The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 13, 1929, Page 2

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WANTS LARGER ARMY TO FIGHT “RED MENACE” Reich Offers ot to Fight Soviet Unt Send These Workers Relief st ioe: GRAPH TELEGRAMS TO ALL AMERICA Wmasis 199 1/6) COLL 6 EX BL Yoling Teligramm. rubiect te the terms an hack here, whieh ane hereby agreed (a COMMERCIAL CABLES CABLECRAMS TOALL THE WORLD DAILY WORKER, EW YORK, MONDAY, MAY 13 on in Return fo ry Concessions from the Allies REICH TOISSUE \N. Y. Labor Joins World RED FRONT BAN Struggle Against Terror Rule (Coniinued from Page One) , pression will continue, regardless cealed irritation was shown by many| whether Tammany Hall, the repub- of the uniformed thugs at the plac-|licans or the treacherous socialist ards carried by the workers, especi-| party is in City Hall. ally “Down with Whalen’s Cos-| “Nothing reveals better the ac- ks.” tual role of the anti-labor parties,” “Socialist” Minister Is | Forcing Premiers | ! | | FACING LOCKOUT Bared as Maneuver | 75,00 BUILDERS SANDINO TO 60 TO PARIS MEET Wage Increase Offer May Be Guest of Anti- Imperialists in N. Y.« (Continued from Page One) Aided. by Socialists, to Join Anti-USSR Bloc | BERLIN, May 12.—The German government, with the active support of the social-democracy, is attempt- ing to gain concessions in the w of altering the Polish border, in- creasing its army, obtaining colonies and in reparation rebates, by offer- ing to “turn its back” on the Soviet Union, and offering itself as a bul- wark against the “Bolshevik men- ace,” according to the foreign cor-| respondent of. the New York Eve-| ning Post here who claims to have| reliable information. | Thruout -the whole _ reparation| 1929 Mey fu 8 $1 OASTONIA CAR 8 24-0 WORKERS INTEIUMTL RELIEP 2 UNTOR, SQDASB NEP YOUR wy SICKNESS SEVERE IN STRIKERS HOUSES PRESCRIPTIONS eCUR DOCTORS GIVE PRES SERVIC STOP FELLAGRA MIFLUBNEA FHCOPINO COUGH SERIOUS NO INTO WIR STB STOP | STOP MONEY MESDED NEDICING ABOUT OMB HUNDRED DOLLARS WEEKLY STOPSAMYER PAMILY SVIOTED SUFFERINO PELIAGRASTOP WIPE COKPINED SOON STOP OME FOSAR LYINO VERY SICK IN OPEN STOP-URS WCCLURB LYINO RAD IN BED CONPINED FEW DAYS STOP DAY TREVBLE SIXTEEN YEARS GUARDINO SICK MOTHER IB HOUSE DEPUTIES CALLED AND FERS PORCED aMAY THREATENED RETURN STOP DATSY MCDONALDS MOTHEA SICTY THO PARALIZED PIVE GRLL CHILDREN NEXT TO G0 STOP EVICTED STRIKERS AT MEETING TONIGHT AT SIX STOP MOVING SOK TO OTHER STROERS HOUSES PROCEEDS STOP WIRS SBWP WERELER NOTIFYING THAT STRIKERS COMTHO APPEAR BRARS SENATE COMMITTEE STOP WIR GETTING TRUCK CARAY FIFTEEN STADERS WM DICTON STOP PICHIC ARAANOED TO INVITS WORERS HUNDRED TWENTY (Continued from Page One) |have tried to prohibit the Red Front Fighters. The so-called “Free City of Hamburg” followed the lead of) | Prussia, and got its House of Bur- | gesses broken up as a result. Even in Prussia, in the big industrial city |of Duisburg an open meeting of the Red Front Fighters in uniform and| other workers was held, to protest | the order dissolving them, and the police too thought it better to stay) away. Most of the other German states had not taken action against! the workers’ defense organizations, until the socialist minister, Sever- ing, forced it upon them. The Red Front Fighters organiza- | tions had planned a huge convention | Soviet Union Lauded, “We find only one country where they have no plots against workers and no injunctions. That is the Sov- iet Union,” declared Bert Miller, or- ganizational secretary of the New York Communist Party, who pre- sided. Miller said that despite the bru- tality of the police department and the bosses’ injunctions at least 1,000 workers would be mobilized in a tremendous mass picketing demon-| stration for the striking cafeteria workers this noon. Many Banners Displayed. A forest of placards, banners and signs waved thru the huge crowd. said Engdahl, “than their carrying | out in actual practice of the attacks of the employers on the workers.” He urged the workers to join in building the Communist Party of the U. S. A., the only organization which fights for the working class both on the economic and political | tield. Anton Feders, member of German! Bakers’ Local 164, received an ova- tion when he was introduced. Earl Browder, member of the Central Committee of the Commun- ist Party, and secetary of the Pan- Pacific Secretariat urged the work- ers to mobilize for the coming Cleve- land Unity Congress which will es- tablish a new trade union center in The “fool's paradise” into which| 9 the labor-hating Building Trades | the United States section of the Employers’ Association attempted | to lead 125,000 building workers by the sudden ahnouncement last week by the association of a five-day week Anti-Imperialist League to ‘the Paris World Congress of all forces cpposing imperialism, Prior to the Eastern Anti-Imper- and a ten per cent increase has/|ialist conference, on June 8 and 9, | evaporated. |three preliminary conferences in Threaten Lockout. New York City are planned. The The association announced Satur- first one will be a meeting of rep- day that the workers will not get vesentatives of all Negro organiza- |the shorter work-week and the in-| tions, to be held at the New Harlem crease, and that 75,000 building | Casino, 100 W. 116th St., on Friday, workers will be arbitrarily locked|at 8 p. m. Invitations have been | out on Wednesday unless the strikes |sent out to all organizations of the jin which members of Electrical) peoples oppressed by U. S, imper- | Workers’ Union, Local 3, are in-|ialism in the Caribbean countries volved be called off at once. These|and to American Negro labor and strikes were forced by the mass liberal organizations. This call has proceedings, there have been present | two sets, of German representatives, ene Dr, Hjalmar Schacht, and the other, working secretly, former sec-| retary of state, Richard von Kuehl- mann, aceording to this informant. Von Kuehlmann was a leader of the | German delegation at the Brest- Litovsk peace parley. KuehJmann, on a “secret mission,” is saidyto have presented the fol- lowing scheme to the French, British and Yankee imperialists: the Ger- man government would be willing to break. relations with the Soviet MILLS BERTEA CRAWFORD CHAIRMAN GE The W. 1. R. is raising money to to house those made homeless, THREE WILL IP COUNTY TO CONSTUTS BIO UNION DEMONSTRATION STOP LARGE DISPRIBUNID COFFEE POTATE S FLOUR LARD WORKING WEIGHING COT PACKAGSS STOP PEELING CITY/TENSE AGA TIST SCABS SORRINO IN MILL VISITING STGRE MANTINO HELP UNION AND CCUB CUT OF ROBT ALLENZSEYTY WIR COMMITTEE . This is a telegram from the Workers International Relief Com- mittee in Gastonia to the main office in New Yor brutalitice attending the eviction of strikers and their need of relicf:* | E Send funds for t Workers International Relief, 1 Union Sq., New York City. to 26. This’ was later changed io| beonere and signa,” One of the lore: | tie, United States, Stuttgart in Wuertemburg which | ne mented thane a8 eae x aa Greetings from Spanish Sailors. |had not prohibited the organization.| man, one of the leaders of the Com- The new move of the socialists}munist Party of Germany, at the seems to be to make the convention’ graves of the murdered heroes of the illegal. May 1 demonstration. It read: The Red Front Fighters will if} “On the graves of our dead we | acted as chairman. |mecessary go underground, but will) swear to carry thru the Revolu- | tell an jnot disband. | tion, We will destroy capitalist me A ECOT nhs OF selene In Reichstag Tomorrow. governments and set up Dictator- |. There {8 every indication that the| Ships of the Proletariat.” Communist demonstration in the| Painted in red the other slogans Reichstag tomorrow when the Com-| were: “Down with Zorgiebel, ‘social- munist deputies demand action on|ist’ murderer of Berlin Workers”; TODAY STOP TWENTY FIVE STRIKERS SCABS STOP |editor of the Freiheit; Jack John- | stone, Juliet Stuart Poyntz, of the | International Labor Defense; D. Benjamin, of the Workers School; George Pershing; S, A. Pollack, of the W. I. R.; Kate Gitlow, of the feed the stril and to get tents his purpose to the m if she were given reparations, political and geographical conces- sions. These concessions are as follows: permission to increase the Reich- swahr to combat the German work- ing class’ and form a part of the} accumulated imperialist forces ar- A. F. L, LEAGUE BARS STRIKERS |their resolution to recall the order | “Down with the Brutal Dictatorship) United Council of Working Class to disband the Red Front Fighters|/of Wall Street”; “Help the Striking, Women, Tom De Fazio, of the Anti- comes along, will stop sessions in| Cafeteria Workers”; “Down with| Fascist Alliance of North America; |that body too, for a while. | Walker’s Cossacks”; “We Will| Jack Rubinstein, one of the leaders \ Meanwhile evidence accumulates | Avenge the Murder of Sacco and | of the New Bedford textile strike; |to show the brutality and blood-| Vanzetti and the Berlin Martyrs”;)| Harry Eisman, of the Young Pio- thirstiness of the police and their| “Police Terror Will Not Break Our| neers of America, and Sam Darcy, Other speakers were M. J. Olgin, | rayed against the Soviet Union; al- teration of the Polish border to do}! away with the Danzig corridor,) evacuation of the Rhineland and the return of one ot more of the Ger-| man colonies. Evictions in Bessemer; Jail Gastonia Pickets (Continued from Page One) The Vossiche Zeitung says that/tional Textile Workers’ Union, and this report is substantiated by the | exposed the fakery of the U. T. W. fact that Schacht admitted that he | 2nd the League. had conferred with Kuehlmann in| The delegation plans to return to Paris. |the picket lines in Gastonia this | morning. | Senate Committee Dodges. They were not permitted to tes- Big Gain in Accidents on the Job (Continued from Page One) ing schools for the same purpose. Socialist chief of police, Zoergiebel.| Solidarity”; “Defend the Soviet) of the Daily Worker. | Zoergiebel issued a statement to all) Union, the Workers’ Fatherland”; Resolutions Unanimously Adopted. jofficials of the social-democratic| “Build the Communist Party of the| Ina resolution unanimously adopt- |party, boasting that his slaughter| U. S. A.”; “Revenge for the Heroes|ed at the meeting, the murder of of 29 workers in a May Day demon-|of Bloody May 1, 1929”; “Down|the 27 Berlin workers was de-| | | Murdock, who were to speak, were | steel district, the anthracite, the five} with Injunctions”; “Down with the/ nounced, and unflinching support stration (the dead include pressure of the rank and file of the organization. The grandiose and magnanimous Three sailors from the Spanish | “offer” of the building trades bosses school ship “Sebastian,” standing |js thus revealed as a cunning man-| near one of the speakers’ platforms, |euver to call off the strikes of the communicated their greetings to the electrical workers. In this maneuver | demonstration thru Bert Miller, who|John Halkett, president of the Building Trades Council, has joined. | Bosses Belligerent. | Whether the lockout will be or- dered or not is yet uncertain. It is quite likely, however, that such a move would not be unwelcome to the profit-glutted building bosses at) this time. Building operations are obviously on the downward path, and thus might be considered by them as good an opportunity as any to break down the comparatively high wage scale of a few thousand of favored building trades workers. the endorsement of the American Negro Labor Congress. Far Eastern Conference, The second preliminary confer- ence will be a Far Eastern Confer- ence. This will be held at 1 Union Square on May 25, at. 1p. m.. Rep- resentatives wili be sent to this con- ference by various organizations of the Chinese, Japanese, East Indians, Filipinos, Hawaiians and Koreans, who are opposed to the foreign im- perialism which is now tightening its strangle-hold upon their coun- tries. Communists fight on behalf of the immediate alms and interests of the working class, but in their present movement they are also de~ fending the future of the move= ment.—Marx. The Fight at Bethlehem, Pa. (Continued from Page One) dys. It is everywhere evident in the women who were shot beating rugs | Hillquits, Zorgiebels and Mullers. was pledged to the striking cafe- | severely beaten in “third degree”) Pittsburgh and Philadelphia dis- teria workers and “to the militant struggles of the working class when- ever and wherever they may take place.” | The resolution concluded: In a word, the employers did not | at windows, one old man, one crip-| Shows Growing Resentment. rest until they succeeded in lowering | Ple with a single leg, and several) The demonstration revealed most the worker’s. wages, so that today young boys) was a “Communist de- convincingly the growing resentment the building worker’s wages are not | feat” and begging the socialist ora-' of ihe workers against the various at all exceptional. The average pay | tors to “make use of this defeat in forms of capitalist oppression. Not |has decreased markedly and is at, the favor of the socialist party.” | only did the speakers denounce the present showing evidence of a new | Employers Uneasy. brutality of the Berlin and the New downward trend, The wrath of the masses of work- entire working class and with the | | | terrorization. They are out under | $5,000 bail each. Ann Burlack, 18-| year-old silk worker, teacher of the Pioneers here, is also out under $5,- Company and Alderman Charles | LAY OFF 50,000 LODZ WORKERS LODZ, Poland, May 10—The in- | troduction of the shorter week in| the large and middle textile mills | here has resulted in the dismissal of over 50,000 Lodz textile workers. | Great indignation “over the dis- | missals has resulted among the Lodz workers. | tify before the senate committee on York police, but they related tb opuressed colonial and semi-colonial| Greenstein. Her brother, Michael, | manufacturers, which has been in session all last week, on the request of the U. T. W. and of William Green, president of the A, -F. of L. The committee heard evidence of of- ficials of the U. T. W. from Eliza- bethton, Tenn., and considered how best to “investigate” the great strikes of the South in a way to break them as was done by a Sen- ate investigation of the coal mine strike last year. How aid this come about? First of all we must state that the increase in wages obtained by the building workers was not due to the kindness of the employer. It-is quite clear to every class-conscious worker that in a society like ours, which is based on goods, there must jhave existed potent causes which compelled the builder-capitalist -to increase wages, Why They Got Better Pay. 1,—The so-called “building booms’ ers, even those not previously iden- tified with the Communist move- ment, against this cynical and ruth- less anti-labor attitude have already | convinced some of Zoergiebel’s capi- talist masters that something is | wrong with his tactics. The German! | papers make much mention of such jcases as that of Otto Engel, who! Michael Obermeier, organizer of the |was shot without warning in the) Hotel, Restaurant and Cafteria back by a policeman, while accom-| Workers’ branch of the Amalgama- panying his fiance home, outside of ted Food Workers’ Union, who re- the district in which the fighting| ceived a tremendous ovation when struggle of these workers with the| struggle against lynching and other | forms of terrorism in the South, the | murder and persecution of working class fighters in fascist Italy and in white terror countries. | The struggle of the cafeteria! workers in New York was told by! perialist oppression thruout world, | “We pledge ourselves to combat |unflinchingly the preparations for a new imperialist war of which this reign of police terrorism and bru- tality is a part. “Down with imperialist war! “Down with the socialist party, traitor to the working class! “Down with lynch law, and op- peoples in their struggle against im-|W48 arrested for handing out pam-| the |Phlets to the school children, | Workers Intimidated. | The effort to prevent the work-| ers from organizing by terrorism, failed in its purpose. The workers were more than ever determined to hold meetings and continue their ef- forts toward unionization. Trial for the defendants has been set for the June term of court, June tricts. The I. L. D. has already begun a campaign against the Flynn anti- sedition law, a measure still remain- “We | 000 bail. She reiterated her belief | ing on the books despite its passage | express our solidarity with the Ger-| in Communism in the face of the as a “war-time emergency law.” man workers as well as with the | attorneys for the Bethlehem Steel —J. C. EDEN. Imperialism is, at tne same time the most prostitute and the ultim- ate form of the State power which nascent middle-class society had commenced to elaborate as a. means of its own emancipation from feud- | alism, and which full-grown bour- geois society had finally trans- formed into a means for the en- slavement of labor by capital. — Marx. A. F, L. Advised Adjournment. About 70 per cent of the remain- ing textile, workers are also threat- | ened with dismissal. The mill own- ers have announced their intentions of shortening the working week to two or three days. Over 120,000 persons are threatened with starva- tion if this occurs. It is common talk in Washington and is reported.as a fact by the L. officialdom advised the senate committee to adjourn for a week upon the arrival of the Gastonia strike committee, Follette and Senator Wheeler, who Greensboro News that the A. F. of, The delegation visited Senator La! U. S, Lands Marines ‘Again in China (Continued from Page One) day but will then be forced to leave them:in order to pick up British refugees: at. other ports. . * Peasants Dying. PEKING, May 12.—Twenty-five million Chinese peasants are suffer- ing starvation in the northwest fam- ine area, and the lack of interest and actual sabotage on the part of! the Nanking government prevents whatever relief sent from foreign sources. to. arrive. The Nanking government of Chi- ang Kai-shek has not sent a single) dollar for relief, every available cent | being:+tised for the militarist in-| triguesand wars. Charity workers in the northwest declare that-millions of peasants wil! | perish. Onéosection, containing 18,000,000 people; cannot be reached at all, due | to the fact. that all available rolling | introduced the resolution into the senate for an- investigation of starvation in the strike, but got only the excuse that it was impossible to re-open the hearing. Overman Embarrassed, Senator Overman of North Caro- lina was showing around a crowd of carefully garbed and “distinguished” citizens when the Gastonia delega- tion, including two child slaves of the textile mills in his state, came upon. him. He was much embar- rassed. The spectacle attracted other senators, who asked questions, and were told of the brutal. evic- tions of sick and hungry families of the strikers, of the gun play by deputies evicting the strikers or charging the pickets with clubs, re- volvers, rifles and bayonets, and of the unpunished and whitewashed assault on strike and relief. head- quarters. by the mill owners’ thugs. However, garbled accounts of the interview to the press. All this time, while starving strik- the senators gavé out| which, coming as an inevitable con- commitant of. the general. develop- ment of American capitalism, re- quired large numbers of new work- ers. 2.—The skill which was formerly required of: a great part of the build- ing workers. 3.—The high degree of organiza- tion attained by the workers in the building trades. | 4—The risk involved - in _ this trade which repelled many work- | ers, Conditions, however, have changed since, so that at present we have the following state of affairs: 1.—The so-called “booms,” as as the building schools, etc.,. at- tracted many new -workers,.. who swelled the ranks of the unemployed after the booms had. subsided. The | aceursed system. of well season. work i.e, the periodic alternation of; ‘“pusy” and “slack” seasons) is ag- | aravating this evil by constantly at- | tracting new masses of workers and } immediately throwing them out of | work again. 2.—The skilled worker, the ‘spe- | cialist, is being thrown out of work by more and more newly-perfected |machines. The steam shovel, ‘the “gasoline erane,”-ete.; help «the con- tractor’ speed up and increase pro- | duction; inereasing his profits and | |decreasing the number of skilled workers employed. I 3.—The organization of the build-) took place. The Berlin police, too! he arose to speak. |cowardly to. charge-the. ‘barricades| " “Despite the arrest of 1,127 strik- | defended by” Red -Front: Fighters, | ers Since the beginning of our drive took out some ‘oftheir peevishness| jin this city on April 4, we will not on newspaper correspondents, shoot-| be terrorized by the brutality of ing one in the leg, and stringing police and will spr-z4 onr strike to |up several. by their handcuffs to! other sections of t..2 city at once.” | trees and:porches, besides Killing the!” The unprovoked, cold-blooded Australian: newspaper correspondent, shooting of Garry Smith, Bronx MacKay. | striker, by a policeman was de- pression of the Negro workers! “Long live the Soviet Union! |10. The charges are under a state | act known as the Flynn Anti-Sedi- Long live the German Communist Party! Long live the Communist Party | of the U. S. A., the vanguard of the | I. L. D. was chiefly instrumental in| |having the workers released. The! Long live the Communist Interna- | attorney for the workers was Leon | | Josephson. working class! tional!” tion act, passed during the war and amended in 1919. Jennie Cooper, representing the N.T.W.U. Statement. | nounced by a large number of speak- ers. Smith is now lying in the Lin- ‘eoln Hospital at the point of death. Cheer Gastonia Strikers. The courageous struggle now be- ing carried on by the Carolina tex- | tile workers, under the leadership of | | the National Textilu Worker’ Union, was described to the meeting by Ce- cil Berger and Viola Hampton, Gas. tonia strikers. Both were enthusi. astically cheered by the wad, John Owens, farm worker of Cali- fornia, who, gun in hand, had de-! ular prisoners who sleep in dormi- | fended himself from the attacks of | tories, the “segregationists” in the San! Sinclair's “roll” from which he Pedro Valley in California, and Har-| made many “tips” to brighten still old Williams, in charge of Negro|more his jail days soon became work in New York, denounced po-| known throughout the institution, A lice brutality in the United States | reported “tip” of $5 to an attendant and Germany, and declared that it| forced superintendent William L. was part of the same system Suton | made possible lynching of Negroes in the South, J. Louis Engdahl, editor of the! grafter to make his prison days Daily Worker, just returned from | pleasant relaxation. the U.S.S.R., brought to the demon-| Other reports from ‘the jail indi- stration the greetings of the Red | cate that Sinelair is directing his oil Sinclair Now Enjoys | Private “Cell”; “Tips” Way to Jail Favors WASHINGTON, } FARM BILL WAR ‘IN CONFERENCE’ WASHINGTON, May 12.—Fast and furious week-end conferences | between President Hoover and the Senators and representatives con- cerned most with farm and tariff legislation are relied on by the ad- ministration forces to get some kind of united action against debentures, or to deadlock the farm bill until months have passed and everybody is thinking of something else. Tt has never been the intention of Hoover, the senate or the house to actually do anything for the farm- | ers, and none of the provisions un- der discussion will help the farm- ers. The whole question is, how to fool the farmers into thinking that they are being helped. Hoover Calls Borah, May 12.—Less Bill Murdock, vice-president of the } National Textile Workers’ Union made the following statement: “Two national officers of the union were falsely arrested. .Ann Burlak, member of the national com- | turbing” proximity of scores of reg-| The officer was in the midst of an explanation when a detective who was standing there, shouted: ‘Put | him in the wagon.’ I was taken to the station and searched. I was not allowed to call my lawyer but taken steadily growing in Pennsylvania, land of the Mellons and the Grun- EYES AND HEALTH than a week in jail, where he is| mittee and myself. Neither of us| eyes: are oftep, the “serving” a three months’ sentence/ were at the meeting at the Hun. | Foor cause of headaches, for contempt of senate, Harry F.| garian Hall Saturday night. I went | preeer a Oa nubile Sinclair, millionaire oil swindler, now | up to the door of the hall and asked exhaustion: Are FOR toy, vs the privacy of a comfortably | the police officer: “Have you a war- your eyes #re pest’ play equipped cell away from the “dis-|rant for keeping the door closed?’ | them examined 2 safe a 1 into a room and put through the third degree during which 5 was} mer pele ge Pre ed su ! ! | beaten several times by this detec-| Pero a ton Auge Peake to issue a public denial of the/ tive Schweitzer and another.” | S xi 8 Blas story. However, he continues his} This je part of th Hee Che | attention to the comforts of the oil ‘a ‘i eae we | » RE stock jg.being used to transport the |ers were trying to get their testi-) war lorg/s:armies. Whatever money | mony in their own defense before the Kugmintang government has al-|the national government, President | lotted;has been given to the well-to- | Hoover was fishing in Maryland. He do provinces where it will be spent) came back today, announcing that| > maintaining the existing armies. | he had caught eight trout. ing workers is now much weaker than it was formerly. Even accord- ing to the official exaggerated fig- ures of the unions and of the de- partment of labor, only 25per cen of the building workers of this coun- \try are organized, This is a result jof the attacks of the employers on jthe one hand and the false tactics fof the corrupt American union lead- jers on the other hand. One thing jhas remained, and. has markedly in- |creased: > 4,—Thke number of ‘industrial acci- dents’ (the number of workers crippled and killed at work) has reached incredible proportions. Ac- cording to the statements of reli- sble authorities (i.-e., secretaries of ‘organizations connected with the \question), the majority of the acci- cents are a result of the calculating, cold-blooded attitude of the employ- ers toward human life. A great many accidents could be-avoided if ithe employers were not so eager to \save their precious dollars when put- ting up the temporary structures ly means of which the workers suppu*t | themselves while at work; if they used better, more durable material; if they had greater consideration for human Jife than for profits, * . * —Just Off the Press! RED CARTOONS 1929 A_ BOOK OF 64 PAGES SHOWING THE BEST CARTOONS OF THE YEAR OF THE STAFF CARTOONE DAILY WORKER bs Sent aire x [ Fred Ellis : Jacob Burck With An Introduction Brilliant Ke’ ry Jo PRICE Joseph Freeman Sold at all Party Bookshops or Daily Worker, 26 Union Sq. y the alist The next article will be devoted to the question of accidents in the building trades, their growth and the reasons for it, Senator Borah is called in con- \ference with Hoover today, in spite \of the Senator being read out of the party by Senator Fess, Just what loover will offer him will not be | \known until later. Brookhart and Fess are quarreling. Watson has | been called by Hoover to anothe: conference. ‘Two important. developments will |take place this week: The senate tomorrow will pass the farm bill, | with the controversial debenture plan. \Chairman Hawley of the house |ways and means committee will con- \fer with leaders regarding demands | for further tariff increases on agri- | cultural products, Tariff Compromise. | | It appears now that republican | ‘leaders in the house will give way | \by permitting committee amend- | cultural increases sought by west- | ern congressmen who think they can tariff will help them, | The farm bill will be sent to con- |ference when it goes pack to the house after senate action. House leaders have abandoned the idea of challenging the debenture clause on the constitutional ground that rev- enue logiclation must originate in the house and will permit the mea- sure to go to.conference, there to long, no one knows how | been foisted upon them by the boss ments to care fer some of the agri- | convince their electorate that a/ remain the center of controversy for | easants’ Republic. the “socialist”? hangmen in Berlin and Tammany rule in New York. He urged the cafeteria strikers to violate the injunctions that have courts and called attention to the coming inunicipal campaign in this city. Engdahl pointed out that this campaign should be utilized to point out to the workers that police terror and other forms of governmental op. 175 FIFTH AVENUE CHICAGO—See us for your ste: Army of the first Workers’ and| company affairs from prison. He denounced continues | | Visitecooeeeeoecs Soviet Russia VIA LONDON—KIEL CANAL—HELSINGFORS AND 10 DAYS IN LENINGRAD and MOSCOW TOURS FROM $385. . INQUIRE: WORLD TOURISTS, INC. (Flatiron Bldg.) Telephone: ALGONQUIN 6656 He his light task of jail drug dispenser, playing idly with pills and lotions to while away the hours. No Wavering, no Hesitancy, no Deviation From the Policy Laid Down by the Red International of Labor Unions, Which Will Lead the Workers in the Coming Class Struggles, Will Lead Them to Vic- tory! igs Every Month NEW YORK, N. Y. ip accommodatiors—MOSCOW NOW PLAYING! Dynamic! Vivid! Realistic! AS GOOD AS A TRIP TO RUSSIA! FIRS? SHOWING IN AMERICA! OSCOW TODAY A Penetrating Close-Up of the Seething Soviet Capital \]] 2 comprehensive \f] tim-recora | | of the RED CAPITAL conditions under which workers live conduct of ficin! life of the ion of Socialist Soviet Republics be- hind Kremlin Walls l "nd on the snme program— EMIL JANNINGS as HENRY the VIII A Brilliant Characterization. x in “DECEPTION” -Directed by Ernst Lubitsch FILM GUILD CINEMA 52 W. 8th St. (Just west) Spring 5095 Cont, Daily, fet, Sat. Seren to Midnite Saturday 12 to 2---35 © Weekdays 12 to 2-=-35 ¢1 ‘WE URGE ATTENDANCE AT MATINEE PERFORMANCES FOR COMFORT. == ©

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