The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 20, 1929, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1929 Page Three” = ——e -MONTEVIDO MEET CEMENT WESTERN WORLD WORKERS Sign Solidarity Pact; Hawkins Returns The representative of the T. U. E. L. at the Conferencia Sindical Latino Americano, I. Hawkins, has just returned to New York from Montevideo, where the epoch-mak- ing conference convened on May 18, and announces that the work went forward with triumphant success, binding still closer the workers of the South and North American con- tinents. Sixty-five delegates from Mexicv, Cuba, Venezuela, Columbia, ~ Equador, Peru and Brazil took part in the eight-day proceedings, which were attended by thousands of na- tive workers. “ Every question affecting the masses of Latin-America was thor- oughly thrashed out; the agenda in- eluded a report on the general sit- uation, one on the Pan-American Federation of Labor, and others cov- ering “socialistic,” fascist and gov- ernmental trade unionism, tions facing the agricultural work- women. A came in for debate, while imperial- “Black Haiti”, Unique Narrative, Starts in Daily Worker Monday | Next Monday the Daily Worker | will begin printing one of the most unique features it has ever offered its readers. Jacques Dicharson, a seaman who has been an active fighter for the working class for many years, has written an account of his | experiences in Haiti. In a vivid and pungent style, lit up by | flashes of ironic humor, Dichar- | son tells how he left the S. Seatonia after being beaten un- conscious by the first mate, how he looked for a job in Port au Prince, Haiti, the people he met, his experiences with the flunkeys of the ruling class, ete, Throughout this - narrative, which is fact, not fiction (though it is as fascinating as a novel), Djcharson lays bare the brutal enslavement. of the natives of Haiti by American impevialism. | “Black Haiti,” as this unique narrative is called, “has been i written for and wili be printed | exclusively in the Daily Worker. It starts next Monday and w be completed during the weel:. Don’t miss it! s | \ | = LEWIS THUGS ers, the Negroez, working youth and! The Indian problem oe ADMIT ASSAULT ism and the war danger, correctly recognized as the most import ant | issue before the toiling masses to- day, was analyzed with all the seri- HE Polbureau is desirous sible Enlightenment Cam dress and the immediate Part; By EARL BROWDER. Very quickly the course of events in the United States is confirming with iron logic the correctness of |the decisions of the Sixth World Congress, and of the Open Letter jand the Address of the Comintern to the American Party. Elizabethton, the New York strikes, ‘the wave of activity that is stirring the workers of a hundred centers, ‘the wide response to the TUEL Cleveland Unity Convention, the de- | velopment of shop committee move- |ments—all witness the sharpening of the class struggle and the grow- ing radicalization of the worke: The hastening of war preparations, the frantic gestures of “pacifism” which are a part of the.e prepara- ‘tions, the vicious campaign against the Soviet Union especially in the reformist press of the world, the tremendous sharpening of the issues dividing the imperialist powers— to even masses of non-party work- ers, in the light of the fundamental Gastonia, | . deep; on the contrary, as the Ad these things are now becoming clear | |Enlightenment Campaign on the Comintern Address to the Communist Party of securing the broadest pos- paign on the Comintern Ad- y tasks outlined therein. All Party members and particularly the comrades active in the workshops in the basic indust ries are invited to write their For Energetic Application understanding of the Sixth Congress theses, and a tendency to accept the interpretation placed upon these de- cisions by the Right elements. We learn once and for all, that this is not a way of fighting against the Right danger, but rather of -tr-ngth- ening it. Further, the former minority | must complete the understanding of their own previous factionalism, as ;@ means to its final liquidation. | While the minority had begun some- what hesitantly to develop what was conceived to be a self- tude before the convention, this w not yet very real nor had it gon v dress declares, the minority was more interested at the convention in capitalizing the decision for group | adventa- than in unifying the | Party upon the basis of the decision. es by this factional attitude, the | minority contributed its full part to |the grievous failures of the conven- |tion, which are so sharply charac- lterized by the Address. If there is |still any tendency on the part of ritical atti-! ‘European Steel Trust Cartel to Continue; Rationalization Grows PARIS, June 19.—The European | opinions for the Party Press. Resolutions of Factory Nuciei Steal Gants eee i Ce ies also will be printed in this section. Send all material deal: to dobinne the Castel ander che ing with this campaign to Comrade Jack Stachel, care Na- tional office, Communist Party, 43 E. 125th St., New York |) City. agreement which expires September. The Cartel decided to increase its ter by a million tons, making total production 32,2955,770 tons. The agreement to continue the Cartel was unanimous. Details of the duration of the agreement are to be settled at the next meeting in Line by | limit: and mobilizatio: clear! effective. the minoi The Cartel enslaves hundreds of housands of steel workers thruout PSR TERCU: NOES : Europe, and the workers will be Central Committee of the ©. |» orced to bear the burden of the in- . in its struggle against allt" (1 eased production, thru the High end conciliatory elements wh t ationalization plans adopted by the were struggling against that line. yo 3. It was further no error to oppose, st obstinately the international orientation of Comrade Lovestone, And it w: ely correct to desire to suppor That ve y th grave er , of concent ns of the monthiy fl tuations of production figures, w an indirect expression of the theory jo? exceptionalism, of the idea that the understanding of the Ameri situation was to be derived fro MINERS AlD VISIT 10 USSR OF Ul, S. CHILDREN face facts and appearances, an:l whose attacks upon the ECCI “rep- without placing these pzoBlems is resent a repetition of slanderous at- r internatio) setting. t upon the Comintern made by tt opportunists,” or of Comrade Gitlow, whose declaration “upholds the slanderous attacks of the right elements on the leadership of the U. and of the Comintern,” | a primary duty of every Communist vo fight against this line Similarly, the minority, while in- ing upon the primacy of the in contradictions of capitalism, f and itself unable to develop properly the in- with dialectical inter-relation of the ner and outer contradictions, the inevitable result of weakne 2 Be ase cf Lovestone, Gitlow, and others, : * cs x [development of the struggle against Which has Inked set ap wersne Other Unions Also ae ane related to the theory |Tgat clements internationally, with Endorse-It of exceptionalism which hed per- |“! seriousness and to its final liqui- ——— dation, But it was absolutely im-! PITTSBURGH, Pa., June 19.— |meated the entire Party and condi- |tioned all its intellectual life. On the Question of Trotskyism. It was not only the pre ‘able—and of this the minor- The National Miners Union, thru its ed with entire correct- National Secretary-Treasurer, Pat s—to have attempted in the|H. Toohey, has endorsed the cam- slightest degree to make it appear) paign to send a children’s delegation steel production for the third quar-| ON MILITANTS National Union Won’t Ask Court Aid - MORGANTOWN, W. Va., June 19. low American delegate, W. Simons,!_The Lewis thugs, who were in- representative of the N. T. W. U..'dicted by the May Grand Jury here spoke on the general report of the |some time ago, have all confessed secretary and also on the struggle |iy the charges against them ana against imperialism. The crowning | wij) come up for sentence some time event of the C. S. L. A. was the jeter, This is all the more signifi- signing of the Solidarity Pact, in-|cant when considering that the Na- troduced by Comrades Simons and |tional Miners Union, in accordance Hawkins during the closing session, 'with its policy, refused to send its acting in co-operation with the R. members who had been slugged to LL. uv. testify against the Lewis thugs. ousness due to it. | The discussions, participated in by | all deiegates, brought out an unre- | lenting anti-imperialist stand. | Hawkins addressed the congress | on the Negro question and his fel- | | ‘explanations given almost a year/any comrade to minimize this re- jago by the Sixth World Congress, | sponsibility, by hiding behind the | factional “needs” that that as a whole the majority of the |to the Soviet Union. This campaign, Complete reports of the congress, | made out in Spanish, are now being iranslated, and will be presented to the workers of the United States within a short time, together with the draft of the Solidarity Pact. Simons has left for Buenos Aires to cover the railway workers’ meet | there and will return to New York | early in July. | The sluggers were indicted as # result of their efforts to break up a mass meeting of the Nationai Miners Union at which Pat. H. Too- hey, of the meeting, and Albert Kowal- sky, president of the local union, were beaten up. over the eye with a bottle, and was ‘so seriously injured that for a time there was danger that he would lose the sight of his eye. In spite of repeated requests from National Secretary-Treasurer, |was to speak. Louis Sass, chairman Sass was struck ithe District Attorney, the National |Miners Union refused to send its {members as witnesses. The Na- \tional Miners Union is willing to let ithe miners decide as i whether nee p 4 ‘prefer the Lewis sluggers, or the Beaches Gr abbed by militant National Miners Union. The the Rich ‘miners are already deciding this by —— following the National Miners Union New Yorkers sweltered without in its fight against wage-cuts and hope of relief yesterday with the | unemployment. thermometer at 86 at 11 a. m. and a Weather Bureau prediction of 95 degrees before nightfall. The chief This confession from the Lewis sluggers is proof that the only stock- pare i in-trade of the corrupt and bankrupt victims were of the workingclass. Lewis machine is thuggery aid inti- Many collapsed at work. |midation; the Lewis machine is 100 The 11 o’clock reading was one de- per cent a part of the machinery of gree higher than Tuesday’s corre-\the operators against the miners. sponding temperature, which rose t0/ tights for the miners and deserves 93 before the day was out and caused fight for the miners 4nd deserves four deaths in the Metropolitan area. |their support. The Weather Bureau said there | sill be thunder showers today, pos- aes ‘Southern Kluxers for Workers children continued to Jim Crow Rule; Want swelter on the city streets—there are no beaches for them except the over- Bone-Dry Democrats ROANOKE, Va., June 19.—The crowded and polluted Coney Island. | The best beaches are private pre-| serves of the wealthy. southern rebellion of bone-dry big- At 8 a. m. temperatures through-| ots against Tammany Al Smith’s out: the sweltering area were soaring |leadership of the democratic party as they did yesterday when in New |took on the nature of a stampede York City a 93-year-old June heat | away from the brown derby here today, when the anti-Smith conven- tion voted to appoint a committce record was broken with 94 degrees. * * * Yuma, Ariz., was the hottest spot | swith headquarters in Washington to in the country yesterday, theremo-| co-operate with Ku Klux groups in jand elaborated for the American Party in two historic documents. That the United States occupies a position of central importance in all | phases of the international crisis of \capitalism, which is feverishly sharp- ening, must by now be clear to all. In this situation, we must rapidly | intensify and complete the readjust- |ment of our Party and its work, |and must proceed with the energetic | application of the new line given us | by the Comintern. Liquidating Past Errors. If the main orientation of the |Party has been rather thoroughly changed, and this is an accomplished jfact; if the most persistent obstacle |in the past to the healthy develop- ment of the American Party, the |faction groups and struggles, have now been completely smashed on jall sides, which is also the case—it |is still impossible to say that the past errors have been liquidated thoroughly. It is still necessary to press even deeper the process of a self-critical examination, as a con- dition for the full understanding and execution of the new line. Our understanding of the Address, Open |statement that “it is the factional leaders of the majority with Com- |rade Lovestone at the head who are |mainly responsible for making use |of the convention for factional pur- | poses,” then it must be declared | that any such tendency, substituting |the mathematical question of de- |grees of error for the political up- rooting of the sources of error, must |be combatted as relentlessly as op-| position to the Address, of which it is a concealed fo: Exceptionalism and Right Errors. There been some = luctance \former minority to make erro: | the struggle against Trots The incorrect imputation of factional ‘opponents that the minority v Trotskyist in tendency, doubtl helped, as did the whole factional | condition of the Party, to accentuate these errors, but do not explain them. And above all the minority was in error in failing to draw sharply the conclusions that must flow from the fact that the largest part of the Trotskyists had been aligned with the minority. It was ja demonstration of a fundamental | political weakness that the minority American Party was supporting begun on the initiative of the Young consciously this international right Pioneers of America, an organization tendency, or that the minority was|of workers and farmers children, has alone the upholders of the C. P./already received the endorsement S. U. line. Objectively this specula-|from many trade unions and other tive attitude gave aid and comfort labor organizations. to the International Right. The New Line and Our Pratical | Toohey declared that the miners children would be in the forefront in support of the delegation. The that’ our whole miners children have gone thru many Party be v a deep under- strikes and know what it is to strug- standing of the intern line, and gle agai the bo; for better be mobilized for a tenfold-increased conditions for the workers. They activity fcr its practical application. | in the Soviet Union there Our discussion of past errors, our |@%¢ no longer any bosses, there is self-crit It is n of starving and living in ism of the sharpest nature,/n0 more child labor, children, in- | was unable to expose the unsound- ority supporters, to recognize that |2¢S% of Cannon until he had gponly their own errors also constituted ey eone Uren Loney takyana anu oe part of the Right danger, and had cl balay EL Vaal SUG h Wh tas their roots in the theory of excep- | ‘in hesitation in making the sharp, tionalism which was most clearly | “astic break with and struggle developed by Comrades Lovestone | #8ainst the Trotskyist adventurers, | and Pepper. Because the minority | which was only the more necessary |had crusaded under the banner of |O? account of the conditions in the | | Party. struggle against the Right danger, | es The minority was further weak in it seems to be thought that thereby | \it had some guarantee against itself this struggle in its failure to develop|the petty-bourgeois cynics, the in- | making Right errors. This idea ag | adequately the political kinship of | tellectual clowns of the opportunist: one of the reasons why the minority \the American brand of Trotskyism | of all varieties, can misinterpret the Bolshevik self-criticism observable, among some former min- | needs the of any comrades. attainment of political has no similarity to “confessions,” |stead and is not to satisfy the emotional hovels, receive the best possible care It is for and treatment. ends, | namely, the removal of those ob-| Workers are sending a delegation to} stacles which hinder the develop- the Soviet Union in order to estab-! ment of the working class struggle, lish solidarity with the children and and the development of its leader- Workers ship, the United States section of order to learn and tell to the the Communist International, to the an children about the conditions of capacity of fulfilling its role. Only the Russian children, and in order to without tae National Labor Committee which The children of the American in the Soviet Union, in e able to fight better for the Soviet Jnion if the capitalists attack it. Pat H. Toohey is the chairman of Ameri- | POPE WILL BLESS! NEW SELLOUT OF MEXICAN MASSES U. S. Completes Union of Church and State 19,—The alliance between MEXICO CITY, terms of the new June the Mexican government and the reactionary catholic church are now in the hands of the pope at Rome and await his official approval. The final details of the agree- ment were worked out on Monday in conferences between U. 8. Am- bassador Morrow and President |Portes Gil and Morrow and Arch- {bishop Leopoldo Ruiz Y Flores and | Bishop Pascual Diaz of Tabasco, the et's papal emissaries. Thus Wall Str |man, who was responsible for ini- tiating the secret negotiatiovs, was | present till the end to see that the wishes ci Yankee imperialism were carried out. The betrayal by Portes Gil of one | of the most important achievements of the Mexican Revolution—suppres- sion of the counter-revolutionary |catholic church—bears a two-faced |character, the announcements indi- |cate. Fearing the wrath of the |masses, who have suffered under |the oppression of the church, Portes |Gil did not dare to make any open changes in the religious laws, In- | stead the new agreement is said to |embody a “more liberal” interpre- |tation of them. The result is the \same: the church will now have @ |free hand and official sanction. | At the same time that he was conducting the secret negotiations with the papal representatives, | Portes Gil intensified the persecu- |tion of militant workers and peas- jants and their organizations. The | headquarters of the Communist Par- ty was raided, its central organ, “El Machete,” suppressed, and workers’ and peasants’ leaders ar- rested and some of them shot. Despite these persecutions, the Mex- ican masses are rallying their |forces for against the U. S.-controlled bour- geoisie. intensified struggle SEE BREAK IN HEAT. WASHINGTON, June 19. — A |break in the heat wave that has |seared the east for four days was jforecast for tonight by the U. S. | Weather Bureau today. Showers and thunder storms will jrelieve the heat in the New England and Eastern states tonight, the Bureau said. |was not a successful one, and that forms of oppotrunism. In it: correct lit also remained in the swamp of | insistence upon the necessity of |opportunism. Failure to recognize struggle on two fronts, against the the opportunist nature of the minor- | Right danger and against Trotsky lity errors, will make it impossible ism, it fell into serious error in fail- for such a comrade to contribu’e ing to concretely demonstrate by effectively to the main politica'anlysis, and to emphasize in its tasks of the Party at this time. | Proper proportions, the opportunist One of the most serious manifes- "ature, implications and associations | tations of the Right danger in the] of Trotskyism. \ranks of the minority, was the fail- | Speculation on Differences in the whom one has been in political| Ure to carry on a proper struggle | Cc. P.S. U. struggle; but harder and more im- |#8ainst the Right tendencies in the; The Comintern Address declares portant is the task of self-criticism, | Tanks of its own faction. Following | that “the minority speculated in the Nor is there lack of material for |the logic of faction struggle, the version as if it were the only group this self-criticism. Right danger was seen only in “the in the American Communist Party There is, for example, the ques- | ther faction,” the struggle against | sharing the attitude of the Commu- tion of the former minority reserva- | the Right danger was thus taken nist Party of the Soviet Union in tions to the Sixth Congress. It must | from a political and Party place and |jts struggle against right devia- |be clearly established by the com-| SU! ordinated to the exigencics of tions.” This statement should be |rades concerned (of whom the writer | faction warfare. All of us who par- | carefully studied and understood by |isgone) that the minority declara-| ticipated in this error must recog- those formerly of the minority, Let tion at the Sixth Congress was a/Nize it, im order to eliminate such’ there be no misunderstanding on major political error, but objectively | errors entirely from Party life in! this; the error of the minority was serving not the struggle against the the future. by no means in wishing to support |Right danger, but becoming an in-| The minority had campaigned | with all its strength the line of the | strument in the hands of the Right against the theory of exceptional-| C. P. S. U., for quickening the tempo jelements against the line of the/ism, and in this fact there was great| of industrialization and_ socialist Sixth Congress. The very fact that| merit which no one could properly | construction, and meeting the inevit- the minority comrades thought it|wish to repudiate; but the trouble | able sharpening of the class sttug- necessary to make such a special|with this campaign was that it it-| gle in the village and with the Nep declaration, demonstrated a lack of |self was also operating within the| elements by intensified Party life Letter and Sixth Congress decisions jmust be deepened by concrete ap- plication in judging all details of past work and future tasks. For former members of the min- ority faction, it is especially neces- sary to concretely understand the correctness of the Comintern criti- cisms directed against their m takes. It is easy to accept the criti- cisms directed against those with \ struggle against the Right danger| With the more open ~:d obvious a 2 ltt alle Lael which a Communist Party cannot |is conducting the drive to send a |come into existence, and attempt to |childrens’ delegation to the Soviet ridicule it as “religious confessions.” | Union. “There is no relief in sight for the Middlewest.” Workers have suf- fered heavily in the heat. hops will see something diffe--nt f from these petty-bourgeois critics— | they will recognize in this very self- | But ti.e workers in the factories and they can be sure that there is grow- fl ing up their dependable ieadership, } a Party which is able to cleanse it- self from all corrupting elements, f which is able to accumulate experi- ences and learn from them, which.i2 } proud to demonstrate its organic jf unity with the workers’ party of the entire world. And as the workers see Friendly this, our Party will grow in size and influence, and the proletarian revo- Atmosphere lution brought nearer in America. And, upon the basis of the line | and directives of our world Party, we must really get the Party to work on all its multitude of pr: tical tasks. E member must as- sume responsibility, every member must be mobilized, and the Party |f itself, as an agrganized body, must direct the great forward movement /|f tor which the conditions are becom- ing ripe in the United States. 5 All together for a unified, mass | jolshevik Party! | Fresh Food Bathing Rowing, Fishing Sports Entertainment Cultural Activities Hiking i ew Mongol Tribe Is | Discovered in USSR FARMERS 60 TO . SHOW JIM CROW meters there registering 104 degrees. Phoenix, Ariz. had 100 degrees, El Paso, Texas, 98 degrees and several cities turned in 94s. The coolest town was Northhead, Washington, with the mercury slumbering at 54 degrees. The territory west of the Rockies continued to remain proportionately cooler than the eastern and mid- western sections of the country. Ww. I. R. Conference in New York June 27 to Plan Textile Tag Days A city conference of the Workers International Relief to prepare for tag days for the relief of the Gas- tonia textile strikers will be held at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th St., on Thursday, June 27 at 7 p. m. Delegates from trade unions, shops and labor fraternal organizations will be present. take up other plans for aiding the striking textile workers. The tag days will take place on June 29 &nd June 30. An organi- zation conference to prepare for the tag days will be held Monday at 6 yp. m. at the office of Local New York, Workers International Relief, Room 221, 799 Broadway. ! The W. I. R. Local New York, an- nounced yesterday that registration for the W. I. R. Children’s Camp takes place daily from 1 to 6 p. m. at the local office of the W. I. R. The lower middle class, ti manofacturer, the shopkee artiaan, the peasant, au tiene fight re oO ‘They nat revolutt Marx The conference will also} other states. That the convention | is an outgrowth of the capitalistic Klux movement was plainly be-| trayed in a plank unanimously adopted by the delegates, which “unalterably pledges the anti-Smith | democrats to racial integrity andj| jcondemns social relations between | the white and Negro races.” A college professor, William Mos- jely Brown, was nominated for gov- ernor of Virginia and selected to lead the Kluxers in their efforts to wrest control of the state machine {from the regular party hacks. The platform demanded the resig- nation of John J. Raskob as chair- man of the democratic national com- mittee and denounced the state leadership as a “most dangerous despotism.” S. Howie Williams, a lyncher from Lynchburg, spoke on the “dam- nable liquor traffic,” declaring that the democrats had condi a two- taced campaign in 1928, The convention does not, of course, jobject to Smith and Raskob being Wall Street servants. What they want are bone-dry, Ku Klux Klan Wall Street servants. STEAMERS COLLIDE | LISBON, Portugal, June 19.— The French steamer Cap Alprecht ‘and the Italian steamer Doride col- lided in a fog near the Berlingas Isles, off Peniche, today. Both |ships were damaged. The passen- , | gers of the Doride, including the British consul at Gibraltar and his wife, were safely transferred to the Cap Alprecht, which was towed to Cascaes, where the passengers were LON RE el Raataaen vet | LEAGUE SCHOOLS R.0.1.C. TACTICS Superior District to|Negroes Join Chicago Teach Them Communist Fight LENINGRAD, June 19.—A Mon- | gol tribe numbering about 2,000 | people has recently been discovered | on the bank of Lake Issyk-Kul, near | the town of Karakol in a district of | | working class—the proletarians.— Not only has the hourgeoisie forged the weapons that bring death to itself; it has also called into existence the men who are to wield those wenpons—the modern Friday—6:30 p. m. Karl Marx (Communist Manifesto), St hain LOWEST COST EXCURSIONS TO CHILDREN Cooperative Summer Home for Workers WINGDALE, N. Y. — TEL. WINGDALE 51 New York Office: 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE Telephone MONument: 0111 and 0112 Tents $16.50—Bungalows $17.50 Our busses leave every Wednesday at 2 p. m. from 1800 Seventh Avenue, corner 110th Street, New York. for children from 5 to 1 Supervision of experienced leaders.—Comrade Torrent in charge. SUPERIOR, Wis., June 19.~Two| Communist Youth League summer schools will open today in the Su- perior District. One of these schools will be held in Superior, Wis., and jthe other in Negaunee, Mich. Abou: 80 young workers, young farmers and working class students will at- tend these courses. Among the stu- dents there will be young miner: young lumber workers, and other: from important industries in the district. This is considered very sig- | jnificant for us here, as it will help, to orientate the whole League to- | wards the industrial youth. | The 1929 courses will be differ- ent’ in many respects from the courses held in previous years. The} schools will last six weeks each, and an entirely different curriculum has been prepared for this year than in previous years, Among the sub- jects that the students will be taught will be: Political Elements, History of the International Labor Move- ment, History of the American La- bor Movement, Trade Union Work, and others. Special emphasis will this year be laid on the question of “Our Tasks” which was not given sufficient attention previously. There will be two instructors in each of these schools, Besides there will be special lectures given by the League district organizes, and other leading CHICAGO, (By Mail).—Jim Crow tactics of the R. O. T. C. were ex- posed by the Communist Party and the Communist Youth League at a dance given by the Crane College R. ©. T. C. following the military man- cavers, When it became known that Negroes would not be admitted, Communist students at the school a-vorted the matter to the local League and Party. A leaflet calling cn mass student attendance at an efter-school meeting was circulated which exposed the real purpose of the R. 0. T. C. and its incidental Jim Crow practise. Three students distributing the leaflets were ar- rested by police summoned by the Ligh school principal. Police squads guarding the side- walk and entrance of the hall for- bade all to enter on threat of arrest. Communist students in the College report a favorable reaction to the leaflet among the Negro students. They plan further propaganda and organization work in the future. League members in the district. The schools this year, as in pre- vious years, were made possible thru the support and cooperation of the different working class organ- izations in the district, such as the Workers Clubs, Co-op, Societies, Women’s Sections, and others, ys RUSSIA Ss. | Semirechye. The Mongols belong to the western branch of Oirats. | Apparently they migrated to the | |banks of Issyk-Kul not later than | the beginning of the 17th century | Gradually they became intermixed s, 29 NEW YORK—-LENINGRAD— MOSCOW jwith the Semirechye aborigines, the | Romak Tip. °325 Kaisak-Kirgees race, taking over mal oe penees tel from them the Moslem religion but | retaining their own language and | some of their customs. | The Academy of Sciences of the | U. S, S. R. is keenly interested in | the discovery of this new tribe and | has sent the well-known student of | the Mongolian race, Burdukov, to| study it on the spot. FREE Soviet Visas No Documents Required See your steamship agent or American-Russian Travel Agency, Inc. 100 FIFTH AVE., N. Y. CITY Phone: Cheisen 4477 atronize our § Advertisers © Don’t forget to mention the “Daily Worker” to the proprietor whenever you purchase clothes, furniture, etc., or eat in a restaurant ORDER 43 East 125th Street. Another SPECIAL EDITION of the COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL Numbers 11, 12, 13 in One Issue A wealth of instructive articles by leaders in the Communist International. Some of the contributors to this issue are Bera Kun, WurM, S. Novixoy, Scuusin, Henrikovsky, Marrinev, and others. To secure a wide distribution for this issue we have reduced its price to 15 cents per copy We Have Only a Limited Number on Hand WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS — Camp gOE BD} =<. Saturday—1:30 p. m. S COLONY to 10 years of age. TODAY! New York City.

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