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THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized Against Imperialist War For the 40-Hour Week Daily = Entered ag accond-class matter at the Post Office at New York. N.Y. ander the act of M arch FINA Vol. VI. No. 173° Company. Inc. 26-28 Union Square. Published daily except Sundsy by The Comprodatly Pablishing N.Y, ar New York City, NEW YORK, THURSD AY, _ SEPTEMBER 26, 1929 SUBSCRIPTION RATES: In New York, by mall, $5.00 per year. Outside New York. by mail, $6.00 per year. L CITY Price 3 3 Cents the Line of the Comintern The New York district membership meeting of the Communist Party on Tuesday evening, by a vote of 1,379 to 52, gave a decisive and staggering answer to the opportunists and renegades grouped around Lovestone. The whole temper of the meeting demonstrated ‘that in the short period of time sinde the rejection of Lovestone’s split- ting tactics against the Communist International and his expulsion from our ranks, the Communist Party, in purging itself of the disin- tegrating factional activity of the opportunist elements, is unifying its ranks on the basis of the decisions of the Sixth World Congress and the Tenth Plenum of the Communist International. factionalism was clearly emphasized by the fact that, for the first time in six years, a membership meeting called to discuss fundamental political questions, was held without co-reporters, It is perfectly clear to the proletarian membership of the Com- munist Party that in the class struggle that is taking ever more ag- gressive forms in the United States today the supporters of the op- portunist line of Lovestone are an active force on the side of the bourgeoisie against the working class. The meeting itself is proof that in the ranks of our Party there is realization of the radicalization of the messes, and that the Party i beginning to grasp the spirit of the Third Period of the post-war crisis of the capitalist system. The Lovestone group selected as their spokes- man Charles Zimmerman, who has previously repeatedly been con- demned by the Communist International for his Right errors and whose recent policy in the needle trades situation has been definitely away from the line of the Red International of Labor Unions and of the line of the Party. That Zimmerman appeared as the chosen spokes- man of the renegade Lovestone forces is an accurate measure of the calibre of those enemies of Communism who still attempt to maintain an orgenized opportunist faction inside the Party. The resolution introduced by Zimme for the renegades only further brought out the fact that the Lovestone group, which started its attack against the Communist International with its theory of | completa exceptionalism, a reflection of American reformism, has now | comole tely gone over to social reformism. Its theory that capitalism A ica was not subject to the gencral crisis of capitalism evi- " dence in other countries of the world, a denial of the radicalization of wide sections of the American working class in the United States, has led to attempts to defeat the masses in their struggles against im- perialism, as was seen in the attacks on the demonstrations against imperialist war and in defense of the Soviet Union on August First. Despite its opportunistic character, the Lovestone group feared, in their resolution, to defend their whole program before the member- ship. Nevertheless, their line against the Communist International was perfectly clear. The reference of the Lovestoneites in their reso- lution to “the establishment of a ruinous, bureaucratic regime in the Communist International,” is precisely the language of every renegade. | It is the language of Trotskyism, of Brandlerism, the language of the strikebreaker,..Hais (expelled from the Communist Party of Czeko- Slovakia). Their arguments against the Communist International are the arguménts of the bourgeoisie against the Soviet Union. In the most demagogic manner these opportunists talk about formal demo- cracy and sink to the level of Karl Kautsky in reviling revolutionary proletarian democracy. Their lamentation about democracy is precisely of the calibre of the apologists for bourgeois democracy, who try to hide capitalist dictatorship under a democratic cloak. From the Leninist standpoint there is no room inside the Com- munist Party for propagation of defeatist, renegade, Menshevist views. For expression of Communist views the Party allows the freest criti- cism ani expression. But anti-Communist views and assaults upon the world party of the proletariat, the Communist International, can be expressed only outside the ranks of a Communist Party. . The rene- gade elements that follow the opportunist line of Lovestone & Co. can ebtain no foothold in the ranks of the American working class or its vanguard, the Communist Party. Their attempt to exploit the Party’s aweaknesses and shortcomings, still remaining from the past, will not succeed. That was conclusively demonstrated even before the mem- bership meeting of Tuesday. The Party will overcome its weaknesses and shortcomings by complete liquidation of the ideology of the past, and by following the line of the Communist International. | The membership meeting took up the pressing tasks of the Party and every loyal Party member will be impelled by the enthusiasm of the meeting energetically to work to give a broader base to the elec- tion campaign, particularly the work of mobilizing the masses om the shops. A broader base for the defense of the Gastonia struggle, for agitating for a mass strike for the liberation of the Gastonia AHese ants, for the establishment of workers’ defense committees in the southern textile mills as a means of protecting the workers in their struggle against the social fascist methods of the state. The cam- paign against imperialist war and‘in defense of the Soviet Union must be intensified to embrace the widest masses of workers. Not the least difficult of our problems is the intensification of Negro work and to resist the sharpening attacks against Negro workers. This phase of our work still suffers from the heritage of the past. Energetic mea- sures must be taken to make more progress in women’s work, particu- larly in the shops. Every effort must be made and will be made to build up the Trade Union Unity League as a real center of the revo- lutionary trade unions and the revolutionary minorities in the old unions. The carrying out of. our tasks involves a more intense activization of the whole Party; increasing the tempo of our activities, the strength- _ ening of the apparatus, the increasing of the activities of every Party | member and the establishment of a firm leadership of mass organiz~ tions through strengthening our Communist fractions. The New York membership meeting showed that the Party mer bership is determined to tackle the fundamental problems of the ¢ and will give short shrift to any and all opportunists acting as ager. of the American capitalist class se the working class and i. revolutionary Party. “You have submitted to the com- pany union. You permitted your- The liquidation of 7 The Party Membership for LOVESTONE GETS U.S.S.R. Acvymen Escape SHEARER CLAIMS’ GENERAL COMPANY UNION ANLY 52 VOTES Mishap in Aleutian Hop BIG NEWSPAPERS: FOR SOUTHERN TEXTILE “ N.Y. MEET 379 Caminunist Party Members Endorse His Expulsion Zimmerman His Agent Decisive Defeat For Right Wingers By a vote of 1,379 to 52, the mem- | rship meeting of the New York |District of the Communist Party, jheld Tuesday night at Webster Hall, |cupported the political line of the| | Communist International and en-| |dorsed the’ expulsion of Jay Love-| jstone and the other right wing rene- \cades from the Party, Three mem- |Sers abstained from voting. The voting took place upon two vesolutions, one presented by the District Executive Committee of the Party, that favored the expulsion of ihe Lovestoneites and endorsed the correctness of the resolutions and theses adopted by the Sixth World Congress of the Communist Inter- national and the Tenth Plenum of the Executive Committee of the Comintern, The other resolution was presented by Charles B. Zim- merman, who was the Lov ‘one caucus leader at the meet! It s full of attacks on the Cc. .mu- nist International and the Commu- nist Party of the United States, and showed to what extent the Love- |stone group has already gone in its |anti-Party activities. Discussion From Floor. After William W. Weinstone, who reported for the District Executive |Committee, finished his one hour and a half talk, the floor was [thrown open for discussion, Among Gale Strikes Plane After Landing at Unalaska; Coast Guards Tow Craft to Safety Flier $s Battle Bad Atmospheric Conditions Con- stantly on Moscow to New York Flight DUTCH HARBOR, Sept. —Braving adverse weather conditions to make the 1752-mile |flight across the mountainous Aleu- tian Islands, the crew of the Land of the Soviets barely escaped dis- laster yesterday when a_ severe southeast gale struck the mono- plane immediately after it had ar- rived here from Attu at 2.12 p. m. | (8.12 p. m, Eastern Standard Time). Amtorg Trading Corporation yes- \terday announced the receipt of ad- vices from Unalaska stating that the U. S. coast guard cutters Chelan and Haida at Dutch Harbor sent motor launches to the aid of the Land of the Soviets, which was en- dangered by a sudden gale after Handing, Lengthly maneuvers were required before the Soviet craft could be towed away from the lee shore to an anchoring buoy. + * 8 First Pilot Semyon Shestakov, Second Pilot Philip Bolotov, Navi- gator Boris Sterlingov and Mechanic 'Dmitry Fufaev, who are manning the Land of the Soviets on its Mos- cow to New York flight, have been forced to battle constan’:,- against difficult atmospheric conditions since taking off from the Moscow air- drome on Aug. 8. Impenetrable fog earlier caused the crash of their plane near Chita, Siberia, and interrupted the 12,500- mile journey, which was resumed in | another monoplane on Aug. 23. While on the first leg trip, the new Land of the Soviets encountered head winds which reduced its speed | to 40 kilometers per hour, although | |those who spoke in defense of the| {for the balance of their hop it at- | Party line were Louis Sisselman, | Otto Huiswood, Rebecca Grecht, jJohn Schmies, Gilbert Green and | Sidney Bloomfield. | The complete text of the resolu- tion adopted will appear in a future issue of the Daily Worker. In his report, Weinstone referred to the increased violence on the part jof the police against workers thru- Jout the United States. Pointing to Gastonia, he said the recent actions | there have proven that the workers |have moved forward by organizing workers’ defense corps to defend the | workers rights against the fascism jof the mill owners. “This,” he jadded, “is another indication of the jvadicalization of the working class.” Increased Militancy, “On International Red Day,” he said, “we found increased militancy on the part of the workers. Pro- ! testing against rationalization, work- ors who never before participated i mt working class acti came to our demonstrations, and when attempts were made by the police to break them up, fought | against the police.’ In New Orleans, Weinstone said. jan economic struggle was turned linto a political struggle in spite of |the tear gas bombs and general ter- {ror of the police. The workers prone ne back courageously, which is {further proof that they are in a mood for struggle, Lonesome at Cleveland. Speaking about the Trade Union Unity League Conference, recently held in Cleveland, Weinstone re- minded the Party members that Lovestone had promised to fight he Party at that conference. How- rver, Lovestone was decisively de- ‘eated, as the mass of unskilled (Continued on Page Tira JonorWorkingelass Heroes at S and tained a speed of from.145 to as| high as 175 km. Run Into Gale. Flying from Irkutsk to Verkhneu- dinsk, across Lake Baikal, the Soviet airmen ran into a violent gale which | pitched their craft about like an autumn leaf. A forced landing in| this rocky territory would have meant certain disaster. Before leav- SANDHOG STRIKE 1S SPREADING The strike of the New York sand | hogs is continuing. More than 1,000 workers have already gone out, and more are expected to join the strike today, Strong picket committees were formed yesterday of Negro white strikers, after Harold Williams, of the American Negro Labor Congress and Solomon Har- per, of the Crusader News Service, spoke at the strike meeting at Man- hattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St., and urged a united struggle of the | ;Negro and white workers. The | strikers are about half Negro and, half white workers. The white strikers are mostly Irish with a few Italian. The speakers pointed out that the Negro workers should demand their union membership books and con-j duct a militant ‘struggle within the union, Work Against Strikers. The American Federation of La- |bor, with which the union is af- |filiated, and the Tammany Hall city | administration are working together (Continued on Page Two) Unalaska, ; jby capitalist newspaper correspon- 10th Anniversary Rally Friday FIGHT “RIGHTS” Betrayed Workers An appeal to all cloakmakers to rally under the banner of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union for a struggle for better living con- ditions, ‘was issued last night by the Joint, Board of, the union. The statement points out that) when the sab International Ladies Garment Workers Union recently | signed their fake agreement with the employers they said that the conditions of the cloakmakers would | improve. “You permitted yourselves to be foo'rd.’ the “Whi monthe acter the settlement? Do a Nuw gee to what a deplorable | CLOAKMAKERS TO): Compan yUnion Has | statement continues. | are the results today, two | nels to be terrorized by their hired orillas, You have given them hard }earned money in dues and taxes; |and now as before you are forced to work piece work’ at the most mis- ‘erable prices, long hours, seven days a week, under conditions of abject slavery. “Cloakmakers! It is high time that you make an end to the ex- istence of the company union in our trade. As long as the company /union remains, as long as you per- mit yourselves to be terrorized and | belong to the company union, just | so long will piece work, long hours, ‘the speed-up system and shameful exploitation be your constant lot. “The elimination of the sweat shop system, the establishment of week work, the 40-hour, y week, ind all other union conditions can nly become «# reality when the! | cloakmakers will have once and for ‘all made up their minds that they ‘must build their own union, a union of the workers, the Needle Trades | i \ i United Front of Rank and File Broadens Base of Campaign; Protest Meetings Grow The tenth anniversary celebration of the Communist Party which takes place this Friday night at Central Opera House, 67th St. and Third | Ave., brings again to the attention of militant workers the long list of working class heroes who died in the last decade of class struggle in the United States. Similarly it draws attention to those of our best fighters, now in prisons throughout the country because of their seif- socrificing struggle against the cap- italist class in defense of the in-| terests of the workers. Leading comrades of the Commu- nist Party, under the banner of the Party since its founding will speak on its experiences during a decade | of class war in preparation for the | overthrow of bourgeois class rule. The role played by John Reed and C. E. Rutherberg, who died in the your conditions have sunk? J verbers Industrial Union.” i service of the vorking siete and @ sate H in. ‘ ’ the lessons of the struggles for which Harry Canter, John Porter, |and others have been imprisoned wil’ be dealt with, Thousands of workers now in the Communist Party are not acquaint- jed with the early history of the Party; the struggle for the right |to “legal” existence, the fight for a mass Party and against sectarian- ism, the experiences of early mass |struggles, the errors committed and | achievements of the Party in seek- |ing new and effective methods of |strugele, The knowledge of these |is of vital importance for every militant worker for an understand- |ing of the present pagition of the organized vanguard of the working class, | The celebration of this Joyous oc- | casion will be aided by the entire ing Irkutsk, Semyon Shestakov and his three comrades has been held up for two days by a cyclone. Again on the stretch from Petro- | pavlovsk, Kamchatka, to its first] landing point on American soil, the Island of Attu, the Land of the Soviets had to plow through heavy Boris Sterlingov hail, rain and fog. |The route across the North Pacific unchartered, having been at- tempted but twice in the history of aviation. * banks of snow, is * 8 The Friends of the Soviet Union requests workers’ organizations to send representatives to the mass meeting called for 2 p, m. this Sun- day at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and | Irving Pl., at which plans for giving | the emissaries of the Soviet workers | and peasants a fitting reception will | be completed. The Reception Committee expects to secure either the Yankee Stadium | Jor the Polo Grounds for the cere-| [mony in order to accommodate the | | throngs who-are displaying keen in- terest in the historic flight. The committee hopes to honor the/ plane’s arrival in New York, which | will take place during the first part of October, by presenting the four | Soviet fliers with a number of trac- | tors and trucks. These will be ship- | ped to Soviet Russia in the near ‘future. REVOLT SPREADS AGAINST CHIANG. BULLETIN. “The United Press st2tes from Moscow that the Soviet govern- ment has sent a new note to the Nanking government through the German embassy listing 28 separ- ate attempts since Sept. 10 of white guard Russian and ChineSe mercenary soldiers to invade the territory of the U. S. S. R. The raids included attacks on shipping and U. S. S. R. villages. It paints a picture of intense guerilla war along a_ 1,000-mile frontier, and severely warns the Chinese war lords that this must Stop. | * Reports from Shanghai, sent out | dents, indicate that Chiang Kai-shek is still lying unblushingly about the extent of the revolt against him by sections of the army nominally ad- hering to the Nanking government, but that the facts are refuting him badly. The defeat of the Nanking gov- ernment’s expedition against Chang Fa-kwei, during which a river battle was fought a few days ago below Ichang, was much more severe than at first admitted. Five troopships of the Nanking forces tried to run past Chang Fa-kwei’s batteries, and four of them were captured after several hundred of Chiang Kai- shek’s men had been killed and wounded. Five thousand men were captured, either in this battle or in another fought about the same time, and about which details lack. One ship was sent back to Han- ow, badly damaged. Feng Embarrasses. Yesterday it was reported that emissaries from Feng Yu-hsiang were closeted with Chiang, appa- rently demanding a heavy bribe as the price of remaining out of the revolt, with no assurance that Chi- ang’s empty treasury could raise the money, or that Feng would stay bought if he was bought. Mean- while, it is certain that Feng’s so- called “Kuominchun” (national peo- ple’s army) is moving against the orders of Nanking slowly down the Peking-Hankow railway line, as though to assist Chang Fa-kwei, whose Ichang position is about 4 hundred miles up the river from} Hankow. Hankow is still held by | \chorus of the Freiheit Singing So- ciety and a | proletarian brass band. Chiang Kai-shek forces, Chang Fa-kwei! controls most of the rive: iti OBEYED ORDERS Letters Involve N. Y. Times and Chicago Tribune WORKERS, | S BOSS PLAN ‘World Organization of W.I.R. Sends Prominent | | European Attorneys to Gastonia Naval Bases the Issue | Trade Union Unity League, Thru Foster, Says Dictated Policies From Geneva Parley While agitation for a full inves- tigation of lobbies was being re- yived in congress, the senate com- mittee investigating the propaganda _ activities heard Henry C. attorney, tell how American ship- ye euders had employed William B. | Shearer, naval expert. yesterday A succession of developments out- | side the committee room indicated the senate soon would be called upon to delve int othe tariff, prohibition and other lobbies, like its naval sub- committee now is doing with the merchant marine and disarmament |lobby. Directed Jingo Campaign. According to Shearer’s testimony yesterday, he directed the publicity Shearer } Hunter, New York | | | BULL The following telegrams of changed yesterday: : “Gastonia Joint Defense and Relie! 80 East 11th St., New York City. view to their pa’ whether icipating in the ¢ * “Workers International Relief, Berlin, Germany. European lawyers will be extremely pacity. Accept offer. Must be Trial reopens September 30. Gastonia Joint * | GASTONIA, Workers Will Defy Bosses; We are negotiating with prominent * * . C., Sept. 25.. Rally to N.T.W, ETIN, international solidarity were ex- f Committee, European attorneys with zastonia trial. Establish definitely authorities will allow them to participate. Workers International Relief.” * valuable in advisory ca- n Charlotte within three weeks. Defense and Relief Committee.” The mill bosses of the South are attempting oy organize a company union of all southern textile workers, it was announce d today. Whether this decision campaign in the American capitalist | is an outgrowth of the recent conference between the mill pre: in s government could be utilized for the | big navy program. This avowed agent of three bi; shipbuilding corporations, and spec- ial propagandist for the big navy gang, claimed he dictated from| Geneva the editorial policies of the New York Times, the Chicago) Tribune and other metropolitan | |} papers. According to his testimony, he was not only the ship and muni- tions trusts’: watch-dog over the (Continued on Page Two) FOSTER WILL SPEAK OCT 1. To Gepbrt at T.U.U.L. Conference Here Wililiam Z. Foster, General Sec- Bead of the Trade Union Unity League, will report on the Cleveland Trade Union Unity Conference Tuesday, Oct. 1, Irving Plaza, Irv- jing Place and 15 St. at the confer- lence of the Metropolitan Area | Trade Union Unity League. Delegates representing thousands of unorganized workers are ex- pected to atend and hear Foster report on the achievements of this historic labor gathering which was | attended by 690 delegates from all sections of the country and all in- | dustries. Reports will also be given |on the tasks of the women workers, | youth workers and Negro workers tin the light of the Cleveland con- ference. One of the main questions on the agenda will be Gastonia. The latest developments there will be taken up and discussed. up from Ichang, and has laid down strict regulations for river traffic. The entire revolt is a military maneuver on the part of ambitious generals who may be taking Brit- ish or Japanese money to start trouble for Chaiang because he has lately been following too much an American imperialist leadership. The revolting generals certainly feel the intense dissatisfaction of workers, peasants and hired sol- diers for the bloody Chiang Kai- shek despotism, and are trying to capitalize it for their own ends, COMMUNISTS ESCAPE Tsinah, Shantung, (By Mail).— |A number of Communist prisoners have escaped from the jail here. A police officer and several others were shot in the malee. Negroes Rallying to Aid of the 13 Gastonia Defendants Newspapers Tell of Boss Conspiracy ; :h a manner that the!owning Governor O. Max Gardner and the largest mill barons pacifist pretenses of the Wall Street | of the state, it was not disclosed. It was stated that the next | step will be an intensified offensive against the National Tex- out all organizations whose on WITNESS TELLS HOW BARKOSKI WAS TORTURED |Wife Identifies Blood- Stained Clothes (Special to the Daily Worker.) PITTSBURGH, Sept. 25.—John F. Higgins, today sat in the witness | box and told the court and jury of being an involuntary witness while | the bosses’ thugs beat and kicked John Barkoski until life had all but | left his body. He told how he and Barkoski had | tried peacefully to settle a quarrel | between drink-maddened Watts, al coal and iron policeman and one of | the defendants and a young boy,) himself being beaten into uncon-| sciousness by Watts, and seeing Barkoski slump to the ground, try- ing vainly to protect his head from the rain of blows delivered by Watts with the butt of his heavy revolve He related how Lycester and Watts had kicked the helpless and uncon- scious Barkoski around the room, Lycester doffing his undershirt and saying: “He'll like a good work- out,” while beating Barkoski with an iron fire poker until the poker was bent, then straightening the | poker and continuing the beating. Asked what Barkoski was doing while Watts kicked him, Higgins replied laconically: “Lying helpless.” Widow Identifies Clothes. Jury and spectators had a shock when Sophie Barkoski, widow of the murdered miner, took the stand, clad in black and with eyes red with weeping. She identified the blood- stained garments. Asked if she saw (Continued on Page Three) t | SENTENCE WORKERS IN TOUR PARIS, Jeanneau and Benoit, arrested on} the eve of August 1 for the disrti- bution of leaflets have been sent- enced to one and two months’ im- prisonment respectiveely. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class, there | (By Mail). — Comrade | Union | ig | tile Workers’ Union and all workers’ organizations, to include a declaration of martial law if other legal weapons fail to wipe ly interests are those of the working class, particularly the | Communis Party whom the class conscious workers are recognizing more and more as their leader. The formation of the company union, the statement declared, is seen by the mill owners as the “best solution of the present labor diffi- culties in that industry.” James F. Barr formerly the president of the North Carolina Federation of Labor, and now as editor of the |Brevard News in which the an- nouncement was first made yester- |day, an unconcealed mill owners’ man, is the mouthpiece. Fo: ‘er Denounces Move. Word was received here today from New York that Wm. Z. Foster, | general secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, pointed out today that the announcement made by the former president of the North |Carolina Federation of Labor on the formation of a company union is simply another project of the employers to defeat the workers. “Barrett’s plan is but another ex- |ample of the extreme degree .to which the misleaders will go as agents of the bosses,” the head. of the new trade union center declared. |“They are not only company union- izing the old unions and turning them into mere auxiliaries of the capitalists, but they are also willing to become the organizers of open company unions when the employers decide that such is the most ef- fective way to demoralize the workers. Workers Smash Scheme, “But the Southern workers, driven to extremes by the pressure of cap- italist rationalization, will smash this latest scheme of the employers and their agents, the American Fed- eration of Labor bureaucrats. They will insist upon a real union, the National Textile Workers Union, af- filiated with the Trade Union Unity League.” Following the conference, Gov- ernor Gardner issued a statement to the press, in which he denounced the leaders of the National Textile Workers Union. A special session of the legislature may be called, it | was stated, to legalize the intensi- | fied attacks upon the union and the Communists. It is obvious that an- other attack of the bosses’ black hundreds upon union organizers and | active members will be construed as |sufficient excuse to take such ac- tion, while the blame for this vio- lence is laid upon the Communists. Thus open encouragement is given the fascists by Gardner. Favorite Trick. Manville Jenckes has always been one of the worst slave drivers in the industry and one of the cleverest " (Continued on Page Three) Organizes Black and White Workers The National Textile Workers Union that came South to or- ganize the most exployted section of workers in America, the white | and Negro textile workers, found the most brutal opposition on the part of the mill-owners, the mill- owners’ government and courts. But the National Textile Work- ers’ tional Labor work has not. Defense finds been in vain. Negro masses, numbering 12,000, 000 of the most exployted work- | jers, are evidencing tremendous in- terest in the case of the 16 Gasto- | nia strikers who go on trial Sept. 30 at Charlotte, in danger of the electric chair. The Gastonia Joint Defense and Relief Campaign, of 80 E. 11th St., | |space in the columns of Negra Throughout Ameri the tobling | a, Continued on Page Two) ie ings for tonighht, SECTION & UNIT INDUSTRIAL | ORGANIZERS’ MEETING A very important meeting of the | section and unit organizers will take place tonight at 8 p.m, at | 26-28 Union Square. | Important matters relating to our trade union work will be dis- | cussed. | William W. Weinstone, district Union, aided by the Interna- | New York City, Room 402, finds | organizer of the Commanist Party, its |the case taking greater and greater | last night instructed all industrial organizers to call off ottheer meet- y