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BELGIUM GUILTY OF BRUTALITY T0 CONGO NATIVES Workers Beaten With Rhinocerous Whips POSTON, M ng from a Africa, C. V the Boston Ju- Hiams, clerk in venile Court, further substantiated the known fact that Belgium is of great brutality to the na- | of the Bel 1 Congo. Williams de ed that the 10,000 | wh who rule the 15,000,000 Ne- groes there, are exerting every ef- fort and imposing extreme cruelties to prevent the ing of Nordic power ard i Prisoners are | driven to the ced labor with | unpadded iron and chains | about their ne wjth the en- slaved workers are goaded and| beaten to their tasks by whites with | rhinocerous-hide whips, The work- | ers are for to fifteen hours a F ing sun, with no respite whatsoever. Any semblance of organization, political or otherwise, :s promptly broken up. In 1927, twenty men were sentenced to death for insur- m twelve rection, to crush a revolt of the natives, but were saved from execu- tion only: by the intervention of a few whites. No Redress Against Whites. Though natives are the police of the Belgian Congo, which is eighty times as large as Belgium, they dare | not arrest a white person on any | charge. Neither have the | course of redress against a e, no matter what crime is com- | mitted against them. The running of trains, steamboats and all other act made possible only by | the natives, who do all the work. The complete suppression by the Belgian imperialists of any native movement of organization lies in the way of freedom, but a combined revolt of the natives is likely to throw off the Belgian slave-drivers. Poyntz Speaks Tonight at “Organization Meet of the Office Workers Juliet Stuart Poyntz, labor lec- turer ard educator, will be the prin- cival ‘Speaker at a mass meeting of cffiee workers to be held under the auspices of the Office Workers Union tonight at 8 p. m. at the La- bor Temple, 14th St., at Second Ave. According to a statement issued by the Office Workers Union, this meeting is a step in the intensive campaign undertaken by the union for the crganization of the-half mil- lion office workers in New York. | “The mass of office “workers is still laboring under the illusion of the superiority of their position to that of industrial workers, which is so diligently maintained by the bosses and their press. The develop- ment of labor-saving machinery in offices and the consequent terrific speed-up systems under which of- fice workers now work, give the final blow to tl myth and prove conclusively that office workers are any subject to the same evils of ex- Certained at present, as Toohey had | ploitation and oppression at the hands of the employing class as the vest of the working class. fe Rather handsome servants’ quarters is the picture ‘above. servant and that makes all the difference. ing of the United home has only 18 rooms and eight Possible Summer Rest-Home for “Ov DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WED SDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1 928 Sees, yang But The-phota shows the adm baths. erworked” President |Has Jobless Fund Plan | BROACH CLAIMS VICTORY; FAILS TO SIGN BOSSES to Bleed Members (By a Worker Correspondent) An increase of ten per cent in the daily wage, and the five day, 40- | hour week has been granted by part | of the electrical contractors of Brooklyn and the Bronx: | This increase was won by a mili- tant attitude on the part of the membership of the local here of the International Brotherhood of Elec- trical Workers, and this membership was led in this fight by the progres- sive group within Local 3, the group that International Vice Pres- \ident H. H. Broach is trying to | break up. But that fact did not prevent Broach at the union meeting in Cen- it happens to be Wall Street's inistration and observation build- States Weather Bureau, station at Mount Weather, Va., about 47 miles west of Wash- ington, which president Coolidge has suggested as @ permanent summer white house. This modest little DISMISS TOOHEY "RIOT FRAMEUP Prosecution Gets New Warrant for Miner Continued from Page One had no case whatever. But at the hearing before Judges Reed and Cohen, the motion of Distriet At- torney Gardner to nolle prosse the |. ease was fought bitterly by Attor- neys Hays, Porter and Ellenbogen of defense counsel, The judge declared to Hays that the “court could not be used for publicity purposes, as the defense intended.” Hays answered that deep issues of constitutional rights, freedom of peech, etc., were at stake, and that the defense wished to bring into light activities of the police in beat- ing, clubbing workers, ete, Due to the arrangement between the district attorney and the prose- cution, the judge nolle prossed the case, with costs on the county. The prosecution had no witnesses except the state police. The court room was filled with lawyers, students, ministers, labor leaders and miners. The case attracted wide attention, and the defense counsel was pre- pared to make a brilliant fight for the rights of the workers, Immediately after the case~ was nolle prossed, a warrant was sworn out to arrest Corporal Onko, who viciously slugged Toohey at the Renton meeting where Toohey and Brophy were arrested. The war- rant charges Onko with assault and battery. As soon as this was known to the prosecution, it announced a new warrant had been issued for the ar- rest of Toohey. The nature of the new frame-up charge cannot be as- not been arrested at a late hour to- lay. Darrow Outlines Case. IN. ¥. LL. D. to Have House-to-house Drive Saturday and Sunday City-wide house-to-house collec- tions for the Christmas Fund Drive of the New York District of the In- ternational Labor Defense will be conducted this Saturday and Sun- day. An intensive canvass will be |made throughout the city for the purpose of collecting funds that will go for the defense of the 662 tex. tile strikers who are being tried in Yew Bedford and the other class war cases now in the hands of the I. L. D. The Christmas season, xploited by bourgeois thropie” organizations for charity with which they seek to crush the militancy of the workers. is being used by the International labor Defense to strengthen the fighting front of the workers. All workers and sympathizers are urged to help the struggle to save the New Bedford militants from jail, to free Mooney and Billings and the other class war prisoners, by contributing generously to the louse-to-house collections. Volunteers are wanted for the col- lections. They are asked to report to the office of the New York I. L. D., 799 Broadway, Room 422, which is “philan- the fake Drop ‘Indictments in Knapp Case; After Al! No Worse Than Teapot All remaining indictments against Mrs. Knapp, former census bureau head and secretary of state for New | York State and charging her with forgery, false entry, and larceny, in the handling of $1,200,000 census funds have been dismissed by Supreme Court Justice Callaghan, in Brooklyn, yesterday, at the motion of Special Denuty Attorney General George Z. Medaile. Mrs. Knapp was convicted on one count only, and served only a fraction of her 30 day | sentence. TICK DELEGATES ~ TO CLOAK MEET | Convention to Be Held | Here Soon | Continued from Page One the discussion at the.open forum was Louis Hyman, chairman of the National Organization Committee of the Cloak and Dressmakers’ Union. Wie BOSTON. Dee. 18—A report de- livered by the secretary of the Bos- ton Central Trades Council at the last meeting of that reactionary A. F. of L. body, shows how desperate the Boston labor-fakerdom is at the fast growth of the left wing local of the cloak and dressmakers’ union } there. The ridiculous extremes to which they are ready to go in their ef- forts to halt that local’s progress can be seen when a report was made by Secretary Greiges that he and two officials of the right wing cloak makers’ ‘>cal had gone to the chief! _ of police to warn him of catastrovhic consequences for the city of Bos- ton, if the “agents of Arnold Roth- stein” were permitted to call strikes kere. In this he was referring to the act'on of the left wing local in calling an organization strike against the Sally Dress Co. From the A, F. of L. faker’s report it was learnt thatthe three Boston boosters had told: the chief of police that Julius Portnoy, N. 0. CG. representa- tive from New York, who had led in the decision to call a_ strike against the firm, had come to Bys- ton as agent of Arnold Rothstein, the dead gambling chieftain, in or- der to disturb the peace of the city. The basis for this maneuver is the scurtilous attacks the socialist “Forward” recently made on the left wing. One day they claimed that tral Opera House from stepping |forward, exaggerating the gains, jand taking all the eredit for the | “successful negotiating,” a “com- | plete victory, except for a few min- | or reservations,” says Broach, | No Big Bosses Yield. | Among these minor reservations | which Broach hardly mentioned is the fact that most of the workers | will not profit by the new deal, be- cause the big contractors, according to Broach, “couldn’t be included.” | At the meeting referred to above, * | Broach, apparently feeling confident | that the audience of electrical work- ers were swallowing this ~bunk whole, proceeded in a self-satisfied way to outline a program for un- employment relief. The contractors, angels of mercy according to this program, will dig up a million dol- lars a year, and Broach will dis- tribute to needy electrical workers half a million a year. He charac- teristically did not explain where the other half million would go, Tho he had to admit that when e first proposed this plan to some iendly” contractors, they thought it absurd, Broach insisted that. he would teach them to pay, “They will learn to pay,” this little Caesar declaimed. | Membership Will Pay. | The progressives warn the mem- | bership that this unemployment re- lief plan will not cost the contrac- tors anything. Some means will be |found to assess the union member- | ship for it, and Broach will be more | helped than the unemployed by it. | And to top off this meeting. H (is) H (ighness) Broach delivered the usual blast against Communists and progressives. He suspects ‘them of seeing thru some of his {high sounding schemes, programs, | and negotiations. | One of the things we are expos- ing him for is his order to an obe- dient rat, “Jack” Solomon, to go around and lift the cards of all those helpers who were not able to attend an electrical school for which they | | have to pay out of their own pock- ets, whether they can attend or not. ThiS school was founded at the suggestion of Broach for the pur- pose of turning out efficient and obedient workers, but it can not seem to get the loyalty or enthus- |iasm of the helpers, who know that |any scheme of Broach’s can have only the effect of sapping the hard | earned dollars out of their pockets. ad i i ich ti lead- The “respectable” medical profession, which includes many } is once more revealed to be a trifle shady be- ‘ng pillars of society, low the surface. Dr. Byron M. Ossex Mountain Sanitarium in New Jersey ts now on fences against bourgeois morality is in ted to certain It ceems that Miss Elmer Gantry was entirely too devoted of his lady patients, Photo shows the hearing where Bertie Galloway (right center) testified concerning KILLS STARVING Released io Watch | CLEVELAND, Oh‘o, Dee. 18 (UP) | An apparently hopeless fight | gainst grinding poverty, climaxed | by a question as to whether “Santa | Claus would forget again this year” | to visit her little home, led Mrs. Anna Kempf several weeks ago to | try to poison herself and her three small children. | With almost the last of her money, the mother bought a card- hoard container of ice cream and a package of rat poison. She mixed them and the family sat down to what the children greeted as a treat. | She thought it would be the end of their earthly troubles, at least | land the judge placed her on proba- GREEK TERROR DOES NOT WANT INVESTIGATION | Denies Barbusse’s Tor- ture Charges PARIS, Dec. 18,—The Gree: pre- j mier, Venizelos, has answered the questions of Barbusse, the French revolutionary writer and chairman of the Committee for the Defense of the Victims of the White Terror in the Balkans, by declaring that his | information was false and advising ‘him to base his‘ demands only on official information, Barbusse had demanded that an ive nig sce committee be allowed jinto Gréece. The Greek “Workers A‘d,” branch of the International Red Aid, has reported that it is in the position te give information on the exiling and jailing of workers and peasants, ae | According to its report, 50 more workers and peasants have been ban- ished to 11 deportation islands for Two Others Starve la period of time ranging from 6 One baby gitl died, the others, | ronths to 4 years. though made seriously ill, recovered. |" "Wifey young soldiers “have “been Mrs, Kempf was tried for first imprisoned in the catacombs » of degree murder at once, there being | Kalpaki, a desolate spot in the moun- no romance or drama in the case gins where the prisoners die from and no reason for delay. The jury| hunger and torture. They were sus- disagreed. pected of having Communist ideas. The second trial followed today." ‘The police commission can sen- Distracted, hardly caring what hap- | tence workers and peasants to terms pened to her, Mrs. Kempf decided) o¢ panishment without any trial. not to fight, and through her attor- ney offered to plead guilty to man- Se slaughter. ‘The plea was accepted Harman, ‘superintendent of the trial for of- which he didn't hide well enough. | the doctor’s indiscretions, CHILD Antillian Songsters at Latin-American Dance on Saturday The entertainment and dance ar- tion. | Mrs. Kempf was freed, to start | over again her fight to feed the two vemaining children. pis 5 “Bur er Consolidation DAP PRESENCE OF Saher Console TALBO, FASGIST Plan Mass Campaign | Against Murderer A resolution of protest against! the bloody activities of Italo Balbo, icht-hand man to Mussolini and, legate to the recent aviation con- ference was adopted at a joint meeting of the International Labor Defense and the Anti-Fascist Al- liance Sunday night at the Irving| Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place, The Anti-Fascist Alliance charges that Balbo, ex-generalissimo of the fascist militia and minister of avia-, tion, is responsible for the murder| of tens of thousands of workers tor-| tured to death in Italy, and fifteen} thousand now in exile or impris- oned. The resolution adopted follows: | “Whereas, the American govern- | ment has welcomed to this country | Italo Balbo, former generalissimo of | the fascist militia of Italy, and who! has personally taken part in the tor- turing and killing of workers; and “Whereas, we consider the pres-| ence of Balko an insult to the Amer- ican workers and their organiza- tions; be it therefore | | “Resolved, that this conference calls upon the American working class, and especially the members of | the organizations that we represent, | ranged for Saturday night, Dee. 22, and Lennox Avenue for the benefit of the Snanish workers’ paper, “Vida Obrero” by the: Spanish Bureau of the Workers (Commu- nist) Party nromises to ho one of the most colorful affairs in work- ing class entertainments. of Texas Oil Companies \ FORT WORTH, Tex., Dec. 18 (UP).—Sale of the oil properties of the Henshaw Oil Corp. to the Amer- ican Maracaibo Co. of New York, 7. a was concluded at a conference of of-| _, It is announced that the Antillian ficials of the two companies here| Group, a quartet of Latin Americans today. |Company in recording the latest With the sale, 21,000 acres of | Latin-American songs, ‘thas heen ad- producing and semi-producing oil} ded to the program. They will ap- lands, mostly in west Texas, will) pear at the dance with their latest change hands, |songs and costumes and they will accompany their songs with their |typical Antillian instruments which The purchase price, though not announced officially has been re- |have no name in the Eng'ish parted at ee ate jlanguage. The group consists of ie ~'|Pedro Marcano, tenor; Aamon to rise in mighty protest against} Aunes, baritone; Rafael Gonzales |the presence of such criminals as | and Pedro Flores. Balbo in this country and against} Tickets can be procured at. the the government he represents; and Workers Book Shop, 26 Union be it further © | Sqtare+and at the Spanish/Center; “Resolved, that we ask our or-|55 West 113th St, ganizations to endorse and actively | participate in any protest demon-| strations against the presence of} Balbo in this country, that may be) organized by the Anti-Fascist Al- liance and the I. L. D.” | The original Isadora Duncan Dancers of Moscow will perform in a special Program of Revolu- tionary Dances at the Fifth Anni- versary ef the Daily Worker, Tickets are on sale at the Daily Worker office. WORKERS LIBRARY PAMPHLETS « Order from Workers Library Publishers 35. East 125th Street, New York City e Every, worker should have all.of these pamphlets at the New Harlem Casino, 116th , the files of Rothstein, in possession | —ELECTRICAL WORKER. Clarence Darrow has issued a long | of the grand jury, would show that | TSU EATS i “We call upon all office workers | in his library for reference: to attend this mass meeting, join our union and build up a powerful organization of office workers,” Race Vaccine Across Alaska to Stop Its , Small- pox Epidemic CORDOVA,Alaska, Dec. 18 (UP). —A dog team carrying a large sup- ply of vaccine was racing down the Yunok to Holy Cross today in an attempt to stop a small-pox epidemic that is spreading inland from the coast. Amateur radio stations at Anvik and St. George Island flashed a message from J. W. Chapman, post- | master at Anvik, to Governor George A. Parks at Juneau, telling of the epidemic. Half of Anvik upply of vaccine has been sent to Holy Cross which is 50 miles away. There is no ap- parent lack of vaccine at Anvik, the message indicated. Harvey, Big Tammany Man, Allowed to Hold Two Jobs at One Time George U. Harvey, recently elect- ed president of Queens Borough, to- day received a certificate of elec- tion from the eleetion commission. »)ames J. Munro, \an attorney, had ted to obtain mandamus pro- Ee i against Harvey’s receiving | the certificate because Harvey was a member of the board of aldermen ‘at. the time of his election. Radio Board Again Helps Radio Moncpoly WASHINGTON, Dec. 18—The Federal Radio Commission continues to grant ship station licenses to the Radiae Marine Corporation, a sv’ _ sidiar'y of the Radio Corporation America, in spite of recent court cisions in the radio tubes cases. T' Radio Corporation of America » pires to a mononoly of the best st» tions and wave lor~ths. Three new . % statement on the nolle prossing of the case, and denouncing the new frame-up planned against Toohey, and condemning the state police as strikebreakers. He says: “On March 6th, last, a meeting of striking and unemployed miners with their families were assembled in their own hall in Renton, Penna., while Patrick Toohey, leader of the Miners’ Union, and John Brophy, another miner and leader, were ad-| dressirig the crowd. “Some ten or twelve members of the state constabulary forced them selves into the meeting, sitting in the back part of the hall; these were obviously trespassers and had’ no! business whatever in the meeting and would, of course, never have | dreamed of going to it if it had been called by the employers. These ignorant officials instwucted the speakers as to what they could talk about and what they could not talk about. The police took their seats in the back of the hall, and at a certain time, without any reason whatever, made their way to the speakers’ platform and ordered the meeting to disperse, After beating up. Patrick Toohey, one of the speakers, they then took the two men to the home of Mr, Bard, one of the owners and officers of the Renton mine, and then telephoned the sheriff of Allegheny County to come to the house and arrest these two men, They were then taken to the sheriff's office and put under a searching inquisition and after holding them for an hour or two, an information was filed charging them with riot and inciting to riot. They were placed under bail and released. es Continued Raids. “Thereafter the district attorney presented the case before the grand jury and both defendants were in- dicted for riot and inciting to riot, and placed each under bond of a thousand dollars. This indictment ‘vas returned by the March grand iry, which has been pending until! lay. When the defendant came » court this morning the district orney asked the judge to nolle ce the case and dismiss it. vious to this time the same gang f police raided various mestings e were granted it yesterday. | throughout the district for the evi- ‘Yellow Dog Forced | on the Indianapolis | Silk Mill Workers INDIANAPOLIS, (By Mail).— The company union now rules in the Real Silk Mills here. It is called the Employes’ Mutual Benefit Associa- tion. Workers are foreed to sign a yellow dog contract. SEEK BURNED BODIES. HAZARD, Ky., Dec. 18 (UP).— Firemen continued digging in the | debris of the Combs Hotel today in search of persons reported missing 4 after fire destroyed the hotel Satur- | day night. dent purpose of helping the employ- ers to defeat the strike. “From the time the ‘police were organized until this very day they | have been the ready tools of the employers in all industrial disputes. That was why they were organized, the state police. Police Strikebreakers. “The two defendants in the case were guilty of no offense of any/| sort. The police knew it, They de- liberately raided their meeting, as they had consistently done before, for the purpose of breaking up the strike. In this business the sheriff gave full assistance. All the par- ties concerned will be sued for mali- cious prosecution and false arrest. “A warrant for the arrest of Corporal Onko was sworn out, on a charge of assault; he has been ‘arrested but was released when Sheriff Braun went his bail. Hear- Rothstein was an agent of the Communists and the next day they charged that Rothstein was the ringleader of the Communist strikes. | Public discredit has by now forced even the “Forward” to stop these | idiocies. This, however, did not prevent their Boston colleagues, from aping them. Despite the order of the police that picketing at the struck shop be | halted, the workers are determined | \to continue fighting. | * + *@ | BALTIMORE, Md. Dec. 18.— Baltimore cloak and dressmakers are called to attend a mass meeting, called by the N. O, C. for Wednes- day evening in the. Conservatoria | Hall, 1029 S. Baltimore St. A repre- sentative of the N. O. C. will come from New York to address the meet- ‘ing. The Yugoslay Worker ‘Club Will Attend Red Poets’ Night en Masse ordered tickets for its entire mem- bership for the third annual Inter- national Red Poets’ Night, to be | held Friday evening, Dec. 28, at} | Manhattan Lyceum, 66 B. 4th St. The club ie an educational organi- zation of class-conscious workers ‘and all the members are going to be present at Red Poets’ Night and ‘bring their friends. | For the first time since the found: ing of the institution of Red Poets’ | The Yugoslav Workers’ Club has | ‘Nicaragua Now Ready ‘for Canal Says Edge ‘in Report to Senate I Senator Edge of New Jevsey, who has been on a recent scouting ex- vedition for American imperialism in Central America, seeking to make its position there more impregnable than ever, reported to the senate yesterday that Nicaragua is now | “teady” for the construction of the proposed canal. He said, further- | more, that it is needed for war pur- | poses. | He hased this “readiness” on the ;scmewhat shaky evidence of the | “good will” dope spread about | Hoover's visit to the coastal city of | Corinto, and the undeniable fact \that the two lackeys, Moncada and | Diaz, had licked Hoover's shoes til) the polish came off. Edge evaded |all mention of Sandino’s continued resistance for national independence. Edge was arguing for $150,000 to jmake a new survey across Nitara- gua for the proposed canal, which, he cla‘ms, is a matter of “national defense,” and would shorten the New |York-San Francisco route by 18 hours and accommodate 79 per cent | of the present. Panama traffic which is crowding that route. Women’s Course Starts at N. Y. Worker School “Woman in History” is the title | ing has been set for Friday on this Night the Yugoslav workers will be| of a course that Paulina Rogers. charge, The authorities will prob- ably now adopt the usual pro- cedure, I have no hesitance in say- ing, they will probably persecute Toohey. It will be interesting to see what kind of charge they will use against him this time.” Darrow, Hays, Toohey and Brophy were given a dinner last night by the local Civil Liberties Union. Toohey was absent on account of illness, Tonight there is a mass meeting with the four as speakers. The character of the new frame-up inst» Toohey cannot ned although it is do known Uiat a warrant is out, represented. John Sigzorich, a con- tributor to “Radnick,” Yugoslav Communist daily and a member of the Yugoslav Workers’ Club, will be among those who will read. Td Poets’ Night this year will be more elaborate than ever before and the poets who will read will include ®& greater number of nationalities. Revolutionary poetry will be fol- lowed by revolutionary dancing or trains of John C, Smith’s Negro Jazz Band. Buy your tickets early! ne SGArige | ITSP) YOUR PROTEST CRRIALIST WAR. VOTE (COMMUNISTS any kind of dancing at all to the} ‘agitprop director of the Women’s | Dept. of the New York district of | the Workers (Communist) Party, will give at the New York Workers | School, 26 Union Sq., beginning to- ‘night. The course will be of par- \ticulrr interest to women active in labor struggles, and particularly in the organization of working women. ARMY GOOD TO FRIENDS WASHINGTON, Dee. 18 (UP).— Tease of the former Boston army _ base to the Bay State Shipping Com- | ny of Boston for five years, be- nning Jan. 1, was authorized to- ‘day by the U. 8. Shipping Board, WASHINGTON, D. C.. Dec. 18.— Newark Worker School Opens Tomorrow Nite, WithImportantCourses | | The Newark Branch of the Work- | ers School starts in real earnest this | week with the beginning of three | \important classes, English on Thurs- | ;day at 8 p.’m., Fundamentals of | Communism, Friday at § p. m., and | | Marxian Economics, Friday at 9:30 | ip, m | | __A. Markoff, instructor in the | | Workers School of New York City, |is the director of its Newark Branch land in addition will teach two coufSes on Friday evening. It is vlanned to organize courses later on in Trade Unionism and American History and Principles of Marxism. | | The courses are open to all work- _ers who wish to train themselves for | ithe class struggle and zor more ef- | fective work in working class or- | ganizations to which they may be- | jlong.’ The fee has been reduced to | the minimum so as to enable all | workers to attend classes at this jschool. Special provision, moreover, | | has been made for unemployed work- | lers and for workers on strike. | The plan of the Workers School | \is to have its Newark Branch be- ‘come the educational center for all militant workers in New Jersey. |The aim is to have the fightine workers of Elizabeth, New Brun: wick and other cities train at th! school. Those who wish to tal any classes at the Newark Branch |of the Workers School should regis- \ter immediately. Yuditch to Talk at | Amalgamated Fraction | P. Yuditch, of the staff of “The |Freiheit.” will lecture on “The Left | Wing in the Trade Unions” tomor- | |vow night at 7:30 at a mass meet- ; ing of the Amalgamated fraction of the Trade Union Educational Teague at the Workers Center, 26, Union Square. | All members’ of the Trade Union | Tidueational League are urged to he | present, especially — chirtmakers, rantemakers, vestmakers and other | clothing workers, Leninism vs. Trotskyism—Zinoviev, Kamenev and Stalin .. American Negro Problems—John Pepper... America Prepares the Next War—Jay Lovestone 10¢ Platform of the Class Struggle... Bolshevism—Stalin . Building Up Socialism—N. Bukhari 3 Wrecking the Labor Banks—William Z. Foster. Lenin, the Great Strategist—Losousky WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS LENIN ON ORGANIZATION How the Bolshevik, Party Was Formed; Shop Nuclei; Menshe- viks and Liquidation; Bourgeois Intellectuals; Opportunism; Party Unity; Democratic Cen- tralism and Party Discipline: Historical Materialism vs. Bours geois Idealism. . NEW EDITION 75 CENTS, Indispensable for every Communist. WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 35 EAST 125TH STREET, NEW YORK —