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senta onnec musi momik sy ete, initely scially ngres- ms of mis s@ ee DAILY Wounnit, NeW YURK, FRIDAY, JULY 18, 1930 GERMANY JOINS ITALY IN DEMAND VERSAILLES TREATY This Move Signifies That the Imperialist War Is Very Near All the Workers Must Demonstration On August First | The cry for the revision of the | Versailles Treaty which was first | uttered by Mussolini successively in his speech at Milan, in an inter. view printed by a Paris paper and | finally communicated to the French | government in the Italian answer to the Briand proposal for a United States of Europe, has now been | echoed by Germany in its answer to the Briand proposal. The fiact | that Germany has joined the! chorus certainly greatly strengthens | the demand for a re-division of the world, and accentuates the war, danger. The German bourgeoisie, suffer- ing from a severe crisis and find- ing no way out, does not mince words in its demand. It first sets forth how Germany suffered “more than any other country” from the | “defects in the existing structure of i Europe.” It describes its situation as “untenable” and demands that | the beginning for the formation of | the United States of Europe must | be the establishment of “principles | of integral equality of rights, of | equal security for all and of specific | harmonization of the natural neces- | sities of existence of the peoples.” | This of course, amounts to a de- | mand for the revision of the Ver- | sailles Treaty in diplomatic language. DETROIT AUTO TO BUILD THE ILD MEN PACK HALL Auto Workers Join Union For Fight DETROIT, July 17. — Packing the Danceland auditorium to capacity, more than a thousand auto workers attended a mass meeting called by the Auto Workers Union. Coming hard on the heels of the Flint strike, betrayed by the stool pigeon union of Comstocks, the re- sponse of the workers indicated the depth of the wage haa 9 and lay- off program of the auto barons. Spirited throughout, the assembled auto workers showed their determi- nation. to fight the bosses’ attempt to lower their standards of living “to the point of starvation. Dunne Chief Speaker Bill Dunne, National Organizer of the Trade Union Unity League, told of the significance of the Flint strike as the first rumble of ap- proaching strikes, and urged the! workers to organize into the Auto Workers Union to be prepared for the looming strike struggles. Other speakers were Andrew Over- gaard, National Secretary of the Metal Trades Workers League; Geo. | Powers, Philip Raymond, Andonoff, | Nydia Barkin, Jimmie La Verne of the Youth Section of the Trade Union Unity League. Robert Woods, National Secretary of the Auto| Workers Union, was chairman. HOLD 14 PHILA. WORKERS FOR TRIAL FOR BIG MEET PHILADELPHIA, Pa., July 17.— Fourteen workers will come up for trial on July 22 in Philadelphia as a result of arrests at a waterfront meeting on Friday, organized by the Communist Party and the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union. The arrested include Frank Mozer, Communist candidate for governor; I, Danniels, L, Young, M. Gross, K. Krietzor, M. Sand, H. Plotnick and Roba Glass, all members of the Young Communist League; 8. Tay- lor and A, Brown, of the Commu- nist Party; P. Pizor, of the National Textile Workers’ Union; 0. Swain and A. Hudson, of the Marine Work- ers’ Industrial Union. . At the first hearing of the cases, at 10:30 the same morning, about 200 marine workers came to the court to support the arrested com- | rades, but they were all put out by the judge, who did not want them to hear the lies that the “officers” were telling about the prisoners. ' The 200 remained in front of the jail, singing revolutionary songs when the prisoners were removed. Chicago Outing to Raise Funds for Daily The Chicago district of the Daily Worker is having an international outing on Saturday and Sunday. July 19 and 20 at Camp Nitgidieget, Bristol, Wisconsin. An unusual program is being prepared for this week end. There is still $10,000 of the $25, 000 emergency fund to be collected by August 1. Here is a chance for Chicago workers to help raise a considerable sum of money, by go- ing to the international outing. The best answer to the Fish Investiga- tion Committee is to build a strong- er and more powerful Daily Worker. Demonstrate against war and unemployment on August Ist! Demand that expenditures planned for armaments be turned vver for the relief of the unem- ~sloyed! a ‘ABOLISH JURIES IN LABOR TRIAL COP TELLS FISH Woll Brings His Own Set of Forgeries TO CHANGE | | Rally to the Anti-War (Continued From Page One.) realize this is not a recognized labor case. Until we educate our juries, I believe we get better re- sults by cases of simple assault, which are tried in the court of special sessions.” Tt was brought out that the lead- ers of the March 6 demonstration in Union Square, Foster, Minor, Amter, Raymond and Lesten were convicted, “under our rioting law” | well known fact that Italy and/ by this most useful, no-jury, court | England have been quite close to-| of special sessions. Tammany | gether, ever since relations between | judges do not have to be “educated” | Italy and the United States have | any more. They know enough not | become strained. | to listen to the evidence! | The grouping of forces among the | The prosecution argument in the imperialist powers are proceeding | Shifrin case was outlined, and the very fast. All capitalist powers | case described as a “typical Com- realize clearly the imminence of the| munist homicide.” Then Lyons war, and almost all the movements | calmly pointed out that the jury | on the chess board of capitalist | acquitted Shifrin, and paused for | world politics represent the at-; dramatic effect. The congressmen | tempts of the two most powerful} of the Fish committee looked at | rivals, Great Britain and the| each other. Plainly something must | United States, are busy in securing] be done about these juries! | allies for the coming war. The fact} The significant year, 1925, was that the demand for the revision of | heavily emphasized in Lyon’s testi- the Versailles Treaty has already| mony, and underlined by repeated | been openly made by two powers is| questions from the committeemen. | another important sign showing | It was in 1925 that the Department | that war is near. of Justice dissolved at least a part The working class must not be| of its anti-labor spy system. One caught sleeping. Let all class | function of the Fish committee is conscious workers rally to the anti-| 0 have it revived, bigger and bet- var d trati ps t 1, ter. So Lyons centered on all the War demonstration on August Ty) needle trades strikes, four between the International anti-war day. 1926 and 1929, all the cafeteria \strikes, 1929 and 1930, the shoe strike, 1929 and 1930, the metal | strike, the window cleaners strike, According to P. J. Philip, the) Paris correspondent of the New| York Times, “many Frenchmen be- lieve” that the Italian and German proposals for the revision of the Versailles Treaty is made “with the connivance, if not the actual good will of England.” This is more than probable since it is a “The strikes were replete with | | a ‘ Lyons was not talking |Functionaries Meeting: about the brutal assaults, day by | day, by clubbing and gun swinging Adopts Resolution police on the picket lines, nor of the occasional outright murder of MILWAUKEE, Wiscon., July 17. | pickets, as in Katovis’ case, by the |—At a sub-district conference of | police. Lyons was talking about | International Labor Defense func- | the knife gangs, invading shops and | tionaries, at which J. Louis Engdahl, | threatening workers, the thugs general secretary, reported, a reso-| smashing workers’ heads with lution was unanimously adopted | sawed off billiard cues, the hun- | pointing out the need for strengi!.- | dreds of gangsters’ assaults on | ening of the I. L. D. in view of the! needle, food, shoe and other work- | sharpening class struggles. | ers, committed by the paid gunmen | Greeting the Atlanta organizers | of the International Ladies Garment | jheld on death charges, the New|Workers, the International York delegation of the unemployed Workers Union, the United Hebrew | now imprisoned, and to the class | Trades, the A. F. of L. food unions. war prisoners of California and| He described all their terroristic Milwaukee, the conference went on | actions in lurid detail—and then he regord for increasing the member- | calmly blamed the whole thing on ship of I. L. D. the Needle Trades Workers Indus- trial Union, the Food Workers In- Terror In Milwaukee. | dustrial Union, and the left wings The conference resolution pointed | in the old unions before these indus- |out that in Milwaukee the socialist | trial unions were organized! . administration in common with | To hear Lyons tell it there are ithe dental laboratories strike, |everything that happened since | 1925, “Violence.” violence.” Ren (Continued from urgent attention immediately in the Party forces during the remaining 15 da: While the increase in circulation value both from the point of view understanding and from that of the financial stability of the paper, especially in the, present period it is ew and Intensity the Daily Worker Drive Page One) ricts, mobilizing the maximum s of the Daily Worker drive. di financial ‘quota allotted to every district and the payment of all out- " standing accounts be reached by August Ist. District with 121 per cent of its quota and Chicago with 88 per cent |! are the only ones that have at all made a credible showing in the Daily Worker drive for su tion during this y delphia, have permitted huge debts which greatly endanger the paper. All districts must immediately quota and to make payments on t The balance of $10,000 is urgently needed by the Daily Worker. August Ist, with the completion of be in. The Central Committee calls u Most districts, particular! By |¢ the drive, this full amount must pon and instructs all district or- ganizers and disrict Daily Worker agents to immediately take steps in } connection with the mobilization of peal of prejudice to the jury to the masses for August Ist to in- | convict. Police witnesses stated openly tensify the drive to increase the circulation of the Daily Worker to the quotas set on April Ist and to raise the $10,000 additional needed ic jt meet the pressing financial obligations of the pape CENTRAL COMMIT COMMUNIST sE. PARTY OF U A. Income For $25,000 Daily Worker Emergency Drive. | The following table and the total amount received to July 9th, shows that there is still about $10,000 short on the Emergency Drive. New York has gone above the quota--this is largely due to the suce Chicago is rapidly reaching its quota. ful Tag Day. lagging behind. The others are | The fact that we have not reached our quota and are so far behind cripples the work of the Daily in mobilizing the workers for the imme- diate campaigns and struggles against American imperialism The $15,000 that has been received shows that the workers in this erisis are supporting the Daily. donations from the workers during dividual donations. However, there make up the quota of your district. August Ist will be the last day our quota. The Daily Worker must sharper struggles. of the workers to make up the quota. The chief source has been from small the Tag Days and other small in has not been enough mobilizatior Rush all funds to the Daily and of the campaign. We must reach be in the forefront on August Ist, and be ready to launch forward immediately after that for new and girls called Negro men, “Comrade,” | and danced with them. Lyons reported with considerable Fur | resentment that the resistance to|Communists and the police had stiffened rapidly in the last few months. The picket lines, instead of submitting to any kind of slugging, fight back. Police have to be called in from outlying districts to garrison the industrial centers for the bosses. He als: complained that moving pictures were made of cops swinging their blackjacks. A Judge Confess S- their capitalist blood brothers of | 15,900 to 20,000 Communists going other cities, unleashed a police! around with razor blades terrorizing | terror against the workers in the} 100,000 \other workers into joining | March 6 unemployment demonstra- | their unions. Lyons said they were tion and at many meetings of the | a1) Communist unions, and he said jobless. | the workers went to 26 Union | Square (Communist district head- | quarters) to join! And the 25,000 | New York police with at least one | UNION BOSSES TO. | gun and one club per cop, to be GET BIG RAISE! freely used, as the killing of Kat-' ovis and Gonzalez shows, plus un- | limited riot wagons, machine guns, ; | tear gas, armored cars had failed | | so far to free these poor protesting Gircaca ahi bier | Workers from the terrible eae! JHICAGO, IIL, July 17.—The 50/ razor blades of the Communists | Per cent wage raise, recently car: | "Twas a dramatic tale, and bot | tied by an extremely narrow mar- the Fish committee and the cap- gin for President Charles P. How | jtalist press swallowed it whole, Zor jard and Secretary Woodruff Ran- | ;easons best known to themselves, a ial eee paed as | UAE ariaetely beraues it helos, in the eas me plans plainly indicated in the “in- Heenan te psi eee a4 vestigation” so far to pass new and | to $7.5 a printers. M8 alse | stricter deportation laws, to build 0 $7,500 a year for the bureaucrats | 4 federal spy system, to smash the comes just after Howard had urged workers’ unions and the Communist | rate ers a chink of tightening their | Party, to make the working class sey 5 fey imes in’ the | helpless to fight against unemploy- | arent Peace typos were| ment, or wage cuts, or the ap-| 2 proaching war, “The increase of $2,500 a year,” Lyons categorically approved | says a hard-boiled rank and filer, | each of these plans during the in- | equals nee $50 a he ne in-| vestigation, in answer to leading: , crease alone is more than the av-/ questions from the committee. one weekly wage of the worisng | Against these plans, the work- printer.” : | ers and unemployed of America The June number of the Typo-| will join in the international pro- graphical Journal, published from’ test on anti-imperialist war day. | union headquarters in Indianapolis,; August 1. They will demand that \contains a warning to members who) the war funds be used for relief, is of the unemployed. Lyons has no word to say against the A. F. L. unions which used all | the violence he describes, and used Demonstrate August Ist! | Urge Bosses and Workers Co-operate, jar -hostile to the official policy of | | co-operating with the capitalists.! |President Howard declares: “The | fundamental poliey of this organiza- tion is co-operation (with the em- | it against the left wing. ployers). The printing industry is} Instead, he says: “If it was not ; privately operated upon a profit | for the splendid fight waged by the _basis. Persons who accept an eeon-| A. F. L. against the Communists, omic’ philosophy of sabotage, Com-| they would probably control now |munism or practice restriction of the fur, dress cloak, food and other production have no place in an or-| industries.” Of course he means | ganization which is committed to| the bloody and unscrupulous war the co-operative theory. Persons | waged by the A. F. L. gangs, the who do not accept the fundamentals | police, the bosses in co-operation, upon which this union has been built | against the militant unions of the should construct their own vehicle |T. U. U. L. in which to ride. Communist Growth, Aside from this, Lyons’ testimony | was chiefly on the rapid growth of Communism since 1925 (“18,000 paid admission to a Communist meeting on March 16, 1930"), and the sudden increase of Negro, Jap- anese, and Chinese membership in the Communist Party within the last year. Lyons ascribes this to the fact that the Communists Demonstrate August 15: ! Germany Bars Soviet Pioneer Delegates (Wireless by Inprecorr) BERLIN, July 17. — The German Government has refused to issue | Workers Union ought to be broken, Judge Mitchel May is the jurist who ruled in the Schwartz and Benamin injunction case that a con- | tract with the Independent Shoe | that a boss should as a patriotic duty discharge every Communist working for him, that the boss did not break his contract by demand- ing that all his workers sign pledges to inform on any Com munists working in his shop, and not to become Communists them selve: Any worker refusing to ign such a pledge, the judge con sidered in his ruling, was tainted with Communism, and should be fired. That’s Judge May's idea of a democracy. Yesterday May read parts of his ruling, and preceded it with a rather unusual confession for a judge to make. “I don't know whether the de cision that I rendered was strictly unbiased or not,” said May, “for the thought of Communism in America is so terrible to every lawyer. I am terrified at the thought that the walls might break down during a time of economic depression. What they (Communists or sympathizers) call a noble experiment, we look upon with fear and trembling.” The Fish committee assured him | that he was a good judge. | Woll and His Boswell. | . Mathew Woll came with Chester | Wright. Wright is the former | editor of the Socialist Party, New | York Call, now director and editor |of the International Labor News, the semi-official A. F. L. news ser- | Woll is president of that ser- Woll walked in with about seven- teen chapters of a manuscript book against Communism written by the late Samuel Gompers. He gave the | manuscript to the committee. | Woll’s long black hair was oiled | back, he thrust out his abdomen, | lighted one big cigar from the stub | of the one before, and snapped at | the press photographer, ‘Well, | where'll it be!” None of the nervous awe that the school principals showed towards a congressional committee! Aren't we all together servants of the bosses? Didn’t me and Easley have the honor of starting this whole, thing? Woll put up his usual argument for prohibition of trade with the Soviet Union, and of course for no vecognition. He criticized all Amer- visas for entering Germany to the | Pioneer delegation from the Soviet| races on terms of absolute social |Union to the Second Children’s | and political equality Thee | World Congress which will be held| while the southern eon» in Halle i actually fraternize with thé colored me glowered, dances in’ which white | ican employers who sell goods to U. 8. S. R., because these goods de- elop the country which has kicked ‘ the capitalist class. Woll’s testimony wasn’t so much. He had two main points, aside from agreeing with the Fish committee in all its program of repression of militant unions. Woll wanted to prove that the} A. F. L. bureaucracy has fought Communism and all militant union. sm from 1917 on. He proved that all right. | Then he wanted to prove that Amtorg. the Telegraph Agency (Tass), all the Soviet Union | trade agents, the Federated P: Henry Ford, the New York T (1) and all sorts of college profes sors and government offic are part of the Communist movement or at least giving it aid and com fort. To do this, he of anonymous letters (copies only) ome of which were sent him by the white guard Russian organization, called, “Protest Committee A Soviet Propaganda,” which accord: | ing to Woll has an office on 125th) St, New York. The first letter, dated Feb. 3, 1930 said, “We ask you to stop Duranty telegrams to the New York Times!” The next one, dated March 6, 1930, copies to Woll, Wheeler, La Follette, said: | “Foster came back with money from | !" The next one, from the informant, dated March 6, |, “Terrible provocative demon strations here have nothing to do with unemployment. If you fight against the terribly poisonous wild animals you will have our assist. Russian relied on a series sia ance.” March 6 was the date of | the demonstrations for work or, wages of 1,250,000 employed and | striking workers in U. S, 110,000} of them in New York, Drug On the Market. About this time the committee began to complain. “We all have | been receiving these letters too, | said Nelson. “1 insist on the privilege of read- ing them,” said Woll. And they let him have his way. | There were a lot of the letters, | all apparently copied on the same | WORKERS’ WALTON LAKE, Hlectricity, mings bungalows, masse sing fires, comradely water Ks atm ? aphere, $21 PER ISERVATIONS WITH $5 DEPOS: MONROE, N. Y., Phone: Mon New York Office: 10 East 1 Excellent Orchestra SROKA, MARR | "GET 90 DAYS |\Make Forum of Court! Wild because the Indian and Chinese revolutions, nists if they had a chance. will appeal the WOCOLONA (50 Miles from New York) For Rebel Speeches | lefense of the Soviet Union, the The prosecution used the red scare, and the red flag in an ap-| hat they would shoot the Commu- The International Labor Defense Farmers Turn Red As Crisis Deepens (Continued from Page Two) Young’s brow will be rather with- ered It is taken for granted that Hoo- ver is done for, Angell saying that “somehow, there seemed to be an impression that Dwight W. Morr was being groomed for the republi- can nomination two years hence.” | Angell, figuring that the “wet or dry” fakery might serve as an “is- | sue,” si that there is a “feeling” in the West that Young, if a dry, made of himself “stabilizing” wheat,| Workers, both in the daily struggles | of the radi IN NEW ORLE: Call Convention To Fight For Low | Wages Against Industrial Union. NEW ORL La., July 17. the east coast, particularly in Phil- adelphia and Baltimore, are leaving | floor for the M.W.I.U. speakers. The I.L.A, fakers Governor Huey Long, who has sev eral times escaped iv peachment for gross misuse of his office only by clever parliamentary ruses to open their sessions. c pect to have | ¢ ¢ t is 10,000 Textile Toilers F On Strike in France cse for the worker The declaration also say British miner ten 1926 when 4 ted coal to pour into B (Wireless by Inprecorr) PARIS, July 17. — Ten thousand textile workers in the neighborhood of Armentieres struck against wage reductions which will Cook’s Zig: Page rive AMSTERD ongshoremen of Pravda Comments On n i Ae ri ie zag Course of the greatest permanent aS the racketeer union, the Interna- | « ars of the spreading of Communist | HAMTRAMCK, Mich., July 17.— |tional Longshoremen’s Association, (Wireless by Inprecorr) The trial of Sroka and Marr ended| and joining the Marine Workers! ysoscow, July 4. J. Cook urgently necessary that the ful] here today with a sentence, the Industrial Union for a real fight j,anded to a Soviet Press 1 7 fe maximum, of 90 days for each plus| for real gains, the I.L.A. here has tative at Stockholm a rad Until now the New York $100 fine. The court room was/ called a conference Sunday at which | jaration for publication in t packed with workers, and the de-| 3,000 longshoremen are expected.| viet Union, The declaration attac fendants and witnesses used the! There are 12,000 unorganized on | amsterdam as an agent of capit cient funds to insure its regular publica- |Court as a tribunal, and spoke on/ the New Orleans water fr of | ism and tool of the Internati Boston and Phila. the unemployment situation, organ-| whom 8,000 are Negro The | Labor Office where Albert Thor to the Daily Worker accumulate ization of the unemployed, the| Marine Workers Industrial Union| represents the interests of the bour Ky Communist Party election cam-| has an office at 308 Chartres St. geoisie work out plans to complete their paign, August Ist demonstrations] Rank and file workers at the! ‘pye declaration also contains the e bills in the remaining 15 days. | against imperialist war and for the] 1.L.A. conference will demand the fo'owing: When faced with capi- talist offensive, Amsterdam become imid, moderate and reactionar ‘apitalist offensive now demands rade union unity but Amsterdar or a year, operating with unions and fascists. but lization is growing, ports ratio Rvssians supported refuses to take the path to u Amsterdam it Amster be brought | struggles financially. has Chr wh the about by the new insurance law. Cook said that he is against tactics of British Communist is dissatisfied with Amsterdam and tricky ses of ing up this chicanery with words about “replace pur actly the same amount of wheat” — not mentioning the ptice changes. | Thus it is trying to ease its way out of the crisis and let the farmers hold the sack. The fak of the Farm Bloc who, renewing their demand for export debenture which they gave up for Hoover's “stabilization” and “coop- | eratives,” although they enthusias- | tically aided this swindle and fail-} ure, are now t blame on Hoover Norris, for ex-| ver’s idea and he alone is responsi- | ble. But these Farm Bloe crooks are late in finding this out. The farmers who are being thrown | he supports the Britis The declaration is the result tion of the masses, into poverty should join with the that he would sooner cooy the Red Internationa. of Labor Ur iors rather the Christian unic He also said pected fighting m Stockholm gates were only during the Congre called the Swedish moderate liberals. Pravda, commenting on the Cook’s ration, says that outburst that Congress ing to put all the! course is well known. f 4 radicalism n ample, says “stabilization” was Hoo- | followed by slanders against ( than with fascist work but socialis nly T ap- munists. One moment Cook proached the Red International of Labor Unions; at the next moment, right wing- ers. has disturbed if not ruined his petty | against finance capital in voting the ; who compel Cook to make radical Communist ticket in November, and| phrases in order to retain whatever 000,000 cruiser building “disarma- |in the August First protest demon- | influence he still has among the District Quota Amt. Collected Percentage | Would have backbone enough to re- Hao 1900 sags 299% main dry under pressure. Evident- cae res eis : ly the democrats have not made up Hoe andi ft bers i their minds yet whether Young 4. Buffalo "300 133.05 should be dryer or wetter than Mor. fae pert dle 166p pie row. But whichever way they think | 6. Cleveland 1,350 478.35 the votes will go, will be their “sa 7. Detroit 2,650 919.46 ery pence: i | 8. Chicago 8,000 649.45 Hoover has cooked his own goose, Hg i 7. li 1400 with his pompous chatter about a wine uper . ‘500 abolishing poverty, his prosperity ie Feats . a ipecac, the ridi ass he has 12. Seattle 600 — Galerie sas bourgeois support; while his $1,000- eG, 5.0 ” . 16. South aah ment” treaty cannot hide from the 17. South 5 workers the fact that he, as the| agent of the whole capitalist class,| has refused to give a cent to the| millions of unemployed, but has | given back hundreds of millions to big corporations in tax refunds. Washington dispatches to the N.| Y. Times, evidently speak Hoover's authority, say spite the demand of Senator Cap-| per that the Farm Board buy 100,- | 000,000 bushels of wheat now, that | it will buy nothing at all until the! production is reduced to consump- tion level. | That “stabilization” is a fearfu is indicated cautiously by a ndent, who says: “There is | trong impression that those most | mtimately concerned have reach the conclusion that the stabilization provisions of the agricultural mar- k t have been found uneco- mic and impractical.” While promises are continually made that the Farm Board will ‘hold off the market,” the 60,000,- 000 bushels of wheat it has, it is secretly selling millions of bushels for export, to save itself from ex: pected further lower prices, cover. ing with | that de- | typewriter but on different colored paper, and they were all the same.. Fish Expels Workers. When Woll was through, Con- gressman Fish of New York, head of the investigating committee, handed Woll a letter he had received ‘om a member of the House Wreck- Union, asking that Fish do mething to get two Communists in the union expelled. “I trust you will take action,” aid Fish. | I will,” said Woll. “The A. F. L. dismisses Communists from | loeals as soon as it finds them.” | Tomorrow, at ten, Whalen and his forgeries. Siuoted in Pine Borest. near my take German Luble Hates: $16- S18 Swimming and Fishing M. OBERKIRCH 1, Box 7% KINGSTON N.Y delivers ou only drivers, union Order ro MONROE, N. Y. FARM IN THE PINES | strations against imperialist war. British miners. Special CONTENTS— in trade unions, ete.) Problems of Shop Nuclei Work The Work of our Trade U: Red Sundays With the Dail ONLY 10 CENTS SPECIAL O 39 East 125th Street Just Off the Press! THE PARTY ORGANIZER. Issue Experiences in Keeping New Members The Role of the Party Units in the Class Struggle Fundamental Directives for Recruiting Drive nion Fractions y Worker Correspondence from the Nuclei PER COPY FFER ? Organization Letter from the Communist Inter- national to the Communist Party of U.S. A. (An indispensable guide in effective organizational work for every Patty member and every revolutionary worker Shop Nuclei at Work on May Day Demonstrations Shortcomings of Party Fractions in Language PARTY ORGANIZER & COMMUNIST (1 yr.) only $2.00 (original price $3.00) Send All Orders to WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS New York City of the Sov FILL OUT ORDER ANK viet Union thousand, FILL OUT ORDER BLANK Order, Sell and Distribute SPECIAL BUNDLES--SPECIAL EDITIONS OF THE Baily 325 Worker to Mobilize the Working-Class on AUGUST FIRST International Demonstration Against Im- perialist Wars and for the Defense Special Editions will be printed Saturday, July 19 and Saturday | July 26. — Prices for special bundles of regular editions | or special editiors $8.00 per and $1.00 per hundred Cash Must Be Sent With Orders ly Workers dated, ++.) 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