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BOSTON AND CHESWICK °M By JAMES P. CANNON. 'ARDLY had the executioners of Boston completed their work of burn- ing to death the two victims of capitalist justice, Sacco and Vanzetti than their prototypes of Pennsylvania were already at work stirring the! cauldron of a new frame-up in which 20 miners of the little coal town of Cheswick have already been indicted and await trial. | | tween the two cases is an even closer one, for the arres | arose, out of the attack made by state co: The connection be-! | in Cheswick acco-Vanzetti ecks upon a | protest meeting held by the workers of Cheswick in solidarity with their two comrades in Boston. With the brutality for which they are notorious, the troopers charged into the meeting, dealing blows to men, women and children with their clubs, blinding them with tear gas and trampling under | | | the hoofs of their horses those who Vanzetti case is being cooked up, | many expert hands for such a job. | ers were severely injured and wounded in the course of this bestial attack. And in addition, one of the state troopers was shot and killed. It is not known who killed the trooper. of, however, is that every effort will be made to victimize the arrested miners who have already been indicted on charges of inciting to riot, re-| sisting an officer and unlawful assembly. | and in black Pennsylvania there are} | came in their way. Scores of work-| | | What we can be pretty sure} | | { It means that another Sacco-| | } The International Labor Defense, which so ardently fought for life and freedom for Sacco and Vanzetti, | ing force in the protest movement, , Which was the organizing and driv-| quite naturally takes up the defense} | of the Cheswick miners, who have already been indicted on three counts} | for their part in the fight for Sacco || and Vanzetti. It is all a part of our| task of fighting with all our resources and might against the imprison-| ment or torture or death of any worker who is a victim of the infamous | American capitalist institution of the frame-up system. The I. L. D. is} | providing legal defense for the arrested miners and will conduct a vigorous | campaign, with all the means at its disposal, to prevent the success of | this new frame-up, to prevent making Cheswick another Boston. HERESY HUNT ON IN YORKVILLE: 1S LED BY STRATON Uldine Does Not Lisp, Says Divine The«Rev..John Roach Straton, the} chief holy'man of New York City, has | appeared in Yorkville court with a complaint against Charles Smith, president of the American Society for the Advancement of Atheism. Adjournment of the case was had for a week after Magistrate Gott- {great dervish of baptistry since “he \told the lawyer for the defense that ;“he was to be respected in this THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1927 MUNIST INTERNATIONAL STATES (Continued from Page 1). {claim that these bankrupt philistines | |its declaration of October 16, 1926,| represent ‘the only genuinely revolu- solemnly undertook to cease the fac-|tionary Leninist’ organization as dis- tional underground work against the |tinct from the ‘degenerate’ Commu- party. |nist International. “This promise was given under the direct threat of expulsion of the lead- | =r a ee fie “While employing, Maslow and ers of thé Opposition,” Trotsky and | Souvarine as megaphones of the ul- Zinoviev, from the Central Commit-|/ BS tee of the Communist Party of thie | Tarlett. sag -aieht--spostles. at tots US aR Bub one: woveey few | munism abroad, the Oppostion with-;{ ee aaNet li J. aed inued- wi days later this August promise met [1 the Us is} epee sae aeth the same fate as the declaration of |E'OWNS Pereistance and Brow sa | the 16th of October. The Opposition Tronbery, “OR Qaaae te hd in the most contemptuous manner |COnCePmns the aeaders é of ty aa violated the promise it gave to the ethene bi os epee dd ne o whole Party and to the whole Inter- |the-U./Sa.6: Baett spread deli SEC | national, and thereby made the con- ly endvero ema ralse a) eee ins tinuation of Trotsky and Vuyoviteh |e Central Committes of the Com: as members of the Executive Com- |MU7ist Party intends to abandon 1e | mittee of the Comintern absolutely {manda peeeeen trades it sneer denna le i jously spreads deliberate slander re-| : fe Violate Pledge garding the position of the Central | “Notwithstanding the promise it Committee on foreign debts, regard- | gave to the August plenum of the |im& alleged concessions to the Kulak | |Central Committee and the Central (boss peasant) ; regarding the policy Control Commission, the Opposition of ‘the Comiaeey in China. continued to form its organizational| “Notwithstanding the resolution of | |centers which in fact represent noth-|the August plenum of the Central ing more nor less than an attempt to Committee of the Communist Party form embryonic nuclei for a second |of the U. S. S. R. to which the Op- Trotskyist party parallel with the | position undertook to submit concern- Communist Party of the U. S. S. R.|ing the opening of discussion for one | Spread Slanders. s REASONS FOR TROTSKY-VUYOVITCH EXPULSION FROM EXECUTIVE \ tions of the: Party fight in defense of its unity, who guard the element- ary principles of its discipline with- out which the Party and Comintern as military organizations of the working class exist,—such an attitude towards Party discipline is of cours connected with a definite attitud towards the Party and the Commun- ist International. Neither the Com- munist Party of the U. S. S. R. nor the Comintern as such figured in Comrade Trotsky’s speech as the su- preme organ of the revolutionary proletariat. Comintern Reviled. “The world organization of the revolutionary proletariat, namely the | Communist International and _ it: leading section, the Communist Par- ty of the U. S. S. R., is described in unison with the whole yellow bour- geois press as a crowd senselessly and dumbly following various leaders. | “*At the present time,’ said Com- rade Trotsky in his speech, ‘not a singe organization discusses or de- cides. They merely carry out instruc- tions. Even the presidium of the Comintern is no exception.’ The Op- position declaration made at the August plenum against the Opposi tion abandoned its theory of the so-| ' UNIONISTS FROM ALL OVER WO ANNIVERSARY JUBILEE IN-THE SOVIET UNION’ MOSCOW, U.S. S. R., Sept. 30.—Over 1,200 foreign guests are ex- pected to come in connection with the October celebrations. ber includes about 20 workers’ delegations in which 600 people are par- ticipating, These delegations will attend October celebrations in Moscow, | Leningrad and other big centres of the U. S. S. R. | Unity Committees have been formed in Austria, Germany, Czecho- 4 | TO ATTEND This num- | | Slovakia and Belgium for the organization of workers’ trips to the U. S. S. R. The delegations will begin cow for the Jubilee celebrations. ‘Toulon Sailors Mutiny at Time of Prison Fight (Continued from page 1) ships of defenseless Russian towns, is the idol of the.French sailors, sol- diers and workers, and the brutality i |of his treatment by the French rul- | ing class courts has aroused a Te- | entment which cannot be accurately | | quences are dreaded by the capital-| | ists. * * * Defenseless Prisoners Unafraid. | TOULON, Oct. 2.—The story of the! | struggle of the 64 Communists, sol-| |diers and sailors imprisoned in the | |naval prison at Toulon, against an} | overwhelming force of prison guards | jand the full complement of the naval | gendarmes stationed at the jail, as:| |Ssumed heroic proportions today, as} details began to come across the | ‘Union Officials Sign ‘auged at present but whose conse- | tablish a tempora to assemble here in October. Some of them will make a tour through the U. S, S. R. and will return to Mos- { ~~ Truce with Operators (Continued from Page 1). loading machines, the use of which is spreading rapidly thruout Illinois s in ether coal fields, the miners have no assurance that even the pres- ent wages will continue in force. The joint commission is empowered to es- cale, when it gets around to it, to endure from Nov. 1927 to March 31, 1928, and in case it cannot agree on this scale, it is to add one more member to its number, and abide by the majority vote. In any event, since there are no restrictions or reservations in the present contract to the contrary, the unity of the miners’ union is definite- ly smashed, unless the miners them- selves repudiate the settlement. The settlement will be on the basis of dis- tricts, comprising a state or a part . i it conti ri e Fifteenth Party cables. court.” The magistrate also upheld|At the same time it continued to|month prior to the Fi ¥ | ealled “Thermidor? | Of AARERLE: Sud Mlbve We HO avian e 180. ae H Sepa sitio ane : Sa PEN | ge- |the contention of the plaintiff that/maintain and strengthen its connec-|Congress, the Opposition demands | “This, however, did not prevent How the workers and LEO aut for thé terms of contract to jan article in one of the magazines introduced by the prosecution which referred to the holy ghost and the Virgin Mary might well have shocked the sensibilities of the shaman of the Calvary Baptist Church. | “There are millions who believe in jthe bible and its tenets,” said Mag- jistrate Gottlieb. “To those, such an |article as this most surely would be |shocking and outrageous.” Judge Plays Up to Parson. When Attorney Snitkin objected to |some of the questions asked Straton |by the assistant district attorney as “leading to conclusions,” he was | promptly informed by the magistrate |that “men of the calibre and intelli- |gence of the plaintiff could not be} lieb to all intents and purposes con- | led. paws : stituted himself the defender of this|,. Attorney Snitkin, in arguing a mo- city’s greatest publicity hunter and/| tion for dismissal of the case, point- insisted that former Judge Leonard|@4 out that it has taken “six months Snitkin, acting for Smith, should use the title of “doctor” in addressing a question to the harassed business agent of god. Pained by Pamphlets. caton, who professes to believe S jfor the literature and blasphemous | material to outrage the sensibilitie: jof Mr. Straton.” | | The motion for dismissal was de- | nied. | May Set Bad Precedent. | | Speaking in front of the Yorkville i | | tions with various renegade groups |that discussion be opened immediate- | abroad, including the Maslov-Fischer group in Germany, Souvarine in France, etc. “The disruptive work in the Com- | munist Party of the U. S. S. R. was} supplemented by disruptive work in | the Comintern. To the menace of a formation of a second party outside and against the Communist Party of the U. S. S. R. was added the menace of the creation of a new ‘Fourth In- ternational’ put side by side with and against the Comintern. Fraternize with Enemies of Labor. “At a time when the international position of the U. S. S. R. has be- come extremely acute and when im- perialist intervention hangs directly every way tries to force sion in violation of | | ly, and ii jimmediate discus | party decigions. Secrigy, Printing Office. | “The discovery a few days ago of a secret printing office of the Op-} | position demonstrates with exception- jal clearness how far the Opposition | diverged from the Party and the| |Comintern. At the same time it was revealed that in organizing this print- ing office the Opposition unhesitat- ingly employed the service of non- |party bourgeois intellectuals connect- ed with shady, politically suspicious land avowedly anti-Soviet elements, \the opposition thus becoming, consci- : 2 | ousky=or unconsciously, not only ide- over the first proletarian | state, the |ologigally- bat also organizationally Opposition openly allies itself with |the center for the crystallization of bee, winch tepresent she worst 21] strata hostile to the proletariat dregs of the international labor land which find the proletarian reg- movement and which stand on the|ino irksome and strive to overthrow verge of direct counter-revolution; which spread venomous slander about the U. S. S. R. among the European proletariat and strive to paralyze the “Calied to account at a meeting of (the Presidium of the Executive Com- mittee of the Comintern held on | forgeries.’ | Comrade Trotsky from once again ut- tering venomous phrases such as ‘Thermidor course,’ and ‘Bonapartist Moreover, leading bodies of the Comintern and the Commun- ist Party of the U. S. S. R. were directly charged with being ‘usurp- ers,” Advocate Party Disruption. “‘The authority of the Presidium of the Executive Committee of the Comintern,’ said Comrade Trotsky, ‘lasts only one year. The arbitrary prolongation of this authority is a} usurpation, Above all questions | tional self-preservation of the Stalin- | Bukharin group.’ In this way is es- timated the present acting leading organs of the Communist movement; in this way trying to explain their open refusal to submit to Party dis- cipline. Comrades Trotsky and Vuyo- vitch have warned beforehand that Party Congress and the Sixth Con- gress of the Comintern as in any | soldiers and sailors, fearfully crowd-| ed into the tiny cells of the foul, | damp jail for their refusal to fight) |for the Frénch imperialists in Syria, | Moroceo and China, persisted in their | protests against the sentencing of. | Marty and Duclos by shouting “Down! | With War! Long Live Marty!” ‘now | forms one of the high points in the! | recent history of the struggle of the| rench sailors and soldiers against} the imperialists. | The battle in the naval prison: be- | gan when, to the threats of the prison |guards ,the uncowed workers andj expire simultancously, Lewis Glad of Defeat. John L. Lewis, international presi- dent of the U. M. W. A. has issued to the public thru the press his as- surance that the separate agreement in District 12 practically ends the strike. Lewis, in. a jubilant mood, talked of “the settlement of the I- linois strike having a great moral effect on the other striking miners.” Ohio Settlement Too? Word has been received here, quot- ing-G. W. Savage, secretary of dis- 4 Ons \the dark corridors stands the question of the organiza- strains of the Intern imprisoned soldiers and sailors: made} trict 6 (in Ohio) U. M. W. A, as say- ring with the ing that he “would welcome” a separ- 2 rs ational. .. ate agreement on the same lines as Resisted With Tools. The same informa- they will not regard the Fifteenth | The workers seized their pr | tools and, resisting step by = | gained the |and there barricaded | During the struggle scores of other prisoners broke from their cells, in order to come to the aid of their! comrades, and throwing themselves upon the guards succeeded in gain- | |ing a temporary victory. Seeing that they were defeated by | = Step. second floor of the jail themselves. | , that=in-: Iilinois. n’ tion states, however, that J. L. Good; retary of the Ohio Coal Operators Association, declared that the settle- ment in Illinois would not affect the situation in Ohio, Strengthens Operators. Meanwhile Rice Miller, spokesman for the Hlinois mine owners has made quite clear exactly what the settle- ment means to the mine owners, stat- ‘ ; ri degree authoritative to them. te “ pe es all the ancient dogmas and who! court after adjour rs ;_| will of the European proletariat to hace wink : ; bene tateeitag ing, “The period from October to’ Feb- preaches the fearsome religion of the| dent of ae pean eens eS defend the U. S. S. R. with toile | Septem ls perigee is ich “ ‘The apparatus, declared’ _Com- of the Lele pare oe firs Se ruary each year always develops a most revolting sections of the old tes-|vancement of Atheism stated that|@bout. ‘Thermidor,’ ‘Degeneration,’ | ’ ¥YOV! 1 ent’ Tong. ‘steps | 3202. ,Ttotsky, is now. preparing 9/116 pa Bers called upon their Statin maximum demand for coal a8 to the ~ tament, claims that he has been out- ‘becoming Kulakized’ (boss peasant’! themselves Treyges: td PS| congress of their own preliminary- raged in an intolerable manner by the receipt and perusal of atheist litera- tu ent him by the defendant. referring to Uldine Ut- ley, the girl evangelist who is a pro- tege of Straton’s, in an uncomplimen- tary manner, and attributed to Mr. Smith, seem to have irked the holy man beyond endurance. His defense next Saturday’ he would produce | some material from the pen of the | pastor that “will match in obscenity jany the complainant can offer.” | In newspaper circles the charges | preferred by Straton are regarded as {another limelight stunt planned by |that assiduous publicity-seeker. | Tt is believed, however, that the jcase may have serious consequences away from the Comintern, away from col-|Leninism and towards the Maslow- lapse of these groups which is parti- | Souvarine group. When at ie cularly illustrated by the results of | with maliciously violating ay a recent elections in Altona, where the \cipline Comrade ‘Trotsky opent a =| ultra-left allies of the Opposition of |elared that the discipline of the Bol- the Communist Party of the U. S. S. jshevist Party is not obligatory for R. obtained little more than 300 him. orientation) etc. “Notwithstanding the utter Flaunts Discipline. appointed workers who must authore ize upper stratum apparently to con- duct this work in the future.’ “The Presidium of the Executive Committee of the Comintern does not to surrender. The demand was met | by a tremendous burst of laughter, followed immediately by a renewe and mighty singing of the Interna-| tional. But. the trapped prisoners! | realized their impossible position and, | number of users, because of seasonal requirements for household and al- lied purposes,” said Mr. Miller. “In view of this fact, it seems wisdom to accept this truce agreement and thereby guarantee an adequate sup- regard it as necessary to deal again in order to inform the Toulon work. Ply of fuel to prevent any possible in detail with the renegade political ers of their plight, many comrades | consumer anxiety panicky buying or arguments repeatedly condemned by| opened their veins and dyed their| excessive prices.” the Communist Party of the U. S..S.| prison rags in the blood. They waved; Mr. Miller is of the opinion that R. and the Comintern as social-dem- | the red flags, thus formed, from the| there will be an abundance of coal ocratie deviations which Comrades |loop-holes of the prison walls where! by next February, and with the ad- re Magis i v3 s iti continues to | of her before Magistrate Gottlieb was| for the defendant and for the free.| ‘°°? the Opposition co almost as impassioned as have been | dom of expression on religious ques- his assaults upon those heretics who tions, by establishing a precedent of |} 4 3 t | “In his written speech he stated at ‘the bureaucratic discipline based NERSHIP, ATION, ETC., th on a false line of policy is not an) Trotsky and Vuyovitch tried to devel- they were seen by the crowds of! vent of summer, the mine owners scoff at the story of Jonah and the| punishment for “violating sensibili- whale. bse ties” of those who claim to hold the, Is Strong for Uldine. key to celestial truths as does the! Relating alleged conversation chief medi man of New York’s With the president of the atheist as-| tribal ‘religion sociation relative to the merits and demerits of this inspired and per- sonable young lady, the staunch de-| fender of amphibious christianity told) 4 the court: “T denied to him that Miss Utley n Two Fight, One Killed. HARTFORD, Conn., Sept. 26.— man known only as “Springfield wee ig dead of a fractured skull i and Edward Gannon is in a local hos- pepe, bss at bar goa es Phag | Pital with a fractured leg following she was being commercialized by pel ane cee verses He oe es oe f 2 ’ | rday night. ligious exploiters. i | No charge will be made against An “Impartial” Magistrate. | Gannon until he is able to leave the Magistrate Gottlieb evidently was| hospital. Coroner Costello is investi- impressed by the demeanor of the! gating the. case. Last Opportunity! To Participate in the JUBILEE TOUR TO SOVIET RUSSIA Registration Closes in a Few Days! Sailing October 14th, 1927, via Cunard liner “Carma- nia” and return Dee. 15th (8 weeks) to London -- Leningrad -- Moscow published New York, “The , except Sunday , for October 1, 1%: » of New York York Notary d_ county : 4 ‘ . i Bert Miller, who,| proletarian discipline so appreciated of t rupting the Party.’ Public in andj atoresaid, |rade Trotsky refuses to submit to appear ees phe Mee take ther tae tne jand characterized, He therefore con- {Business Manager of "The _ Daily | siders it unnecessary to defend Com- Worker,” and that the following is,|rades Serebriakoy, Preobrazhensky to the best of his knowledge i ilies, a true statement of the owner-|and Sharov who, as they themselves ment, ete., of the afore- i Fére ahaa i publication for the date shown jadmitted, were organizers of the anti the above Piaget 7 or, ee ee printing office. of August 24, 1912, embodied in| « : Sotion 411° Postal Laws and Regula-| comrade THO ey. % ions, printed on the reverse of this|clared at the Presidium of the Exec- ‘orm, to wit: i ead : utive Committee of the Communist 1. That the names and addresses of jy 40 ye ‘ Dice the publisher, editor, managing editor, | International that ‘Serebriakov, Pre- and business managers are: 5}, |Obvazhensky and Sharov, in their aC es wk rer ditions, |Policy stand two heads above those Louis Engdahl and William | who screen their crimes behind Party |Dunne, 33 East First St.; Managing discipline’ “People organizing illegal offices against the Party with the aid of bourgeois intellectuals are proclaimed | ship, manag | said in t | Editor, J. Louis Engdahi; Business | | Manager, Bert Miller, 33 Bast First St. 2. That the owner is: If owned by | a corporation, its name and address | | must be statéd and also immediately | “Tt goes without saying that Com-} squarely de-| | cannot ignore the contemptuous ref- ‘erences to the organizations of the Communist proletariat as a voting crowd, it cannot ignore the fact that disrupting Party discipline is pro- claimed as the highest virtue. It cannot ignore the open justification ‘and the promise of further continu- tance of the practice of organizing ‘secret anti-Party printing offices. Further Membership Impossible. “The Presidium of the Executive |Committee of the Communist Inter- national considers impossible the further membership of Comrades Trotsky and Vuyovitch on the Exec- utive which they proclaimed as usurp- ers and against whom they conduct rabid fights with the aid of renegade papers abroad and secret printing of- fices, the organization of illegal cen- ters of malicious slander in the U. trina “Gndividual owners. must be|#8 standing politically two heads lgiven, If owned by a firm, company, | higher than those who at the instruc- or other unincorporated concern, i name and address, as well as those of | each individual member, must given.) The Daily Worker Publishin Co., 33 First St. New York City; Lovestone, 33 First St., New York Cit. Foster, 33 First St., New_York | Max Bedacht, 33 First Street, | York City; James P, Cannon, 33 St., New York City. 3. That the known bondholder | mortgagees, and other security holde owning or holding 1 per cent or more | of total amount of bonds, mortgage or other securities are: (If there are none, state.) None. | 4. That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names of the owners, stockholders, and security holders, it any, contain not only the list of stock- holders and security holders as they appear upon the books of the company but also, holder or security holder appears upon TROTSKY-VUYOVITCH MOSCOW, Oct, 2.—Emphasizing the fact that the organization of an illegal printing office to carry on a campaign against the Com- munist Party of the U. S. S. R., is unprecedented in the history of the organization, Pravda points out that “this is the work of the whole | Trotskyist opposition whose lead-* r th stock- | +; ii in cases where the stock-| 000.0 entirely responsible for this the books of the company as trustee| crime.” or in any other fiduciary relation, the | The opposition leaders show no name of the person or corporation for | whom such trustee is acting, is given; | intention. of diselaiming this re- also that the said two paragraphs con- sponsibility, it continues. Preobra- 8. S. RB.” PRAVDA DENOUNCES UNPRECEDENTED CRIMES OF OPPOSITIONAL METHODS | tee of the Comintern regarding their expulsion from that body. People taking liberty to do what is essentially incompatible with membership in the Party affiliated with the Comintern, declares Pray- da, certainly can no longer remain in the leading organs of the Comin- tern. The Communist Party of the U. S. S. R., it says, was founded, edu- cated and stamped by Lenin, who established the Pary regime which fundamentally c:¥ie into being instrument for consolidating but an lop. But the Presidium of the Exec- | Workers who had ‘already heard ru-| will be again in.a very strong posi- instrument for disorganizing and dis-|ytiye Committee of the Comintern ™°s of the fight and had gathered | tion in which to insist on a reduction in the courtyard below. A shout rose | of wages. from the masses and at the sight of the bloody signals, assembled worker held 1 in check by the rifles and ma- chine guns of the naval reserves who | had arrived. Struggle Wrecks Dungeons. |tempt against the prisoners. The |prisoners defended themselves cour- | |ageously, but outnumbered ten to | one, they were overpowered. The en- | tire interior of the jail was wrecked taowetee before the end of the strug- gle. The outbreak did not end until the struggling soldiers and sailors mer- cilessly beaten by the clubs, swords and gun-butts of the naval police, and bleeding from the gendarmes’ brutality, were handcuffed and chain- ed in lines to the prison wreckage. As the jail was too badly wrecked, for inearceration, the authorities, fearing that the remaining prisoners might revolt, determined to remove the injured workers to Fort Malbous- quet. sak As the manacled and_ bleeding workers, soldiers and sailors were dragged, forced and led into. the | prison yard for loading on the trucks, the crofds of French workers, who had gathered in hundreds ar jail, attempted to interfere with their transfer. The naval police beat a path thru the excited masses: with their clubs and swords and, ° with great difficulty, loaded the bound and gagged men into the camions. parture of the trucks by miaking wall of their bodies, and failing i the fury of the! could seareely be! With the arrrival of re-enforce- | ments, the guards made another at-} The workers tried to prevent -the ‘des f | that, as the camions charged at full | ELLE ARN New--- GERMAN BOOKS PON Paper Bound Probleme der Chinesischen Revolution Bucharin AS Entwieklungswege der Chine~ sixchen Revolution Jan Ping Schan AS Die Kriegsgefahr die Chinesixche Revolution und die, Kommunist Internationale A.. Bennett y 1S Warum Greift (der Englische Imperialis.:us die Sowjet- Union Ant ~~ v John Pepper ap Die Vereinigten Staaten des | Socialixtichen Europa John Pepper. Der General Streik John Pepper Aus Dem Leben der / Arbeiterinnen der U, S. S. Rt, (5. Bojarskaja | as) | ‘Die Berg Arbeiter Frauen | Englands Im Kampf Katherine Cant AS, | Wak “Aitglo-Russixche Komitee / wid die Opposition in der Kpsu | und die Opposition in der KPSU \_ D. Petrowski pas OX Cloth Bound j | | | in st ti bracing affiant'’s| | ier “ ‘ a full ‘enowinaghs Aaity: Malidee as: to thier jenski, Sharoy, Serebriakov, three | many years before Trotsky was ac- | speed thru their ranks, broke into | > basis nocabacte Reales Cen | 4 circumstances and conditions } a under which stockholders and security hold- ers who do not appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other than that of a bona fide owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association, or cor- poration has any interest direct or i direct in the said stock, bonds or other |the International and followed the | of the opposition leaders even openly declared in official docu- ments addressed to the Central Committee that they are “politi- cally responsible for this action” while Trotsky teok upon himself their defense, Pravda continues: cepted as a member of the Party; it came into being not incidentally but in a fierce struggle against Menshevism, and particularly against Trotskyism. “The Communist Party,” Kari Marx —80 trucks along their route to the fort with long shouts of “Down With the Army! Long Live Marty! Long Live Duclos!” The workers, soldiers and sailors, thrown into the dungeons of Fort Ludwig Feuerbach und der { | Ausgang der Klassisehen | | Philosophie } | Friedrich Engels —-80 | Auf Dem Wege Zum Oktober 4. Stalin —1. The Tourist Delegation will have the privilege of participating in the Grand Celebrations and Festivals of the 10th Anni- con- tinues Pravda, “will allow nobody i il rs securities than as so stated by him. Must Account to Party. to change its Lenin regime. One | Malbousquet, are reported to have|f) .. versary of the Russian Re- letidc tae tate tae Rie tie “After this it is impossible to | cannot enter our Party with.one’s |undergone more terrible police tor-|{/ DIE KOMMUNISTISCHE rots nn 600 tion sold or distributed, throuzh. the| have any doubt that the Party will | own. statutes. Those for whom | tures than those they endured at the}! INTERNATIONALE voiution, ntire cost $ ? mails or otherwise, to puld subscribers | call to account the audacious lead- | ‘Lenin’s shoe’ is too tight must | Toulon prison. : , « . 15 CENTS Y ag ee eo ta dota te ‘he | ers of the opposition.” Referring | choose: either to carry on sectar- | The port and all the public build- You Must Apply Immediately! (This information is ‘required from| to documents of the opposition of | ian work against the Bolshevist |ings of Toulon are under heavy|] $2.50 a Year $1.25 Six Mo. daily publications only.) BERT MILLER, Business Manager. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 30th day of bin! ane 1927. . L. PERILLA, (SBAL) Notary Public, (My commission expires March 31, 1928,) 1923 to show that the opposition is carrying on a struggle against the regime established by Lenin and under Lenin's direction, Pray- da declares that the Party. will with full unanimity welcome the decision of the Executive Commit- armed guard and re-enforcements are being concentrated in the town. The mutiny on the warship Ernest Renan and the heroic resistance of the 64 workers, soldiers and sailors in the naval prison have enraged the French Party, thereby foregoing the right to call themselves Bolsheyisks, or remain in the Party unconditional- ly, submitting to all decisions of the Party and its leading organs and immediately cease all factional activities.” World Tourists, Inc. 69 Fifth Ave., New York TELEPHONE ALGONQUIN 6900 ‘ The Daily Worker Pub. Co. 33 First Street New York | bourgeoisie.