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——> NEW YORK WORKERS RALLYING TO BLOCK IMPERIALIST WAR PLOT AGAINST THE SOVIET UNION Communist Party New Yerk District Statement Is Ringing Call to Down Tools August 1 Pittsburgh Workers Will Defy Police and Hold Open Air Meeting; Chicago Conference (Continued from Page One) | in all trade unions. provocations! | 4. Elect delegates, from three to Defend the Soviet Union against! five, in all labor organizations, the Chinese War Lords and hirelings | <mall or large, to attend the Con- of World imperialism! ference on July 25, to participate ir Mobilize for the Anti-War Dem- the anti-war demonstrations of Au- onstratio gust 1. ‘0 All Units, | Down Tools August 1. to All Party Members: | 5. Propagate for the slogan of | Now is the time f6r all units, all| @mti-war day, August 1. Down tools | functionaries, all Communist Party|#t 4 o'clock! Join the demonstra; members, to show their Bolshevik|tion at Union Square. Parade from me your shop to Union Square. | The war lords of China, backed|_ 6 Get all workers to attend Fri- | by the world imperialists are rais-|4ay night's special demonstrations | ing their bloody hands to strike at| throughout the city. Make these | the Soviet Union, our socialist| meetings ringing protests for the fatherland. The movements of mer-|défense of the Soviet Union and | cenary troops to the Soviet border, | Preparation for Anti-War Day, Au- | preparatory to invasion, is occur- | £ust 1. ring. | a On every occasion, wherever The capitalist press is already | Possible, speak to factory gate spreading its poisonous propaganda |™eetings, spread Party leaflets, shielding the vassal puppets of Sue special editions of shop bullet- | American, British' and Japanese im-| ins, issue special leaflets to the fac- perialism. The Union of Socialist |tories in your locality raising the Soviet Republics is in danger of at-|call for the fight against the com-| tuck jing war! Down tools August First. | 7 Our Duty Is Clear. 'Fhe above tasks are the concern The duty of all revolutionary|! very loyal member that feels | himself a soldier of the world prole- | tarian army. To forsake your duty at this moment is treachery to the | working cles! All unit function- |aries, all Party members, redouble your energies; speed up the fight! workers and particularly of its van- guard is clear: We must stay the hand of the imperialists! We must come to the defense of the Soviet Union! The workers throughout the length and breadth of the Soviet F tat Union are declaring their readiness | pel Hae ias chy United of defending the workers’ father-| Bs ecpeh tela co | iands | District Committee, New York Dist. The American workers cannot re-| WILLIAM W. WEINSTONE, main inactive. Huge mobilization District Organizer. jor the defense of the Soviet Union| A mass meeting to protest the war | ust take place. All units, all func-| plot will be held by the militant | onaries, all Party members are to| workers of Pittsburgh tomorrow at | undertake the following tasks: 8 p, m. at the corner of Union Ave. | 1, Rouse the workers in the fac-} and Ohio St. in defiance of the police tories to the danger confronting the| department refusal to grant permits | Soviet Union. | for open air meetings. sit 2. Organize anti-war committees! An international Red Day.confer- in the shops. Preparatory for the| ence to plan a huge demonstration anti-war demonstration August Ist,| August 1 is being held today at} resolutions must be passed in the| 2021 West Division St., Chicago, | shops protesting the provocative) with delegates from left wing) acts against the Soviet Union and| unions, fraternal organizations and | resolutions for the defense of the|the Communist Party, and many | Soviet Union. other meetings are in process of or- | 8. Adopt resolutions of protest | ganization, and will be announced | and support for the Soviet Union| within a day or so. { MILITANT UNION GOVT, LEADS T0 ORGANIZER HITS BREAK ORLEANS | civil wars, Soviet Union Workers Give Overtime tor Their Defense World Labor Moves on August First to Demon- strate Against Imperialist War Plots (Continued from Page One) out of Chinese seizure of the Eastern Railway in Manchuria. The reply from Nanking officials said they felt the ques- tion could be settled amicably on the basis of existing Chinese- Russian relations. The note from the Nanking government said that China would reply soon to the full text of the ultimatum which the DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1929 GLOAK WORKERS REPUDIATE FAKE LOW AGREEMENT Declare Determination : to Fight on (Continued from Page One) urer of the In- Soviet government dispatched in connection with the railroad \i11 | seizure. The preliminary reply of the Nanking government indi- cated that, the Chinese minister is returning to his post in “ Moscow. The Soviet declaration had demanded, in addition to a con- ference for settlement of the controversy, the Nanking govern- ment’s pledge to stop persecution of Soviet citizens and insti- tutions in Manchuria. It also had demanded guarantees that the joint control of the railroad, will not be endangered by the | Chinese in the future, and that all arrested Soviet citizens would be released. * * * MOBILIZE ARMORED CARS. TOKIO, Japan, July 16.—The well informed semi-official newspapers here continue to publish news of further concen- tration of Chang Hsueh-liang’s army along the Siberian boun- dary. Latest advices are that® 60,000 Chinese and white guard) Russian troops are along the| border, with 40,000 more in re- serve along the railway. Sev- enty armored cars have been moved northward toward the border from Mukden. The number of white guard Rus- sians, many of them former soldiers in the bloody Kolchak armies driven from Siberia years ago, now in the! pay of foreign imperialists through the agency of the militarist, Chang, | is said to be around 50,000. They | out of their wages. Some large fac- are anxious to spread fire and the | tories ate pledging amounts in ex. sword through the villages of the| cass of a million rubles ($500,000) peasants who ousted them in the | There are more and more appes for the introduction of the un- In Chung-kuan, governor of the| broken working week, and offers to special district of Harbin has an-| work extra time to increase the nounced that the railway was seized | quota of the five-year industrial from the Soviet government officials plan. by Chang’s troops, on orders from Nanking. construction of industry, but that they would be as ready to shoulder them again if the occasi i it. These remarks alwa: unanimous approval and rounds of applause. Offer Overtime. Workers’ meetings, from factory meetings of the unions in small towns up to great mass meetings in the cities, are adopting resolu- tions proposing that the coming in- dustrial loan of $250,000,000 be doubled and the date advanced pledging they will take up the loan Confidence in Red Day. The workers of the U. S. S. R. i aa Moscow Proletariat Demonstrates. news of the plans to demonstrate MOSCOW, U.S.S.R., July 16.—! against imperialist war in the other Enormous mass meetings, and par- | countries of the world, on August 1 ades with brass bands continue | Internstional Red Day. Word has throughout the capital of the First|been received from New York, Workers Republic. War Commissar | Stockhotm, Berlin, Copenhagen, Vi- Voroshiloff’s office is piled high|enna, Paris and Brussels that there with telegrams from soldiers and | will be a world-wide protest of the sailors’ organizations expressing | working class against the war plots. readiness to fight, if necessary, From most* cf these countries The arrival in Moscow of more of |Comes assurance. that preliminary the officers of the Chinese Eastern | demonstrations before Chinese con- Railway and the news that they were | Slates and embassies will take | deported in brutal and hasty fashion, | Plate- also the information that more ar-| The furious demonstration by a rests are being made in Manchuria,|great throng of Berlin workers increases the indignation of the/against the Chinese consulate there workers. | was accepted here as convincing Serebriakoff in Moscow. jProof that workers |countries would not submit to im- watch anxiously for every bit of] of capitalist | | UT. W, FAKERY (Continued from Page One) gains to reward them for the long and bitter struggles against the bosses. upon the highly paid skilled work- ers, and only utilizes the unskilled for its own traitorous purposes, MacMahon, Hoffman, Googe, Mac- Grady, Woll, Green and Lewis, all have similar records of treachery, of selling out the members of their unions. They are all highly paid, The A. F, of L. bases itself | _ CARMEN STRIKE (Continued from Page One) | widespread graft and bribery for | killing, entered the strike for its publicity value as an aid to con- |solidating his position. A NEW ORLEANS, July 16.—For- mal negotiations with President |Hoover to “adjust” the street car strike will be opened late tonight or tomorrow by William Green, presi- dent of the American Federation of Labor, J. B. Lawson, representing The Chinese foreign office has |finally sent word that the passport jof the Soviet envoy extraordinary, | |Leonid Serebriakoff, designated to itake up negotiations with Chang and Chiang over the situation in Man- churia, is to be visaed. But the Commissariat of Foreign Affairs of the Soviet Union has already an- | | nounced that Serebriakoff is to wait until an answer comes from Nank- ing or Mukden, if In all of the meetings, former | Red Army soldiers rise up to declare | that. they were glad to lay down| their victorious rifles at the end of the civil wars and return to the re- yerialist plots to invade and crush the workers’ republic, the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom .Up—at the Enterprises! Putronize | No-Tip Barber Shops! 26-28 UNION SQUARE a flight up) 2700 BRONX P/"K EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) reactionary and corrupt officials—|the Street Car Men’s Union, said| bureaucrats who are in the lucrative business of collecting dues from the workers and graft from the bosses. It is impossible to point to any) achievements, to any gains made, by means of strikes, for the work- ers, under the leadership of these labor fakers, during the past year or more. Oehler declared that in the past week the activities of the union have greatly increased and that organ- izers are being sent out to various textile centers in response, to in- sistent demands of discontented workers who are in revolt against the stretch-out system and starva- fon wages for long hours of work. “We will go forward to the build- ing of a real union, fighting against the exploiters and the betrayers, and with the radicalized Southern work- ers.” METAL WORKERS STRIKE. PHILADELPHIA, (By Mail). — Metal polishers of the Nedlin Co. here struck for a raise in wages of 15 cents an hour, which would bring the wages up to $1 an hour, DIRECTION OF MODERN BUNGALOWS, ELEC- TRICITY — MUSIC — SPORTS LECTURES AND DISCUSSION $23 for Tents—$27 for Bungalows Special LOW RATES for Members Round Trip Ticket Thru Our Office $2.00 N. Y. Office Phone Stuyvesant 6015 CAMP | TELEPHONE — MONROE 89 tions must be made afew days in advance jhere today. | Accompanied by W. D. Mahon, |president of the International Car-| men’s Union who betrayed the strike of the subwaymen in New York in the fall of 1928, Green talked today | with the attorney-general and the secretary of labor. Schemes To Break Strike. “For Any Kind of Insurance” (ARL BRODSKY ‘elephone: Murray Hil, 5530 7 East 42nd Street, New York || Cooperators! Patronize While continuing his customary policy of campaigning to drive the) S E R O Y men back to work in the interests | CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 of the company, Green objected to! employment of 100 deputies to en-| force the court injunction against the strikers. It was apparent that his objection was not based on the juse of the uniformed strikebreakers as such, but because “there had»! been no violation of the injunction,” Open Air Meets Today Eagle »Pencil Co., 14th St. and| Ave. C., at 12 noon. Speaker: Nesin. Seventh St. ang Ave. B, at 8:15. Speaker: Steele. 118th St. and Pleasant—Warhburn Wire Factory at 12 noon. Speaker: per. Bronx, N. Y. Cooperators! BERGMAN BROS. PATRONIZE Your Nearest Stationery Cigars, Cigarettes, Candy, Toys 649 Allerton Ave. BRON Telephone: Olin Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. New York Office hours: Mon., Wed., Sat., 9.80 a. m, to 12; 2 to 6 P. M. WORKERS Tues, Thurs. 9.30 a, m. to’ 183 ocolona COOPERATIVE Camp snegsuneays eek Wa pm i ON LAKE WALTON, MONROE, N. Y. Fifty Miles from New York City Fr appointment. Telephone: Lehigh 6023 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any BAPAC DELS other office Tel. DRYdock 8880 FRED SPITZ, Inc. FLORIST NOW AT 31 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 1st & 2nd Sts.) Flowers for All Occasions 15% RED! ION TO READERS OF THE DAILY WORKER FURNISHED ROOMS Now is your opportunity: to get a room in the magnificent Workers Hotel Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUE OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Cor. 110th Street Tel. Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number of tenants were compelled to leave the city, we have a num- ber of rooms to rent. No security necessary, Call at our office for further information. “Despite the ny union camp, we d or discouraged will rise up in hatred and anger and break the chains that shackle them, destroy the company union! and win for themselves real union | nditions.” | In words of scathing satire Louis Hyman discussed “the great ‘vie- tory’ without a stri nd what it will mean for the claal s. He ended up with a call for militant action .th brought the cloakmak- ers to their feet. Other Speakers. | Others who spoke were J. Boru- chowitz, manager of the Joint] Board of the Industrial Union; Lev-| irman of the Committee 5 ie ss, manager of the| department of the union, who} pointed out the connection betwi the new suppressions of the work-| ing class in this country and the| imperialist attacks on the Soviet Union; E. Oswald, Italian organ-} izer of the union; B. Kaplan, for-| merly chairman of an-I. L. G. W. local, and J. Cohen, who acted as} chairman of the meeting. | | One of the memorable parts of| the evening was the enthusiastic ac-| claim that greeted the reading of a resolution denouncing the imperial-| t provocations against the Soviet | Union and pledging solidarity with the workers and s of the| U.S. S. R. again mer- cenaries of imperialis ing of the resolution follow speech by M. J. Olgin, editor of the | |Morning Freiheit, Jewish Commt nist daily, who told the cloakmal ers of the recent events in China and of their significance to the workers of the world. ‘ * * cloak Dressmakers Meet Tomorrow Plans for a vigorous org e in the dress trade will be di ed at a membership meetir all dressmakers, called by the Joint Board of the Needle 'frades Work ers Industrial Union for 7 o'clock tomorrow night in Webster Hall, 119 E, 11th St. Must Register Now | Fer Speakers Class At Workers School The Workers School announces the organization of a speakers class to begin August 8, Thursday evening at |7 p. m., under the direction of Com- rade Rebecca Grecht. the Directio: |a powerful dra wee SPEND YOUR VACATION IN CAMP NITGED AIGET THE FIRST WORKINGCLASS CAMP — ENTIRELY REBUILT 175 New Bungalows -- Electric Light Educational Activities Under JACOB SHAEFFER “AMUSEMENTS | Was Germany Guilty of the Wa Now Playing! is az- ts SEE ite tin “FIGHTING | presenting Ger- i rg tthe for the te “mation Be FATHERLAND” tures taken at ri the front. — — and on the same prog JOHN BARRYMORE in “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” | FILM GUILD CINEMA : | Imperialism ts, at tne «ame time the most prostitute an@ the ultim- 2 State REFRIGERATED CAME® * OPPRESSED” Starring EL MELLER 42nd Street & Broadway ate form of t wer which ety had aS M means ation from feud- commenced to € ‘own bour- finally tr: ned o a means for th siavement of Iabor by capital, Marx. a RAQU THIS FRIDAY, JULY 19, UNION SQU Very Important Matters Are To Be Taken Up, and You Must Be Present Without Fail. 1 Millon LEAFLETS ON THE GastoniaFrame-up JUST OFF THE PRESS HIS IS A POWERFUL INDICTMENT of the huge conspiracy to send fifteen textile strike leaders and workers to the electric chair. t 6:30 P. M. A million copies must be distributed in the » Mines and mills within the next two Order your bundle immediately. $1.50 per 1,000 plus express charges. Checks or money orders must accompany all orders. F issued by the IST PARTY OF THE WRITE OR WIRE DAILY WORKER, 26 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK COMM UNITED STATES Director of Sports, Athletics and Dancing EDITH SEGAL Director of Dramatics JACOB MASTEL of THIS WILL BE THE BIGGEST OF ALL SEASONS DIRECTIONS: LITE CAMP NITGEDAIGET Telephone Beacon 731 Take the Hudson River Day Line Boat—twice daily— 75 cents. Take car direct to Camp—20 cents. BEACON, N. Y. New York Telephone Esterbrook 1400 y eT we WN ‘a COSTUME BALL ABOARD THE S.S. Peter Stuyvesant (a Hudson River Day Line Boat) FRIDAY EVENING ugust 9 VERNON ANDRADE’S FAMOUS NEGRO RENAISSANCE ORCHESTKA Tickets: $1.50 in Advance Boat leaves West 42nd St. $2.00° on day of sailing Pier at 8:00 P. M. sharp DAILY WORKER, 2¢ UNION SQUARE, N. Y. Comrade Frances MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New Yor! el. B in aot Advertise your Unic here. For informatic The DAILY WO Advertising Dept 26-28 Union Sq., ALBERT MODIA? Violin Instruct BRONX BOULEVA cks North of perative Hou Phone: LEHIGH 6 M4 b International Barb M, W. SALA, P 2016 Second Avenue, (bet, 103rd & 104 Ladies Bobs Our Private Beauty |] 141 SECOND AVENUE, | Phone, Orcha |] Im case of trouble w come to see your frien long experience, and « you of careful t <. VEGRTAR Dairy STAUIL omrades ill Always Pleasant to Dine at Our f 1787 SOUTHERN BLVI (near 174th ONE i— 1 PH MEET YOUR FRIENI vd ? Messinger’s Veget and Dairy Resi 1763 Southern Blyd., & Right off 174th St. s 23 RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVE E Bet. 12th and 13 Strictly Vegetarian | All Comrades Meet BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Heal + Restaurant 558 Claremont Parkway, Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3316 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DI A) place with atmospher where all radicals meet 302 E.12th St. New York | Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers on the first Monday of month at $ p. m. One Industry—One Union—)o and Fight the Common § 2 Office Open from 9 a. m. Unity Co-operators Patron SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New Yor! Between 110th and 111th Next to Unity Co-operative } BUTCHERS’ UNION Local 174, A.M.C.&B.W. of NA Office and Headquarte Labor Temple, 243 8 St. Room 1 Regular meetings every third Sunday, 10 4 Employment Bureau dav arg P. st and} 1 open prert MEF Pek