The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 20, 1930, Page 2

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rage Two ’ WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 20, 1930 4) STRUGGLE FOR WORLD AUTO MARKET GROWS IN SHARPENING CRISIS Aatonabile Capitalists Unite to} European Fight | Uns. Competition French to Tiecunce Tariff Against American Automobiles and Parts Nothing “official” has been done, it is said, but a definite accord “has been reached between producers in hopefully , y will be anufac- While Paris dispatch > ment with | Germai Italy, France, Belgium, France not to raise the tariff on}Austria and Czechoslovakia, to | aulos to the 1 height, other | ‘orce an iron-clad import contingent | w th act much hope |agreentent which is primarily in- | esult |tended t» halt further expansion of | United States automobile trade on | the Continent.” }lin demand that the United States | government do something to help | auto ma’ ers of America by “in- the European govern- hie, agents in Germany an avto concerns, have cabled ot only new big cam- kers is ‘an curs out fluencing ‘ments. The agents in Ber- | ‘PLAN TO GET BIGGER SPEEDUP _ IN SLAVE PLANT Workers, Organize in| T.. Ud (By a Worker Correspondent) its that they make from our sweat | the Western Electric bosses compel us to stake our meagre earnings in |the shares of this company, Yes! by shoving on us their stock they wring more profits from us and hand us [the pay envelope less $3 every} month, What do we get out of these | | |shares but an other slave-driving | bastard like Fagan watching over our backs and driving us faster, | ever faster producing more and | more war materia! to be used in the | coming slaughter. This is the scheme of the bosses | to fool the workers into Si | speed-up to make believe that they own something in this company | and, therefore, 1efuse to organize | |Arrest Negro Worker, | Now He Is Missing; Is} \Thought To Be Lynched| WINSTON-SALEM, N. C., Jan. |16.—Bob Carter, Negro worker, ar- |rested Monday at Reedsville, N. C., | because “he acted suspiciously” is now reported not to have been ar- rested. He has “disappeared.” One {thousand dollars has been offered | for his “capture.” Troops were origi- i nally called out in a fake gesture against lynching. It is believed here | by the posse which was first said | to have arrested him. A white wo- }man, May Banes, claims that she | Was assaulted by a Negro. Any Ne- | gro will do for a lynching in a case like this, according to the standards encouraged by Southern mill uwn- ers, who want to divide white end Negro workers. TUL CONVENTION COMES MARCH 1-2 By decision of the Administrative MEETING SPEEDS | NTWIU CAMPAIGN Strike Grows i in Shops;) Local 48 Wins Victory ling before, a new impetus has been | given the drive of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union to mobil- | ize all dress-shop workers for the | intensified struggle which comes im- mediately to win union conditions. | The union offices were crowded jyesterday with shop meetings, | | electing shop delegates. Monday the industrial union calls jall workers to come to its office at 131 West 28th St, in the morning for picketing. There are a number {of strikes going on, and yesterday jand the day before several victories | mand the unconditional freedom of meeting. After others had spoken, jwere wc. These strikes will be | spread through the trade without | into an industrial union and to de-| Council of the Metropolitan Area, |regard to the I.L.G.W. fake strike. | ‘WORKERS’ MASS Workers of Ireland Contribute to Fund | for Gastonia Defense} Rochester Typographical Union, | 2 15, which has 380 members, to-} {day sent a donation of $82.75 “to ne fight o the Southern evabeerl orkers for living cond | Their contribution, sent to the rintee jnational Labor Defense national | office, tame simultaneously with a ‘donation of $9.70 (two pounds in British money) from the Interna- | As an immediate result of the/tional Broom and Whisk Makers |Mail).—Carl Sklar, sub-district or- Not content with the pile of prof-| that Carter was simply murdered |successful mass organization meet- | Union of Dublin Ireland. ing held in Cooper Union the even- | A letter from the latter organiza- tion stated, “Enclosed please find | check for two pounds for your fight | ‘to release the seven Gastonia organ- | lizers who are in jail in Gastonia, for their activities in behalf of their jfellow workers. . . . Hope you will have complete success in the South.” These contributions came several jdays before the appeal of the Gas- |tonia strikers comes up in superior | court of North Carolina, January 15. | The LL.D. is fighting to have the brutal sent-aces repealed. The above contributions show world-wide inter- | lest in the case continuing to de- the workers, |meeting, was arrested as soon as he )Hague “Success” Is to Start a New Row About Reparations ieee HAGUE, Jan. 17.—While the legates here listen to a storm of Kerb from throughout Germany at the surrender to France of “sanc- tions” giving France or any other nation the right of invasion and oc- cupation, and while comment from MILITANT LABO FIGHT IN CAL. ON MEXICAN TERROR ‘Sixteen Jailed in Los Angeles all German sources point out that he present Hague “agreement” vi- LOS ANGELE:! Cali (By ses the Young Plan, and forecas s are made that the agree- ment will be fought in the Reichs- tag and the Young Plan may pos. sibly be again upset, the “success” ganizer of the Communist Party, is | being held without bail on a frame- jup charge of “illegal entry into the of the conference reduces itself to country,” and Jessie Shelen, mem- i | arted a new ceries of quar- ber of the Young Communist | pen Lat aaa ie a League, is being held by the juven- | ile authorities, as a result of their! adopted a resolution declaring soli- |participation in a demonstration darity with the oppressed masses of jagainst the white terror in Mexico.|Mexico and condemning the white Fourteen others arrested have been |terror, Then, the workers at the bailed out by the International La- | meeting went to the Mexican con- bor Defense, and are awaiting trial. sulate where they staged a succes Frank Spector, chairman of the |ful demonstration despite the at- jtacks of the police and the arrest of sixteen. got up to speak. M. Boylin of the Young Communist League took Spector's place and continued the | Build The Daily Worker—Send in Your Share of the 15,000 New |the workers present enthusiastically | Subs. mand better conditions of work and | Trade Union Unity League, the con-|Monday night all women needle | NI AT fe oaed [so Samual WeBs Nan Soshrces tice few tan eres Buesece Gor Hs cde ‘ on January 25-26 s been post- in ede ees. neti ss eopele tit poned to March 1-2, Irving Pasa | ference called by the union. to buy its shares, of course, not, it | Hall. The movement for 1,000 dele- Win ‘Hat Strike. | does, however, increase its speed-up | Stes developed in a direction for! The Mindheim Hat Co., 400 Lafay- system. It places another watch| Which the machinery was not Pre-| ette St., fired a member of Local dog at the wash-room door. It lays|Pred. It is necessary to mobilize | 43, N.T.W.I.U., Eva Friedman, and Jan. 21, $|Tuesd » (Lincoin fand | Wa n'St.; St. Louis, Labor Lyceum, |i) FREE BOOKS LENIN MEETING FOR YOU? Tuesday, 1917 | Gler Reeve, Grecht, van, 2i, ¢ 444 Rice Jan. vood 2 M Duluth, vers Munn., fail, 8 , spealrer: n., Sunday, Jan. Hiall, speaker: Mich., Sunday, Jan. Hardju Herman, 18, speakers: nwood, M. e Hall, spea Minn Minn, pine Tues sa ¥, Jan. 21, Hall, 813 Walnut 8t., orman; . Denver, — Colo. 4 Lyceum, 1545 Ci owa, Tues- 508% sth, se Omaha, day. Jan, 22,’ speaker: : fouston, Texas, Sunday, . Loneshoremen's Hall, District 13, rcs Tuesday, Jan. ‘columbus Hall, 612 San a oe Sauk Cali- 3 Oi .5 if, Tuesday, . mm. oh ri “Hall, 7th, and Bere Ss sacramento, Calif, J. ; Jose Calif., Jan. 21: ‘pélatuma, f.. Jan. 21: “Pitteburgh, Callf.. aturday, Jan. 25; Carson District Fifteen, New Hayen, Conn., Jan. 18, 38 Howe speaker, Engdahl; ‘Hartford, 593 Park Ave. 8 p.m, mford, Conn. Jan: . Workmen's Circle” Hall, “|Seeret Diplenacy Stimson’s Policy From First Mor ont}; LONDON, Jan. 17~-C og a 3 | Shining example of what he meant ah | w hen leaving the United States by in. |S0unding trumpets against “in- |trigue,” Secretary Stimson’s first act on arrival heré was a three-hour |secret conference with MacDonald, and when beseiged by 100 corre- spondents who wanted to know what happened he said: “We had a nice jenp of tea.” Pressmen who know the conference will mean more na- val armaments, not less, commented . Jon the “Faith, hope and parity” sda, * | catehw ord of the United States dele- gation, by saying “Pa-‘ty covers a multitude of ships.” ek The United States effort to pre- Frit tend to be more anxious than other | imperialis ‘ms for “disarmament” was 2\slichtly jolted yesterday, when the Hon. | British trick proposal of “abolish- Onto, | ing” big battleships was “coldly re- ved” by the United States delega- 26. | tion before landing. In addition are [statements were made saying that Hy at pT | Hoover is decidedly against doing He | away with big battleships. 18 Merchant y Toohey nday, ann Veen, . Tuesday, eenten ni ILL. YOUTH MINE MEET. Guy £0) Ploneers Springticld, Obie Tuesday The N. M. U. has issued a call for Jan. 18, 8-p. m., speakers: Dave Mar- id i tin, League speaker: Cincinatti, Ohio,|& state-wide Young Miners Confer- Sunday, Jan, 19. 8p. ni., speakers? t Dave Martin, Eli Khrney? Columbus, | ence £0 be held on Sunday, Feb, 9, at Ohio, Monday, Jan. 20. .. speak-|10 a. m.,,at Belleville, Il. It will ers: Dave Warren, bring together young miners from every section of the district. The podrome Ha ne ays, Dight: S ; | purpose of the conference will be to Karson, Lioyd_ Dight: mobilize the young miners for the Ohio. Sunday, Jan. 19, strike under the N. M. U. leadership, to build a powerful youth section and to elect an executive committee to direct its work. This young miners conference will also work out loca] youth demands, :39| develop sports and cultural activities . ‘Sunday, Jan. 19,|among the young miners to counter- nd Auditorium. | get the bosses’ sports. W. Rayne Av ey Lioyd Dig Ohio, Tuesday, Jan. 8 p Epeakers: I. 0. Ford, Rose Clarke, District Seven. M npeakers t, Pioneei Muskegon, Jierainian : ete eon The young miners of Southern |dering the workers. . . . We will t 4. Wolver: |Iiinois constitute about 25 per cent |not be bullied by your terror! We Fri day JER of the mining force. Rationalization |will continue the fight! We will (the speed-up), the growing unem- ployment, etc., increases the suffer- Phil Ba Mistriet Might. 1 emoand, Ind. Jan, m..!ing of the mining youth. ant, Hay Roseland, a> gan | oe a m. Lithuanian Hall, 10413- n Ave: Hegewifch, Ii. an, = age, rourceots ane, 1 18351 Baltimore Rd; cago, “Jan. 21, Ashland Atditor- ium, ven Buren and Ashland, speak- ers: Bedacht, A pig hee Ford; Zie) fer, ga ‘Liberty Ha i Rockior: .m., Work= llwauree, Liber- te wwutshed by thisethat ft ban simplitiiu clase notagontems. € and more. society io splitting two great hostile camps. two great and directly contra. poned clannent bourgeoisie letariat—Marz. is itnt and ‘th Bt: Rock Shana, IL, Sunday, Jan, 19, 2 p. ma off a worker for a whole week in i | agai ;|fensive attack against all this? wd |First and foremost organization! PROTEST MURDER |food, shoe, metal and needle work- jers, the Local Council of the T. U. ; dying case he should come in five minutes late. | These are a few things in the gen- | eral attack that the boss is using | st us. What must be our of-| Organize into shop committees and affiliate with the Trade Union Unity | League. COME IN MASSES, Socialist Lawyer Got Murder Injunction As Steve Katovis lies probably in Lincoln Hospital, shot | through the body by a Tammany |policeman at Millers Market, Thurs- day, the Communist Party calls the workers of New York to come in masses to the spot of the murder- ous assault and demonstrate against this slaughter of strikers. In doing | iso, it denounces also the socialist | party, which acted in the Miller Market strike as part of the mur- der machinery. “Down with the brutal police ter- ror against strikers!” says the call of the Communist Party. “Defend your right to organize, strike and picket for higher wages, less hours and for better conditions, against the speed-up and wage cuts,” it says. “Demand unemployment in- surance paid for by the bosses and the government,” it continues, and, | “Organize Workers Defense! WASHES CROWDER a big sources. this possible. The postponement makes It also better enables militant trade union movement to | make good the quota it set for itself | of at least 800 delegates. The statement issued reads | part: “In order to rally the growing larmy of unemployed workers to | struggle, in order to throw thou- | sands of Negro workers, young and woman workers into the new revolu- tionary trade union center, to con- centrate on large plants of the basic industries in New Jersey and to |help the convention during the strike of the dye and silk workers of Pat- | erson, to de el > the struggle of the in U. L, finds it necessary to postpone the convention. “Organize shop committees! Elect delegates to the convention! Make this a mass convention of struggle | for higher wages, shorter hours, in- | surance against unemployment, acci- the militant trade union movement to the speed-up, rationalization and the war danger. Begin election of delegates at once! WAR DEPT, WHITE- Sugar Grafter Gave Away War Secrets WASHINGTON, Jan. 14—In an attempt to whitewash Major-General representation from these | j refused to meet the shop chairman Let Injunction Papers ‘Enoch Crowder’s part in the sugar Shot. At: Meeting. | lobby graft, the War Department The leaflets issued by the Party |}as declared that the general is in |tell of the shooting down of Katovis, | ithe worker, while attending a meet- ing called by the Trade Union Unity League to appeal for workers’ solidarity in the strike of the Food Clerks’ Union against the Miller Market, and they tell of other bru- tal attacks by police on strikers. \They call also for all to attend the Lenin Memorial meeting, Jan. 22, to demonstrate against the killing of workers in imperialist war as well as by police. i The Communist Party calls to ac-| tion in a life and death struggle | against the most ruthless form of| suppression of the right to strike. Socialists With Eneftty. Solidly linked with the boss in the Miller strike, as in others, are the socialist party and the right wing union officials. While Miller’s uni- formed murderer, Patrolman H. Kiritz, was shooting Katovis in the| back, the boss was using as his at-| torney, Charles Solomon, socialist party leader and candidate for al- derman. for the United Hebrew Trades, which furnishes scabs at the Miller} Market. He got injunctions (which were the excuse for the shooting) for both boss and fake union against thé strikers. Real Communist. | Katovis was a good Communist, |active in all workers’ struggles. A} few days before he was shot he came to the Daily Worker office) and donated $6.50 he had made by| working overtime. Now he is in a serious condition, paralysed from | the waist down, and with a bullet perforating his spine and tearing six holes in his intestines. He was operated on Thursday night, but little hope is held for him. The New York district bureau of the Communist Party has issued a statement reading in part: “Walk- er’s and Whalen’s Cossacks are mur- | organize workers’ defense corps to protect our organizations and our meetings! We will continue to or- ganize and mobilize till we over- throw the imperialist power and es- tablish a workers’ and farmers’ gov-| ernment in the U. 8.1” | The Food Clerks’ Union yesterday stated again its determination to Solomon is also attorney ; reality two persons. As General Crowder, they say he is one person, and as one of the sugar graftng lobbyists, he has an- other existence. General Crowder revealed the war secrets of United States imperialism to the Cuba Co., which has $170,000,- 000 invested in Cuba, in an effort | to get a lower tariff rate for them | on sugar. Crowder pointed out that | the war plans of American capital- ism were, at the outbreak of war, | not to attempt to defend the Philip- pines. His purpose was to get con- gressmen and senators to vote for a lower tariff on Cuban sugar—for which he was handsomely paid. Crowder also spilled ti.e secret that Henry L. Stimson, in the plans for the next war, differed from these tactics and insisted that United States imperialism hang on to the Philippines at all costs, because, as he sa’', mass revolts would immedi- ately sprir, up if United States troops were withdrawn from the ‘ands. . Stimso., as head of the United, States delegation to the race-for- armaments meet in London will in- sist more cruisers, battleships, sul--arines and airplane catriers to carry out this war plan on the United States. YOUNG MINERS AWAKEN. The militancy and fighting spirit of the young miners was very well demonstrated during the last few weeks of the miners’ strike, in | Springfield, in Collinsville, in Coella, Wasson, etc. Where the whole ma~ chinery of the state, the United MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, Jan. |19.—The Executive Committee of}. ia the Latin American Trade Union|} Dally Worker Confederation, with Tate cal Ad ‘ | here, has issued a telegraphic call J gt sevoli¢a for slemtes | ito all adherent organizations to SLUTZKY'S and committee to settle prices. A strike was called, and picketing be- gan yesterday morning. Later in |the day the boss yielded and the} istrike was won. While the chair-| man and committee were meeting the boss to arrange settlement, they | discovered that Local 24 of the | Cloth Hat, Cap and Millinery Work- ers, A.F.L., had even that early called him up and told him’ he shouldn’t settle with Loéal 43, as it did not belong to the A.F.L. Pre- sumably Local 24 had followed its | usual tactics of offering to supply | scabs and gorillas, | WOMEN PROTEST Lie on Meeting Floor The Independent Shoe Workers | Union reports that the demonstra- | tion which was scheduled for today at Brooklyn Borough Hall is post- | | poned until next week, and instead | the shoe workers .are mobilizing to attend the Lenin Memorial meeting | in mass, The militant shoe workers | will take a prominent place at this | meeting. | REPARATIONS DEADLOCK. The refusal of Hungary to pay | reparations asked by the Little En- | | tente, and the latter’s insistence has | deadlocked the whole question, The | big powers, through Snowden, gruf- | fly told the Little Entente to com- | | promise, and that they should be locked in a room with no food or| water until they did. So they are | | trying to find a compromise. At) FASCIST LEAGUE 28 Arrested in Expose} of Fake T. U. League jgeneral rotocol if the big powers | would not help them. | Hundreds of women workers gath- | ered at a demonstration yesterday | noon on Lexington Ave. and $4th St., protesting against the social- fascist Womens Trade Union League, which had taken part in the fake pacifist conference of capital- ist women held at Washington re- cently. Twenty-eight were arrested and taken to the 57th St. court, still sing- ing “The Internationale” and other songs. They protested at the Trade Union League’s duplicity in deceiv- 1003 SPRING GARDEN ST. | ing Witty One of eh se hn ios Widen cc base | ni ndon Raval Cantleine te ‘teoed this fas. sere kaa ig aa cist league that pretends to repre- sent working women, PHILADELPHIA W. I. R. OFFICE 39 N. Tenth Street SUPPORT THE ILLINOIS COAL STRIKERS House-to-House Collection Jan. 26 ference February 11, at 8 p. m. American Restaurant "I Physical Culture Restaurants QUALITY ¥OOD AT LOW PRICKS 19 North Oth St. Phi rid paerue® am New ct 7 St. New York City Calls Latin American Trade Unions’ Protest Upon Terror in Mexico protest against the bloody persecu- tions being practiced upon the Mex- ican workers by the Mexican gov- ernment which has sold out to Yan- kee ‘imperialism. The protest de- mands a cessation of the terror against the workers and the release from prison of those now held. * 8 8 SAN SALVADOR, Jan. 19.—Al- leged to be “Communist speakers,” a large number of workers of dif- ferent nationalities held in the prison at Santa Tecla, have been released. Delicatessen Store FOURTH 4ND PORTER STREETS PHILADELPHIA The work we make is good. ganizations §=work—our specialty. Spruce Printing Co. 168 N mene ae PHILA PA im Market evstone— aie FFo40, GLENSIDE UPHOLSTFRY All Repairs Done at Reasonable Prices ROBERTS BLOCK, No 1 Glenside. Pa. Telephone Ogontz 4165' Ax far an | am concerned. I can’t af t th trugeies. and politi Showed th seonomte sureatens or PHILADELPHIA j CAPITAL BEVERAGE CO, wit hte Pete g our $ ODA WATER ‘and’ BEER 2434 West York Street Telephone: COLUMBIA 6365, te abelte La | Mine Workers of America fakers | together with the I. W. W., the ‘Trotzkyites, ete, have united into one solid front against the miners, the youth put up the most militant struggle. The young miners are awakening to their true position and their role in the present life and deatn strug- gle in Southern Illinois. They have shown that they have confidence in our revolutionary union, the Na- tional Miners’ Union. Fight the Right Danger. A Hundred Proletarians for continue its drive to organize work- ers and establish union conditions. Every Petty Bourgeois Rene- gads EAST PITTSBURGH WESTINGHOUSE WORKERS! LENIN MEMORIAL MEETING Speaking—Music Recitations Thursday, January 23, at 8 P. M. WORKERS HALL Corner Electric and North Ave., East Pittsburgh Auspices: COMMUNIST PARTY with all subscriptions to the Baily Wes Worker Arrangements with Inte Publishers, _ These books should immediately find a place ry i worker's home, By a arters and organization. Any district of mmunist Party, any workers’ organiza- tion can now secure & library of these books FREE by mobilizing forces to campaign for subscriptions to the DAILY WORKER. For organizations we make this offer: You can lish a Library for Workers, composed of the books listed below upon the following basis: Secure 50 subscribers to the Dally Work. we will send you wort! FREE. Secure 150 subscribers nd you $150 worth o Party members, readers of the Daily Worker, othr ‘sympathet/e workers can secure FREE $1.50 book value for every yearly subscrip- tign sent in Two half yearly subscriptions count the same as one yearly subscription. 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