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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1929 ‘Labor’ Party imperialists |/IJail 32 Indian Workers Meerut Trial Nearing End—Prosecutor Says Attack Is on Communist International—‘“Laborite” Imperialist Places Outrageous Conditions on British Communist Representative at Trial (Wireless by Inprecorr) ; with ‘conspiracy against the king- LONDON, Dec. 6.—The prosecu- jemperor,’ are Englishmen. tor in the trial of 82 trade-union| “After lengthy correspondence, *leaders of India, who were arrested |this permission was granted by last March and taken to the iso- | Wedgwood Benn, Secretary for In- lated town of Meerut, has concluded, dia, but very rigid conditions were his closing speech, dispatches from |!aid down, which we only accepted India state. The speech lasted for under protest. J. R, Campbell was days. The prosecutor ended by say- |elected to go. The following gives ing that the British authorities in|us an idea of these conditions in India were not attacking the trade | Benn’s own words: unions or the nationalist movement, | “‘I am further to make it clear but only attacking the Communist | that any person to whom permission International, is granted will be required to give * ‘a written undertaking that during his stay in India he will confine him- \self strictly to the purpose indicated in your letter, and will not engage jin any other activities whether on ship of the movement, symbolized in | behalf of a Communist organiza- the leaders of the militant trade | ton, ot otherwise, and that he will unions, is being carried on under a | "0t address public meetings OF at guise of “protecting India” against |tempt to influence the proceedings the Communist International, jin the ease by means of any kind 2 8 The effort of British imperialism to deeapitate the national revolu- tionary movement of India by im- prisoning the working class leader- The charges against the 32 lead- | ers on trial at Meerut, are of “try-| ing to deprive His British Majesty! of sovereignty over India”’~as the | indictment reads, The masses of | India have shown intense and de- | voted support of their jailed leaders, | who, on their first appearance in | the court, sang the “Internationale” and shouted “Down with British im- | perialism!” while in the streets of | Bombay the masses marchéd in pro- test under banners declaring for a of propaganda, nor attempt to act as an agent of communication be- tween the accused and Communists inside or outside India. “In the event of his breaking this tundertaking or otherwise so conducting himself as tc make it appear to the government of India desirable to enforce the Public Safety Ordinance against him, it will be open to them to require him to leave India immediately, and if necessaty to deport him. He will Turkey Objects to U.S. ' Hypocrisy on So-called | ‘Food Ships’ Immunity’ | CONSTANTINOPLE, Dec. 6. The Turkish deputy, Zeki Messouli, | writing in a popular paper, attacks | Hoover’s hypocritical claim of “im- | | munity for food ships” in war, and says: “By a brilliant gesture having a huntanitarian appearance, the | United States is trying to put her commerce on a well-based guarantee leven during a war when America is neutral, During the World War, America protested the blockade of the central powers, but when Amer- j ica became a combatant, it helped |to blockade Germany. | “Are the European nations going to jlet America, which is a great power lin blockades, influence their affairs whether it is in a war or not?” In this stand of Turkish capita! ism, Turkey, of course, reflects the antagonism of England, and the im- perialist rivalry of England against thi United States at present, rather than the old alliance with Germany. Illinois Miners Can Not Wait ‘Till Strike Date (Continued from Page One) at Moscoutah, and for all the de- mands of the second state conven- tion of the N. M. U., held in Octo- ber, at Belleville. These demands are for the six-hour day and five-day week, no more penalties inflicted or docking of the miners by the bosses; 15 minutes’ rest in evety hour and employment of larger crews on me- chanical loaders or conveyances; no speed-up, no check-off, no arbitration of grievances, bur settlement of all grievances by the pit committees; abolition of the “bug lights” (the SOCIALISTS OF BE POLAND AIDING FASCIST REGIME, A Party of Deceit in Vile Maneuver WARSAW, Dec. 6.—The ridicu- lous pretense of the Polish socialist party in making of “opposition” to the Pilsudski Tasast dictatorship is becoming so apparent that many workers who once followed the so- cialists are turning to ine Commu- nist Party. The farce enacted in the Sejm (the Polish parliament) in October, when Pilsudski filled the chamber with saber-rattling officers, and the socialists were forced to make ar empty form of wordy “opposition to the Pilsudski dictatorship, or lost moré support among the workers to the Communists, is to be repeated in the presént session of the Sejm, only with a bit more smoothly oiled machinery. To secure the attention of the workers, a sort of debate is ar- ranged outside parliament, between th capitalist patties, which, of course, includes the socialist party, | at which the socialists are to “at- tack” the fascist dictatorship, but ; meantime attempting to fool the Workers by this trick, they are to keep “reasonably quiet” in parlia- jment itself, at least for a few weeks, | After the - rkers are off their; guard and fed-up on long parlia- | mentary wrangles on the budget, | the fake “opposition” of the so- | \ Dictator st party, which t of the fascist machine oper: Poland, to delude the The Polish is an indivisible p War-preparation he Soviet Union, i ist dictator But they tr 0 ee es Be HE SHOPS Page Three ‘Machines Throw Ulinois Miners Out bv Thousands (By a Worker Correspondent) The miners of Springfield were SPRING SLD, Ill. (By Mail).— ¢ontented—in their minds. They It doesn’t seem possible that condi- thought because of natural condi- tions in this vein of the coal it would tions could get so bad in the mines around here without a general re- volt. The men are working under unbearable conditions. They are be: driven by the boss to a speed: at human tissue cannot stand conditions in the Springfield be impossible to construct machines that would work successfully. But the machines have been made and installed and they are a success so far as displacing men and adding to the bosses’ profits are concerned. fie e no different from those) In three of the Peabody mines, exi throughout the state, where machines have been installed, Pe af ., A we find the fololwing: The Lewis-Fishwick union, the!“Gon socmerly 460: now, 160, UM. WA, Ae teen OM al Sa eae ceiow: Sao ee Woodside — formerly employed, mask and now stands 100 per cent 409. now; 180 Cie ea Riverton, formerly employed, 750} men have been intimidated, 50, \Farmers, Ruined by Banks, Must Unite With City Workers (By a Worker Correspondent) OKLAHOMA CITY (By Mail).— Most of you workers read the state- ment our “dez beloved” Henry made last week after he had payed a visit to the boss-scabe herder, Herbert Hoover. Henry said he was going to raise the wages of his workers 40 offset his part in the Wall Street crash. Well, if we could judge by what has happened since then, it is very likely that if we had been able to listen in on the talk we might have heard another “statement”—some- thing like this: “Well, Herbie, I’m going to order all of my assembly plants shut down for the winter now.” workers by a fake “fight” against bullied, discriminated against and — Pourteen new machines were in- Pilsudski. discharged till it seems that have ‘stalled in the Woodside mine last “Why, that would make it look no further Bes ll we know week, the same mine men worse yet,” Herb would reply. oe | Dic man’s patience and endurance is lim- were discharged. The reason given “Just leave it to me,” Henty says. Haitians Rise ‘ited. by tho parent for the dismissals “You know I’ve got most of the fools Against Empire) Te two major coal companies | was that they did not load sufficient thinking I'm their Big Brother. Vl oe oe here are the Peabody and the coal on the conveyor. They haven't teel them I’m going t¢ réassemble (Continued from Page One) Panther ( eabody owns seven a grievance, according to the U. M. my assembly plants so we Can go before, but the fact had been hidden |™imes and th Panther Creek five.!W. A. officials.—G. V to work right. by the U. S. news censorship which : : ae = ‘These banks are all in the smaller hid facts as long as possible. reia Workers Feel] | “ich bettaved this 1921 strike, is towns of Oklahoma and are supe On Wednesday, the faets could no - hide ngs | pucerely bated by the Georgia |ported by the, fatmers, and % looker be hidden, AG 0:30. that d of Organization | workers. Conditions are growing jeans this: Workers and fatmefé, morning, the customs emplbyes, — worse, the stretch-out is stretching foreclosing will be the order of the some of whom as leaders of previous (Continued from Page Qne) further. The textile crisis in the in- gay, These farmers will be dispos- strikes had beén fired under false the American Federation of Labor dustry is to be solved, the bosses sessed, and then there will be only charges of heving been guilty of and the United Textile Workers think, by greater exploitation of the one place for them to go, and that ciistoms frauds, drove the The I. L. D. conference elected Workers. Three and four day weeks | wil] be to join the ever-growing bosses out of the offices with clubs, del to proceed to the con- are common. army of unemployed—we already beating the Collector of Customs, D. ference in Gharlotte. They are R.| The agricultural crisis grows, also, | also in any case be required to leave India as soon as the case is com- pleted.” This sort of letter from a leading jmember of the so-called “labor” party of England, in office, acting \as a jailer of the working class lead- ‘ers of India, sufficiently character- izes the imperialist character of the |“labor’ party. Pollit's article con- ‘chides by stating: “Let us be up and at the coward- ly hypocrites who bleated their sob \stuff against the Tory government, tend the trial of trade union organ- | but who are doing worse things in izers at Meerut, India, Three of |1929, than the Tory government the acetised, who are all charged jever dared to do.” Soviet India. Pollitt Writes on Meerut. In the “Workers’ Life,” organ of | the British Communist Party, of November 15, Harry Pollitt writes in part as follows of the Party’s effort to break through the ring of isolation in which the “labor” im- perialist government is holding the Meerut victims: “The Communist Party applied to the Government for permission to send a political representative to at- ieee little “safety” lights that are worn | Cialist-fascists to the government on caps), $85 a weck social ingur- can be “defeated” (by arrangement ance for unemployed miners, to be | With them) by Pilsudski’s officers paid for by the bosses or the state; | @aain ¢lanking in with the iron, equal pay for young miners, full boot. Whereupon the socialists can | social, industrial and political equal- | “explain” to the workers that they ity for Negro workers, and no dis- “fought valiantly but in vain” crimination of any sort because of |@eainst the further extension of age, color, creed or nationality. jfascism and its war plans against Leave U. M. W. A. the Soviet Union. The delegates from all parts of | Mlinois at the Bellevile convention | : also voted for all local unions to take down the United Mine Work- ers’ of America charters and affili- | ate with the N. M. U., for complete | PROTEST ON EVE! ACCORS! TRIAL |have agents inside the city. Chang Backs Down; Soviet Gains Terms (Continued fram Page One) city, ahd have been discovered to It is |said that these were inciting a strike jof rickshaw pullets and taxicab Nation-Wide Rally to Smash Frame-Up | (Continued from Page Qne) | international campaign of protest against the proposed, legalized mur- der of Accorsi, linking up this strug- | gle with the brotdening of the Gas- tonia éampaign. | The campaign which has already assumed wide significance in the | Pittsburgh area is to be intensified, according to this plan which pro- vides that: | drivers, but it is more likely that any strike movement is an independ ent action of the revdlutionaty workets of Canton, who only two years ago fought for their own So- viet government. Soviet Masses Protest. MOSCOW, Dee: 6A storm of resolutions from factory workers and mags organizations of all kinds is pouring into Moscow demanding that the Soviet Government stand firmly against the war threat of imperialist America, They state 1.—A vigorous information cam-|that the Soviet is for peace, but paign. be carried on nationally and'/that the Soviet progress toward internationally. | socialism as shown by the success 2.—The issue is to be raised be-|o7 the Five-Year Plan, makes the fore the American workers, as a | leading imperialist bandits wish to frame-up against a worker, singled | out for special persecution, A fate that may befall any worker strug- gling with the bosses. Meetings are to take place throughout the coun- try, leaflets are being distributed wholesale and resolutions are to be passed. 3.—A special campaign is to be carried on among the coal miners. The National Miners’ Union has affiliated in a bedy to the I. L. D.| and will work hand in hand with it | in the defense of Accorsi. i 4.—Mass meetings are to be held on the eve of the trial and during it in the Pittsburgh district. All resolutions and telegrams of pro- test are to be sent to the I. L. D, 119 Federal St. N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa. Among a number of mass meet: | ings in the coal and steel towns of Andy Mellon’s state, to be held De- | cember 8, on the eve of Atcorai's) trial, is one in Cheswick itself, in the vicinity of which the police on August 22 1927, gassed, clubbed and rode over a mass meeting protesting the murder of Sacco and Vanzetti. During this affair Trooper Downey was killed, and for this Accorsi is being tried. At Ambridge, Jones and Me- Laughlin _ steel-controlled town, where Pete Muselin, one of the three Woodlawn prisoners who are now | serving five years at Blawnox Work- | house on a charge of sedition, spoke in spite of extreme provocation from the state police just before he went to jail, a meeting will also be held. This mass meeting will take place Sunday, 3 p. m., at Croatian Hall, 383 Merchant St. Meetings are also being arranged in Pittsburgh Union Town and other company towns for the same day. Carlo Di Santis and Max Salzman | are visiting labor organizations throughout the region enlisting the workers’ suppozt in the campaign to free Accorsi. Di Santis was em+ ‘ployed by the United States Alumi+ num Co., Andrew Mellon’s concern, and was fired when he ran this year for councilman on the Communist ticket in Adnold. He got three times as many votes as were cast for the Communist Party last year. Salvatore Accorsi, in the mean- time, is kept virtually isolated in his cell in Allegheny County Jail. It is impossible for a representative eee sa | Year defeat it by war. The Red Army organ, the “Red Star” declares: “The armies, navies, armaments and military budgets of capitalist nations are much greater than be- fore the World War. Anarchy in | production—the growth of the class struggle and internal difficulties, lintensifies the capitalist interna- tional struggle for markets and spheres of influence. “The success of the Soviet Five- Plan is no longer denied abroad, but is welcomed by foreign proletariats and oppressed races, ‘The latest events in the Far East signify a change in the imperialist camp from passive hostility to direct provocation of war. The imperial- list hypocrites bethought themselves of the Kellogg Pact only when Muk- den, under the pressure of the So- viet Union’s resolute policy, was forced to resort to a peaceful solu- tion of the eonflict. “The note of the powers anew rev minds the Red Army that it must stand to defend the Soviet.” + * 8 Storm U. S. Consulate At Warsaw. WARSAW, Dec.. 6.—Masses of workers led by the Communist Party of Poland stoned the U. S. Con culate here last night after police tried to break up a demonstration protesting against U. 8. interventior in the Sino-Soviet dispute in Man- churia, Shots were fired and win- dows were broken, the demonstra- tion spreading to the Polish govern- ment buildings when broken up at the consulate. of the Internationa! Labor Defense to visit him, and he is allowed only one visit a week from his relatives. Only one basket of food is permitted in a week, all additional food being rejected. Go aie Conference in New York. Tomorrow, 2 p. m., in Irving Plaza, a conference will meet on the defense of Salvatore Accorsi, called by the Italian section of the International Labor Defense. Rep- resentatives of many Italian labor and fraternal organizations will be represented. Among the speakers will be Louis Gandella, Italian or- ganizer of the LL.D, yank and file control of the union, and for officers’ salaties to be the same as miners’ wages. Fishwick Strike-Breaking. As was expected, the U. M. W. A. | has acted immediately in the ine | terests of the coal operators, and | Harry Fishwick, president of the | Illinois District of the U. M: W. Ay has issued a statement to the press that the miners’ general state-wide strike will be “quite vigorously op- | posed” by his organization. { The National Miners Union na-| tional office, through Secretary- | Treastirer Pat Toohey is distribut-| ing to the miners this answer: “Fishwick’s declaration reveals | clearly his role as a representative | hot of the Illinois coal miners but of the operators. The fact that he} responded so heatedly to the an-| nouncement of the miners’ strike} proves he is first and foremost anxi- | ous to guard the interests of the | bosses. ployers look upon Fishwick as their unofficial agent, whose purpose is to stem the militancy of miners, and throw confusion into their ranks. That the bosses consider Fishwick their man is seen in. the spectacle of a number of coal operators going into court in the Lewis and Fish- wick row and fighting for the con. tinuation of his rule in Illinois, Fishwick’s declaration proves he and his corrupt gang fear the National Miners Union, The N.M.U. considers there is one enemy, the operators, and the U.M. W.A. officials ave their agents.” N. M. U, Rallies Support. The National Miners Union states ment concludes with a prediction that the Illinois miners will over- whelmingly support the strike. The National Miners Union is mobilizing all of its forces to sup- port the Illinois struggle and a num- ber of organizers who were in other districs have just been sent into the strike zone, At the Zeigler Tri- district convention last Sunday, the Indiana délegates pledged for the miners of their State that they would also join the strike to prevent any use of Indiana coal for strike breaking purposes. Chicago T. U. U. L. Supports. At the same time the em- MILITANT YOUTHS CLEVELAND, Ohio, Dec. Ten mémbers of the Young Com- munist League, three of them girls, | were arrested on charges of “dis- | orderly conduct” after a demonstra- tion at the City Council Monday, {in which 21 woking class children |appeared, demanding free carfare and lunches for the school children. The acute unemployment situation has brought great suffering to the workers’ children here. Among those arrested was Lillian Andfews, one of the three militant wotkers, who was setiténced to 10 years’ imprisonment on sedition charges following their arrests at an August 1 anti-war demonstra- tion at Martins Ferry, which steel- | trust police broke up. At the same time 40 members of the Young Pioneers were arrested, and later released. The trial of the 11 yoting workers will be held next Tuesday, The appeal on the 10-year sen- jtences against Lillian Andrews and {the two other workers, sentenced {to 10 years in connection with the Martins Ferry demonstration will come tip on Monday. The Interna- tional Labor Defense is defending the workers in both the Cleveland and the Martins Ferry cases. 6.— |_ LONDON (By Mail).—A Workers’ | | Legion physical culture class has | {commenced here. “War, Fascism | and the Workers Legion” will be discussed by Jack Snook, ex-soldier and Legion leader, at a meeting | later. { | dialects | Jack Johnstone of the T.U.U.L., and |Bill Gebert, organizer for the T.U. U.L. in the Illinois mining fields, | adopted the following resolution | unanimously: “We pledge our full material and! {moral support to the strike of the | |doal miners of Illinois declared for December 9 by the National Miners | | Union. Miners, we are with you | 100 per cent in your struggle against | the United Mine Workers of Amer- | ice company union, and the coal | operators. The T.U.U.L. will mobil- | ize the working class of Chicago and | the Illinois district in support of | P. Johnson, and on other Yankee and spreading the strike to other government department employes. A detachment of marines ap- peated, but the strikers had gone to the other government buildings. The harbor workers and _ others joined the strike. The strikers rettirned and clashed with the marines, a captain of the marines, George O’shea, be stoned and mauled until he fled w little clothing left but his shirt and that torn to ribbons. The strike spread to another port, Cayes, where the situation re- ported as unable to be handled by the 40 marines sent there by motor lorry. Brigadier General John H. sell, who is the real ruler and des- pot of the supposedly “independent republic of Haiti, under the autho: ity given him by American imper- ialism as “High Commissioner,” ot- dered Colonel Richard Cutts, brigade commander, to declare martial law and arrest certain leaders of the Haitian Patriotie Union, the organ- ization which has, in spite of persec- ution, sustained a long struggle against American imperialist rule and armed occupation cotitinually for 14 years. The proclamation itself hypocriti cally sta’es that the United States has promised to “support the con- stitutional government of Haiti,’ that “peace” (the peace of a trave- yard) has been attained, but that now “disorders fomented by agita tors” inake it necessary to take mili- tary action against the breakers of order, against articles and their writers of incendiary character”— which, the declaration says, “are di- C. Miller, a Negro worker; Clarence Williams, A. Wehner, and a mill worker from Rome, Ga. Demand Organizers. Gerson told of the insistence of the Southern workers on being or- ganized. They send in demands to the union office for organizers and for meetings to be held. Mill committees have been estab- lished in half a dozen mills in Geor- gia, and the organization is ready to branch out into Alabama. in the South. A bumper cotton crop is, on many fields, not considered worth picking because of low prices. The roads are ¢ ] with whole families of work arved out, and trying to leave the tes. ok All trades in the South are anxious to organize The need of a dozen ity League organ- reat. The stone cut- Ga., not knowing of militant union, want to join the N The Georgia bosses are aware of | Union. ery worker in a small the struggle of their workers for a | metal products factory in Greenville union and fear it. They are calling | filled ¢ pplication card to join a conference of employ the } middle of this month, at whi have something like 10,000 of them in Oklahoma City. Every worker and farmér must understand once and for all that their interests are one and the sanié. Join the Communist Party, the only political party chat fights your every day battles, the party of the work- ers and farmers, the party with @ program that will lead the over- throw of the robber system and will establish on its ruins the di¢tator- ship of the proletariat. Let us defend with our lives the fatherland of the workers and farm- ers, the U. S. S. R. —A CITY WORKER. Anderson, president of the Bibb Manufacturing Go. (tire fabrics) will preside, This company shows its good will toward its employers by building all its new mills with ma- chine gun emplacements in the walls. The Fulton Bag and Cotton Co. will be prominent at the conference. In this concern the workers, in their 1921 ke, threw Johnstone, the manager out of the third story win- dow. Johnstone later went to the Loray Mill at Gastonia as manager, making way for Bough, the present Loray manage ome time ago. The United Textile Workers Union It is admitted among the workers has been growing. The universal hatred against “president” | 3orno has grown to such dimensions “serious.” uation as that “unrest,” especial! CREDITORS SALE hat the U. S. was compelled to shift faces and tell Borno to decline to be “elected” again, but to put up some other equally servile tool of Washington. | “functionarie To Méet Their Demands We are forced to Sell Our High Grade Stock rected against the domination of the United States,” and also against was Hoover's mention in his recent and officials of the message that i was “desirable” that , U marines be withdrawn, but of such speeches or this was purposely not made defin- Another effort to calm the storm United Stat The author articles will be tried by court mar- ite, and is the same hypvcriticalls tial. empty promis: as England make Sn cies or. “dominion status” for, Indi Washington Worried But , With the uprising against th WASHINGTON, Dee. the American authorities s¢ acmitted here that the Hoover it will be some time” bef» ministration regards the Haitian sit-| marines leave Haiti. WE MUST HAVE 2 Mass Distribution o this pamphlet as an organic part of the Party Recruiting and Daily Worker Building Drive, ° WHY EVERY WORKER SHOULD JOIN THE COMMUNIST PARTY , OVERCOATS TOPCOATS TUXEDOS *20 These Garments Formerly The National Miners Union yes+| your strike. It is the beginning of | Sold Up To $37.50 terday received a message promis- ing full solidarity from the Chicago membership of the Trade Union Unity League. A mass membership meeting in Mirror Hall, Tuesday, addressed by National Organizer a real fight of the working class | against rationalization, not only in| the coal fields, but in all other in-| dustries. Your struggle is our) struggle. Your victory will be the | victory of the whole working class.” 32 pages of mental dynamite for every class- conseious worker. Presented in simple style and in the language of the workers of the shops, mills and factories. Five Cents Per Copy Unusual discounts for orders in quantity lots. 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