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oe WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1929 Page Three __ Investigation Exposes Berlin Police Brutaltties and Lies ‘in Attack on May Day PREPARE FOR Bl INTERNATIONAL RED DAY, AUG. 1 Bell Summarizes Work | and Outlines Tasks By TOM BELL. The Sixth World Congress of the Comintern placed the question of the | war danger in the center of its an- | alysis of the international world sit- uation. It declared the war danger constitutes the very crux of the new period. to combat this danger and to make it the center of the whole of our Communist activity. The lengthy hesis prepared by and tactics of Bolshevism struggle against imperialist war, in the struggle of the colonial peoples against counter-revolutionary war, and the struggle against the class war par excellence, viz., imperialist war on the Soviet Union. Congress Showed How. The Congress not only re-stated the general strategical and tactical lines but it did something more. It prepared a lengthy detailed resolu- tion on the methods of carrying on anti-militarist activity amongst the fighting forces in conjunction with the general political activities of the Parties. The Congress laid special strecs on the mistake of a number of Parties which still looked upon anti-m arist activity as the busi- ness of a few specialists. Date—Aug. 1. is’ now decided to make Aug. 1 International Red Day. separates the Communist cam- from the quasi-religious- + meetings of the Social Dem- who will have their mect- on Sunday, Aug. 4. All Sec- of the Communist Interna- nal are now busy making prep- ions for Aug. 1. It i the ies have been en- in, ich the war dange! has oceur ied the front of the stage. iebknecht-Luxemburg ign made the fight st war the crux of All our press, lit- bution and demonstra- 1 issue. Sixth Congress also decided ailing an Anti-Fascist Con- ch linked up the war dan- h the fight against fascism. ongress met in Berlin on and was a huge success. delegates came from all The importance of this conference must not be confined to the conference itself. Before the meeting numerous meetings, confer- ences for the election of delegates | and demonstrations took place in all | the countries represented. Thus the | war danger was brought home to a much wider audience than the pure and simple ty meetings, For ex- ample, in Oslo, a conference took place at- tended by 103 delegates represent- ing 20,000 workers. In England, France, ete., similar conferences and | held, which Side by demonstrations were were equally successful. side with this activity a large con- | W0 gress is being prepared by the League against Imperialism in July at which representatives will attend from all parts of the world. The war question will find a prominent place on the agenda. Latin-American Bureau. The Sixth Congress was attended by a number of delegates who came from Latin-American countries for the first time. It was decided to establish a Latin-American Bureau. During the Bolivian-Paraguay dis- pute, and when Hoover of the United States of America made his diplo- matic visit to the Latin-American countries our Bureau was able to mobilize large demonstrations of workers against these imperialist adventures and to raise the war dan- ger before the eyes of thousands of proletarians. Our French Party continues, true to its traditions, its excellent work amongst the soldiers and in the fleet. On Dec, 4, 1928, Comrade Cachin mede a-great speech which caused a sensation, and exposed in parliament the war preparations of the French imperialists and their allies against the Soviet Union. This speech was taken up by our brother Parties. In Germany our comrades con- tinue their fight against the new eruiser building programme of the Social Democrats and take an active art in carrying this campaign into he factory councils and munition shops. During the conference of the International Women’s League for Peace and Freedom, held early in January this year, a number of our comrades raised the question of the war danger, the expansion of the chemical industries and the huge military preparations now being carried out by the imperialists. In Yugoslavia when King Alex-| ander on January 19th issued his de- cree instituting the Supreme Court with the Defense of the State our Party caused leaflets to be prepared and distributed. Hundreds of ar- rests were made. In England, a consistent press campaign is conducted by the Party organizations exposing the British intrigues in the Middle East. Afghanistan, India and against the Soviet Union. Special anti-mili- tarist propaganda is conducted by It called upon all sections | the Congress | srought together the whole strategy | in the} This | orway on March 3 in| 'Polish Fascist Govt. to Send Jobless to Die in Brazil Swamp |. PERNAMBUCO, Brazil (By Mail).—The Polish fascist govern- _ment has arranged with the Brazil- jian government to colonize a large | area in the state of Espiritu Santo, | ito which unemployed workers will | |be sent into slavery in the, tropical | lrice swamps. Thousands of Japan- | ese and European unemployed work- ers, virtually deported here by the | |governments to “solve” their unem- ployment problems, have perished in | these swamps. STEEL WORKERS. HEROIC STRUGGLE |Set Excellent Example| | of How to Win | One thousand, seven hundred workers employed in the Steel | Works and Rolling Mills in Hen- \ningsdorf, near Berlin, an undertak- jing belonging to the A. E. G. con- cern, have been on strike for over three months against a wage cut lof 10 to 30 per cent. The fight be- gan on Jan. 28 last when a depart- iment, comprising 308 men, downed |tools because, after futile negotia- |tions by the works management, the above wage cut was simply dictated. \In order to enforce this wage cut {the works management, a day or two later, locked out the whole of the staff. | Commencement of Struggle. | At the commencement of the struggle the staff was divided into strikers and locked-out, into free trade union organized, christian-sc- ialist organized, and unorganized workers. About 15 per cent of the whole staff is organized in the free trade union. In order to set up a united fighting front the revolution- ary opposition, on the second day of the struggle, organized the election | of a united Strike Committee, in which both the organized and un- organized workers are duly repre- jsented, This measure was unapi- mously supported by the whole of the staff. Already in the first week of the struggle the wives of the strikers and also the youth were mobilized, and they elected their representatives to the Strike Com- imittee. By this means the women, who otherwise are often a retarding element in labor struggles;*were ac- corded an active place in the fight- ing front. The united revolutionary Strike Committee, in close connection with \the fighting workers, have for four- teen weeks frustrated all attempts |2t sabotage on the part of the re- \formist trade union bureaucracy, the |Christian union and the Stahlhelm, repelled all the attacks of the works |management and the social demo cratic burgomaster and thwarted all jattempts of the foremen, acting on behelf of the works management, to |cbtain strikebreakers. \ 14 Weeks’ Struggle. | In the fourteenth week of the |struggle the reformist trade union | bureaucracy went over to open strikebreaking and declared the trike to be at an end, although the ers had by six votes rejected a base compromise and decided to |continue the fight. | | But all these efforts to force the | |workers to capitulate have been of |no avail; the front remains firm and unshaken. The workers have | realized the necessity for and the | leading’ role played by revolutionary | Strike Committees as united front organs capable of fighting deter- |minedly against the reformist trade union bureaucracy, the employers, and the organs of the state. During the struggle the factory nucleus has increased from seventeen comrades to over fifty; a local group of the Workers International Relief, num- bering 200 members, and a group of the Young Spartacus League have been formed, The number of read- ers of the Communist organ “Volk- secho” has increased by 70, About the same number of workers have, in spite of the treachery of the re- formist trade union bureaucracy, joined the Metal Workers Union in erder to strengthen the opposition. This. struggle constitutes an in- structive and heroic example of the whole labor movement. means of leaflets and study circles among troops. The effect of the Party programme of demands for the army and the navy is seen in the attempts of the military and naval lords to introduce minor reforms into the service. Baltic Countries. Throughout the Baltic countries in the unofficial armies such as the “Asaig” organizations the Commu- nists have to work very cautiously, but considerable activity obtains in these organizations. In conclusion, the illegal condi- tions under which our Parties have to work, the increasing offensive of the bourgeoisie against the Com- munists, the growing increase of the jealous vigilance exercised in watch- ing over the troops is a serious handicap upon our comrades, and makes detailed reporting very diffi- cult. Nevertheless we can say that the injunction of the VI. Congress to all Sections to make the fight against the war danger a living part of the daily life of our Parties is re- ceiving the serious attention of all our Sections, ~ | dren” Enlightenment Campaign on the Comintern Address to the Communist Party 4 pete Polbureau is desirous of securing the broadest pos- sible Enlightenment Campaign on the Comirtern Ad- dress and the immediate Party tasks outlined therein. All Party members and particularly the comrades active in the workshops in the basic industries are invited to write their PARTY CONTROL COMMISSION AND MINNESOTA, CALIFORNIA AND KANSAS CITY the British Textile Union. | opinions for the Party Press. Resolutions of Factory Nuclei also will be printed in this section. Send all material deal- ing with this campaign to Comrade Jack Stachel, care Na- tional office, Communist Party, 43 E. 125th St., New York City. DISTRICTS URGE SUPPORT OF THE ADDRESS OF THE COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL FOR RELENTLESS STRUGGLE AGAINST DISRUPTERS The Central Control Committee has unanimously passed the fol- lowing decisions: “That the Central Control Committee as a matter of course accept- ing and endorsing the decisions of the Comintern, fully agrees with and supports the steps taken by the Central Committee in connection with the recent letter of the Comintern, and that the Central Control Com- mittee will take every measure within its power to have them carried into effect. “That we instruct the Presidium in this connection, to draw up a letter to the District Control Committee, pointing out that it is their duty to see to it that no factional groupings or meetings or factional activities are maintained in their districts, and to take disciplinary action against any offenders. “The Central Control Committee pledges itself to carry on a re- lentless struggle against all those who will make any attempt to dis- rupt the Party..—CENTRAL CONTROL COMMITTEE, Chas Dirba, Secretary. MINNESOTA DISTRICT WELCOMES ADDRESS. The Resolution on the Address of the Comintern to the American Communist Party unanimously adopted by the Bureau of District Nine (Minnesota) was as follows: “The district Bureau welcomes and unreservedly accepts the Ad- dress of the Communist International to the American Party and pledges itsclf to carry on an ideological and if need be organizational campaign for the rigid application in the district. We particularly wel- come the analytical search light thrown on the unprincipled factionalism which has so considerably reduced the efficiency of our Party in the past. “We register our determination (collectively and individually) to liquidate all phases of factionalism in the district no matter from where they may come or under what guise they might appear. As an essen- tial prerequisite for the achievement of this and we herewith record cur appreciation of our errors of the past and resolve to separate our- selves from all connection with whatever factions we may have been associated with. “We greet the fact that two of our delegates and one factional dele- gate to the Sixth Convention of the Party broke off and disassociated themselves from the Majority group and unreservedly accepted the Communist International Letter and its organizational proposais. We also greet the fact that the members of the District Executive Com- mittee have fought against the maintenance of Party groupings and unprincipled factionalism. “We strongly oppose and condemn the actions of comrade Love- stone and Gitlow who according to the Communist International Ad- dress are ‘opposing the final decisions of the letter and taking an atti- tude approximating one of a split in the American Party.’. Further- more we condemn their vacillating attitude‘on the Right wing in the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. That we condemn and demand the immediate withdrawal of the opposition presented by the delegation in Moscow opposing the Address. “The especial emphasis placed on the Right Wing Danger is especially applicable and appropriate in our district where of the many right wing errors were committed. Two recent and outstanding ones ... the Coolidge Reception Committee and Bloomberg Duluth Municipal Election incidents are still the subject of doubtful discussion by a few members. We also point out that the opposition to May Day Parades and Party picketing during strikes is an expression of the Right Danger. Undoubtedly the Right Wing Danger is the greatest danger facing our Party and the double emphasis placed upon it by the Comintern in the Address will greatly help in our campaign against it. “The Address is invaluable for the clarification of our member- ship by the lucid explanation, briefly given, of the errors flowing from the general misunderstanding of the ‘inner and cuter’ contradictions of U. S. imperialism such as the ‘no cruiser slogan’ and the ‘exceptionalism’ theory. It is correct to emphasize the evergrowing crises sapping at the very foundation of American imperialism as part of world capitalism. “As the Address well states ‘it is only by relentless struggle against unprincipled factionalism. Tron discipline + and the subordina- tion of the Minority to the Majority on the basis of the Party’s perusal of the line and practical directions of the Comintern’ that we can build a Party capable of leading the American proletariat in its struggle against capitalism, “We welcome the Communist International Address not in the sense that it is a victory for any faction in the Party but in the sense that it is a victory for our Party under the leadership of the Communist Inter- national, “We warn the membership against verbal acceptance of the Com- munist International decisions without making attempts at carrying these decisions out. “Furthermore, we endorse the Central Committee decisions of May 18th regarding the Address and determine to learn from our past mis- takes and march forward a disciplined Party under the leadership of the Comintern and the Central Executive Committee of the American Party.”—PAT DEVINE, District Organizer, District Nine, Minnesota. MOTIONS ADOPTED BY CALIFORNIA DISTRICT. “4. The District Executive Committee wholeheartedly endorses and accepts the Comintern Address, which gives the correct political line for our Party, to abolish the destructive factionalism and to become a mass political Party of the American working class. This Letter, com- ing from our International leadership, sharply condemns both former groupings and lays the basis for a united leadership with the drawing in of all the best elements in our Party. The District Executive Com- mittee pledges itself to carry out the Open Letter and to secure a unani- mous acceptance in the District. “2, The District Executive Committee points out that the Com- intern Address has a special significance for District 13, (California) where the factional situation went into an unheard of length, to an open split situation in San Francisco, to the maintenance of a dual organi- zation led by Manus, Glicksohn, etc., who are today openly fighting the Party, as shown, for instance, at the Trade Union Educational Con- ference. ‘ The District Executive Committee calls upon those misled proletarian comrades who are being used as tools to perpetuate the split, to repudiate these Anti-Party elements and to come back into the ranks of the Party. “3. Special unit meetings be called to discuss the Comintern Ad- dress and its application in District 13. Letters be sent to every’ mem- ber which shall call upon them to liquidate factionalism and to take their place in the Party’s work. Speakers, who unconditionally accept the Comintern Letter be sent to nuclei, as reporters. “4, The District Executive Committee repudiates the spreading of factional documents, such as the wire shown by Himmelfarb, spread by the 1212 Market office, giving a factionalist distortion and misrepre- sentation to the Comintern Address. “5. The Secretariat shall bring in recommendations to the next meeting, for the boadening. of the District Executive Committee, for the drawing in of additional comrades who accept the Comintern Ad- dress and who pledge themselves to abolish factionalism and to build the Party. “6. The District Executive Committee pledges {tself to increase our activities more than ever before, to build our Party into a mass Party in District 13 on the basis of the Comintern Address. “7, To mercilessly fight and root out any and all attempts to further carry on factionalism in our District. “8, The District Executive Committee shall fight with all its energy against any telat msiire of resistance to the Comintern Ad- XI KANSAS CITY DISTRICT ACCEPTS FULLY. “We accept fully and unconditionally the Address of the Comintern to the American Party with all its political and organizational decisions. We believe that these decisions were necessary in order to achieve unity in the American Communist Party and to end factionalism. The district Bureau pledges itself to immediately start a campaign to en- lighten the membership on the meaning of and reascns for this Address and urging all members to unconditionally accept and support the Ad- dress. We instruct the District Organizer to see that immediately Bureau members are sent to all units meetings in Kansas City and vicinity to lead in a discussion of the Address of the Comintern, urging them to unconditionally support and endorse it. That the District Or- ganizer write letters to all section committees asking them to discuss the Address and record vote. That section committees send members to unit meetings to lead discussion of the Address, only those voting for the Address shall be allowed to go to the units. That those who lead the discussion must not attempt to distort the meaning of the Address for factional purposes or to justify there connections with one or the other group in the past! That votes of all members in the units shall be recorded. Voting for: Lucas, Stephens, Garfin, Petersen, Thomas. Miklash. Opposed: none. Rovinsky member of the District Executive Committee recorded her vote for motion.”—ROY STEPHENS, District Organizer, District Ten (Kansas City). MOBILIZE SCANDINAVIAN COMRADES FOR LETTER. The Scandinavian Bureau of the Communist Party of the United States, after reading the new open Letter from the Communist Inter- national to the members of the American Party, adopted the follow- ing motions: “1, The Scandinavian Bureau fully accepts and endorses the Ad- dress of the Commu’ International. “2. It fully supports the Executive Committee and asks the same to immediately mobilize the membership of the Party in order to carry out the decisions of the Letter. “3. The Scandinavian Bureau will instruct its fractions about the contents and meaning of the Letter; will also ask the Scandinavian members for all their support to carry the decisions of the Letter into effect. “Long Live the Communist Party of the United States! “Long Live the Communist International.”—GUSTAV NELSON, Secretary, Scandinavian Bureau of the. Communist Party of the U. S. A. SUPPORT FROM TEXTILE CENTER. The motion on the Communist International Address, carried unani- mously by the New Bedford, Mass., Section Conference was as follows: “The Section Conference of the New Bedford (Massachusetts) sec- tion, endorses and accepts the Communist International’s Address to the membership of our Party. We pledge full support to the decisions of the Executive Committee of the Communist International, and we will do all in our power to mobilize the membership in the interest of Party Unity and for a mass Communist Party in the United States.” —PETER HAGELIAS, New Bedford, Mass., Section Organizer. MOBILIZE MEMBERSHIP FOR COMINTERN. The Bureau of Section Four, District 2 (New York City), unani- mously passed the following resolution on the address of the Com- munist International to the Communist Party of the United States: “We accept and endorse the address of the Communist Interna- tional printed in the Daily Worker of May 20. We call the attention of the membership to the condemnation by the Communist International of factionalism in the American Party. This furnishes a basis for the elimination of the deep rooted and long standing evils in our Party which haye served to cripple its revolutionary fighting strength and its ability to win the confidence of the proletarian masses. “The wiping out of factionaliem opens the road for a unified col- lective leadership based upon all the best, most sincere and proletarian elements in the Party and for the complete liquidation of all group- ings. With a new spirit and with united ranks our Party must fight to do away with factional protection and factional indulgences which serve to degenerate the Party, and to throw itself unitedly into the task of mobilizing the Party and the broad masses for the struggle against imperialism. “We call upon the entire membership of the Section to help carry through the decisions and instructions of the Communist International.” NOTE—The abovy» resolution was passed unanimously at an en- larged meeting of Section Four Executive Committee at which mem- bers of the Section Executive Committee, department heads and all Unit organizers were present. FOR IRON UNITY AGAINST SPLITTERS. * “The Bureau of the Caucasian Fraction of District Thirteen (Cali- fornia) unanimously and unconditionally accepts the Comintern Ad- dress for the unity of the Party on the Comintern line. On the basis of the Comintern Address the Bureau which supported the former Minority calls on all members regardless of former groupings to sup- port the Comintern line against all unprincipled factionalism and oppor- tunism for iron unity against splitters.” ENDORSE REMOVAL OF COMRADE MILLER. The following resolution was adopted unanimously by Unit 1, Sec- | tion 4, District Two, New York, at its meeting Thursday, June 6th, 1929: We accept and endorse the address of the Communist International printed in the Daily Worker of May 20th. We call the attention of the membership to the condemnation by the Communist International of factionalism in the American Party. This furnishes a basis for the elimination of the deep rooted and long standing evils in our Party whch have served to cripple its revolutionary fighting strength and its ability to win the confidence of the proletarian masses. The wiping out of factionalism opens the road for a unified col- lective leadership based upon all the best, most sincere and proletarian clements in the Party and for the complete liquidation of all groupings. With a new spirit and with united ranks, our Party must fight to do away with factional protection and factional indulgences which serve to degenerate the Party, and to throw itself unitedly into the task of mobilizing he Party and the broad masses for the struggle against imperialism. We fully endorse the action of the District Bureau of New York in removing Comrade Miller as organization secretary as one who ex- pressed in the crassest form the hidden opposition to the Comintern. We condemn the splitting tactics of Comrades Lovestone and Gitlow and call upon all members of the Party to mercilessly fight against all opposition, whether open or concealed, to the Address of the Comintern. One of the prerequisites in fighting the right danger and mobiliz- ing the Party in its practical tasks basing itself on the radicalization of the masses, is the complete elimination of the theory of exceptional- ism which destroys the revolutionary perspectives of the Party, CANTON, OHIO, UNIT PLEDGES SUPPORT. At a meeting of Unit 116, street nucleus of the Communist Party of Canton, Ohio, the Executive Committee of the Communist Interna- tional Address was read and discussed. We unanimously accept and endorse the decision of the Central Committee and pledge our support to the C. E. C. in uniting the Communist Party of United States of America on the basis of the Executive Committee of the Communist International Address. For a united Communist Party under the ‘Su. J euldance of the Communist International. /Revoke 10% Wage Cut {the strikers, who kept up militant ae despite advice to the con-| | |few street cars that continued run- Workers Force British | Wool Bosses to Yield; GREAT AUDIENCE IS FOR OUSTING OF POLICE CHIEF Witnesses Testify to Merciless Slaughter (Wireless By “Inprecorr”) LONDON, (By Mail).—With the withdrawal of ten per cent wage cuts by several more woolen textile firms, all of the Yorkshire blanket and worsted mills have yielded to rary by Ben Turner, misleader of BERLIN, June 7.—The first pub- lic session of the “Committee for the Investigation of the May Hap- penings” was held yesterday in the eons Schauspielhaus,” and, after @ cross-examination of wit- ne: s by the most expert lawyers in Berlin, developed only the fact |that all the killing was done by the police. Large forces of police, the same R sort of police who brutally at Cars Are Stopped tacked the workers’ May Day Dem- - onstrations, were stationed provoca- BOGOTA, Colombia, June 7.—A|tively near the theatre. The place | strike of students was started today was packed full and thousands were jas a protest against yesterday’s | ynable to gain admittance. street demonstration which mounted | The famous publicist, Stefan Police charged, injuring several. | rossman, opened the session, de- Although the struggle is apparent-| ciaring the committee was formed ly over local political rivalries, back |1¢cause the officials have refused of it lies a fierce struggle of Amer- +, institute inquiries into the bloody ican imperialist capital to entrench May Day events, He stated that if itself in this oil, mining, fruit and|+4¢ qui! apathy toward the slaughter |hardwood state. i . |of 80 innocent people must be broken British, Grench and German capi- through, tal is also present, and corrupt poli- ticians are struggling to be on the | payrolls of various foreign imperi-| The famous criminal lawyer, Ap- alists, and to advance their inter-|fel, then publicly subjected 20 wit- ests after drawing their bribes. nesses of the May 1 events to strict The government recently shot to cr xamination. The evidence pieces a strike of workers on the|showed the ferocious brutality of POLICE FIRE ON BOGOTA CROWDS : IStudent Strike; Street Slugging and Murder. U. S.-owned United Fruit Co. plan-|the police, their slugging of men and tation. |women and unprovoked murders. Stop Street Cars. | A barber named Pankhaus de- Street car service was discon-|scribed how the police shot his tinued today. The city council unan-|mother dead in a house doorway. imously passed a resolution protest-| An architect named Jonas told of ing against the mayor's dismissal] seeing a passing cyclist dragged which was the immediate cause of into a gutter by half a dozen police the demonstration. and slugged and kicked. A renewed clash occurred last) Borongh Doctor Schminke de- night in front of the newspaper scribed his post-mortem examina- Diario Nacional. Shots were fired|ticn of 17 corpses, almest all of and several were injured. The news- | whom were shot in the back or sides, paper El Tiempo said the injured | and not one single bullet wound was numbered 10. Director General of|yeceived vertically from above, Police Cortest Vargas made an ex-|/which indicates that none were cuse which convinces no one, say-|{illed by roof sharpshooters. ing: “It was the public who fired f on the police, injuring other demon-| MERU strators.” Bullets found in the corpses were A boycott was instituted against |all from police carbines and from |the street car service, owned by |Parabellum pistols, the arms of po- lice. The Communist leader, Pieck, was grilled by the lawyers, but his story stood unbroken. The Communists were holding orderly demonstrations jon May Day. The blood shed was e caused by the police running amuck. German Cigar Plant | After the investigation there was Closes; 1000 Jobless a resolution unanimously adopted demanding the resignation of Zoer- STUTTGART, Germany (By Mail).—The closing cf the Waldorf- giebel, the social democratic chief cf police of Berlin; prohibition of the Astoria cigarette factories in a su- burb of Stuttgart threw over 1000 juse of firearms against the civil |population; the immediate release of workers out of work. he Waldorf plant is the twelfth cigarette plant all persons arrested; compensation to close down in two years, U. S. capital. Students stoned the ning last night, and compelled the passengers to alight. Police pa-| trolled the central streets. for the dependents of the murdered and for all workers and others wounded. GAS BLAST INJURES TWO LONDON (By Mail).—A blast at the South Suburban Gasworks se- verely injured two workers, who may die. NO AID FOR JOBLESS. | LONDON (By Mail).—In spite of the growing seriousness of the un- employment situation in England, reports show that in 230 districts no | one is receiving unemployment aid.' SEND the ~ Daily Worker @ to a Striker @ rVVVVVVVVV VY ‘ HOUSANDS of workers on strike desire to receive the DAILY WorKER, but we are not in a financial position to send it Although we send thou- sands daily—it is insuf- ficient to cover the de- mand. Even these bund- les we will be compelled to discontinue unless aid is forthcoming. The DaILy WorKER as in all previous strug- gles during the past few years must be the guide and directing force. In addition to re- lief send them the or- gan of class struggle. Ae & 4 & 4 DAILY WoRKER 4 26 UNION SQUARE * New York CIty Enclosed find to be used for the DAILY WORKER fund to supply bundles of Daily WAR to on strikers in various sections of the country. eo aa ROUEN ay Name ix U1. 0 1) PRMMe aun nae SCR SEN Eanes ANeAUN IS