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DAY. APRIL 22, 1928 al Page Two 1D) Le Wi ORKER, } NE NORE, MON [MOBILIZE FOR MAY DAY Comintern Appeals tor Aid to Viobilization Manitesio’ for International Ma: Da, +1929 | Packinghouse Workers Join (Continued from Pi ig C The :American: capitalist employers; fleep jn the imperialist ‘strug: gle for world “domination, are attacking*the working class to enforce a still more brutal and unbearable exploitatiom:through capitalist “‘ra- tionalization,” the: speed-up system, tht ruthtess: wearing -out -of -the lives of Workers in the shortest possible jperiod,:theysubjection of women and children to health-d ying labor at starvation awwages; the throw- ing of hundreds of thousa: of workers onto:t tréefs to swell the army of: the: permanently, employeds.« \Tod mericanh.. capitalism ‘rst, time iA histori: the phendmenon,-of s engaged in set) w ibits to the world for the e an absolute dee! while prod ein'ithe. number of work is enormously increased. os Pérmanent Jobless" Aritty-4 Grows, May Day, 1929, Sees’ the’ growth ‘df’ the petnianent: army of! uriem-. ployed cast up by speeded iechanization’ processes. that! disgorge: an increased production with a diminishing’ ‘useof Iabor power. Unem- ployment is today not merely an accompanimerit+of the: periodic: crisis. More than ever this year the jobless*army~hes ‘become -a.permanent | disease ‘of the latest phase of the capitalist era.2°The demand -for-un- employment ‘relief;* therefore, comes 4tigh onthevorder of theday; along “Witlt dthé® forms’ of social “insurance, with insistence’ that industry carfy*the’ barden “of payment.: *So¢ial \insarance against old age, sickhess,“acéident ahd the many’ ovéiipational diseases, link them~- selves irretrfevably with the’ demand Seite increased: wages arid the short- er work-day. May Day, tries, in’ various sections ‘of ‘the nation, "engaged in desperate “strike struggles: The most médérh technic ii“fhe textile intustry;owith In- famous rationalization schemes, the “strétth-out’” and: other “efficiency” 1929, secs tehis of thousands eeworkens in’many indus: | systems, imposed in the so-called “backward”South on workers newly | drawn from simple agriculture in the hills and mountains, has brought on a wave of struggle which these workers:call the “‘new-Civil- War.” New dnd’ militant legions ‘are’ added “to lebor’s:-ranks: in: the -ever- sharpening Glass ivar*that develops numerous*industrial batties,-many of them spontaneous and sometimes short-lived,-in-the mining; auto- mobile; food, shoe, clothing and other industries, even including various sections of the aristocratic building trades. tae view World Radicalization’ ‘Grows. Throughout the world a generals, radicalization, of, the. working class is being-generated. -The past year has.~witnessed,the courageous resistance-of.the- workers everywhere. The giant. struggle of the tex- tile workers at Lodz, Poland, of the coal, miners and. the metal workers in the Ruhr, in Germany; the movement, of. the. unemployed in Great Britain; the increasing resistance of textile, metal and railroad workers, with the peasantry, to British rule in India, rising. to barricade fight- ing in some localities; the-ceaseless struggles of China’s revolutionary workers against the worst. imperialist oppression,,the valiant onslaughts of Japanese labor against the tyranny of the capitalists, are all con- erete proofs of the growing radicalization of. the workers everywhere and the maturing of world imperialism’s-contradictions in the third period Since the great war. Standing before the whole world today, as a challenge to the capi- talist system. and the inspiration to/theworkipg, cléss of the e world and the guiding light for all oppressed peoples struggling against imperialism—is the Union of Socialist. Soviet, Republics. The Soviet Union is the fortress of the working clats-of the world—the Socialist Fatherland of all of our class of whatever land—the guarantee of the final triumph of the proletarian world revolution. While the contra- dictions of world ifuperialism drive the. tapitalist.states ‘toward more | and mére feverish war-like efforts tosave: thenis@lves aud their system | of slavery from the historic forces which will destroy them, the build- ing up of socialism proceeds in the Soviet Union, pointing the way by which alone civilization can survive. The spirit of International May ..Day, 4929,, is the spirit of world proletarian struggle against the war danger that threatens the Union of Socialist Soviet Republi¢s; the fortress ‘pt! thé world ‘revolution, the Socialist fatherland of. world labor.- The ;Soyiet Power, quickening its tempo of industrialization, puts the seven-hour-day into effect and sets an example to encourage labor the world over.’ The approach’ of May’ Day sees ‘Hoover ‘in: ‘Washington, and Churchill, in London, urging congress and parliament to quicken and increase the tempo of war pobre te # »Fmperialism rejects, with characteristic viciousnes$ titid’ cynicism; the proposals for peace and com- plete disarmament by which the-Union, pf Socialist Soviet Republics has forced them to expose the fact that capitalism cannot bring peace, but only bigger: imperialist wars. ‘Imperialism, grives, with lightning ., speed toward a new world slaughter. * The Reformist Allies of Great ‘Business, In its war-preparations, in its struggle to smash.the.trade unions, to prevent the organization of the unorganized and to halt the develop- ment pf the independent class power of the workers, great business has staunch allies inthe American Federation! of Labor, ‘the socialist party and the latest brand of poisonous reformism Minott the label of “The Musté Group.” The A. F,.of L. openly Gueaes the Smnilitargst _PYogram! of the Hoover republican government at Washington, while the socialist party urgestit to join the League of Nai pitalist Inter-. national. » The A. F. of L. openly champions class Pretcbereten and urges: “industrial peace” with the capitalists, which means industrial surrender for the workers, while the “socialists” strike the class struggle principle from their party membership pledge. Both the A. F. of L. and the socialist party link their efforts with those of the employers and capitalist state with its police and courts in the hope of smashing. the militant left wing of labor. But in-vain. Historic events since last year’s May Day, the participation on a national scale of the Communist Party in the 1928 presidential elections, the organization of left-wing industrial unions, the development. of campaign for the organization of the unorganized, the calling of the Tradé Union Unity Conference, at Cleveland; for June First, the de- featist campaign-against Wall Streets militany- it gua and China, all indicate that class conscious labor in the United States is at a sharp turning point, facing new and greater- ‘struggles. The formation» of left. wing. in the mining, textile, ‘needle and shoe industri ‘ward: in spite ‘of the capitalist overlords and their class state, in spite of the employers and their agents, the A..F of L. buréaucrats, socialists, oe | followers, the police, underworld gangsters and gunmen. ay Pay sounds the call to struj le against: all th emies, of labor,” ll fa 5 the slogans of “Organi the flshigabidea)” rphd ¥ ‘Build Fighting Organizations of Labor!” for the Cleveland Trade Union Congress.” Revolutionary labor will fight the deSpicable role played by every brand of reformism; it will fightthé “expulsion policies of the bureaucrats against the left wing, it will fight for leadership over every work@ still under. the:,ipfluence of mg egagtion and Se retermust agen! 4 aS nda ot hateten + For, the ‘Unity of,,All Races... Riscosteat May Day i is a unifying Bie not only for the worl and dppressed peoples the world over. The ce ues that it typifies has @ spétial’ meaning for the Am “working “class; constittited as’ it is §f toilérs“drawn from all races and retionalities. More than ever the twelve millions of Negroes in the~Americar-population are being, drawn into the developing and sharpening class struggles of the whole working class, May Day calls for a redoubling of our efforts in the fight for political, racial and social equality for the oppressed Negro race. This First of ‘May we’ demonstrate our solidarity with the oppressed colonial peoples fighting against Yankee-imperialism, in China, Nica- ragua, Haiti, Mexico, Hawaii, the Phillippines, demanding complete liker- ationzfor all the colonies and semi-colonies. May Day the working class everywhere raises its demand for the tation of the class war prisoners, Mooney and Billings, ‘the Centtplia victims, John Porter at Leavenworth, the prisoners of the Passe, the New York needle trades, the mining and other strike strug- gles. > Labor. battles. against all legislation intended by congress to rest! the rights of the foreign-born and it demands the repeal of ell erimil a eynditalist laws. International May Day calls for the mobilization. of-labor. for future struggles, It calls upon workers to empty the workshops everywhere and celebrate this day .as their -holiday;. to joi-im the Jemonstrations planned everywhere over the land. Mobilize for May Day! e Communist Party calls upon all workers, all, the exploited, _ also o “those who are in the ranks of the American Federation of f and the ed By the Socialist Pa oietiey and to such proletarians to the call of May Day. ust remember, ever, social revolu- | | International, May Day Sneetiadge arranged by the Communist Party sympathetic organizations. ‘The | various districts are urged to send in immediately for listing the dates, cities, and speakers of their May Day meetings. otherwise noted, meetings are on } HE following is a_ partial list» of Fraternity Hall. Chaplick, Speakers: kers: -M. Daniels, stration at 6 p. parade to Auditorium. Baliimo: Boston, 8 p. m. New Bedford, Wei Gardner, } Detroit, 7:30 p. m., Dance! Speakers: N. Tallentire, others. Pontiac, 7:30 p. m. / Flint, 7:30 p. m. Saginaw, 7:30 p.m. Speaker: A Grand Rapi :30 p. m. Speak Muskegon, 7:30 p. m. Speaker, Newark, 8 p. m., Progr ‘enter, 93 Mercer St. Jersey City, 8 p.'tt.; Ukrainian Work Home, 160 Mercer: St. New Brunswick, 8 p. m., Workers Home, 11 Plum St. Paterson, 8 p. 1 54-6 Van Houten St. Passaic, 8 p. m Union City, 8 Perth Ambo; Elizabeth, May 5, 8 p. m. Trenton, 8 p. m. p. m., Nepivoda’s Hall, 418 21st St. 8 p. m., Workers Home, 308 Elm St. party Hall, E. 2nd St. . Lawrence, and YWCL speaker. N Me YORK. NewYork. 7:30 p. m., N. Y. Coliseum,, E., 177th, St. River Ave. Yonkers, Yonkers, and Bronx Workers Cooperative, Center. treet meeting. Manor House Sq, OHIO. Cleveland, 7:30 p. m., Public Hall (Ball Room). Buffalo, 8 p. m., Hungarian Frohsin Hall, Ge Rochester, 8 p. m., R. B. I. Auditorium, 172 Jamestown, 8 p. m., Business Third and Fourth Sts. Niagara Falls, Hippodrome Hall, Pine and 19th Sts. Schenectady, 8 p. m., Red Manse Hail, 11 Mohawk Ave. (Scotia, N Syracuse, May 5, 8 p. m., Kosciusco Hall, Tiega-and W~ Fayette Sts. Binghamton, May 5, 8 p. m., Lithuanian Hall, 315 Clinton St. Troy, May 5, 2:30 p. m., Youngs Hall, 18-20 State St. Utica, May 4,8 p. m., W. C. Lyceum. Lackawanna, May 3, 8 p. m. PENNSYLVANIA Pittsburgh, 7:30 p. m., Labor Lyceum, Philadelphia, 8 p. m. Speakers: R. Negro speaker. Chester; 8 p. m. Speakers: Ben Thomas and a YWCL speaker. Allentown, 8 p.m. Speakers, L. P. Lemley and ad YWCL “speaker. Wilkes-Barre, 8 p. m. Scranton, 8 p. m. Minersville, 8 p. m: Easton and Bethlehem, 8 p. m. ao May 5, 2:30 p. m., Scandinavian Hall, 701 5S: & Spring Sts. torn Ave. So. ; Miller St. Minor, H. Benjamin, and a PSE STA 2 EASTON the deceptions of the reformists: and drive out of:their midst the “social- ist” and trade union bureaucratic flunkeys >of imperialism. »Social « revolution will be possible in the United States and throughout the world only when the workers of all countries will join the serried ranks of the international proletariat under the banner and slogans of the Communist International. Long live the First of May—the day of: achidextiee of the mevelinis tionary workers of all country! Down Tools on: May Day? Down with the imperialist war! All to the Defence of the antes of Socialist Soviet Republics! Down with Colonial Oppression! Long live the revolutionary struggle for liberation of the oppressed peoples! Long Live the Chinese Revolution! Long Live-the ‘Indian TeNOr lution! Fight against the speed-up and for the winning of the eight-1 hour day. Long live the 7-hour day and the 6-hour day for young workers. Fight for social insurance against unemployment, sickness, acci- dent and old age for the organization of the unorganized; for militant, fighting unions. Long Live the Cleveland Trade Union Unity Convention, Demonstrate solidarity with the striking miners, textile, food and shoe workers, and against the treacherous socialist party and the capi- talist flunkeys of the A. F. of L. Long Live political, social, and racial equality for the oppressed Negro race! Down with discrimination against the foreign-born, women and youth workers. Long Live the Class War Prisoners! Down with capitalism! Live the alliance of the working class and the poor farmers! Long Live the Communist International! Join the ranks of the Communist Party! Hail the World Revolution! CENTRAL COMMITTEE, COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES. NATIONAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE, row WORKERS (COMMUNIST), LEAGUE. ; Long - Millinery Strikers Teach Thugs Lesson +RERET STE Es ayer eAN “> Hired thugs of Zaritsky, head of the right wing Intergatins)~ ‘nas Union, were taught a lesson when they tttacked @ Yroup viking on a millinery workers us Wh wing local 43 in front of the fat Co. on W. 88th St. Tho armed with knives and other’ re thugs ‘got the woret o| eh ; Except ‘where | -/fluence in town and cpuntry reflec Ply, College Auditerium; Cherry St. betwech | N. ¥.) | “than in Brit Asks Workers to Rally: tact i fightin; powe! its will. to fight, out of its wits: impesial- he exégutioner’s zs and Peasants | axe over the Wo! Parties ‘Their newspaper olished, the leader: Left wing workers’ and: peas- ement are ~jailed./. The nd Peasants Parties’ are ate to the Communist In- ; by their very nature, s parties,.they could not to the Commurist: Intern: But their rapidly rising ‘the, revolut | broad mass Hl the force ary terror inst the toilers of India. Their ‘tzade union leaders, their newspa-| per editors and the participants at the open conferences of workers and | easants are threatened with execu- ith hard labor in the Brit- Justice must be meted ial chamber of tor- ture ‘without n a farce of a sworn jury or the staging of a trial. It is to open up a new chapter in the | bloody oppression of the country ith its 800 million people. To cast a cloak of legality over such jus- \'tice;:the Indian Legislative Assem- this miserable simulacrum of a parliament, this diet of a handful of corrupted plutocrats must, under the lash of the imperialist usurpers, approve the penal laws dictated by | the government, Open Terror Keynote. Never did. British imperialism |réign but by the most brutal terr and most despicable bribery. The crisis which British imperialism is} now undergoing makes it less and|? less ‘pessible for the imperialist tusurpers to pursue a policy of hypo- { critical promi Terror, naked vio- jlence in all its shapes is ‘more and more becoming the keynote of the policy of the colonial usurpers. The | ruth plunder of the country, so rich in ‘its’ natural resources, .con- stitutes the main basis of British | imperialism. The stability of the British do- minion in India decides the sttength jot British imperialist reaction on} thé ‘international arena. The plans ‘fof British imperialism for the com- ing’ world slaughter are set by its aim to hold fast its monopoly in the phinder of India without having to| share out its profits with cther im- perialist robbers. \Subjugated, ex- hausted, losing millions of her sons | through starvation, India must also | provide cannon-fodder for the Brit- \.ish war machine. The intensification of plunder and violence’ inIndia unleashes. revolu- tion in the country. Capitalist ra- \tionalization in India combines the | most perfected, modern methods of economizing machinery and material -with, the, most cruel destruction of ‘human labor power, with the most ruthless, stamping out of the life and health of the toilers. The con- tradiction. grows between the need for the development of the produc- tive forées ‘and the throttling pres- sure of iniperialism. Imperialism and its feudal allies are drawing ever- tighter the noose of unbearable ex- ploitation, deadly serfdom and ig- jnominious slavery around the neck of the peasantry. Starvation with its millio: victims is the accom- plice of imperialism in removing su- perfluous lands in the colonies that imperialism does not need. Workers’ Leadership Grows. With the rise of the reyolutionary wave the leading influence of the proletariat in the fighting anti-im- perialist front is growing, widen- ing and becoming stronger. The proletariat of India is showing to the toilers that it will not stop at any sacrifice in order to lead the peas- antry, the urban poor and all the 1 ‘;exploited in a yictorious war against imperialism. The workers of Bom- \bay and Calcutta, Caragpur and Lilloah, in their heroic self-sacrific- ing strike ctruggles, in their num- erous militant demonstrations, have -|shown that they have learned dur- -ting the heavy defeats of the reyolu- -\tion in 1919-1921, the art of strug- gle and victory. They are now going farther. The great lessons of Shang- hai, Wuhan and Canton have not | been: in vain and the Soviet slogan is ‘already. emblazoned on the ban- -|ners of the Indian proletariat. The agrarian revolution is the pivot of the revolution in India. The Indian peasants are beginning to re- alize that notwithstanding their great sacrifices they have been de- ceived, broken up and kept in \thraldom because they. believed the nationalist bourgeois politicians and leaders. Imperialism wields its bru- '| tal terror over the proletariat in the hope of bleeding it to death before ‘the: peasant reserves will come to ‘Only a combination of pro- | fetarian ‘revolu' and peasant war ' | will destroy imperialism with its feudal and bourgeois allies. In no country in the world more in have the Second In- ternational and’ Amsterdam Interna- | tional so much experience in the op- pression’ of ‘the colonies or suclt crim- which havehitherto existed | ;| demand when it was advanced by \for the ‘nal traditions: MacDonald, while in ‘ice, was quick ‘to strengthen the tt machine of imperialism, * and"'the Labor” cain by” bh Indian Revolutionary Masses to » Strugele for India’s Liberation from Yol:e of Imperialism , Purcell & Co. ranks cf the Indi to behead the . Social reforr at home in i lays in the colo- e of extortion and ism, pacifist nies its robbery. The new onslaught of terror w: pregeded by a shameless and treach- erous capitulation of the bourgeois nationalist organizations before im- perialism. Bourgeois nationalism, under the Issh of the Simon Com- mission whip, recanted the slogan of Indian independence with which it toyed but a little while ago. The government, which mocked at this the bourgeoisie, now runs amuck in a bloody frenzy when the struggle a independence is beginning to be led by the proletariat. The Indian aes employers’ organizations demand the | annihilation of the labor movement. Not only has British imperialism | forced the nationalist-bourgeois op- | position to its knees but it has got} them shamelessly to screen its ter-! roristic offensive. The reformist | trade union bureaucrats, who danced | attendance at one time upon bour- geois nationalism and at another | time upon British imperialism, actu- | ‘ally support the government. Base for Attack on USSR. The threads of imperialist war now ) teing plotted are stretched out to} India, but the great proletarian re- volutions and colonial uprisings also extend thither. The exploitation of | India occupies the foremost place in| the array of colonial profits for) whose sake the British and Amer-| ican bandits are now driving to- wards a universal slaughterhouse. Relying on India as a base, British | imperialism prepares its long- -cher- | ished plan of a “strategical assault” upon the Soviet Union. But here in| Tadia meet the paths of the grow- ing forces of the world revolution, | marching into war against imperial- | ism. The revival of the Indian re- volution give the revolutionary movements of China, Indonesia and | Egypt a new life, will sound a rally- ing call for the whole of mankind in chains. The day draws near when the proletarian revolution in India | will be joined with the colonial up-| rising. | Workers of the world: when you) organize militant support to the In-| dian revolution, you build up, widen and. strengthen your own interna- tional anti-imperialist battle-front. Oppressed peoples: the emancip: tion of India will smash the imperi- alist system of colonial violence and loot. Workers of England: hew down British reaction at its roots, organ- ize working class aid to the Indian} revolution. Tear away mercilessly the masks from the faces of the re-| formist flunkeys. Expose and con-| demn the violators of the colonies. | Remember, “no nation can be free) that itself oppresses other nations.” (Marx). Build Communist Party. Workers of India: forward to the fight. against your class enemies against the capitalists, cgainst the imperialists. Only by organizing and consolidating your vanguard in the Communist Party can you rise to the height of your great historical | mission, to lead the national-revolu- tionary struggle to victory. Peasants of India: foil the plans of your mortal enemies to isolate | and smash the proletariat by rising struggle. To the fight against the landlords and the usur- ers, for the confiscation of the land! Hasten into the line of fire! Or- ganize, widen and consolidate a fighting worker and peasant alliance against imperialism. Your strength lies in alliance with the working class. Toilers and exploited masses of India! Only in a resolute struggle against bourgeois treachery, only by exposing and driving out the re-| formist lackeys, only under the lead- ership of the revolutionary prole- tariat will the Indian revolution be triumphant. Down with British imperialism, the plunderer and hangman of In- dia! Down with the Swarajists and other bourgeois parties—traitors to the Indian national revolution! Down with the British and Indian yeformist flunkeys, the agents of imperialism! Long live the revolutionary strug- gle of the workers and peasants of India! Long live independent and liber- ated India! Long live the Indian Soviet Re- public! EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE COMMUNIST INTERNA- TIONAL, WORKERS DEMAND RAISE. NEWCASTLE - ON - TYNE, Eng- land, (By Mail).—Organized ship- yard workers at this port have de- manded an increase in wages, and threaten a strike if denied their de- mands, MORE MINERS JOBLESS. PHILADELPHIA, (By Mail). — The Federal Reserve Bank of Phila- delphia report shows that employ- ment in the anthracite mine area fell off 8 per cent in March, and was 12 per cent lower than in March, 1928, SEAMEN HURT IN CRASH. Rhye (By Mail) —§ were Campaign to Double Number of Readers of Daily Worker The Packing House Workers, who are among the worst explcited in the United States, y Worker and to double the num- jj n to spread the D: ber of its readers, From Kansas. City are now in the thick of the i! Mo., center of the packing industry, ¢ and center of a district in which are also many steel mills | and cecal mines, comes word of plans for putting the Daily | sup “We have found that the ription campaign over the top. Daily Worker is eagerly read by the packing house workers in the packing house centers of this di: ‘ict, in Kansas City, Denver and Omaha. Especial- . Jy do the Negro workers in the packing houses look for- ward to the Daily paper. They feel it i drive in the Kans A Red Sunday is planned a house to hous: the: Croation lang Thousands of pi this campai Worker, and recognize it as their own their paper,” those active in the Daily s City district state. in the near future, featuring campaign for both the Daily and “Radnik,” zage organ of the Communist Party. g house workers will be reached in ign for the Daily in the Kansas City district. Class conscious workers in all districts must put the Daily drive over the top in their districts. |Heads Female Jingoes of the ar E who clamor r, elected a new e the usual at- at its recent | * convention. (above), of leader of the emale jingoes, saa HERON D7 me PSUR aU ISTRATION IS LARGEST YET : (Continued from Page One) AG had a shed speaking at the eting held after the gunmen had wrecked mill owners’ the strike and relief headquarters. | She has been held on $2,000 bail on a framed-up federal charge alleging A in her naturalization, but is out again and spoke for the first time | at yesterday’s meeting. I. L. D. Bails Out Dawson. The rek of Ellen. Dawson, who| was held on $2,000 bail for trial in| September, was effected by the In-| ternational Labor Defense, which, after having much trouble in get- ing bonding companies to act in irregularities North Carolina, has made arrange-| 5 ments to send $5,000 down to this state to bail out arrested strikers, There are constant thr to} murder Organizer Pershing. An at- | tempt by the mill owners’ thugs and deputies was ‘made at the close of Saturday night’s meeting to mob} Pershing, but the strikers rallied to his defense, put him in a car, and) held back the gangsters and gun- men until the car left the scene. jonty an GLASS CONTRAST WORSE FOR NEGRO IN STATEN ISLAND (Continued from Page One) have experienced betrayal after be- trayal by the labor fakers of the A. F. of L, Politically there is no or- |ganizations of a working class na- ture. But if the plight of the s as a whole is deplorable, | the plight of the Negro workers is | especially bad. To the Negro worker Staten Island is just like a city of the Southern cotton belt. Ku Klux ism reigns supreme over the island. Won’t Employ Negroes. Many cf the factories do not em- ploy Negro workers. When a strike breaks out among the white work- e the local papers scream in large headlines: ”Go back to work Negroes will take your jobs.” |The police take it as part of their | duties to invade Negroes’ homes and | beat up and jail workers, and race jviots are usual affairs. Last Saturday there was 4 race riot with its attendant degrading and savege features. Hundreds of Negroes were beaten and clubbed \by the police, and three fine young | Negroes were arrested and jailed. Luckily there were only two: casu- ulties, two white hoodlums: who had made a practice for several years cf insulting and molesting Negroes. The outcome of the riot will prob- to what happened ian years ago when as an after- |math of racial trouble, a Negro’s ‘home was burned, Circulate “Negro Champion.” There is no organization to lead the Negro workers in the struggle gainst white terrorism. The local anch cf the N. A. A. C. P. hitched self to a Negro church and gives the official ergan of the Americari Négro Labor Congress, is being circulated among the Negroes of the Island, A gathering of Negro end white workers is being ar- x May 3, at 110 Victory This will be the first militant gathering of Negro workers on the Island. Let it be the duty of every worker in or near the island to make this gathering a huge success, There e possibilities that this gathering ll lay the foundation for a mili- tant Negro organization on Staten’ sland, Demonstrate for World Labor Sol lidarity May First at Colixeum, New Devices for War in Air | annual dance instead of... jactual work. The Negro Champion,