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‘ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK RED ARMY OF CHINA ADVANCING sho Weinberze ; IN KWANGTUNG; FENG DRIVE ON Page Three TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1929 IN THE SHOPS Fakers Help to Break Union NEMPLOYED IN yw - Hungary in BERLIN'S BLOODY m unger Strike i ENNA, Noy. The hunger ‘| HANKOW SMASHES NANKING LINE sxtcecesiercs QF SOCIALISTS comrades Rakosi and Weinberger, noted Communists, are dying. The (Wireless By Inprecorr.) nied and an equal number refused | gn; i i i i i. pts ‘ anarchist Stadon, also a hunger Communis ec Nake cele ate Re Nad be eter ecmabed ay one el amen day eee vo ideas? has died at Vaez prison.) ~ Gate ne (By a Worker Correspondent) jing to get the majority of their spyits aaah , autos Jomrade Theres2, i i ) i | FA : z Be a < t pus . > very ig in Se. ginth, this pul the invaders nearing Laohokow, |prison is in ae Beara pe sie ae | hagas eek (By ee wile eae ce ae ae AT LEAST 125 N00 allele edlphere ccs men and/where all is confusion. |The government has ‘informed the (Wireless By Imprecorr) | Pe hehe se Ree mane ing class.a steady job is becoming J j has reached Kwantung Province | wer. Chowshaw. A C ist foree BET Aad sede Wagk, Gumi tants | MARTIAL LAW IN SHAN of 1,000 men have occupied twenty villages in the Haifung district. | | SHANGHAI, Nov. 3.—Martial law Sah eae an extra American Ry. Express Co, no re- strietion was placed on the number But when the second blow dealt | FAN ‘os, : 7 that could be hired daily. Mee are ieee arene OO Laid Off in Big Harvester Plant company has instituted the | sidered, one is inclined to charge thi tice of hiring extra men at the leaders with somethin; nning of each busy period and|than mere stupidity. 0) defendants’ counsel that it is ready | BERLIN, Nov. 3.—The triel in HAL, |to negotiate all questions but only :he Berlin Moabit criminal case is| after cessation of the hunger strike, |0 appeal, in which case three Com- | declared in the Chinese city, sup-| “hich means exactly nothing. aN agers of the ap eie Pane | HANKOW, Nov. 3.—The Japan-|posedly to suppress a Chinese stu- i ' . abe ese military intelligence service, |dent demonstration, actually is de-| MacDonald Given Help pet fa hy a thing of the pa (By a Worker Correspondent) which, be it noted, has its agents | signed to use against expected revo- ‘ 5 g them off when work slacks the agreement forbids th LITA, right on the ground in the present | lutionary action of workers who are By Baldwin for Break Rs te eee sane thet doing this several times per day. | of union members without their case | », ae 4 = he rae ee i ivi 24 7 siri is : . & shag u Pune Thus we se fi Is enter- | being first reviewed by a joint com- —* eto were tis sf field of civil war, reports that Feng jeuspected of desiring to take advan-' of Qgvyiet Relations rovulation to participate in the May hus we see Union officials enter- | being first reviewed by a joint com-| 4 may be thinking of coming to Yu-hsiang’s Kuominchun army has | tage of the weakness of the Chiang} ih eae . ing an agreement with the Company | mittee—but thi ame agreement | aq). : s iven a decisive defeat to Nanking | Kai-shek government. The situa-| Seid Maseaemonstrations) “despite: police that these v are not entitled | further provides tha maployee | oeaae ai eetel: OF thes Unni ba al a —Conservative | Prohibition. The editors were blamed b Sara sal ie PrOvIdAS -UNBY RO EMPloves | called:a “job,” LONDON, Nov. to a full day’s work and pay but|can join the Union who has not | troops along the northwest obrder |tion in the north is muddled by cen- J of Hupeh and Honan, Nanking/sorship and impossible claims of Party leader and ex-premier Bald- Nia Sedcae conch aa short period in which he been’ 1 employed bythe |Jobs are almost non-existent here troops are demoralized,-10,000 muti- | success. to England with the announcement (cratic leaders and the police. Beer-| yen ag full speed and ther) company at Jenst 9) an SEGA: tier alte sakierttan sive | RE that his party will moe a vote of |lin workers are intensely interosted | | : This clause completely filled the | any estimation as to the huge un- | | censure against the “labor” govern-|in the appeal. ~~ STOCK RALLY ae ce of stupidity (or worse) | gap in the barrier built up between ovoioved army at present but there | COMMUN VOT DARROW vex “for the manner in which” it} The verdiet of the appeal court prepay eee Be eee eee ee ee eee tirtte ciiction er (1820 doubt that at least’ 125,000 | | jis working for resumption of rela-|is: Comrade‘ Schrader’ acquitted, (Continued: from Page One) i a ettees UE) Sate Union. vegantatives, ‘The [azo jobless many more thou- | P tions with the Soviet Union, While |Comrades Norden and Hirsch have overnight. ‘These orders are stimtte nn POTMHOMS ABE NOW trys One Oe onenily hires « few men |S8"ds are working only 2 and 3 | CAST TODAY FOR CHI 6 A 60 Ti Liberal assistance the vote is |their fines reduced to 600 marks or|Jated by -’-+ amcunts to » sub- cove company <reauanily: Bi pipet. s a week. not likely to carry, MacDonald can |12 days. The facts brought forward | stantial boaus, and are jart of the YOUNG COMMUNISTS IN BA eee hateat Suffering is severe among the | easily use this opposition to sharpen | by the Communists compelled the war preparations. Also, they were CALL FOR STRUGGLE. jobs. They get the same wages and). ors, Many plants are laying i seat | ae, the attitude to such resumption and | bourgeois court to admit the blood started hefore the recent crash a arp palds cathe regeiey vvig im. |Off thousands of workers, and in Candidates in Several 'WhitewashingProceeds | ?"°?""° for war eventually around | guilt of the social democrats for the |U. S. has now second place in world ,, (Comtinud from Page One) Seca‘ op'heine’ paid each night us lling about the city one sees ae |such “reasons.” | May Day massacres. ship building ; j4-years is common; They reccivel| Mes ee ees eee y of the medium and smaller States Answer Bosses | in Ella May Murder | : a? See ane an average of $8 or $9-weekly. They he Ortras are, But they are inva, (sized shops closed down entirely. —= |a reason other business in Mecklin-| demonstration of Denver workers! The speech of Dr. Julius Klein, (2%¢ Prone to the starvation disease, 4. %, plies 89th day aaa The Deering Works of the Inter- (Continued from Page One) (Continued from Page One) — |bure County, lagainst the conviction of the Gas-lassistant secretary of commerce |Pcllagra,y because of lack of whole-|<tay lone enough to join the union, tational Harvester Co. has been present regime of wage cuts /n all |will become as notorious before the} All bonds of the 16 were fixed at|tonia defendants, against company over Columbia Broadcasting Sy tem {2% food. Only higher wages and gine es ig ere ich bar. |/@¥ing off men for the last two night, in which he scolded /€88 Working ogurs can cure the car and months. They laid off about 5,000 gaining between Union | factory and mill workers, and @ | workers of the land, and of other |$2,500 except for one $5,000 bond. j|unionism and class collaboration, Sun trick sanitation proposal. ___ |nations, as the Gastonia trial, which | @fense Attorney Flowers is in) was held under auspices of the Joint | the ze number of failing retailers | ‘The blow at the freedom of our |, y officials the Union consists |'™ °P® bunch about a month ago. The Communist Party is running jis an effort to halt the organization | Gastonia today trying to secure the| Gastonia Defense and Relief Com-| and told them it was their own fault Seven comrades is a challenge to the of a few men in each depot who As to working conditions in big r surely Chicago industries, there is nothing to brag about. For i ance the steel mills in South Chicago pay the “great” sum of 40 cents an hour for 8 and 10 hour shifts. And many of these jobs have no bonus, like they once had. In Gary and Indiana Harbor the wages are slightly higher, being 44 candidates in New Jersey, for state jof..the unorganized textile workers Yelease of $5,000 bail money held by | mittee, Friday night, at the Charles for not heednig danger signals, as | offices, and in several other cities. |in the South. Solicitor Carpenter which would be | Block. the country’s business was sound, ; League, h is the leader of the jabs. The former company seemed _ Persecution Fails. | “Growing unemployment, even in | used to bail out Fred Beal, Gastonia! ‘The speakers were William Diet-| has failed to impress numbers of Young workers in their struggles, satisfied with (his an : but Vicious persecution by the police the building and metal trades in| defendant. Beal’s father is danger-| rich, Eva Shafron, James Allander, fitms facing bankruptcy. upon all Southern young work- the new regi determined and all other agents of the bosses |/Chicago, coupled with the increasing | ously ill in Lawrence. It is hoped/and Mildred Gaims (Youth speaker), ‘The leaders of the stock exchange ¢'s, white and colored, to accept (o crush eve y_ imitation I} have failed to intimidate the work-|speed-up, is developing a flaming |to secure his release late today. ‘A vosclation against the cnmplovers’ again dodge the issue by agreeing ‘this challenge of the bblood-thirsty of a Union. This can be accom- 4 ers of Pennsylvania in Pittsburgh,{discontent in the ranks of labor | Strikers Demand Release. terror was adopted © {to close the New hange se and fight back with greatly | plished with but little “fort on their I] McKeesport, Arnold, Portage, ec.,/throughout the Chicago district,} 4 Jeaflet is being issued by th Pea early on Wednesday, 1 . ed orgenization and effort, part. ‘The “Clerks” Union with coal and steel towns where the Com- which the employing class fears, es- | 999 ih yu peas eal N Ca ea 4 Friday, and all day y. e call upon you to s ci ch the Express Union is affili- ] munist Party has put up candidates pecially in such large plants as the |worken’ temermn Ninine uted patina Mer apeaking: offer the same old excuse that their the National Textile Wor ated is but little stronger in other Cents an hour. The basic wages in ] in the local elections. Western Blectrie, the Northwestern |fellowing demande, inn aiditen te yO OEK: W. Va. Nov. 4— s are tired, a thing that never |to form chop committ te DAY ihe caiteey asrvlee’ (the! etave are from 37 to 40 “The attempted breaking-up of Railroad Shops, the McCormick Hay-|rrose tate Tr ethe tere cintg Stephen Graham, arrested for speak-'effected them during the big buyin ; Hop. | thon ft is ationg the expre Tt |cents an hour, for 9 and 10 hours the 12th Anniversary of the Bol-|vester Plant, the Pullman shops, and | ose, relating directly to their mill ing at a meeting called by the Intet- periods. ; ie has a scattering meml a day shevik Revolution celebration and the steel mills at Waukegan, South |? es! national Labor Defense to about 80 Oe ant Gauss workers The basic wages in the Interna- the arrest of myself and four other |Chicago, Hammond and Gary. The _ 1—Unconditional release of the | Negro workers, was convicted of mail plaifo | tional, Harvester are 40'to 45 cents \speakers, nicluding District organ-|effort is heing made to use tie sedi- | O'Sanizers and members of the N. “inciting to riot” and fined $450! st] AED (To Concluded |an hour for a 10 hour ‘day. ed Devine,’ failed completely to/tion act to combat this radicaliza.|/: W- U- sentenced up to 20 years | Hsi case will be appealed. (To enclaged) | The radio manufacturing com- care the workers away from our|tion process in the ranks of the | 1°" defending themselves and their ie Be SSS such as the Cilver-Marshall azaar for*P. Hibben , : 3 i i ill be brought to Philadelphia organize all together to fighi | ; F ” nold | work ene . | union headquarters against the Man-| ! i all be ‘Brough RBG OTe gether to fight and Temple Zenith are all Party,” said De Santos, Arnold| workers. The International Labor q Be eee Adopt Harrison. to be the chief speaker at a big against the boss the ee ee tka el the Aluminum worker and candidate for | Defense will resist this attack to the | Ville-Jenckes Co. and its police. PHILADELPHIA, Pa, Noy, 4,— mass meeting under auspices of the| “We call uy the y } teal} Mayor on the Communist Party | utmost | 2—Punishinent for the murderers |The Philadelphia executive “Com. \I,'L. D. dave and. place te be an, (of ihe South vo condemn th- teem, Hospital in U, 8. 8. R. hours are anywhere, trom 9 to 1 ticket. “More and more the class-| sttathaway Out, 6 Held. of Ella May. : mittee of the International Labor nounced soon. The Philadelohia I # the ar HES RIG Aa ie DetERnES conscious workers are rallying to 3.—Punishment for the kidnappers| Defense at a special meeting last . D. requests the national office to »who ee oe cere ery eure eee the support of the only political or-| and floggers of Wells, Saylors and night voted to adopt George Harri-| promptly arrange a speaking tour A ganization which fights the ratign- Lell. |son, one of the Gastonia defendants, for him. Fe . alization, terrorism and imperial 4,—Disarmament of the Manville-|and to proceed at top speed to raise| All forces. among class conscious 1 war plans of the bosses and for the Jenckes Committee of 100 and all! the $5000 bail reuired for his im-| workers here are mobilizing for a defense of the Soviet Union, oe Hiels Kiar, Stephen other black hundred bands. mediate release. \big Gastonia nAti-Terror drive sok cidents such as those of last night |” " Borich, Irving Hermann |, This leaflet is to be distributed in) It is estimated that within nine |lection, to take place Sunday, Nov. serve but to emphasize the class na- |” Samuel Milerem, While bail |@@Stonia, Charlotte and the sur-'hours after the adoption of Harvi-|10, all day. workers! The Young Communist | hold the best and most responsible cler! “We call upon the young wor between the orkers and to | panie 123 ef the off fextiie Work The Paxton Hibben Memorial Hospital Fund announces the open- | hours are 10. ing on November 1st of a Russian| There is one bright side I can Exhibition and B: at 17 W.|put in this letter. Every time you 57th St. The proceeds of the sale | hand out the Daily Worker or mili- of Russian peasant handicraft will | tant union literature they are eage ‘be us: ‘or the maintenance and |ly taken ky these slay That equipment of a Children’s Hospital |why the big manuf-sturing assoc viet Union, ations have started on the savage “Especially infamous is the set- ting of extortionate bail in the case: f those already under arrest in-| cluding Clarence A. Hathaway, Chi- cago district organizer of the Com- to be opened in the ture of even the local government. |is fixed at.$15,000 in most of these | Ounding area, with bundles mailed|son, $1,100 has already been collect-| Stations for collectors are an- jto all organizers in the Piedmont/ed in donations and loans, and in nounced as: 1331 North Franklin spite of bad weather, which made | St.; it hard to reach meetings of wérk- Ritner; 39 North 10th lers’ organizations. With the McKeesport Tin Plate and the National Tube Companies’ tool, Mayor Lysle, at the head of the local government on McKees- port, the C. P. candidates have been denied the use of the streets and of all halls. Despite this, however, a vigorous campaign has been carried on through leaflets, house to house visits, meetings of shop com- ittees in the mills and through cret meetings of workers gathered in private houses. In Pittsburgh, 50,000 copies of the election platform and general de-| mands of the Party have been dis- tributed in the working class dis- tricts. “With the Anti-working class campaign of the bosses gathering in momentum daily as evidenced by the vicious Gastonia sentences, the stenjencing of the five California workers, and the arrests on criminal svndicalism or sedition charges in Ohio, Chicago, and many parts of Pennsylvania, the denial by the Supreme Court of the appeal of the Woodlawn workers, it is imperative that the workers of the country answer the atacks of the bosses by getting behind the Communist Par- ty’s candidates and platform in the local elections,” said Pat Cush, Gas- tonia labor-juror and Pittsburgh candidate for Mayor. LABOR JUROR ON WITH USSR FILM | (Continued from Page One) | promised a full report the next day. ” CLEVELAND, Ohio, Nov. 4.—A mass distribution of over 15,000 copies of T. U, U. L. propaganda leaflets advertising the Cleveland mass meeting of the T. U. U. L. at which Wm. Z. Foster will speak on Thursday, Nov. 7, is on. Special leaflets are being issued by the Building Trades Industrial League, Local 88 of the Auto Workers Union, the Progressive Needle Workers Group and by the Metal Workers Industrial League. The Workers Inter-Racial League, an or- ganization of Negro and white workers, has also announced that it will issue a leaflet calling on the colored workers of Cleveland to at- |) tend the meeting. The meeting will be held in Moose Hall, 1008 Walnut St, at 8 p.m, Nov. 7 —~ At this meeting Foster. will give a report of the Trade Union Unity League Convention held here. He will also report on the recent con- vention of the American Federation of Labor in Toronto, which carried the sell out of the American work- ers by the A. F. of EZ, one step farther. It is expected that this meeting will give a real impetus to the building up of a powerful T, U. UL Admission to the meeting is free Cl eland worker is cases, twice and three times this | |maount is demanded in property as | security; ridiculously low valuations have been set on some of the pieces | of real estate offered. Under these | circumstances only Hathaway has} been released, although the Interna- tional abor Defense is making eve | possible effort to secure the freedom |of the others as well.” | The attorneys now in the case are |David J. Bentall and Albert Gold- jman. Moulders’ Protest. | The International Moulders | | Union, Local 288, of Chicago, which is the largest local in the union and has 1,100 members, has adopted a | sharp resolution condemning the terror against textile workers in the | | South, particularly the Marion mas- lsacre and the Gastonia trial. It says of the Gastonia trial: | “The strikers and the organizers refused to allow themselves to be | shot in cold blood, but instead put lup a resistance worthy of good and |loyal union men, and in the fighting jwhich followed the police chief | Aderholt was fatally wounded, | “The attempt of the Southern mill | bosses to electrocute the defendants ‘and to sentence them to long prison jterms is a plot to drive the Unions out of the South, so that the bosses may continue their speed up of workers and their starvation wages by keeping them unorganized. | “We demand the unconditional freedom of all the prisoners, their | immediate liberation, so that they |may again take their place in the ranks of the Southern textile work- ers to carry on their tasks of or- | ganizing the South.” i ” Whitewashing Proceeds. GASTONIA, N. C., Nov. 4} Judge P. A. McElry, selected by | Governor Gardner to conduct the whitewashing of the murderers of Ella May, has ordered the arrest of 16 persons, whose names are with- held. The hearings start tomorrow, with 40 witnesses subpoenaed, The action of the grand jury in simply refusing to indict a number of kill- ers, all mill bosses and superintend- were identified, has roused so much mass resentment, that McElroy was sent in to do the job more skillfully. It is even possible there may be a fake trial, as in the case of the kid- nappers of Wells. Bulwinkle Shows Connection. A. L, Bulwinkle, chief counsel for | the Manville-Jenckes Co., openly made a connection between this com- pany and its city and county author- | ities this morning ‘when he asked! that the list of 16 men for whom, warrants were issued be handed to him and he would see that all ap-) peared at the next session | Judge McElroy stated tuday that) no secret sessiors of the court would | be held, aad that fall sessiovs would start tomorrow merning, tho delay being at the ents, mill gunmen, etc., after they|” texile district. * * * Denver Workers Meet. DENVER, Cclo., Nov. 4.—A mass POLO GROUND Girard Ave., Will you be in the Saturday, Nov. at 6:30 p. mi. to hear the Fliers speak © to the American workers ® If so be sure to get your tickets early! 75 cents, $1,00 and $1.50 each at the office of FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION 175 Fifth Avenue, Room 511 ‘We cail upon the youns workers zhth and of the South to fight for the freedcm St.; 1124 |of our seven comrades! Spring Garden St.; 2926 West the freedom of all cla Promptly on Harrison’s release,iGordon St.; 1748 Aberdeen St. oners! 1928, in the Soviet dry who might talk organization o |tancy of the workers is always Terror! Vote Com- |}. nae he Gastonia Prisoners Ask YOU Fellow: Workers, to Help. Get Bail for Them! RED HENDRICKS, one of the strikers, himself, sen- tenced to seven years, and who is now out on bail, appeals to the working class, “They got nobody to appeal to but you. Pin scared for thenz and 1 plead hard with you all.” The Philadelphia District of the International Labor Defense telegraphed the National Office yesterday: “We decided to adopt George Harrison, one of the Gastonia de- fendants, and we are proceeding to raise the necessary 85,000 bail for his immediate release.” W hat Has Your District Done? ARE YOU WORKING TO GET BAIL FOR THE PRISONERS? MAX BOEHM, a worker of Conneaut, Ohio, sent $5.00 today to the National Office of the I, L, D. with the fol- lowing note: “if oniy 25,000 workers would donate $1.00 cach, the $25,000 bail would be raised at once.” The International Labor Defense calls on the workers to act at once—TODAY! \ WHICH OF THESE DISTRICTS WILL BE THE FIRST TO RAISE BAIL? Clevelaizd District—$2,500 to Free McLaughlin Pittsburgh District—$2,500 to Free McGinnis New England District—-$5,000 to Free Beal Philadelphia District—$5,000 to Free Harrison Detroit District —-$5,000 to Free Carter New . York Distvict—$5,000 to Free Miller CASH LOANS CONTRIBUTIONS el at nce LIBERTY BONDS Every worker or friend of the workers must help! JOIN THE INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE! 50,000 NEW MEMBERS BY JANUARY 15 WHEN THE GASTONIA CASE WILL BE APPEALED! 0,000 IS NEEDED AT ONCE—NOT ONLY FOR GASTONIA, BUT FOR CHICAGG, LOS ANGELES AND A SCORE OF CASES THROUGH THE LAND! INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE 80 EAST 11TH STREET, Reom 402, NEW YORK CITY to Paxton Hibben, |campaign to persecute all and sun- their wage slaves. Lat the mili- |growing and will beat the terror