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Page Two THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1928 Workers Party and Daily Worker Drive a Fight for the Cause of Labor SAVE THE UNIONS, HORTHY FORGERS DOUBLE CROSSNATIONAL COURSE Widespread Spy Net Maintained in U. S. by White Terror 10 STARTS ON AT END IMPERIALISM, FOR LABOR PARTY Militant Slogans Under Which Members Asked The National Office of the Work- ers (Communist) Party continues its plans for an unusual and large scale mobilization of all the forces of the party, from shop nuclei in the remot- est regions to the leading committees at the center, the party press, speak- ers’ tours, and meetings, to| gain 5,000 new members for the Work-} ers Party and 10,000 new readers for | the DAILY WORKER. } The campaign will begin, and the} keynote will be struck at some 200) mass meetings held over the week end} in every big city of the United States, to commemorate the death of Leni | It will last for a month and a half,} reaching a climax in the Ruthenberg | anniversary meetings, in February. | Meetings For Labor | The struggle of the Workers Party has never been a sectarian one, and this effort is no exception. New) members and new readers will be in- vited, on the basis of the present can | paigns to save the Miners’ union, to| mass | ally } sky. to sue Count Szechenyi, Hungarian ambassador to the | dered in forgin; | | | | puone worn {0788 bare CHige peracrive MORALITY LEAGUE OF AMERICA The Kron Detective | Agency, a part of the} system of international | forgery mills. main-| tained by reactionary | governments through-} out the world, instruct- | ed its Washington, D.| C. lawyer, according to, a document published herewith and origin- in possession of | the notorious spy and forger, Jacob Nosovit- United States, meney alleged to due for services for be ren- a ser- ies of documents. These documents were used strike down the injunction menace, to| solve the crisis in the American labor | movement, to democratize the unions, | to oust the reactionary bureaucracy | wherever it is in control, and to check | the imperialist war makers. | Speakers and mass action which| tends to strengthen the labor move- ment, the central executive commit- tee of the Workers Party announces, is the best way to convince the work-| ers that this party is their party, and| that they should belong to it. | There will be a series of open shop| nuclei educational meetings to co-op-| erate with the city mass meetings. The | shop nucleus is the basis of the Work- | ers Party, a form of organization | which recognizes that this is an indus- | trial age, and that the workers should | organize as they work, also that poli-| tical action and economic action are | inseparable, | All Participate. | In all of this campaign, organiza- tions sympathetic to the Workers | Party are urged to participate. Wher- ever local issues predominate, special editions of the party press, in all janguages, have been ordered and the mass meetings will chiefly concern themselves with the important mat-| ters closest to the needs of the work- ers there. The Workers Party looks forward to a considerable strengthening of its possibilities through the added num-| bers of workers taken in during this| by the American agents of the bloody regime of | Horthy in Hungary against working class | organizations as well as against all other elements who oppose the Hungarian white- terror maintained by the international brig- ands, the imperialist powers, Extend Horthy Spy System. The Hungarian work- ers’ daily, the Elore, declares that there have recently been sent to this country from Hun- gary two stool pigeons from the Budapest nest of murder and provoca- tion maintained by Horthy. Two of these arrivals have been as- signed to special work under direct super- vision of the Hungar- ian ambassador and two others were placed in the Kron Detective Agency, which works hand-in-hand with the Nepzava, a da‘ly paper and the semi-official Horthy organ in the United States against JULIUS JAMES KRON DETECTIVE AGENCY . LINCENSED AND BONDED 302 BROADWAY | NEW YORK February 1lth,1926. Mr.T. Emmett McKenzie, Attorney at law, Washington, D.C. Dear Sir:~ I herewith authorise you to start Court proceedings against Count Ladislaw Szecsenyi, Hungarian Minister, of Washington’, D.C., as well as against the Hungarian Government, for the sum of $6408.00, monies advanced to cover disbursments, etc. If you think that it is advisable to sue the Count and his Government for the $100,000.00, as per agreement with him, to be paid by him to us, use your dtscretion therein. Vory truly yours, JULIUS JAMER Know PRINCIPAL voinee aprcian -OENy . & OneT, oF susTICR 7 the enemies of the Hor- thy regime Wants to Collect Pay. It appears from the documents that were in the hands of Nosovit- sky, the international spy, that the stool pigeons and _ provoca- teurs are so crooked that they even double- cross each other. That after Nosovitsky and others working with him did the dirty work of forgery for the Hun- garian ambassador, that agent of Horthy did not pay the stipu- lated sum, $100,000. Hence Nosovitsky is suing the Kron Detec- tive Agency for the amount, while the Kron Agency, accord- ing to the letter pub- lished in another col- umn, instructed its Washington attorney to start legal proceedings against the Hungarian ambassador, It is doubtful if the threat of a suit by the Kron Agency is any- thing other than a fake, for the simple reason that this agency is still actively engaged in ventures in behalf of the Hungarian ambas- saoor, according to in- formation furnished by the Elore. When such enemies of labor and agents of reaction fall out many things come to light, JULIUS JAMES KRON DETECTIVE AGENCY SIKS fo ear Hite, | | | JMORKE YSCHOOL Mass Meeting Feb. 3 to} Welcome Students A new milestone in the history of the Workers School and the educa- tional activity of the Workers (Com- munist) Party will be passed on Wednesday night, February 8, when the first National Day Time Train- ing Course is opened at the Workers’ School, 108 E. 14th St., New York City. To commemorate this event and to give a rousing welcome, on behalf of the working class of New York, to the students who are coming from other sections of the country—from Seattle to Boston, and from Los Angeles to Richmond, Virginia—the workers of New York will hold a mass meeting in Irving Plaza, 15th Street and Irving Place, on Wednes- day night, February 8 Jay Love- stone and William Z. Foster, two of the instructors in the school will speak on behalf of the instructors. A selec- | ted list of students form various! parts of the country will represent the student body. William W. Wein- stone will welcome the comrades from all over the country in the name of the New York District, and Bertram D. Wolfe, the Director of the Work- ers’ School, will act as chairman of the meeting. From Various States. The students are selected leading comrades, one from each district in the country, who are to receive further training for the filling of | posts as leading workers of the Work- jers Party. Each district is limited | to one student for the reason that the |best available material is being se- jlected from the various districts and jnone of the Party organizations can | afford to spare more than one of their | most active and leading elements. | The students will remain at the |Sehool for a period of three months, | getting a training in Marxism-Len- inism; History of the United States and American Political Problems; Theory and Practice of Trade Union ism and Special Trade Union Prob- jlems; Party Organization, Theory and Practice; History of the International Labor Movement; History of the American Labor Movement and of the Party; Marxian Economics and Ad- vanced Marxian Economics; Methods of Research; Methods af Teaching in Workers’ Classes; Public Speaking; and Workers Correspondence. Full-Time Course. The instructors include: Jay Love- stone, William Z. Foster, Jack Stachel, H. M. Wicks, Alexander Bittelman, Max Bedacht, Alexander Trachten- 1 | Heads Strikebreakers A convention in Albany picked Col. Lucius A. Silsbury, commander of the 102nd N. Y. Medical Regi- ment, to head the N. Y. State Na- tional Guard Association. The bosses always rely on the National Guard to crush the workers’ ef- forts to better their conditions. POLISH MINERS PLANNING RELIEF The Polish Local of the Machinists Union here in Chicago, active in or- ganizing a Polish Passaic Strike Com- mictee, The Polish Sacco and Van- zetti Committee, has sent out to the Polish press a call for a conference for organizing a Polish Miners Re- lief Committee in Chicago. This call is addressed to all Polish Union Lo- cals (of which there are 14 in Chi- cago), to all Polish organizations and Societies to send delegates to a con- ference January 19, in Stankiewicz Hall, corner Emma and Noble Sts. In its call the Polish Machinists Lo- cal points out the long struggle of the locked-out miners, the hostility of the Coal Operators, the misery of the min- ers and their families, and the evic- tions and points out that among the miners are thousands of Polish work- ers. The call is for organizing relief for Colorado as well as Pennsylvania and Ohio. trict and friends of the School are expected to act as hosts and take one or more of the. students into their homes for the period. Those who are able to do so should communicate at once with the Workers School, or Jack Stachel, Organization Secretary of the Workers’ Party, 48 East 125th Street, New York City. A. F. L. COUNCIL POSTPONES ACT ON INJUNCTIONS At Some Future Date to Call Big Conference MIAMI, Florida, Jan. 18.—Disre- garding the fact that the Shipstead ‘| bill limiting the powers of injunc- tion judges may come up while they are lounging in Florida, the executive council of the American Federation of Labor yesterday made plans for the calling of a conference of inter- national union heads at some future date, not. decided upon yet, and for support of the Shipstead bill, in ways not decided upon yet either. The council’s action followed a pur- ported statement of President Green’s that all hope for legislative action to curb the injunction menace had been abandoned, and that all the energies of the council would be spent on picking “friends of labor’ for the 1928 campaign. “We have been promised a vote at this session of Congress,” said Mr. Green, “and we have every reason to hope for favorable action.” Continues Awards. Another step made yesterday ‘was announcement that all decisions of the National Board of Jurisdictional Awards which until last summer func- tioned to prevent jurisdictional strikes jin the building trades, will stand until further notice. A plan, it is known, is being worked out to prevent the continuance of these strikes. In addition there was the inevitable class-collaboration pronouncement by Wm. Green. “Management and la- bor,” he said, “have been cooperating . +. they have succeeded in a mar- velous way to the profit of both... .” * * * A wire was today received from Senator Wagner, of New York, coun- sel for the Amalgamated Association in its Interborough Rapid Transit In- junction case, congratulating labor on the recent “victory” resulting from the decision of the New York State Court of Appeals in refusing to grant the requested first injunction of the LR. T. JAIL FOR DRY AGENT. Jesse Harvey, of New Rochelle, former prohibition agent, must serve his sentence of 13 months, the United States Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled. Harvey was tried and con- vieted on a charge of conspiracy to violate the prohibition law. f LECTURES AND FORUMS berg, D. Benjamin, Bertram D. Wolfe, Art Shields and Carl Brodsky. The workers who are coming to take the courses will have many ex- | penses _and will be unemployed for the entire period of three months, as this is a full-time training course. The comrades in the New York Dis- -_—— period, and is making every effort to! see that the workers of America know and see just what the party is and; /housands Rally to what its program is. All members| i | are to participate in the campaign | Support of Miners, every way they can, such as the letters and other docu- ments now being exposed by the rep- resentatives of the Hungarian work- ers’ societies and the Hungarian Uj LABOR TEMPLE SCHOOL ANNUAL DINNER at Aldine Club Rooms, 200 Fifth Avenue Friday Evening, January 20th, 1928 at 7:00 o'clock Heywood Broun G. F. Beck John Cowper Powys Edmund B. Chaffee John Haynes Holmes SUBJECT:—"The Lecturer—and the Future of America.” Tickets at per cover may be obtained at the Labor Temple Office, 242 EB. 14t! TICKETS GOING FASi—-MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS TODAY, Play for Mine Relief To Be Offered Here en “The Price of Coal,” a one-act play}, It is certain that the Horthy agents depicting life in the mining regions,|in the United States have resorted |will be given by the Brookwood| to all conceivable underhanded meth- | Players at the Church of All Nations| ods to get rid of the working class political enemies of that monstrous} SPEAKERS Thousands of workers are attend- ing miners’ relief meetings in New England addressed by Milka Sab- MORE ARRESTED lich, Colorado strike leader; A. 8. 2.50 st | Embree. strik izer, lq here, Sunday, at 8 p .m. for the bene-| Polit I that Mere Sitpdt nesrcails 4a. be fit of the striking miners of Pennsyl-| regime, which ranks in infamy with ssn BY HAVANA COPS lceived at the national office here of SL algai Ohio and Colorado. Four|the Italy of Mussolini. | , * Tote . Fale {Brookwood students, togeth ith rear mare copamoea! | 1 Wo 7 , together wi Bate er ermational, Workers’ mons Gippate fonter’ ‘adeeatiinsl| MOSCOW, Mf RCM. yeu 16-4 director for the miners in Sub-Dis- trict 5, Illinois, will give a symposium on the problems of the miners. Nearly $1,500 in money and cloth- ing has already been sent for miners’ relief in the eastern and Colorado] U. S. 8. R. since the establishment of | fields as a result of appeals made by! the Workers’ and Peasants’ govern-! students of Brookwood Labor College, { ment. | at Katonah, N. Y., to local unions in| = Westchester County. D. I. Kursky, former Commissar of Justice has been appointed to fill the vacant post as Ambassador from the Soviet Union to Italy. Kursky has been prominent in the affairs of the Meetings have been held in Boston, Machado Agents Cause | providence, Springfield, Hartford and = |New Haven. Meetings are arranged Reign of Terror lfor Philadelphia, Washington, Syra- cuse, Rochester, Buffalo, Erie, Cleve- (Continued from Page One) }land, Youngstown, Canton, Akron, es arose in various sections of the | Toledo, Detroit and Chicago. erowd which witnessed the Srenenys| —————_ Altho the Nicaraguan flag was s raised by representatives of the Diaz | A Study in Wealth | J regime, contrasting response showed | are | the cheers were for the little band of HOBOKEN, N. J., Jan. 18. — The| Klansman Now Deputy | revolutionists under General Sandino| body of Mary Zunio partly devoured| m | Se ate atrugcling araguan | by rats, was found at the bottom of a} In N. Y. Klan Center| LENIN-RUTHENBERG DRIVE From Lenin Memorial Day to Ruthenberg Just Off the Press Memorial Day independence, In spite of strict po-| flight of steps in a five-story 40-room SSR EX, lice supervision some one in the throng| house which she had occupied all} John M. Winters, field seerétary shouted “Long live Sandino.” alone. She had been dead for more|of the ku klux klan in Long Island; Open Sessions a Fiction. than 10 days, doctors said. Neigh-|was appointed a special deputy Altho the conference voted yes-| ors became curious when Miss Zunio terday for open sessions, the vote | failed to come out of the house. means little. At the request of any | Folide. were ssked to investigate, one member of the committee, the ses-| Jewelry worth $5,000 and $10,000 in sion can be transferred into an ex. | cash in large denominations were ecutive one behind closed doors. ‘This | 10und sewed in the woman's clothes. fact accounts for the apparent alac- | She is said to have possessed more $ rity with which Charles fvans{ than $150,000 in real property. Hughes of the American delegation ‘mene accepted the Argentine proposal: for | Gets Babbitt Post sheriff yésterday by Sheriff Joseph Quinn of Queens. Long Island is the klan stronghold of greater New York. Winters is a klan lecturer. Police broke up a klan parade in Queens last decoration day. JOIN IN A REAL FIGHT AGAINST FOR 1, Organization of the unorganized. 2. Miners’ Relief. 3. Recognition and Defense of the Soviet Union. 4. A Labor Party. 1. Injunctions. 2. Company Unions. 3. Unemployment. 4. Persecution of the Foreign Born. Church in Power OCEAN GROVE, N. J., Jan. 18.—- open committee hearings. Antonio Sanches Bistamante, chair- man of the Cuban delegation, was elected to the presidency of the Pan- American Union at today’s session of the conference. oe @ q Cal in Jacksonville. JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Jan. 18.— President Coolidge, homeward bound, | arrived in Jacksonville today aboard! his presidential special train. | $1,000 for Death TRENTON, N. J., Jan. 18.—The state supreme court upheld the con- vietion and $1,000 fine imposed on the New York, Susquehanna and Western Railroad for manslaughter im the death of Victoria Rees, struck by a train while riding over a grade crossing at Hackensack in August, 1926. The railroad’s attention had «been repeatedly called to the danger- ous condition of the crossing. i nic ait J. Edgar Masters, respectable citizen of Washington, Pa., has been eppointed grand secretary of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Babbitt organization. A 10-year-old crippled child, who had just undergone an operation at a hos- pital at Long Beach and was being rushed to her home here by automo- hile, was not permitted by Methodist officials to enter this town, an ocean resort, controlled by the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Association. Tt was Sabbath and the Methodists do not permit automobile driving here on Sunday. The child was Jane Wain- wright, daughter of Mrs. G. L. Wain- wright, a local resident. She was taken to her grandmother at Asbury Park. FATAL FERRY ACCIDENT. NEW ORLEANS, La., Jan. 18.— Two Negroes, Ed Johnson and Tim Tomba, two boys, one 12 and the other 18, Anatol Nicholas, father of six de- pendent children, his eighteen-year- old son Murphy and Urvin Landeche, 21, who operated the ferry boat, were all killed when the towboat City of Pittsburgh collided with the ferry in a fog. Only two passengers survived, First American 5. A Workers’ and ment. bd 5 < |] JOIN A FIGHTING PAR’ Subseribe to the Daily Worker Join the Workers (Communist) Party of hate Read a Fighting Paper FILL OUT THE SUB BLANK BELOW AND MAIL TO DAILY WORKER, 33 FIRST S¥, WRW YORK. Appltcation for Menbership out nk and mail t 43 B. 126th St, NY. Gy °° Workers Party, Rank and File Labor Delegation to Soviet Russia Price 25¢. Wire your orders for Lenin Memorial Meetings. WORKERS LIBRARY PUB- LISHERS, 39 East 125 St. NEW YORK. NAW civivccveceveescavecs Rates otitside New York $6.00 a year, 3.50 for 6 months, 2.00 for 3 months City and State .cs.cccccessscceees On Sale on All New York Newsstands. een wees NAME eererrrers 5 No. DEEL ATION. «s il pay initiation fee In New York UNEMPLOYED $8.00 per/ yedr (Enelosed find month's dues.) GET YOUR SHOPMATES TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE DAILY WORKER! you are on strike or WITHOUT INITIATION and stamps until employed. SOOO eee redone eee deteceeceeeseees St. Sit" Biate heady sees dachiptoydd ana vengces Please check this box fy onnet AND STRIKERS ADMITTED receive dues exempt $1.00 for initiation fee and one