The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 29, 1929, Page 2

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‘age Two | TTSBURGH M ORKERS MEET HOWS PROGRESS MW.A. in Ziegler Fast Disintegrating (Continued from Page Or criet and nati essed throughout the conv word of d was All the dele whom were the majority -time fighters, shov ™=* DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, YY 29, 1929 Address of the Comintern, Genaniae from Page One) of the American workers, to put the inner and outer contradictions in 4 wrong way and to dissociate the development of inner contradictions of American capitalism from its external contradictions and from the general crisis of world capitalism; to underestimate American reform- ism, to slide down to petty-bourgeois pacifism and to underestimate the right danger in the American Communist Party. This makes neces- sary the final rooting out of the dangerous illusion of “Execptional- ism” which is a reflection of the pressure of American capitalism and reformism on the working class as well as our Party. “Only a sharpened struggle against these right tendencies can prepare the American Party to take the advantage of the increasing favorable conditions for building the Party, The fact that all the most serious mistakes since the Sixth World Congress have been of a Right character, the fact that both former groupings contain elements with strong Right tendencies and have been guilty of serious Right errors IN HARBIN RAIDED (Continued from Page One) | Chiang Kai-shek, traitor to the Chi- nese masses and handmaiden to the imperialists, now charging that the revolt of Marshall Feng Yu-hsiang against the Nanking regime is be- ing maneuvered from Moscow, raided the consulate in an attempt to give substance to his declaration and pave the way for further imperialist i vasion against the Chinese workers and peasants, Chiang, in an effort to strengthen the allied dictatorship of the Kuo- INE Additional Statements on USSR CONSULATE DAIRY GUNMEN KILLS'AGKET Injure Many, Jail 13, Applying Injunction (Continued from Page One) in the West End district of Pitts- burgh last night and this morning. The delivery truck appeared with Deputies Vierling and R, B. Fink guarding the scabs driving it. When the pickets were seen, Vierling and Fink approached them. An argu- ment followed; first Vierling and then Fink drew. guns, and Vierling | During Polls € (Continued from Page One) creasingly clear that thousands of | voters are entirely indifferent to the lelections, since they have learned | ‘larity of the programs of the major parties. Because of the severe election laws the Communist Party has succeeded in placing only 26 candidates in the over 500 con- stituencies. The tendency of the th : . : : mintang . officials and the im- opened fire point blank into the Communists to gain strength as the ; ready to take all this calls for the immediate carrying out and understanding of the, , has expelled all of Feng’s crowd of pickets. The strikers re- election advances has brought a ainst the epidemic of Comintern decisions. Any resistance to these decisions and to the line | supporters from the Kuomintang) taliated with rocks, according to one |concentration of the capitalist par- at have ruled this distr of the Comintern during the present period can only be considered as | ang the government, Many of these,! report, and drove the murderers lties in these 26 constituencies. » men returned to work i y are all for the T nion in Cleveland, to ade U Reports Reports by Secret »ohey for the ti a most serious Right deviation. While carrying on the fight against the Right danger as the main danger we must also crush counter- reyolutionary Trotskyism. ‘2.—The District Executive Committee of District 2 condemns the opposition to the decisions of the Comintern on the part of Com- rades Lovestone and Gitlow and will struggle together with the whole membership of the League and Party against all attempts at splitting the Party and against all open or coyert attacks against the Comintern who were occupying important gov- ernment positions in Nanking, have not only been removed by Chiang, but have been removed in such a way that they have disappeared. Many Documents Stolen. The five truckloads of papers and fixtures stolen from the Soviet Con- away. The men under arrest are charged with violation of the injunction. The strike started May 10. The strikers demand union recognition, the nine hour day, a $5 wage raise, two days off work every month and two weeks’ vacation every year with! ————— capitalist lackeys in the courts are male lackey of the bosses. — Photo shows the swearing in of a Woman. Judge-Magistrate Jeanette Brill, by Tammany officials. Ramsay MacDonald, speaking at Middlesboro, already gave an indi- {cation that he does not believe in jthe value of the “unemployment |solution” offered by his own party |when he said, “If any of you think you are going to reduce unemploy- The female of the species of as vicious to the workers as the Kemenovict i 4 A “7 |ment to a normal level in twelve Fe apa aT ps ue ee ge a anaes vere neaaehiP. sulate during the raid, were carted|full pay. Till now the men worked | jmonths, you are living in a fool’s .\. » tion, concretely showed Youth Eeseus cai toe ik Heo eke cetitade eet ae d the steennist | to the goernment offices, where they |12 and more hours a day for seven McGRADY WOULD l T W TRIES T0 | paradise,” te i les : 1 seyuo calls or Heteemes nn a1 le Wee ee e si Senled will be examined while the Soviet days a week at an average weekly Whaaeg | Philip Snowden and J. H, Thomas tablenhing: its-or eS UNS SENS BAY Leacing Tunctionary oF tue League Of erty | officials are kept in jail. Just like| wage of $15. No vacations were are even more outspoken in defense ‘ tal n r who oppose or show the slightest hesitation in connection with the the provocative raid in Peking in| given. | of imperialist policy. Speaking at pa eon Wie ven qratiinal decisions the Comintern may deem necessary as a guarantee | he imperialists, is a direct threat of/ Not many scabs have been secured not getting enough out of the shy- ited that thé mine work race era es MORE HTGnaL aS oF ieeincipla inthe Wren WeenbGe =| Con eae oN cy occur cea noe [OE the company, but the A.B of Le See aa locking, of Germany and announced re march the str in the American Party the Open Letter states: ‘The American Com- {peau VO TONEY MAESCS Of oo an ee ae te anen Gastonia Group Expose 10 Shots at Poisoners; tt hes would gn for 2 preniee hio, West Virg and Ken | munist Party is confronted now in all sharpness with the question of share than even Baldwin has been ter the leade: liners Union, Vv a the danger of political disintegration of the present leading cadres which threatens to undermine the whole work of the Party.’ The British imperialists, alarmed at the growth of the revolutionary Charles Miller, the business agent of the local, says he has not authority Elizabethton Sell Out | Organize Commune lable to obtain. |there is much speculation here as In the meantime Sexecthias of the necessity of anew “We! agres’ with thaveriticina/at the Party leaderahio sad pledie eee ee aeteie tate acd eoceall ee mie ont auderatet ra (Continued from Page One) | Co tiaier from ae Cae) ._ |to the likelihood of ae relation : nion. to wholehearted support all measures proposed by the Executive Com- | terests threatened in China by the| All attempts to reach them mect |°PPo%ed to Wilcox, Perry and Buch. | cents for examinations, which is with American imperialism show Reports from delegates brought | mittee of the Communist International for the strengthening of the | revolt of the Chinese masses, the| with the answer that “they are out.” field as the actual kidnappers of |Ré rule here, many of the steer adi pe sean " ut concrete examples of the stool) leadership and the uprooting of factionalism including the most ex- French imperialists working erin Meee eS " |Hoffman some time ago, and knew|¢" sas path e re ie i a Skarpened Class Struggle. mn fgeon acti the United Mine} treme measures if necessary against those who further persist in ja] with the British, wand the they ‘were gathering information to| (pechers in the school tallt ageinst) This election campaign finds ald Yorkers -of » who stoop to factional activity and violation of the decisions of the Address ‘clean | Japanese imperialists with their in- HOOVER TARIFF use for persecution and discrimin-| 1° aay eoannte S Bee terete hourgecls. enaea woueoe ae iat isiting b uses to denounce up to expulsions from the Party.’ | terests peitoed te Retna ation against the militant strikers. ae aes NEA the cowed | v. M).U. membe: Numerous resolutions were doptef; supporting all the national md district campaigns, demanding ‘reedony for Mo y and Billings, ‘ight against the coal and iron po- ice, Watson-Parker bill, company “4.—The Open Letter of the Comintern and the measures it pro- | poses have the greatest importance for the Communist Youth League | in connection with the unanimous decisions of the League's Fifth | National Convention.. The ECCI Open Letter means an immediate | improvement of the Party and a more rapid tempo in the development of the Party from a numerically small propagandist to a mass politi- cal party of the working class, This will make possible the more rapid all directly ai against the Soviet Union. Chiang Kai-shek, who has made peace with | these imperialist by giving them free | play in China in return for recogni- {tion of the Nanking regime, is the mill and scab, | Salisbury Council Invites. This morning a carload of strikers left for Salisbury, N. C., to address | National Textile Workers’ committee here warns the rayon PASSES HOUSE |workers that this is a mere gesture, jand that the company will place its | ‘stool pigeons in as registration of-| ficers under any circumstances; it |tool being used against the Soviet Frame-up Gang Meet calls on the strikers to stay out and trend which British imperialism at | one time enjoyed, extending the ex- ploitation of colonies for the bene- the monthly meeting of the Central’ Fit of capitalism at home, is no more. | Trades and Labor Council of that! The decaying British imperialism of |city. The Council invited the strik-| the present, which does away with 4 lers to send a delegation to their | the “nation of shopkeepers” condi- G7 Hives oe jtion, makes for unemployment, i n spite of the heavy showers,! shay d class struggle, ete, It 0 regis ti ‘a Feat | sharpene Bele, etc, — (Continued from Page One) 4 . ant Temieiered, yee see | striking textile workers of the Loray | was inevitable that in this situation | fred E. Beal and Vera Bush, | mill yesterday finished erecting the|the labor party should have ‘piled ‘Gastonia strike organizers, were re-|tents and moved into the Workers| inionspate. Thezeonvention re-elected the ol cfficers, with the exception of vi president. A Negro miner was chosen:as vice-president. carrying through of the line laid down at the League’s Fifth National Convention and by the Communist Youth International for strength- | ening of the League and turning it along a new course of mass ac- tivity. The growing radicalization of the American workers, the immenent war danger,—all create conditions for the eliminating of win. So far the registration does Union. not exceed a couple of thousand. The very fact that Chang Hsueh- liang, son of Chang Tso-lin and di |tator of Manchuria, conducted the | amendments restricting the presi- ' | Held in White House c raid on the Soviet consulate, gives | dent's “elastic” Thousands Join. ZEIGLER, Il., May 27.—The dis- factionalism and for the building of the Party and the League. The District Executive Committee of District 2 of the Communist Youth League calls upon the entire membership of the Party and the League to unreservedly s@port the directives of the Communist International ialists that Chang was in a plot with |the Soviet Union, Chiang used this | power of fixing jlie to the declarations of the imper- | Gutios, Frame-up Experts Meet. fused the floor when they tried to| ty:grnational Relief tent colony. The | speak at the mass meeting called by | strikers have decided to run the the United Textile Workers’ Union up the long record of betrayals, in- cluding the general strike betrayal, ihe miners’ lockout desertion, the colony on the basis of a commune,| angio.Russian Unity Committee integration which set in after the} ist ¥ 4 spree ; statement to attempt to seize the| Hoover assembied his recently ap- |misleaders yesterday morning to electing a sanitary squad, manage-| in of- “oN ae Convention of the Illinois! #24 Communist Youth International not in words but in deeds, not Chinesa Eastern Railroad, in which Pointed commission to devise easier |complete the sell-out of the rayon sien beanies al foe tore ht re Bee breaks ete. When ploy ere in of District of the United Mine Wo formally but on the basis of real understanding as proven in every luke “Soviet eovesiinenty fas prior frame-up in labor cases and pave |strike here. Beal and Bush wanted! 2. sug dittwancss teat me |fice in 1924 they claimed they cou! ot Aner hich “the ant day activity. This is the only guarantee for successfully making this ‘he Soviet 8 the way for a big federal spy army to warn the strikers of the treason | anice among the workers Ynot meet the demands of the work- __{ ers of America, at which the miners turn along this new course—TO THE MASSES AND TO A MASS |Wnership. Find ise of. investipation. df th icad th he eee ing class, because they did not have F were betrayed by the scab outfit and NIST: Ty AN “TT “ T * The raid comes two days before Under guise of investigation of the /practiced upon them, and te’ em| = May Take Away Bed Sheets. ; istity On th : : mes COMMUNIST PARTY AND LEAGUE IN THE U. §. A. ; lcohibition eit Gsane haw hee Gaat trik ape is i" neBed a parliamentary majority. On the fakers, is proceeding so rapidly that | ae: the fourth anniversary of the | Prol ibition enforcement, an came |how e Gastonia strikers, under! Gladys Wallace, an active striker, basis of this appeal it is possible z the U. M. -W. A. in this distri At the membership meeting of the Communist Youth League held | Shanghai massacre which was the |cut boldly, admitting that its main leadership of the National Textile jas been notified that her bed sheets that -they -will get a wisjority’ in t being wiped out. The mine in New York on Sunday, the resolution of the District Committee was | spark that lit up the revolution and | Purpose was not just the dry probe. | Workers’ Union were fighting to a| wil] he taken away because she owes | + >, t 3 : 5 4 | ‘hursday’s vote. joining the National Miners Uni unanimously endorsed. |on the same day as the body of Sun| The supreme court decided yes- victory. |$6.80. She has paid $22 on them so|~ : by thousands as the fakers are ex- | Saas | Yat-sen, leader of the revolution in|terday that the president's pocket! ‘The temper of the strikers here|far. She is determined to resist the ‘The Communist Party is the po- posed, | BUFFALO DISTRICT BUREAU ACTS. |its initial stages, arrives in Nank-|veto power applied to all sessions |was such that the fakers dared not | instalment house if they attempt to| jitieal leader of the working class. | An indication of the response cf District Bureau met. Unanimous on Central Committee de- ing, falsely claimed by the traitors of congress, not just the one which jthrow the Gastonia strikers out, but | take away the bed-clothes, after she —Stalin. eat tl the miners to the appeal of thn Na-| cision on Comintern Address. Pledge win entire membership for | of the Nanking regime as theirs, [ends a congress. It also smashed|in the afternoon, Vice‘President | has paid so much on them. Pe tional Miners Union can be seen in| Communist International line and demand end with any opposition to —_——_ |the appeal of the pacifist, Rosika|Kelley of the United Textile Work-| ‘The Loray mill preacher attempted in the thousands that are flocking to Comintern Address and unity of Party for mass work.—Charles 5 ;Schwimmer, Hungarian applicant |ers, called a closed metting, in which | to divide the Negro and white work-| th the N; M. U. mass mectings. In| Mitchell, District Organizer, Buffalo District, FERR ARI R AFT [for citizenship, who was denied|he assailed Beal, saying he “was in|cos’ hay failed’ they ottered a a spite of attempts to murder and * #8 | oe ig ;Papers by a lower court because she the.pay of the Soviet.” | Negro well known to the strikers | i sitg and frame-up and imprison the | The Resolutions of District No. | Against Groupings—for the Line of stated that she would not kill ene-| Edward McGrady, A. F. of L. leg- 375 to talk against the N. T. W. U. th N. M. U. organizers; ‘the respo) Three, (Philadelphia) ee the Gnaintes mies of American imperialism on jslative representative, who declares They wanted him to get himself in- wi vorkers is increasing. ‘ sane | ee | \the battlefield. The majority of the himself the personal representative | yj ; j 2 from the workers increasing. ‘ ; | | P vited to speak from the union plat. In W eee Sue oF The resolution of the Executive! The South Slavic Bureau of the| | justices declared that this was a/of President Green, today offered | ¢, d th il th ion fi . in West Frankfort, between 2,500 é es ; : : joe 5 ‘| form and then assail the union from a a h00 miners came to a m Committee of District Three, (Phila-| Communist Party of United States | zs |“dangerous theory” and hastened to |his services to the bosses and busi-|it, He was told he would be paid aROTET Se o on meeting in the park, while more “¢!phia) on the address of the Com-/fully and wholeheartedly accepts a jdo the right thing by the imperial-/ness men’s committee of Elizabeth-| 95 for his first speech, and another LL.D. Leads Fight; to eli than 1,000 were present at an in-|/i2term unanimously adopted by the] and endorses the Address of the|More Dirt on Tammany jist war makers. ton to “ride Beal and the Commun-| $59 if he would continue to attack| i." ~¢ Pr joor meeting at the Polish Hall, District Bureau was as follows: | Executive Committee of the Com- Alliance | The senate committee investigat-|ists out of town.” «: |the union, The Negro, who at one Be Sentenced Today the a MME which’ at one time was| “The Executive Committee of ama aetron tional ae ine member- | jing the exposure of the names of Lynchers Meet. |time had Been & mill worker, ‘took Cnet Pace’ One) de ronghold of the Lewis ma-| District Three, accepts, wholeheart-| ship of our Party and the unanimous . |senators voting to approve appoint-| 4 i tod f the business |his union book from a shelf and said:| _ ‘ontinued from Page One the é ee aictsict Ben et sao jedly endorses and pledges unreserved | decision of Central Committee, and ea pte See ean jment of Lenroot, power trust hire-| ons ‘tyadhing ply tee st “decide | “That's the kind of a man I am, If; Judge, the ruling out of all Sacco- | ¢ hia ers came to the meetings in spite |Support to the Address of the Com-| pledges its fullest and unlimited sup- ilew 45 ets in ling given a customs judge’s job by Jon measures to keep the Communists |I speak it will be for the union and| Vanzetti evidence and the shielding hes a heavy rain. At all these meet-|munist International and to all de-|port to the new line of E. C. C. Ue ee eaten Hed dntimee tate cone Onvees failed to force Reporter |\.i0 veccived assurances from Me-|not against it.” |of Fuller are looked upon as a con- cel ings, when the N. M. U. organizers, | cisions that may flow therefrom, [and the unanimous decision of Cen-) -- 7 aU Gi ie ts we of Mallon to say where he got the in- Gay, Kelley, and Weinstock that/ Funds to purchase food, tents and | tinuation of the lynch “justice” by chi si W: enry Cor.| ‘The District Executive Commit-|tral Committee in full application | MVC Sree ee |formation, but voted down in its , af * sist- | medicine for the striking workers | Which Sacco and Vanzetti were mur- ‘Bi President John Watt and Henry Cor- | Je fi | fictitious bookkeeping which netted ‘ A . |they would give all possible assist is | bishley, asked all those who were |tee considers that this decision def-]of the Open Letter. We firmly be-| 700 some $3,000,000 in forged |°W™ executive session a motion to snco. McGrady in his speech yester- | should be sent to the Workers Inter- | dered. am ' with the National Miners Union to/|initely ends the factional struggle|lieve that our Party can and must | ‘i i 4] Bed! allow the reporters back on the day boasted of the extraordinary ex-|national Relief, One Union Square, To Be Sentenced Today. spe raise their hands, practically every | Which has continued in the ranks of | have only one line on which to de- | notes bos ae Baas ergy h |floor of the senate. |penditures spent by the A. F. of L.|New York City. Canter will be sentenced tomor- of | + % fife e senti-|our Party during the past six and|velop into a mass Communist Party,|_ Prominent leaders of “the new Fr Gang Hears ‘Hoover. |: ‘ amiash the fur $1,000 Received. row at 9:30 a. m. He is faced with and hand went up, showing the senti. to fight Right D, te, and thig | Tammany,” whose share in the huge ‘ame-up ig Hea jin their attempt to smas f 30 EF | aoc Tanai of 46 Sam: ment of the miners, es yearn ae Lie ie the Tee oe is rd nua ae teat Coentaeee The| graft has already been admitted, in-| The Hoover “law enforcement strike in New York City, He said:/ The American Fund for Public 3 ail ak Sad a y of t at epee ce te hall was closed sine of the Oper Lather addvesbad to|E. C, C. I, has done everything in its clude to date Warren C, Hubbard, commission” ou . ane a | “This same crowd of agitators, | Service, (ie Garni, Land) La The resentment of thousands -of & against the N. M. > but an ben | the Sixth National Convention of the|power to convince the Party as a|Edward Glynn, nephew of former|toom at the White House, where it who are members of the Communist 20" Om Trine Gousec, New York | workers is being crystallized in a ee meeting with a large crowd was | poy whole of the necessity of uniting the |Gov. Smith, General Sessions Judge|W@S announced that its Permanent |party, cost the American Federation | oie ee ie ee 0G dor the we |mass campaign that is being Iaunch- ~. a Hee held rcod mectinge, The| ,{The District Committee consid-|Party on the C. I, correct line, but | Francis X. Mancuso and his father,) headquarters, woud ibe in tHe 96° lof Labor $190,000 in combatting |i2¢"or tne striking ‘workers of the|ed by the International Labor De- a | Hier all held good meetings. The) 4. that the Address of the Comin-|so far without desirable success, as | Pasquale Mancuso, Italo Carlo Fal- eer ae t reg ea tna comm |them during the fur workers strike | south, The money is being used to|fense, which is defending Canter, to jenn U. M. W. A. officials are getting | torn provides the basis for the unifi-|the Majority and Minority of Central |bo, editor, and G. Pope, publisher,4 Hoover, in ey Atel thol piesa New York City. purchase food for the Gastonia, N.|force the Massachusett’s courts to _ | desperate and are nena | = cation of the Party in that it elim-|Committee failed to carry out the|of the fascist newspaper, “Il Pro- eh ase ee tahicied the P casnpitind Porter, supposed to be a represent-|C.,, textile workers. free him. Legal steps are also be- - ‘rou ae ae Haat oe awake cat inates the influence of factional con- cocaine of aerate eA? of |gresso,” are also involved. hinder erty the commission was |ative of the Socialist Pane ee |ing taken y 1. L. D. apie x verac rganizers, s Shot’ jsiderations in determining policies |the Communist International. Judge Mancuso had been shown| A did Chaic- |Committce for “strike relief” and a 5 | thur Garfield Hays and Harry Hoff- wr“ Resent Frame-Up. and in selecting the leadershipf the] Therefore, we disassociate our-|at previous hearings to be drawing uDDoden #0 work; neither dy pea _|member of the socialist party, acts Flees Starvation |man to appeal the case to the state : i i i | man Wickersham or Attorney Gen: fal The attempted frame-up against |Party and provides for the selection | selves completely and definitely from|heavy “salaries” from the City | ral Mitchell mention the dry law. |8S an informer to the fakers. > ae 3 supreme court. + ocia John Watt, president of the Na- of comrades for leading positions en-|all elements or groups who have| Trust, ostensibly for his membership |i all said much about the “re.| There were no strikers represent ‘ Warns Against False Hopes. ; aeet tional Miners Union, which resulted | tirely on the basis of their fitness. |been and are in opposition to the|on the board of directors. Besides | ect due to the laws” made by the ed on the settlement deal, just the The I, L. D. warns, however, in the jury disagreeing and a new, “The District Executive Commit-|Comintern and we are determined | carefully refraining from question- Seat of big business in congress, A. F. of L. misleaders and business against placing any faith in the P Mo trial,has brought the miners up in |tee endorses all the unanimous de-|to carry out not only in words but|ing the bank’s practises in his ca- re their own use, and usually op-|men. “fairness” or “tolerance” of the capi-. BE nent, ‘TI . MU 5 » C. C. sta ad deliberately covered up open|(.. and farmers. leveloping among the we’ . The T istor wil] Hdd a mass meeting here in our hearty support to the Central] against every cttempt of eplitting | forgeries in the accounts of the Har- are glad to sée the National Textile the granting of the appeal and the ‘erlir the near future to enroll the miners Committee in carrying out the line | the Party. We will i'ght to preserve|lem branch of the City Trust Com- pigeons coeenes: | Workers’ Union in the field, and are | ultimate release of Canter, the or- etal into union. jof the Comintern as embodied in the| the unity of the Party against all|pany. The evidence was given by| The president ordered the com- | responding to it. ganization declares. ‘ oerg nton, at the Franklin County | Address. The District Executive /attempts to split it. We condemn| A, Elliott Pincus, auditor for Dr.| mission to “find out an Panag Bei Many copies of the Labor De- Funds are needed immediately to outta Mi “wildcat” strike is in prog- Goemnitee. wa ated Beast arn severely, tte whe aa ae A. H, Giannini, to whom Warder had ob espe be esate ata fender have been distributed. meet the heavy legal expenses and iy resedainst the discharge by the upon all Party members in District leadership of the Communist Party | endeavored to sell City Trust stock |lowing thi } — to develop the mass campaign ona :~ astra and the fakers of four| Three to carefully study the Com-/of Soviet Union and the Comintern | shortly after the death of Ferrari, |S8!8 for changes.” | teen Freed of Navy Higegesscale -THayalonlac bar went: to te men ‘for loading “dirty coal.” The |intern Address to orientate them-| end do not accept C. I. decision. The ale: Assbant Speeches by Hoover already indi- the New England International La- - arter ~ cosltoperators informed the U. I. selves on the line of the Address as| economical and political, national] pi ..us also gave additional in-|cate what he means. He wants Charge He Shot Balloon bor Defense, 113 Dudley St. room Da _W. A. officials that these strikes | the means of preparing the Party to | nd international situation demands cirminating details of the open sab-|™ore repressive agencies, more 6, Boston. ‘>. metic we pread and the N. M, U. come #0 forward the more rapidly towards | a complete and genuine unity of our otage of the examination made by|SPies, more rural police to use for! BREVENS, N. J., May 28—One eae ee, ol bel’s in ss they did something to peveapts heeripar the peel pea a she Vanna feat Ghaniini's audttord of tha bank A. Beketeee en and aes h ot naval officer is hopping mad, and 5 Bodies in Glen Alden i » kill « « them. and for carrying ou' e Many an tional ine and we are determine ‘ % guard armed destroyers, which can commenting bitterly about the lack + . aders E} Miners Revolting. difficult tasks which confront us. | to fight for this unity as this is the ere, sao vds ey lie be added to the navy when the war | o¢ respect for their betters shown Mine Explosion 2 Years - tt cz fe yeaa ‘ “The District Executive Commit-| only road to a mass Communist 4 1g He also wants convictions Pisin shich id ' iners from Valier, suffering i A < the account of one A. Magnoni. The | Comes: today by three juries, which passe A t Be F do oe - u tee earnestly warns against the dan-/| Party in the United States. Nf * gnoni, made easier by a change in the harges brought. by Ideu- zo Canno e Foun BB oreo rious unemployment, sent a A ‘ . largest account in the bank, the sum sng [On aS many charges ght by ahoricke demanding |&¢! Of interpreting this address or i i s we will ; ‘ method of trial by jury, placing V. Wile cocaangy 4 orres| 4o Fishwick, d d ‘ Pig A As the immediate steps we t as litth t of the other | et tenant Commander H. V. ys P Se ied an ang | any part of it as a decision which| go the following: meant as Little as most of the other | siies even more under the control | ruler of the navy dirigible Los An- WILKES-BARRE, Pa., May 28.— le work be phe up, ot |favors one or another of the former] 4° gend a letter to all our Frac- alleged assets” of the City Trust, ‘of the judges and making their se- eales) apaicat’ Marton Banking tw The fire which has been burning On two ce sage oe |groups in the Party. This decision | tions calling upon them to carry out eapbie a keny mivad EPA veat lection even more unfair to the de- | f,.mor here, The juries decided that underground in the Glen Alden Coal oknied @f dividing up the work, Fish- | cannot be properly understood if ° ‘et In. | , rhe list of “forged and accommo- = than’ they ate ow, j Company's. Woodward mine has just) . d | r 4 the new line of the Communist In. ” fendant: iy the naval officer’s courage was @ e | cry wicl& and the operator decided to| considered from the viewpoint of ached dation notes” at the City Trust, . Hanki: now become cool enough to work iow los@itlie mine down completely. A|tne past factional standards, The| ‘m#tional. . __|read by Walter H, Pollack, attorney To Boost War Planes. little shaky, and he Pong am ate destind 48 ran tated are today, 0% in¢ ig a een es Jonmd wat | Address of the Comintern must be) ,,% Send speakers to all Fractions for Moses, revealed that Pope, who| The letter of resignation of Mabel | Was trying to shoot down his bit; little over two years after it started. fae th held and 20 new members joined up. accepted as a condemnation of the | t? mobilize every Party member for is ajo head millionaire of the Col-| Walker [Wildebrandt, made public | loon, whereas the SEMer ONY. No hope is held out for the recov- . | ; ¥ he line of the C t Int ji d to attract the men’s attention by (|e poli Ba | factional practice of both old groups. | the line of the Communist Interna-| onial Sand and Gravel Co., besides| today, shows that she quit her job |¢d to mip ery of the bodies of five miners valine ANOTHER OIL MERGER | “The District Executive Commit- ger Tave’the. Garkituntat Tales being publisher of “Il Progresso,”|as assistant attorney general — Leal firing his shot gun. who were lost when the fire started tel SHREVEPORT, La., May 28.—It | tee calls upon all comrades to apply “phiond +9 se eye *|had got $39,000, Michael F. Longo, |sist the Aviation Corporations lega . with a terrific explosion, due to the waibe was reported here today that the | themselves even more vigorously to Fee one rare he Unity MA of the bankrupt Lancia Motors, an-|staff, and build planes for the com- GARDNER PLANE RACE STARTS » company’s allowing inflammable led: Humble Oil and Refining Co. will| the work of organizing the unorgan- | OUF job _, Down witl ‘Goan i {other Ferrari concern, got $25,990, |ing war in which Hoover will lead) EAST ST. LOUIS, Ill, May 28.—| Living on apples and water for six| gas to accumulate in the working | ‘Come transfer all its properties in North | ized; to the struggle against the Any Opposition to the Communist) anq other friends of Ferrari had|American imperialism in a bloody |The Gardner air race, an annual|days, Johannes Schihera, 29 year| places. The explosion was of terrific | Hardly Louisana and South Arkansas, ex- | right danger; against the “remnants pitta nery oe oe he acti forged notes ranging from sums of |effort to run the world. event to encourage the building of |old worker of West Prussia, stowed| force, shattering windows. - all | aN a cept its wildcat acreage, to the|of Trotskyism; against social-re- paige tare i) hh roe bach ee $25,000 to $250,000, 7 The Aviation Corporation fs the|faster military pursuit plantas Z away vig the ee reali oe aa Rane ond bppiied a { rdt fe ‘Standard Oil Co. of Louisiana on|formism and all its manifestations; A new $2,000,000 holding company re-|going on. Five groups of speed |thinking he could find better condi-|men. Bodies of two of them: Feliz , pe _ June 1, One hundred and fifty pro-| against the war danger and for the | America, F, Borich, Secretary, No Wavering, no Hesitancy, no |sently organized to control airlines, |planes are. traveling over as many |tions here, after starving im, Ger-|Klasko, and Herbert Mensch were bk'bad ducing wells with a daily yield of | building of a mass-Communist Party Deviation From the Policy Laid {manufacturing companies and other |different but equal courses. The |many. He was caught and will-be|brought to the surface. The men, pee vould b fected. for the American working class.”— wn by the Red Inter: ines of aeronautical endeavor. It |two first planes in each heat will|sent back. Workers here reccive|lost were Henry Carpenter, Forty 40,000 barrels would be affected. | iz Down by national of | |ine: pl , e | ' Near t Office employes and half the field District Executive Committee, Dis- mr oe es pore Beg ye merry Labor Unions, Which Will Lead |ic sometimes referred to as the Gen- jrace from here to Indianapolis and |starvation wages and millions are|Fort; William B, Evans, Kingston; | unifo e of the Humble Company will | trict No. 3, Communist Party of the rg Meate ‘ano d hoeti ", , | the Workers in the Coming Class |eral Motors of aviation, and has|back on May 30 for a $5,000 prize | unemployed just as in Germany —| Angelo Mengi, Prigle borough; Shel- , oh, a ransferred to Texas, the report | United States, Herbert Benjamin,| into two grent and directly Struggles, Will Lead Them to Vie- jonly one competitor in size, the |given by the head of the Gardner |the bosses in both cow _ra-|don Skalley, Pringle borough, and | the sa district organizer, Jotatateumare Se sis tory! ey United Atrcraft Corporation, 4... [Motor Co, ~ ~~ ional id Konstantz Tilinzak of Edwardsville. | and w EY ae peck Regge hl re dete heseangD dnl a a ft ih enh = light r | i

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