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Page Six THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1927 | Professional Patriots | One of the most interesting things about pro- fessional patrioteers in the United States is their profound ignorance of “radicalism.” R.M. Whit- ney, an official of the American Defense Society, and author of “Reds in América,” once wrote that “Upton Sinclatr is the founder of the I. W. W. and the American Civil Liberties Union.” PROFESSIONAL PATRIOTS is edited by Norman Hapgood from material assembled by Sidney Howard and John Hearley. acne (Continued from yesterday) Acts of Violence. A record of acts of violence by members of the Ameri- can Legion acting as such, compiled from the press re- ports and verified by correspondence, was published by the American Civil Liberties Union in 1921. It listed 50 such acts up to the close of the year 1920. From that date the record of violence fell off, due to the criticism | it caused and the resentment aroused even among its | own membership. There have since been not more than tem cases, of which two were serious—at Wilkes-Barre in March, 1924, and at Great 1981. At Great Bend, where a Farmers Non-Partisan League meeting was scheduled, four speakers on the way to it were beaten up, and two of them were tarred and feathered. J. O. Stevic, editor of the Nonpartisan Leader, Carl Par- sons, a veteran of the World War, while ex-Senator Burton of Kansas and George Wilson of Oklahoma, who were together in a car, were forced to get out of the county. At Wilkes-Barre a Lenin Memorial meeting conducted | by the Workers Party was broken up at the point of | rifles by a crowd of Legion men who marched from their hall for that purpose, and who forced the audience to leave the hall and to salute the American flag. The ac- tion of the local post was baeked by others throughout the country who wired their approval. The following frm Oklahoma is typical: “Oklahoma City Post No. 35, American Legion, wishes to congratulate you on your recent stand in upholding Americanism, which is the basic principle of our organ- ization. Dispersion of Bolshevik worship strikes a chord in the heart of all true Americans. The American flag is good enough for us. .Stay with it. “Oklahoma City Post, American Legion By H. Lee Minton, Post Commander.” The Wilkes-Barre Daily Record of January 30, 1924, in a news account reported that: “Those who entered the local Legion Hall last evening could hear a click of rifles on the indoor rifle range. A large group of Legionnaires exhibited eagerness to become proficient in this art for future emergencies. The rifle range was crowded last evening with ex-service men in quest of rifle practice. This is unusual and attracted the attention of all who entered the building.” Break Up Meetings. The breaking up of meetings at the instance of the American Legion has been accomplished without violence, by"pressure on local officials and hall-owners. The Legion specialized in stopping Socialist meetings addressed by Eugene V. Debs, concerts by Fritz Kreisler, and show- ings of a film depicting conditions in Russia, entitled “The Fifth Year.” Legion alarmists prevented peace signs being carried | in an Armistice Day parade in Boston. A Legion of- ficial journal in Sioux City has made libelous attacks on the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom on the basis of information which the local post admitted was furnished by the “General Staff of the United States Army.” Loyal Legionnaires joined with the D. A. R., the Reserve Officers Association, the Better America Federation, the National Security League, and the Military Order of the World War in a loud outcry against Frederick J. Libby’s appearance be- fore the students of Leland Stanford, Jr., University. As noted above the Legion Chapter at Concord, Mass., attempted, in June 1926, to prevent the New England Fellowship of. Youth for Peace from holding a conference there. Eggs, stones and stink bombs were reported among the missiles used without avail in this Legion- inspired attempt to intimidate college students interested in peace. Later the local Legion officials who had been most interested in breaking up the student gathering repudiated their participation in the violence. The Legion’s propaganda material against the Fellowship of Youth for Peace was supplied by the Industrial De- fense Association and the Massachusetts Public Interest League, “composed of a group of women who are jealous of the good name of their state.” Mr. Marvin ofthe New York Commercial also contributed to the attack. According to Brent Dow Allinson, the chairman of ‘the students’ conference, the charges made by all the “pat- riots” were “unproved, unfair, untrue and a baseless slander.” Civil Liberties Union. A. Leroy F. Smith of Los Angeles, writing in the American Legion Bulletin for September 22, 1923, under the title “A Nice Little Kitty—with Claws,” indulged himself in a page of pleasantries about the American Civil Liberties Union, which has a branch in Los Angeles to combat police suppression of radical meetings and the numerous criminal syndicalist prosecutions. The article evidently had the approval of the Legion officials. It seored in picturesque language all the principles of free speech and assembly, characterizing the Civil Liberties Union thus: “The local committee has a number of well-known figures on it, very well known; while the national com- mittee numbers among its members such eminent pa- triots as William Z. Foster, Rose Schneiderman, Scott Nearing, James A. Duncan (former I.W.W. mayor of Butte), Felix Frankfurter (which means in English Merry Sausage),” etc. The spectacle of the I.W.W., an anti-political organ- ization, with a mayor, is enough to characterize Mr. Smith’s ignorance of public affairs, even overlooking the fact that Mr. Duncan was secretary of the Seattle Central Labor Council and not a resident of Butte. The spirit behind these evidences of patriotic zeal is not far removed from the Italian Fascisti. Indeed the connection is not fanciful. The Legion invited Musso- lini to address its San Francisco convention in 1923. He sent a cordial reply regretting that he was otherwise engaged. National Commander Alvin Owsley, in an in- terview with the Newspaper Enterprise Association pub- lished in various papers served by that agency in Janu- ury 1923, said: “If ever needed, the American Legion stands ready to protect our country’s institutions and ideals as the Fascisti dealt with the destructionists who menaced Italy!” “By taking over the government?” he was asked. “Exactly that,” he replied. “The American Legion is fighting every element that threatens our democratic government—soviets, anarchists, I.W.W., revolutionary socialists and every other ‘red.’ .. . Do not forget that the Fascisti are to Italy what the American Legion is to the United States.” Mr. Owsley’s reported statement was never repudiated by him or by other Legion officials. (To be continued.) Read The Daily Worker Every Day M somnapinwrornnaneamtlamnncsateen: ee as _ +s eeeemeeemeainanmmmmmmnmmmmamiammaa Bend, Kansas, March 21, | The men who were beaten and tarred were | ! Hugh Gibson, United States minister to Belgium and head of | the American delegation to the arms’ conference in Geneva, Switzer- land (left), together with Secretary of State Frank B. Kellogg, and | Rear Admiral Hilary P. Jones (right), are shown leaving the White | House following a last-minute conference with President Coolidge; | Admiral Jones is chief naval advisor to the delegation, [Whats What*Washinsto WASHINGTON, June 7.—One very { good reason why Secretary Kellogg on the muddiness of the water of the Potomac. will not go to Geneva to take the lead in the three-power naval limitation conference is that neither he nor Pres- support scheme. to this Coolidge-Kellogg ident Coolidge is now giving much| The Labor Party members of the Australian Industrial Delegation now studying industrial conditions and wages in this country after a long two | months of being shown non-union fac- | tories and railroad shops, and being ‘The General Member- ship Meeting ‘Duties of Party Members in Soviet Union Factories | By KARL REEVE. OSCOW.—Before examining the tasks of the various | parts of the apparatus of the party organization in |a Soviet factory, let us take up more definitely the tasks !of the party nucleus in the factory as. a whole and the |general tasks of every member of the party. We may \take some examples from the “Moscow River” Factory, a textile factory located in Moscow, which employs be- tween 1400 and 1500 workers. This factory numbers 147 members and candidates in the party, 31 being candi- dates, and 180 membegs and candidates in the Kom- somols (Young Communist League). Of the latter, all are full members excepting 15, who are candidates. Of | the thirteen persons who joined the party in this nucleus |recently twelve are workers, and one is an office clerk. | The admission of new members is first approved by | bureau of the factory nucleus, then at the general mem- | bership meeting of the nucleus, and is finally approved |by the rayon (section or county) party committee. Mem- | bers of the Young Communist League who are transfer- |red to the party are received in the same manner. |THE general membership meeting in this nucleus occurs |* once or twice a month, some meetings being “closed” |when only party members and candidates are present, |and others “open” when non-party workers are invited. |In this factory there were approximately twenty meet- ings during the year, about half of them being open meetings. The attendance was good, in spite of the fact |that the factory is working on two shifts, 70 per cent lof the membership being present on the average. In ad- {dition to the matters touched on in the last article, the following questions were taken up, among others,—or- |ganization of important campaigns, discussion of the collective agreement to be entered into between the trade union and the administration, the work among the Young Pioneers, and in addition the usual reports from the bu- reau and the various committees. Political and educa- tional questions are discussed. I was present at one meeting where the question of the international situa- tion, the threat of war against the Soviet Union by the The big thing before the adminis- | banqueted with the rest of their party tration, every member of it is made|by chambers of commerce, began to to feel, is the re-election of Calvin|speak. It seemed that they were en- Coolidge, for the good of business and | thusiastie Labor Party members, keen the country, this year. True, the bal-|for discussion of what Australian loting will not take place under the Jabor has done through social legisla- law until November, 1928, but the/tion, government ownership, elimina- Coolidge organization proposes to de-| tion of private profit, and no end of vote the summer of 1927 to making Coolidge’s third term inevitable. And naval reduction or. limitation, which looked like a good issue a few months ago, looks hopeless as a cam- paign slogan today. Except for some extraordinary break of luck, the Geneva parley will be a complete fail- ure, “He’s Never Sick at Sea.” That is why, on the day the Amer- ican naval and diplomatic delegates and their staffs were embarking at |heretical things. Miss May Matthews | took the first occasion when she was invited to make a speech before work- ing women, to declare that the United States needs a militant working class |party and industrial unionism. Won't Hear Him. | John Valentine, of the Locomotive |Enginemen of the state of Queens- land, told of how the Labor Party in his state had ruled with brilliant suc- cess for the past 12 years, steadily improving the economic condition and world imperialists was taken up and many questions were asked. Of course, in these discussions, after the report of a qualified comrade and after the questions, the members freely express themselves in short speeches. Then the reporter of the evening sums up and a suitable resolution is passed by the meeting. In the Moscow River Factory, referred to above, dur- ing the months of March, April and May of this year, the following general membership meetings of the nu- cleus, among others, were held:—March 16th, subject, re- duction of prices in the Soviet Union; April 18, Report of the party fraction in the Factory Committee of the trade union; April 20, (a) Report of the factory manage- ment (Red Director), (b) Results and Prospects of Work Among Women; May 18, report of the nucleus bureau, and re-election of a new bureau (taken from the 8 months plan of work carried out by the nucleus). Te bureau of the Kamovniki Rayon (section) in Mos- cow, last fall issued instructions on the duties of mem- bers and candidates of the C. P. of the Soviet Union New York for the journey to Geneva |the legislative safeguards of the to “put an end to naval expansion and | workers while the general prosperity naval threats,” Cal Coolidge |of the community forged ahead of donned his naval officer’s uniform as|that of any other state in the com- commander of the fleets of the Amer-|monwealth. He was ready to talk to ican nation, and sailed down to the |any labor audience. Virginia capes to review 98 ships of} But these Australians found few war. The cameras were on hand. He |interested auditors in the American tipped up his cap so that the pictures |capital. There was no general de- could betray his likeness to the com-| mand from trade union officials for mander of the “Pinafore.” Then he |descriptions of the triumphs of work- walked among his guests, remarking ing class effort abroad. Flour Gold Panned by JIM SEYMOUR. | In White Gold, whose title refers ‘to the alleged monetary value of a | lot of dirty stinking sheep, the * es » proletarian | D¥sband with the slaveowner | psy- For the benefit of those proletarian l-chology im ghovwen’-ea the! cue lene readers who never see gold except in : ~ \he is. He does not triumph in the the minted dises of w they re- end simply: beenuss. ts lew. gals ceive sackfuls every payday I an-| Py ag nounce that flour gold is gold in| een economic system sere se minute particles. The prospe jhim a. coward ee i Ma. eis ctor, ‘ : : | mains a cur, sometimes with a pan made for the | thority but ‘he. levied: a Heavy, toll upon himself: he lost something very purpose, but usually with some’ old fryingpan picked off a dump, washes | beautiful, something that would | have prevented his damn fool ac- the goldbearing gravel with infinite patience. removing the dirt from time \4ions had ‘he beer anything but a to time until the bits of gold, being | P : 7 4 contemptible property owner and in- pop one eee ere Paes capable of vipdrenis) less ignoble than :°. mi 4 | conventional maggetry. tapi panes bik ayptian enter tA Parts nis hace ne Po oa because af of sheer novelty of the experience, the ey send Hoots pele and some- it pleases me to speak a good word ae haere for White Gold. In this colyum you can expect a * little of everything, including some Reason For a Fence. junk brass that I have to work off ene somehow, But after all, we are in the| The Christians, having stolen a United States and brass is all wool | Jewish god, are now incensed be- and a yard wide. Aimee McPherson, | cause Jewish schoolchildren,, hereto- for instance... . | fore considered undeviating adherents This is a sad world, fellow kickers, | Of the creed Gescheft ist gescheft, re- and we need to laugh once in a while, | fuse to accept the stolen property. so while I’m doing the panning I'll; ° * be try to give you now and then some- Exodus I. thing to laugh at. When I succeed that’s a nugget, even tho you are enly laughing at my attempts to be funny. But don’t hope for too many, for nowadays, in order to be really funny, a fellow has to find something more idiotic than the capitalist sys- tem, and that isn’t easy. Besides, I searcher, for if I had much of a sense of humor I wouldn’t be trying to con- duct a colyum. However, hold the sack. * Till Sheep Do Us Part. Heretofore the only movie I ever saw that was worth the wear and }tear on the seat of my pants was * * The Last Laugh. But now that White Gold is playing the cheap houses I can add it to my scrawny list. It is a de Mille picture starring | Jetta Goudal, who, unlike the brain- |less babyfaced calendertops that still have a fair monopoly of the business }ean really act. And the photography is perfect. But I am more interested in the story. For the first time I jhave seen an American picture that does not end with the sickening moralistic “must” that attempts to convince us that things that are are right because they are. The world always was this way and it always will be. Clutch, . . . Hold it! don’t know that I’m stich a good) A cartoon shows California’s new criminal code causing a stampede of crooks across the state line. This probably aecounts for the multitude ef abandoned real-estate offices in Los Angeles. ° * * No Wonder They Are Unbalanced. Roger Babson says: “We believe the two greatest losses that this country has thus far suffered are the present neglect of | family |prayers and Sunday observance. | Thus far, the loss is only spiritual, |but, unless rectified, will soon be |economie and very real. Let us, |therefore, hold fast all the more | earnestly to the habit of church at- tendance as the one surviving leg of | the stool on which America’s great- ness rests...” Is this the balance that the powers are always trying to maintain? * * * | English as ‘She Maybe Come, Do you wish to be classily inter- red? Quality and durability of our subterreanization guaranteed. Non- expensive. We desire no remunera- tion other than an_ infinitesimal honorarium. Our one passion is to serve, Dunham and Steele, Stificians to the Elite. ‘ which also gave direction as to the rational use of the time budget. This resolution points out the importance of economizing the time of the individual party member and of the organization. It directs the equal distribution of the party duties, as far as is possible, and declares that the work must be conducted planfully. “It is nec- essary to combat exaggerated plans, the tendency to dis- cuss and solve in one month the greatest possible num- ber of questions and hold the greatest possible number |of meetings. The plans of the lower and the leading bodies must be co-ordinated in detail. The leading organ- izations must refrain from piling campaign upon cam- ,|paign which should be distributed evenly throughout the year,” i esc work of the party must be strictly differentiated from the work of the trade union, co-operative and other non-party organizations, the resolution continues. “The party organizations must refrain from preparing and carrying out all the campaign. . . While giving the general political line, the party organizations, (the rayon committees and the nuclei) must demand from the Com- munist fractions in the non-party organizations greater initiative and independence.” As many active non-party workers must be drawn into the campaigns as possible. Those comrades failing to properly carry out their party work must be disciplined. “(,UESTIONS should not be discussed at party meet- ings which may be discussed at non-party meet- ings.” The agendas should be carefully planned in ad- vance, but they must be worked out collectively, the pre- liminary preparation of the questions and the time budget must not suppress the initiative of the members. Wide discussion of the questions prepared must be al- lowed. The following suggestions are given for reducing the duration of the general membership meetings, and thus economizing the time of the workers:—to limit the agenda, to carefully prepare it, to allow reporters be- tween 15 and 45 minutes, to limit the meetings to two or a maximum of three hours, to post agenda announce- ments beforehand, enabling the workers to prepare for the meetings, to open the meetings on time. | band recommendations are that where one person can handle the work, committees should not be appointed. There should not be a number of bodies deciding one and the same question. Questions already decided in practice should not be dealt with . Long, tedious reports must not be written. “The public opinion of the party organization must be focussed upon this question. Se- vere self-criticism, an exchange of opinions, a maximum of initiative, criticism in the -press, exposal of defects, the popularization of achievements and the resolute car- rying out of the decisions adopted—all this is necessary.” (This resolution, quoted above, was adopted after a study of the manner in which the party nuclei of the Kamovniki rayon were carrying out the decision of the rayon convention on the question of economizing the worker’s time and developing a rational time budget.) Note.—Article 3 will deseribe the structure and func- tions of the departmental nuclei, RETRIBUTION. A missionary in far Nanking his master disobeyed, He pulled a gun upon a Chink who questioned why he stayed, But that heathen Chink had quicker Finger on a christian trigger, So the missionary went aloft to join the big parade. P. R, O'SCRIBED. SEND IN YOUR LETTERS The DAILY WORKER is anxious to receive letters from its readers stating their views on the issues con- fronting the labor movement. It is our hope to de- velop a “Letter Box” department that will be of wide interest to all members of The DAILY WORKER family. Send in your letter today to “The Letter Box,” The DAILY WORKER, 83 First street. New York City. | (Laying the foundation stone of A tall textile worker with a very serious face holds the huge plan in his hand. Then a few carpenters skil- [fully attached it with boards to the | posts of the wooden platform, and, like a banner, it is raised above the ground. That is what our new factory will be like! What a contrast to the old stunted, two-storeyed brick shed of the old Danilovsk factory at the foot of the hills, How grand it all is, how light and airy is this new four- storeyed building of concrete and glass, The ground is already cleared for the foundations. In a few days the work will begin. By the winter the building will be ready. In a year’s time, equipped according to the latest technical pattern with the sanitary and hygienic requirements suitable to the demands of the Soviet country, the factory will increase its output of yarn 2% fold. This factory will be light and airy. It is reckoned to have a volume of 100,000 cubic metres. The ventilation will be exceptional. In the central buildings will be a huge dressing room, connected with all departments, and from here the worker will go straight to his bench without going through other departments or work- shops. There. will be sufficient douches, lifts and other contrivances |to lighten the conditions of labor. This is how the workers’ build for them- selves. Future Owners. The whole of the Soviet territory is covered with a network of new metal- lurgical works, textile factories, mines and petroleum towers, The country is enjoying a universal holiday—a build- ing holiday! During the laying of the foundation stone of the new factory, the crowd was as gay as on May day or November 7. Huge masses of working men and women stood round the tribune. Children roamed through the crowds: “Now, you future owners, quiet”—they were silenced. But the “future owners” conducted themselves as owners, found their way through to the very Presidium table, and one of them, clinging to the table, became transfixed there, listening to the words of the orators, Comrade Kuibyshev, President of the Supreme Council of People’s Econ- omy was on the platform. He said that every new workshop built in the U. S. S. R. gave evidence of the pos- sibility of building Socialism in a technically backward country. “Our country is moving towards that bright goal on behalf of which the October Revolution was accom- plished. The workers of the whole world are watching our building work with intense interest. Every new fac- tory increases their belief that social- ism is greater than capitalism—that socialism will conquer the world.” On behalf of the CC of the Textile keep “We Build for Ourselves” _| the Spinning Factory in Moscow) ii | Workers’ Union, Comrade Melnichan- |sky greets the workers of Danilovsk and the builders of the factory: New Technique. “We suffered a great deal through the old, worn out machines,” he said. |“But we showed that even on those machines we could push forward suc- | cessfully until we could scrape togeth- | | er enough to build new factories, And | if the proletariat was able to conquer | in the arduous conditions possible, | with what speed will it now be able ing to the last word in technique.” This dynamic growth was indicated’ in the figures given at the beginning rector of cotton trust: } “In 1921, in all the factories belong- | jing to the trust there were working | | 9,000 workers; that means that 30% | jot the trade was working. Today | 17,000 workers are employed with | 72,000 spindles, which means that the trade is working 100%. During the coming years, according to the plan of development of the factory, 29,000 | workers will be engaged in the under. takings, with 230,000 spindles.” Comrade Ulanova, a working woman said: “The merchants also built factories, |joy. They were built by our sweat, |the bricks were strengthened by our blood. New we build for ourselves, | we build for our children,” And she called to mind those dark days, when the factories stood de- serted. : “They left us broken throughs, we collected rotten potatoes. ,But though we fed on potatoes, we did not relin- quish our hold on the factories, we held on to them for ourselves. Let the bourgeoisie gnash its teeth when afraid. We shall continue to build ditions of life.” * * * | Soviet Start. A square of red brick is laid down on the ground, five-pointed star had been made out of bricks. The bricklayers in aprons and with smiling faces, gaze with sat- isfaction on their work. It is ex- cellent. According to the builders’ custom, Comrade Kuibyshev holds in his hand a piece of green bottle glass. He carefully “cements” it in the liquid cement, | “Go on, cement it, Kuibyshev; ce- ment it more carefully,” shout the workers, smiling, Comrade Melnichansky lays the brick, the working men and women following. ” The foundation is finished. And from the factory yard there jeomes the loud’ “three cheers” of a huge crowd of workers, “We build for ourselves.” —LEON. | Last week in one of the reports on the Ruthenberg Drive printed in The DAILY WORKER I stated that Comrade Alfred Loseff had secured 10 new members for the Party in the course of the drive. A few days ago I received the following letter from Comrade Isidore Brodowsky, the secretary of one of the branches in the Bronx. “Dear Comrade: A few weeks ago you mentioned about a comrade who brot 10 new members into the Party. It is good work, but I want to report to you that I brot into the Party 30 new members in 3 weeks time and also 80 members into the Interna- tional Labor Defense. I am not telling these things because I want credit, for what I.did is my duty and the duty of every Party mem- ber. I report this because I want the other comrades to know about it so that they can make a real ef- fort to do the same. I want this printed as an example of what every comrade can do. I want to tell you that the Ruthenberg Drive will be for me forever, and not only until the 9th of July. Com- radely yours—Isidore Brodowsky. Here is an achievement that not only comrade Brodowsky can feel proud of, but of which the entire Party can be proud of. Comrade Brodowsky is correct. What he did every comrade can do. Not every one can be so successful, but surely every Party member if he makes a real effort can bring new members into the Party in large numbers. And this is further proven by the fact that we have already taken in hun- dreds of new members in the course jof the Ruthenberg Drive. At the same time the great bulk of the membership has not yet made good. Every Party member must secure at least one new member by the 9th of | July, the birthday of Comrade Ruth- enberg. If every comrade gets on the job now, this will be accomplished, and we will have doubled the Party membership. The key to the success achieved by Comrade Brodowsky lies in the fact that he has also secured 80 new members for the International Labor Defense. For this testifies that he is carrying on widespread propaganda for the campaigns of the Party, that he has no doubt approached hun- dreds of workers on the issue of Sacco and Vanzetti, on the arrests of the fighting furriers and cloak- An Example of Achievement in the Ruthenberg Drive By JACK STACHEL, Acting General Secretary District 2, W. C. P. makers, and that he understands that the Ruthenberg Drive is not merely a mechanicAl or sentimental appeal to the workers to join the Workers (Communist) Party, but that the Ruthenberg Drive is based on the campaigns of the Party. That our Party appeals to the more enlightened and militant workers to join its ranks because our Party is the leader of the struggles of the American workingclass. If all the comrades ap- proach the drive on this basis as did Comrade Brodowsky they will suc- ceed in broadening the influence of the Party and the left wing and at the same time get new members into the Party. An approach on any other basis will not succeed. . * . One more thing mentioned in the letter is important. Comrade Bro- dowsky states that/he will always con- tinue the work for the Ruth Drive and not only until July 9th. This statement proves first thet he understands that the task of build- ing the influence of the Party and to increase the membership is part of the everyday work of every mem- ber, and secondly that he under- stands that the Ruthenberg Drive is an appeal to the American workers in addition to the regular campaigns of the Party, an appeal on the bas’ of what Comrade Ruthenberg for—namely against the war, building up of the power of the ingelass, that Comrade The example of Comrade Brodow. sky is an example worthy to be strived for by every member of ou: Party. : , Let us have more of surh oe T am sure that there will be many who will try to excel this. But Com. rade Brodowsky will not be sorry if they do. And besides Comrade Bro. dowsky is still on the job. Bostonians Attention. A whole Boston truck: party is ar- ranged for Sunday, June 12, 1927, to Franklyn, Mass., Camp Nitgedaiget, Trucks leave 9:30 A. M from New International hall, 42 Whenonha Rox, Ma and the party office 36 Couseway Street. Tickets are $1. We have arranged special sports games, Every body come.. Everybody welcome. Auspises of truck party Industrial department’ of the League and the perty,—Winokur. As of the speech of Comrade Deitch, @- | comrades, but they did not give us i it looks at our successes; we are not | factories in order to improye our con- | | Inside this square, a | | | f i | | | | to advance, equipped as it is, accord- | | i 4 i i {| | 1}