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Page Two ‘THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1927 ‘Party Organizer’ Off Of Press; Valuable To Every Member The December issue of the Party} Organizer is now off the press. It} is the first number since the last} Convention and contains material in- dispensible to every functionary and activ ber in the conduct of his Party wo: The following is the} contents of the Party Organizer: 1. The leading editorial “Let’s| Get Down to Work,” which lays down | the principal tasks of the Party at} the present time with valuable sug-| gestions how to carry them out. 2. “How to Strengthen the Part; by C. E. Ruthenberg, being the |: article Comrade Ruthenberg wrote on the question of organiz the month of Decembe dealing with the s the Party.” As the comrad member these were the last word of Comrade Ruthenberg when jout for help against a , |20-cent cotton threatens to cut in on} “Nice Fast Worker” Of Southern Mills Driven by Hunger By HARVEY O'CONNOR. CHARLOTTE, N. C., Nov. 20 (FP). | Two hundred thousand cotton mill workers in the two Carolinas, on the auction block as formerly their Negro brothers were) bought and sold outright, are crying sudden on-| | slaught of speed-up. | “Doubling up” they call 1t in the| cotton mills. Every mill worker is familiar with the practice, but never has up as within the past four months.| Nor has it ever been so intensive. Take It Out of Worker. The rise in the price of cotton is I Last year 10 cent meant to the cotton growers and fat to the mill owners. This year Expulsion of Trotsky and Zinoviev The expulsion of Leon Trotsky and Gregory Zinoviev from the ranks of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union is the subject of a statement fissued yesterday by the Central Exe- cutive Committee of the Workers (Communist) Party. The statement in full reads as fol- cheap labor where} jows: Statement of the Central Committee of the Workers (Communist) Party of America. The Central Executive Committee of the Workers (Communist) Party endorses fully and completely the ex- here been such a wave of speed| pulsion of Trotsky and Zinoviev from the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. *This action is dictated by the most vital interests of the workers and peasants of the Soviet Uniun as weil as the toiling masses the world over. The Trots' ‘inoviey opposition has long ago over-stepped the bounds 8 A letter from the C lanitt was Miter i ‘; ah ulleting q| mill profits unless labor can be made pee onal Ale eeve an stop |to stand the difference in the price of bulletins, |the raw material. 4, An outline for a class for fune-|_ In every mill comes the same mo- tionaries that can be used by all dis- | notonous story of doubling up, of old- trict and local organizations with full | time workers thrown on the industrial biography. ; scrap heap, to be replaced by fresh| 5. Gem quotations from Lenin and|machine fodder from the schools at| the First Congress of the Communist | the age of 14—and under, when the| International on the question of or-|mill boss is not too squeamish about ganization and much other material. |the school law. The Party Organizer will be pub-| In the great model Lyman mill, lished regularly in the future and|owned by Pacific Mills which operates should become the necessary tool in|in Lawrence, Mass., speed up is nak- the work of every functionary and ac-jedly visible. Scores of boys and girls tive comrade. | work feverishly—at piece rates—tear- The price per copy is 10 cents./ing sheeting, folding sheets, hem- Bundles of ten or more, 6 cents per|stitching them, wrapping them for copy. Order from the National Of-| shipment, fice, Workers Party of America, 43 A Perfect Slave. E. 125th St, New York City, or from) «Nice fast worker, ain't he,” says yaar district, office. |the Pacific Mill boss, pointing to a TS young. man who rips sheeting into ap- Hearst Again Publishes|propriate lengths for sheets, ‘The young man works like a machine, Letter Already Exposed | throwing scores of yards of material jin endless motion, the ripping being (Continued from Page One) | almost too fast for the eye to follow. tageous to the Calles government. “He makes $4 a day,” the boss Such documents could only be useful | boasts. “Mighty good money, I'll tell for the purposes to which they are|you. Yes, only the youngsters can put by the chain of Hearst papers, /stand the pace that way. But there that is, trying to inflame public opin-|are plenty of ’em.” jon against Mexico and Nicaragua in} In another corner of the huge room, order to support the policies of the)/women work desperately on more imperialist interventionists. |miles of sheets, hemstitching for dear Money for “Livitnoff.” Laas eee disappear one after On Saturday morning and again on |##0ther with incredible speed through Sunday the Hearst publications, con- ee hemstitching machine. The woman tinuing their attacks based upon for- nee at the clock. It 1am o'clock. gery, “revealed” that Calles had ot- 8 ay pee it. since 7 and must dered $100,000 to be shipped in aj Stay at it until 6. round about way to a so-called Com- Bonus System. munist propagandist accompanied by} “Mighty good worker,” says the the observation that “the funds which|boss proudly, but the little woman may be confided to him (Livitnoff) \looks worn and frayed as she strug- for our propaganda will be employed | gles on through the mountain of effectively.” Surely no one outside a/|sheets, trying valiantly for the bonus ‘mad-house or a theatre producing | which Pacific Mills gives if she keeps light operratas, would resort to such | up to the pacemaker, melodramatic and absurd correspon-| In yarn mills it is the same. In| dence. The grotesque manner of | weaving, a new system of using bat- forging the Hearst documents are|tery fillers to assist weavers makes| added proof of the fact that they are | it possible for one man to handle 48, | spurious, and are only published for|60 and even 72 looms. Women pace the malicious purposes of Hearst and/alongside long | rows of spinning his fellow oil, mineral and land/frames, on the alert for broken thieves. ithreade: an endless 10, 11 and 12-hour A Champion of Hearst. | endurance test of speeded up machin- But one other paper, aside from his|¢ty against exhausted human flesh, own puulications in New York, has to|The machine always wins. date spoken favorably of the Hearst * * * forgeries. That is the Wall Street} (It is Pacific Mills in Lawrence Journal, which on Friday published | which has led the speed up race among a cheap jingo editorial based upon|northern mills. As many as 120 looms the Hearst fabrications, containing | per weaver have been used, though the most vicious attacks upon the gov-|the skilled weaver in such case has ernment of Mexico and declaring that |two or three poorly paid boy assis- since the question of Mexico has come |tants. The independent American back to the front page again it| Federation of Textile Operatives un- “should remain until the American|ion attempted to fight, this system people demand that an end be put to|but Pacific Mills set up a company these plots against us.” junien to put it over.) The Journal has been a consistent _- supporter of the most vicious of = * i erertcan insperialist policies and has | Daily Worker Builders been particularly aggressive in sup-} ‘lub Masquerade Ball port of the suppression of the nation- . alist elements in Nicaragua so that | Ln Pittsburgh, Nov. 24 the United States may have a free! hand in the construction of a Nicara-| PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 20— guan Cdwal that will be even more | A masquerade ball with be held by @dvantagedus for purposes of carry-|the “Daily Worker Builders’ Club” ing forward imperialist policies than |of Pittsburgh, on Thursday, Nov. 24 is the Panama Canal. | (Thanksgiving night), 8 o'clock, at a, i | the International Socialist Lyceum, Coolidge Decorates Marines, 805 James St., N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa. Distinguished service medals and|The committee in charge have ar- Special crosses were awarded by Pres-| ranged a splendid program, with ident Coolidge to na’ and marine good music. Come all. You are “protectors” for their services in sup-| promised a good time. | pressing the duly constituted Sa | | government in Nicaragua, and mai taining in power the Wall Street pup-| CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 20. — pet, Diaz. Even the older Turkish women are| Captain Henry Lake Wyman, com-| bobbing their hair and discarding the | mander of the cruiser Denver, was| Turkish veil. f | @ewarded for “bringing about peace. | Seems ee ful conditions on shore,” was sent ul BOB SPREADS IN TURKEY. to the Naval War College at Newport, { 4 RB. L., for better preparation to spread ¢ av UNIS | | more peace, | Bn (SRNATIONAL Captain Richard B. Buchanan and| = Private Marvin A. Jackson of the ™marine corps were granted posthu-| mous awards for their faithfulness to| Wall Street interests. For disarming | protectors of the Sacasa government, Captain John D. Wainwright was giv- | en a special job as head of the navy | hydrographic office in Philadelphia, | as well as a special medal. Ensign Charles L. Carpenter, who was killed os Y i during the encounter that won him his | With other splendid articles award, was especially praised for | 10 CENTS shooting “in self-defense” a Nicara-| $1.25 Six Months. $2.00 a Year. guan ex-soldier, who had been “egged on by a crowd of rebels.,,thereby producing a most salutary effect upon the populace.” . i SR ne ae Kame Commit of te Come ernie No. 15 Now Ready FEATURING: An Article by Stalin on The International Situation WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 Bast 125th St. New York, N. ¥. _ of the permissible in a Communist, Leninist Party. The actions cf the opposition have long ago veached the point of actually encouraging the ene- mies of the working class. Now the opposition has come to the stage where it is organizing a new party, joining hands with non-working class elements, enemies of the Soviet Union, becoming the rallying center for capitalist opposition to the Soviet power generally. Was Final Step. The unprincipled public attack upon the Party and the government of the Soviet Union at the tenth an- niversary demonstrations arranged to celebrate ten years of achievement and victory in the building of social- ism was but the final step in a long chain of events which followed an ob- jective logic of their own, leading farther and farther away from the Party line and from Party loyalty. Beginning with the attempt of Trotsky and his adherents to under- mine Leninism and substitute for it his particular brand of ultra-revolu- tionary phrases masking petty-bour- geois opportunist tendencies, the op- position has moved from that to the formation of an unprincipled bloc of all elements in opposition to the Com- munist Party, plotting with the op- position in the Communist Interna- tional and with renegades from Com- munism, on an international scale, then to open defiance of the Party, violation of pledges, counter-demon- strations against the celebration of the tenth aimiversary, and thus to open attacks on the Party. Opposite of Leninism. Trotskyism is not Leninism. It is the negation of the Leninist revolu- tionary theory and practice, which alone guided the toiling masses of Russia to success and victory. It was only by abandoning kis own theories, by accepting the theory of Lenin, ard by joining the Party of Lenin, the Bolshevist Party of Russia, in 1917, that Trotsky’s efforts in the past con- tributed to the struggle and victory of the toiling masses. Now, however, when Trotsky and the Trotskyites have reverted to the policies of Trotskyism as against those of Leninism; when the Trot- skyite opposition, joined by Zinovierz and Kamenev, is undermining and | vainly attempting to split the Party | which Lenin led to victory and which |is now leading the masses of the Sov- {iet Union to socialism, now the ef- |forts of Trotsky and Zinoviey have | become detrimental to the working jclass and a source of gratification | and joy to the enemies of the toiling | masses. For Trotsky and Zinoviev today there is no room in a Bolshevik, Communist Party. Non-Proletarian Attitude. For nearly 14 years (1903-1917) Lenin and the Bolshevist Party of Russia have been fighting the fal- |lacies of: Trotskyism. For 14 years, until Trotsky tacitly admitted defeat and joined the Bolshevik Party, in |the spring of 1917, Lenin and the ad- | herents ef Leninism were combatting \mercilessly the non-proletarian atti- | tudes of Trotskyism. These were the support of the Mensheviks against | the Bolsheviks; the refusal to accept | the alliance between the workers and |peasants led by the revolutionary | working class; the alliance which | proved the basic condition for the success of, the revolutionary move- ment; lack of faith in the victory of the proletarian revolution .and the victory of socialism in Russia, this being the basis of the Trotskyite theory of permanent revolution; bit- ter opposition to the efforts of Lenin and the Bolsheviks to build a cen- tralized revolutionary working class Party; rejection of the only correct Bolshevik slogan of “Civil War Against Imperialist War,” proposing instead during the late imperialist war the petty-bourgeois pacifist slo- gan of “a democratic peace without annexations” as though such peace were possible under imperialism. Defeated Trotskyism. Leninism defeated Trotskyism as it defeated Menshevism and the other non-proletarian and _ petty-bourgesis tendencies in the revolutionary move- ment of Russia. The actual experi- ences of three revoluticns and ten years of struggle of the Soviet Union and its successful building of social- ism have convinced the masses of the correctness of Leninism and the fal- lacies of Trotskyism. That & why the Communist Party and the toiling ee ae the masses. They hesitated and fin- masses of the Soviet Union have re- jected and swept aside the Trotsky- Zinoviev opposition, leaving it a little group of disgruntled and discredited generals without an army. That is why the revolutionary workers throughout the world stand with the Leninist Party and against the Trot- | sky opposition. That is why the | Workers (Communist) Party of} America stands with the Central| Committee, with Leninism and the Leninist Party, against the Trotsky- ites and splitters, Hinders Development. The bankruptcy cf the opposition | and its non-working class, non-revo- | lutionary character is further evi-| denced by its policies of more recent days. The epposition does not believe in the victory of socialism in the Sov- iet Union and is actually hindering | its socialist development. Trotsky and | Zinoviev refused to vote for the in- troduction of the seven-hour day, branding the proposal as insincere be- cause they themselves lack faith in the growing possibilities of the Sov- iet Union to improve the conditions of ally refused to accept the uncondi- tional defense of the Soviet Union from military attacks of the imperi- alists, Trotsky actually declaring that the Leninist central committee of the Communist Party in the Soviet Union was a greater menace to the working class than the threatening imperial- ist war against the Soviet Union. The opposition’s “criticisms” of the poli- cies of the Communist International in England, China, etc, have been proved by actual record to be insin- cere, unprincipled and false. Reverting to Old Mistakes. Pravda, the official organ of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union has rightly said: “That Trotsky is returning to Menshevism and Zino- viev and Kameney have squandered their former principles, repeating now their mistake of ten years ago” when they opposed the proposal of Lenin that the working class seize power. The Party has been amazingly pa- tient, but the time for patience is past. The length to which a handful of disgruntled oppositionists have gone and the danger involved in such attacks upon the unity of the Party while the Soviet Union is being threatened by a new war, makes it especially imperative that the unity Old Guard Fights ~ ts Rebels Over Committee Control WASHINGTON, Noy. 20. — Sena-| tors Curtis of Kansas and Watson of Indiana, “with advisory help from Smoot of Utah, are trying to rally the Old Guard Republican forces in the upper branch of Congress, against at- tacks, which the progressive Republi- cans and the Democrats are about to Unions and Other Workers’ Groups — Aid Mine Relief PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 2 The number of wvrkers’ organizations, fraternal, educational, social, as well as labor unions, which are heeding the call of the Pennsylvania-Ohio Miners Relief Committee for money to aid the locked-out coal miners is growing. and Leninist line of the Party be maintained and that even the self- appointed heroes of the opposition be obliged to accept the will of the Party and follow its line or be swept aside. Complete Liquidation of Opposition. We are of the opinion that the forthcoming Congress of the Com- munist Party of the Soviet Union should complete the liquidation or aes Ea eect an Bat make upon their control of commit- Organizations in pony, Ecbie neither elemen ary ante Se tees of that body. Curtis is chair- centers, in steel Veale pone the alty to the decisions o: io Party ian ot the voles committee, and Wat- unorganized miners, are forming central committees for the collection of money thru dances, concerts, ba- zaars and by the use of official con- tribution lists. The Working Women’s Club, Luzerne Pa., raised $50 by giving a dance. A joint dance by lodges 33 SNPJ, 41 SPZ, 44 SSSS, 304 HBZ netted’ $158.75 for miners relief. The Finnish Ladies Club of Monessen Pa., membership and committees. The forthcoming congress should expel every oppositionist who does not sub-|anq uncertain of the crop of recruits mit himself once and for all to the | that may be gathered from among will of the Party, and completely re- | men elected as progressives, pudiate the opposition views and tac-| While the Borah-Norris group has tics. The Party has no room for self- | not yet, caucused upon a program of appointed leaders who defy the will |invasion of these committee strong- of the Party and attack it before non- | holds, the members of the group are Party elements, plot against the unity | convinced that if they are to get their of the Party and the Communist In- |Jegislative demands before the Senate Sent in $52. The Finnish Educational ternational with renegade and ex-|this winter they must secure places ASS0., of Cleveland $43.20. son is cheer-leader. They face the new Congress with decimated ranks, on the committees pelled elements and become a rallying powerful from | Kansas City Women Busy. center for all enemies cf the Soviet} which most of them have begn ex-| A bazaar given by the miners’ re- Union and our Party. cluded. Borah and Norris, as veter-| lief committee of Kansas City re- Party Expressed Attitude Before. pa qeye come ay Be senior- qulted in $125 for relief. Lodges 210 : i - ity to chairmanships of the foreign re- {5 : 1 Savez Sloboda, 125 HBZ or- ee ee eae tay ee lations and the judiciary committees, ganized a dance and made $89. The a hole have on |Zesbectively. But they want Howell Himlerville, Ky., Workmen's Sick aud and the Party BS ie a ee es of Nebraska to take a place on the Death Menefit Asso., collected several CoraOHs, CAP PRROES paid a finance committee. They want Nye, Lodge 360 HBZ, Duquense, Pa., col- litude clearly against Trotskyism and) ,* North Dakota to enter the foreign ‘lected $61. Brownsville, Pa, lodges the Trotsky-Zinoviev opposition. Dur-| relations committee. And they have 398 -SNPJ donated $58.50 and 333 ing the Sixth and Seventh Plenums| similar posts of responsibility picked HBZ $65.35. The Croatian Fraternal of the Communist International the | out or under consideration for Frazier, Union, Elbert, W. Va. sent in $50. Party’s representatives actively Par-|Brookhart, Shipstead, young LaFol-,The Slovak Workers Society, Lans- ticipated in combatting the destruc-|jette and Blaine. ltord, Pa, $75. Contribution lists cir tive activities of the opposition, join- May Compromise. ‘culated in McKees Rocks, Pa., brought ing with the rest of the Communist | Jt is likely that Borah and several $42. Siovak Workers Lodge of International in unanimously maln~ | others of the western insurgents will Newark, N. J. remitted $50. Croatian taining the Leninist line and unity of | go into the Republican caucus, when Fraternal Union 505, Kansas City, the world Communist movement. the Senate meets, and will present a , $30! To Educate Membership. e| a : list of these proposed changes to the U; More Affairs. The Central Executive Committee | Curtis-Watson-Smoot crowd. It is| ar ae is of the Workers (Communist) Party ‘kel é There are hundreds of industrial likely that the Old Guard will offer | i : i pledges itself to increase its efforts centers in the country where a joint to educate its membership and the Sher veer ae ae pals ee arrangement between workers organ- American working class as to the line |crats will encourage the insurgent Re- Heder carat be ener Jako, oe he of Leninism and the issues involved | publicans and the Bourbon Democrats ing miners andithelr familion in the controversy in the Communist jing & Party of the Soviet Union. ; a | to discuss a possible agreement, but ; ‘i : We take this occasion to pledge that the insurgents will wait until the cce i 5 Old Giard ias rejected their demands, | The organization of miners relief dnew our solidarity to our brother Party. Then the insurgents will formulate a NB in the larger industrial committee list, and offer it on the CeMters is progressing rapidly. Fre- Hail the unity of the Communist | senate floor as an amendment to the esate: ees 7 ee a ae Party of the Soviet Union and the aor of the committee on commit- | ae ‘he ve ane see cigscs bes on Communist International, leader of and a secretary for relief work in the world’s working class! that city will soon be named by the Long live Leninism, the path victory! 3, "Famous Reactionaries Gone. A i 4 f Old:Guard losses from big commit- |Pennsylvania-Ohio Relief Committee, toh due to. defeat ov veteonentits ‘which has its central, office in Pitts: Seize Bonds Like Those Given to,Fall « (Continued from Page One) probability that Blackmer will give up his happy exile in France to re- turn and explain his peculiar con- nections with the Teapot Dome oil lease fraud. Get Subpoena. A subpoena was served upon Black- mer In France last summer, under authority of a special act of Congress introduced by Senator Walsh of Mon- tana, leading investigator of the oil land leasing frauds. Blackmer fled to Europe with President O’Neill of the Prairie Oil & Gas Co. when the Teapot Dome leasing scandal was ex- posed four years ago. No subpoena has yet been served on O’Neill. Blackmer and O’Neill are key wit- nesses to the planning by Harry F. Sinclair and themselves, with Stewart of Standard Oil of Indiana, of the secret slush fund from which Secre- tary Fall received $230,500 in Liberty bonds. It was Blackmer who instruc- ted former Senator Thomas of Colora- do, counsel] for the Humphrey oil in- terests in Texas and Mexico, to draw up the contract of sale of oil by the Humphrey companies to the Contin- ental Trading Co., Ltd. of Canada, which had been formed overnight to conceal the fact that it was Sinclair and Standard of Indiana, through their subsidiaries, that were buying and reselling this oil in order to create a secret fund, Same as Bribe. The bonds taken by the government yesterday by arrangement, Blackmer’s attorneys to avoid the ‘necessity of U. § Marshalls searching through the missing oil man’s papers and pos- sibly discovering other secrets, were {of the same denomination and issue | (First Liberty 514’s) as those used in \the bribery charged against Secre- | tary Fall. WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 18,— | District Attorney Gordon's sharp re- pointed by trial judge Siddons in the Teapot Dome oil graft trial to see | whether contempt proceedings should |be instituted calls attention here to the curious actions of Siddons in the | Whole case. Careful of Kidwell. Courthouse lawyers at the time ice Siddons declared a mistrial ex- ssed surprise that the justice did not immediately cite Kidwell te show cause why he shoul not be adjudged in gontempt of court. Kidwell was charged in affidavits submitted by Don K. King, a reporter, and J, Ray Akers, street car ¢onductor, with hav- ing said he expected “an auto as long as a block” if Sinclair was »7quitted. Kidwell, through his attorneys, then filed a petition seeking a hear- ing and asking that King and Akers be held in contempt for having im- properly approached him during the trial. This was to have come up to- day but Attorney S. MeComus Haw- ken appeared in court and asked that Ju : burgh. senators, include Lenroot and Cameron ; fF from -appropriations, Weller and! In Philadelphia. p Stewart from commerce, Ernst and| Clara Thomas, who functioned so )| Stanfield from finance, Lenroot and Sbly in other relief drives in Phila Gunnison Miners Bren Strike in Colorado (Continued from Page One) the Colorado Miners Defense Com- mittee, with which the International Labor Defense and the I. W. W. Gen- eral Defense cooperate, makes the use of militia at the jail unnecessary, and the great increase in state police placed in the strike area has caused state authorities to stop the use of expensive airplanes. Thomas Annear, chairman and Wm. H. Young, a member of the state industrial commission, which is trying to break the strike, were on the grounds of the Columbine mine, in the northern field, today, looking over the scene from which airplanes and machine gunners drove off the pickets a couple of days ago. * * * Means and Harreld from judiciary, |taty for that city.) In Pittsburgh a Weller from manufactures, Wads- |>road relief conference has been called worth from military affairs, Pepper t? meet in Walton Hall, 220 Stanwix and Weller from naval affairs, Ernst | St-. Sunday Dec. 11, at 2 p.m. The from privileges and elections, and E2st Pittsburgh relief conference will Stanfield from public lands. take place in the Workers’ Home, Watson and McNary have recently | North and Electrieé Avegue, Sunday been graciously offering some of these | Nov. 27, at 11 p. m. vacant places to a few of the insur-| Esther Schweitzer, who has also gents. The rebels have suggested that had valuable experience in similar they will take them when they get campaigns in the past, will act as around to it, without any help from’ miners relief secretary in Cleveland the administration, and that they will and has begun the task of organizing do so as a step toward their legislat- i relief conference. The organization ive program. of the New York City relief confer- ‘ence will take place on Dec. 4. Charles ROB BRITISH SHERLOCKS. | Mitchell will act as New York re- LONDON, Nov. 20.—Leading Scot- lief secretary. Announcements of ac- land Yard sleuths were robbed for’ tive relief drives in cities west of De- the fourth time in the last five ttoit will be told of at an early date. Gets Machine Gun. Pepper from foreign relations, Ernst, detpia, will act as miners relief. secre-— DENVER, Colo., Nov. 20.—A day or so ago Roy Connors, state police- man who has been stationed im Walsenburg watching coal stnkers, drove thru Denver on his way to the Lafayette coal field, and stopped long enough to change his automobile li- cense plate and take on a machine gun. * 4% * CROSBY, Wyo., Nov. 20.—Locals 2671 and 2700 of the United Mine Workers of America, Gebo and Cros- by, Wyo., have gone on record ds fol- lowing: “Be it resolved, that we, the miners of local 2671 of Gebo, Wyo., and local 2700 of Crosby, Wyo., United Mine Workers of America, in meetings as- sembled, unanimously pledge ouselves to support the miners of Colorado, both morally and financially, irre- spective of what leadership, so that it may be possible for them to form an organization which will enable them to protect themselves,” This action of class solidarity was taken _in espite of the resolutions jammed thru at the last two general months, despite their announcement! that they would stamp. out crime, when the home of Inspector Ralph Rowe was robbed of $500 worth of jewelry. Stomach Troubles Vanish Many thousands of people after long suffering found permanent relief from their digestive troubles through the use of the famous, pleasant “System Cleanser” Herbal Compound If you suffer with chronic indigestion, gas, dizziness, sleeplessness, hexdaches, nervousness, congested bowels, . and other ailments caused by a disordered stomach, DON'T LEV IT GO ANY FURTHER A clogged digestive system leads to more serious ailments. No matter what else you have tried, you owe it to your- | ae to try this marvelous Digestive erb, “SYSTEM CLEANSER” will overcome the most stubborn resistance of in- digestion. The lining of the digestive tract will be freed from mucus, restor- ing normal glands, action of the secretory Relief begins AT ONCE. } portions—for $1.50 went ther charge on receipt of > 0 Dis. Bath additions for every trouble. BESSEMER CHEM. Co. NATURAL REMEDIES Smaller cities should also have itheir relief committees, should con- stitute central bodies thru which re- lief work could be carried on-in a systematic and organized manner. |Emphasis {s at this time made upon |the collection of money. But cam- |paigns for clothing, shoes, stockings can also be undertaken, for many miners’ children are entirely in- adequately clad for the winter (months, many hundreds being withe out shoes or stockings. Those wha desire to be of aid should address the Pennsylvania-Ohio Miners Relief \Committee, 611 Penn Ave., Pitts- jburgh, Pa: HOLY NINE BACK ON JOB WASHINGTON, Noy. 20.—The |Supreme Court of the United States j will resume hearings today, and con- The Federal Prohibition law will bef involved in several cases the court hopes to dispose of before Thanks- giving Day. Fuel rates fixed by the state commissions of West Virginia and Kentucky will be challenged by | tinve ‘sessions until Christmas recess. , fusal to..serve_on the committee ap-4 | tempting to terrify witness MeMu!lin the hearing be poned indefinitely in view ef Siddone geen ppoint- conventions of the U. M. W. A. against radicals of every sort. Dept. B. 1 Beekman Street RK, N.Y. \the United Fuel Gas Company. ing the select committee, approved. A new charge against Burns of at« This was ANOTHER NEW BOOK: Sacco-Vanzetti—Labor’s Martyrs By MAX SHACHTMAN This new book is a popular dra- matic presentation of the whole case of Sacco and Vanzetti. Their early lives, their work in the Labor move- ‘ ment—the effort of world labor to free them from the electric chair. The story is complete, and vivid— the kind to inspire every worker. It is issued with an unusual cover in two colors with the photographs of the two martyrs. $.25 > CASE OF. SACCO AND VANZETTI. CARTOONS on the case of By Felix Frankfurter, (Cloth) $1.00 Sacco-Vanzetti. By Ellis. $.25 LIFE AND DEATH OF SACCO-VAN- POBTRY ON SACCO-VAN- ZETTIL Eugene Lyons, (Cloth) $1.50 ZETTI $25, by constant following, shadowing, and investigation is hinted by the district attorney today. MeMullin’s wife, who held a responsible position. with a Washington restaurant was promptly discharged when MeMullin turned against Burns. Other members of the committee ap- pointed by Justice Siddons theoretic- ally to investigate the act of con- tempt have written a sharp letter to District Attorney Gordon, assailing him for giving out the secret that he was being forced into a peculiar posi- tion by being placed on the Siddons committee, The cohmittee has been ordered to go ahead without him, NEEDLE WORKER AFFAIR. CHICAGO, Nov. 20.—The Needle Worker, left wing paper of the neele trades will celebrate its six months of existence at the Workers Club, 2736 Division St., Dec. 8. A large musical program is being arranged. WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS, 39 E. 125 St., New York — ’