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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1929 Page Three LIONISTS ADMIT ARAB REVOLT IS AGAINST BRITAIN ManyFalse Statements Exposed by Facts Correspondents» of capitalist pa- pers in Jerusalem are now admit- ting that many of the stories sent out by the Zionist publicity experts about “pogroms” and “attacks” on colonists were false. Together with that the Arabian revolt was really against British imperialism, this is significant, It is now admitted that Te! Aviv, at first said to be wreck- ed by Arabs, was not attacked, not a single house damaged. Not a single tree was cut down in any of the orange groves in Judea and in Sharon. Fake “Massacre.” The orphans’ village at Ben She- men, scene of a big fake “newspa- per massacre,” is now admitted ab- solutely undamaged. No Jewisk settlement in the Jezreel or Jordan valley was damaged. Ruttenberg’s powerhouses are working normally. The places the Jewish colonists were attacked were where they placed themselves in the front. rank of British imperialist drive against the Arabian revolution, organizing armed corps to put down the peas- ants’ uprising, and making attacks on the Arabs themselves. eee ke Lipsky Speaks Out. The speech of Louis Lipsky, pres- ident of the Zionist Organization of America, to the New York mass meeting held by that organization in the Town Hall, last Sunday, is sig- nificant. While Rabbi Stephen Wise spent most of his time blaming the Brit-) ish government for “inefficiency in} defending the Zionists,” and claimed | that “by a negative, neutral, non-co- operative attitude the Balfour decla- | ration has been tortured by the Pal-; estine government into sanction and acquisition in anything that the wrongful leaders of the Arabs have chosen to do,” (a sufficiently amaz- ing statement in view of the British terror raging there against the | Arabs), Lipsky, more realistically, stated frankly that the Arabian up- rising “masked an attack on the mandatory government of Pales- tine” (which is a British mandate, and therefore the fighting was an) anti-imperialist movement), Clash of Empires. This attitude of the official spokesman of Zionism in America indicates that there is a pro-Amer- ican drift on the part of some of the Zionist leaders, who are certain- ly not anti-imperialists, and a feel- ing that U. S. rather than England could make a colony out of Palestine to better advantage of the Zionist organization. The Zionist extremists (Revision- ists) who held their meeting in Irv- ing Plaza the day before, although their attitude seems mixed, showed mistrust of Britain. They are or- ganizing a Zionist legion to be sent 25 Indian Unionists in Meerut Case Make Hungerstrike Threat (Wireless By Inprecorr) LONDON, Sept. 23.—Twenty-five GOVERNMENT OF AUSTRIA YIELDS to the court repeating their demand | for their political rights, and point- ling out that one prisoner held in Lahore, Jatindranath Das, has al- ready died as a result of his hunger strike for political rights while two others are seriously weakened, The | letter states that should the Anglo- Indian government not grant politi- cal rights within a week the 25 pris- oners, including the Englishmen, Spratt, Bradley and Hutchinson, threaten to hunger strike, Xe: ee Offers Constitutional Changes Thursday The United Press correspondent reports from Vienna that the Steer- | the parliament Thursday a plan for |considerable change in the Austrian |national constitution. The change Heimwehr ultimatum expires. When Das’ funeral took place last} The Heimwehr, or Austrian fas- week, thousands of workers lined | cist military organization, several the eight-mile course of the coffin, days ago demanded that the consti- shouting “Down with British rule.” | tution be changed to place dictator- ial power in the hands of the presi- ss sys dent, with the idea of fascisting the One Million Petitions lgovermneat and threatened to march to be PresentedWhen Gastonia Trial Starts on Vienna and seize the government |by force of arms if their demands One million signatures of protest by the time the trial were not met. of the Gastonia prisoners re- Government Action Suspicious. | It is known that the Austrian na- opens at Charlotte, N. C., Sep- tember 30, continues to be the | tional council has been considering these changes, and that the govern- aim of the Gastonia Joint De- fense and Relief Campaign. ment is giving no real attention to any preparations to block a fascist coup. It is planned to present these petitions to the 16 prisoners in danger of the electric chair and A large meeting of Heimwehr was held Saturday, at which the opinion to the authorities on the day the trial opens. seemed to prevail that the govern- Protest the fa | | |ment was co-operating with them. |A meeting of 100,000 landbund (re- actionary peasant’s organization) was held Saturday and voted “con- t terror in olay and Macktenburg Coun- | fidence in Steerwitz.” jes. ey | Protest the murder of Ella 4 jah es Form Anti-Imperialist Protest the lynch plans of Manville-Jenckes. Protest the plans to legally murder the sixteen Gastonia strikers. Send the petitions to the Gas- tonia Joint Defense and Relief Campaign, 80 East 1ith St., Room 402, New York City. | STARVATION KILLS NEGROES. ‘League in Cleveland as ‘Simons Continues Tour | CLEVELAND, Sept. 22. — A |branch of the All-American Anti- Imperialist League was organized here following a talk by William Si- mons, League, National Secretary, at Gardina Hall. David Martin was elected local secretary. { at Indian trade union leaders in the Meerut case have addressed a letter | | The United Press correspondent | A Geneva cables 15 Lati worked out a plan for an economic STEP WITH CHAIN union, similar to that proposed for | — tions for a voting bloc within the league, according to this correspond- (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO (By Mail)—I am a ‘Latin American States’ |Delegations At League at atin American delegations have held two | meetings among themselves, and) |Europe by Aristide Briand. | Tay 7 | | | They have also laid the founda- |Never ii et hat Pay |ent. What happens to states under {rival imperialist control, as Para- witz government will turn over to|guay is by England and Bolivia by|worker in the McCormack reaper have a 15-minute short relief period. | paid ones. irene in Chicago. We assemble parts of binders that are moving We have to keep up |U. S., is not stated. Argentine, Bra- j il, Costa Rica, Ecuador and Mexico are not represented at the league.,;on a chain. | will be offered two days before the|It is planned to submit the plan to|as fast as the chain is moving and) | (Continued from Page One) Chang also was described as seeking an alliance with Feng Yu-Hsiang, |the “Christian general.” What to Do for the Defense of the 16 Make Them Quit (By a Worker Correspondent) Few raises are given. New oper- | CHICAGO (By Mail).—In a pre-|ators are paid $65 a month, and the | vious letter I told some of the con- | bosses intend to gradually replace | ditions of the workers of the Postal/the older operators getting $20 to | Telegraph and Cable Company. Rou-|/$30 a week with the new low-paid tine is the constitution in the Postal.| operators. These are mostly girls You must abide rigidly by it—and from 16 to 20, monitors and supervisors see to it. “Riding” the Older Workers. Talk between operators and chewing| Intensive riding of the older of gum is forbidden. operators goes on to make them Lunch is a half hour and they | quit and replace them with the low- The other day, an oper- ;One minute late on your relief and|ator after sitting at a printer four you’re docked 16 minutes. |hours, being ignored after asking Ten Hours for the “Printers.” for relief, got up and went to the The girls work an average of 10, washroom. hours a day, no overtime being paid.) with kids at home to feed. Workers to |No holidays allowed off, neither is} These conditions prevail in all | there a half day Saturday. The/Postal offices, only in the smaller girls slave all day on these nerve-|cities rationalization is even worse, |wrecking printers—their hands con- tinually flying. If they lay off a day, on their own time, the card ‘supervisor calls up to ask why they |are not down. The Chief Monster. There is a chief monster, a veri- jtable snake of a woman, who cruelly |rides the girl operators for any |slight infringement of the routine. |She has them fired for nothing at all. | and wages lower. Top in Omaha, $85 a month, in Los Angeles, $110, in the South much lower. A year ago apn attempt was made to or- ganize the Postal workers and when the corrupt A. F. of L. sent an “or- ganizer” we were told the company knew of our plans and it would be wisest to disband for a while. These conditions also prevail at the West- ern Union Telegraph, too, —TELEGRAPHER. PROBE SHIELDS 'BARCOSKI TRIAL | Fac dered by Coal and Iron Police McKeller in Attack on) Mur | British Navy | | (Continued from Page One) makers, 4 |managed to “put it over on him,”/an iron poker until the poker was Wakeman replied: “I don’t know.|bent out of shape, the coal digger It must have been super-salesman- almost unrecognizable and his last ship. I hate to admit it.” moan stifled. Warr snred Losing Money. {posed to have started when he re- |what information he expected to get |fused to be a witness against a FH ‘ friend accused of bootlegging. When from Shearer, but had in mind Jeane hed gotten him 46 tha barracks (Continued from Page One) Result—laid off, a man| WAR PROFITEERS 10 OPEN TODAY When asked how Shearer his prostrate body and hit him with) The attack upon Barcoski is sup-| RICHMOND, Va., (By Mail)— The death rate of Negroes in Vir-| ginia doubled the death rate of! whites, state department figures) show. The rate in 1928 was 9.89 for whites and 18.69 for Negroes. |The starvation wages paid the Negro workers, and the lack of san- itary facilities and hospitals for them is the main cause, | MOVIE OPERATORS STRIKE. BUFFALO, N. Y., (By Mail).— Motion picture operators at the! Strand and Genessee Theatres are | on strike to obtain union working | conditions. | | from America to Palestine, and hold the country by force, for which em-| pire they do not say. However, they | called for the resignation of Lipsky | and Chaim Weizman, president. of | the World Zionist Organization, be. | 18; Los Angeles, Oct. 20; San An- | 26; Dallas, Oct. 28; Oklahoma City, tonio, Oct. 24; Houston, Texas, Oct. | We never know for certain what lus for the time that we are waiting | pay. On top of that the trucks that we have to wash up either in the arating them from Canton is the!Evidently the bosses don’t care revolt of Chang Fa-Kwei is taken | have established a shop paper, the The London Daily Telegraph's | C#" expose the rottenness of the sys- jhelp finance the fight against the} struggle in the colonies reported by| (Presumably the same which fired | Cities Simons will visit in con-| the “Ironsides” division was advanc- tober 2; Kansas City, Oct. 4; Den-| Teaching Pukow, across the Yangtze against each other, making charges Oet. 31. the workers and peasants of China, our wages will be for the week. We | average from $27 to $30 a week. | | for the chain to begin moving again. If the chain gets stuck one hour |Red Army Annihilates |they use are not electric trucks but White Guard Raiders | gasoline trucks and the smell from toilets or go to the painters’ wash- room where we have to wait until |narrow province of Kwangtung.| whether we wash up before going Between them and Nanking lies the | home or not, that is not their con- |seriously by the Nanking govern-| Harvester Worker, and think it’s a 1 ment. |great paper. Through its columns |Shanghai correspondent reported tem in the shop and the raw deal | Chiang Kai-Shek’s government was| handed the workers, and point out |Ichang war lord, The Exchange Telegraph Corres- delegates to the Frankfort and Mon-/0n the Nanking troop ship), were | tevideo congresses of the League | disarming Nanking punitive troops | nection with his organization tour|ing to join General Ho-Chien at | will include Chicago, Sept. 24, 25;|Changsha, on the .cy to Canton ver, Colo., Oct. 7; Fort Lupton, Oct. | tiver from Nanking. 8; Portland, Oct. 11; Seatle, Wash., | Many Mutinies. of graft, ineficiency, and reaction. It is reported that Wang Ching-Wei, though recently again; in opposition to Chiang Kai-Shek, is in Hongkong, |these governments, asking them to| there is not a minute’s let-up as | Sometimes the chain breaks down | | before quitting time they simply them injures our health. the painters get through. We have province of Anhwei. | cern. | |and through the Daily Worker we |doing its utmost to sell $70,000,000 | the need to organize. |pondent at Hongkong reported that | Against Imperialism, was noted by | ene out under General Chang Sei-| Gary, Sept. 26; Milwaukee, Sept. 27;! and that some of the troops were re- | Oct. 13; San Francisco, Oct. 16;| Both Chiang Kai-Shek and Chang at one time regarded as a “left waiting to join the anti-Nanking UNION POLISHERS STRIKE. CLEVELAND, Ohio.—Union_ pol- hers and buffers are on strike} Gastonia Prisoners 1.—Hold mass protest meet- ings! 2.—Mobilize for the mass col- lection days, Sept. 21 and 22! 3.—Send resolutions of protest and telegrams of greeting to prisoners at Mecklenburg County jail, Charlotte, North Carolina. 4.—Build International Labor Defense units! 5.—Build Workers International Relief units! 6.—Tell your neighbors, shop- mates, friends of Gastonia! 7.—Build a united front in the shops, factories and mines! 8.—No let-up until all the Gas- tonia prisoners are freed from the danger of lynch-law or legal lynching! The Gastonia Joint Defense |the Washington Arms Conference ‘had scrapped a ship his company was |building in 1921, that in 1926 his and clubbed him to the floor, Lieut. |Lyster, one of the defendants, is reported to have stripped to the |company was constructing the Bit: | rive and ‘eelked tha Woker saying) \craft carrier Lexington and bidding | (7 F ” | for two cruisers, the contracts bear- | ip ey eee oneal 1 eectae ing a cancellation clause. | Harold ‘Watia “and. Frank j j | doors. “T guess I was just jazzed off my . } feet,” the witness said. | Slapkis, the Coal and Iron cops who Meant Millions Gained. lieved Lyster whenever he got Senator Allen, republican, Kansas, , Gea 2 4 asked whether the ease with which| ‘The trial was originally scheduled Shearer foisted himself upon com-|¢oy June 10, but deferred until now jpetent business talent indicated the |/on the plea by defense counsel that ship builders had “a languid or @/ public opinion was such that a fair |Poignant interest” in the Geneva ¢yiq] was unobtainable at that time. \conference, The interest was languid, | The attorneys for the defense are | Wakeman said. going to claim that Watts struck did, and was the author of the|the latter had “attacked’ him while breakdown of the Geneva confer-|he was investigating the violation ence, the American shipbuilding in- | of the Volstead act. dustry profited by $740,000,0007,” asked Allen. fendants, it will be shown, did noth- ling to contribute to or to aggravate brought Barcoski to the barracks,| “If Shearer did what he says he|Barcoski in self defense only after | “The other de-| both meetings, the cabled report | of America in Cleveland, as a result that the U. S. consul in Jerusalem| of putting a night crew on a lower was helping the Zionists was loudly|wage rate than that of the day cheered. crew, Women (Continued) Mill Bosses Own It. I went out from the mill, down the long weaving room, out into the warm, sunny streets of Columbia, out among the hills with their aro- matic pines. In Columbia the snow never falls and the cold winds of winter come not. I passed the abid- ing places of the mill slaves. These homes are owned by the mill owners. Shacks are rented at $2, $3, and $6 a month. The churches of Coiumbia are owned by the mil lowners. The schools are owned by the mill own- ers. Ministers and priests are chosen by the mill owners. Said the superintendent of Gran- by. “The hands is very religious, and we’uns take pains to keep up this spirit.” I spoke ‘to the “Cracker” super- intendent, “Do you employ Ne- groes?” “Naw,” drawled the man, “The Nigger goes to sleep at the looms. The all-fired hum of the machinery gets on his nerves.” Again I spoke, “There is no air n'these mills, all the windows are closed, and there is no ventilation.” “Naw,” again he drawled. “Cotton weavers can’t have no air in the mills. Air breaks the threads.” in the Cotton Mills I said, “Some of these men work-] I laughed softly to myself. I had cee powerful in build, they are | heard the story before. intelligent, and they will not stand} a 5 yore for these things long; they will or- | What of the N. 'T. W. U2 ganize on class lines.” | I lingered saying, “What of the “Want No Unions.” new “National Textile Union?” The superintendent snorted “Class lines Northern mill owners | ate coming to Columbia, woolen mills are coming, they won't stand for unions—they air a-comin’ for | cheap labor.” heel, and prepared to leave me. I called out “Just one moment more.” The man’s face was red and angry looking. ‘“We’uns can’t have labor unions in this mill,” he replied. “What do you do for these chil- | r dren in the July heat?” I asked.| ,, nae Arapment sr vk “Oh,” replied the man, “If it gets} ie sail Haul coe fi : over 100 degrees inside the mill we| ete” I said. “The Ethie Renta sprays outside with the hose.” get the ‘millions thet the workers “Do the workers get coid, ice | make. Work conditions in these water through the heat?” I con. | Mills are bad; labor must make its tinued. 3 a conditions. i re Ee a “Noy if you are making ready for the tell ee enGiee You sieag | Revolution in the cotton industry?” about unions. We had mide; doxen 1) The superintendent was sulien and of them I. W. W. fellers down hyar | silent, long since. They stopped three to six months, I reckons, a-tryin’ to organize the han’s, an’ what do you think they did to be popular? Them fellers went rite in to the best rest- aurants in town an’ ordered a fine dinner for the crowd, an’ when the waiter brought the bill, they tore | it up and cried out, ‘Charge it to the Mayor.” I continued, “140 mills in the South. It is time that the workers here in Columbia took a hand in making decent working conditions in these mills. All the millions made by the manufacturers are wrung from labor’s toil; labor’s social pro- ductive values. What belongs to labor, labor must have; and labor is bound to come into its own!” COMPLETE TOUR FREE SOVIET VISAS The Oldest Travel Organization See...... SOVIET RUSSIA Be on the Red Square to Witness the Celebration of the 12TH ANNIVERSARY OF NOV. Group Sails:—S.S. AQUITANIA—October 23 Send Tourists to the U. 8. 8. R. REVOLUTION $ >) 9s. NEW YORK LONDON LENINGRAD MOSCOW WORLD TOURISTS 175 FIFTH AVE, NEW YORK Flatiron Building Telephone: Algonquin 6656 — 8797 to cause of their too tame policy. At| against the Chromium Corporation | |Join with it. long as the chain keeps going. or gets stuck so they simply dock LOSE IN BATTLE | alae jsend us home with that much less When we get through working | Hupeh and Kwangsi adjoin. Sep-/no washroom for our department. Reports from China indicate the| We are beginning to awaken. We | Chiang Raising Money. disbandment bons, ostensibly to —HARVESTER SLAVE. The sharpening _anti-impeialist|Chang Fa-Kwei’s troops near Itu| Simons in his speech. hu. The correspondent added that Minneapolis, Sept. 29; St. Louis, Oc-!ported to have moved eastward, Oakland, Oct. 17; San Diego, Oct.) ha-Kwei are issuing proclamations winger,” but actually a traiter to | forces. and Relief Campaign Com- mittee, 80 East 11th St., “Why, it’s absurd to think this man could affect negotiations be- Barcoski’s injuries,” the Mellon at- torneys claim, and expect to point The. superintendent turned on his | * * * New York City. Crush Invaders, : WANT BUSINESS HEAD. Before the recent Brotherhood of Painters convention in Denver came Reports by capitalist press corres- pondents from Chita,. Siberia, state Dek he auae aaa bend machine delegates from Glendale, rs |Cal. and Terro Haute, Ind. with a Liner pea as Puen {Net demand that the international union the U.S. S. R. : i i A i tee ante’ deg ree acitis BTOUP |called a dictatorship. They proposed Head cing caval als ith. the | that a business manager, to be paid loss of one man wounded, killed 11/88 high a8 $59,000 a year, assume of the white guardists, wounded |°°mmand of the union. is | The Brotherhood, viewed as a mil- many, and captured their horses and 1:54 dollar concern or better, is en- | titled to the services of a high pres- Attempts were :naae by white|sure business executive who has guard mercenaries of the Mukden| won his spurs, not in the.organized government, unsuccessfully, to in-| labor movement, but in big business vade the Soviet Union at Michinsky, | itself, in the view of the machine. Amitzar and in the Pabi-Gugutar! Many were the protests against district. Chinese soldiers of the the old “one hoss shay” methods. Mukden army attacked behind a bar- rage Soviet order posts at Sanchago. After considerable firing, they were repulsed. A Red Army soldier is | reported killed at Amazar, DEMAND RAISE. CHICAGO (F.P.), — A 40-hour week and $3 weekly raise is demand- led by Chicago Typographical Union |No. 16 for the new job shop con- | tract. Abolition of the bonus is WIN FIVE-DAY WEEK. BUTTE, Mont.—Painters, plaster-|the principal union demand of the ers, plumbers, electrical workers and | "°WP@Pers. Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! hod carriers of Butte are working the five-day week, their unions an- | nounce, | GASTONIA Citadel of the Class Struggle in the New South By WM. F. DUNNE W4 HISTORICAL PHASE in the struggle of the American working class analyzed and described by a veteran of the class struggle. To place this pamphlet in the hands of American workers is the duty of every class-conscious worker who realizes that the struggle in the South is bound up with the inedenente) interests of the whole American working class, 15 cents per copy (plas Se. postage) Place your order today with the WORKERS [IBRARY PUBLISHERS be placed under what might be! tween high powers,” Wakeman re-|to the great number of German plied. jworkers killed by the three defend- * | ants during the World War as McKellar Assails Britain. proof of the desirability of sparing Yesterday in the senate, McKellar, their lives. — |democrat of Tennessee, and one of| As it is important for the pur- the outstanding agents of imperial- | Poses of the bosses that the illusion ism in political life, made a sharp of fairness and impartiality be pre- attack upon Great Britain. Con-| Served, the workers expect that cerning the discussions between Am- | Perhaps one or two or possibly all bassador Dawes and Premier Mac-| three may be sent to jail for short Donald, the Tennessee senator said terms—with the promise of pardons he would vote for no agreement that @S soon as the public has had time does not ensure absolute parity. to forget about the case, Claims British Supremacy. “Our newspapers state,” he said, “that our government has reached a} tentative agreement with the British * * ER WAGE SCALE. CLEVELAND, Ohio.—The grant- ing of a 14 per cent increase in government that instead of a “par-| wages to the Cleveland musicians ity,” America is to accept an in-|} union has made possible the re- ferior cruiser strength to Great| opening of the Hanna Theatre, a Britains, just as she accepted her | legitimate house. The musicians de- inferior battleship strength in 1922.|manded a 40 per cent increase. Under these circumstances I shall fight to the last ditch against put- ting America in an inferior position on the seas.” HIGH Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! Answer the Attacks of the Social Fasci DAILY WORKER BIG MCCORMICK Bosses “Ride” Old Telegraph HAWTHORNPUNGH PRESS SHRIVELS WORKERS’ HANDS Western Electric Co. |Machinery Dangerous | (By a Worker Correspondent) | CHICAGO (By Mail).—Depart- {ment 6338, Building 30-2 at the Hawthorn Works of the Western Electric Company is a punch press department. The workers are paid on an individual piece work basis. |The day rate is $21 per week and the maximum wage a punch oper- ator can make under the most mad- dening speed-up conditions on piece work is $26 a week. There is practically no ventilation of any kind reaching the punch press workers. The workers are so |speeded up that they have not got sufficient time to remove their hands while feeding the material to the press before the safety flap in front of the die comes down and strikes their hands with the result that the small fingers are all shrivelled up with the thousands of knocks that they receive every day. | The place is very unsanitary, the lard oil sticks to the clothing and |stinks like hell. The operators have their hands covered with a film of oil, making the work more danger- ous due to material slipping out of hands. The company does not pro- vide wiping material nor does: it provide free laundry service or over- jalls for these workers, who have to jdig out of their meager wages to |have this done every day. The Western Electric slaves must and will organize to end these con- ditions, but they will follow the leadership of the Commnist Party which will not sell them out. —W. E, SLAVE. \Int’] Harvester Co. | Bleeds Young Workers; |Must Do Adults’ Work (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO (By Mail)—The In- ternational Harvester Works em- ploys a great many young workers, some just out of school. In many cases they do the same kind of work the adults are doing but their pay is considerably lower. They receive anywhere from 35 to 45 cents an hour, hardly ever any more, but in many cases they are put on jobs at reduced pay. This happened in Department 36 as well as other de- partments. Certainly these lads need more protection from the ex- |ploitation of the boss who does not lrespect any age, old or young, as long as he can squeeze out a few | bloody dollars for profits. Harvester | workers, organize! —REBELLIOUS WORKER. | BOUNCE TEXAS STAGE HANDS. | HOUSTON, Tex.—Twenty stage hands in Houston’s biggest movie theatres were ruthlessly given two weeks notice to leave their jobs when New York magnates control- ling the chain show houses decided to install all-talkie programs. The union has not announced what ac- |tion it will take. | Union musicians in the movie jhouses have been working without |contract for a month, pending de- |cisions of the show magnates to (install complete mechanical equip- ment to oust the hand players. The change to “sound” movies, eliminat- ing all vaudeville acts—ineluding |their necessary accompaniment of | stage hands and musicians—is going on all over the country. MACHINISTS STRIKE. ILION, N. Y.—Machinists are on strike against the Remington Arms Company for discrimination against members of the International Asso- ciation of Machinists. ists Against the MORNING FREIHEIT by getting behind the + Ske BAZAAIR MADISON SQUARE GARDEN Eighth Avenue, 49th and 50th Streets OCTOBER 3, 4, 5, 6 Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday Leave all your buying for those days because Madison Square Garden will be turned into A FOUR-DAY DEPARTMENT STORE 43 EAST 125TH STREET and all Workers Book Shops NEW YORK CITY Thursday, October 3rd. 50 Friday, October 4th 50 Saturday, October 5th. $1.00 Sunday, October 6th... 50 $ Total. ...seeeee0.0.°$2.50 Combination for all four days 1.25 On Sale at Daily Worker, 26 Union Square, New York