1,1 11 The Position of the IIIIIHIIIIUIHIUIIIIIIiIfIUIIIHIiniIIIIiIIIIIIIIHUIIiHIIIHIUtIIIII pimiuiiiiniiiiiiiHfiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiimiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiiifliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittmiuuuuiiiiNiiHiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiuji Parties in England Just Received! I Penetrating Analysis! Burning Criticism! Sound Logic!! i THE NEW AND SIGNIFICANT BOOK | (Continued from preceding page.) JUBILEE NUMBER • ENTITLED munist Party. Right into the autumn of 1923 it was undergoing structural (5 years) | The World’s transformation, making a first at- f tempt to apply the Third Congress de- “COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL" cisions of the Comintern. During the Trade Union Movement whole of this period it hardly managed 200 pages, 28 Illustrations: Lenin at By A. LOSOVSKY BEST.” Also of leaders to hold its members. New mem- work and “AT General Secretary of the Red International of Labor Unions own of the C. I. and Its Congresses; Lenin's 5 In this book, published in March at Moscow, and now made available to = bers joined the Party but old ones left funeral, etc. as quickly. The whole of this activity = American readers, the leader of 13,000,000 trade unionists depicts, dis- = CONTENTS: 3 of forces developed before, during, has been in tj>e midst of tremendous sects, and measures the relation and =j Nicolai /.... By Zinoviev since the depression working Lenin- war. in the ranks of the The Great Proletarian Leader...A. Matlnov class. Still further changes were Lenin as a Theoretician U. Thalfieimer The first book ever written dealing so made as a result of the conference of The Literary Legacy of llyitch the party executive with the Comin- L. B. Kamenev comprehensively with this vital subject tern E. C. in the middle of last year. Extracts from Lenin’s Writinge. says: It was not until the beginning of 1924 The 6th Anniversary of the Commitern William Z. Foster G. Zinoviev = “Here are described every political, economic, and organizational force 3 that it was possible for the develop- From the Intern, of Word to the In- S of the world’s trade unions, and their role in the fight, developed since 3 upon get moving. ments then agreed to tern. of Deed...—«... C. Zetkin the war, between Reformists and Revolutionists.” The main lines agreed upon were The Comintern and the Far East sound but it will take time for them S. Katayama | 112 PAGES, STIFF PAPER COVER, WITH PHOTO OF AUTHOR. | to show the results we are after. Under the Leadership of Russia O. Kuusinen FIFTY CENTS PER COPY. During the last eighteen months the The Capitaliet Terror...—..— —P. Kohn party has concentrated so much on or- The 3rd Intern, and its Place in His- Bundle orders of ten or more, 35 cents each, ganization and the development of the tory..— .....Nicolai Lenin with special rate on larger orders. circulation of the party paper, tried so Manifeito re First Congress of C. I. Conditions of Admission to the Com- hard to transform itself in terms of a munist International. paper scheme that the membership be- Five Yeart. By Kolarov, Pascal, Terra- Trade Union Educational League, came tired. It needed new Inspiration clnnl, Amter, Dmitrov, ‘•K’’ Schuller. 11113 Washington Blvd. Chicago, 111. and enthusiasm. It was complained PRICE SO CENTS BY MAIL. i that the Executive was out of contact This Issue Is a historical document. You■ should have one. Send your order to A special edition of this book has also been published for the 3 with the members and there was good = Party. and members of the party expected to LITERATURE DEPARTMENT, Workers Branches are s grounds for the complaint. There had S place their orders with the literature department at the same address. 3 been no party conference for months WORKERS PARTY OF AMERICA, illlllllllllllllililHllllHflltlllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllltllllllilllllllilllllilllllllllllllilllllllllllUllllllllllllllillll^ more than a year. It had been put 1113 W. Washington Blvd., oft time and again. Finally we held a WORKERS Chicago, 111. JOIN THE PARTY! conference. Snags were removed. Pre- parations made for a Party Congress iiiiiuiuuMmmiiimuiunaHmm«iu«MMMHMMmMtimna SUBSCRIBE FOR THE “DAILY WORKER!” were afoot. The whole political situa- tion changed and brought new vitality |iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiifitHiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii| in the fight. And the Party has begun to grow. But we have still to face the char- acteristic failing of the British move- ( ment as a whole. We have got to get THE LIBERATOR stage the purely prop =1 S past the of agandist party, conducting general propaganda, and become a political | THE MAGAZINE OF AMERICAN | party of struggle. For this we need up the quality of the also a toning of POLITICS,9 LETTERS AND ART s as party, the development of its theo- retical equipment, in order to be able 2 5 to diagnose correctly the significance of the political events that are unfold- ing and to deal with them concretely The Only Magazine of Its Kind in America and with revolutionary purpose. All | ROBERT and require pa- Editor: MINOR this will take time 2j 2 tience and persistence. But one thing is certain: That the party was never in a better condition than it is today, and it was never faced with greater opportunities for development. CONTRIBUTORS INCLUDE: The position of the parties is such that the two capitalist parties, the | • Max Eastman William Gropper Liberals and the Tories, are still in John Pepper Fred Ellis turmoil and unable to take decisive §§ Leon Trotzky Boardman Robinson action, and the Labor Party has begun Wm. Z. Foster Art Young to reveal to the masses of the workers William Dunne Floyd Dell concretely the meaning of "gradual- Party has Scott Nearing Mary Heaton Vorse ism,” while the Communist Zinoviev Barnes become the one center to which the G. Cornelia J, Louis Engdahl Lydia workers can turn as their eyes are | Gibson opened to the great illusion. C. E. Ruthenberg Michael Gold Jay Lovestone Moissaye Olgin I A Communist Call to Fight Fascism. Upton Sinclair Joseph Freeman Eugene V. Debs James Rorty Hugo Gelert Claude McKay 5 - 5 S == The Liberator, formerly The Masses, has won for itself a unique position in the world of revolutionary politics, literature and art. Become acquainted with this interesting and live monthly magazine. * SI.OO brings The Liberator to you for six months. May 11, Halle, Germany. Use the Coupon below. “KOMMENTS ON THE KU KLUX KLAN” The deeper meaning of Wizard, Dragon, Titan, Cyplops, Hydras, Fur- LIBERATOR, ies, etc. A complete expose. Secret THE work, oath, and constitution. The klan is dead the minute the people 1009 N. State St., understand it This book explains all. Chicago, You may now look under the sheet. Illinois. Or.e dozen books, 11.00; 15c per copy. Order' front—John T. Cooper, I I I Checotah, Okia.—Agents wanted. I enclose SI.OO for six months subscription Mention The Daily Worker Res. 1632 S. Trumbull Ave. Name Phone Rockwell 5050 MORDECAI SHULMAN | Address - | | • attorney-at-law 701 Association Building 19 S. La Salle Street CHICAGO Dearborn 8657 Central 4945-4947 T ____________.
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