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[1] K . Kautsky 's pamphlet was translated into Georgian and published in Tiflis in March 1907. No. 7 of the Bolshevik newspaper Dro, of March 18, 1907, announced the publication of K. Kautsky's pamphlet in the Georgian language with a preface by Koba (J. V. Stalin). [p. 1]
[2]
Cadets -- the abbreviated title of the Constitutional-Democratic Party -- the principal party of the liberal-monarchist bourgeoisie, formed in October 1905 (see J. V. Stalin, Works, Vol. 1, p. 405, Note 52).
[Note 52: The Constitutional-Democratic Party (Cadet Party) -- the principal party of the liberal-monarchist bourgeoisie. Was formed in October 1905. Under cloak of a spurious democratism, and calling themselves the party of "Popular Freedom," the Cadets tried to win the peasantry to their side. They strove to preserve tsarism in the form of a constitutional monarchy. Subsequently, the Cadets organised counter-revolutionary conspiracies and revolts against the Soviet Republic.]
[p. 5]
[3] First Symposium -- a Menshevik symposium, published in St. Petersburg in 1908. [p. 6]
[4] Nashe Delo (Our Cause) -- a weekly Menshevik journal published in Moscow from September 24 to November 25, 1906. [p. 7]
[5] Tovarishch (Comrade) -- a daily newspaper published in St. Petersburg from March 1906 till December 1907. Although not officially the organ of any party, it was actually the organ of the Left-wing Cadets. Mensheviks also contributed to the newspaper. [p. 7]
[6] Otkliki (Echoes) -- Menshevik symposia published in St. Petersburg in 1906-07. Three volumes were issued. [p. 9]
[7]
Mir Bozhy (God's World) -- a monthly magazine of a liberal trend, began publication in St. Petersburg in 1892. In the
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'90's of the nineteenth century it published articles by the "legal Marxists." During the 1905 revolution, Mensheviks contributed to the magazine. From 1906 to 1918 it was published under the name of Sovremenny Mir (The Contemporary World).
[p. 9]
[8] Golos Truda (The Voice of Labour) -- a Menshevik newspaper published in St. Petersburg from June 21 to July 7, 1906. [p. 11]