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pane Page Two THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1927 ‘Fascists Kicked Out Coli Search Rescues 2)p} : | of Sormenti Meeting |Fishermen Left to Die Right Wing Labor | After Raising Row by Schooner Glouchester | i i it BOSTON, June 7.-—Fascists were! HALIFAX, N. S., June 7.—Major | In Norway Accepts \ejected from a meeting sponsored by |. Sidney Cotton, of New York, and} Industrial Court Organizational Problems) General Motors; suit. |New England Workers Face ———--__ By Inventor Dismissed || Worst Depression of All, This is the first installment of a pamphlet on the problems of Party or- Se Sr “ | ; ganization by Comrade Arne Swabeck, district organizer of District 8. It] , PE ADELEBIA, June 7.—A de-| Says State’s Job Expert deals purely with organizational problems and does not deal with the role of | {#!0N 0% tar reg importance to | the Party. Hence its natural limitations. Ppublication of Comrade Swabeck’s the General Motors Corporation and| | to the automobile industry was hand- | jthe Anti-Fascist Alliance here when/the other members of the expedition | they attempted to howl down Enea) which is to scour the wilds of Libra- | BOSTON, June 7.—New Eng- € | > contribution in pamphlet form is intended later o: * ORGANIZATION OF NUCLEUS CHAPTER I. HE nucleus is the basic unit of the Party. Its functioning determines the life and activity of the Party.} The capacity of the nucleus for mobilization of all its members for active work is determined by its general understanding of Party ob- jects and by the leadership given within the nucleus. Our Party is built to fit the re- quirements of the class struggle. The strength of its inner structure is de- cisive. It must stand the test in ac- tion. Applied in organization prac- tice this means that each nucleus must become one compact body, always ac- tive, It should be organized generally on the following basis. | The Leading Committee. A nucleus must have an. Executive | Committee composed of the following | members: chairman, secretary, fi-| nancial secretary, industrial organ-| izer, agitprop director, and literature | and DAILY WORKER agent. (This may be increased or decreased accord-| ing to the size of the nucleus.) Each THE erally consist of the following: 8 of n point. nould » indi- | of cir-| n on party | action on ¢ Current B' - include assignment of we vidual memby distrib eulars and li press, recruiting of new members, | finances, du stamp sales, ticket} distribution, ete. (The two last items | should be conducted so terfere v geners the meet 4; Curre Party npaigns.- Whether this be a campaign in con- nection with union activities, a cam-| paign in connection with political tivities, elections, labor party, pro- tection of foreign-born, or building of | the Party itself or Party press—un- der this heading specific measures and actions to be taken by the nucleus should be thrashed out and decided. 5. Political discussions.~Under this heading should be discussed the political significance of Party cam- paigns and most important current} political events or strikes, based on! reports in the Party press. Dis- s not to in-| conduct of | HAWAIIAN LAWYER ed down by the U. S. Circuit Court of | land workers are facing a depres- Appeals today, ordering the dismissal | of a suit by William P. Deppe and the | Deppe Motors Corp., charging in-| fringement of patents by General Mo- | tors, Deppe is inventor of an internal | combustion engine and also of a meth- | od for preparing explosive fuel mix- ture for the superheating of gasoline | to the most volatile point, charged | General Motors had encroached on his | rights in the production of the 1922 Buick passenger car and the 1922 General Motors Truck. | JAILED, HOUNDED FOR STRIKE AID Denied Parole; U.S. Su-| gar King's Control Board sion unparalleled in that ‘center of unemployment. This warning comes not from pessimistic. economists or- southern textile interests but from G. Har- ry Dunderdale, superintendent of the Massachusetts state employ- ment bureau, Speaking before the Boston Central Labor Union, Dun- derdale declared that New Eng- land is now at the lowest level of depression in a quarter century and that workers must expect even worse conditions. Textiles are the main contri- butors to the widespread unem- ployment, he declared, but boots and shoes are also “very spotty” with little work in some sections and virtual shutdowns in others, More than 2,000 men and women apply at the Boston employment bureau every day, Dunderdale de- clared, but there is only one job for every 20 applicants. Engdahl Talks at Health Conference in Moscow Sormenti, a New York anti-fascist| | editor. Sormenti, soon to be deported | |because the government charges he| jentered the country illegally to es-| jcape certain death at the hands of | Mussolini’s avents in Italy, is editor| |of Tl Lavoratore. Sormenti is az Italian war veteran | iwith four wounds to show for his service. He charges that his mother | was murdered by Italian fascists be- | cause of his activities. The. Civil! | Liberties’ Union interested itself in| his case and obtained the Department | of Labor's consent that he be deport-| ed to some other country than Italy, | | where he fears he would meet cer- tain death. [NEWS FROM NEW JERSEY NEWARK, N. J., June 7.—The| | Window Cleaners’ Unions which has been on strike here for past 2 weeks | against the bosses who proceeded to) hire scab help in violation of their agreement with the local are all out} {100 per cent, The spirit of the work-| ers is just as strong today as the day | | they went out on general strike. | Most of the bosses want to settle | In Gay Gambling Joint. dor for traces of the missing French | fliers, Captains Nungesser and Coli,! in the monoplane Jeanne D'Arc, ar- | vived here today on the liner Silvia. | The Silvia reported rescuing two | fishermen in a dory sixty miles south- | west of Cape Sable. The fishermen, | Howard Clayton and John Toab, were | members of the crew of the American Schooner Gloucester and had been lost in the fog while following their | ship. | U. S. Babbits in Rusii: For Top Hats Required OSTEND, Belgium, June 7.—A fa- mine in top-hats exists here as a} vesult of the sudden ambition of sev- eral hundred American Rotarians, | here for the Rotary international con- | vention, to be properly attired. | The tradition of the “Kursaal,” fa-| mous gambling. resort has always! called for this formality. Besides the | gambling, the chief attraction today | for the Rotarians was the visit of} Queen Elizabeth and Princess Marie | Jose. i OSLO, June 7 (FP).—Norwegian labor, placed under a system of com- pulsory arbitration of industrial dis- putes by act of parliament, has ac- cepted the first award made in the arbitration tribunal, Passage of the new law was fol- lowed by the calling off, by Norwegi- an employers, of a lockout against 15,000 trade unionists which had been effective for 12 weeks, in an attempt to enforce a sharp cut, in wages, It is this group that has accepted a com~ promise reduction in pay. The new law provides that until Aug. 1, 1929, wherever the cabinet considers that important public inter- ests are endangered, and when the state conciliator has failed to settle a dispute, the cabinet may, at the sug- gestion of its conciliator, issue a de cree forbidding a stoppage of work and ordering the tribunal to decide the point at issue, No change in wages or conditions is permitted until this decision is made, member of the Executive Committee | cussion should be conducted with a is to function as the head of each| view to educating and training the particular department named. | membership. ; While the Executive Committee] A roll call of members present), ms sig D A | Pablo Manlapit, a Hawaiian lawyer of | must give complete leadership to all} should be taken at each meeting and | Filipino eee ch peso Serta the activities of the nucleus, it, how-| it is of vital importance to get into|/ 2 y : if x irk eae ach ¢ithousands of Filipino workers on ; ry rane oh Dee hit Sa brig Facer ic ges hl el vagutens sugar plantations in Hawaii to strike, | YO" ee et a jtle. These two firms want to main-/is a very important one, The orders : radihoe: : . em~ | 1924, for a $2 basic wage, and who | NoWned specialists in their profession. |tain open shop conditions. The work-|issued by the sheriffs of Allegheny give general direction, and see that | bers who do not karo English, haa: nctved: Awe. yeate: tn ri Bon “a a| They were all united in the common | erg are determined to stay out onl/and> Washington countios against work is properly distributed and de-| such should be arranged ‘or. result, is the center of a fight between | Struggle, not only to combat, disease | strike until all the bosses concede to/|large scale picketing is un-American. | cisions carried out. The active func-| Membership Reports. the sugar barons and their territorial | {2 all its forms, but to eliminate the | their demands. These orders were issued in order to tion of the nucBeus will in the Jargest | FLOP talks on conditions, activities government at Honolulu and the hu-| Causes of disease as well, a stiuggle | * protect the interests of the coal op- measure depend upon the ability of|Y and experiences gained in shops, manitarian element in the Hawaiian|™#d¢ Possible by the building of a! Big Meeting Tomorrow. /erators and is a blow at the striking its Executive Committee to mobilize | unions or other workers’ organizations | Islands, Manlapit’s story has come | Mew. social order that is crushing the} On Thursday evening in the New| miners and at labor generally. Every the members for active systematic) are great incentives in Party train-|to Washington. Efforts are about to | Profit system underfoot. I was pre-' Montgomery Hal}, Prince and Mont-| ounce of our energy must Le mobil- Party work. It is therefore, im-}ing. When time is set aside for such|be made by progressives to compel | ented to this audience by the first | gomery streets, a huge protest meet-| ized in order to defeat these vicious Avella Miners Demand | Mass Picketing By LAURANCE TODD. (Continued from Page One) (Federated Prews) . ‘ he os, . WASHINGTON, June 7 (FP).— bia an ele si boing ie |with the union and have made ap-| yc | Proaches to the local strike commit- | j tee. However, the American Window | wae |Cleaning Co. and the N. Y. & N. J.| It was not difficult to talk to this | Window Cleaning Co. are bitterly | great assemblage, many of whom fighting the union and refuse to set- BOOKS | } ; for your yj | (Continued from Page One) * * portant that the Executive Commit-|talks, one or two comrades should be| the territorial authorities to answer | 2Ssistant tee fully understand the qualifica-| tions of the various members for the} various tasks. To this end it should) from time to time conduct an ex-| amination of the memberhip in order) to have work properly assigned and| to make sure that each member at-| tends to his respective duties. Those | members who belong to mass organ-| izations should participate ~“~ularly | in activities assigned to th within such organizations, while tne small) nuclei functions in many cases may| be left to those who have no such} connections. Main Excutive Duties. | The duties of the Nucleus Exec-} utive should be the following: 1. To nut an agenda for,each nucleus g. 2. To introduce the proper} to the meeting and to watch its} uct. 3. To take care of all} aunications containing plans of from higher bodies and make} recommendations in accordance with} the plans to the nucleus. decide which letters are to be read | in full to the nucleus, if any. 4. To} recommend measures for the conduct of current Party work or Party cam-} paigns. dividual members. } The Executive Committee should meet prior to each nucleus meeting, work out its plans and select one of! its members to make the complete} report to the nucleus containing the| various recommendations. The Exec- utive Committee should also compile! reports for higher bodies from time to time, such reports to contain} standing of membership, number be- longing to unions or mags organiza-| tions, general activities of the nuc- leus, participation in campaigns, leaf- lets distributed, paper and pamphlets cireularized, ete. The report when compiled should be thoroughly dis- cussed in the nucleus with a view to improving all future activities. Tt should |; 5. To assign work to the in-|; selected as speakers and prepare|for their arbitrary and vindictive at: their material. The nucleus should|titude, which seems to be due to the also require its members to make i dividual reports among non-Party workers. A good) of the class government which the diseussion with helpful criticism will sugar companies maintain for their generally serve to -improve the| private protection. methods and activities of the com-| As the story has been told by Amer-| rades. : icans who have brought it to Wash-| _The nucleus executive cannot con-' ington, the Filipino plantation work- sider itself as having measured up to| ers in Hawaii were brought there to requirements as long as some of the| supplant Chinese. Portuguese and nucleus members remain inactive. It,| Japanese labor which had in turn sup-| therefore, follows that the first thing| planted the native Hawaiian workers | to do is to make nuclei meetings in-| on the plantations. Native population teresting so that all will want t0|haq fallen in 50 years of hard toil on attend. Next to get each comrade] spose plantations from a total of interested in each particular task and/ 399 999 to 21,000 Japan’s govern-| fully realize the possibilities avail-| ent refused to permit Japanese peas- able. Third y, to make assignments | ants to come to Hawaii to work at to the individual comrades in ac-!e9) g month and a company house, cordance with their capacities and| rich was the rate paid Chinese and with a view to ever more developing | portuguese on 2-year contracts. So| their responsibility and understand- the Japanese were paid more, and the ing. As soon as members become | Chinese secured better conditions, un-| in attending meetings or in ac- til some 15 years ago the Filipinos be-| tivities they should be visited and in-| pan coming, under a contract system. Shop y ve * ‘ at ditional tasks which will be dealt with | feed at lr oe dah haar gt Shoot Down Strikers. | | ™-' fact that these officials are in the} of their activities) sugar business. Manlapit is a victim n Manlapit became counsel for a British and American junion which was established among Gol id Helps Assassin | these Filipino plantation hands. Sym- pathizing with their misery in a coun- (Continued from Page One) try where the cost of living was rap- divest supped’ of Mogint: imperial. |‘ rising, he inspired them with a |no country in the world outside the! |of the government. This is so because | With them to break the Rabbit Work- | people’s commissar of! ing has been arranged in behalf of ealth, Z. Pp. Soloviov, who was act-| the striking furriers of Local 25. ng as chairman. I said in part: | Every worker is urged to attend to) Engdahl Speaks. ‘learn for himself of the frame-up| “Comrade chairman and comrades|@gainst the local and its officers. | of the Sixth Convention of the Health | Prominent speakers from Newark and | Departments of the Soviet Union. In| New York will speak. The attempts on the part of the) Soviet Union does there exist a peo-| International Fur Workers’ Union and | ple’s commissariat of health as-part| ll the reactionary forces lined up| in no country where the rule of|¢rs’ Local Union 25 have thus far) profits exists, is the class in power|met with failure. The strike and the interested in combatting and eliminat- | SPirit of the men is high. ing the causes of the diseases that ravage the working masses. | in their struggle to build the new | “In the United States we have a) social order. | department of state that carries on an| | prohibiting mass meetings of union anti-labor orders of the sheriffs.” The resolution in regard to picket- ing says: | “WHEREAS, the sheriffs of Alle- gheny and Washington counties of the state of Pennsylvania posted notices miners and picketing near the scab mines, and “WHEREAS, such an order of the sheriffs is an arbitrary and unwar- ranted act aimed to help the coal cp- erators to break the union, and “WHEREAS, the present system of picketing, where the union men are prevented from coming together in| large groups and to spealt to the strike-breakers is ineffective, and “WHEREAS, this makes it neces- | |the government of the American | Chinese Professor Killed. | aggressive campaign in the interests! 1 cited the heroic martyrdom of Lee} of American imperialism. It is wag- | ing its fight today against Mexico, Nicaragua and China. In the cabinet of the American president there also sits a secretary of commerce, Herbert | Hoover, to help protect profits} wherever they are endangered, and to| expand this robbery of the masses.) But there is no secretary of health in| profiteers, Unity For Health: “Within the borders of the Soviet Union you have achieved the unity of the health departments. Thruout the Union one system of health protection is maintained that is centralized in the people’s commissariat of health. | | | Ta Chao, whose murder at the hands| sary to fight for our rights to picket | of Chang T’so-lin’s assassins had just | awfully in any way we may find it been reported that day from Peking. Necessary, therefore be it / Lee Ta Chao was a professor in the) “RESOLVED, that we call upon our law faculty of the Peking University. | International and District Presidents our District and International Presi- dents shall lead this picketing in or- to picket to the attention of all work- | der to bring the question of the right ers and the public at large.” The other resolution calling for more effective relief measures de- mands: “1.—That we call upon the Inter- national officials of the UMWA to Committee. He was the son of a peasant. His immediate crime was the fact that he was caught in the| provocation raid on the Soviet Em- bassy of Peking, for which he was) strangled to death. He left a mother! and widow, son and two daughters. | I argued that Lee Ta Chao’s heroic) martyrdom should inspire honest in- | tellectuals to greater sacrifices in the | OPEN AIR MEETING Look at the Prices! Many of the books are listed at reduced rates. Take advan~ il ord of it tay of this, $5.00 or more, from this Hat, ee will be al- At 5 Cents AMALGAMATION—Jay_Fox. MOVEMENT FOR WORLD a UNION UNITY—Tom Bell, REDS AND THE GENERAL STRIKE—C. B. UNDERGROUND RADICALISM— John Pepper. ss 2 THE BRITISH STRIKE—Wn. F, Dunne. bg ey AND STEEL—Jay Love- stone. TWO SPEECHES by Karl Marx, BRITISH RULE IN INDIA— Shapurji Sakletvale. WHITE TERRORISTS ASK FOR ERCY—Max oOkfies RUSSIAN TRADE NIONS. CONSTITUTION OF SOVIET RUSSIA. At 10 Cents TRADE UNIONS IN AMERICA~ Foster-Cannon-Browder. THE LEFT WING IN THE GAR- MENT UNIONS—Margaret Lar- kin. WHAT'S WRONG IN THE CAR- PENTERS' UNION. LABOR LIEUTENANTS_ OF AMERICAN IMPERIALISM — Jay Lovestone, 8 COLLABORATION—HOW jism, which is arming for intervention | against the Soviet Union. Not Successful Yet. As yet this bloc is not completed, nor is the ring round the Soviet | Union closed. Up to the present, | Germany has withheld its consent to English intervention. The bargain- ing continues in the foreign offices |hope that they could win better terms} Yu have already achieved tremen- by striking. The stoppage of work|40US progress in winning the partici- | that followed was joined by thousands|Pation of the masses in the health |who were not under contract. Amer-|W0rk of the Union, thru drawing the |ican owners of plantations, organized| Workers and peasants into co-opera- in the Hawaiian Sugar Planters’ tive activities with these health de- |Assn., became panic-stricken, They | Partments. You have developed the feared that the strikers would form a| PTostam, not only for curing the sick, permanent union which would force! Von also for eliminating the causes of sease. them to pay wages far above the old| level. -Manlapit was denounced as a| dangerous agitator. Police were sent of the Great Powers. Germany is) setting hopes which are not unfound- }ed, on the support of England and | demands that the frontiers laid down by the Treaty of Versailles be changed, above all that the Danzig corridor be removed. Poland, how- ever, still remains inflexible and ¢ol- emnly declares through the mouth of Zaleski; “not a hend’s breadth of The Nucleus Agenda. The nucleus agenda should gen- THE WORKERS’ CAMP Camp Nitgedaiget of Boston Grand Opening June 19, 1927, All information and reservatfons at Workers’ Bookshop, 32 Leverett St., Boston. Tel. Hay 2271. Directions: Go to Franklin, Mass., there take Summer St. to Camp. of the fatherland.” Wali Street In It. The United States is partially fi- ‘\nancing this bloc, as evidenced by GOOD STORIES By UPTON SINCLAIR Times, April 2, 1927: A credit from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York along the lines of the accommodation which the bank Britain, Belgium, and oter countries is also understood to be part of the financial plan for Poland. . . .The bank in the past has given credits to Poland, secured by the deposit of gold, Philadelphia I. L. D. Has Conference for Bodies A. C. W. Bars | PHILADELPHIA, June 7,--Deter- |mined to help ign the work of free- jing Sacco and Vénzetti, even though barred ‘from the conference called by the Amalgamated Clothing Workers for this purpose, the Philadelphia lo- eal of the International Labor De- fense has issued a call to all workers’ organizations who for any reason could not get into this work other- wise. This conference meets every Thursday evening, at Free Letts Hall, 531 North 7th St., and urges all or- ganizations, other than unions, which should affiliate with the Amalga- mated conference, to. send delegates to the I. L. D, conference. THE JUNGLE Cloth Bound 3.50 | MANASSAS—A Story of the | Civil War. Paper, $1.00 THEY CALL ME | CARPENTER Cloth, $1.50 Cloth, $1.50 THE METROPOLIS—A sto- ry of New York. Paper, $1.00 Cloth, $1.50 THE JOURNAL OF ARTHUR STERLING Paper, $1.00 Cloth, $1.50 By IVAN CANKAR YERNEY’S JUSTICE Cloth, $.50 FLYING OSSIP—Stories of New Russia. Paper, $1.50 Cloth, $2,50 Polish soil; every man to the defence | the following from the New York} in the past has extended to Great| out to cow the strikers. Many were arrested. Crowds of strikers were |shot dead and a score left wounded. The strike was broken. The Filipinos went back to the fields. Manlapit was arrested on a conspiracy charge, and was convicted and seutenced to serve \from 2 to 10 years in prison. Refuse Him Parole. i | After two years he was entitled to! |a parole from the prison board, but when he applied for it, in January, 1927, the board ruled that unless he | would submit to deportation to the Philippine Islands he would not be paroled. He had never lived in the Philippines, His wife is a white Amer- ican citizen. He has four small chil- \dren, The sugar planters’ influence | had been such that organized charity in Honolulu found pretexts for refus- | ing aid to his family. His wife went! to work in a laundry at $8 a week,) and she was induced to sign over the |eustody of her children to an orphan ‘asylum, Under these circumstances, | Manlapit refused to accept deporta- tion to the Philippines unless his fam- ily were sent with him. The board refused to consider such a suggestion, Even after the state's attorney decided that the board could not order him deported, the board refused the pa- role, Two of the three members of the board are prominent in sugar companies, while the third is a former I. W. W., converted to Y. M. C. A. and Boy Scout work. He spoke sym- pathetically of Manlapit—and voted to hold him in prison, Gov. Farrington, who could force the board to release thjs victim of sugar planters’ vengeance, is a part- ner in a newspaper enterprise with one of the biggest men in the sugar planters’ organization. He has evaded |the issue, claiming that it was a mat- | ter for the board to handle, “You are to be congratulated on| the able leadership of Comrade-Doctor | Semashko in carrying on this work.| Even in far off America we have heard of the able and constructive work directed by Comrade Semashko. The health authorities of Ameggica are forced to recognize his worth, even tho the profit system that keeps workers enslaved under disease-breed- ing conditions in American industry makes it impossible for them to carry out in the United States the system you have established here. Comrade Semashko recently presented tho health work in the Soviet Union to the international family of health depart- ments at the health conference re- cently held in Paris. But not until the workers in other lands have also won their victory over the profit sys- tem will it be possible for them also! to inaugurate the war against disease on the broad and effective scale that you are carrying it on here under the ae of an emancipated working class. . Workers Watch, “Thus the workers the world over| Party. are turning their eyes toward your congress here, and it is with the earn- est hope of world labor that your achievements will soon spread to all lands, that I greet you in the name of the Communist International and also of its American section, the Workers (Communist) Party of America.” Many of the remnants of czarism still persist among the so-called “pro- fessional” classes. ‘This includes the doctors and physiclans, some of whom chafe under the fact that they do not enjoy the best of conditions, while the Workers’ Republic strives to do its uttermost to lift the level of the masses, that wes low indeed under the czarist tyranny. Thus I urged that the intellectuals, especially in the professions, must become the hon- est and devoted allies of the workers class struggle everywhere, I also cited the case of the Rus- sian professor, Timiriasev, who gave of his precious intellectual forces, of his knowledge and vast experiences, | to the Soviet task of reconstruction. | He joined the forces of the workers and peasants, since the very begin- ning of the revolution, being de- nounced by the intelligentsia, who did not understand him, as “an old man who had lost his senses.” He was de- nounced as insane because he worked \with the “terrible. Bolsheviks.” Yet it was Lunacharsky, the Soviet com- missar of education, who said it was Timiriasev who had saved the honor |of the Russian intellectuals. clared: I de- Intelligence For All, “The best elements of the intelli-| gentsia should not belong to the bour- geoisie, but should join forces with the working class. Instead of selling themselves to the/capitalists, they should become the allies of the work- ers and peasants.” Then I told of the revolting health | conditions, citing many statistics, that \existed in capitalist industry in Amer- ica, especially in those basie indus-| tries where the workers were unor- ganized and unable to protect their | interests, | I concluded by urging | every possible support of the people’s commissariat of health. My address was translated by George Askenudse, formerly of the American Communist | Comrade Wolf extended the greet-| ings of the doctors’ fraction of the Communist Party of Germany. The people’s commissariat of health, Dr, Turcomahia, also spoke pointing out} |that the Soviet medical program was building up the health of the work- ers of the East. A greeting was also extended by a representative of the Young Communist League, who pointed out that the death rate of the youth was being lowered under Soviet rule, Workers’ delegates from the factories and workshops also spoke, If time permits I will give you some of the details of the work of this congress in another article. SACCO and VANZETTI SHALL NOT DIE! immediately place a 15% strike as- sessment during the period of the strike, upon all miners now at work in the anthracite and the union bi- tuminous districts, the money so col- ‘lected to be used entirely for strike relief. ; “2.That we request the Interna- tional officials of the UMWA to im- mediately issue a call for financial assistance for the miners and to urge the American Federation of Labor to issue a similar appeal. “3,—That we call upon the district officers of District No. 5 to stimulate the collection of relief from labor unions and sympathizing elements in Western Pennsylvania, and should urge other districts of the UMWA to do likewise. “4.—That local unions of the UM WA shal! take the initiative in form- ing local relief committees in all min- ing centers to be made up of repre- sentatives of miners’ unions and friendly local unions of other trades, for the purpose of raising funds for the relief of the miners on strike.” Workers’ Aid Raising Relief. The International Workers’ Aid will do its share in this relief work in this district as long as the strug- gle between the miners and the coal operators continue. The International Workers’ Aid of Western Pennsyl- vanian will hold a huge picnic at the farm of Frank Gaida, Cheswick, Pa., on Sunday, June 12. An elaborate program which includes dancing, speaking and sports was arranged by the arrangements committee. and the motion picture “Broaking Chains” will be shown free. The pienic can easily be reached by trains, street car and automobile. Directions to the picnic grounds from Pittsburgh. Take car 50 at Smithfield and Sixth, go to end of line, transfer to car No, 94 then go to the end of line to the Cheswick car, Trains 10:10, 11:26 a. m., 2:50 p. m, to Cheswick, Pa., or by auto—follow Daylight Booze Vold-up. Four automobile bandits held up a truck loaded with $10,000 of pre- war whiskey at 11th Ave. and 44th St. yesterday, kidnaped the driver and his helper and took possession of t But this did not prevent his being a|to fight against this vicious order of | leader of the Chinese Communist | the sheriffs by organizing mass pick- | Party, one of its organizers and a/eting at a number of mines in viola-| prominent member of its Central |tion of the sheriff’s orders and that TO FIGHT IT—Bertram Wolfe. ORGANIZE THE UNORGANIZED - —Wm, Z. Foster. WORLD LABOR UNITY—Scoit Nearing. THE GENERAL STRIKE—John Pepper. Int CONNOLLY AND IRISH ¥REEDOM—. Shutler. Eee OF COMMUNISM— o] 8. cONBU Naa ¥. CHRISTIAN- ISM—Bisho} rown, ND. ENG LS ON REVO- LUTION IN AMERICA, LENIN, THE GREAT STRATE- GIST—Losovsky. # STOPPING A WAR—Scott Near- netic TURNS BAST — Scott GLIMPSES OF THE SOVIET RB- PUBLIC—Scott. ene LABOR LAWS OF SOVIET Rus- MARRIAGE LAWS OF SOVIET Ri SSIA, 100 %—A. Stexy, by NL het Sinclair. THE DAMNED AGITATOR AND ‘Oni BR BTORIES Michael At 15 Cents CUINA ON Ee Weisser: TRE WATSON-PARKER LAW— Pfinwat tO THE LABOR LENIN AND THE TRADE UNIONS—Losovsky. On all orders under $1.00 postage Mark a cross over the books you number of DAILY WORKER PUB.CO. _New York 33 First St. Enclosed §. books marked above. NOME ies daisies ee