The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 9, 1929, Page 2

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Peze Two ILLEGALLY OUST GIRL. ORGANIZER IN WILKES-BARRE Police Deport Unionist to Washington (Spee ly Worker) Pa r Wast ial to the Da mn ing that her of her activit After worker night, in police court, ¥ nd with- out the k the knowle eu was e police authori- An urgent call for immediate aid r Pa W bakes to “Der Arbeiter,” German Com- DAILY WORKKER, EW YORK, ''UESDAY, APRIL 9, 1929 Invent New Flying Engine of Destruction for Wall Street 4 A finished sh two. pair diri-plane.” The 4 feet long, 96 feet wide, with a metal bag holding 450,000 cubic feet of gas, , five motors and a maximum speed of 180 miles per hour. It will ci 30 pas- s of freight (ammunition), and a crew of five. The inventor claims it will ascend power. s own y under Communist Party of U.S.A. ORDER SINCLAR Asks Aid ‘or “Der Arbeiter” SERVE 3 MONTHS munis the f publication, is contained in Rockefeller’s Foe Supreme Court Defeats OHIO MINERS TO WACE NEW FIGHT ON COSSACKS w Union Convention Ends District Meet NVALE, DIL The fi Ohio Ohio, April 8.— annual convention of the Miners District, National cently concluded he’ a attended mass me Co-operative Hall. The convention was constitu official delegates :nions cf the ional Miners Union, | by delegates from organization eroups in mines where National Miners Union locals are now in the process of organization and commit- tees from unorganized mines, The convention was presided o Robert Matusek, district pr The report of Andy Plechaty, se r, showed that the Ohio distriet was in an excellent condi- local d recently, and that the re- inl results. He reported the s of the anti-wage cut cam- » Which was followed by sev- trikes under National Miners nion leadership. u Unemployment. “No One Knows” Well-Known Gambler cky Arnstein (at extreme left), gambler and swindler, has achieved so much power in the capitalist police departments, that he may be released because no one wants to identify him. probably mean death at the hands of a gangster. “GOOLIDGE AND FULLER MAY RUN FOR U.S, SENATE Sacco Murderer Wants Rival to Be Judge BOSTON, April 8.—Possibility that former President Coolidge, who broke the Boston police strike, and |former Governor Alvan T. Fuller, !who gained world-wide infamy in Sacco-Vanzetti case, would be als for the United States Senate | }from Massachusetts in 1930 was |seen today. After a trip in the South Fuller said he was paying the greatest at- tention to the senatorship. It would He was inclined to doubt that Mr. Coolidge might attempt to obtain PORTAGE, Pa., April 8.—De- charge all who attended the mass ’ Central Pennsylvania [Rail Bosses to Keep Mine Bosses Fail to Up the International Stop Miners Meeting Cartel the post, as a Boston newspaper re- cently reported he would do. “T don’t take that seriously,” he " said, regarding the question of Till Mar. 1935 | cootidge’s trying for the senate, “I ldo not believe that Mr. Coolidge LONDON, (By Mail).—The inter-| would be attracted to any public inaugurated drive to build the spite interference from the mine| ational Rails Cartel will be pro-/ position, elective or appointive, un- jon in Ohio had already achieved posses, who went from house to| longed until March 31, 1935, and the | house and from miner to miner, @gteement of the | while at work, threatening to dis-| Signed in London on April 14. s it might be to succeed Justice will be | Oli Wendell Holmes on the | United States Supreme Court bench, | The demands for an increase of in the event that Justice Holmes re- cartel meeting of the National Miners’|the English quota were withdrawn, tires, He might care to accept that, | Union, the meeting was held with! &nd the quotas for the rail bosses of and I believe that President Hoover ltwo hundred miners and wives in| ther countries remain unchanged | would be very glad to give it to him. put ona tr lowing statement issued by The reports of the delegates to| attend Speakers were Thos,| so. English manufacturers are|I think it would be a good appoint- ‘ eneton i L 6 ROWS the Central Committee of the Com-| - : His cagnoanish sc aaeed tothe ken Pic te Mery-treasurer of the|#iven the right of sole deliveries to | ment—splendid.” of munist Party of the U. S. A.: WASHINGTON, April 8.—The _— ' og “eh the English colonies, except man- Anything is good for Coolidge that keeps him out of Fuller’s path, was the opinion expressed by Fuller | supporters here. | vere unemployment which is general | Central Pennsylvania District of the} s ae throughout the Ohio mining field. | National Miners’ Union; Louis Saas, dated areas. The reports stated that scores of | Hungarian organizer, and Pat Too- Saat mines are closed down, while others | hey, national secretary-treasurer. '1,000 Men Displaced {are working only a few days aweek| The speakers condemned the! A () wade ah ee a month, The conditions of the|“Union Mi ; -|by Vending Machiner or a mon e conditions of the|“Union Miners’ Ass'n.” as a com-| DY g Y Seven States Produced | | LONDON (By Mail).—Over 1,500 The German Language Fraction,|U. S. Supreme Court, a thoroughly in its struggle to again come to the/ republican party organization, made forefront, true to the well-known) up of men appointed by administra- revolutionary traditions of the Ges) aiens very friendly to the Rocke- man workers, has succeeded with! fellers and their plans for world- the help of a class-conscious group| Wide monopoly, today affirmed the in founding its new Communist| sentence of three months in jail for ' - Hold Concert, Dance on lice have been used to patrol the April 20th street ne: mill on motore: and on ho Unwarranted CLEVELAND, (By Mail)—A con- cert arranged by the Young Work- miners are going from bad to worse. pany union movement, sponsored by |The employers are cutting wages, | the coal operators and agents of the rests have been made and strik ief i : \60.1 Per Cent of All the | ce on horseback sev- : expression in the form of a bi-| Rockefeller’s chief rival, Harry F, A ‘ hac eet | : ‘ ‘ A : : | from the mill, ers Communist League, District 6, Geekiy paper known as ey Ar-/ Sinclair, of Teapot Dome fame. A ee ee eee party, _and se ene b sites have been secured in England | Manufactures in U. Ss. r member of| will be held Saturday, April 20th, 8 beiter,” written for and by German| Sinclair, by filing a petition for sorever possible sae i trap tl . miners into the paws of/for the installation of automatic Young (Communist) |p. m,, at Association Hall, 2105 E./workers. This is a step of great/a rehearing, might postpone issue "7 OO HA on Cr ere jmachines for vending supplies. Over}! WASHINGTON, (By Mail). — League, was also | together 2ist St., for the benefit of the importance and vital necessity not) ance of a mandate for carrying out) 1) onvention ; eg Bae oe . ‘ |1,000 workers have been laid off as|Seven states have 60.1 per cent of with Helen. He later fined $5/ young Workes Summer Training | Only for the German-speaking work-| the sentence for a week or two be-| testing. aes: 4a gee: ying the |Explain Aim of TUEL- anes | the total production of manufac- by Magist r, for), Jers, but for the Communist Party| yond the 25 days period starting |°'#anization drive and the penetra- | Wig |tures in the United States, accord- Sind 3! ool! Wille eondudbed by | eo a Ee plalne taeeae the pe [Negro Labor Congress Argue Dwelling Bill Today. _| ing to the department of commerce. The school will be conducted by m1 ‘ a re a Pa | eae | as ven- | : iN a ‘: 5 % i the League of Distriet 6 during| The object of “Der Arbeiter” is] On the other hand the govern- /tion was the arrival of a delegation |Meet at Noon Today) petegations of real estate men, New York leads with 15 per cent; the months of July and August. This is the third year of the Summer training school in this district. The previous schools have proven suc- cessful from every standpoint. Many GOVERNOR LONG again to rally the German masses for active participation in the class struggle and to set up a barrier against all German capitalist and counter-revolutionary papers, es- |ment might ask the Supreme Court| to have the mandate sent down | “forthwith,” which would require |the sentence to start at once. ] { Sinclair will serve the sentence in from Sub-district 4 of District 6, which iies in the Lisbon, New Am- sterdam, region of Ohio, and in a section where the National Miners Union had as yet not reached. pecially the New York “Volkszei-| the “Washington Asylum and Jail”| TRIED THURSDAY Impeached on 1 Count, Others Coming Up BATON The Louisi vas to try Gov- | P. Long on at least one impeachment count voted Saturday | ly 58 tc 40 in the house of repre-| e governor’s enemies im impeached on 18 | before long, a list | ttempt to-hire an | rder representative and disorderly at a Starts Thursday. nate will meet in judgment or Long Thursday at. noon. The single count charges the ex-| ecutive attempted to block editorial opposition to his proposed occupa- tional oil tax measure by threaten- ing Charl ’. Manship, Baton Rovge editor, with publication of the fact that Manship’s brother, a world war veteran, is confined at the State Hospital, if the editor did not stop his oy ition to the pro- posed tax bill. When this count was voted, repre- sentatives friendly to the governor compared m to “Jesus Christ nailed to the cross,” but the general impression throughout the state is that Long’s supporters are desert-| ing him. | Contractor, Agency Shark in Cahoots to Cheat Jobless | participate in the concert on April | workers. | 20th given for this year’s |T. Adams; Athletic stunts comrades who attended the school are now taking leading part in the/ activity of the League. The school} has served the purpose of training young workers to take part in the many tasks of the League. tung.” named in the sentence handed down Lore’s “Volkszeitung.” originally by <ustice William Hitz| It is well known to the readers|in District of Columbia Supreme of the Party press that upon the) Court two years ago. expulsion of the obnoxious oppor-| This was the only jail sentence = a : jg {unist, Lore, from the Party, who/ imposed as a direct result of the! cape dah bahab Se atge with his small group of followers | famous oil scandals of 1923-24, Sin-| The jceameten sean of young control the Volkszeitung Publishing) clair and some associates also have workers in industry--the worsening ASS0Ciation, Lore took this paper been sentenced for jury-shadowing, | of their conditions, necessitates the| “ith him. By the device of posing and their appeal is now pending be-| orientation of the League toward/®S @ Communist, he at once started! fore the Supreme Court. The sen-| the basic industries. The school will|? C@™Paign of lies and slander | ate contempt indictment was the spend much time in preparing the ey ae ee and the Commun-’ first of nearly a dozen voted by Dis- League members for this task, giv-}" % ing detailed instruction on how 6 We gathered our forces and, un-) Sinclair on sflarch 22, 1924, re- work in the shops. The fight against |4er the leadership of the Party, fused to answer any questions of the| the war danger will be made a vital/ With a small-functioning Bureau, cummittee, .and he was indicted a| part of the program. jthe Fraction began to organize|fcw days later « ten counts, each| The six weeks of the school will|uClei in every German workers or-| specifying a question, and was con- be an intensive study course of tha | Eatisstion-— rade ne, fn ee victed on four. lass struggle, and how young work-|@nd social—and opposed the poison-| pea er arora | se must maicnate in A one strug- {ous slanders of the Lore press. With | Two Bi Mass M ets gles of the working class. In the/¢w members gained for the frac-| Fe e past years the workers’ organiza-|tion and a group of sympathizers | in West Virginia Rally. tions of the district have given ex-|Steadily increasing, the new revolu-| | eet cellent co-operation to the financial| tionary organ in the German lan-/Miners for New Union MORGANTOWN, W. Va., April| success of the school. With their S¥age was launched first as a 8.—The National Miners’ Union help we were able to get thru the| monthly and is now a bi-weekly. “Der Arbeiter” carries the mes-| launched its organization drive in’ full course of the school giving free! Exposes Renegade. Several Workers’ choruses will | sage of Communism to the German| notorious West Virginia a few days | trict of Columbia Grand Juries. | board to every student. | In its columns the rene-| ago with the holding of two large} school. gade tactics of Lore were exposed! mass meetings. The first was in Among them are: Ukranian Singing | and as a result of this Lore was| Star City and was attended by two Society, German Singing Society,|compelled to withdraw his fraction|hundred miners. The second was | Freiheit Gasangsferein. Other num-| of delegates from the New Yorker | held in the city of Rivesville and bers on the program are: Mrs,| Volkszeitung’s conference. The con-|more than 500 miners attended. Inez Dempsey, Cleveland colored ference as such was dissolved, while! Speakers at both meetings were E.| singer, student of Professor Murray |We set to work to reorganize the bulk; P. Cush, secretary of the Pennsyl- by the|of the remaining delegates into a) vania Labor Party; Chas, S. Close, | Pioneers; A one-act play by the| conference for “Der Arbeiter.” Lore,|N. M. U. Executive Board member | Drama Club of Branch one of the| who through this act was compelled | of West Virginia; Louis Sass, N. M.| League; and speakers. j to drop his mask of Communism, not|U. Hungarian organizer. Many | The admission is 50c. Tickets can|only lost his last connection with| miners joined the National Miners’ be obtained at 2046 E. 4th St. the class-conscious elements, but! Union at both meetings. |now stands exposed before the Get-| ‘The miners of West Virginia, be- MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., (By Mail). —Laborers had to pay the Universal man workers as the renegade he is, the enemy of the Soviet Republic, WIR Asks Unemployed to Report at Office Lite aes and henchman of the | bourgeoisie. Unemployed are asked to report} Now in Second Year. at the local office of the Workers) The fraction with its new weapon, International Relief, Room 221, 799| now in its second year, is marching Broadway today, to help arrange the | ey But to hold our gains and to e1 EMBED NPT EE must make “Der Arbeiter” a weekly Feland Says Sandino Disappeared. eee shuns Barty by ntrengelaning Arriving here yesterday on hie | the “Arbeiter” to bring the German way to Washington, General Feland, | + 4675 closer to the Party, . The peommnarider of the’ caecbonsiotes Nie-| tradition of Liebknecht and Luxem- jaragua, said that “no one ever hears/burg is with the Communist Party lof Sandino anymore. I think he is | of Lenin. Bring the German speak- alive however, and he may reappear | ing workers to the one and only later. | revolutionary party of our class, The Central Committee endorses the sending of contributions to the | “Arbeiter,” 28 Union Square, Room | 608, New York City. Buy one or more “Arbeiter” certificates at the price of $5 or $10. Help to make the “Arbeiter” an effective instru- ment to rally the German workers behind the banner of Marxian Com- munism, as raised by Lenin. CENTRAL COMMITTEE, Communist Party of the U.,! Employment Agency here a $3 fee for a 30 cent an hour job at the} Northweste National Bank con- | struction job. Then they worked from a half to 8 days and were fired by the con- é °} tractor, who is said to be in Peheots | APPl 12, 18, 14 mine relief tag days. with the agency, so that the agency | could get another fee for the same | job. In bourgeois society, living labor is but a means to increase neeumu- Jated labor. In Communist societ reeumulated Iabor ix but a mean to widen, to enrich, to promote the existen: of the laborer.—Kari Merx (Communist Manifesto). Magistrate to Fi Another ight Strikers si ‘3 More Hurt-in Airplane Frenzy A pilot and two passengers were injured when @ small sightseeing | airplane developed engine trouble this afternoon and crashed from a height of 50 feet to the Homes Air- port, Jackson Heights Walter J, Prior, 29, the pilot, re- ceived lacerations of the face and ss Beeet are 1 y Mayor Walker and Joseph McKec, president of the board of alder- ven of New York businessmen, swearing ina new magistrate, Edward Waish, who will take the place of the late Glatzmeyer. Walsh will it as loyal a strikebreaker as his Tammany colleagues. j contusions of the head and a pos- sible skull fracture. His son, Daniel, Jr., 14, was only slightly hurt, strengthen our ranks, we} j head. Daniel McCarthy, 45, suffered | | trayed after a long struggle by the | notorious Lewis machine, are not de-| | pressed but are swinging into the, | National Miners’ Union. The West Virginia National Miners’ Union is| lat present busy arranging for a | series of demonstrations in the open) |shop towns of this region. | The coal companies are cutting | Wages thruout the state. Conditions | are becoming worse and worse. Con- ditions secured by the’ miners after | |many generations of struggle are | being taken away from them. The | miners will realize that it is only the National Miners’ Union which will fight their battles. /Reparations Terms | Inacceptable Say German Papers BERLIN, April press adopted a rebellious attitude | towcrds the Paris Conference of Reparations experts today, assert- ing that figures reported demanded ‘by the Allied delegates as’ annuity payments by German were “inac- | ceptable.” line’ which said: mands of the Allied shylocks.” Tageblatt, referring to the “in- | acceptable figures,” said the diffi- culties of the conference had in- creased enormously and asserted | that the negotiations were “not far- ther advanced than when the ex- perts started eight weks ago.” | forged the weapons | denth to tteelfs Into ext 8.—The Berlin | One newspaper carried a head-| “Unbearable de-| ion, of establishing the district, | | of waging strikes against wage cuts, | of strengthening existing local | unions and the establishment of new locals, of intensifying ‘he drive to extend the ufion, were among the | matters discussed and acted upon in cetail at the convention. The regulation of the union’s financial system, of work among the | young miners and the spreading and | | supporting of the “Coal Digger,” of- | ficial organ of the Union, also re- | ecived consideration by the conven- tion. The convention ratified the work of the district officials and re- elected to office unanimcusly the| present staff cf officers, until such time as the referendum election would he held. Fight Cossack Bill. The meeting was sponsored by Local Union 6, National Miners Union. of Dillonvale. Speakers were | Pat Toohey, Robert Sivert, board member from Lansing, and Robert Matusek. Music was furnished by Blahovic’s Band, | The employers of the state of | Ohio realize that the miners of Ohio will sooner or later wage a militant | struggle for a union and union | standards. The employers’ lobby | has succeeded in pushing through | the state senate and house the in- | famous Clark bill, calling for the establishment of the notorious Cos- sack state police in Ohio. The bill is at present waiting for the signa- ture of Governor Cooper and then becomes a law. The National Min- | ers Union is concentrating fire on | this Corsack measure and mobil- | izing the forces of the miners in| opposition to it. UPHOLD PRICE FIXING WASHINGTON, April 8 (UP).— | President Wilson’s war time prices | of $2 and $2.45 a ton for soft coal, | decreed under ihe Lever act, were | upheld by the United States Su- preme Court today in a suit ap- pealed from Clearfield, Pa. 35 Easr 1257H Street. A mass meeting aiming to mo- bilize sentiment for the coming Metropolitan Conference of Trade Union Educational League will be held at Pier 14, East River, at noon today, under the auspices {of the two organizations. Speakers will be Richard B. Moore, American Negro Labor Con- gress; Otto Hall, Trade Union Edu- cational League; Harold Williams, Communist Party; George Mink, Marine Workers _ Progressive League, and Harriet Silverman, of the |the multiple dwellings bill passed by | |American Negro Labor Congress |the The question of building the | and the Negro department of the| place of the tenement law of 1901.| |The Bill relieves the situation in no | way. the New York local of the Work- | ers’ International Relief. 7-CENT FARE DECISION The United States the court convenes today. Antici- pating victory for the company, the I. R. T. shares are going up, NOT AT ALL HEAVY . li wibne Rc) ‘ ‘The grocery clerks promise the biggest booth with at least $3000 worth of merchandise for the ‘BUILD THE UNION’ BAZAAR Everything will have to be sol for any price that it will brin STAR CASINO April 18, 19, 20 & 21 PARIS on tHe BARRICADES by GEORGE SPIRO Is Now In Its Second Edition! This has enabled us to reduce the price to 24444 25 cents a24444 and offers a splendid opportunity to widen the sale of this most timely and brilliant example of revolutionary fiction WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS New York Crry, Supreme | Court's decision in the I. R. T. 7-cent | fare case may be handed down when | i} (of 5th Ave.) | i | Pennsylvania is second on the list, and Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, New Jersey and Massachusetts follow in the order mentioned. |with their architects and welfare workers, will appear to argue against state legislature to take the} We have seen above that the first step in the revolution by the work- ing class is to roise the proletarint to the poxition of ruling class. to win the battle of democracy—Karl Max (Communist Manifesto) 2nd BIG WEEK Another SOVKINO Masterfilm! “An authentic historical epoch of Czarist Russia, simple, genuine acting, moving mass scenes and belillant direction. |.’ picture, is powerfully realistic, rare examples of splendid photograph of the Volga regions. . .” rigid Ss DER GARLIN, Daily Worker, | «FLAMES onp | «THE VOLGA) DIRECTED BY JURI TARITSCH who produced “CZAR IVAN THE TERRIBLE” | A powerful realistic drama depicting the Re- | volt of the Volga Peasants against the Oppres- sions of the Czaristic Regime under Catherine | the Great. .... Enacted by a Cast of 5000 Fame, (i gxildcinoms 52 W. 8th St, (Just West) AN AMKINO RELE. A SPRING 5095 » 5090 opt. Dally, incl. Sat. & Sun., Noon to Midnite Special Daily: 12 to 2—35e momoee The Textile Strikers of Gastonia, N. C., Are Being Evicted from the Company Owned Houses! They Are Facing the Bullets of the Mill Barons National Guard! Thousands of Workers, Their Wives and Children Are In Need! They Are Appealing for Aid! We Must Not Fail Them — ° emcee oe: Rally to their support! Donate a day’s wages! Take upa Collection in your shop! Sell stamps to your shopmates, i Volunteer to participate in the Tag Days, April 12, 13 and 14. Report at the office of Local New York, Workers International Relief, Room 221, 799 Broadway, and se- cure collection box and stamps. Open until 10 p. m. every day this week. MAY DAY BUTTONS This year will carry the slogans: —“Organize the Unorganized!” —‘Defend the Soviet Union!” —“Fight Imperialist War” AMPLE SUPPLIES OF THESE BUTTONS SHOULD BE OR- DERED FROM THE DISTRIC?' OFFICES OF THE PARTY! PLACE YOUR ORDERS NOW! | PRICES: 10c each to individuals Tc each to Units on orders up to 100 buttons 6c each to Units on orders over 100 buttons COMMUNIST PARTY OF U. S. A.—NATIONAL OFFICE.

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