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‘a! KAMENEV FORMER INS : 4 a iu TATEM! Deelares Full Agreement with Party Policy and Centre al Co Wrges Active Participa ation in All the Str uggles FACTION ALISM iNT TO PRESS. CONDEMNS rt mittee of the Party | MOSCOW (LP.S.).—The press ; t! iorienlenel tes Trotsky, have publishes a statement of Comrade proved that their policy is the pol- Kamenev concerning a conversation between him and Comrade Bucharin | in 1928, referred to by Kaganovitch | |the path of Leninism under the in his report to the Moscow Party | leadership of the Central Commit- Kameney admits that! tee, and not only to lay the foun- conference. Bucharin attacked the Party leader- | ship in this conversation and agrees with Kaganovitch that his (Kame- | nev’s) failure to inform the Party | proved that this aim is not only leadership of this conversation was dictated by factionalism, repre- sented a vulgar political error and justified mistrust and watchfulness | overcome if the Party rallies firmly | on the part of the Party in'its at- titude toward him (Kamenev). Ka- menev then declares: “I hardly need to say that I am| | Party. i“ completely in agreement with the general line of the Party for the building up of Socialism, with its struggle against Trotskyism, again: the right-wing opportunist dev tions and against the left-wing ex- aggerations of the Party policy. In all these questions I share com-| pletely the opinions of the Party Jeadership laid down in its various documents. In its struggle against us the Party has proved that its policy is the policy of Lenin, the policy of the international proleta- rian revolution. On the other hand, those who have pursued opinions to | fault.” MINE POLICE FIGHT NM.U, Pittston Cops Arrest’ Six to Stop Meet PITTSTON, Pa., June 29.—Most of the police force was called’ out here to probibit the demonstration | of the National Miners Union, and keep the striking miners on the move. Six have been arrested, including} ter refused to give him any. Phil Frankfeld, District Organizer | ing the altercation that followed, of the Communist Party who was | in which Eggar probably threatened arrested when stopped on the street. Others arrested aré Freeman Thompson, President of the National . Miners Union; Joe Tash, National ~ Organizer of the N.M.U.; Ben Licht- man, a worker photographer; Callo Saldini, a member of the N.M.U., and Sylvan Pollack, District Organ- | iztr of the International Labor De-| fense. Pollack was held in the police sta-} tion when he entered to arrange bail | for the others. Thompson was re- leased, then re-arrested when the police said that he was the man they | wanted. The miners are beginning to see from this that he is the man they also want, along with the N. | teenth Party Congress, and our er- icy of the counter-revolution. 1 have only one wish, to go with t Party shoulder to shoulder along tions for the building up of S alism, but to complete this work in the Soviet Union. It has been New York. Jomrades: Nothing can stop the magses* on | their final march to freedom only theoretically justified, but practi- cally possible of achievement. The | the lack of leadership. Which so far | difficulties in the way can best be |has been only industrial and in pro- paganda. Something that would to its leadership and fights without | bring the whole weight of the conciliation against all deviations | mighty proletariat. ; from the general policy of the} ‘n the U. S, A, the Comfhunis must give the people political lead ership. They must give the people a political whip. Then and only then shall Communism take the leader- ship of the proletariat in this coun- try. Now friends you must give the people a Farmer Labor Soviet Gov- ernment in the U. S, A. Kamenev then concludes:: “Our factional activity in the years 1925- 1927 justified the annihilating mea- sures taken against us by the Fif- rors in 1928 justify the mistrust and watchfulness of the Party to- ward us since our return to its yanks. We have no complaint to But you will say how? You must make against our Party. It has Call a National Farmer Labor Con- treated us justly. The path before | gress. First of all you must remem- us is clear; by active participation | ber that you are dealing with hos- in all the struggles of the Party | tile masses. You must guide your we must regain that confidence in| Convention accordingly. It will us which has been lost by our own take a long time to educate Ameri- | can masses to Communism. You ae must take power now and educate later. LYNCHERS KILL tae hein * Los | Editorial Note:—Comrade For |More Action rightly understinds ;that the American workers and poor farmers must build up a pow- erful revolutionary leadership in the (om | form of the Communist Party. | But if Comrade For More Action Demanded Wages fro His Employer |thinks the mater over, he will have |to admit that his ideas are some- AUSTIN, Texas, June 29.—Two | what confused. What, for example, members of a lynch mob today shot | does he mean by saying that the and killed Jack Robertson, Negro | masses are hostile? The fact is that worker, on the road to Austin. the bosses are throwing the work- When Robertson demanded wages |¢rs out on the streets by the mil- from his employer, Eggar, the lat-|lions; they are cutting wages left Dur-|and right; they are e workers with a terr speeti-up, so that at the age of forty, the workers can no longer be used by the bosses, ete, These are certainly conditions that are making the masses hostile —but against capitalism and not against the Communists. While it is true that the bosses are trying the Negro worker, Robertson seized | a shotgun filled with bird shot and fired it at Eggar. | Immediately word was spread throughout Round Rock and a lynch mob whipped up and intercepting Robertson on the Austin road sal him to death. [aso oar DEMONSTRATE IY SUPP eae tempt to seize Rainey Williams, Negro. The lynch terror is now in more M. U. The prisoners are not booked, | | frequent use to terrorize the Ne- | but are held for “investigation by the mayor.” tered by the ruling class, a hys- terical mob tried to storm the Jef- ferson county jail here in an at- gro workers and share crop- | pers to prevent them from organ- | (Continued from izing together with the white work- | Women and children. rom Page One) The worker: $15,000,000 FURNITURE MERGER ers for a struggle against the slave Were temporarily beaten back but PORTLAND, Ore.—Between four-| conditions both work and live under, “allied again. teen and twenty Pacific Coast Fur- | They then marched around th: niture plants will form a giant mer-| ture Corporation of America. Their | lock and took the police by sur ger by combining with the Furni- investments are over $15,000,000. New York Sets Pace | in Aiding Our ‘Daily’ + with respect to total amoynt @ollected for the Daily Worker fight- fng fund, as well as in methods of collecting, New York district sets the | ¢,. The contributions that appear .are all from District 2. Read the list carefully and you will at once realize that in this district the comrades are really in action to help | save and defend the Daily Worker. This list of contributions proves c that the New York comrades allow no‘occasion to pass without calling to the attention of workers that their paper needs their support. Par yy units hold house parties to fynds for our central organ. ie its make collections in the shops where they work. They make mo- tions for contributions in organiza- tions they belong to. At a China- iidia mass meeting $26.55 was col- lected. Party sections hold affairs. _ And individual comrades seem much active in New York, coliccting the Daily Worker campaign lists _ initheir possession. This is why the New York district eent in to the Daily Worker $25,000 i fund nearly twire as emergency inuch as all the other Party districts vi % combined. This is why we again say tkat most districts have not yet per- formed their Communist duty to-| ¢ sagas Communist organ, the Daily -$ 1.00 ‘at a farewell party to Stark, N.Y.C. .. 7.00 « Section, Newark, N. J.. 11.05 Section 8, N.Y.C. ...... 2.50 0, Chicngo, Te 2... 8.00 fend Unit, Hempatend, 1, 5.00 10.00 5.00 1.00 30.30 1.45, prise. The cops again started to beat the workers and were agair |repulsed severely. The police re treated and the workers had fre¢ |access to the front of the consulate. All‘at once the police emengency wagon with a to Whitehall Street. About a dozen cops got out and started | to heat the workers. They succeeded | in knocking Beatrice Blosser uncon- scious. But the workers carried her away and prepared to defend them. selves against further attacks of the pune 50 police. From then on the demon 00 | st: ation was one repulse of the po- | lice after another. One worker was beset by six cops and they started to beat him. | truck came past bearing a bunch 5.00 |of longshoremen who were not in| ‘| the demonstration. When they saw n|the cops beating the worker they 0 rushed to his assistance and the bur- Sie ly police were lucky that they es caped with their skins. One of the cops from the emergency wagon 70! 10.06 | into the fight with some worker: \Ina few minutes the workers had Section 1 BOuta sentences « Seetion Two affair for Daily Worke: 5.00 5, Collected” shop, N.Y. Unit 13F, Section 3, N.¥ Anton Loo, Newilort, Island, N. Y. Staten 475 . deeitan a. Local committee of Tollers Org., N.Y. € Collection from xroup of com- rades at Croto: " - Tales 8 Croton Camp, Peeks: Party for Sor ¥. C,. so badly beaten tha 3.64 he cursed a traffic cop for not com jing to his assistance. The injur« 20.00 | cops took refuge in a restaurant a 10.00| there one of them, Patrolman No cf rf |10274, who had been beaten, sai’ 00 hat he didn’t know who beat hi The ambulance irom the Broad © gasn| hospital took eare of the injured 8.35 | cops, but let the slugged wo oo | shift for themselves. When the cops attacked B. Plc ', they were hel! bind Aurnow, Bronx, N. Collected at mass Indin and China b Park Worke: Section 2. N.Y. c. Unit TF, Section ©, in the Boro Club, B’klyn., LIVING GSTON Seven Reasons WW Desnntin: SN. & ager, Unit SF See W. Darniev, N.Y.C. Night Wo GOODY One of the most herntiful locations in Sallivan Conniy cy? 2. Most reasonable rates. 1G) Ey vate road, ileal for families 49) 4, 2400 feet above sea level. ‘ 5 ements. i 6. ‘our own datry. F 7. Walking: distauve from vilinge--tie teiten, en ‘ THE GOODY HOUSE ie Lowergeney Fund needed. M. FEIGELSON, Mer LIVINGSTON MANOR, N. ¥, [/2@. Collected to date ,, austing the | ens shrieking shot | xt Your Vacz DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, _ MONDAY, JU. NE 3 30, , 1930 Page Three |Are Labor Leaders “Conducted” Through Winning Majority of Masses} Necessary For Revolution “LAW” FIXED FOR THE PARASITES ©; the Soviet Union? San Francisco, Cal. mw Dear Daily Worker: ie | their best to make the workers hos- Am sending you an article on So- Buffalo, N. Y. tile against the Communists, it is| viet Russia taken from the kept! Daily Worker: also true that the activity of the| press. Is it possible that labor dele-| Qne Jaw for the worker, another Communist Party is convincing | gations are “conducted” through the | or rather no ot the soctal 1 ever larger sections of the workers | country? site. “This 9 iy preven that only the Communist Party stands and fights for their int Please answer this article through he the millionth a 2 time, a aid, “there was ex- DELEGATE, HILY os ATH CONVENTION Arrange Workers Mass Funeral Tues. |}, ara tion e Negro masses, respond- (Continued From Page One.) | at t, all of agents of the white pr d to attack the meeting at, are plainly athe wh as killed tr role which t move- A e by the name of G ment n misleading the Negro Wa ief speaker at the Garvey | masses from struggle against ing. He person helped to|the white r class, which ex- beat un the workers at the Commu-|ploits and ee Napto catia to the pol ¥| Unemployed Council Says On s | With Fight. The Un which ive mé embers s to take ration. 0 reported the he had t “Tub that t Daily as it is v imports yesterday a anded dowr y this coml ests. Naturally the Communists! for workers to know the exact truth. by “Justice a Buffalo | Garvey official ; der hy must know how to win the masses Comraaly, ae Gori ianothet eee Dy and how to give them leadership. M On M 18, M Mildred Nevin, meetir ft. but the Gar- ‘ he bruta Now although Comrade For More) huis ze ROBES eecics Gh ieS Nes ea | SOS and on Aad Week SCO AG NR ic _ Editorial note—The clipping that Ave., wer spinning in a car, ey h 6 Unem- Z.C.M. enclosed was a lurid t 0 hough didn’t and doesn’t have | ““° ” and the swept by a tremendous and deep- | Gade esas. Lagi ieaigny VaSI eO p Bek Une | going wave of radicalization which jt#"*8 don) wild children, ete: carried |°) 5 ee Sh whe aeeaale ands ont Peet Mnee lis increasing and not diminishing >Y the Hearst papers recently as/®"¢ Tupper § ark Ae Gee ARE Ihe naverthel is in a hurry to\that gutter journals’ contribution injured 1} ue Mary McDer- yn with the “take power first” and educate the | towards war preparations on the Mott. ae, this she was he ue only Or wag | masses later. The experience of the Soviet Union. long enough to go through the for The American Negro I international working class and of|_ In interviewing Comrade Daniel lity of furnishing bail. Mar gu 0 called upon all its mem- past revolutions has proven that Donovan, a machinist of San Fran-|(@4ys later she appeared before the Member ef Unemployed Council. | bers and sympathizers, both Negro you cannot m&Ké a revolution with-| ‘isco and chairman of the recently as a mere matter of routine,| “ payne ; and white, to take part in a mighty ‘out the masses. In other words,|Teturned trade union delegation to| Where she was given a clean, lily-| 4. irtom Unempl. 1 funeral of you cannot have a wedding without | the Soviet Union, we asked if there /White bill of innocence in the mat ade Union Unity League and killing of Levy,” jthe bride. The Communist Party|W8S any basis for such a charge. tet: The judge ordered her re-| 2 ) ie of the Communist Part in part, “is an organ- does not stand above the working} “None,” Comrade Donovan de.|leased from official custody and| tye hey been ont of cock far chan; | izet Dart of the new: wave of lynch- class. Its aim is to lead the work-|Clared, “When we arrived in Mos-| had her bail refunded. It was held| vin. months at the time he was iM& and terrorism turned loose by ing class both in its immediate|Cow we were met by the district that the defendant was not guilty|jooten and murdered, His s of the South and struggles and in its ultimate strug-/ Organization of trade unions. The of manslaughter, of reckless driving |}. in Whitehall, Jamaic Negro masses and |gle to set up a Soviet government chairman told us: “We want you! driving without a license. After the Garvey officials, TLE ORNS |of workers and farmers as in the |‘? go everywhere you wish, and see| Workers caught in a similar pre-| gether with the blackjackine po Levy was also a member of the Soviet Union. It is only in the ything you ¥ We want your |dicament would have been heavily | succeeded in breaking up the | Marine Workers Industrial Union, | course of these struggles that the sm, suggestions, etc. Our |fined, givera long prison term and| St, meetir was taken to the| Which directly upon the news of Communist Party can educate the and work is the country and| the right to operate a car would) Harlem he ‘ters of the Com-|L@vy’s death, called upon all the masses, In other words, our first a of all workers of tha world. | have been revoked. munist Party, where he fell uncon-| Workers of New York to take up the task is to educate the masses to the| You must take part by telling us bail would have been ref Just before he lost uncon-| {ight for which Levy died. ‘“Com- necessity of fighting against the ou shortcomings, achievements, ete.” as it is refused for ig | sciousness a second time, Levy c: ra ,” the M.W.LU. said, entire capitalist system, and this| According to Comrade Donovan. crime of “unlawful ass ed upon the comrades and workers | ® Victim of police brutality and te can only be done by fighting withthe workers of the Soviet Union re- Absorb this picture of capitalist | of the entire city to go on with th ror used against all eirore oe Ae the masses from day to day. gard their country as held in trusteo- tice,” fellow-workers fight. He urged them to mo! workers, to organise and struggle S MAY ESS SLUMP. WASHINGTON.—Department of commerce report reveals May busi- ness slump. Check payments for | the first four weeks of May have | dropped as compared to the same | period of 1929. Steel plant activi- | ties have dropped below the May, 1929, output; the value of new building contracts is 6 per cent ship for all workers and as respon- sible to all workers of the world for rict account, and nothing is hidden from the various trade union dele- gations that go to the workers’ fath erland, si NEW HAVEN, Conn.—Function- ing style the socialist party, to betr the workers, will call a convention ", and the auto industry is far/ for the purpose of revising the | w what it was a year ago. | United States constitution! » and then following episode. | Seyeral months ago two or three lads were parked (not driving) in a fliver, which one of them owned. The lad at the wheel had no opera- tor’s license and when some cops came along they began to run from the scene. The cops, traditionally known for valor in the face of over- | whelming odds, immediately opened fire and one of the boys, aged 17,/ was struck in the head and instantly | «| killed. The abysmal brute who com- | mitted this cold-blooded murder was | later exonerated in a veritable blaze , H. al ponder on the NEW § EP OF SOCIAL FASCISTS. in characteristic so ial-fas |of official glory. n” from the British con: Cne of the police sergear the consulate had called 2 of New York say that ration is the “worst ; Communists in New Chinese Vanguard, who called upon the mas and against colonial oppression. March to British Consulate. After these speakers the chair- trial Union and Comrade Mo of the! \ BOLIVIA REVOLT ie s to fight unemployment | HITS U.S, RULE 7 man called upon the workers hat ig to say, that the! nach to the Britteh consulate on — a are learning how to pro-) wwiteHall St. When the workers|, (Continued from Page One) Ives against the attacks | statted marching the few’ police (America’s maneuvers to seize. the Ku present made a futile attempt to Chaco region from Paraguay for One fat detective punched a girl| halt them. The workers shoved Standard Oil, which has great c worker in the jaw. But that was | them aside and continued to the Cessions in Bolivia. It upsets ithe the last thing he did for the day.| conculate, dictatorship, through Siles, of the He went down amidst a shower of | blows from a group of workers. He tried to pull his gun, but was not given a chance to do it. A group of workers threw him to the Some of the slogans carried by with the Gandhi and the tools of Briti perialism, live the Revolution of Dillon-Read Bank of Wall Street, whose agent, J. T. Byrne, the “financial commission” ruled Bolivia for Dilon-Read, escaped over the Pei bossing which barely ivian border. workers were: “Down the ‘labor’ party! round and trampled on him. An-| 've, the Indian | Siles himself is a refugee at the ‘the cop chased a lon@ worker Sele ie Ue Fight Brazil legation. | into Battery Park and started to! (Rone) 4 seeveen. athe |) Bat the new: military dictators} beat him. Several workers rushed | pinec1 “Workers, doin the revoln | ShiP cannot solve, but will ot up on him. He turned and fled. \tisnary trade unicns the T. Ue ty | crease the misery of the masses. ' Then he stumbled on the cobble- ugy 40 fies Chiecoutinen.: It can rule only with the same or Beech end SS, w OL RGEs Mere UDON sto vadl Gunveutionigulses and be | ist terror as caused the im. He drew his gun, but put it back again when he saw a larger group of workers come up. Stark terror was depicted in his face when he saw the workers pounce on him. He was roughly handled. After the demonstration a check- up was taken and it was found that four had been arrested, Rollins, Manusky, Mary Cohen and another worker, whose name is not known. Two of them are charged with fel- | onious assault and two with disor- derly conduct. Many were badly hurt. The mass meeting Park, just before the opened by Biedenkapp and after a short speech he introduced the fir speaker, J. Paterson of the Ameri- ean Negro Labor Congress. He spoke of the heroic fight of the ‘ndian masses and called upon the orkers to denounce the traitor, / ndhi, At the end of his talk he « led upon the workers to protest |” 2 murder of Alfred Levy, an u ployed Negro worker, by t cops and Garveyites on the nig’ of June 27, Paterson was followed by oth:: 's, including J. Davis frov he Young Communist League, Per- y from the Pioneers, Sazar of ths | tional Textile ie Worker: | | “MANOR, N. Y, ’ You Should Spend tion at the HOUSE The three workers arrested, Law- rence Anna Manusky, were not tried in| Night Court Saturday night, are being held incommunicado until Fight for the seven-hour day, five-day week. masses to rise against Siles, thus the revolution of the masses ;must continue, even after being checked by the new military dicta- | torship. and Cohen, Anna Rollon and but charges of “felonious assault” are eae aaa June oe Hy : cooked up against them, fi se DP hair Abs cet bog p88 4 fought for the city. Siles, not de- pending on the soldiery which ap- parently on a local scale remained undecided and inactive, depended solely on the police, who shot down As Always= Spend Your Vacation at Camp Nitgedaiget FIRST PROLETARIAN NITGEDAIGET CAMP—HOTEL Hotel with hot and cold water in every room. Bungalows with electric lights. Tents—to remind you the old days. Cultural Program for the Summer of 1930 The Artef Studio (Mass theatre with the |». Artef) Comrade Shaeffer will conduct mass | ~ singing. Cultural Program—Comrades Olgin and Jerome Athletics, games, dances, theatre, choir, lec- tures, symposiums, ete, CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N.Y. PHONE BIEACON TL ‘TAUROOK 1400 By Train: From Grand Central every hour. By Boat: twice daily | idiotieally | the article by again all forms of exploitation and on.” 's body will Ave. at for a determined struggle against the Garvey officials who openly ally themselves with the enemies of the | lie in’ state at the corner of Negro masses and join with the po-| ; 44th S ing Monday wen: lice to club Negro and white work. | /44th St. during Monday and Tue: ce day, Thousands of indignant Negro and white workers are expected to The news of Levy's death spread 5 come to see Levy body. ¥ “4 quickly and the revolutionary work-| (me, 10 See, Levy's body. sees ! * - ‘ aiternoon, J at 3 je . ie ers of New York were stirred by A| funeral procession will becin f wave of indignation and fury. The|j,. 7. eis Sa cr the Lenox addr New York District of the Commu | nist Party immediately ued a statement calling upon the Negro| and white workers of New York to turn out in tens of thousands at « mass funeral of Comrade Levy next | ‘Chicago Picnic; Greet Convention Delegates Tuesday, and to demonstrate their CHICAGO.—On Sund determination to carry on the strug | there will be a Commu ir gle for which he gave his life. Picnie at Elm Tree Gtove, 6541 » Irving Park Blvd. All workers “In the murder of Alfred Levy ee jurged to come and greet the Na- tional Unemployment Convention. | The picnic will be held rain or shine, men, women and children in wan- ton savagery on the streets; police h Gan dancing and speakers. with artillery and machine guns, rickets 95 cents, Take Irving Pack though they butchered without | Gay i mercy, could not hold out against EDLE UNION MEETS. the masses, who captured the ar- |} PHILADELPHIA and airpls UADELPHU s and ce, who the final refuge of the police, who had barricaded themselves in PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Monday, headquarters. A United June 30, all members of the Needle correspondent tells how the ma released all political prison that urprisingly rades. Workers’ Industrial Union will attend a general membership meeting at 39 N. Tenth St. at 8 m., to hear a report on the Sec- observes riday calm, con- night was “s' p. sidering that most of the populace | ond tional Convention of the was armed and there was no police W. I. U. Speakers from the protection.” The armed m s had ional office of the union and just finished killing the murderous | local convention delegates will re- police and needed no “protectio: port and lead the discussion, It remains to be seen if the masses will surrender these arms to the new military dictatorship, If not, we may see the struggle con- tinue with the emergence immedi- ately of worker and peasant forces led by Communists mentioned in Armando Guerra, to be found on the last page of this paper. } FARM IN THE PINES cd in Pine Forest, near Mt. ‘Table. Rates: $16— Swimming and Fishing, M. OBERKIRCH Box 78 KINGSTON, N. ¥. R. 1, REGISTER NOW BEFORE IT IS LATE! ERE VIS SS I OT UNITY CAMP WINGDALE, N. Y. CAMP PHONE WINGDALE, N. Y. 51 A COOPERATIVE CAMP FOR WORKERS Gather Strength for the Looming Fight! Good Food, Comradely Atmosphere Proletarian Sports, Recreation and Cul- tural Activities. Bathing, Boating, and Fishing in Lake Unity. Register Now for July 4th CARNIVAL, BALL, MUSIC AND DRAMATICS Register at once at 1800 Seventh Avenue, New York City. Tel. the Barber Shop, 30 Union Square. Monument 0111 or at Tel. Stuyvesant 8774. Our buses leave 1800 St. Every Fri