The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 27, 1927, Page 2

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n it has mem- ix months. In District 30, Rentucky, not a‘local has on any members in the last But eleven delegates are ¢ 14 locals whose ex- entirely imaginary. 00,000 For Votes. These packed delegations have been id any dues at all in| for progres seeking the regeneration of the union. | Vie determination to “clean house.” Lewis In Action. | lengthy report, which even his }men could not refrain hrough, pronounced eu dazzling policy which has lost es and left wing forces | hap: |therefore a “red.” from sleeping | Speaker stands in. danger of life im- exeommunica. | Ptisonment because of his leadership! Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express! |of a strike, shows that he has learned! and Station Employes. ng his enemies, Lewis | well th gua, where they ar “the! “Demand, and it is prima facie evi-; Coolidge administration, acting in ac-! president Murray echoed the dence that thou art unreasonable and/ cord with the wishes of Wall Street” | to aid the Diaz tyranny agamst “the | A labor editor who can justify the| duly elected head of Nicaragua gov-| | President Lewis, in a dty and /closing of a hall for a meeting for! efmment,” has been adopted by the e way to “be reasonable.” “Reds Cause Strikes.” In addition to the editorial quoted i carefully organized by international | his serninge ony _— has lost | representatives, of whom there are|to the union West Virginia, : ore Eibap aoe on the Mine Werkoes gna | tucky, iections of Panneyivania, parts sist eae OR OE sOROR: CIO It, averagi $5, vear in sal-| Of Ohio, most of Canada, and the en- | °°) '0"- i : pent half a million dol-|<rete program for saving what is left | SS the CCLOriel Bie quote oe etl crew, in the last year. | °F recovering what he has lost. rei Federation af Cabos to prore Gat! it there is not one new mine or- A Reason For Accidents. the editor “knows his onions.” | nized in the entire territory stretch- Murray lashed out in bitter con-| One of the stories is headed: | g from West Virginia through Ken- | demnation of the Bureau of Mines for} “trade Unions In U, S. Being] y to Tennessee to show for this | jt: failure to reduce America’s ap-|Purged Of All Radicals, Says Green.| ormous expenditure. pa mine disaster record, the high- . 7} More Graft Coming. e ident’ rate in the world. But Ken-| there are four news stories on the} Lewis has. lars on th Communi Being Expelled From! Every Organization Belonging To A.| he Progressives say that a large part id nothing about official failure | F, of L.” | of the millions of organization funds | in the organized districts to enforce| Why are the unions “being Sete ory of all radicals”? The sub-head tells| us: “Reds Cause Strikes.” | The second news story is headéd: “Matthew Woll, in Phila., speaks kindly of Capital.” | Is this not in sweet and kindly con-| trast to those workers who are in-| clined to disregard appeals to be! “reasonable?” Just listen to the spent in West Virginia were for the on or even state requirements as purpose of g over 150 dele-| to safety. Machine officials in solidly gates here from District 31, which! organized Mlinois regard with com- has not even one single organized | placency the overspeeding of under- mine, and to maintain parasitic “or-| ground trains, the lack of cross braces, ganizers” there. the failure to trim walls and roofs The administration plans another | of projecting rock, ete, But Murray huge orgy of waste and graft in West | had nothing to say of this. Virginia after the convention closes, Pri pssives sat through these re- and has levied a two dollar assess-| ports and smiled. They keep their | 0 sonable” vice-president of the ment on all members to net half a powder dry, and wait for the first | american Federation of Labor as| million dollars. Progress ves claim | big fight, which will be over the ques-| quoted in “The Union,” whose motto| that promises of another “big cam- tion of challenged credentials. jon its masthead is “The Sword May| ~! Strike The Shackles From The Slave, | But It is Education, Organization and! Arbitration That Makes Him a Free! Man.” Woll said in his Philadelphia! speech: “Labor and Capital thruout the country are beeoming more closely| united on a cooperative basis * * * CONDEMNS LEWIS FOR LOSS OF MEMBERSHIP (Continued from page 1) j and Vanzetti, investigation of huge e >. } union expenditures and alien regis-| Not Fair Test. | tration reeeived attention from locals | George Bassett, a delegate from | submitting resolutions. District two, was wheeled in to make} ————_—_. eragh diy are ane parm in a flank attack on Brophy. Rittner their workers’ welfare and labor is dnd Tetlow closed the debate, although | EL@ Who Slapped Bethlen | puying heavily in stock of the core porations which employ it,” phasis mine.) “God's in his heaven and all’s right with the world.” many progressives were clamoring (Em- i ase for the floor. Cites Vorovsky C Emperor Lewis calmly shut off de-| ¢ VA, Jan. 26.—The trial of ‘day evening, Jan, 28, at Urkrainian bate and ordered the vote. The strong | tyan de Justh, secretary of the Re- | progressive section voted no, but the} publican party of Hungary, who committee’s report was passed be-| sianped Premier Count Bethlen in the | cause of its indefinite nature. face last June, in the lobby of the Five hundred and fifty-six resolu-; league of nations building, is in pro- tions were showered on the conven-| cess, tion this morning. Scores demanded| 4, Moutet, attorney for the defend- militant organization policy, criti-' ant, scored Bethlen, for taking this ing the “Lewis policy. Dozens) matter to court, and for not liquidat- called for alliance of rail and mine} ing this affair by the duel method. workers’ labor party, honest election; The defendant testified that he had reports, nationalization of mines, en-| administered the beating as a -pro- dorsement of the Soviet Union and| test against the contempt and snob- the sending of a miners’ delegation | ighness of Bethlen, and to discredit to Russia, the six-hour day and the) him before the world as an unfit five-day week. \leader, The defense counsel asked for Asks Raise. | acquittal of the chayge, on the ground On the other hand, another batch that the proseeution was not sincere eatied for raising Lewis’ salary to|in demanding that De Justh be con- $15,000 a year. He now receives a|vieted to insure safety for the dele- mere $8,000. One resolution suggest-| gates to the convention. He cited the ed $20,000. case of the assassination of Vaslay ‘Election instead of appointment of | Vorovsky, Soviet representative, at International organizers, now the) the Lausanne peace conference, The key to Lewis’ machine strength, the| aseassinator, Maurice Conradi, was demand for the promised check-off in| brought before a Swiss court and ac- the anthracite, condemnation of | quitted. inilitariam, the timing of hard and) soft coal agreements together, freo| RoW in speech in the Miners’ Journal Sacco The coal barons shut their union mines down for two years, starved 200,000 union miners out of the union fields and now demand a 15 to 20 per cent cut in wages and an agree- ment providing for enforcement of the speed-up system by the union, | “Labor and capital are becoming | more closely united on a cooperative basis.” j In the coal fields this “cooperative basis” consists of the coal barons strangling the union fields by stimu-' lation of non-union production and loving labor to such an extent that they are willing to let 200,000 miners force submission to their terms. Friends To Lewis. “The Union” speaks here in In- dianapolis for the powerful group of union officials known as the “Indian- apolis clique” and which includes the officialdom of such unions, with headquarters here, as the Teamsters, the Subs Kor The WORKER. DAULY | Workers, The leaders and their families starve in order to, hench- | Strike relief on the ground that the| Old Dominion Lodge, 977, Brother-! | hood of Railway and Steamship | The resolution also says, in part; “Whereas, The constitutional gov- ernment of Nicaragua is supported by the Nicaragua Federation of La-| bor, and “Whereas, At the same time the, American Government, in support of) these same Wall Street interests, is) threatening Mexico and has sent fifty-two American warships to China, and all these governmental ac- tions carry the threat of a new inter- national imperialist war in support) of Wail Street investments, now therefore be it “Resolved, That we call upon our international officials, in conjunction) with the Executive Council of the} American Federation of Labor and any other workers’ organizations favoring such a move, to call confer- ences of delegates from all workers’ and farmers’ organizations to carry on a struggle against the Wall Street policies of the government and against the danger of war involved in them in order to mobolize the whole power of labor and the farmers against these policies, and that this organization send delegates to such ® conference when ealled. Lenin Memorial in Newark. NEWARK, N. J, Jan, 26.--A Lenin Memorial and DAILY WORKER Wel- come meeting be held here Fri- hall, 67-59 Beacon St., under the ats- ital. ibunals, however, will never become the real instruments of the masses, until they constitute | the proletarian courts of a Work- ers’ Republic. This;»-of- course; raises the fact that there can be no arbitration of the issues between | the Mexican people and the tore-gn imperialism oppressi them. One On behalf of the master class for would be shouldeped with a bur- densome debt on fyhich they woud be paying interest, to foreign capi- tal down thru inferminable years, Mexieo today is poor. The stand- erd-ef-living-is~het high, Mexico cannot pay. The debt would be in- evitable. The only way out is to take. That was the way of the Bolshevik revolution in Russia; the way that sueceeds. Mexico must go the same way, finally, not be- 4% if Hy ’ i wi Page Two THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 27, 1927 - : , la ’ | | ¢ _ |‘REDS NOT WANTED IN INDIANA’ SHOUTS REACTIONARY C " i A bi . ‘BRIT H URGE ecor OWS LEWIS sueet; Hates PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT apitalist Arbitration | is Fe inane ae ea fe ° | i Yonti i from page 1) e iia eres avy ec! vi ° | (Continued ) type. They are fully in accord with! on oO m | } {hand and decided that Weisbord| the policy of the Lewis machine in| oO u re) r e | ac S mers ee | should not be allowed ronan’ -!this convention and that policy is to} é Pa | |There was no meeting of any * | launch an offensive against the “Save! F Poor on Facts, the Union” bloc instead of against! acing exican asses rete | sracity of the author of the| the coal operators. | eli nateaaeiia 3 cY ‘ < ; $. < ave Pr = worse than his grammar, Al’ Those sections in the union which } _ Reactionary Machine Bitterly Attacks Progres-/sbove ' Wort tia oe ie eee eee atk tie. ttocving of st races Doma | May Be the Result sives But Offers No Constructive Plan which Weisbord spoke and a little! 200,000 miners out of the union, the of Isolation Aaa sen ter the officials of the anes members who demand nationalization! ‘ — . : : , zabor Union, thoroughly amed of] of the coal mining industry, complete HE Senate has v at, Geliken hese. malt ‘ | TOKIO, Jan, The British am- ics ‘ ees n 3 a | ig y, | Senate has voted unani- ; arbitrate} Coolidge claims that | : Special to The Daily Worker.) | Ives for being duped by labor’s| organization of the non-union fields, mously.for settling the con- | “the abrogation of American prop- | bassador continues to press the for. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Jan. 26.—On the basis of his own} h gave the ageing ta hall abolition 7 the coal :ebuagad rian trove between the United y rights in Mexico without com- Sill he Mi ple ke age fo A . x vi | a * re he ; t 20! 8 State ne age ft; . Eee hae «. | poliey ing. 4 sador 5 ~redential’s committee report, President John L. Lewis has packed |; std. Taber Rd al a Bia teats i 2 rer pr fed the bit ed.” a ee tas faced ‘the gelato of Wash. 3 Lae : 5 . : ‘ Z and a lab a a ation. 2 de: a a rated. e wo! are a st | g a id the International Convention of the United Mine Workers of| But this is beside the question.) unions, are to be denounced as| Washington Ciccecomani erik Bie | watuiieas TG: WORUR. OFC ANROBL tee to. gollow an indedemient America with literally hundreds of delegates from “paper’’ locals | What Pe anont tnt pene. in oie ow enemies of American institutions,) ico, as well as with Nicaragua and | % se as a reason why Tokio should and long dead districts. jepede an: seals kel pet une agents of Moscow,” disrupters of| China, are decided behind, the In the “peacd” days before the , mite attitude. “Japan, on the The progressives will continue to expose these frauds as the pe eid, of ita hoetilityr te’ the “rea made uelou and “8 menaces, to the! ¢losed doors of the White House | world war, ie Was a school of evant, Winks i “5 se —— convention proceeds, but meanwhile the fake delegates make a} menace.” It says: | Henly, the, APE BNE Fon AE i the State Department, the | sociglists in. country, . with | Yvon Sone ct ape Bite hg . F 5 “Reasonable” oa ~ sthod “dniiae omit ih cy of Chinese odium that is now almost 4 i sic Re 85 Fe ss ‘ “One th ht to | ar to em- A “Reasenable” Machine, t method of “dollar diplom ved D. Wargen, editor of the Ap- ; 4 r nsive chorus of “Yes Men” to Lewis’ fulminations against} ne thing ought to be e Can aa . 5 | 1 oo entirely shouldered by the - British espo! | . Pi acy” that looks upon Congress és | peal to Rew rar’ sas tirels fe y Ash the left wing, against progressive, militant miners and all their |Ployers, that were it not for the con-| Here in the stronghold of kluxdom| &¢y_ the KS upon Congress @s | P 0 See of Girard, Kansas, Jana hen had a tance Cf GbUd Bee ey SERN. Premr con yes j bite indies |servative labor press, the Red move-| and labor officialdom, the Lewis ma-| ®° inc&mbrance that must be tol | oof its"Mhief spokestnen, that | ood it was bitter on the tongue deeds. : ‘ he li |nient in America would be bound to| chine, if it docs not trip in the thous- Bigs Se ; | de aes the Wy to end capitalism |” ‘ i hand f " ac > s made a bs nder ay ig e lists 2 ' ay. s e serva- sof F rei white @ ei ie gesture is not to be over- as to buy it ithe, erinlism,” ¢ : The mac hine has made a bad blu nder in permitting the ists} nake headway. It is the conserve” ands of yards of red, white and blue phe a sis ‘f te : i ae. , Ae lie ‘aut “Imperialiam Australian Wopkers ‘Protest, of credentials, as repor by 2 docile credentials committee, | tive- point of view as atlonten in the} bunting, with which Tomlinson hall is,‘ pit Ae ng tt irely ee 4 | wenkinn thr@ its government at | SYDNEY, N. S&S W an. 26—The ‘ gaa conort [conservative lal ose makes} gr. qhadeaic Ceaele’ wei reat @s that at least one branch ashington, gems perfectly will-.| . cea iy Ste . 1e delegates’ hands at . @ as » report | conservative lator press that makes/ draped, or strangle itself with one or) ‘He® ) 2 ams perfectly : fn at etivitie | to get into the delegates’ hand: a nes tim a oe x eda ery difticult for the Communist] more of the four dozen American! “ the government harbors the | ing to be boughtS»xt in Mexico, but Auetthtian Wor a Union (a, shnual | of Secretary Treasurer Kennedy, which shows the per capita) movement to vdvance in America. It flags which hang from every projec-| potion that Mexico has some rights. | at ils wn price, Sidee this “price? antl 5 A rong 5 eee paid from the districts. . 3 aie ~—~|is for this reason THE A-ltion, expects to prove with the a The arbitration game, however, as | is backed by the “for%s" of the a ae st 100,000 Comparisons of the lists lays bare} paign” are given now for the two-| TIVE LABOR PR sistance of the capitalist press that |{ Jt is played by American employ- | United rmy, navy and air Pigeeates pp sagen aided an almost incredible story of the at-} fold purpose of ing the w {TO 7 r L EI "lit is the most “reasonable” of all)‘ers and by “dollar diplomats” is | fleet, it may be taken for /granted ess bannenta i Chit and “a tempt to stifle the progressives by| boss followers of Lewis that there.will| NESS INTERESTS OF THE COUN-| 4 an labor leadership, just another shell game, with Uncle | that the price demanded will be far ppsnings 2 cited nil swamping the convention with hand | be a reward for them, and of running | TRY. (Emphasis mine.) ‘ Shylock manipuls the shells | beyond anything the Mexigans feel | mands that the Federal Goveryatent picked delegates who represent no|a bluff before convention delegates | 4 Lucky Ward | Fake Delegates Wanted, and the mys us peas and, of |, they can er ought to pay aba tee embrail Australians: in regular unions. Even when the most/that some organizing may be done in| How extremely fortunate for this veral hundred delegates, who) consequentl, in the coin. { There is a growing feeling in | drmaie LAW: WEFSRFE has defense of liberal allowances are made for ex-/the future t liate the utter fail-| inspired writer that someone put}have been fighting the coal operators a as Mexico that there is no rdason why <apltalistics equipyssions. ars onerated—non dues paying—mem-| ures in the past. |the word “conservative” in the Eng-| for three years without any help from Indications are that the Calfés | anthing should be paid to tho alien |, -c°oRe Ys 1m the event of any at- bers, the swindle thus revealed is Red Hunt Hysteria. ish language. Otherwise, unable to| the Le machine, want to know) government is willing to seize upon | exploiters in the United’ States, T¢ | SP te i, a Australian yontins monstrous. Yesterday Sigman, Schachtman, | exp: properly his love for things! what has become of the 200,000 van-| arbitration as a method of settling | the wealth in natural regources was | 8°°'* °F f° ispateh Australian war- District 31, Northern W Vir- and Woll, wh names|as they are, the full flower of his|ished union members—and a number} plu- | stolen by the agents of foreign cap- | ships, this convention instructs the ginia, has almost as many delegates as y to workers everywhere the|slavish soul, unrecognized by the|of other things. ; : | tocracy. The New York Evening ' ital, especially under the reien of | ‘der! council immediately to or- it has members. District 17, ruled by | extreme in right wing terrorism, and posses, would have blushed unseen in| There is such a thing as being too} Post admits that, “Upon our dif: { native tyrants who joineg with for- | S2%i4¢ & ne-intervention compsign”. y Tetlow, an army captain | selfish boss-serving at whatever cost/the dark garden of silence. As it is,| “reasonable” even tho one has packed! ferences with Mexico arbitration is | eign greed in the plunder of the Exaggerated Reports. for “law |to the union, were joined by John L.|he can now get off such super-con-|a convention with machine delegates ed by various important organ- | workers and garmers, they it is ar- | . SHANGHAI, Jan. 26.—The alarm- F condemna-} Lewis in demands for expulsion of | cervatisms as: by methods-so shameless that harden-! jzations of our people,” . | gued by the Mexican wasses, daily | ist reports of desultory rioting pub- tion of militant sles in the Di di E bi ss The organized labor movement of | ed henchmen would rather talk about ut President Coolidge has let it \ growing more conseigus of their lished in foreign newspapeis and re- sends 164 deleg although it h / a feat aes for the oe | Americ does not desire to take Deer) something else, 3 5 ,| be known that he is opposed to ar- | own power, that they/ougft to re- | cabled here do not give a caireet pic- only a few hundred members, of militant miners were j Session of capital,nor to run private; “Reds are not wanted in Indiana’) pitration. And in-this he speaks | cover their loot and that now is a {ture of the situation, Slight dis- the miners’ constitution prov es in office, Phillip Murray, | business. It does desire better work-| hy the bosses but the “reasonable” the mind of the profit takers, be good time to do it. They see no | turbances are exaggerated. Strikes F one delegate for the first five h nd Thomas Kennedy, | ing conditions WHEN SUCH ARE! reactionary officials create a de-' te than they can state the case | necessity for any ¢ompensation. | against greedy employers are numer- ; dred members in a local, or one dele- | secreta urer. {SUGGESTED AND BETTER) mand among the workers of Indiana <hemselye: | hay eon nothing’ ar G San’ bul they “ase air ii oboe i is Ww ‘3 WHEN IT IS POSSIBLE! © Ben themselves, ey got nothing for ‘the natian’s | ous but they are directed against gate per local fo ae locals. Virtuous Sluggers. \ro TNA REASONABLE} for more red and less reaction in the natural resources, the Ifind, the oil, | Chinese-owned factories as well as Delegate B teed Three Membe This reactionary trio, who resorted | way Gisitshasie Spagna polley of the labor movement. Arbitration is welcome to the | the mines, when they) were taken | against those owned by Hritish and Diste [) ee gba hi 1 A): Yerwcdwaa aan ‘Viiaisamatiet eau aie aeseter reek Smee great employer when he is sure | from them. They five nothing | Japanese. ee” Cae bowen gat Ade 4 ‘Each -owers Hap 4.” “3 $ Railway Clerk al that the arbitrators can be fixed | when they take it bagk again, That | The first contingent of British pest © ce represents three |e more progressive off the floor)” ‘The voice of the great god Morgan| allway Clerks Loca | beforehand. Evidently the Mexi- astituds constitutes ‘the aightmare treeps from Hong-Kong which is ex- fiur bonafide dues payiig. mem- of the convention, each of them raved | ha; spoken to the labor Moses from) Condemns Imperialism }, cans are in favor of the kind of | that disturbs Washiggton and Wal) | pected to arrive momenta is cal- b The ent e of Tennessee | i his official report yesterday after-|the golden clouds of the Wall Street 7 AS tion that make that , Street. . i’ culated to influence the negotiations nqisteerr 4 a : sen. | 200n about “left wing cons ies to| Sinai and said: As Wall Street Policy | ults will be in their favor. */*) | now taking place in Hankow between ti ies se A vt Masa sized Penn control the union.” : “The first commandment for thy S For a ssa ae | s it should be. The Mexi- If Mexico sought to compensate | British and Cantonese officials. The = a cig bacco geal age Ari Secretary Kennedy beat the toesins| flock is that it, each and sevetally, RICHMOND Va.—A red hot reso-| can courts, established by the re-)\ alien. greed, at its own price, for | display of force was apparently in- w tte Keituvke ° canbe he of union destruction by declaring | he onable. lution demanding the withdrawal of} public, should be fitting tribunals | “property” to be thken back by the | terpreted in this light by Euge Chen, ; x tg r there is no place in the miners’ union] “Ask and thou shalt receive—per-| American armed fore ara-| tor settling the differences with ~ people, then the {Mexican masses | Cantonese Foreign Minister who is- |sued a strong statement declaring |that the Nationalist Government | would not be awed by a display of | force. Do Not Trust Sikhs, The Indian detachments «1rdered to China are said to be all Mohammedan as the British have less faith in the | loyalty of the Hindoos, The new re- |inforcements are also calculated to offset the strikes employed as local police who are falling under the in- pices of The Workers Party, Speakers will addvess the meeting in Bnglish, Russian and Jewish. Ad- mission free, Russian Party Problems Subject Coming Lecture Chicago Workers School CHICAGO, Ul, Jan, 26.-—-The next Sunday lecture, part of a long program of weekly educational talks arranged by the Chicago Workers Sehool, will be given by Max Badacht, member of the cen- tval exedéutive committee of the Workers (Communist) Party. The January 80th meeting will be at Northwest Hall, North and West- ern Aves, at 8 P. M. Bedacht’s subject will be “The Recent Diseus- sion in the Russian Communist Party.” Following this, a series of three Sunday lectures will be delivered by William Z%, Foster on “Strike Strategy.” James P, Cannon of Carpenters, Printers and United Mine! International Labor Defense and of these! intone are all of the “reakbnable”) Leland Olds of the Federated Press avril! be the speakers at later dates, j | or the other must triumph, j | | fluence of the anti-imperialist propa- ganda spread by Koumintang leaders. The British intend to play on their religious differences. Refusal of the Indian parliament to authorize the sending of tivops to India igs hailed with joy by . the Chinese nationalists, Individual Americans residing here have cabled Washington urging a non-aggression policy towards China. The leading British newspapers here is thundering against a sur- render to the Chinese and insisting that “trade should not be put before honor”, Britian is expected to make a fight for repossession of the British con- cession in Hankow. * A general advance of the Koumin- tang army in Kiangsi province to- wards Hangchow on the seacoast of Chekiang has been ordered. Persons close to Chang-so-Lin, have stated authoritively that he is prepared to unite with the south against the British should the latter attempt to regain the Hankow con- cession, British news agencies continue to publish interviews with the Manchur+ ian dictator, in which Chang, huris propaganda blasts at. Moscow and of- fers himself humbly as the man who is capable of unifying China, sug- gesting at the same time that he would be able to accomplish this laudable purpose sooner provided he had a little ready money, There are those who believe that Chang is sim- ply talking thru his hat and that Tokio is grinning over its teacups as Chang continues to pose as the savior of civilization, cause of Russia inspiration, or in- stigation, but because there is no other way in the struggle for lib- eration from capitalist rule. oe 8 which it rules, the Washington gov- ernment declares the Mexican oil and land- laws are confiscatory. That sounds iike an echo of the em- ploying class complaint immediate- ly workers demand increased wages, the shorter workday, better conditions, the abolition of child labor, equal pay for men and wom- en, and ether concessions, that would make for a‘little better life for the working class, The Coolidge government in Washington, in its attitude toward Mexico, however, is as arrogant and iron fisted as the Gary tyranny in the steel industey, or the Rocke- feller kaiserdom ft the oi! industry that declares, “There is nothing to MEN, NOT MUD The Mexican masses, in there. fort to get back what belongs to them, must have the support of all American workers and farmers, If Mexieo were foreed to pay, that would. merely strengthen Wall Street, making it more powerful in its depredations against the work- ers and farmers at home, The senate ha§ voted for arbi. tration. Capitalism’s attitude to- ward arbitration is to use it to keep labor in continued submission. La- bor’s reply can only be to arbitrate capitalism out of existence, “CLEANED-UP” Worker Correspondent Says We Improve | Editor, DAILY WORKER: ‘The “debunking” campaign of DAILY WORKER will certainly help the to see more clearly their own Main street, Borger, Texas lower phokat The first number is already a very ers to “clean up” the town entirely, the mud being six big improvement and the pleasure of mete ee Cee i ais psy Sado news the same day- ich means a BORGER, Texas.—Texas rangers can stand mud. But a worker with an idea is too much for then, Recen trains have left this town with a coat- ing «f mud in the streets from vix tc tweive inches deep. Instead uf devot- their xttentions to thas, the rangers sd ory nore in the heart of t and ir alist ital. that ‘imey bd ree mperialist capital shack, a heavy trace chain was fixed| ‘The New Les to the sills of the houses, and the| low prisoners locked to this. But later, off'cerg admitted, it was cheapur to “ and similar yel- papers may keep on throwing mud gnd lies at Communist party or- will not affect us now, the police of the barons, have con'| give the prisoners a free ride to ronders on your good centrated their eforts on | th | Amarillo, the next big and we t heat will appre- town minus anyone who to or | are put on trains elate your Wr nhod veka ag: ganize the workers in the Texas Pan | ti than to keep Sincerly, J. Aven handle oif district. , sfeod them, (Worker Correspondent) A) 2

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