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

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r 7 MAY can SIBUBD AN a2 9, 1929 s oe Be Oy on <Seawe DAILY WORKER, W YOR Subscription Is Continued Until June the 15th FREE! A Copy of This E: The Daily Worker Campaign The Famous Novel of Present- DAILY WORKER 26-28 Union Square, New York, N. Y. Send me a capy of CEMENT and one year’s sub to the Daily Worker. I am enclosing $6.00 to cover the cost. Day Life in the Soviet Union cellent Book Now Appearing Serially in the Copy of e Chicago Grand Juro CEMENT Daily 25 Worker with tion to the DAILY WORKER. Every Yearly Subserip- NAME ADDRE HOUSING PLANK OF COMMUNIST PARTY PROGRAM No Segregation, Low Ipleiters or any of their apologists. It is a platform of struggle against the exploiters and their system; it jeclares w upon the capitalists, r government, their politicians, courts, their exploiters ad, their war preparations, la- bor bureaucrats, reformers and so- cialists. f th re a Against Landlordism. It is the platform of the working a working class which in- every proletarian, ‘white, N2- 7s Co nfess GASTONIA MILL STRIKERS DEFY. THUGS TO SHOOT Refuse to Move From! Seeking to Whitew Bribes Offered Th em to Acquit Sena AGAIN JAM MEET AT TILING PLANT Tell of 100% Dividend; Bosses Booed ash Vestris Owners | (Continued from Page One) May Be Deported by Canadian Government TORONTO, Ont., May 8.—Depor- tation is threatened by the Dominion Immigration Authorities here against Sam Langley and Joe Farbey, two of six Communist Party members arrested speaking at street meetings during the recent munici- ‘pal elections here. The Canadian for Eller = ’ CITY COLLECTOR GANG ON TRIAL! Would Pay $200 to Free FOR VOTE FRAUD: i seq 270, American, Polish, Irish, Chi- wae digthateed Mantas: At ie Oe Re ecient “ Rents; Free Houses : i | > Pr ; | was discharged Monday. Alcen, |Labor Defense is leading a fight to ‘ ‘ tents; Free Hou Japanese, Latin Ameriean, an.| Company Property teat Waien wee tener ee anes eae Senator Leonard till ery atiol 4 ra hasan e meeting bege n . at a ’ sla ed the Allen Street is the class line, the line that sepa- move up to Manville-Jenckes. The in his speech, pointed out |your No eee Tyas been made|eribe jurors sitting in election day scheme for widening and the con- yates the mass of workers from the strikers are sleeping in the open air methods used by Alcen | soninst tt f thai ave bean (oko tees one corenem alseloned” | struction of ‘model apartments.” tinue of eeptoiters fed cccWine nthe. poan ais toes 9 against them, and they have been |igday by the admission trom two akes, which o effect, would be benefit of the mem t Side Chamber of just as during the Both these schemes are even if put int done so for bers of the Commerce. EF Ore of the planks of the platform for the class struggle is the plank wung at the landlords and the sys- tem of landlordism, an integral part of the system of capitalism. supplied them by the Workers In ternational Relief. The offer of thc | company to store the furniture wa spurned by the strikers. | of trucks are |. Trains arriving en the workers away from organization, and the bluff he put up of “closing the plant if the work ors are not satisfied with their con- ditions and moving to Zanesville, Ohio, and Los Angeles.” Szepesy denied trial. The technical excuse for driving them from the country is sought by the government in the jflexible “vagraney” laws periodical- |ly used to deport militant workers. veniremen that they had been’ of- fered money to return a favorable verdict for two henchmen of Citys Collector Morris Eller. Four Eller men are on trial for last municipal election, he will con- "The platform of the Communist | bringing scabs to occupy the houses alba. ihe ta Heth wnuldshe case | Pages Sari at eve ‘| arbey and | the third time in connection with tinue talking these schemes untill party takes up the fight of the|One family, brought from Georgia Med into AHIR alana tea eased 9 eh ‘igen may be violence on primary day, April 10; after the clections, and then if workers in the tenements as a part |Tefused to go to work in the Lora “Tho: movement fon eeganization |e een |1928, in the 20th Ward: Several | | elected either forget all about them or actually build—model tenements for the well-to-do Their Bluffing Ability. To realize the bluffing ability o of the fight of the working class against the capitalists in every field of exploitation. House Committees. |mill as soon as it saw the situation | More tents are urgently needed to house sick strikers, and small chil-, |dren, and expectant mothers. Funds | |for the purchase of tents should be is spreading fast,” he said, “in spite of the terroristie methods of the besses.” 100 Per Cent Dividend. When Szepesy produced a copy of Both workers are incidental yic- | tims of the nation-wide campaign |of red-baiting recently launched by the Dominion government. men have been arrested in connec+ tion with the bribery attempts. One of them, Paul Harders, is said to Lave confessed. Michael Hepp, venireman, told these grafters, we need only re To fight effectively, organization | yyshed to Workers International Re-| ae Nest 4 Judge Frank Comerford that he had the fact, that since 1835 the Tam.|i8 necessary. Only the pressure of |tiet, One Union Square, New York. Sa oe se - the Perth Amboy Evening ce MILL RELIEF TAG Bace apaeundbed he Hagaces Gad Uae many machine in New York City| the masses, organized into effec- | ik ee | A view of the Board of Trade “inquiry” in London into the Which carried an item of the Amer- | fered $200 if he would vote for ac- has been talking housing relief and to this very day, in 1929, has done tive units, can wring housing relief from the landlords and their legisla- County Starves Strikers. UL, in which GRE ILLE, N. C., May 8.— Vestris sinking last fa Steamship Co. was ponsible for the drowning of aver 100. the greed of the Lamport and Halt 14" Encaustic Tiling Company de- The claring 2 100 per cent dividend on | quittal of State Senator James Leonard, one of the Eller men on nothing to relieve the housing sit-;ture. Only the reactionary power The strike committee today formu- Londoy “inquir like the one in New York, will, of course, white- ue ee a Ale B Berame srsally st DAYS IN CHICAGO trial, uation, but has allowed it to go from Cf the masses Sa ee sppltary lated clear-cut demands for the Wash the Lamport and Holt Line, making some subordinates, perhaps {ated and Wied AS <abapeere pals | A short time later, Frank Szyman~ bad to worse. conditions in the tenements, dO} poincett mill of the Brandon cor-| the crew, the goats. rom id Pants | — ski, another prospective juror, said Of course, the Tammany speakers will say nothing of the Emergency Rent Laws, which, inadequate as they are, will be totaly repealed on May 31, on the recommendation of a committee appointed by the for- mer democratic Governor Smith. Park Avenue Parties. The republican party bluffers will go on the street with promised re- forms in housing. Just imagine what the republican party, the par- ty of big business and the landlords, will do for working class tenants! The republicans haye shown with away with rent robbery and break Gown the racial and national bar- riers put up by the exploiters. The immediate organization steps that the Communist upon the workers in the tenements is the organization of mass tenant leagues, based upon the organiza- tion of house committees tenements. The house committees, acting like shop committees in the factories, are to represent the ten- ants in dealing with the landlords, declare rent strikes against rent- isers and evictions when necessary Party urges | in the! declaring they “ought not to listen | poration. There are four Brandon | mills which have been on strike for about six weeks, and when starving | strikers yesterday sent a delegation to the county authorities who vom been pretending sympathy for them, and asked that some of the surplus = Tae REE ane in the Greenville county treasury | 80d Fannie Rudd, field organizer for jbe expended to save the lives of | the Workers International Relief ad- | workers out on strike. The answer| d¥essed the convention in the name |was a flat refusal. jof the militant textile strikers of “Giving Greenville county funds| the South. A collection was taken to strikers is unlawful,” County At-| up from the delegates of $45.85, and | torney James H. Price informed| 2 resolution was unanimously car-} members of the Greenville county | Tied expressing solidarity with the Foreign Born Workers Must Rally to Cleveland Congress to the poison this man Szepesy is spreading.” & y immediately retorted that “this is poison for Mr. Alcen, his voekethook, and the company’s prof- \its, but for us workers it is a mess- ar A age to organize for hetter By NELS KJAR. Lona serie viees In the basic industries of the Chl- with which Mr. Alcen and his like cago area we find hundreds of thou- are intimidating and sands of foreign-born workers. In| the workers.” the Lake County steel mills and in} Two of the bosses’ trustees, who the Chicago stock yards especially hold down the easiest positions in |do we find these workers of many |the plant tried to disrupt the meet- exploiting | Mobilization to Answer Evictionsin South | | CHICAGO, May 8.—As an answer | to the evictions of the Southern tex- | tile strikers, many workers organi-| zations in this city haye arranged | | special membership meetings this | week for the mobilization of forces | for the tag days this Saturday and) Sunday, May 11 and 12. Not only food must be supplied the strikers, but a fund must immediately be he had been offered $500 by three. men if he would help convince the other jurors that the men on trial were innocent. The names of the three men were withheld. 4 The election violence in the 1928 primaries was nothing unusual for Chicago, where beer-running gang= sters are essential parts of the po- litical machines. aK USSR Extends Grants for Coal Production ‘ A iy a ; z 1 nationalities, ing by throwing wet sponges filled | T@ised for tents, so that these work- z : DP undoubted ability how well they can|#nd act unitedly with the house| aio cotion ji i . This is| Southern textile strikers, eondemn- | "@ceS and ni jing by throwing pong. : 4 fee call hoes | govern for the interests of the ex- committees organized throughout pebble gg fein ere ee | ing the violence practised against, The foreign-born workers have with water at Szepesy while he was | era and Faeie families will have r0%8 in Donetz District ploiters, in city, state and national the city. the westige af State Be resentative | ‘hem by mill owners, state and city long ago seen the real role of the speak . They were booed by the | is z | KHARKOV, USSR (By Mail) Be | i P | officers, and the evictions to which| A. F, of L. bureaucracy and its! workers and forced to stop. | Seventeen tag day stations have Michssth Leaiden ith ii governments, These parties aré‘*té lie “fought! with all the might arid main of the workingclass, for they represent the tenants of lower Park Avenue, the avenue of 2,000 millionai Our Housing Program. The Communist Party comes be- fore the workers of New York City with the following program on hous- ing for the municipal elections: H, C. Godfrey, of Spartanburg, who | Nas saan Py threo worker’ | workers to hurry to their aid with Workers Union because you don’t) fons, br shoud De pie 0 Noe need a union, the state and county mon Sa New Fore OUP: will take care of you. Godfrey did hey are subjected. It calls on all! failure to organize the most ex Police Officers Present. ploited sections of the working cla: A police sergeant covered the |The Cleveland Trade Union Unity, mecting in addition to the hosses Conference to be held on June 1st|end their flunkeys. Copies of the |and 2nd will organize a national | Daily Worker were distributed and been set up throughout the city, where supplies will be furnished the volunteers. The stations are as fol- lows: Downtown—Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, 28 South —During the current year the grants for capital constru purposes in the Donetz coal district aggregate 120.3 million roubles as against 114 | million roubles in 1927-28. This in- cludes grants in the amount of 60.5 \ _. Socialist for Constitution. 1, No segregation in housing; | go through the formality of asking | trade union center, based upon the| were well received by the warkers, | vite Be see ee Union, million roubles for the extension of The socialist party, the party of the abolition of the race barriers Governor John G, Richards for an} class struggle, to organize the un-| The fight in thia plant is going it Sarasa ae 7, | the output of coal and anthracite “strugpling” corporat 3 ritictalle eras’ a Gent by the | 25 . i ‘ organized workers into industrial|on for the eight-hour day, time and} North Side — Finnish Workers! : : 5 ggling poration lawyers, | artificially erected an pt by extra session of the legislature to 5 , ‘ ‘ a ., . =r,a\ and the production of coke, as well callared and de-collared clergymen|lendlords in Harlem and other sec- unions. The new unions will not a half for overtime, double time pay | Club, 2409 North Halstead St. 4556 4 housing du the election cam- | 2. The construction of dwellings “investigate the textile situation,” formi ; ~, 3 ak aaeae: ° Ea is Y . z as 25 million roubles for the build- and reformist strikebreakers, has al- tions of the city where Negro work- | put this request, mild as it was, the cater to the aristocracy ck labor £0) work on Sundays nd holidays, North Crawford Ave. ie cio ing of new pits. a | ready told us what it will do onjers are forced to live. pote ranteuina eccbacaall alone, but will unite all workers—|25h per cent inerease in wages for Southside—Reynost I’'Udu, 1510 The oxddbstinn {lan Sovetaae: dow 7 18 mGY TesrerHay emphatically bill 2 |semi-skilled and unskilled of all{ell workers, organization of depart-| West 18th St. Radnik, 1823 So.! le production Blan vp S jected. a gross coal output during the cur- paign. Mr. William Karlin, the law-|hy city and state, rented without eee Ws * races and nationalities to fight the ment and shop committees and the | Loomis St., Vilnis, 3116 So, Halstead | seme et i ae y as 5 A ct ; 5 ~{ E : year in the amount of 25,400,000 yer and ex-honorable, will cal i | vhs 4 {bosses in their wage cutting and|veinstatement of all those who have|St. American Negro Labor Con-| ‘ 3 ee ; Sx-honorable, will call the | profit, Chicago Tag Days. ILD Calls Workers to|specd-up campaign. been dischargd. gress, Room 204, 3522 South Michi-| DS 28 against 22,000,000 tons in “politicians by their numbers, the only thing that the socialist party can do during such a campaign.” Mr. William Feigenbaum, also ex- 3. The municipal fixing of low rents for workers, not to exceed 10 per cent of their wages. 4. Adequate housing of unem- CHICAGO, Ill, May 8—As an answer to the evictions of the tex- tile strikers, many workers’ organi zations throughout Chicago are hav- Attend Saturday Undeterred by the action of the The foreign-born workers help to build the Cleyeland Confer- ence and the new unions. We must must | . AID SOUTHER gan Ave. Pearson’s Studio, Stony Island Ave. Pullman Work- ers Club, 2954 East 97th St. 5706 | | 1927-28, | During the first half-year of 1928- 29 a total of 13,120,000 tons of coal was mined in the coal pits of the honorable, will attack the Soviet ployed workers and their families |” u HARE | line al ve. \follow up thi cessful steel con- West Side—Freiheit, 3801 West astri Hriay because it allows “all tea les ecg atte witct charge, 2 special membership meetings Police Wye en BAMHATs RE Ae TO fei Gary aed tha Aloe | Roosevelt Road, Freiheit Singing So- | Ponetz district, houses to go to pieces.’ Norman| “5. Down with fake housing legis. | tts week for the mobilisation Sov Dievatay Garipeny, veveked a pare| Yards campaign in Chicago, In the ciety, 3837 West Roosevelt Rd. a ania x Thomas, “the old man who has re- lation, such as the Multiple Dwell- |e Tag Day Saturday and Sunday. eee rene re pay moet. (Shops we must organize the workers | Northwest Side — Folkets Hus,| Johnson, Militant in tained the touch of youth,” the kind-|ings Bill, and the passage of laws | Nt only food must be furnished /T His tee MDS NY Ate stent. |to send delegates. This movement | 2733 Hirsh Boulevard, Jewish Work- | : . “ are . ~ s Pp . i! a the strikers, but a fund must im- Lf ’ = fi | aa Ms on 7 ivisi S 4 iy pulpiteer teacher of the S. P.,|which will force the landlords to| ‘Me, Sevikera, but @ fund must im-| Oe 9 Tanker pear the OMS lant | oe atc be. supported. financially. —— |ers Club, 2736 West Division st, Australia Sea Union will allow no illusions to remain in| maintain the houses in sanitary |Mediately be set up for tents, 50) Oren oe eee onkers thig Set.|In tho various workers’ organiza- ’s Circle | Workers Book Store, 2021 West'Framed Up and Jailed the minds of the workers. He will tell |conditi ide'a heating, | {bat these workers and their fam-/0 °°" meeting in Yonkers this Sat. | i th as sick and death benetit| Lit Workmen’s Circle | pivision st. Russian Workers Club, | s 01 Ss. ill tell |conditien, provide adequate heating, Mes Mutya a vakiiisae Ghats hands: | urday at 1 p.m. When the meet-| tions, such as sick and death benefit | i. a them, as he has been telling them for some time, that the socialist par- ty will not be able to alter the consti- tution if its candidates are elected (‘an emergency in itself,” says Mr. yentilation and light, laws which are | to be enforced. 6. Municipal aid for workers \building their own co-operative | Seventeen Tag Day stations have iM was broken up last Saturday, ‘been set up throughout the city,|three of the speakers, Henrietta where supplies will be furnished the |Cooper’ and Max Shalkan, members | volunteers. The stations are as fol-|°f the Communist Party, and Ed- societies, workers’ clubs, workers} must be approached for funds to carry on this most important cam- paign. Class conscious Give Full Support CHICAGO (By Mail). — At the workers | session of the Workmen's Circle conference, knows no sweet words for t textile worker from Gastonia, N, C,,| hey of the C munist Party, odd port, 1628 W. Division St. Ukrainian Workers Club, 1532 West Chicago Ave. There will also be a station at the! Workers International Relief, Chi- SYDNEY, Australia (By Mail).— Jacob Johnson, militant secretary of the Australians Seamen’s Union, which is misled by reactionaries, : apartment houses. sia a ward Wright, business manager of | ™ust work to get his or her organi-| protest convention held at 3301 z has been sentenced to six months’ eeaees), the corporation lawyer, | 7. The construction of play: [eve Downtown) Posie Trades) ie Labor Defender, organ of the |2ation to support the Cleveland| Roosevelt Road, Dewey Martin, a| C480 headquarters, 23 South Lincoln| imprisonment growing out of th | dollaying in the footsteps of Morri’! grounds and the maintenance of | Millinery Workers Union, Local | International Labor Defense, were | Conference. striking textile worker from Gas- St., Chicago. Australian dock strike, during which 5 sot ; And without altering the nurseries in the working class dis 52, 170 N. State St. North Side;|atrested. They will come up for! The Chicago Trade Union Unity tonia, N. C., and Fannie Rudd, field TAG workers resisted brutal police at- constitution nothing much can be |tnicts by the municipal government. \Finnish Workers Club, 2409 North|tvial Monday, when they will be de- | Conference will take place on Sun- organizer for the WIR addressed the 1 AGES tacks, He was jailed because he ; gone for the workers in the ey ee Halstead St.; 4556 North Grawford| fended by Irwin E. Klein, repre-| day, May 25th at 10 a.m, Contribu-| convention in the name of the mil-| WASHINGTON (By Mail).—The | dared expose one of the ship-owners’ é a 8, Fontinyes the old young man. By Force of Masses. ‘Ave. South Side: Revnost I’Udu,| senting the New York District of the tions or other communications shquld|itant textile strikers of the south. |average weekly wage paid to 127,-|tools among the labor fakers, ; FER ee arts Of course, would | Only the pressure of the working |1519 West 18th St; Radnik, 1828 So, International Labor Defense. be sent to Nels Kjar, Trade Union| A collection was taken up from the /G34 workers in 1,648 silk manufac-|Thomas Walsh. Seamen and dock; ' _ ink of altering the constitu- masses can wring these concessions Looms St.; Viinis, 3116 So. Halstead | Workers of Yonkers, who are | 2ducational League, 28 S. Wells St., | delegates of $45.85, and a resolution | turing plants in the United States Jers throughout Australia and New ion. 4 from the exploiters, only mass St: ‘Acaedan liars Labor Con-|kighly indignant at rile action of | Chicago, Ill. fully supporting the strikers was jin 1927 was $21.10, according to the | Zealand are aroused at this frame- | ] Kind Tammany. pressure can maintain the conces-|°”” } Hine ; The final T, U. U. C. rally before unanimously carried. The resolution |department of commerce. up. is 1 But one thing thi in di | gress, Room 204, 8522 South Michi-|the police, are called upon by the | ? Me eho ag uy th ey woh ° SY | sions we |gan Ave.; Pearson's Studio, 5706|New York International Labor De- | the conference will take place at the reads in part: Shorea ara ; pevill tell the workata: fake ay Until the time when the force of | Stony Island Ave; Pullman Workers|fense to attend the meeting Satur-|%h Annual T. U. E. L, Pienie on| “We, the National Protest Con- UEERSEES IESE . . They will tell the workers in the tt y “ the masses overthrows the system | Gy, “ 97th S Side: di d , fi | Decoration Day, May 30th at Alten- vention of the Workmen's Circle, |= > KY 1 : tenements that all they will have to| ee ; Club, 2954 East 97th St. West Side: day and to support the fight of the | Pecoral ' | Veigert OF A ( arting ins y men a ME 2 |of exploitation and creates a work-| preineit, 3301 W Rd.:!L L. D., which i i heim Grove, 7900 W. Madison St. {meeting in. Chicago, do hereby 5 ] do is ask the kind tiger Tammany| org) end. f Ht cad. the Preiheit, 8301 West Roosevelt Rd.; I. L. D., which is making a test case | | Jed » “deat iets eae tel ace REIS and its rider Walker to make the| asses must force the exploiters ta | [reinelt Singing Society, 3837 West of the breaking up of the meeting | tng fextile svorkers of Novth Cay Dynamic! Vivid! Realistic! } tenements a little better to live in (asses must force the exploiters 1 Roosevelt Rd. Northwest Side: Fol-/and the arrests, A statement is-/May Day Meet Held ed porine eS ae g tieaae 1 Hes y t 2 sbi ; Gad; presto, the tenements will be|@?e* Serre aelin i cn kets Hus, 2738 Hirsh Blyd.; Jewish|sued last night by the I. L. D.,| : baneeee pts one “ete yh pada Netcarrrar, AS GOOD AS A TRIP TO RUSSIA! j better to live in. as in wages, shorter hours and bet- | Woryers Club, 2786 West Division|signed by Rose Baron, secretary, de- | in_ Chester Despite ls bese Tecigaget hp gh cA td ‘ f That is the program of the social. | tT conditions. ‘ ty | Sti, Workers Book Store, 2021 West | clared: Presence of Police struc against cemtaticn satiowatt || Srikleotege ‘ ist party on housing. leat pommanist Hesty is the only | Division St.; Russian Workers Club,! “The New York District of the pb sehen iP AaPENAE CAP : metropolis from I Shek te Bee fectively in such a struggle. Help pC adpas cpivirion, Be} Wicraiaien International Labor Defense gon-| CHESTER, Pa, (By Mail).—De-| “We urge these brave fighters to pipet este ‘ That is the program of the s0-|buid, Join it new. Win new ad- My » 8°/demns in the strongest. terms the | spite the presence of several detec- continue their fight against the $8.00 fatypate sapect ? cialist party on housing. harents for it. Vote Communist in ee ill also b ine ey | action cf the Yonkers police, with tives and members of the police| wage, against the 60 to 72 hour cow, ing a y eile | ane anarhicinal election: e has i a a as ation dae |he co-operation of Mayor Fogarty, | force, workers of this city celebrated | week, the speed-up that is sapping ea ieee (ee i Workers Have a Party. | 4 onl nl niapontleaay Bae a in revoking the permit for the May | May Day with a big mass rally in their energy. We call upon them to which workers i ‘ The tenants that live in the old, Build the Communist Party. #go headquarters, incon | Day meeting and arresting the three | Lithuanian Hall. The mobilization |organize a powerful, militant sec- live b aible-dawn, Siapase-hrseding tene-| St, onl ‘ Ae | workers, We catge fae the tue pees wets followed by a concert, | tion of the National Textile Work- conduct of A SOVKINO FILM ie ments of the segregated working ary Conference Sunday. )den action on the part ot e police jen. omas, representing the'ers Union. i ’ class districts of Harlem, the East \Lake County Confab A Lake County Conference for | was dong at the request of the of-| Communist Party, 4 member of the| “Woe call upon all branches and A Penetrating Close-Up of the ‘ Side, the West Side, Brooklyn; in in Gary to Aid Mill | the relief of the southern textile jficials of the open-shop Otis Hleva-|local Young Workers (Communist) | militant members of the Workmen's Seething Soviet Capital the barbed-wire fenced areas of up- | strikers will be held in Gary, 215 tor Con:pany, who are fearful of | League, and the head of the militant | Circle to give their utmost financial D per and lower Harlem; in the worst Strikers This Sunday | West 18th St. at 2 p. m. Sunday. |having their workers learn the truth|Longshoreman’s Union addressed|and moral support, so that these and on the same program— slums in the world; in the gas- B | There will be delegates Tepresented about the system by which they are| the demonstration, urging a more |southern textile strikers may achieve : t Bee Oe 31 q je arrest of these three work- -up in the factories f 5 i i ‘ A i A : A i izati : A brilliant characterization of 4, many-wived ch, Pp Jip. "iiels Kichon’s native end | bold here ile Sunday'at frie, st] eo” on attasiee Cepnniantonn!/{'4, "Rt eame & St eane andthe and &, pore Tntesive creasiation Complete Oil Refining naa ROARS hah aeons men atinat anaret wee TL } : nd | . m, 4 . L. D, f jut til P = id courts; under the lash of the whip 215 W. 18th St, Delegates are ex-|drive for the Workers International |the end, The right of free speech |munist Party and Young Workers Plant in Batum, USSR in “DECEPTION” -Directed by Ernst Lubitsch i $ t: id cted fi Relief. y a of vent-raisers ani evictions--these | pecte rom Hammond, East Chi- elief. 4 ., {and assemblage guaranteed by the League. % workers have a Party of their own | cago, Whiting, and Gary. Plans will| Dewey Martin, a southern textile |constitution of the United States is| The speakers referred to the] BATUM, U.S.8,R. (By Mail).— ros fil That |Party is the Communist be made for a thorough campaign died Fannie Rudd, old organ-|being attacked by the police and the | gigantic demonstrations being held The construction of oil refining FILM GUILD CINEMA tol 'y of the United States of Amer-|for relief and for an extensive or-| izer for the W. I. R., and H.C. Gar-|mayor of Yonkers, We call upon | throughout the world that day. works with an annual output of ‘a. ganizaticnal drive for the Workers Bere some tesretary of the Miners the workers of Yonkers to give us 150,000 tons has heen conpleted at 52 W. 8th St. (dust Went) Spring 5095 ~ Class Struggle Platform. International Relief, ; elief Conference will address the | the utmost support in this fight and OFFICIALS COMPROMISE. Batum. The construction of kero- 4 2 CEH fs Mb Av) gies » The Mew OK, District of our] Dewey Martin, a southern textile oontorenee, send to defend their constitutional rights} PHILADELPHIA, (By Mail).—|sine and oil works has also been [ci Dates Dette; Wels Bet ae Sms Meee te hd Fe Party will enter the municipal elec- | striker, Fanny Rudd, field organizer esolution Protests Evictions. by attending en masse the meeting | After a strike of 150 truck drivers | started at Batum which are calculated ni lets i the platform of Hey be ple “al and 3. 6. Pera pedl ars MF He W. Ge Bae: called fer Saturday at 1 p. m.” against a wage cut to 60 cents an/to handle 320,000 tons of naphthi Now Playing: “Moulin Rouge’—a stark, tense drama v1 The Bader of the class strug. | lief tanec will aise! this velt Rd., Dewey Martin, a striki i Aaue, = corpuronne to. 68 cents, wes per opis. The: oupus ot. teas starring Olga Chekova, noted Russian actress. At fi es y qi ing Eyery militant worker a mem- | reached between labor officials and | works is intended exclusively for ex-

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