The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 10, 1927, Page 2

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Page Two Organization By CHAPTER II (cont.) Assignment of Work in the Shops. | § At shop nuclei meetings members} should report regularly on conditions in their department. Changes in work and in regulations of we or hours of work or new policies posed by the management and the sentiments and reactions of the work- ers must be carefully noted. The nuclei should discuss the reports thoroughly before definite measures or policies are decided upon. The nucleus executive must assign specific work to each member. Aside from thé regular functions of pub- lishing the shop bulletin, handling the Party Campaigns and the Party propaganda material, members should be assigned to specialize on study of the conditions existing in the shop. They should prepare the proper ma- terial for the nucleus and bring fo ward recommendations for measures to be taken. In connection with the question of wages, data should be col- lected on the requirements of ARNE SWABECK. pro-|t = al Problems| ve or kept saf into the_} bo t the homes s or docu- . members the shop, mbers ments r¢ hould not give the n. but merely the shop nu of such In appr a indu must te ca vhen revealing their Party members In addition to re- Short has been President of the | 1 propaganda ma- Washington State Federation of Labor} should be ap-| for ars. He recently resigned, as he y by indivic felt that he would soon be kicked out have rly been should they mbe . able the until and p: the Par know who the other w It is always prefe nuclei meet right .|cause it has always shown a hostile THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1927 W. Short, Seattle — in Scaby Hospital (By Worker Correspondent) | TACOMA, Wash., June 9.—W. M.| Short, president of the Brotherhood Cooperative Bank of Seattle, was re- cently a patient in the Tacoma Gen- eral Hospital, an institution which has long been on the unfair list of the Tacoma Central Labor Council, be- vttitude to union labor. It is domin- BUILDING TRADES ____ Labor Banker, Lies, HEAD IN. ROLE. OF A STRIKEBREAKER \Orders Return to Work) With, Scab Plumbers | John Halkett, president of the New | York building trades council, has as- }sumed the role of strikebreaker. In a ukase just made he orders all building trades in Brooklyn who had refused to stay on jobs with scab ated by the leading local banker, if he did not. He has always been a bitter enemy of radicals, and helped wreck the Seattle Union Record, tried to haye Gompers smash the Seattle ate. He is a firm believer in plumbers, to return to work. | Workers Defy Order. The order addressed to the business agents of the erafts involved followed \a protest registered with Halkett by |the New York Building Trades Em- |ployers’ Association, who declared that the men were violating an agree- ‘ment with the bosses which is opera- shop| Central Labor Council, helped smash |tive until January, 1928. s| the Farmer Labor party movement in The lie is given to this assertion by leaders of the union who declare ‘Do You Want fo Go With 500 Tourists On Visit to USSR? A study of social conditions and re-| cent cultural developments in Russia cans who will leave New York in July) to visit Leningrad, Moscow and| neighboring points under the guidance of the U.S.S.R. Committee for Cul- tural Relations with Soviet Russia. While there have been several stu- |dent, delegations and other special} travel groups to Moscow, this is the beginning of general tourist travel. | The New York agency co-operating | with the Committee for Cultural Re- lations is the World Tours, Ine., which opened offices to-day at 41 Union Square, Room 803. The Tour- | ist section of the new Swedish American Line “Gripsohlm” has been | chartered for July 14, and it will sail] direct to Leningrad taking 11 days! for the trip. | is planned by a group of 500 Ameri-| CHICAGO BANKERS Tacoma, Wash, Ford WANT PORTION OF Repair Men Strike FLOOD RAKE-OFE Over “60; 40" Plan acatea By Worker © spondent). Negro Labor Congr ess Mea rs See dae Py : Me- Protests Slavery | chanics at the local Ferd agencies are - | on strike against a new piece work CHICAGO, June 9,—Heatled by) plan known as the 60-40 system, in- Mayor William Hale Thompson, a) stalled by the Ford Motor Co. The special train bearing advocates of im- plan was to give the shop 60 per cent mediate flood control measures was|and the worker 40 per cent of labor to leave Chicago todayiifor Washing- | charges on each job. In case work ton to discuss the problem with Presi-| was not satisfactory it was to be dent Coolidge. | done over free, the mechanic there- Many La Salle Street bankers have | fore jeceiving no pay. This -plan been heard to sav hard things about | makes it impossible for mechanics Herbert Hoover lately, because the | to earn a decent wage, so they struck, official director of flood “relief” has There are many local garages em- left out of the picture most of the | ploying union workers, and these get Chicago capital, and has organized among the financiers of Wall Street, with local, flood region, bankers as the distributors of the debt he plans to impose upon the victimized farm- his “credit corporations” principally | most of the repair work, which is frequently necessary on the flimsy flivvers. Meanwhile the local agen- cies have imported a few m& from | the Ford assembling plant in Seattle, and are paying them $120 a month, The American party, which is to be sub-divided into small groups with room and koard, But there is Some Oppose Debt. little work for them to do, and as collaboration and other labor- that their agreement specifically | ideas. states that only union men shall be| cent standard of li ers. ers. id safet ¢ Que conditions ir uld be studied by comrades specially - signed as well as the proble how the workers must go taining compensation in ¢ | cidents. One comrade should be as- signed to study the piece work and speed-up tem, collect the neces- sary material and bring forward recommendations for demands. One} comrade should be assigned to make a thorough study of the publications of the compa if any, find ‘out how their black! em works, the methods of their bosses’ associations, or company unions and make pro- posals to the nucleus on how to act in regards to these. All this material collected is, of course, also necessary | for the shop bulletin and Party pres: Members of the, shop nucleus should} be trained for shop committee func-| tions where such can be established. | They should study union agreements, should be assigned where possible to take care of the language problems so that where necessary workers may be approached in their own language. | Comrades should also be assigned to! take care of Labor Defense activities | in the shop, relief work, etc. | Recruiting of New Members. | The sympathetic connections es- tablished by our shop nuclei with the rs in the shops should greatly itate the recruiting of new mem-| for the Party. Sale of bulletins v1 Party press at factory gates will ke'p and our Party members should in approaching sympathetic workers ‘ vor to establish connection with them socially for the purpose of wit tnem for the Party. of ac-| | pursued energetically. should be taken when new members| are won and brought into the shop| against the infamous crime were held. | consolidated. nucleus to get them interested, to|The speakers emphasized the fact, that|the Home Service Co. get them active and help them to get|this murder was linked with the anti-| were’ abandoned. to d other Party lit only when there is assurance of getting ¢ the act. Di sution of bull erature, as well as speaking at tory gate meeting members of* atory org: by the nucleus in the While ; the prepar- to be done shop, howe all nece must never- theless be recognized that we will not use caution to the extent of hindering our work. Fear of victin tion should never, cause our memb to stop, or even lessen, their i ; fail to accept ar nization c Polish Workers Declare Pilsudski Accessory (Continued from Page One) tarian masses of Pola: the feeling of deep love to the mc and of pro- letarians and a W. Soviet Union and will fight against t of another i ski’s f. Workers Demonstrate (Special To DAILY WOR MOSCOW, June 9. R) The assassina- In Moscow, meetings of protes 1 Pilsud-| There i several a hospital in Tacoma, and Seattle where Short has that are friendly to union u e appeared to feel that a scab hospital was more appropriate for himself. Laundry Girls Out On Strike Against Tacoma Wash Trust (By Worker Corresondent). TACOMA, Wash., June 9.—Mem- bers of Laundry Workers’ Union Lo- cal 42, went on strike Friday at the “|plants of the Home Service Co., and three other laundries. The walkout was a 100 percent success, even the ing out. Three others of the large laundries are still unién and will re- main so, including the largest and most modern plant in the city. The laundries are endeavoring to obtain. scab erews, but have so far had no success. As they only ran | three days last week, they have been junable to keep up with their work | ‘and are rapidly losing customers to union plants. The labor movement is ‘ong in Tacoma, and the girls on jstrike are getting good support and |tion of Woikoff, Soviet Plenipoten-/it will probably not be long until Such re-}tiary Representative in Poland has|the bosses learn that they must give ting activities should always be| provoked an outburst of indignation |in. Great care|from the toilers of the U. S. S. R.| About a year ago six of the lead- |ing laundries, five union, one scab, They call themselves Three plants It was apparently a better understanding of our Party} Soviet policy of the British imperial-|the intention of this company to build so that we may not only make recru-|ists and pointed out that the Polish its, but also keep them. New mem-/government was responsible for the bers should always be given specific] murder. Resolutions adopted unani- tasks to perform within their degree|mously stress the aspirations of the of training in Party work. Shop nuc-| toiling masses of the Soviet Union lei will find greater possibilities than| towards peace, but at the same time membership for the work and keep| them active at their tasks, but it| must be well organized and system- ized. Dangers of Victimization. Due caution is always necessary in conducting the activities of the shop nuclei. Members active in Communist work, exposing the objectionable con- ditions within the shops are easily open to victimization by the bosses. Examples of such victimization are not numerous as yet in this country but they are bound to increase as the work of the shop nuclei becomes in- tensified. There are, however, real dangers only if the elementary rules of caution are neglected. These rules are the following: While the nucleus becomes known for its activities on behalf of the workers in the shop the identity of the indivi- dual members must not be revealed,| particularly is this true for those on| THE WORKERS’ CAMP Camp Nitgedaiget of Boston other Party units for enthusing the| emphasize the readiness of the toilers| wait for this. of the U. charge the Soviet Government to de- jmand from the Polish government sat-| isfaction and severe punishment of the assassin, and liquidation of the White Guardist organizations in Pol -and, The meetings ended with a huge demonstration wherein several hun- dreds of thousands participated. Par- ticularly impressive were the demon- strations before the building of the People’s Foreign Commissariat, which lasted till late in the evening. The demonstrators carried thousands of banners and placards with inscriptions of protest, indignation and readiness to fight. In the demonstration Chines dents of Sun Yat-sen Univers hool participated and together with the Moscow proletariat demonstrated not only thei: pathy, but also their readiness to protect the Soviet Union, | Huge demonstrations of protest were held in Leningrad and Kharkov and in all cities and big towns of the tudents of the International Military | Grand Opening June 19, 1927. ° All information and reservations at Ww ’ Bookshop, 32 Leverett St. Boston, Tel. Hay 2271. Directions: Go to Franklin, Mass., there take Summer St. to Camp. |U. S. 8S. R. The Bureau of Aviation decided to name after Voikoff the first airplane {of the flotilla, “Our reply to Chamber- |lain.” Say’s He'll Hop Pacific. SAN FRANCISCO, June 8 — Around the world in twelve days— with the first hop from San Francisco to Tokyo. That is the airplane flight being | considered today by Lieut. Bert Hall, famous ace. Lieut. Hall said he expected the 6,500 mile air jaunt from San Fran- | ciseo to Tokyo could be made in from 50 to 60 hours. This ambitious air | feat will be attempted sometime dur- ing August and no later than Sept, | 1, Lieut. Hall asserted, | ; As a Doctor Sees It By B. LIBER With 64 Pencil Sketches by the author. This _ interesting new volume is the ' kind of a book that, can be recommend- ed to every worker. A critic says: “It certniniy sums ap | WASHINGTON, June 9—The American wheat crop this year will | fall considerably below reeent years, | Secretary of Agriculture Jardine told President Coolidge today at the White the total of human misery that a physician House. te ante te ois a Jardine, who has just ‘returned erent city ramnti~ from a swing around the wheat belt, | said the government report to be is- | sued late today would show an even | greater reduction than the 33,000,000 | bushels shrinkage estimated in the last government report cally as anything I have read” $1.50 Postpaid. The DAILY WORKER PUB. CO. 83 First St, New a iw up a scab organization. For some time they have been laying off union workers and hiring non-union ones. |Once they had built up their scab |erew they would have tried to force jout the union. But the girls did not S. 8. R. to defend to the | expired on June first, they went out) |last the conquests of October and|at once to the great indignation of The drivers are not yet out but are expected to quit in a day or two unless the strike is set- tled. {the manager. | Some workers in the Tacoma laun-| dries are receiving as low as $18 a jweek. The Tacoma workers receive jless than is paid for the same work |in Seattle, Auburn, Kent, and other towns in this district. But Tacoma laundries are notorious for high pric- es. Much of the local laundry work is done by’ Japanese at low prices. | | Their laundries are small family af- |fairs, long hours, primitive methods jand insanitary conditions prevailing. |The union wants the same scale in Tacoma that is paid in Seattle. As usual, the head .of the local laundry trust peddles out a line of | bunk in the local capitalist press, He {claims that the strike was entirely | unexpected, meaning that he wanted |the workers to wait until he had scab screws ready to take their jobs. He also claims that the workers did |not want to, go out, but were forced |to by the union officials. This is a lie. Under the aggressive and mili- tant leadership of Miss Gertie Wetz- lel, secretary of local 42, the local |laundry workers have built up a j strong organization, and they will stand by it, and win their fight. Tacoma is a low wage town. While it is a strong union town as compared to many, organization is mostly among the more skilled workers. The |lumber mills employ thousands of |unorganized workers who receive $2.60 to $3.40 a day in most cases, and are never sure of a full week's work. Because of the fow wages, the workers have tittle to spend, and the result is that local merchants are al- | ways complaining that business is poor. It is the ambition of the local business interests to make the $3.40 scale of the lumber mills a maximum wage. They can not do it. Over a year ago an attempt was made to lock out the building trades when the workers demanded the sam@a wage scale that is paid in Seattle, Port- land, and Grays Harbor. This failed and only one important building has been built since by the low paid scab labor, this being the Masonic Temple. The attempt to defeat the laundry workers will fail in the nats way. non-union girls at one laundry com- | When the agreement! employed on the various jobs. Workers in the trades involved in Halkett’s order refuse to be stam- peded into returning to work and are indignant at his attempt to foree them into the position of scabs, | Stand With Plumbers. On two big construction jobs in Brooklyn .all the men had dropped jtheir tools last “weck, according to ;Dan Quigley, business manager of Local 791, who reported this fact at a meeting just held. These are lo- |cated at Eastern Parkway and Wash- \ington Ave., and Lafayette Ave, and |Ashland Place, On several other jasking to be taken off the jobs on ac- |count of the presence of seab plumb- ers, Workers in the locals affected are |giving the cold shoulder to Halkett’s order, declaring that the struggle of ‘the 8,000 striking plumbers in Brook- lyn was a situation of vital concern ‘to their own progress. Attack Order. Morris Rosen, of Local 791, a lead- jer of the progressives of the Carpen- ters’ Union, led the fight on the order of Local 376, whose charter was re- voked because of its fight against the bureaucracy in the international union, Rosen, in moving that-a protest be |sent to the district council of car- penters and to the Building Trades |Council, declared that such an order jis equivalent to forcing the men to | Scab. ‘. ' | “The plumbers’ struggle is our | struggle,” he declared. “If they lose their fight for the five-day week, it jwill be a signal for an offensive against the entire building trades.” Adopt Motion. | The motion, which was adopted by jan overwhelming majority, was ac- | tively supported by MeClarkin, trus- tee of the union, and other members, who declared that they would under no circumstances obey the orders of | the officials to return to the jobs, Britain Fighting Egyptian Effort To Run Country LONDON, June 7.—Lord Lloyd, | British High Commissioner in Egypt, |has been instructed to resume “con- _versations” with the Egyptian Gov- (ernment, after the recent exchange of |notes concerning -the control of the | Egyptian Army. |The powerful Zaghlul party has been insistent that the Army be taken ‘completely out of British control. The | British Government, while denying | that anything in the nature of an ulti- -matum has been sent to Egypt, is ‘jealously guarding the power which it ha’ usurped under the guise of a “henevolent” protectorate, and is un-| derstood to be firm in its stand that | all efforts to detach the Egyptian | Army from British control must cease. Between this demand which is backed up by the guns of the three British battleships recently dispatched to Egyptian ports and.the pressure of the Zaghlul forces, Sarwat Pasha and his so-called “moderate” government, recently placed in the saddle by Brit- ain, are steering unhappily as be- tween two horns of a dilemma. Nungesser Search Begun. HALIFAX, N. S., June 9. — The monoplane Jeanne D’Are, in which Major Cotton plans to search the North Atlantic coast for trace of Cap- tuins Nungerser and Coli, missing French trans-Atlantic fliers, was launched today at St. Johns, Nf. The plane was flown to the Cuidi Vidi Lake Aerodrome, which will be the starting point of the aerial search, No Alaska-Greenland Flight. SEWARD, Alaska, June 9.—Cap- tain Hubert Wilkins has abandoned his attempt to fly from Alaska to Greenland, according to advices re- ceived here today from Fairbanks, Wilkins and his party arrived at Fairbanks yesterday and related how, after they were 200 miles out, en- jobs, he reported, the carpenters were | jof the officialdom. Rosen was for-| |merly president and business agent| jwhen it reaches Russia, will travel with interpreters and be received by delegations at the various factories ‘and institutions, which are on the intinera. Because of the housing shortage in Russia, such a tour would be impossible unless arrangements were made with some such group as the Committee for Cultural Relations | which is responsible for rooms and meals for all visitors at all points.) One of their residences will be a for- mer castle which is now a dormitory for one of the engineering societies. This first Russian tour will last) | six weeks, returning to the U. S. on} Labor Day. Other tours will be ar- ranged by the World Tourists as pub- lic interests warrants. | | | ‘Locomotive Engineer Convention Worries Over Labor Banking | CLEVELAND, June 9. — Behind closed doors and in executive session, the convention of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers has opened | here. | To judge from the reports emanat- ing from the convention, it would ap- | pear rather to be a businessmen’s than a workers’ convention. | The Brotherhood is interested in several banks—among them being} |now the Mitten Bank of Philaedlphia, | with which the Brotherhood bank in |that city recently merged. This is | “high finance” and takes the mind jof the engineers—or at least the |bureaucracy—away from the dis- agreeable question of everyday work —hours, wages, working conditions. Then there is the town building en- terprise in Venice, Fla., in which the Brotherhood has invested money and energy. ft. It would appear as if the condition of the engineers in this country, des- pite the fact that the engineers or part of them belong to the “aristo- \eracy of labor,” would be of greater moment to the convention, composed, as it is of men at the throttle, than | business enterprises. But the offi- ,¢cialdom which is steering into the |field of “labor capitalism’ and is deeply enmeshed in its already thinks | | otherwise. d | Perhaps that is one of the reasons that the convention is behind closed doors. Workers are beginning to re- |alize that the aspirations of the of- ficialdom are quite apart from the everday struggle of the workers. There are about 5,000 visitors in the city as a result of the convention, this including the 500 delegates, The convention will last 30 days, it is reported, and will be replete with balls, outings, ete, ‘Man in Jail for Life Practically Dead, Is _ Verdict of High Court, A person sent to prison for life for murder is legally dead, Justice Fawcett held in Brooklyn Supreme Court yesterday when he granted | Mrs. Blanche Irene Gallaway Webster, wife of Harold F. Webster, convicted | slayer, the right to resume her maiden name and inherit her husbands’ prop- erty. Webster was. sentenced to twenty years to life imprisonment’ in Sing Sing for killing his mother-in-law. Mussolini Foe On Trial ROME, June 9.—Gino Lucetti was | | placed on trial today before a military tribunal on charges of having made an attempt on the life of Premier Mussolini last September. Lucetti is alleged’to have thrown a bomb at the Premier’s car as he drove from his summer residence. bomb hit the car but rolled away and soul without injuring the prem- er, Doheny Wants Monopoly. CHICAGO, June 8—Unless anti- trust laws are modified to permit re- stricted production, American oil companies face a long period of Pa hee "Las E, L. Doheny, ¢ oil magnate, declared today. The hero of = Dome agitates for a complete e f There is a large and influential | they are incompetent to do this right, section of business men, especially the local agencies are at present al- among the manufacturing interests | most idle. of Chicago, which has nothing to pro- fit from the mortgaging and debt) slavery the Hoover plan provides for | Southern farmers, and desires instead | a direct gift of rehabilitation funds | from the United States treasury to | the Mississinpi victims, so they can, continue to purchase the products of | Chicago and other lake ports. Advocates of both these factions are understood to have pooled their forees to bring pressure on Coolidge. - * 2 BOOKS for your Negroes Protest Slavery. CLEVELAND, June 9.—At a re-| cent meeting the American Negro Labor Congress here took action| against the system of slavery that prevails in the flooded lowér reaches of the Mississippi Valley, in the fol- lowing resolution: | WHEREAS, thousands of poor col- | ored and white farmers and laborers are the chief sufferers in the Missis- sippi flood disaster; and | WHEREAS, a system of partial | slavery due to the fact that Secre- tary of Commerce Hoover releases} the Negroes only to the owners of | the plantations from which they) came; and | WHEREAS, our brothers have been | and are being treated in a most! shameful manner and are not allowed | any freedom of action for themselves, but are made to submit to the dicta- tions of the relief committee, who | have been acting in an utterly hypo- | critical and unfair manner, increas; | ing rather than alleviating the suf- | fering of our brothers; and OPEN AIR MEETING Look at the Prices! Many of the books are listed at reduced rates. Take advan- tage of this. On all orders of $5.00 or more, from this list, a 20% discount will be al- At 5 Cents AMATION—Jay. i FOR TR Bell. REDS AND THE STRIKE—C. B. UNDERGROUND RADICALISM— John Pepper THE BRITISH STRIKE—Wm. F. Dunne. BLOOD AND STEEL—Jay love- x stone. WHEREAS, the colored laborers in | TWO SF iCHES by Karl Marz. i i } 3 § LE > NDIA — the flooded valley have no objection | dha purii Makindvate. to working, but do strenuously object |@ WHITE TERRORISTS ASK FOR MERCY—Max Bedacht to being cursed, beaten and forced to work on the levees under the guns of white civilians; and RUSSIAN TRADE UNIONS, CONSTITUTION OF SOVIET RUSSIA. | WHEREAS, they are not allowed to leave the relief camps to seek work wherever they can, without permis- sion of the white plantation owners; therefore be it RESOLVED that the Cleveland lo- At 10 Cents TRADE UNIONS IN AMERI Foster-Cannon-Browé: THE LEFT WING IN THE MENT UNIONS—Margaret Lar- | out scores of square miles of rich cot- | cal of the American Negro Labor! Congress do hereby protest and call | upon the president to take immediate action in the flood district so as to afford the colored flood victims pro- tection and the same freedom of ac- tion as is given the white flood vic- | tims, and so that both white and col-_ ored flood victims as American citi- | zens may be given the right to leave | the camp as they see fit. } e,.¢ * } Army Floods Farmers. HOUMA, La., June 9.—Destructive work of incompetent U. S. army en-| gineers, the same engineers whose | policies of levee building made cer- tain the present destructive flood, was sternly rebuked by about two hundred farmers here today. A dam erected above the town of Mouma, Louisiana, by the army, was | backing up the water and drowning | ANTS OF- IMP. ALISM Jay Lovestone. CLASS COLLABORATION—HOW TO FIGHT [T—Bertram Wolfe. ORGANIZE THE UNORGANIZED -—Wm. Z, Foster. WORLD LABOR UNITY—Scott ERAL STRIKE—John JIM_ CONNOLLY AND FREEDOM—G. Shuller. PRINCIPLES OF COMMUNISM— Engels. COMMUNISM VS. I1SM—Bishop ‘own, MARX _AND E $3 ON REVO- LUTION IN AM ICA. e THE GREAT STRATB- GIST—Losovsk: STOPPING A WAR—Scott Near- ing. RUSETA TURNS EAST — Scott Nearing. GLIMPSES OF THE SOVIET RB- PUBLIC—Scott Nearing. Pty LAWS OF SOVIET RUS- MARRIAGE LAWS OF SOVIET RUSSIA. AMER) IRISH CHRISTIAN- 100%—A Story by Upton Sinclair. THE DAMNED AGITATOR AND OTHER "STORTBS—Michael sold, ton and sugar cane. The dam was not needed to save the little city of | Houma, except in the opinion of the engineers and the police they had won over to their view. After vainly expostulating for some days, the im- periled farmers blew up the dam. Lindbergh to Get Cash at Breakfast in His Honor on June the 17th Col. Charles A. Lindbergh will be- presented with the $25,000 Raymond | Orteig prize which he won by making his New York to Paris flight, at a breakfast to be given in his honor the Hotel Brevoort on Friday morn- ing, June 17, according to an an- nouncement made yesterday. Ford’s Friends Hit Back? CHICAGO, June 9.—Aaron Sapiro, ¢ | Chicago lawyer and farm cooperative organizer and I’, J. Lisman, New York banker and traction financier, were de- fendants today in a $900,000 breach of contract suit brought by Andrew Stevenson, Chicago banker and rail- road reorganization expert, and James R. Howard, Clemons, Ia., president of the American Economic Institute, Breach of contract in the reorgani- zation, of several mid-western rail- roads on plans Stevenson claims he originated, through yep in (the stocks, was charged in the complaint, At 15 Cents CHINA IN RBVOLT—Stalin, eto. PASSAIC—Albert Welsbord. THE WATSON-PARKER LAW— Wm, Z%. Foster. THE THREAT TO THE LABOR MOVEMENT—Wm, }°, Dunne. ENIN AND THE TRAD UNIONS—Lowovely, On all orders under $1.00 Mark a eross over the bo Want—or specify wumb coples—add remittance anu to the ‘DAILY WORKER PUB 33 First St. New You Enclosed $ books marked above. Name ..... Street .. State wc...

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