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' THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized For the 40-Hour Week For a Labor Party PROTEST MURDER OF MELLA; ATTEND LENIN MEMORIAL AT “GARDEN” THIS SATURDAY NIGH? FINAL CITY yu rke Y EDITION the Post Office at New York, N. Y., under the act of March 3, 1879. j Price 3 Cents Entered as xccond-class matter NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY 15, 192 In New York, by mall, $8.00 per year. Outside New York, by mall, $6.00 per year. Published daily except Sunday by The National Daily Worker Publishing Association, Inc., 26-28 Union Sq., New York, N. Y. LENIN MEMORIAL SERBIA MURDER Negro Girl Is WILL DENOUNCE Held as Slave’ Vol. V., No. 323 CAL’, KELLOGG ORDER “ROUND Big Indian Fighter ' MELLA’S MURDER Working Class Groups Call for Giant Demonstration Pistol Fired by U. S. Expect Thousands at ist) Party, in conjunction with lead- Hubert Dr Work, chairman of the Republican National Com- \mittee, leader of Hoover's campaign to an indictment of former Secretary CLIQUE ARRESTS | 20 COMMUNISTS, in New Jersey (Crusader News Service.) LITTLE FALLS, N. J., Jan. 14.— An astounding story of domestic servitude involving a helpless and Croatian Workers Face Death at Orders of _ [illiterate 16 year old Negro girl was 8 |uncovered yesterday seven miles “White Hand” | southwest of Paterson. | The child is Alsie Martin, former- Widespread Red Raids | ly of Lowendesville, Abbeville Coun- jty, S. C. She was brought from ‘Autonomy’ Chief Gets |there last October by Mrs. Theron Saville Allen, who says Alsie was today at Zagreb, Croatia, by troops | < e of the new dictatorial government! There are four children in “the | ROBIN” ENDED “ Reservationists” at ‘Once Comply; No Wish | to Injure War Pact Mild Resolution Tabled Imperialists Amused at House and the State Department, | uke cross marks Kalenin, president of the Union of Socialist | in Ame ca. MELLA’S MURDER Demand President Gil Sever All Relations With Cuban Regime Police Hide Assassin Use Agent of Machado of Portes Gil is cautiously but defi- a7 ‘ ” f ‘ ‘ i ii | “given” to her at the age of two. Soviet Republi He is at the Fourth Congress of Worker am | ce i " Garden” Meet Lor BESSON, Ces, FOS rape Job for Betrayal | aiten is assistant superintendent of Game, But Want Vote | peasant Com pondents of the U. S. S. R ae tol with i | to Aid Murderers The district office of the New lied eaelee bed ses ie es BELGRADE, J tates Yen 1a rock quarry at Great Notch, out- WASHINGTON. Jan. 1 e group of the delegates. “Tell the work of American that we | Be = aah an investigation of graft in Indian 21 , Jugoslavia, Jan. 14. | side Little Falls. ASHINGTON, Jan. 14.—Under want to correspond with them,” was the message of these corre- MEXICO CITY, Jan. 14—Demon- York District, Workers (Commun-| i) Jands that was leading straight |—TWenty Communists were arrested Child Was “Bound Out.” heavy pressure from the White! spondents to papers in the Soviet Union, to their fellow workers | strating anew that the government ers of trade unions, labor defense bodies, workers’ educational groups and other organizations issued an appeal last night to the toiling masses of Greater New York to join in a protest at the Lenin Mem- orial meeting this Saturday evening, January 19, at Madison Square Gar- den against the brutal murder of Julio Mella in Mexico by tools of Wall Street. With thousands upon thousands of men and women workers in at- tendance, the meeting will also serve to give clear and unmistakable ex- pression against the preparations of the incoming Hoover regime for a of the Interior Fall, Commissioner Burke of the Indian Bureau, and lothers. Work was himself Secretary of the Interior when he conspired with Attorney General Sargent to dissolve a grand jury in Oklahoma City which was turning up facts that would have badly compromised the republican party administration. OIL STRIKERS FIGHT POLICE of King Alexander and the “White |family. Alsie fills the triple role Hand” murder clique. | of nurse, cook and general slave for The new laws permit the shooting | the family. She never has been to of arrested persons after drum head | school, her tangible assets consis‘ court-martial. A gigantic roundup | of $1 and some old clothes, and she of all anti-government forces has|Sleeps in a little room on the top |been ordered by Alexander thru his floor of the old house. prime minister, General Zivkovich,| Questioned as to what wages secret head of the “White Hand.” | Alsie was paid, Mrs. Allen explained Experienced in Murder. there was no regular wage, but that The “White Hand” is an organi-|money was given to her “just like zation of the most reactionary army |we give money to our own children, officers, who are loyal to the present | and some of it she puts in the bank.” regime because most of them took} While this conversation was go- part ih the successful plot to murder ing on, the young Negro girl, in an the rival dynasty outright, and bring | old blouse and soiled dress, with Peter Karageorgevich, father of the | black shoes without laces, was put- present king, to the throne of Servia. |tering around in the kitchen prepar- Zivkovich was the Obrenovich ing supper for the family, who sat the Reed group in the senate today dropped their “round robin” petition that the Kellogg pro-war treaty be- {eauched in language which undiplo- jmatically challenges the British em- pire, and took a new and more {direct line. While the telephone bells in ‘heir offices were ringing with calls from Secretary Kellogg, the Reed group met and decided to propose a direct resolution in the senate calling upon the Foreign Relations Committee to make an official report of what it thinks the treaty means as regards the Monroe Doctrine and other American foreign policies. As soon as the senate met, Senator Workers in Soviet Union Ask ine Correspondence NEW FRAMEUP IN MINEOLA CASES: “Tell the wo rs of the United States that we want to correspond with them, tell them to write to us,” is the message sent the Ame n working class, especially the Amer- ican Worker Correspondents, by their brothers in the Soviet Union. The message is brought to this coun- try by Nancy Markoff, delegate to ne ‘ C pil the Fourth Congress of Worker and Trial se Is a for) January z | Peasant Correspondents. She has had an opportunity to observe the nitely playing a subservient role to the interests of Yankee imperialism the police of Mexico City are using every effort to evade the increas- ing demands of the masses for ap- vehension and punishment of the assins of Julio Mella. One of their methods is in trying to frame up, with the aid of a Cuban fascist employe of the Cuban government, the fairy tale that Mella was killed as a result of a love affair. With the temper of the Mexican masses rising at the outrage by which Yankee imperialism, direet- ing the hands of Mella’s assassins through its ownership and control of the venal Machado government |of Cuba, shot down on Mexican soil i ialisti | i rorked ‘ . xtensive Worker Correspondent Far from being freed, as many | i revoluti fu- new imperialistic war. The cold- guardsman who opened the door of | about idle as she worked in the hot |James A. Reed of Missouri, proposed | °* a. se y Mella, a Cuban revolutionary refu ©" ‘looded slaying of Mella, Cuban Worker: Heartened as the palace to the men who were to kitchen. the reaclation. It Was not discussed movement in the U. S. S. R | Workers apposed, when they heard | geo welcomed to Mexico by work Communist leader by agents of 8 kill his superiors at the time. The/ endiepndiittanoanat ie swash delayed (22 vorieT: 1 08 tn the’ large ‘cary of the: < mn of the New York/ers and peasants, Portes Gil, Mex President Machado, figure-head of] Stones Meet Clubs ‘White Hand” has killed other polit- | antit tomornow. Tt lies on the table shops of Leningrad, Kharkov or| Court of Appeals, which set aside | jeo’s president on a vacation” at ical enemies since then, and is a par- Rostov, the big rubber plant in|the conviction of the seven furriers | Cyautla, Mexico, wired the police of Wall Street’s puppet government, has given new significance to the Lenin memorial meeting. With the BOMBAY, India, Jan. 14.—The ticularly anti-labor, anti-peasant movement. ELECTION MEETS in the meantime. The Reed resolution follows: Asks Plain Words. Moscow or the oil fields of Baku or| victimized in a Mineola frame-up, the silk and cotton plants of Uzbek it is now learnt that the open shop and Turkmnistan, there is the same|interests in Nassau County are con- Mexico City to carry out a careful investigation “but without preju- dice.” demonstration but five days away,| Wave of strikes which is sweeping 5 Suppress Peasants. “il r n is 5 ts e the arrangements committee is work.| over India, in the wake of the har-| Since the Alexander-“White Hand | NEEDLE UNION “Resolved, that in view of the im-| ger interest in American work-|centrating all efforts to railroad | yy, police, however; ignosinieiaae ing at top speed to make it by far|tal, or general mass passive resis- dictatorship was proclaimed a few) portance of the pending treaty (the | ©TS: she reports. a ___ |them to jail. facts and ail the demands Oetaae the greatest of its kind ever held in| tance, of which the Simon Commis-|days ago, all peasant organizations | Continued on Page Five The keynote of the Fourth Con- This was seen at the Nassau|masses that they apprehend and this city. Murder Is Challenge. William W. Weinstone, organizer of the New York distriét, Workers (Communist) Party, issued... this statement: f “To the militant and class com scious workers of Greater New York: The brutal murder of Julio Mella by the Machado government, tool of Wall Street, is a direct chal- lenge on the part of those who are today attempting to reduce the American workers to slave stand- ards. The attack upon Mella is part and parcel of the general attack sion to investigate the government of India is the occasion, reached a crest. here today with a violent struggle between the authorities and strikers at the petroleum works. ‘Twenty-five of the strikers were in- jured by the police during the strug- gle. The number of injured among the police is not known, The struggle began when striking oil workers, who have been out for several days, were set upon by the police, apparently at the instance of the owners of the petroleum work- ers or their representatives. To the charge of the police, the have been ruthlessly suppressed, the | death penalty proclaimed for Com-/Dyess Strike District munists, workers arrested every-| where unless they were particularly | Rally Today docile, the anti-government press _ suppressed, and the Croatian -home|-—'Tpe united New York Joint Boar rule movement forced under cover. " Traitor Promoted. |dustrial Union, yesterday issued a Belgrade, will officiate as foreign the membership of locals of all minister in the new military cabinet | crafts will be able to meet for the kovitch, who will take a vacation to| sng functionaries of locals and of recover his health. Seelimir Masi- |i Joint Board. huranich, a Croatian leader, who has! re i ‘ The meetings intend to nominate Jd out his followers, was named | i So ot is onetce ‘and industry candidates to fill posts from general lot the Needle Trades Workers In-| Kosta Kumanudi, Burgomaster of | fy]} Jist of dates and places where | during the absence of Dr. V. Marin- |parpose of nominating all officers | TAFT RULES FOR CHICAGO PLAGUE ‘Decrees Lake Water Is, anand to Float Steel Ships | aErgere i} WASHINGTON, Jan. 14—In a} long opinion written and read by himself, Chief Justice Taft of the gress of Worker Correspondents County Court, in Mineola, when the was the necessity to start imme-| seven workers appeared before the diately an interchange of corres-| same labor-hating Judge Smith, for pondence between the workers of) the new trial they were granted by capitalist countries and the workers | the higher court. District Attorney of the Soviet Union, At this con-| Eqwards <dasisted that. the earliést ference there were fighting,-.writ-| possible date be set for the trial, ing workers and peasants’ from and the judge very speedily set the every nook and corner of the Sov-| date for Jan. 28. | iet Union. They listened with keen) ‘The sinister intentions of the Long | interest to the report of this Amer-| {sland Ku Klux Klan authorities,! ican delegate and later peasants|who engineered the frame-up with| and workers came up and gave her the aid of scabs, scab shop owners, | their addresses and the same burn-| 4, fF, of L. officials and even “so- ing message: ‘We want to corres- ciglist” union officials become ob- pond with the workers of America.’ vious when the following facts be-| Worker correspondents and all| come known: punish Mella’s assassins, are bend- ing every effort to “proye”’ that Mella was killed over a love affair. To bolster up their ridiculous story, the police have-brought for- ward-a “despicable agent. provers- teur, a Cuban who appears to be the employ of the Cuban gover ment as were Mella’s assassin This character, who goes under th jname of Jose Magrinat, is claime by the police to have met Mell: shortly before his murder, but de- nies that he told Mella assassinr were seeking him, and, without ex planation, is claimed by the police to have said he “believes” Tina upon the working class in the form| Sttikers responded by closing their manager and secretary treasurer |), ss workers are urged to write to the vom . p of union breaiing, wage cuts and| Tanks and calling other workers in poduy, down thru business agents, Joint eS Snr ee ee ne Daily Worker. ike & pcs ee they ig #,coniedion oy pide by the | Modotti was involved. speed-up. the vicinity to their aid. Many| ,popoges “STATE OF M Board delegates, local functionaries (1°" ang the whole working class| should portray the life of workers coe ia ae awhis Adare get This fairy tale is denounced hy “The workers of New York must give a fitting answer at the Lenin Memorial meeting on Saturday eve- ning, January 19.” In a statement on behalf of the came running up and met the po- lice clubs with a shower of stones and improvised weapons, sticks and clubs. Apparatus around the works was and local executive boards. ATTAN.” Ht In doing this the local leadership ALBANY, N. Y., Jan. 14 (.P).— population of Chicago must face pestilence sooner or later, to save A state of Manhattan comprising counties in New York, New Jersey is carrying out the recent decision ‘the steel trust the expense of build-| of the General Executive Board of the national union, which decide ing lighter boats or imyroving its arbors up the lake. | Markoff on the Worker Correspon- in the work shops and at home. Interesting Series of Articles. The Daily Worker will ‘publish soon a series of articles by Nancy able doubt of guilt” exists, is usually | quashed, since such a decision prac-} tically admits that the prosecution failed to prove their case. In this howe all who know Mella and the girl as a camouflage behind which the po- lice are .sheltering the assassins. Tina Modotti herself declares the police tale‘an infamy and denounces ani and Connecticut is proposed in a)... 5 2, er, the district attorney ‘ United Council of Worki: badly injured as the struggle surged oe A | “to instruct all locals throughout the | bits P a dence movement in the Soviet |; -. ees A ‘n€Y|Magrinat as a spy of the Cuban tat Giant akin ‘ing Women, Rani and’ fork and ac mamber of | Tesolution introduced in the assem: Fequdiey: tol pcbceed’ with elections of | Never Cared About Sewage. Union. plies on a new trial. This means| ,overnment working with the as- “It is the duty of all workers’ wives to unite in a mighty protest at the Lenin meeting against this latest outrage against a son of the revolutionary, proletariat. Mella’s life was taken for but one reason: He was too valuable a worker for the masses. He taught too well and Wall Street felt it expedient to do away with him. He died for us. We must make it plain that his ef- forts had not been in vain.” As the director of the Latin- American Department, national of- fice of the Anti-Imperialist League (U. S. section), Alberto Moreau, said in his appeal: “The murder of Mella can be traced to his recent activities against the dictatorship of Machado, tool of the Washington government. Mella, the author of “Revolutionary Struggle Against Imperialism,” was Continued on Page Four 500 Copies of Textile Union Paper Given to Bklyn Hosiery Workers _ More than 500 copies of the Na- tional Textile Worker, official organ stores in the vicinity had their win- dows and shutters broken. Police reserves were immediately summoned and a number of arrests |made, the prisoners being thrown jinto jail where they are held incom- municado, The struggle of the oil strikers and the police, coming at this junc- ture during the intense struggle of the cotton workers with the mill owners, has frightened the authori- ties to the point where they are preparing to invest the working class quarters of Bombay with an army of police. The press is carrying its custom- ary screaming alarm leaders and the Anglo-British government here is showing signs of panic. The struggle with the police has greatly heartened the workers in all the industries, who are learning from every fight with the authori- ties that the police is not invincible, Moroccan Tribesmen Fight Troops; Report: Rebels Concentrating CASABLANCA, Morocco, Jan. 14. of the National Textile Workers|—Rebel tribes were reported con- Union were distributed last night in|centrating in the district near Beni- bly tonight by Assemblyman Louis | A. Cuvillier, democrat, of New) York City, which provides for com-| states to make a survey. LESS INFLUENZA YESTERDAY Clear, freezing weather seems to be checking the influenza epidemic in New York City. Forty per cent fewer cases were reported yester- the three previous days. Bacteriolo-| gists report that the majority of} cases in this epidemic are caused by | the pneumonoccus, or common) pneumonia germ. This was not so in the more severe 1918 epidemic. VICTIMS OF ROMANCE. | HACHITA, N. M., Jan, 14.—Forty heavily armed men are in a small | mob on horseback, chasing dcwn a | tribe of Apache Indians in the Sierra Madre mountains. The Indians are | zecused by the mobsters with hav-| ing kidnapped a cowboy named Phil- | lips. Residents here scout the idea, und say that the Indians are merely the victims of romantic delusions of recent settlers, who want to be “Injun fighters” such as they read about in cheap novels when young. then let us ine, for the “If we nre to perii perish for our own mission representative of the three “ | Trades day, Saturday and Sunday than ‘in| officers so as to immediately organ- ize the union machinery for the ygle ahead.” Following the appeal for support sent out to the general labor move- ment, which was reprinted in the Daily Worker recently, the Needle Workers Industrial Union, | yesterday issued its call to the mass jot workers in the cloak, dress and ifur manufacturing industries. The call, after reviewing briefly the events leading up to the forma- tien of the new amalgamated union, tells the workers that only thru militent dards in the needle trades, They then call on them to become active in support of the dressmakers strike which will be the first of the big} struggles planned and to join the Continued on Page Two KNOWS HIs TAMMANY Maurice Connolly, former borough president of Queens, under convic- tion on fraud conspiracy charges in connection with the construction of Queens County sewers, returned home from Europe yesterday. “T’m absolutely confident,” said. he ALBANY, Jan. 14 (U.P.).—Lake Placid would be placed among the struggle can they ever) hope to regain and win union stan- | Chicago, the second largest city of the U. S., has been using 8,500 cubic feet of water per second from Lake Michigan to flush its sewers | and keep its harbor open. No mod- ern adequate sewage disposal plant has ever been built by Chicago’s| gangster and graft-ridden city gov- ernment. The wealthy burghers live along the Lake Shore drive and in before the trial date comes | around he will be ready to present| U.S. Strengthening Its | more framed up evidence. | . In the meantime the other two agar me - ig oo w iio: complivesusnihaen or Imperialist ar|t i inal conviction are already | locked in prison, where they began | BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Jan. 14 (U.P).—Navy tests of the rebuilt re: a half to five years. No new trial | sassins and aiding them and the po- lice to cover their trail and escape from the punishment demanded by the Mexican magses. The police chiefs called at the Cuban embassy and told the ambas- sador, Fernandez Mascaro, that the Mexican police were at his disposal and his orders. The ambassador erving their sentences of two and| cue and salvage submarine defend was granted Leo Franklin and M. suburbs lying to the north of the|were begun here today. The final| Malkin, the two serving time. city, and have their own plants. The} jsouth Chicago and west Chicago | working class districts lie in a low |plain, what was formerly swamps, | and to avoid plague, the city has been running a steady stream of | | water thru these sewers, and thru a drainage canal, | Steel Trust Objects. | But this had the bad effect of} lowering the level of Lake Michi-| gan and Superior, and interfering | Continued on Page Five | Chile Gets Money From Guggenheim for Planes to Guard His Interests | SANTIAGO, Chile, Jan. 14 (UP). —Daniel Guggenheim of New York, has given the Chilean government {$380,000 for development of civil aviation in Chile, it was announced | test—an unofficial one—was to be The seven to face the new trial a 30-foot dive in Long Island sound|are: Jack Schneider, Geo. Weiss, with the salvage vessel Mallard Otto Lenhart, Martin Rosenberg, standing by. Sam Mencher, Oscar Mileaf and Joe If the Defender makes its sub- Katz, mergence satisfactorily, it will be) At the offices of the Needle Trades towed to Great Salt Pond, Block Workers’ Industrial Union and at} Island, R. I., for official and much | International Labor Defense offices, more rigid trial lappeals are being sent out wide- |spread calling on the workers to BAR NEW JERSEY INSURANCE. "ally to the support of the Mineola | prisoners. WASHINGTON, Jan. 14.—The| terday’s prelimi - Supreme Court today upheld the| ings Ailes Soe Atak pend validity of that section of the New| each to $3,500 each, the court refus- York insurance law requiring for- ing to grant the Sotiot to quash eign corporations doing business in| made by Geo. Z. Medalie attorney | the state to conform to the state for the defense. i law restricting investment of insur- | PRENSA 8 ance companies in the stocks of other insurance companies. This is| : a blow at New Jersey companies | trying to do business in New York.| BLASTS IN BIRMINGHAM. | ON E AST SIDE BIRMINGHAM, England (By | gave out a hypocritical message from the Cuban government at Havana “deploring” Mella’s death. stairs,” said an old attendant, who guarded the gateway to bliss at a nickel a throw. Place looks like a store. Sells cigarettes, tobacco, sandwiches. The nickel business is to get you in. Dare you to get more than a nickel\s : worth for that five cents, ss Too late to see if the employment sharks are shipping. Here’s the Bowery Mission, 227 Bowery. Prayer is being offered up. Big fat guy, looks well-fed, even over-fed. Talks to God, one of the 57 varieties. Asks him to rer ember these men “who want to be good men.” About 300 there. Poorly clad, came in to get warm. Get jazzed up on Jesus. “He saves.” They can't. “Have passed thru trou- blous paths,” moans the fat divine. “Lead them away from sin and dis- cord.” Sure, make ’em humble front of the Julius Kayser and Co.|mellaf again today. “In fighti ease, at the, weemene,, £65) the) Oe7. 7; A hosiery factory located at DeKalb | with government padi two soldiers SE eye eee eee Veen eae See seeking the 1932 winter |here today. The gift aroused favor-|Mail)—Two alarming underground | slaves, Keep ‘em away from un- Ave. and Taffe St., Brooklyn. The|are reported to have been killed Olympic games under a bill which distributors were headed by Albert Weisbord, secretary-treasurer of the union, . & company detective attempted to drive the distributors away, but they ignored him ‘and gave’a’ copy of the union paper to every worker that left the factory. The distribution is part of the National Textile Work- ers’ Union campaign to organize the workers which consists to a large degree of young girls. al ing imperialism, Among the so- and the ammunition taken from the retreating forces, Recently a force of French of- ficers travelling in armored cars were attacked by insurgent tribes in the same vicinity. Pittsburgh Will Hear Gitlow at Lenin Meet PITTSBURGH, Jan. 14.—Ben Git- low, member of the Secretariat of Assemblyman Fred Porter of Essex County is prepared to introduce in the assembly tonight. memorial _meet- Madison Square The Daily Worker herewith con- |tinues publication of the denuncia-|tinual menace of death at the hands the revolutionary workers. Armand able comment throughout the capi- tal and the president cabled a mes- sage of thanks to the American in| behalf of the government. CUBAN EMIGRES DENOUNCE MURDER OF MELLA Latin-American Working Class Poorer by Loss of Outstanding Militant Leader whose members live under a con-jrevolutionary, have also been the|Machado’s Promise to Wall Street. |victims of Machado’s assassins. | ferings imposed upon thefn and explosions occurred in Birmingham, in the congested districts, causing a small panic. Fault in electrie cable | was the cause. Zero, Jesus, Jobs and U.S. Imperialism Cold yesterday? Not the weather, |but you. Did you ever try bumming around the streets in zero weather looking for a job, with no more than |a few dimes between you and starva- tion and no more than a pair of blue overalls and a thin sack-coat between jyou and the biting’ wind? Try it sometime and see how it goes with the “submerged tenth” down below In this way Machado fulfils his Speaking about zero weather, we employed riots. Many grey-haired men there. Too old for the conveyor system. In the discard. But lots of young ones, too. The sky-pilot reads ‘3 Epictle to the Galatians.” What's that to do with unemployed men? Paul tells ’em. “Those who preach another gospel than my gospel ar: accursed.” < Next door the Salvation Army. More hundreds of rough wor 5 without work, keeping warm, In front a sign “U. S. Army Office. Earn, Learn and hg “The principal tion of the murder of Julio Mella, |of Machado’s fascist assassi ‘ i i ithe white light district where it costs | Come i y Imperialint at the Workers: (Communist) Party,| eng ascist assassins, The deportation of fareign-born promise made to Wall Street on the | ‘ome into my parlor said the spider will be the main speaker at the Saree rereleranle py Sica a Merely liberal oppositionists meet | workers who voiced some sort of pro- occasion of a banquet given him by ee Rave Ree EY ene biog fly. “Earn” your dollar a day t Pittsburgh Lenin Memorial meeting eae vay itupecialil the same deadly knife or gun as do |test, however mild, against the suf-|New York bankers in 1925: “| * Zeros Tub. ing bawled out by a and war without overthrow- {on Sunday evening, Jan. 20, at 8|“™ercan imperialism. 1! promise that no strike in Cuba will A < getting shot at by other ike you for bankers you never heard of. cial democrats, thére are two ten- |P- ™m. at the Labor Lyceum, 35 Mil- Ae ew nage § Andre, liberal and head of the army|their Cuban comrades, has reached !#8t more than 48 hours.” es dered di to the four-flush- oy f dina ler St. Murders All Who Oppose. of liberation that fought against |up into thousands, Mass murders, | In the cells of the military prison re Sine WZere’s. Tub” Mae Bt dduntovbled y ye ‘Sean colale q teades! ‘of bourgeois pacitiam.” | The meeting has been arranged] Political parties of a nature that Spain and editor of the liberal daily |such as the massacre of the railroad of “La Cabana,” sinister legacy of | Marks Flace, where a sign offered | the comi ie “Travel” to ; dl From thenes of, Sixth, Congtena of by District 5 of the Pittsburgh|oppose this murderous regime of |“El Dia”; B. Sagaro, former liberal |and sugar central strikers in 1926, the Spanish domination, still are im-| “Dine, 5 cents.” That’s a “pay as|in forty "pieces. Wines SINT shell Comoriat meeting, January 10, te | Workers (Communist) Party. A|Machado do not exist in Cuba, ex-|representative in the Cuban parlia-|have been witnessed by the terror- Prisoned many militant workers. vox enter” joint. Wouldn't Jet us interrupts you FP jo your musical program will be offered, cept those which exist in secret and iment; Maso, veteran nationalist jized people, ts Y Continued on Poge Two jin to sit around, “Do that down- on. bit for U. S. imperialism,