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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1929 ‘} Toronto Police 5 V1.) FACE CHARGES OR “SEDITION SMASH MEETINGS Brutal Police Terror) Rages Against Labor TORONTO, Ont., Sept. 13—A riolent campaign of government re- rression against the Communist Party of Canada reached a climax) when police raided a local printing rlant and confiscated every current | esue of the Worker, official Party | organ, as it came off the press. Threatened with sedition proceed- ngs, the printer was forced to re- fuse handling the paper in the ture, The raid followed stubborn re- listance of the Party to police terror organized to smash its fight for free ipeech and freedom of the streets. Five workers face sedition charges wising from their participation in he campaign, Ruthless Suppression. The charge, a sharp instrument of lass suppression in Canada, was in- roked against the workers in the Winnipeg General Strike in 1919. Six workers face jail terms fol- owing their arrest at mass demon- trations. Meyer Klig is serving a nwo months’ sentence for the cus- omary charge of “obstructing the yolice.” : The seditious charge is also be- ng used against a local printer for vrinting a leaflet demanding free peech and free assemblage, Savage brutality marks every stration organized in Queens » Where most. of the arrests oc- - under the direct supervision of he loyalist Police Chief Draper, vho systematically breaks every lemonstration with mounted and cot police, The struggle was intensified with . jhe jailing early this year of Arov id 7aara, editor of “Vapaus,” Finnish | fi) .Sommunist paper in Sudbury, center vf the Mond nickel mines, Vaara vas recently released after serving ix months for sedition. He was ilso forced to pay a$1,000 fine. Deportation is threatened against ion-Canadians actiye in the fight. Only the mass protest of the Cana- lian Labor Defense in conjunction with the Communist Party saved he British workers Joe Farby and 3am Langley from immediate de- yortation, although they are out mly on the sufferance of the Dominion Government. Reformists. Aid Suppression. Following the lead’ of the liberal yress, social-democrats in trade mions mildly plead for “greater” ‘reatment of the Communists on the prounds that they should be al- owed “to let off steam.” The tory press demands rigid application of he 1919 sedition laws—as in the :ase of the Montreal Gazette and he Toronto Globe, which edi- rially campaigned fer “deporta- tion—a simply remedy,” to “quell the troublemakers.” British Steel Merger First Unit in Trust; Snowden Aids Owners A great merger of British iron ind steel firms has been completed n the Northwest coast district of she industry, say capitalist press torrespondents. & is under the eadership of Sir Arthur Dorman, The chief firms in the amalgama- sion are Dorman, Long & Co. and Boleckow, Vaughan & Co., Middleborough, who, to; a number of other firms between the Tyne and th: Tees, will bring the greatér part of the steel and ron production of the district un- der one control. Dorman issued a statement yes- serday to the press, saying this is the first of a,contemplated four unit trust to monopolize the in- dustry. The other units will cover South Wales, Midland and |Scot- land. i | | ] Uses Laoor Party. He stated that the prospects of e-capturing foreign markets due to he insistance of the labor party finance minister Snowden at the ‘gue conference, would be good this year. Snowden se British iron and steel ownerg, combatting "Ger- man reparations in kind as a pay- ment of the tribute levied under the Young Plan. British steel workers wages are not to be raised, however. | Bick, Hi ad Mobilize for Field Day (Wireless By Inprecorr) VIENNA, Sept, 13.—The so-called Austrian Front Soldiers’ Day oc- curs Sept. 13-16. Great detach- ments of the German Stablhelm fascist organizations preparing to a@ great frater- nization of Austro-German fascists. German fascist: member of the tag, Dr. Hoeltscher, spoke esterday in a Heimwehr meeting. With regard to Hoersing’s threat to send the Reich’s banner to Austria hould the Heimwehr become too insolent, he declared that Stahlhelm wouldn’t permit such action, uppress Orga es Ry Wall Street has appointed T Porto Rico—to cutinue the enslav and peasants and to starve more tens of thousands of them to death. A typical home of a Porto Rican worker—a thatched hut of reeds and mud, Wall St. and Death Stalk Hand in H a? | Would Replace Britain As Official Exploiter Counting their chickens before they hatch, Italian fascist papers are beginning to speculate on an in- | crease in Italian political and com- mercial power in North Africa, jjvith the “withdrawal of English imperialism from Egypt.” There is Theadore Roosevelt as governor of ement of the Porto Rican workers ARREST EIGHT IN CHARLOTTE Disarm Workers, Pre- pare for Lynching (Continued from Page One) Hugo Oehler, southern organizer of the National Textile Workers’ Union whom Sheriff Lineberger declar are he will be unable to restrain, none other than the mill owners’ hirelings, and not at all the work- ing population . The six organizers arrested to- gether with Lell and Saylor are Dewey Martin, John Gibson, Taylor Shytle, Edward Ritch, Paul Shep- pard and George Saul, an Interna- tional Labor Deferlse organizer. Preliminary To Massacre. The arrested organizers as well as other active unionists kept arms in their houses to protect themselves against the bosses’ gang who have repeatedly threatened to lynch them. Frank Fortner when he fired a vol- ley of shots droye off a lynching party which stormed his house in Dallas. The raid to disarm the workers is similar to the plan of the June 7th attack upon the tent colony in Gas- tonia, when police led by Chief Aderholt served as legal shoc troops to take away the guards’ guns as a preliminary to the arrival of the Manville-Jenckes Committee of 100, which was to have followed from the Loray will to wreck the headquarters and massacre the or- ganizers and members. Only the heroism of the strikers’ guard pre- vented this slaughter, : Charges Pile Up. The eight arrested organizers Judge Shaw who is presiding at the “investigation” and charged with “arming themselves with the pur- pose of feloniously assaulting and killing authorities who interfere with their meetings Saturday at South Gastonia and combining against the peace and dignity of the state.” The sedition charge was later added, International Labor Defense attorneys are preparing habeas corpus writs to try to release them. The raid last night was flagrant- ly an attempt to intimidate wit- nesses in the investigation of the leaders of the bosses’ black hun- dred. Fourteen Gastonia mill su- perintendents, hirelings and police officers, were among those war- rants had been sworn against on the basis of testimony presented by Saylor, Lell, Mrs. Lodge and scores of other witnesses of th eatrocities committed by the millmen’s gang. Proceedings Stop. Of course there was no need for habeas corpus proceedings, and the millmen’s lackeys were immediately released on bond. They appeared before Judge Shaw this morning, but the proceedings were stopped because Saylors and Lell, principal witnesses had been jailed. Obvious- ly, this was one purpose of last night’s raid and arrests. Needless to say, two of the ringleaders iden- tified by Saylors and other wit- nesses, namely Carpenter and Bul- winkle, head of the prosecution at- torneys demanding the chair for the Gastonia defendants, were not ar- rested. At best, only a few of the lesser lights among the bosses’ forces may be made the goats as a gesturé of “impartiality” but the real leaders will be unmolested. Organizers here point out that the legal offensive of the bosses, in- |British Fear Attack declared, adding that the “people” i} were arraigned this morning beforeitroops have literally wiped out en= some doubt in Italy as to whether |the labor party government of Britain really means to withdraw. Cooler heads point to the practical certainty that the MacDonald g tures merely mean riyeting British rule under other forms, Over Jordan; Relief Aids Palestine Labor British correspondents in Pales-| tine note that the mandate commis- = ry ? sioner is much worried oyer the low |“!8¥Ptian independence, and cam- water in the Jordan River, which|P@igning for its vigorously, ap- makes it easier for the Arabian|Parently ready to contest English revyolutionists massing on the Trans-|@0minance, even, the Rome press in |jordania. side to cross at thinly | Several points out that Italy now guarded points. Two more regi-|has third place in the Egyptian jments have been {rushed to the| ‘ade: with 21,190,000 exports from river from Jerusalem. Hes to aya wien is second place Heavy troop patrols were parad-|/07. CxPrts. | Strong fascist organi- ing the Goede eee setter. | Zations exist among and terrorize day, because Friday is a holiday for | tHe 10,000 Italians in Egypt. Tripoli |the Arabs. The Zionist newspaper! pes, 0" (one, side, of Heypt, and Doar Hayom was suppressed by|=Tit¥ea on the other, both Italian Deputy Commissioner Keith Roach, |C2lonies. With a political sphere of Thursday, because of its tactless ex- influence in Egypt, these could be |Posure of British imperialist policy. (consolidated, and the dream of con- |The paper had practically called for |Weting *Abyssinia, from which a massacre of Arabs, earlier Italian imperialism was Paani rudely awakened years ago by the | Tie WoL Rhee aeded eae successful resistance of the Abys- lowing’ appeal for aid for Palestine, | nan could go on again. “While we regret the fact that | po Sect dtst o-nedan \many Jews have suffered from the : | uprising, still we reject the at- 7 | tempts of the Zionists to mislead the working masses, especially | : among the Jews, with the assertion N AV A that pogroms have taken place in| Palestine. The uprising in Pales-| / tine is nothing more or less than a ‘ |revolt of the suppressed and ex-| (Continued from Page One) |ploited Arabs against the shameful | @@teement between the two powers. |Balfour declaration, which has for |’ These merely are negotiations be- its object of drawing Jewish capital | tween the two powers and will be |investments to Palestine, and mask- | Subject to action of a conference in ing the direct expropriation policy} Which others will participate. }of British imperialism. | This announcement comes as a “The so-called ‘Labor’ govern- ment, led by MacDonald, reaffirmed | tended to see in the conversations the shameful Balfour declaration, | between the spokesmen of the two and has sent warships and troops,| imperialist powers a step toward jand the most modern means of de- | limitation of naval arms. The ques- struetion—tanks, airplanes "and|tion is now raised regarding the armored cars, to slaughter thou-| nature of the conversations between jsands of Arabian and Jewish work-| Dawes and MacDonald that were ers and peasants. The British|heralded as disarmament talks. It is pointed out-here that these con- }tire villages with fire and sword, A’ Versations “occurred ‘simultaneously special court has just been estal jo] with the opening of the imperialist lished by Sidney Webb (Lord Pass-|0f--asive against the Soviet Union field) the colonial minister of Great and probably dealt with joint action |Britain, which means preparations|in support of the attacks of the for further bloody reprisals, and | imperialist agents at the head of the the imprisonment of large numbers |Kuomintang government against of workers and peasants, in addition | the workers’ and peasants’ state. to the thousands already thrown Strive for Advantage, into the dungeons of British im-| The limitation of armaments ges- perialism. tures are merely attempts, on the Many Dying. part of the conflicting imperialist The Jewish colonists, who have| powers, to impose arms cuts upon perished by the thousands from |théir rivals while they build greater |malaria, hunger, and toil on the|forces of destruction for the next roads, since the beginning of the so-| world war they.are preparing. The called, Palestine immigration, and|fact that the state department is to wpe are still living in caves unfit for’ invite France, Italy and Japan indi- animals,—they together with the|cates that American imperialism |Fellaheens, and plantation laborers, | will endeavor to bring these powers are the real victims of British im-|closer to its own policies and at- perialism and Zionist expropriation. |tempt to align them against British Not one cent for the Zionist | imperialist policy. charity campaign! The discussions between Great | Support the campaign of the! Britain ayd the United States, have, |Workers International Relief, for according to Secretary of State the relief of the Arabian and Jewish | Stimson,-been on the basis of total |worker and peasant families in| naval tonnage. | Palestine. It was assumed from the manner in which Stimson stated the propo- sition that efforts to obtain material reduction in cruiser tonnage have failed and that the United States must build all of the vessels re- cently authorized by congress. It would be a great mistake, Stim- son said, to be led along, by the fact that the greatest difficulties oc- curred on details, into believing those details were the most im- augurated yesterday, will be to ar- |rest active unionists on framed up | liquor charges, and then add charges lof conspiracy to oyerthrow the gov- ‘ernment, to kill police, interfering with the law, etc., etc., to hold them inactive in jail and if possible send them to prison, The same charge of “constructive murder” will be framed ‘against |them as is used against the 16 now| portant part of the Negotiations. He facing electrocution or long im-|was referring to the prominence prisonment. Thus the authorities | given the discussion of cruiser ton- lare preparing a case against the/ nage. union organizers in. expectation that| Because the difficulties have been there will be casualties or fatalities | greatest in a single class of ships, when the meeting is attacked to-| Stimson continued, the papers have morrow—or at other meetings in the future. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! 75 FIFTH AVENUE TOURS to Soviet Russia VIA LONDON—KIEL CANAL—HELSINGFORS AND 10 DAYS IN LENINGRAD and MOSCOW (First Class Travel and Hotels in U. S. S. R.) vectel PROM $385. Sailings Every Month NEXT SAILING —— BERENGARIA —— SEPT. 18 Visas Guaranteed—Permitting Visits to any part of the U.8.S.R. INQUIRE: . WORLD TOURISTS, IN (Flatiron Bldg.) Telephone; ALGONQUIN 6 NEW YORK, N. Y. n of Canadian OVER EGYPTIANS HOOPER MILLS \Slave Harder, Is Order (By a Worker Correspondent) The Daily Worker is doing great work for the wokrers and one who knows, the difficulties of running a paper for the workers can under- stand it. The splendid fight you of Bosses are making for the Southern work- patuias ers is truly wonderful, when one (By a Worker Correspondent) | Knows the South and the backward BALTIMORE (By Mail).-Not|Rdition of labor below the Mason satisfied with the terrible exploita- |@"¢ Dixie Line. tion of the Hooper Mill workers with| Have just passed through that |the previous system of Base Work, |$¢ction on the way north from |Boss Hooper, with the help of his |Florida and words cannot describe lefficiency expert, Mr. Gulici, has |t8e conditions under which working Jintroduced the piece work system.|™en and women and children are |This piece work system will speed |tiven. It is as bad as before the lup more and more every day until |Civil War. Slaves were better off, |My, Hooper will take our very lives |28 the boss had to feed them and |in the mills to accumulate millions | WS Sv | of dollars of profits. jsendition. |. Last Friday at the meeting called |WrtY over how they are, for there Communist Party Page Three ~ > Threa Now, as a carpenter, I was in- 2 en Printer and Here FASCISM SEEKSINTRODUCE PIECEFAKERS DON’T WORRY STICK TOGETHER TO EXTEND SWAY WORK INTO THE Cardenter Misleaders Ignore Workers AND WIN AT THE day. Ask the Central Labor Union | of New York why the prevailiing rate of wages in city contracts never | -y+ ; is allowed the worker. »The cron-/Girls Struck and Beat trollers’ alibi is that no complaints | have ever been made. Who is to} ame for that (of course no hope from old Boy Hutchinsn as he don’t care a damn), but how about De- Company th: (By a Worker Correspondent) 1 CLEVELAND (By Mai laney, who was president of Big Six) * Worker in the Thomson Stee! | and is supposed tp be a labor man,| Here. T want to write an, incident ere, and this Sullivan, who has made his | living off labor? They never say| a word. In Philadelphia I gathered some| 8° 2 wage-cut. pretty good suits of clothes andj" sent them on to Gastoniia, and will should get word of it, it would cost| But assuming that there will be|by the company we were told how |Z More in the hills ready to carn| me my card, so we American work- | |in Dept. 18 went on strike! On Wednesday, July 17, the girls They Instead of their egular 37%4 per cent bonus they were going to get 19 per cent bonus, was sure to keep them in working do the same thing here, but if that| /stead of the 30 cents an hour the Now he don’t have to|bum, Hutchinson, or any of his tools | Sit/s were going to get 27% cents an hour, etc. At noon, instead of going back to ers haye to sneak to do what we|Wwork when the bell rang they stayed shquld be proud of in helping fel-| downstairs. | low-workers. /¢ {t ployed line up in front of Murray Body Company, many of them get- ting in line as early as 5 o’clock in the morning. For hours this line ment office, Lut only a few skilled workers are hired—body panelers and fender finishers, workers are turned away, jobless; |many of them homeless, more o: |them hungry. And this in the year liovely it is to work under the piece {Ore money, as many in the South |work system. Mr. Gulick, who is|“on’t know what real money looks |and said, “As the conditions are {o-| day you are not satisfied and the DETROIT? NO |company is not satisfied. With the) 5 piece work system you will *be bet- Boss Says “Slave Harder!” PROSPERITY Then Mr. Gulick put his foot into — jit will be your own fault for not working harder.” (By a Worker Correspondent) against the piece work system, for DETROIT (By Mail).—While the we know that piece work means about “prosperous” Detroit and in- Nes Mec, Hogar Has made ous lives viting tourists to spend their sum- | more miserable during the past few ter fruits of the “American Plan.” decent wage, today we are receiying a starvation wage. organize into a powerful union which will fight for better conditions for Workers Union, the only organiza- tion of the textile workers which | well known as @ slave driver made | like. ter satisfied because this system it and said, “If you do not make Unemployed Line Up Who is Mr. Gulick trying to fool? |Board of Commerce is spreading more speed up, less wages, longer mers here, the workers of this great years. While during the war period Workers, Into the N. T. W. jall textile workers. We must or- fights against the rotten conditions |Every morning hundreds of urem-| | moves slowlx through the employ-| The mass of | The superintendent ame in to speak to them and locked he door. He was afraid the senti- | being laid off from the Fisher Body | ent would spread. The girls would plant and 900 from Oakland! nat hear of anything until they were There are @ few plants running | Promised their old rates. They in Detroit. Go out to Chevrolet and| Stuck together and won! The rest they may give you a job—1134|0f the day everyone of the workers ‘hours a night. The Kelsey Wheel |" Co. will give you the same privi- lege. Or take a turn down by Tern-| rates! in the shop were all smiles They were promised their old But fellow workers, this is stedt and they'll honor you with a|Mly to keep them quiet. This walk 13-hour shift! | There is but one answer to this| |wholesale unemployment and speed- |up. Cut the working day to seven jhours and the week to five days. {Cut down production so that the j workers have enough energy left at |the day’s end to take in a show or |play baseball. Spread the output through the year, instead of having |a burst for a month or two and then a long, long period of unemploy- ment. How can we get this? Only by the way in which the miners, |railroadmen and textile workers get it—join the union! Divided, we are sped up, thrown out of jobs, have our wages cut; united we can work like men, play like men, live like Join the union! t I | men. I ‘Storm Destroys Homes| of Workers in Toulon out must be a les: us. We want results. for us to form our shop committee. By organizing a strong shop com- mittee with representatives each department we can kick against these rotten wage something from tke boss. against wage cuts. committee, n and a warning Each department ‘9 the rest of us. will be cut, but not all at once. This keeps the workers divided and each department thinks it is only their affair! Wage cuts is the affair of all of We all will be cut soon. Don’t let them get away with promises! Now is the time from cuts and get Fight Form the shop Write to the Trade Union Educa- tional League, P, 0. Box 208, Cleye- land, (KIDNEYS FLASH surprise to the pacifists who pre-'in the textile dustry as a whole. maeSPEND YOUR VACATION IN CAMP NITGEDAIGET THE FIRST WORKINGCLASS CAMP — ENTIRELY REBUILT 175 New Bungalows - - Electric Light Educational Activities Under the Direction of JACOB SHAEFFER Telephone Beacon 731 a “beautiful” speech for Mr. Hooper will help you.” | enough under the piece work system i Daily The workers in the Hooper Mill are | propaganda throughout the country | hours and worse conditions, general- open-shop city are tasting the bit- | workers were receiving a somewhat The Hooper Mill workers must ganize into the National Textile prevailing in the Hooper Mill and Betrayed by. U. T. W. The American Federation of Labor union, the United Textile Workers | “Union” has betrayed us once and we cannot hope to better our con- ditions if we depend on the U. T. W. | Let us organize now; let us build a strong, militant, fighting organ- ization of the textile workers here in Woodberry and fight against the terrible conditions under which we are foreed to slave. Join the National Textile Workers Union today! Join in the fight | against the viece work system and jagainst all other speed-up schemes! Join in the fight for shorter hours and higher wages! Organize and fight; join the Na- | tional Textile Workers Union! Write | or call, 1206 East Baltimore St., Baltimore, Md. Telephone, Wolfe | 9104, |failed to say the proposed confer- | ence would cover five diffezcnt| |classes of combatant vessels, | We spent most of our time on| |ctuisers, he explained, because that | jis where the difficult technical mat- | |ters arose. | But the c“Z2ct of the conference | will be greater than its effect merely upon the cruiser class. Pity the Poor Navy. The secretary said the present American building program for all and that the total tonnage of the American navy now is 1,200,000 tons. He believes agreement not only would benefit international re- lations, but would benefit the navy which he described as living now from hand to mouth because its esti- mates of requirements cannot be justified by comparison to any stan- dard naval strength. He thinks the proposed agreement would stabilize that situation. Congress would be expected to accept naval estimates of requirements because they would be} ment, No “Immediate” Benefits. | Hudson has laid off 7,000. of American “prosperity,” 1929! Over at Dodge’s there is a small crowd, for most of the unemployed have heard that Dodge is not hir- ing and are not willing to waste six cents to come out. Hamtramck Briggs plant the em- ployment office has closed. Out at the Mack Ave, Briggs plant there is a big crowd standing, packed to- gether like cattle in a pen, swelter- ing in the hot midsummer sun. Some victim of Mr. Briggs has writ- ten, “If poison fails, try Briggs.” Down the street we hear that Morgan and Wright tells us that we don’t need to apply there for a job, They! also are laying off’ Chrysler is just getting along with a few workers. | No job there. Out at the Ford Rouge plant a great mob of men stands inisde the fence. It is a strong storm fence, used in the stock yards to keep cat- tle in check. Henry uses it to keep the unemployed in check. But there are no jobs there, Mr. Wilson, for- mer employment manager of the plant, says that there wer 2,000 less | on the payroll at the end of the spring than there were during the winter. Production engineers in the same period were able to increase Ford production daily from 6,000 to 7,500! And that, auto workers, is the open shop! That—unemploy- ment and increased production—is “prosperity!” Reports from Pontiac tell of 2,000 would be obtained by replacement. Stimson could not predict when the forthcoming five-power confer- ence would take place but said further progzess awaited that con- ference’s action. Premier MacDonald, he said, will not attempt to carry the Anglo- American understanding further when he visits here next month, The premier’s purpose in coming based upon an international agree-| here is merely to call on President Hooverythe said, He cautioned that material bene- fits would not be immediate but Build Up the United Front of the Working Class. " Director of Dramatics JACOB MASTEL AEE EEE ia deen ne NEY THIS WILL BE THE BIGGEST OF ALL SEASONS DIRECTIONS: Take the Hudson River Day Line Boat—twice daily— 75 cents. Take car direct to Camp—20 cents, CAMP NITGEDAIGET "VT ACON, N. Y. New York Telephone Esterbrook 1400 Director of Sports, Athletics and Dancing EDITH SEGAL Over at the| "eighboring countryside. WARNING PAWS It is often a sign that your kidneys are calling for Lava An seqearsaaie Seated with Santal Midy capsules and a sensible diet per | Stores were flooded, roofs and_| directions will bring relief. If serious, consult | windows were smashed and the | yourDoctor,ifnot,try genuine economic life of -the city was | Santal Midy capsules, bearing Saag paralyzed for a time, signature of Dr. L. Midy, noted French physician. Build Up the United Front of SAB iin ci NA <A, WORKERS! Columbia Records VvvvvvVvVvvvvvvy TOULON, France, Sept. 13.— |Many workers and their families were made homeless today when a cyclone struck Toulon and the Newest 10” 5e 133 Russian Lullaby.... Violin, 1 part The Far Away Bells......v¢e2 Violin, 2 part 257 Ain’t ja coming out Tonight Prison Song (Dalhart). 792 Cohen on the Telephone, Abe Lewis Wedding Day... 204s. eae, Comical 939 Ain’t He Sweet........ “rr acatihaa ee dann parts Mollie Make Up Your Mind 5 20070 Bolshevik Galop ....... Orchestra 20074 New Russian Hymn . Singing 20046 La Marsallaies ........... Singing 20085 Workers Funeral March .... Singing 12082 Russian Waltz (Accordion Solo) Magnante The Two Guitars +(Acc. 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