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| workers has caused a deep wave! charged the workers in the square | nthe police, a series of Communists | stones by the demons } 20 witnesses, including 9 policemen, , ‘he maximum unemployment insur- | “anemployed workers receiving the} FIND CACHED ARMS AND DUM-DUM BULLETS IN FASCIST HIDE-OUT Berlin Workers Enraged at Murder Bands of Fascists Who Have Free Hand Mass Demonstration Against Fascists at Pir- masens; Police Attack | BERLIN (LP.S.)—The series of |lutionary workers is all the more fascist murders have compelled the | energetic. police to take at least some action| , During the funeral of the mur- : ‘ : |dered worker, Heimburger, who was against the fascists. During the! stabbed to death by fascists, the course of a number of searches in| police attacked the funeral proces- the houses of suspected persons, |sion and a worker was stabbed by the police discovered a fascist dump ja police officer with his bayonet. with revolvers and large supplies} On Sunday evening masses of of dum-dum ammunition in the| workers collected before the local house of a tradesman in Berlin.; headquarters of the Communist The man is a member of the Na- | Party in Pirmasens to protest | tional Fascist Party. against the murderous attack on unarmed workers earlier in the day The police The long series of murders com- | mitted by the fascists against|by armed fascists. of indignation in Berlin, and even| with their batons, but met with} the bourgeois democratic press is! bitter resistance so that they were compelled to call for the suppres-| flung back. Thereupon they drew afon of the fascist murder detach-| their revolvers and fired a volley ments. The pseudo-measures of the | into the m S, Seroiusly wound- police against the fascists are half-|ing 2 workers. A number of other | hearted and without noticeable ef-| workers received less serious | fect., Their action against the revo- wounds, Growth of Communist Influence in China SHANGHAI, (IPS). The Chinese and foreign newspapers are unable to conceal their anxiety at the rapid spread of Communist in- fluence. One newspaper writes regretfully, “The Communists are taking advantage of the generals war to consolidate their own positions and capture one town after the other.” The Communist troops are closing in on Hankow. The government troops suffered severe casul- ties in an unsuccessful attempt to prevent the Communists from taking Hanchow. The revolutionary peasant movement is swelling and tre- mendous areas are completely in the hands of the Communists. Masses of bourgeois fugitives, officials, landowners and merchants are flood- ing into the big towns with their families. There are 50,000 fugitives in Hankow alone. The foreign press advises the Generals to end their wars as quickly as possible in order to exterminate the Communist danger. | Boss-Police Child Killers Go Free | PRAGUE, (IPS).—Following the {other means to disperse the demon- | bloodbath amongst the Communist He denied the police story | children in Radotin carried out by | that they had been bombarded with | s, and| were arrested in order to save the |that only one shot had been fired. | face of the police and to convey the | The fact that in all nine persons had ‘ i a . {been wounded by bullets, including | impression that the incident was the |four children who were seriously | fault of the Communists. The first | wounded, exposed the shameless | group of five Communists came up | preyarications of the authorities. for trial today before the district! As is usual in capitalist courts, court in Prague on charges of hav- | the judge dismissed the evidence of | ing committed offenses against the | the civilian witnesses and accepted public safety, Amongst the accused | contradictory evidence of the pi | is an editor of the official Commu- | witn s gospel truth, Two of | nist organ “Rude Pravo,” and athe accused including the Berlin | Berlin Communist named Fritz) Communist Fritz Krohn we on Krohn who took part in the demon- tenced to five months imp ment stration. The comrades have been | each, a third accused received three | in prison since the 30th of April weeks imprisonment, the fourth ac- | 1930. jcused ten days imprisofment while | During the proceedings a number | the fifth accused was acquitted. of collisions occurred between the | With these sentences the Czech orisoners and the defense on the one | bourgeoisie hopes to shift the re- hand and the court and.the prose- sponsibility for one of the most cution on the other. Amongst the | bestial happenings of recent yea | onto the shoulders of the victims was the Communist deputy Kopecky | and their friends. The victims are who condemned the bestiality of the | guilty, the murderers are innocent police action in an energetic politi- | of all blame, is the highest principle cal speech. He declared that the |of bourgeois classjustice where re- police fired into the ranks of the | volutionary workers or in this cas thildren without any previous warn- ‘the children of revolutionary work- ing or without previously using any ers, are the victims! stration. Attack Revolutionary Greek Trade Unions AVHENS (LP.S.).—The police authorities m Salomka have made application to the courts for the dissolution of the local trades and labor council of the Tobacco Workers’ Federation and of the local organization of the tobacco workers. The organizations in ques- tion are mass organizations of the Greek workers with a long revalu- tionary tradition. The legal reason given for the application is that the organizations in question have exceeded in their activity the limits laid down in their statutes. Jobless Increase in Germany BERLIN, (IPS).—The number of anemployed workers in receipt of last year at this time. The Reichs Ministry of Finance ince support on the 15th of May | ‘was 1,630,000, and the number of so-called crisis support which is | tonsiderably less, was 320,000. In addition, there are 800,000 workers registered at the Labor Exchanges who receive no unemployment sup-| port. The official unemployment figures for the whole of Germany nave thus reached the colossal total of 2,753,000, or 1,200,000 more than French Metal Workers Strike for Wage Rise PARIS (LP.S.).—Six hundred metal workers in the engineering works in Muelhausen in Alsace save gone on strike for a wage in- mease of 15 per cent. The man- \gement refused even to consider the lemand. The building workers in Maza- net (Tarn) demand a wage increase vf 5 francs a day. The reformist Revolutionary Chinese Free Class Prisoners PARIS (LP.S.)—In Hokou, on Uhinese territory, a train bearing the French consul and a group of evolutionary Annamites, being, ‘aken to Indo-China by police was \eld up by revolutionary Chinese at \ station, The prisoners were re- rased, i BOSSES OPPOSE OLD AGE PENSIONS ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.—The Manufacturers Association of New) ‘ersey opposes the giving of old age _ ensions for workers by the gov- | aa mn | *the immediate arrest and handing announces that there is a deficit of 737 million marks in the Reiche| Budget. Four hundred sixty million marks for the unemployment insur- ance scheme are missing and 140 million marks for the crisis support scheme, and the rest tax deficits. The government will discuss this | critical situation in the next few! days and undoubtedly further at- tacks on the unemployed and on the toiling masses in general must be expected. leaders are trying to reach a com- promise in order to prevent a strike. The 1,500 striking builders in Rheims have now returned to work. The strike was conducted under ex- tremely difficult circumstances. The police acted energetically on behalf of the employers and over 200 strik- ers were arrested. During the strike many new members were won for the revolutionary union. As a result of this incident the French authorities have protested to the Chinese authorities of the province of Yunnan and demanded over of the prisoners. “Reprisals” | are threatened should the Chinese authorities fail to carry out this demand, JOBLESS INSURANCE IN SASKATCHEWAN. REGINA, Sask.—Workers here have finally forced the legislature ‘| grows indignant at the very idea of | “IETAL WORKERS. MASS MEETING Active in World Negro, | R.LLY. Congress | (Continua » from Page One) League; Pete Chapa, national youth organizer, M, W. I. L., and E. P. Cush, nationa) field organizer of the MW At Negro and R. I. L. U. Congresses. Ford will emphasize the impor- tance of the International Labor Congress, to be held July 1, and the struggle of the colonial peoples gainst imperialism. He will also deal with the Red International of Labor Unions Fifth World Congress, | jto which the M. W. I. L. Confer-' manifestation of its life into anti-Soviet propaganda. ence is sending three delegates. Large Delegation From South. The national office has just been informed that a good-sized delega- tion has been elected to attend the conference from the steel centers in Birmingham and Chattanooga. It is of particular interest that for the st time in the history of the revo- lutionary movement in the steel in- dustry a delegation will attend from Birmingham, where the Chamber of Commerce and the employers dur- ing the 1919 steel strike boasted of the fact that the strike did not af- fect the South, The M. W. I. L. estimates that especially from the South the steel workers, which con- sist of 75 per cent Negroes, will be- come the most active force in the next steel strike. Organizer Bailey of the Youth Department of the M. W. I. L, re- ports that a large delegation pri- marily of young workers has been elected from the Pittsburgh Steel Co. in Monessen, Pa., and from all other steel and metal centers re- ports indicate that the youth will play a very important role at the Youngstown Conference. Strike At Wa A strike of 200 w Tool Forge Co. in Warren, Ohio, is tal ace, 2 M. W, I. L. has already issued a leaflet and an or- ganizer been sent in to secure a delegation of these striking metal workers. Ohio. s at the The M. W. I. L. expects at the Youngstown Conference and in pren- aratior for it to strengthen its or- ganizational machinery and over- come all of its shortcomings, adoy a program of action, making this p ble to immediately send into the various metal and steel centers at least a dozen field organizers and prepare for a real mass convention in the near future to lay the basis for the establishment of a new rev- olutionary industrial union, and te prepare for the coming mai trug- gles of the workers aga’ wage- .| cuts, speed-up, unemployment and| the war preparations of American imperialists. The M. W. I. L. will also mobilize for a large unemployment delega- ion to the Chieago Unemployment Convention July 4, 5 and 6. The League will mobilize all of its forces jto reach its quota of 5,000 new} members in the general T. U. U. L. drive before July 1, CIVIL LIBERTIES MAN AIDS LECION New York Office Mum on the Matter MEMPHIS, Tenn. June 11.— tening to the support of the fas cist American Legion here, Robert Keebler, local representative of the Civil Liberties Union gave his of- ficial approval to the arrest and holding of Tom Johnson, Prof. and Mrs. Davis for holding an open-air meeting. “I have your wire of June 7, and in reply I beg to advise you that | the American Legion has saved the! night, God save the king. All is quiet along the Mississippi.” Thus the local upholder of the “sanctity of constitutional rights wired in reply to the New York! office demands to not allow “civil | liberties” to be trampled on so} crudely. | Then with a sigh of relief and a great service rendered (to the bos- ses) the local light of civil liberties Communists daring to organize Ne- | gro and white workers. “Our” bourbon lawyer goes on to | tell of his part in the arrests, “Un- der the circumstances the police | commissioner did precisely what I} would have done. I advised Prof. Davis by telephone that he had no right to hold the street meeting in violation of public authority.” Commissioner Davis stated that | his choicest coterie of dicks will | escort Tom Johnson to the train, and said that with such backing as | he has received (American Legion, | Civil Liberties), he intended to in- vestigate “the operations of any Communistic or radical movements.” Joe Norvell, the fourth organizer to be arrested, has been re-arrested and efforts are being made to deport him. Inquiries made today at the New York office of the Civil Liberties Union elicited the reply that the matter was under advisement and that they had no statement to make jat the moment. MORE ACCIDENTS IN COLORADO MINES. DENVER, Colo.—There have been 153 metal miners filled and 5,035 to act partially on the unemploy- ment situation, seth injured in the rfetal mines of Colg- rado during the past ten yer | JOBLESS SOLIDARITY . SRK, THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 193 0 A Governmental Conspiracy | Against the Workingclass Congress Prepares New Anti-Labor Laws in Secret “Investigation” (Continued from Page One) profit out of unemployment, the Soviet Union is engaged in the abolition of unemployment by means of abolishing the profit system. While the American capitalists coin profits out of the misery of the masses, the Soviet Union is busily engaged in abolishing the misery of the masses by abolishing capitalist exploitation. This development becomes daily a more inspir- ing example for the working masses everywhere, and, of course, also in the United States. Congress of the United States wants to liquidate this ex- ample. It wants to drown it in the blood of a capitalist war against the Soviet Union. It therefore tries to turn every There- |fore it decides to investigate “Moscow influence” in America. | The investigation is now on. It would be interesting for the workers to know the answer to the following questions: Does the Committee intend to investigate who bought and! paid for the forgeries which inspired Congressman Fish to de- mand the investigation? Does the Committee intend to investigate what role Mr. Hamilton Fish played in connection with these forgeries? Mr. |Fish is now the honorable chairman of the investigation com-| mittee. | Will the Committee investigate what role Mr. Matthew | Woll played in connection with this forgery? Mr. Woll is now |an honorable witness for the committee. Wi | Whalen played in connection with these forgeries? Mr. Whalen | was the honorable police commissioner of New York. Will the Committee investigate why Mr. Whalen never brought the forgers to justice although all facilities were sup- | plied to establish their identity? Will the Committee investigate whom the honorable ! gentlemen, Matthew Woll and Ralph Easley, officials of the |turers Association respectively, were serving when they, in | league with Mr. Hamilton Fish, the honorable chairman of the (investigation committee, peddled the obvious forgeries? Will the committee investigate whether the Jesuit Father Walsh, who was caught acting as a spy for the Vatican, in the Soviet Union, is not now acting as a political agent of the ‘ Vatican in the United States working for a war against the Soviet Union? We know, of course, that the committee will not investi- gate into the questionable activities of its honorable chairman and his accomplices. This committee serves the express pur- pose of finding ways and methods of gagging the American working class. In line with this purpose, the committee will! ‘organize raids against all labor organizations and labor insti- tutions which the paytriots of the land dislike because they serve the workers, in order to secure materials to concoct | new forgeries. | It will prepare and push the passage of laws for finger- | printing and registration of aliens in order to make possible | their deportation in case they should dare to complain about wages or in case they should be active in the organization of industrial unions. | It will prepare laws which will give the Department of; Labor police power, incidentally opening a new source of graft, and expressly for the establishment of a most efficient ma- | \chinery for the selection of the most docile and cheapest slaves in Europe for the American profiteers. It will prepare poisonous propaganda for use by the anti-| Soviet war mongers for their murderous purposes. We warn the American workers. The Congressional Com- mittee for the investigation of Communist activities is a gov-, {ernment body to attack the working class. Hatred against | the working class is its genesis; laws against the working class \are its aims, | But in spite of all that we declare that we will continue to raise the demand to the capitalist masters of America: | Work or Wages to the millions of unemployed! We demand the right to organize, to strike, and to picket for the workers!| | We will continue to organize the workers, to fight for these | rights. We will continue to point out to the workers that they | can obtain these rights from the rule of their capitalist mas-| ters only by struggle, and that they must defeat this rule and | replace it by their own, by a political rule of the working class. | Fight back the attack of the bosses, their government, and their A. F. of L. agents! | Protest against the anti-labor conspiracy of the U. 8, Congress! Demand the dissolution of the Fish Commission and its | secret spy apparatus! Defend the Soviet Union! Fight for the right to organize, strike, and picket! Fight for Work or Wages! COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE U.S. A. CENTRAL COMMITTEE, (TRIM EVEN FAKE DAY ON JUNE 28TH “COMPENSATION” BILL | The struggle of the 8,000,000 un-| WASHINGTON, D. C., June 11. employed workers of this country --Trimming down the so-called lib- against hunger and mass misery cralization bill for World War vet- will reach a high point on June 28, rans compensation from an estim- when a national Unemployed Soli- sted cost of $500,000,000 to $75,000,- darity Day will be held under the 000, the Finance Committee of the auspices of the Workers’ Interng- Senate is now ready to report on it. tional Relief, in co-operation with | While supposedly providing for 100,- the Trade Union Unity League. 000 veterans the compensation only Unemployed Solidarity Day will |C°Vets certain specified virulent be a preliminary mass mobilization diseases and loss of limbs, barring for the great National Unemployed |™@"Y who would not fall in this Convention to be held in Chicago |°#tegory- July 4 under the auspices of the! That the bill is used to play the Trade Union Unity League. The|game of voting-catching capitalist day will be used to acquaint work- | politicians is seen in the fact that ers, through open-air meetings, with | despite that it is being reported on the significance of the convention |it will not be voted on during the and to raise funds through shop- | present session of Congress; gate and house-to-house collections | ve and tag days to finance and main- | pe WANTED Comrades tain the National Unemployed Con- to go upstate to collect signatures vention. It will be a mighty soli- to put the state ticket on the ballot darity demonstration, with the Workers’ International Relief unit- and building the circulation of the Daily Worker, ing all sections of the working Write or call at class. the office of the | The W. I. R. is preparing to es' lish food kitchens to feed the thou- sands of unemployed delegates at Chieago, Funds for this purpose and for the support of the conven- tion should be sent to the National W. I. R. office, 949 Broadway, Room 512, New York City. District Campaign Committee Communist Party, 26 Union Square, Room 202 Support the Daily Worker Drive! | pigeon as 1 the Committee investigate what role Mr. Grover; Fig HYNES EXPOSURE Also Corrupts Text of Leaflet (Continued From Page One.) pamphlets, ete. and shows itself tuilty of sins of commission. When district attorney read the : “Fight police brutality,” he ead it, “Fight the police.” he read the word “militant,” he read it “Military” (“military action,” ete.) said, they it and protested, he what’s the difference; this way, anyway.” The prosecution rested yesterday at 2: without having made a case against the workers on trial, but evidently relying on the jury of ranchers, and the hostile atmos- phere to convict. Defense Begins. Carl Sklar was the first witness for the defense. He defined a stool “A human rat who sells workers to the capital mean his fellow class.” Sklar explained the aims of the Communist Party, also its role in the working cla movement. A number of worker witnesses are to be called by the defense. The prosecution is for the pur- pose of crushing militant organiza- |tion by having the Communist Par- |ty, the Trade Union Unity League, jand its Agricultural Workers In- dustrial League declared illegal or- | ganizations, ee ers Red Squad Chief Hynes of the | American Federation of Labor and the American Manufac-|/0s Angeles Police Department, and tical beginning of the so-called stool pigeon for the last 11 years for the Chamber of Commerce and big business men, perjurer for the Imperial Valley Vegetable growers in the El Centro trial, has got him- self exposed as a liar by the U. S. ate department. His technique was poor. Hynes issued a boasting yarn to the press, Tuesday, telling how he “foiled a Commu president elect Ortiz Rubio of Mex- ico,” when that fascist agent of Wall Street was touring America. Hynes said he notified the U. S. State departme! Hynes evidently first heard about this “plot” the same way as every- body else, from a campaign state- ment by Luis Morones, head of the “Crom,” the Mexican reactionary federation of labor. Hynes evidently also rushed into print without fixing things up with Washington to back his story, and the New York Times carries under t plot against ldate of June 10, a story about the|nist League met last Sunday, June state department denying all know- ledge of the “plot.” The Times story says: “The department said it had re- ceived no communication from the Los Angeles police, knew nothing of the alleged plot and had sent no message of the character re- ported by Luis Morones to Senor Ortiz Rubio.” 5 MORE CASES NEED DEFENSE Deportation Asked by Employers For Organizers of Jobless. “The overwhelming number of ar- rests and jail sentences for class onscious workers continues to grow,” stated the International La bor Defense yesterday, calling at- tention to five additional recent cases. Ignacio Gonzales, member of the Agricultural Workers Industrial League, arrested in Imperial Valley in April, was charged with carrying a gun. Within ten days this worker was tried and sentenced to five years in jail. He is now in San Quentin prison, while the I.L.D. is putting into motion efforts to appeal the When | | When the defense caught him at “Oh, | fi e RED RAIDER HEARD BY FISH J. Edgar Hoover Again Attacks Workers (Continued From Page One.) violation of the capitalist govern- ment’s own laws. The outstanding lawyers of the country were shocked, and united to vi PROJECTS SLAUGHTER 13 | Tunnels For Water Systems Driven | by Detroit, Frisco Dangerous. | Two municipal water tunnel pro- jects, speeding the work and taking E ntage of the unemployment situation to abandon safety regula- tions because hungry men will face danger with less complaint, killed 13 yesterday and injured six more. premature blast in the Detroit ke tunnel under the river killed Samuel Seaball, Pleas Talli- ie son, A. M. Mass E. Howe, J, issue the denunciation of Hoover | Harper and C, Zulaski. Thirty more and Palmer for having “comitted jin the tunnel saved their lives by continual illegal acts.” A part of their accusation reads: “Wholesale arrests both of aliens and citizens have been made with- cut warrants or any process of law. Men and women have been jailed and held incommunicado without ac- cess to friends or counsel; homes have been entered without search warrant and property seized and removed; other property has been wantonly destroyed; working men and working women suspected of acing for the entrance, but of these x were hurt, In the city of San Francisco's Hetch-Hetchy project, which has {been under construction for about |ten years and has killed dozens of | workers, an explosion 12 miles south }of Sunol killed seven men, Particu- lars are lacking. WAGES OF 200,000 CUT IN GERMANY. Attack Y.C.L. Meetings adical views have been shamefully abused and maltreated. the Agents of Department Justice have n introduced into radical organ- ns for the purpose of inform- ing upon their members or inciting them to activities; these agents have even been instructed from Washing- |ton to arrange meetings upon cer- tain dates for the express object of facilitating wholesale raids and ar- rests...” That of Police | | (Wireless By Inprecorr.) BERLIN.—Labor Minister Stege- wald has confirmed the arbitration _the present activities or decision cutting 7% per cent of the | Hoover is being shaped to the same wages of Rhineruhr metal workers.| Md as his activities in 1919, is ob- The decision will take effect begi lous _in his being picked by the ning July 1 and will affect 200,000 | Anti-Communist committee to be its serena! first government witress. The decision represents the prac-) That Hoover was in charge of the illegal violence against the workers then, is shown in a very confidential instruction issued on Dec. 27, 1919, to Department of “Justice” agents throughout the country, giving de- tailed orders how workers’ organiza- tions should be raided and whole- sale arrests made on Jan. 2, 1920. “price” reduction campaign sup- ported by the reformist misleade: of labor. The most significant fea- j ture of the campaign is that wages, but not prices, are cut. The work- }ers are in a ferment and are pre- paring resistance by electing com- mittees of action. Heavy struggle In part these instructions said: are expected. The struggles will in-| “Qn the eveni *. enin; {clude the miners also. | Sei hee Oven Gene | this office will be open the entire |night, and I desire that you com- ‘municate by long distance to Mr. Hoover, any matters of vital im» portance or interest which may arise during the course of the arrests. . I desire that the morning following the arrests you should forward to this office by special delivery mark- ed for the “Attention of Mr. Hoo- ver,” a complete list of the names of persons arrested. . .” | In spite, or rather because of-his *| “great ability” in violating the laws ‘lof the U. S. government, the U. S. | government retains Mr. Hoover in | the Department of ”Justice”’ and he comes out now as an “expert” |6, at Reichenberg. Collision with | ¢o™ He police occurred. The police inspec- | *8*mst the Communist Party. |tor was seriously injured. Twent; } four youths were arrested, 14 ot Phila, LL.D. Picnic pete Sunday, June 22nd | whom received sentences ately. The rest are still waitin: for the trial. It is reported that| lecticue charges will be brought up|_, PHILADELPHIA, Pa., June 11,— |against the youths, including the | T0 raise funds for the defense of |German deputy, Comrade Pilz, |the six workers facing the electric , s° ® \chair in Atlanta, Ga.; the victims of VIENNA—The Young Commn-|the Flynn sedition law and all other |nist League meeting which was | Class war prisoners, the Interna- scheduled to come in session at| tional Labor Defense of Philadelphia |Traisenthal last Sunday, June 3, Wil’ hold a picnic Sunday, June 22. |was prohibited by the government, @t Strawberry Mansion Park. {and violent collisions with the an- | thorities followed. Workers arrived | from many parts of the country by| ROME, Italy—28 working girls busses. A legal indoor meeting | here got‘sentences totalling 129 year was held. The police were ejected| for purely political offenses. This from the hall. The police attacked| shows the working of “law and or- the hall after receiving reinforce-| der” in Italy. ments, Workers defended the hall with sticks, bottles, ete. The police|a local factory. Traisenthal work- used bayonets, cleared the hall and! ers fraternized with the arrested arrested everybody, who are in-| workers and further collisions oe- terned and held in the courtyard of| curred. Many were injured. OFF THE PRESS! Anti-Soviet Forgers Appeal. Karumidze and\ Sadathierashvilli, etc., the Georgian anti-Soviet for- gers, who, under \ he direction of |the British oil king, Deterding, and | with the co-operation of the Ger- man social democratic government, tried to ruin Soviet finance by flood- ing the Soviet Union with forged Chervonitze notes, has appealed against the verdict of guilty. Pro-| eedings for the appeal opened to- day in the absence of Karumidze, the prosecution refusing to adjourn. ae an 3 PRAGUE.—The Young Commu- | i i SENTENCE WORKING GIRLS | { Special Convention Issue of TY COMMUNIST Central Organ of the Communist Party of the U. S. A MAGAZINE OF MARXIST-LENINIST THEORY AND PRACPICY Contents NOTES OF THE MONTH Major Tasks Before the Seventh Convention of the C.P. U.S.A, By MAX BEDACHT The Crisis in the United States and the Problems of the C.P, U.S.A. By S. MANGULIN ip Some Burning Organizational Questions By J. WILLIAMSON Some Problems tn the Building of District Leadership By J. STACHEL New Trends of Agriculture in the United States and the Crisis By P, LOUF-BOGEN A “Fellow Traveler Looks at Imperialism,” a Review of Scott Near- ing’s Latest Book “The Twilight of Empire” By E. BROWDER “My Life” by L. Trotsky- Combination Offers: case. Bosses Ask Deportation. Richard Davies, of Boston, active organizer of unemployed in that city | and Providence, is now out on a| $1,060 bail, while deportation pro-| ceedings, requested by the Provi ence Textile Manufacturers, go for-! ward against him. August Pinto, another young) worker from Boston, is also the vic- tim of deportation proceedings for} his activity in strikes and unemploy- ment protests. For disregarding a} probation sentence he is now serving | six months in jail. | On May 31 in Milwaukee, Wis- | consin, Jean Graham and Grace| Brown, two members of the Young | Communist League were arrested | before the Plankinton Packing Com- panl for distributing leaflets. The police captain offered to let them) go free if they would promise not | BOOK REVIEWS. Reviewd by W. ree | ) | NATIONAL PRESS CORRESPONDENCE, + 86,00 to distribute any more literature. il etn yen 2 COMMUNIST, rae aks So.00 Refusing to make any promise, the |]]] POGETHER WITH Tin Com mUnae! , iso two young girls were brought into the District Court and fined by Judge Page. SEND ALL ORDERS AND SUBS TO WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 389 BAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY Santal Midy prescribed for years for Kidneys 4 and Bladder Back aches, night rising, burning sages should be corrected before become dangerous. Neglect may be | {CAMP WOCOLONA 4 WALTON LAKE, MONROE, N. 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