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Not in the “Nationalist Congress,” but in the Criminal Court, where Workers are on Trial, we hear the Voice of the Masses of India: “Up With The Revolution! Up With The Proletariat! Down With Im- perialism!” Dail Entered as second-class | tier at the Post Office at New York, N. Y., under the act of March 3, 1879. Published Company. Vol. VI, No. 259 cept Sundsy by \The Comprodaily Publishing. 26-28 Union Square. New York City. N. ¥.' 21 SUBSCRIN" Outside Ne ON RATES: in New York. by malt $8.00 ver rear nw York, by mail $6.00 per year = = Race for \ NATIONAL EDITION Price MOST INTENSE Hoover Pushes LUMBERTON N.T.W. LOCAL even according to the capitalist press, been driven Ore Cy a hostile demonstration of many hundreds of “oO % vers and others. N l A ‘ pe ‘p L,very significant. | a va Vm S , 4 * “ . A : q — i % that American workers abe_beginning in | WASHINGTON. Jan. a—2The .), Substantialm that the affairs of Wall Stréetin bloody | | | aa, ON piaeegat ss >» - fee x : Sih delegates to the race-for-arma- suppression, eX,* «tule over the Latin American “coldnies” | Sa Naa GETTARINIG Cea bo. 1RLESan ‘ of Wall Street in” “ave also the affairs of the American workers Germans Attend After! Mine Demonstrations bh saa mad) aie Ud. by ped : Pe eee ars themselves. The, «ican workers are at least beginning to under- | 4 sree atta. chad ate or ow: 1 . ane sil, HERBE che sinMPreghnicsl bMGGELE oilee thent in the Aiton Loading All Burden Against Terror to | pact” Stimeon, will mect with Had Repulsed 125 Thugs With ( un on Friday; | “rationalized” capitalist workshop is the hand which conducts the bloody " " i R1p 1 ee ENR en cee men ae Now, in Danger of Murder colonial regime of American imperialism. A banner that was carried on German Workers Spr ead Strike | order to ge final imatrappons Disarmed Now, in net in the Detroit demonstration is reported to have read “Henry Ford | ‘ Pee from the Wall Street impertal ; os Fes sgh : will welcome Rubio—that is the same Ford that enslaves us.” iGerman Jobless G row} 40 Miners Fired Daily. chief of how big @ navy U. Totherow Kidnapped, Flogged, Left in Swamp The better consciousness shown by the Detroit workers certainly | — | | perialism needs to a vance ie meee ae 7: “A * -oanizatio Tork is influenced by their experiences in connection with the Wall Street |Tporjalist Bandits WEE: Calls for Funds fight for world markets and more | Escapes and Will Continue Organization Work wars on Nicaragua and on Haiti. It is time for us to reaiize that such ee ee es gee %| colonies. = greens * 4» demonstrations of American workers as those recently held in defense Sure to Disagree 'Children Eat Garbage In apeaking to capitalist news- ; BUI N. : seme ‘ of Nicaragua and Haiti—even though at first they may seem very od | Sowtet ‘aviator dene: > esoiedlaie : paper reporters, Stimson toddy re- The National Office of the Trade Union Unity ue has issued ‘ * “small”—have a cumulative effect in developing the masses’ under- (Wireless by Inprecorr) | Italian fliers of the Nobile expedi- | SPRINGFIELD, I 3.—An| vealed the fact that the question | a call to all its affiliated organizations to send telegrams of shin , Standing of imperialism and its connection with their own sufferings | HAMBURG, Germany, Jan. 3—| tion, has been placed in command |intenge struggle is brewing here.| of no neutrals in the newt war was | to the governor Gf, Nevtl, CasOiita, aad to arrange pet aera hi and exploitation. ; 3 j __ |Phe Vulcan Shipyard here has| of the Soviet airplanes which will |Prepdyations are being made for| discussed between Ramsay Mac- meetings; sore a ae Bee (Ana sib emia ag. iif hambertons | Together with this development of superior understanding of im- closed down, throwing 14,000 work-| search for Cary Ben Hielson and |mass demonstrations against the | Donald and Hoover in their Ra- 17 year old textile organizer — Bue ae hie Nationa perialism goes the rapidly increasing radicalization of the, American ; f tee . | Earl Borland, American aviators |tervor that will be the signal for) pidan meeting. Stimson said no N. C., also to demand immediate safety and re eb pe workers under the pressure of the present unbearable speed-up system |¢rS into unemployment. The Hein-) (7) joie een missing for weeks |Spreading the coal strike. commitment was made on the mat- | Textile Workers’ Union Lumberton secretary, Caudle, who has been | introduced in the effort of the exploiters to solve the economic crisis. |richs Foundrey at Hartingen is fac-) 77 the coast of Siberia, He will | The spirit of the miners is high.| ter. thrown in a jail before which the mill owners’ lynch mob he re- ; The readiness of the American workers to fight for the freedom of ling closure with 5,000 workers to be| begin the flights in search of Eiel- | When over 150 were arrested | in Tha uectoenhine autrale: ti pulsed last Friday is assembling | their Mexican brothers, even if only the beginning of this willingness |qisemployed. Five hundred are un-| 80” and Borland Jan. 18, the first | Taylorville, they refused ae Give! the neat war between the imper- CHARLOTTE. N. C.. Jan fd” wal Metered hers «| s is found in the Detroit incident, is one of the brightest signs of the day. {employed in Recklinghausen. Close| day of sunlight in that section |US ae not bail,’ ee . ialist powers was brought to light | AKL Sea Cac ehea beeen as N Cc Unquestionably the Detroit district organization of the Communist [downs are announced of the “Igfar-| of the Arctic. Chuknovsky and | U. M. W. ne ae hic! Work: | bY, © British white paper which late today that T. M. Caudle, Ss! nherton, N. C., Party has had its leading part in this demonstration, for whicli also it | ben” at Krefeld, of the Babcock| the other Soviet aviators will have | The deputized Oe ae ee, said that the Kellogg past would local of the National Textile V had bi ar- is to be praised. Let the Mexican workers learn from this role of the | workers at Oberhausen, and the fa-| to fly ut a temperature of 50 to eaes ai are os raeene i Aatie bring every nation into the next | yested and was confined in the Lumberton jail, with a lynch Pe ee cae Smee coe ervey (oaron that only, esider: | mong 5A. B. G.” German Geheral |: 92 depres below ser, Mr Me ihicg with tho, National See pee ec seeneita rahul mob assembling outside ee eee Waurelr. | Blectrip) in eBritn, Miners Union. The firing is not! si0¢ ‘the Kellogg pact wan Jaudle had defended himself last Friday night in his freedom. Laer ae SOVIET AND FOR 4 he thet firectly, but that the Kellogg pact was a ee 1 telbreakoast A 5, ree DOBRSE Ct y> ‘Hees ct.” Senator 7 d- 7 a gang of 125 mill thugs attempted to break into Mr. Rubio, the fluvkey of the Yankee “Governor-General” (the U. S. ‘The Hague Conference Opens. logy tie: it committees of the United | baaee ae ; ne yal eran ad ; home when ag ang a i > y : An : P : ay is i ambassador) in Mexico, should get out of the United States, or at least Hague dispatches telling of the \Mine Workers. | mitted tha if the ji h whi i his home. The organizer, armed with a email gun, whipped quit insulting the working class by public appearance before them, And Jopening of the Young Plan Confer- | ‘The Peabody Coal Company owns | 2Per ae ree eke logg pace Se As el n the door and ordered the the Mexican workers in their struggle against Yankee Imperialism will lence on Reparations, speak with a FIELSO SEARCH w< lines ia this section and also} 27% tually a aeethres i tk ist wang awaymeAwed be » have to drive him out of Mexico as well. cautious, speak with a cautious op- | the railroads. They are running| f his gun and spirit, the gang = = ~ |timism on the outcome of the con- — | special'trains for scabs from Girard, | ; But thes a : ; | 3 y got their : |ference, especially for the German a“ = caer sya) thirty-four miles away, and are| 5 Set Se aes acer LD CONVENTION MANY MERGERS delegation of eighty persons. Since | BOFISChuknovsky Joins joing aided by the Us MW. A. PRO FTARIAT!” wdeeds Ge wii ies of | the conference is supposed to “reg- Expedition Frank Farrington, chief lieutenant | EROS ks GREPL Ey pe aiti | ‘ulate’ the plunder of Germany, it aD |of Harry Fishwick, president of the | THE ANTARCTIC eae A SE cnU Wy SiC a | |is Germany which comes as a pris-) BERLIN, Jan. 3—M. M. Gromoy, | Hlinois District of the U. M. W. A. | He | | y ae it ig: i Wi oner to the dock. Soviet aviator who piloted a Soviet | as a former (?) employe of the Pea- at { ni nore ppd} i | | However, with the aid of S.|plane on a tour of Europe last |body Coal Company at a rates and Brean Fight ten ‘up and: 1 a to die i a Rea se rae Parker Gilbert, the American direct- |Summer and regarded as one of the | $25,000 a year, is of course, only too/ U, 5, C1UE 2 sae swamp ei miles from a town {mmediate Result s|Imperialists Dominate |ing the looting, the German “so-|leading aviators of the Soviet Un- | eager to aid his benefactors in every | Over Control ‘Imperialists Admitting called Marion, S. ( bert Tother- Foll Meet | Government | cialist” government has recently en-|ion, is leaving Moscow tomorrow to ieee Dany, soneaaa's | RB 1D » Not — ony 17 Rie ol crea o the y OLLOW acted legislation to lay th ‘a- | take part in the search for the miss- ishwick-Lewis Decision Soon. . : = “real anger’ NO poh ells extile ° wruOn, | digom Hendon Holly ih thie Gechate ing “Aidatiedn aviators, Hielson and |. The decision of the coal operator _The meaning of the present con- eal Dang aes idan yestr thage “The tremendous significance and| There have been a large number working class. But with the crisis | Borland. Gromoy will use a Fokker jcourts in the suit over the injunction | flict between the Un: ed States and| Lahore Congress in Lumberton, N. C., regained con- force of the convention of the In-|of mergers recently, strengthening in German indsutry having raised|plane for the search. | brought by Harry Fishwick, pr Great Britain over the Antar a —— sciousness and crawled to safety. “‘ernational Labor Defense just held |the imperialist character of U. S-/the unemployed army to 2,250,000| Boris Chuknovsky and the other {dent of District 12 of the U. M. W.| continent and the claims ote Indian dispatches reveal in a co-| He managed to get to Marion, ere in Pittsburgh, center of Mellon | capitalist economy. Foremost is ‘the already, and German exports fac- | Soviet fliers who have already left |. against Hig International fret eae A eaaee uk mee vert way the tremendous upsurge where he telegraphed to the union reaction, will undoubtedly result in recent steel merger, involving $350.- | ing tariff wall in other countries, | Moscow to search for Eielson and |dent, John Lewis, EeCUHLE Ut leame more auparent’ with Byrd's (of tivolution among the toamies qty nesdauarters in Chasiotte, for aid. the building of a real mass organ- 000, > eS |the German capitalists are worried | Borland, are expected to reach |? stop trying to take over or a Atmtie ahah thateeies Liable vvoal India. Yesterday RE REST SEY S Revere hours sages he wa zation in this district,” said Max). Thete is the proposed tris goa a8 to whether or not the country | Krasnovarsk some time today. They |linois organization of the U. M. W../announcement that valuaile 08! rhe seal danger which the govern: back in Charlotte, hattered and Salzman, district ILD organizer of | tion of all the telegraph, radio oe |can make the reparations payments | will arrive4yithin a few days in the |has been taken under advisement by ys Ans e the New York Times, Ment of India must now tackle lies bruised, but unterrified by the fas- ihe se Esbiagh Dis inte (OvAy- by 01 mh DM ae: oetcenll jeven with the limit of exploitation | North-eastern section of Siberia, |Udgé Jones, and he may ita Redd ers that geologists with his NOt so much in the empty declaration ¢It kiduanping: The immediate revults of the emn-| Hie Coy and the proposed nas | *Etitet the German workers. | where the American, aviators, are paced to decide any time now. TMs | Tepedilion have discovered coal ‘0F independence and the boyoott gf | The National Textile Worker vention’ are already- beginning. Sg Boe 4x | believed to have been lost. ye aut is ae i AS eu saeee rode,” witch-“experts 2esemblies..qzdered. py. the Net Union national 104 Pith es e mergers of the railroads. ri tween the Illinois coal operators, | bearing sanistond, witch “ext OSTA rear Fe orgy “ods (o> Seno ie myer ani Tae eet ieee: that tke |, During 1929 there have been 44 International backing Fishwick, and outside op- | think is part of one of the world’s | 0 ot. the use of vio. lowing telegram to Governor Gard, District. The very fact that the |p ank mergers. The smaller banks erators, backing Lewis. Whichever | largest coal fields. “Here was what | 7& suggestion of the use of vi an Ny aa roe pening mass meeting, © Friday > heen swallowed by the larger || Wireless JOBLESS BATTLE vins, the miners gain nothing, as|I had come all the way to the Ant-|lence.” / Da tear cca area oul oe , i rat en ua br al financial institutions. The largest | News he te aad ae aeas ne iteeeace| aah ¢ to find,” reported one of ae this tess ee srlene action Gane sa ar git : Wore Music Hall, where meeti . s lace in | ich on ieee have saith |Botd's. geologists: of the ma whic! iting Lap-| oar seerencne bbsandseso! seen broken up again and again Loi ergers hare taken place Be ees Bae sar eee very of coal by the Byrd |don with ill-disguised alarm, and un sia potkes beatae the aetna which had ‘been refused to militant OS ore . BRITISH BOSSES BILLIOUS AT j the = xz ris 2d balk. doubtedly makes the Indian boure iz of Elbert Totherow at Lum- f i them were ‘the National pee ay miners’ wages and worsen their | expedition, far from being acciden- |COUDtedly me cael rertana MGC: “Ele ia’ thie Wouth we workers for meetings, shows the Bank of Commerce, which was ab- “DAILY WORKER. laaittions “ot erhich’ ganeief union {tah aay ane of the main reasons colsie centered! in| the Indian Nae|Mertam, NAO) “He is the Youth >reaking into the wall of | Meloy sorbed by the Guaranty Trust Com- Wireless By Inprecorr, nr isleaders in the U. M. W. A. re-| for his flight to the South Pole and |tonal Congress anxious lest _ the | bs : ‘controlled ecution in Pittsburgh iv 7 ( y Inpi ) ; misleaders in the for i) a dan imoveneit weep then. eats Never before in. the history of |Puys the Seaboard National Bank,) yonpoN, Jan. 3—The “Daily Wound 10 Fascists; ceive the check-oft and sell out the the less spectacular, but more im-|™ASs movement sweep them aside. = ibonbibane 25 dave yon. | Which was taken over by the Equita~/ Worker” appeared on January 1 A +1440. | miners. portant geological surveys. Coal| It is this mass movement which ae VERO ¢ shat, organizatiim was there # con-|ble Trust Company, and the State | containing a telegram of greetings|>U0LmM Police Building| Fight for Demands was discovered in the Antarctic for |vesterday sent the chief industrial BIE | A ECE @) | vention of such wide proletarian + which | comaning. a telegram of greetings = ‘ig! shah ad ‘ 8 Cecovered:: ates lake ioaniwardl the stock ex.) = aa HE bie j ers in all| 520 and Trust Company, which| som the Communist International.| __ m:_:...| The miners are anxious to carry |the first time in 1909, and again in |shares downward on the stock ex scope, representing workers in ap |was merged with the Manuafctur-| m0 hourgeois press commenced a| Unemployed workers in Timisoar| oq the fight, under the. leadership |1911, Recent exploreions, includ- |change at Bombay. ; LIDIMIN? H De ee ie sictry, from every |<T,2fust Company. Among the| rorious anti-Scviet campaign, al-| (formerly Temesvar), in the prov- | of the National Miners’ Union. They ing Byrd's discoveries, indicates| It is this mass movement which Fl i INAS HERE states in the country, from every | banks most active in the merger leging this to be a violation of the |ince of Banat, Rumania, yesterday | s+ struggling for general demands, |that there may be a huge coal field led to the reported remarkable dem- fied! EGR ELE ope ane Sue eae ene field were the Chase National, the | ¢ 74 qo agreement “propaganda” |"esisted fascist troops who fired on! such as the six-hour day and five-|in the Antarctic ing more than |onstration in a Lahore courtroom, gh Fas | From the Illinois coal fields.) Bank of. Manhattan Company and} oiice. The foreign office of the |them, when the workers demon- | gay week, the $35 a week minimum | 100,000 square miles. when Indians charged with the mur- > Whetesite Fete Dirtind pare parne the Bank of America National As-| «13,5,» imperialist government, con- |Strated for their demands. Accord-| age, no discrimination against Britain wotified the United States |4er of a police officer appeared for F a ke Independence rom the first day of the strike as | sociation. The Bank of America, in| , °°) i ’Gri.{ing to a wireless dispatch to the |” eas cect etiate ine | Pea are. | trial. ; a ane : oh ti aankt Age 258 forming to the demand of the Bri- Boe young miners and Negro miners, that “the British own the Antare Bo lv Cc 1 of Vv all St : fighting organization, came /addition to acquiring control of the | | italigés: i318 .¢ {¢apitalist press from Bucharest, the 3 ehadepaid for Wy ale | ace Gy Sean iny »| On coming into the court, they) OQ! 901 OF Wall St. jelegation of striking miners. "i aun -,|tish capitalists, is in conference - employment relief paid for by tic.’ No reply w made until the r rg 0 urt, they ibe! go 5 enting | Nasst National and the Traders | it, a view of filing a protest | demonstrators, led by members of | cerators or the State, bigger|gay Byrd was ready for his actual [began a song of their readiness to ol ee Beta : Of the 382 delegates, representing | National Bank, also absorbed the : Pee tonal the Communist Party, stormed the | \ how iindd veat neribda tor lance . coal (sacrifice their lives’ t. a: murierouat. WASHINGTON: Jan nu xbout 200,000 workers directly, | private banking house of Blair and ®#@inst the Soviet Union. building in which the prefect of po- [ores eee es ee eee eck-off, |22@ht and then the psychological ; “rt R Dr. Pedro Gil, Jose Castillo ,f | | . 4 2 e a ey brews, re check-off, “ as used for a note government, then cried out: . EL eer eee eee she | Com and is now in process of mers-| Communist MURDERED IN lice had his office, and which also te Thay sing: Heve (ih every. mine, ee ie ia eaecthe: the’ terri: | “Up with the revolution! end’ Marcial ‘Lichaaleo, outstanding significance was the | ing the Murray Hill Trust Company. Deer ae Reeves they local sadniiniateation) or We te adaande: “conterhing sncne Citint he weal 7 bay ue ane the ) n¢ eof "'H} *tact that these proletarian dele-| President Hoover, in his message GERMAN PRISON. | building. ey oe aaa jtories visited by Byrd. The o | “Up with the prolet Philippines, arrived he cit Ps Mu * r 9 Stal | ie AS __ |safety measures which are now prac- | jean flag has been raised in the sec-| ih incertae Sane prayabet : : , fates wittn in the very forefront of | to Congress, recommended that the BEREAN, Jat, Kobitchmeyer, A fire brigade was mobilized in| tically absent; against being forced seb sicady ee ih coal “Down with impe riali m! day inder tl ; t Se sce a re | 7 De revise 0 that the Dig bank. |@ | Communict sentence on ine aon |an attempt to halt the demonstra-|to lay tracks, set timbers, take up|“ °lpachans in other minerals, to| The horrified imperialist report- “Philippine Independence Ci changes in policy necessary for the | ing institutions could develop branch | years prison at hard labor in 1925, Soba: qeloses aniline kept rial 8, set 8 ae, and perhaps othe! Ree, + eee ldnladiion’ in) sen asdinent ewe prone: : ‘ Ginie bal Satna "| tors, whose ancy kept rising. |hottoms and do other unpaid work; jay a basis for struggle with Great TS looked on in amazemen ¢ Bsn International Labor Defense to re-|banks throughout the country. This | died last night in a hospital here Wh ici ths aces Zaticd to tall tach ce : Pet in ting (2, trug eae thea Salen waginttile, whe eocied Philippine Inde main an effective fighting organiza-|would be a tremendous step for the} a result of lack of medical atten-| Ah a Seg e Separate olla eae pee ma Ye pacar Bes for |pritain over the South Polar regions. | 1" "1.3 unconcerned, “allowed | Mission, heade tion in this period. further monopoly development of |tion. Prison doctors declared him | - 7". '. Dae é Sa as | | 2 eae the aumainbe choviaita le enearad be ‘ ‘1 | . he ‘ é rues _ | fired into the workers and the work- half or three-quarters of an hour WORKERS HOOL OF tne Open ne eo: The full acceptance of this slogan |the big banks and would give them|healthy enough to serve the sen hace outubro: the | 7 wil: ; MGatTA f starting the trial. by the delegates, characterized the a tighter grip on industry. It| tence without danger, although he |°Ps Tevumed The fine. : |before going Des Boe PHILADELPHIA. SAR GU ited ietscclige ines Cull realization of the new policy of }would concentrate financial and in-| lost forty pounds weight in prison! Many workers were wounded, but | More Relief Stations, =| : sly with eS yparty y ans pe ram When F | the workers, not paling before the| Marcel Scherer, representative in| Simultaneously with the Party | suggest is the immediate reinforc ee | Sstrial, control into fewer. hands secently and euffered from lung | ice fire, wounded ten of the|Southers {ilincis. of the Workers| recruiting drive, the Workers |[o¢ thg police pore ne) tion and accepted. than even now. | trouble. es eae cre Bass in of-| School of Philadelphia is opening : é P general of the same “Hs: equal importance was the| Lenin pointed out that the merger | * 8 * jpakies: : ; eee Lew ee “nee coursehs aMaevslob the Party sp RE a state that the petty bourgeois politicians now here \ leading role the Negro workers|of banks and industry, with the DUTCH DEMONSTRATE Eighty-five of the workers were |fices : ile W. L Rlfunctionaries, new members and, Sor Sovenmmenys ©; n, the on the independence commission, / played in the convention. There| banks in control, was supplemented AGAINST TERROR IN arrested, including the local Commu- | attended the Taylorvi ni pies ” Tdesy aympathetie Wain > Rexeral Daily Herald,” recently sold by la- pledged! this rabid i ist thets \, were about 30 Negro delegates from |by the directors of the big banks INDONESIA nist leader, the dispatch says. conference yesterday. He eae ae yl begin on Tuesday, Jan- (Poriee owners to a big. scab printing ify) cooperation and suppor "the mines and steel mills of Penn-| taking over more and more open a3 a Timosoar, an industrial center,| “A relief station in Taylorville is | classes se bt Spring Garden St. COmPany and then cially an-| Upon his arrival Roxas said: “I sylvania and Ohio, from Delaware, | government functions. AMSTERDAM, Jan. 3.—Hun-|with a population of 72,500, is in|badly needed. 1 am looking for aj uary Diag rofl SDF: **|nounced as the government orgat.|expect to confer with secretary North Carolina, Tennessee, below| In the U. S. this is proceeding at |4teds of Communists have been ar-' Banat, one of the former Hungar- | store now, but I expect trouble from They are as follows: states that the Indian demand for son and secretary of war Hur the Mason and Dixon Line. a rapid rate. Hoover is closely con- | "ested in Indonesia. The Commu-|ian provinces which was seized by |U. M. W. A. guerillas if I open it-| Fundamentals of Communism, in- complete independence instead of joy betore italy, heaping Oae The Negro delegates were all/nected with Morgan and Co. La-| "ist Party of Holland organized a) Rumania, with the connivance of |The station in Eldorado is already | structor, William Lawrence; Com- dominion status, is “an academie uy program for the hearines.” workers. Among them were two|mont of Morgan and Co, is Secre- | PTotest_ demonstration in Amster- | the allied powers, at the end of the open and another one will have to! munist Party Organization, E. Sok |change involving no immediate con- Roxas wants to get his cue on the women—Negro women entering for/tary of the Interior. jdam. The police attacked it, con-|jast imperialistic World War. The |be established in Christopher. Funds |way, instructor; Program of the sequence.” The “laborites” ave ap- joote of the state ante dene Li the first time the united struggle ena | fiscating the banners and arresting | Hungarian workers and_ peasants, for relief are the crying need. | Communist Internation, E. Gardos, | pealing to Ghandi to cooperate with mont before he opens his mouth, ” of black and white workers. During Build the United Front of the | two, including Lakerveld, member! forming the great majority of the, “In Saline County I found chil- | instructor; New Members’ Class, E. | England against the Indian masses, ‘The Filipino petty-bourgeois leaders vall the discussion sessions of the| Working Class From the Bottom |of the Central Committee of the! population in Banat, suffer great dren picking oranges form the gar-| Bender, instructor. ‘There will also | showing that it is the masses which | werle very clocele with Wall Stmot convention the Negro delegates! Up—in the Industries! Communist Party. persecution under the Rumanian |bage of the company store. You | he several classes in English. are feared by British imperialism. against the will of the 10,000,000 ~played a leading role in emphasiz- white terror. __ {ean imagine how rotten the Ces Filipino masses. The demand for ing and bringing out the meaning ocean etaw niet ie, eaopemiel ian Oe a hit tee ‘ absolute, complete and. immediate of. the mass struggle policy dis- jerisis of capitalist industry in Eu-) Y mer: eet s © independence is firmly rooted in the | i : hungry and miserable, were eating i ; ; cussed and adopted at the conven-| n rs epo O rope is clearly reflected’ by the hungry , Or he workers and peasants. The first tion, | uba. orke [great slump in industry in the| this {UM a some’ toad | SIS Me ens War Da er; heabiige et Detcavat ace’ sot. Warts | | sci i i -| “We will try to get s the S rito ¥ it | e smaller, fascist nations, like Ru- | : M 1 t G the Senate ritories Committee on Textile Boss’ Lynchers Germany; Others Face Death =" in which the industries are from the farmers, but we must | ass | nemp oymen alns jc: Th tel Dele te: fos controlled by the British and French | have immediate kate for Aree We | : ‘ ’ reaten gates industrial magnates. are also arranging larger relief con-— on Rete, HUMANITARIANS OF “LABOR” Oe es Four Shipped to Hamburg Under Pressure of sues ay ue Pea Lake ih ference reo aey prnera Capitalists Admit Crash Long Brewing; Press RULERS » CHARLOTTE, N. C., Jan. 3.— s *. the Balkan States, the workers an - A is LONDON (by ).--Underpaid Negro and white workers here are Protests; Mexican Workers in Hell Hole peasants of these nations are daily next two or three weeks.” Fight for Wor Id Markets; Arm for War and ‘éverworked, Louis Be Dearing, » indignant at the attempts made by = va growing more militant. \ ; a factory worker of Battersea, wa the Southern mill owners and their) MEXICO CITY, Jan. 3.—Under militant trade unionists were or-| The Communist Party has led BUFFALO HAITI Strong attempts are being made, world crisis of capitalism. Gbntencad to thres’ mosiaenerdita city and county authorities to in-|pressure of mass protest meetings in|dered to be placed on the first/many recent struggles of the Ru- | DEMONSTRATION. " by capitalist propagandists, as well| The stock market crash was the!bor when she fell into a police trap timidate and coerce Negro delegates |the United States, Mexico and else- |ships to leave for Cuba in order to|manian and other Balkan workers, BUFFALO, N. Y. (By Mail). as by the Lovestone* renegades, to) result of a long-brewing decline in| and cents from a bag. Local | ff % the Fourth National Conference | where, against-the reign of white | hand them over to bloody Machado, notably the strike of the Lupeni Buffalo workers held a mass meet-| foster the illusion that the present production, American imperialism, workers are orsanizing protest of the International Labor Defense |terror instituted against Mexican |whose history of murder against | miners, in which fascist troops mur- | ing at Millers Hall to express their | admitted sharp crisis is the psy-|in spite of the. glowing figures! movements for her release. i i i i i he solidarity ith Haitian workers and ‘ pe t and prevent their going to Pitts-|revolutionary workers and peasants | trade union leaders and Communists | dered over fifty strikers on the | solidarity :wit |chological outgrowth of the stock|which are juggled by the Depart- ss “th ‘ burgh. on orders from Wall Street, the ar~| makes one of the blackest pages of | picket line. peasants. Many Negro workers at-| market crash. |ment of Commerce, Hoover, La- GENERAL STRIKE PRISONERS [> , Delegate Edwards, a tenant on rested workers, Barreiro, Kotono, | reaction of an imperialist puppet. tended. Resolutions for the Haitian’ This js the sheerest bourgeois|mont and Lovestone, has been STILL HELD | the Mell Grier plantation, where th2 | Junco and Montalvan, have been de- | Other comrades are awaiting de-/ Fight «the Right Danger. A workers were adopted. fairy tale which attempts to gloss | showing distinct signs of decline LONDON (by mail)—The ‘Labor’ ¢ young Negro farm tenant Willic ported to Hamburg, Germany, ir- portation to Cuba end other Places, | yy undred Proletarians for “ a ois over the fundamental capitalist for two years. government is persisting in its re- ;, MeDaniels was lynched recently, was | stead of Cuba, as was the original | where torture and death await them. | is R Write About Your Conditions | contradictions of U.S. economy and| This confession is now made by;fusal to release five workers am » threat with violence and arrest | plan of the Ortiz Rubio government. | A continuous international, militant | bad Petty Bourgeois Rene-| for The Daily Worker. Become a /the fact that American imperialism Carl Snyder, statician of the Fed- |vested in the May, 1926, general it he to go. Many Cuban Communists and Continued on Page Four gade! Worker Correspondent. is intimately connected with the| Continued on Page Four strike. seat ; 2 * Y