Word: voroshilov
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Maxim Maximovich Litvinoff, Soviet spokesman at Montreux, was 60 years old last week. Because in Bolshevik theory a Foreign Commissar is a most unimportant character, not to be compared with such weighty men as Defense Commissar Voroshilov or Commissar of Transportation Andreyev, photographs of rotund Commissar Litvinoff are practically non-existent in Russia. Millions of good Communists do not even know of his existence. As a birthday present Joseph Stalin decided last week that his Foreign Commissar had been neglected long enough. To him the Red dictator sent the rosette of the Order of Lenin, highest Soviet decoration...
...Soviet Russia, Ambassador Troyanovsky attacked the legend that they control the U. S. S. R. Said he: "This would not be discreditable if it were true. It happens not to be true. It is enough for me to say that Stalin is not a Jew, nor is Molotov, nor Voroshilov, nor Ordjonikidze, nor Mikoyan." Encouraging the banqueteers to subscribe $350,000 for Biro-Bidjan Jews, he explained that the Soviet's fee of $200 per family for setting up Jewish immigrants in Biro-Bidjan with land and equipment for farming was less than cost...
...feel German and Japanese pincers pricking the Soviet union on both flanks. That ink is newly dry on a Japanese-German secret treaty of military alliance is charged in resounding Moscow speeches by owlish Soviet Premier Molotov and that popular eagle of the Red Army, Defense Commissar "Klim" Voroshilov. Since the Soviet Secret Service is definitely keen, Dictator Joseph Stalin anticipated months ago that the Japanese, feeling Germany to be with them, would in time pass from hesitant encroachment and frontier incidents to such undeclared war as came last week. To Moscow the forehanded Dictator recently invited flat-faced, greasy...
...lingerie, perfume, champagne, vodka, cheese and sausages Hero of Labor Alexei Stakhanov was back from Moscow last week in his home on the Donbas Steppe, a four-room shack, the walls of which were decorated with poster pictures not of potent Dictator Stalin but of popular War Commissar "Klim" Voroshilov. Squeaked the Stakhanov family phonograph in English: "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf, Big Bad Wolf, Big Bad Wolf...
Grooming popular Defense Commissar "Klim" Voroshilov for his expected appointment as "Marshal of the Soviet Union," Pravda called Klim "the personification of a true Marshal of the Revolution...