Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
i 4 oh Page Six THE DAILY WORKE THE DAILY WORKER Published by the DAILY WORKE! R ‘PUBLISHING co. 1113 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago, M1 Phone Monroe 4712 | bine Cents ‘ rt Aiba SUBSCRIPTION RATES “By mail (in Chicago ‘only): { By mail (outside of Chicago): $8.00°per year $4.50 six months. | $6.00 per vear $3.50. six months $2.50 three months i $2.00 three moaths —— Address all mail and make out checks to THE DAILY WORKER, dab Ww. Méaehingtys Bivd., Chicago, Ilipois Heed Apcniined \ ditors | ‘ MORITZ J. LOE B.. ob -Business Manager ‘ Entered as second cago, Ill, 8s mail September 21, 1923 “at the page -office at Chi- | under the act of March 3, 1879. “Advertising rates on application, Ey) Britwin’s s daeaalte on Communists side it beset with the contradictions of capitalism. The imperialist vortex in which changes, deeply affecting the destiny has dealt heavy blows against the economic’ life of Britain. British colonies and dominjons In, vestinent capital has*enabled them to establish their. own industries and compete with England itself. position of markets ‘for products they become competitors of the industries of the British Tsles. 2 The efforts to increase the exploitation of the ‘peoples *6f ‘the East meets with opposition as the nationalist movements ‘agaihst im perialism develop. The inspiration for the great wave of anti-im- perialism is to be found in the growth and prosperit¥ of the Soyiet Union. Hence the bitter hatred against the proletarian revolution in Russia, and those who advocate the principles of proletakian revolu: tin at“home. In the home industries the situation grows steadily worse. The Dawes plan is working to the disadvantage of British mdustry) The coal and steel industries have been hard hit. The arniy ‘of unemployed, since the war a serious problem, is rapidly increasing. A drive against the workers at home must ‘é tiade and has al- ready been launched in the arrests of Communists, the vanguard of the working class. Britain, like the United States, always fires’ the opening gun of a war on labor against the most advanced: section. The outcome of the Searborough labor congress, its favorable attitude toward Russia and the question of world trade union unity, was a challenge to the British imperialists. It means that British labor will refuse to participate in an armed struggle against‘ ‘Russia, and that there will also be the most stfentodus resistance: to wage cuts. It means furthermore that efforts will be put forth®to bring the exploited colonial peoples into the world trade union sovenienty British ek lepers is fighting back. The Communists, 4 in the act’ of Unless labor in general poaista this blow and comes to the detcies of the Communists the next blow will be dealt the main body. tion. On every is sorely of, nations, occur, oyer night, no longer absorb the industrial products of the mother country, From the Incidentally it should not be forgotten’ that: Mr. Ramsey Mac-} Donald and his red baiting, time serving crew in the British labor party aided and abetted this assault upon labor by the despicable actions at the Liverpool congress of ‘the labor party, where most of the time was spent maligning the: Communists. The objective conditions for a challenge to British imperialism are at hand. Instead of crushing the Communists the assaults of the government will only strengthen our’movement, bringing to the at- tention of millions of workers the vile role of the MacDonalds and the fear of Communism in the quaking hearts of. the imperialist government. This understanding is essential for the workers whose task it is to crush both the treacherous ex-premier, MacDonald, along with the tory premier, Mr. Baldwin and his government. + ; ve For the Line of the Comintern The remarkable Communist gains in the municipal elections in Germany last month, where the large proletarian*centers: such as Berlin and Bremen increased their representation in- the: ‘city eoun- cils, as well as the gain in the smaller localities, are testimonials to the wisdom and superior leadership of the Communist Interna- tional. ‘ ‘ : The German Communist Party, in its efforts to. eliminate thé right wing tendencies of the Brandlerites, who made such a miser- able fiasco of the revolutionary situation in October, 1923, had to depend for leadership upon the Ruth Fischer-Maslow group, a mix- ture of intellectualism and leftism. Under the’ leadership of this group the party drifted toward sectarianism’ Worse’ still, io efforts were made to follow the line of the Communist International, | .A system of double-entry bookkeeping was established, whereby the Ruth Fischer-Maslow group paid lip service to the decisions of the Comintern and then wrote and published’ articles ‘trying to swing the membership away from that policy with the argument that the tendency of the world party was away from the deeisions of the Third Congress and toward the right. Realizing the hopelessness of reseu- ing this leadership from its confusion and the plain outstanding'fact that the party under such leadership was stagnating, the €ontiintern, took decisive steps to place the party in the hands of better elements, _ proletarian leaders, who would adhere to its line. R wt Instead of antagonizing the social-democratic workers, a distine- ~ tion must henceforth be made’ between the membership. and;,the treacherous leaders of that party. The first result of this. wag the Berlin united front in the elections that enabled the party at one stroke to re-establish itself as a vital part of the life of the working masses of Germany. In this maneuver the Communists "gained tremendoiisly, defeating the bourgeois bloc in the city council, even! tho the social-democratic vote ‘declined. The sectarianism that vitiated the trade union work is, cor- rected and the damage done wil? be overcome. The resolution of the Workers (C ommunist) Party of America places the party inthis country definitely on record behind the Comintern in its decision on the Germany party situation, and pledges us relentlessly to fight every deviation from the line of eor- rect Communist tactics. The German party is the second party in the Communist Inter- national. We believe that the new leadership of the German party, in which we have full confidence, will soon fulfill its historic mission —mobilize the masses of Germany for the overthrow of the capitalist class and establish the dictatorship of the proletariat in that eoun- try, thereby defeating the machinations of the imperialist plunder- ers trying to reduce Germany to:the position of a colonial depend- erey and a pawn” ine see ated struggle between the imperialist Get a member for the Workers Party. iii @ new subscription wii aNenT SEE, Weneneavonee | BIH. Mw. Ww WICKS, | HENRY FORD—AMERICA’S With a preface by Maxim Gorki. International Publishers, New York. Price $3, oe @ F the forlorn, slaves divested everything that passes for initiative and reduced’ to mere automatons, | whose labor power goes to pile up | the enormous profits for Mr. Henry | Ford, want to learn to what idiotic as a revelation, Tf they imagine that Edsel Ford, heir Apparent to the Ford billions, ts ously half-witted: father, they should read the account of the musi¢al ac- complishments of Ford Junior. The young man’s idea of entertaining paci- fist ladies and gentlemen of the in- telligentsia is to play a drum solo to the accompaniment of an Edison phonograph, Those who had to smirk and endure this afflictiton, gentlemen and ladies must when the }fond parent is showing off the idiot child, were Mme. Rosika Schwimmer, the Hungarian pacifist, and Mr. Loch- ner, the author of the book. As a drum virtuoso, Edsel should qualify for a place in the United States government alongside those jother eminent musicians—Mr. Dawes who plays the fiddle and Mr. Coolidge who takes lessons on the saxaphone. The Ford slaves will also get a thrill out of the description of “the ornate mansion at Dearborn their master hired other slaves to build for him, Henry gleefully displayed his tile swimming pool and the magni- ficent pipe organ installed in the place. DON} QUIXOTE. By Louis F, Lochner.| of | uses the wealth they create is occa-| sionally put we recommend this book | prs sais : |a whit more intelligent than his notori- | The Baldwin government of Great Britain faces a. grave situa- | like all| Rivalled Noah's Ark, S a menagerie Noah’s ark might have surpassed ‘the Ford peace ark, but unquestiomably ,there were zoological specimen. on. the latter that | the proprietor of the ancient ark never | dreamed of. Most of them were pub- | icity seekers whose skins had been well tanned from basking in the lime- | light. So habituated were they to spouting before any and all who would | consent to Usten to them that they | devoted-a part of each day to har- | ranguing each other. These “daily discussions” aroused so much mirth among the reporters (who accom- panied the expedition and had their expenses paid by the wealth gouged | out of the Detroit workers) that they dubbed the good shff “Oscar II.” a | traveling chautanqua!*’The only chau- tauqua attraction nifséing was the late Bryan, the princé !of peace from Nebraska's shimmefin® plains, and he promised to meet ’thé menagerie at | “continuous mediati6#” was to be es- | tablished in order td “get the boys out of the trenches? by Christmas.” Mr. Lochner inforths us that the date was not necésSarily arbitrary. If not by Christinas, then by New) Years; if not theti,’ Decoration Day; then the fourth of “iily. Just so the | holiday was Ameritan and christian. | | If the armies fought thru New Years | | the Hague where tle ford mission for! R THE VOYAGE. OF THE OSCAR II jtales of reporters to the ‘effect that | the ladies and gentlemen aiding Mr. Ford to spend his money for thé pur- pose of establishing peace before Christmas indulged in excesses violence against each other, he does admit there were some heated discus- sions. Mr, Lochner, the author, who acted as impressario for the peace ship expedition, categorically denies the story that he had Mr, Ford tied to his bunk in a stateroom because of the auto magnate’s violent out- breaks against his brothers and sis- ters in Christ. Exit Mr. Ford. ANY exciting experiences are re- lated by Mre#Lochner in the time intervening from the day the ship left New York harbor on December 4 un- til the approach of Christmas, which eight more hours Christmas would |dawn. The day of the days, | But steafthily and under cover of | the penultimate night—the last but} one before the day of salvation would break—-Mr, Ford faded out of the picture. His trunks were packed. | He sneaked out of his hotel. The ex- pedition was left without the guiding} hand of the master. He left them, tho he did not abandon them. His, of | something to do ‘with éverthrow of! ezarism in Russia. however, for ‘one “cannot expect the impressario of the expedition that Was to rescue the world from warfare by the journey of the Oscer II., to dis- ;claim any permanent effect resulting therefrom. We are grateful to Mr. Lochner for revealing how Mr. Ford's spiritual ad- viser held an influence over the fliv- ver magnate comparabie to that of the monk, Rasputin, over the czarina ot Russia. Not in the same manner, perhaps, but sufficient to induce Ford to leave his companions in the lurch. Dean Samuel S. Marquis. who took care of Mr, Ford’s soul, had no sym- pathy forthe peacestrip. Possibly his brand ‘of christianity conformed to that ‘ofthe: wobbly song: found the expedition in Norway. The! Cee pen calhe decisive day was approaching. It was et -thecdentte: déeu be |the 28rd day of December. In forty- a P. ~ Bless your dynamite." It’ Séetis®the eminent doctor spent most of’his time in the smoking room | with‘ newspaper men cracking vulgar | Jokes atout ‘the zoological exhibition | on ‘the upper deck. This conduct was’ excédeingly distressing to the rain- bow’ ‘cliasers, who incidentally thought they had‘ found the pot of gold when |, | they ‘gained access to the profits | wrung from the sweat of the workers This is excusable, | By H. M. Wicks Tho Mr, Lochner denies” the weird | the Ford expedition’ “might have had) instruments to blow humanity to hell (Ford actually, believes there is’ a hell outside of his factories) is well | stated and reveals the real Ford. <) This’ story of the pacifist turned munition manufacturer ‘closes . the book, And at its conclusion we must admit that it is well worth reading. Not that.Mr, Lochner interprets Ford in the light of politics and econonites. That he does not do, He depicts him as a stupid, pliant, half-educated, gullible creature, who finds himself at the head of one of the world’s zibly the richest man in the world and unique in that he depends upon no other capitalists. The motivating forces that created Ford’s wealth are ;not touched upon, which is just as well. ya pacifist and sentimentalist, is not |the’ man to estimate Ford otherwise |than he did. The book ag it stands |is a, valuable addition to the libraty | of the revolutionist. It strengthens the contempt we hold for the bot. | geois swine thrown upon the stage of j history. It is just as well that Mr. Ford ‘considers that “history ig bunk,” because history will deal rudely with | him. “Mr. Lochner’s book is ohe stone jin the monument of~ shame that ‘is | being erected to Ford during his oh | lifetime. “Henry Ford, © America’s © Don Quixote,” is the title of the book. -If Piet sna Senshi” |largest combinations of wealth; pds- , Certainly Mr. Lochner, himself ~ jand into the next Year-they couldn't! purse strings still fluttered to the paci- stop on the second day of January, but | fist breezes. The ladies and gentlemen had to at least céiitinue until Lin-| were left to carry on the -heroic, if in the Pord industries. Bll thd to: Hell Mr. Ford was Don Quixote we cannot te ee ‘| resist the temptation to observe that M¥; Lochner, by his own revelation, coln’s birthday. Pacifists, single-takers, renegade so- cialists, birth controllérs, artists, pro- Germans, playwrights in embryo, set-| tlement workers, jay-bird lawyers, statesmen and just plain unadorned! adventurers comprised most of the! misunderstood, task after Christmas | had passed. Ford had gone, but they remained behind, The chapters relating to the events | of Christmas week and the week, fol- lowing are intensely interesting. We must say, tho, that Mr. Lochner's per- | Queer crew that sailed on the Oscar II. spective | fails him when he suggests He’ Ford finally withdrew his sup- sport from the permanent media- tion outfit and decided to howl with the rest of the war jingoes; how he despaired of stopping. war thru dis- seminating sweetness and light and bestowing the blessings of heaven upon humanity and finally decided to So into the business of manufacturing must have been the Sancho Panza.” Now that Mr, Lochner has done So well in depicting Mr. Ford,’ per- haps another of ‘the crew of the Oscer II, will devote a volume to Mr. Lochner. But the next character is Sancho Panza’s mule. By EARL | RE BROWDER. HE trend of. American capitalism for the. month of October con- tinued upward. Most dramatic of all expressions. of this fact was the great boom in the security market, | which culminated in the small panic of November 10 when rediscount rates"were advanced, and brief liqui- dation ‘Movement set in, only to see | the upward trend resumed. Automo- bilé production continued to set new ;high ¥ecords over previous years. ;Agricultural machinery . production was oy &F 40 per cent abdve a year ago.” Steel mills are increasing op- erations’ “With increased volumes of unfilled orders on the books. Rail- roads “Continue high records of ‘car- loading¥, “with earnings the highest since the war years. Foreign trade continues to increase. Investments abroad continue to increase over a year ago. All the usual business in- dicators ‘(including wholesale and re- tail Wistribution) sak to continued expansion. joThe First Rift in the Lute. the first time this year, how- ‘ever, it is possible to note cer- tain disturbing factors which threat- en, this waye of capitalist “prosper- ity.” And as in previous years, so it would seem, it it agriculture that will prove to be the Achilles heel of American capitalism: The first symptoms that all is not well with the system of production and distri- bution of wealth in the United States comes from the agrarian districts. It was brot to the attention of the pub- lic in the sudden and unexpected bankruptcy of a number of banks in the middle-western wheat states, which disturbed the. political equan- imity of the administration in Washington that Coolidge felt it necessary to issue a statement that he had not forgotten the problems of the farmers. * Surely the farmers’ problems have not been settled. More. than a year ago we_pointed out that the allevia- tion of the agrarian crisis had been brdt about bya fortuitous conjunc- ture of a world-shortage of grain with a large crop in the U. S.—something that was not forseen, certainly not Planned, and unlikely to recur in the (near future. Figures now available show what is happening to the farm- ers in this respect, and are convine- ing proof that the agrarian crisis is still with us. Prices of grain, cotton, and live- =| Stock, declined in the month of Oc- tober. With sharp decline in the price of wheat, it is still higher in the United States than in the world market. During the week ending Oct. 17, a large quantity of whedt was imported into the U. S, from Canada, paying a duty of 42 cents per bushel. Exports of wheat for the three months ending September 30, were less than,60 per cent of the fig- ures for one year ago. Receipts of wheat at interior markets for Sep- tember were somewhat under 70 per cent of September last year, with a still smaller percentage tor the three- month period. The estimated yield of wheat for the entire country this year is about 80 per cent of last year’s crop. With such a condition in wheat, it is .cleqr, that the farmers’ “pros- perity” has proved even more short- lived than’ we had expected. Last year's “farm prosperity” was -hased upon, Certainly corn, also an SI ‘OD, played little part, as the crop for 1924 ‘was smaller than) for the previous four-year period | which was a time of intense crisis. | And the 1925 crop, of corn, altho larger than last year, is still smaller than the 1920-24 average. Hay, a) very important da! crop, is esti- mated as being 12—per..cent smaller than last year. §F What effect thes ‘appearance of the agrarian crisis“Will have on the course of industrial-production is not clear in its details, Certainly it will curtail the domestic market, and intensify the push of American im- perialism to developforeign markets more intensely, c¢ontier new ones, |and even more energ@tically wield its credit monopoly int“favor of Ameri- can industries. It Wl also stimulate the investment of eh/pitdl ‘abroad. To what extent these faétors will offset one another, and “6! what extent American industry’il find its op- erations curtailed, cannot be indi- cated at this time. “What is certain is this: That a very disturbing de- velopment for American cayitalism has shown itself again, upsetting to Book Reviews A Book on 1 Stool Pigeons 1 The Stool bigesa a ‘and the Open Shop iavanent by Jean E. Spielman; Am- Current Economic Tendencies a certain extent what had appeared to be a very stable equilibrium. Where Industrial “Prosperity” Comes From. out, again and again, fabulous profits now being reaped to the increase of exploitation of the industrial workers. In the index, figures of the Federal Reserve Bulle- tin for November we find ’ “sti |stronger support for this contentidir. Workers in the manufacturing” ité dustries, numbering 5 per’ cent fewer than in 1919, produced” toni- modities 25 per cent greater than in 1919. The total wages paid towork ers in these manufacturing industries was less than 4 per cent greatertham in 1919. 190 1 How this process of intensified @x- ploitation has been applied various industries, is shown’ “with great clearness in the following ‘table, compiled from the Federal ResétWe Bulletin, jLS- Spielman’s preface indicates that he belongs to what may be called the old guard of labor officialdom but that does not delude him as to anti-red incitements, when made by the agen- cies. “The agitators and radicals,” ‘he says, “interpreted in the language of the open shopper, are those striving for higher wages, shorter hours and erican Publishing Co., Minneapolis. Reviewed by CARL HAESSLER. The 40-week organization ‘drive authorized by the American Federa- tion of Labor at its Atlantic City con- vention will carry in its wake a horde of operatives of private detective agencies, eager to frighten the em- ployers and drain them of their sur- plus cash. An innocent resolution by the Illinois State Federation of Labor favoring organization of bank clerks had the immediate ‘effect of placing on the desk of every Chicago bank exec- utive an offer by the Pinkertons to help meet the meffdee. Every Labor- Forward movement’ has as its bypro- | duct the noisome agtivity of the under- cover men, This makes rig nics Pigeon and the Open Shop ‘ement pertinent reading. It is a bodk of 240 pages by Jean E. Spielman’ organizer in Min- neapoliss and othér milling centers for the Intl. Unioi"8f United Brewery, Flour, Cereal & S6ft Drink workers. Though copyrighted in 1923 and there- fore open to constitérable revision, its central theme, thé’ Widespread infiltra- tion of private détectives into labor organizations, prdbably remains un- impeachable with ifs’ page on page of reprinting and fa#Slinile reproduction of private detetfive correspondence with émployers ‘ail the department of justice, always against the worker, with murdering Max Golstein, have mitted suicide after being tortured by Comrade Comra forced to si he contracted a cold, and the guards any kind, yor Both of thi Dubinsky was stripped preferring sul vd. i COMRADES BOJOR AND DUBINSKY BUCHAREST, Roumania, Nov. 22.—The Roumanian boyars not"t on, the cold stone floor. mrades who had been active In the wi Roumanian boyars were fed rotten Indian corn for meals. i to death by. starvation, ended their ti better working conditions.” While he touches on stool-pigeon honeycombing in the A. F. of L. un- ions including miners, machinists and printers, and in the I. W. W. and the Communist party, his principal con- cern is with the flour mills he was charged with organizing. He shows that the Marshall Service, with head- quarters in Kansas City, was employ» ed by the Pillsbury, Washburn-Crosby and other mills in Minneapolis. At one time, in 1921, this agency actually union alive, because, as the Pillsbury president wrote to the detective head, “a weak organization of this type is better than a disorganized one, and a reorganization later on.” But the employers were satisfied. Like all detective agencies in labor work, the Marshall fed lies to the boss at high prices and failed to deliver the goods. A followup ep- erative had to report to the agency chief: “The trouble here is this, who ever had this work before faked their reports and Crosby (the Minneapolis miller) is suspicious of agencies,” In view of the pious reformation of a number of radicals in Minneapolis Spielman would probably delate the extremely interesting history of the progressive insurgency of the Min- nea) Trades & Labor assembly which looms large toward the end of his book. taken the lives of Comrade a Roumanian Communist, and Dubinsky, a Bessarabian comrade, who com: the police for a number of months. jojor passed the last two months of his life in solitary con- finement with manacies on his hands and feet. naked and thrown into a cell and The first day he was in the cell, refused to allow bess medical care of jainst the comrades E have not wearied in pointing: that the} by capitalism may be traced directly’ t in “the | kept a decrepit local of Spielman’s |: seldom | anneal By Earl R. Browder Manufacturing Industries Index Month of September | (1919-100) Employment Payrolls Production ‘ 1925 1924 1925 1924 1925 1924 Iron and Steel .. 86.6 80.2 87.7 80.1 120 96 | Textiles .... -94.1 90.5 99.1 983 107 98 | Lumber and products 102-2 100.9 111.9 107.8 160 143 Automobiles 129.4 97.2 155.3 111.8 193 “178 General index soeempe 95.1 91.2 103.9 991 1265 118 5 From 1919 to 1924, in brief, exploita- tiof’ was ‘increased 14 per cent+di ‘manufacturing industries, and at the same time, by in¢reasing the number of unemployed €working a- smaller force for longer hours) the basis was laid for further intensification. | In 1925 this made possible an increase of exploitation more than 22 per cent greater than in 1919. No wonder the golden stream of profits has been swelling! : No Prosperity for the Workers. ‘ and Farmers. 0 ROM all of which the workers-and farmers may get another hint, that “prosperity” for capitalism means ‘the opposite; for “those who toil. Greater profits for the | capitalists, | ABE KLEIN “Abe Klein, 23 years old, mem- ber of Branch No. 4 of the Young Workers (Communist) League of ‘Chicago, and a member of the party died after a short illness. He was secretary of the Butchers’ Union in Chicago, and very active in the Jabor movement Many of his comrades and co- workers -in the .union participated inthe funeral Comrades David- son, Hecker and Morris Levin spoke at his grave. Danish Workers Send Delegation to Russia MOSCOW, (By Mail).—A Danish workers’ delegation consisting of twenty memlers is expected to arrive in, Leningrad. ‘Name Todd Successor. “BISMARCK, Noy. 22—Gerald P. Nye, of Cooperstown, a country news- paper ‘editor, has been appointed by ‘Governor Sorliéof North Dakota, to ‘shcdeéd' the late Senator Edwin F. Ladd.’ “The appointment will be’ con- 'tésted by many of the old guard sena- tots headed by Moses of New Hamp: ing thé decision of the‘ governor not | to nam anyone for the office, but wait until Viiie 30, for elections, se d Workers Province, we wt Nov, 22,— The Moscow orginiéation of the Russian Commun- ist Party has mobilized 883 comrades for Work’ inthe country; these in- bee 33.9 per cent ‘volunt ‘0.4 per cent women. In the Saratoy gubernia 450 Communists have been Di a for work in the coun- ry. Leningrad Workers Protest. —A mass meeting of protest against the torturing of workers in Hungary took place ‘in the one time Taurische Pala e, now Uritsk Palace. The pro- test resolution demanded that the So- ache Bi ire.” The appointment came follow: |. LENINGRAD, U, 8. 8. R. (By Mail) | spells greater oppression for -the masses, for the workers in the indus- tries. and Yarmers on the land.. 4 The ruling capitalist class is able to coin into even greater profits the increasing efforts of those who. toil— because they control the machinery of government, the machinery of in- dustry, the machinery of credit, the machinery of marketing and distribu- tion. Only when the workers farmers cement a firm alliance struggle, to overthrow the capit government, set up a workers’: farmers’ government—and then pro- ceed to take over the machinery of industry, credit, marketing and. portation—will prasperity be possi! for those who produce the wealth oe the world. Stamm Police Assist Russian White Guards VIENNA, — (By mail)—A congress or Russian counter-revolutionists took place here recently in which 108 dele- gates participated and decided to form a so-called national people’s league It must be stated that the Austrian government gave voluntarily the right of asylum for some’ days’ fo these counter-revolutionists while it is less tolerant with regard to rev- utionary workers. The Vienna police pretends to have known nothing about this congress. It is peculiar that it always knows very well about Communists and rev- olutionary fugitives who come to Austria. The social-democratic me ber of the workers’ delegation whicl lrecently visited Russia intended to report his experiences to an Austrian workers’ meeting. He was stopped at the frontier and refused’ bse oad sion to enter Austria, ~ The Chinese student ‘Then-Shi was expelled during the~ month of’ Sept- ember because he had committed the crime of speaking in a mi ot nieetings of the Internat: ‘Work- ers’ Relief in favor ot the Chinese workers who are suppressed by water ‘national imperialism, The worker. Dorn who was arrest- ed some time ago in a de tion in Vienna was not only e: i, but has been kept under ty weeks before his final cpio ae Hist of the exjelled workers. in ds very long. All this sho’ the ‘Austrian government and’ its “police are following the dictates of the capi talist states, to persecute by all means and| the revolutionary movement and to offer protection and asylum to the German fascist leader Russbach and the Russian white guards. ; ‘City Club “Investigates,” The bourgeois City Club is carry, ing on an “investigation” as to how examinations of teachers are com ducted in Chicago following the re: fusal of the school board to the reappointment of Supt. of viet government do everything Within its. power to prevent the Liteenanne death sentences. 4 Take this WORKER | sina LY. shop | “! of examiners William McAndrew's he liam H, Campbell as head of | The teachers o! to the methods used by the rew appointee and the board vestigation refused to confirm ‘appointment, a> FARA AE eT SOO =