Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WURKER, EW YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1930 : Thre@ i Page DAILY WORKERS OF BELGIUM, |?oteSi« eo demonstration THROW UNEMPLOYED CRISIS SHAKING RISING TO STRUGGLE, FIND OUT BETRAYERS Postal Workers, Rail Men, Starving Diamond Cutters, Discover “Socialists” Are Traitors Reformists Agree to Leave Unionists Off List of Those Getting Jobless Relief BRUSSELS, Jan. 7 (By Inprecorr | they now demand increases in ac- Mail Service)—For some time now| cordance with the cost of living the Belgian Post Office employees | amounting to about 30 per cent. A have been conducting a fight for | commission appointed by the govern- higher wages. The index wages of | ment to inquire into the situation he P. O. stand at 700, whilst the | proposes increases of 15 per cent., cost of living index stands at over|nct that this means that the gov- 900. In order to support their de-| ernment will adopt the suggestion, nd for wage increases the em-| The commission ai Ss against the HOUSES IN CAMPBELL, 0. | Police Captain Owns Hall, Closes It to Jobless} Workers Mass Meeting W. age Cuts As High As 20 per cent in Sheet; and Tube Mill Sunday, January 19, at Roumanian|in the sheet and tube mill.. Wage Hall, and the captain of police, John | cuts as high as 20 per cent and |Putko, who is said to be president | over have taken place in many. of \of the hall, Yefused the hall at the|the departments and are soon com- }last minute to spoil the meeting.| ing to the rest. Unemployed, Ne ployees of the General Post Office in| adoption of: a sliding scale as de- Brussels made a, demonstration | manded by the workers. strike of 15 minutes, during which! No Support for Diamond Workers. time they demonstrated on the It will be remembered that the streets in front of the G. P. O. build- | authorities refused unemployed sup- ing. port to the diamond cutters who are In the meantime a deputation ne-|now without work on account of FLASHES gotiated with the Post Master Gen-| the temporary-closing down of the| They demand a ‘sliding scale | works. ‘The Labor Minister has now | ARGENTINE PAPER OBJECTION | index based on the cost of living. | ratified the decision of the authori- ON FAITI There is a Communist group in the| ties. The official reason for the re-|_ BUENOS AIRES, Jan. 26.—The G.P.O. which has gréat influence on| fusal to grant unemployed support | paper “La Prensa” hore, comment. the employees. The reformists are| is that the social democratic leaders | ing on the whitewashing “inv er doing their utmost to break the|of the Diamond Cutters’ Union| tion” of Haiti proposed by Hoover, Communist influence and sabotage | agreed with the master diamond) <noaks against the “supervision of the fight of the P. O, workers. [cutters that the works should / Haitian affairs by overseers ap-| Raley. Workers tewerm cats | be closed down, and that therefore, | pointed by the W House,” but} ae eae |His own mother was violating the| gro and white are being thrown prohibition law and had di still and |.from the company houses.. We must he was getting customers for| discuss these rotten conditions and| 4 RENEW MEXICAN whiskey. He is well fixed now so|organize, led by the Communist. Ke don’t worry about the poor| Party. FASCIST TERROR == : CAMPBELL STEEL WORKER. Immediately after breaking |been owt of work for about nine driver of a foreman. isa against the revolutionary | Work each week till it gets busy. I/and better car—by reducing the This American and economists who met ington several weeks ago nounced that acute would face the for the next ten ye: the FROM STEEL COMPANY ALL CAPITALIST |‘Work or Pay’ Fighting Slogan of Millions (Continued from Page One) ces with a capitalist (By a Worker Coryespondent) Thousands of workers are unem-| Burns, formerly of Kings | Colfee, CAMPBELL, Ohio (By Mail) —| ployed here. Many more work only | London, declare! that the | Unites |The unemploye1 workers: of Camp-| part time. Ten hours’ work for nine States is facing an unemployment |bell were to Have a mass meeting | hours’ pay has been put upon us sete it Tns Se statement by statistician in Wash- and an- unemployment American kers Sharpening Crisis The fundamental crisis of can capitalism out of which present se | the steel bosses themse unemp! Chrysler Promises 90¢; Gives 55¢ shows no signs of coming out of its b Young, Workers Senti = iy a werter vorreepondent)io) (whieh (oon mo eleven Nours to make, | y Tie: etrnwes iat, sven His capital to Vile Prison DETROIT, (By Mail).—I want to/I found that I averaged 55 cents an| (" EtPe een ee docs not : relate some of the Hoover prosper-|hour, instead of the 90 cents that) ©™Cs® TN Site’ Drocuetln, (ee to oft| ity in the auto industry. Having|was promised to me by the slave| 8'V° Very mueh Che hae Last relations with the Soviet Union, on ; : | ese (eon Are cat » of the orders frém Wall Street, the Mexi. | Weeks, I was asked to come back| This, fellow worker, is how Chrys-| Weck vutae amour 08 ue ist_goverriment’ intensified |@M1 I would be given a few days |ler can put out a cheaper, bigger| Steel exploiters, | admitted | that There is growing discontent amongst the railway workers in Bel- gium, so much so, in fact, that the reformists have seen themselves compelled to organize meetings all over the country and to indulge in radical phr: , Whilst at the same time carefully avoiding any prepa- vations for a real struggle. The ex- remest practical demand on the rart of the leaders has been for a srotest strike of a few minutes. The workers are paid according | to a tariff decided upon in 1927, and |so to speak, they had a hand in | causing the unemployment, which jmay be said to be to some extent | voluntary. 4 |. The members of the Christian | Diamond Cutters’ Union and*the or- | genized diamond cutters will. receive | support. This is a wonderful result jers and employed, as continually | propagated by the socialists, and is likely to be a thorough lesson to the diamond cutters, of whom will receive no support as the result \of the tactics of their leaders, Millions Struggle in Germany, Eng. (Continued from Page One) Jobless Are Joining the Communist Party (Continued from Page One) | of the co-operation between employ- | 15,000 | |foolishly adds that the “occupation |has failed to aceomp. its objects” | —which is nonsense, The allegedly “objects,” of cou being the bet- terment of conditions for Haitians, |is not to he confused, as “La Prensa” \confuses it, with the real object, to | subject Haiti to U. S. imperialism |for both economic and naval stra- tegic reasons. And these have not |failed, though the Haitian masses are going to have the last word. | THREAT ON CHINESE WORKER A Chinese worker on train from |New York to Philadelphia was en- gaged in conversation with another jworker about the political situation {in China. By getting off the train, |a dick who had overheard the con- | versation came over and tapped Him | jcame back to work Monday, Jan.| standard of the workers to such a 13th. Then the foreman Spproached | low level. me with some nice talk: “Due to The only solution for this lies in the slackness in the trade you would | organizing into real militant unions, have to take a 10 cent cut, from ajlead by the TUUL and the Auto out anew, and yesterday five work- | 4ollar to 90 cents.” After working | Workers’ Union. @nly by these ers were deported to the deadly for about fifteen minutes I was|means will the workers be able to prison, the Mary Islands, off the | further informed that it was a piece | stave off further wage cuts and Pacific Coast, |rate job and that it was timed So | speed-ups which are taking place in These young workers members | that T could make my day rate. 2 of the Young Communist League,| After completing the job, the total ent period. : he are Eduardo Calero, member of the|f°. which amounted to six dollars, —CHRYSLER WORKER. | Central Committee; Alfonso Cuellar, | Antonio Rodriguez, Santiago Diaz) Black Hundred Threats Fail to Stop Charley and Pablo Santamari: { Summey Word from the Mexican Interna- | wo and peasants’ movements. Fascist terror in Mexico, balked for a time by the powerful demon strations of workers in half a dozen capitals of the continent, has broken the automobile industry in the pres- | deep-growing crisis i} ties.” At the same time it favors the Hoover lying ¢ otherwise “to destr to discourage enterprise.” is Admit Deep-Going Depression An editorial in the New York Times (Jan. 26, 1930) points out that there is a lot to be discouraged about in the present state of the of capitalism, It says: “To many watchers of the trad returns the great shrinkage in a tivity at the year-end may hav brought discouragement. Official reports have now shown that De- steel production was the declaration that “employment is ime |proving,” and that the crisis is not 50 bad as it was several months ago. | What improvement has Hoover and his fellow imperialists in. the [National Business Survey Confer lence made? Hoov aid all efforts . These exploiter e been pushing this field to the utmost, But reports from 99 cities on build- ing permits issued for December |show a drop of 16 per cent! | Not even in this special field can \the bosses stop the growing mass unemployment. The whole attempt of the capital- ists and their government spokes man, Hoo ep the jobl millions , with hope built u lies that “things will be bett meanwhile all the burden is laid upon the wo: Against this rule of mass tion millions of unemployed must orgar heir forces, and to- gether with the emp d workers orsened con are part attack results, ployment the the whose \¥ “work or and demonstrate their pi united we THOMPSON GETS wag His Arrest Was Plot | Against Peoria Strike TAYLORVILLE, Tl, Jan. 27. —Freeman Thompson, who was arrested yesterday in the hall of a successful National Miners’ Uni sub-district conference | here, was released to-day at the demaind of the Inte’ mal La- hor Defense. Peabody Coal Co. mine boss, commanding 25 deputy sher- iffs, broke into the meeting and | arrested Thompson on charges of |tional Labor Defense, sent to their | brother organization, the I.L.D. of |U.S.A., declared ‘The deportations took place after the president of | Mexico offered the LL.D. here to 50 get relief from the unemploy- | watched by stool pigeons, the Lenin |on the shoulder, “You come along | set them free, and notified the press ment office, and 25,530 from crisis relief, totalling 176,889. This means that more than 125,000 un-| : employed get no relief, ur at most/ unanimously adopted a resolution |“Ate you a Bolshevik?” After two | these ) depend upon charity. oul The state labor office says the! the unemployed marchers, demanded |Viding he doesn’t attend labor wy following about the jobless situa-| the release of Comrades Powers ani, ™ectings or have anything to, do/ terrible, and few come back. tion in the Brandenburg district | Raymond, who are held in $15,000 | With the Red and especially in Berlin: “The enormous burdening of the labor market in the territory of the state labor : department Brandenburg can best be seen in the sudden increase of the num- ber of unemployed by 37,537 to 418,137, This means that .unem- ployment has already now con- siderably passed over the highest point which it reached during the cold wave last winter. Compared with the same day last year, the number of unemployed is today 69,958 or 20 per cent higher. Dif- ference is greatest in Berlin with 56,568, which makes it 24 per cent for Berlin.” More British Unemployed. With the “labor? government try- ing to aid the bosses cut wages and inemployment relief, and increase rationalization, speed-up, ete., the mass army of unemployed is grow- ng. t The number of registered unem- jloyed, according to official state- ments, was 1,510,200 on December 30; this is 206,648 more than on De vember 16. These official figures give only the number of those unemployed in receipt of unemployment benefit. The number of unemployed is in veality about twice that much. As the unemployment legislation in England is still more reactionary than in Germany, only half of all imemployed are getting relief. The workers of all these and all other countries, tiring of the grow- ing starvation, are rallying their forces in daily meetings to rouse the whole toiling masses for struggle which is to culminate in. the Interna- tional Unemployment -Day demon tration on February 26. - HOW CAN ONE SLANDER ZOERGIBIEL? BERLIN, Jan, 26.—Wilhelm Kir), and editor of the “Rote Fahne,” of- ficial organ of the: Communist Party of Germany, was fined 600. marks (about $150) for calling Zoergibiel, “socialist” chief of police of Berlin, a “mass murderer” in commenting on the murder of 35 workers last May Day. The court refused to al- ow witnesses, of which the defense had 100 to testiy, or to*show a film of the murderous attack of the po- lice 6n May Day demonstrations of workers, The charge was that Zoer- ~ibield was “slandered.” ‘ FARMING CRISIS. (Cortinued from Page One) dulged in by the industrial capital- ists will also hit the farm workers, “A somewhat larger supply of la- bor for farm work will be available, probably at slightly lower wages during the first half of the year.” The Department of Agriculture admits that the crisis on the farms is going from bad to worse. Mill- ions of farm workers, mostly the youth, have poured from the farms into industry, only to find no jobs, and these will join the campaign against unemployment which will culminate in great demonstrations ° Feb. 26 in all cities, | tended meeting in a long time. With militant spirit, the workers | denouncing attacks of the police on |bail, under the vicious Michigan “Criminal Syndicalist Law,”. de- manding as well the release of other workers held for days without charges, and, as stated, answered the call to join the Communist Party by nearly 50.applications for mem= bership. These 47 new members for |the Communist Party are in addition ito the 41 who joined in the same ‘hall one week meeting over the terror in Mexico and Haiti. eee Bosses Fear Unemployed Leaders | DETROIT, Jan. 27.—As a result |of the unemployed march on the |City Hall at Pontiac, two more | workers, Leo Novak and George Du- jowich, have been placed under the | same charge as Philip Raymond and George E. Powers—membership in the Communist Party under the Michigan Criminal Syndicalist Law. | Novak and Dujowich were arrested in a raid on their home which was | carried out without even the fiction of a warrant. The persecutions in Pontiac auto completely by the General Motors Company, follow the successful cam- paign of the Auto Workers Union, the Trade Union Unity League, to organize the employed and unem- ployed workers, and the ability of the Communist Party to recruit a large number of workers into its ranks. The immediate event pre- ceding the arrests was the mass demonstration of unemployed who marched to City Hall rallying 1,500 unemployed demanding immediate unemployment relief, It is interesting that Powers and Raymond, who were among those leading the unemployment demon- stration, are not charged with any- thing in connection with the demon- stration, but are charged merely with being members of the Commu- nist Party. Four other workers who were charged with disorderly conduct in connection with the demonstration have been bailedeout, the bail having been fixed at $100 each. Reveal Fascist Plot to Seize German State (Continued from Page One) calling for war against the Soviet Union) included have contributed heavily to financing the fascist armed forces. The plotters hae enough funds to arm 200,000 men and maintain them for several weeks. To arouse no suspicion, the com- mittee has ordered the maintenance of an outward independence of fas- cist organizations from one another and the state authorities, while se- cretly the political and military op- erations are strictly centralized. The fascist Minister of Interior in Thuringia (one of the German states), Frick, plays a special role in the fascist preparations. Frick is arming fascists in Thuringia, maintaining connections with the Reichswehr and police, gathering arms and proceeding to prohibit the Communist Party. « center and owned and controlled | the | Memorial meeting was the best at-| with me,” he said. | He took the worker to the police ation. The worker was asked: |hours the worker was let go, ‘pro- FIGURES ON COMMUNIST PARTY OF U.S 5S. R. Moscow dispatches state that members and candidates of the Com- munist Party of the Soviet Union total 1,551,000, statistics show since the Party cleansing of unfit clements Workers from 65 per cent; peasants 20 per cent and office employees, before at the protest | Craftsmey, etc., 15 per cent. There) not give any importance to the’ | are 212,000 women. New members |are coming in rapidly, chiefly from factory workers, Eleven percent were excluded in the cleansing. SOVIET CONSUL HARBIN. TOKIO, Jan, 26.—Reports from Harbin, Manchuria, state that most of the Soviet employes and mana. gers of the Chinese Eastern Rail- way ate back on the railway line, jand that the returned consul, Mel- nikov, was greeted by a huge crowd at the station. The “Internationale” is being sung frequently in the Har- bin streets by workers, BACK AT Many Caurses Offered By Workers School For the Spring Term The program of the Workers School is arranged to satisfy the needs of the labor movement in its struggles with the oppressors of | state and industry. Of particular | importance to the workers will be the Fundamentals of’ Communism, night. If one has already studied this at the School and wishes to go ahead, the next logical subject in order would be the Principales of Marxism J, which is given on Tues- | day nights from 7 to 8:20 and also | from 8:30 to 9:50 p. m. The in. structor of this class is A. Markoff. Continuing this subject one may take Principles of Marxism II, by E. from 7 to 8:20 p. m. terested in starting a class in eco- | such workers Marxian Economics A, Miller, Gastonia defendant, on Mon- ; day night at 7 o’clock, <A class | being formed in the Program of the Communist International, heretéfore | given exclusively to Communist Party members is now made avail- | able to anyone who wishes to regis- | tez in it on Wednesdays at 7 o’clock, | with Samuel A. Darey as instructor. | . In addition, the Workers School | announced the formation of two day time classes given in the Funda mentals of Communism ‘on Fridays | at 3 o'clock and also English on Thursdays at 3° o'clock. This, of. course, is especially inviting to night | workers. | Register now for term starting | F-burary, 3. | Bea ME OE, | FRENCH BLOW AT U. S. FILMS. | PARIS, Jan, 26.—Six Freach com- | panies, with $12,000,000 capital, are forming a merger to buck tho i portations of American made movies and talkies, It is expected .o bring the Pathe group of companies into | the combine shortly, if if for which one can enroll any week | Campbell, given also on Tuesday, | Of further interest to workers in- | nomics, the Workers School offers | which is given by Comrade Clarence | to that effect. We have started a national campaign and hope you | will go on_ internationally becau deportations set a terrible for the . revolutionary The Mary Islands are Those who do are always living corpses, as they are very ill treated and tor- | tured.” “precedent movement. Mexican Press Lies The Graphic of Mexico City ran the following story of the activities: “From authoritative sources we | know that the Mexican government has not incited any jagainst the Communists, alleged | traitors to their country, as they do activities and subversive acts. A bulletin sent out by the I.L.D. in- | forms us that the declarations made | by them to the press are being used | as the basis of persecutions against | the leadership of the organization, and they declare their organization |is a broad one that has the solidar- |ity of the working class thé world over, and will fight this time as ef- | fectively as before and demonstrate that the government may commit all kinds of persecutions against them, but cannot stop workers’ solidarity tkvoughout the world.” ———+ SOVIET UNION PLACES AVI- ATION CONTRACT. P. I. Baranoff, chairman of the | Soviet Council of Civil Aviation, who |is heading a delegation of Soviet civil aviation authorities to this country, has just visited Dayton, Ohio, where he concluded a contract with the Deleo Aviation Corporation involving orders totaling $500,000. Workers! This Is Your Paper. Write for It. Distribute It Among Your Fellow Workers! campaign | | (By a Worker Correspondent) | | Southern textile worker and an or- ist Party unit organizer. he bosses are trying in eycry way | possible to bribe the workers 10 keep them away from the union. |now as an answer, a worker went | leave the state, but I am still here | out and signed up sixty members | | build our union. : ne deed 1 |of business Sn Teng er areas treed oUF cs tue gesak ancartacty ae the | cember’s | ers are treated in the “sunny south”. |smallest since the ‘ oN | And the conditions today are really CHARLOTTE, N, C. — I am worse than they were when I was | working for 45¢ a day. The workers ganizer for. the National Textile | say they are going to have a union Workers Union and also a Commun- | regardless of who will try to stop | smallest | them. We know it takes fighting to | the index of employment in manu- facture at the lowest of any month | This shrinkage since I have been threatened by the | but one since 1922 nd am going to remain here nd or-| Commercial mind | and ina very short time established | Sanize workers into the Union of | financial movemen a National Textile Workers Union | the Communist Party as long as I |local where the UTW had once sold | live. jout the workers. The ~orkers around here say that if Hoffman gr | |Wm. Green show their mugs in this —————S rrr st | town they will get all that is coming j to them for their rotten sell-outs. | I went to work in a mill at theh | age of 11 and received 25c a day for about three months. Then I was! raised to 45c a day and for two long | ears I remained working for 45¢ a| day and this is the way the work- | Meaand Whitewashing of Police. Who Slew Barkoski Starts Now} PITTSBURGH, Pa., Jan. 27.—| | The second trial of Police Lieuten- jant Lyster and two others of Mel- |Jon’s coal and iron cops opens to- morrow in Franklin on a charge of venue from Alleghany county. These police took a, miner, Barkoski, to ; their headquarters and beat him to | death in horrible fashion, prolonging | his agony hours. They were whitewashed by an. Alleghany county court last October, | when ‘tried for murder. The pres- ent trial is only for “involuntary | manslaughter,” with possibility of | conviction slight, for Mellon owns the courts and protects his killers. | If convicted the term is one to two years. Pe haar Townes OUT OF A JOB! By EARL BROWDER A’ invaluable analysis of the problem’ of UNEM- PLOYMENT. The author destroys, by means of facts and Marxist-Leninist deduction, all illusions cre- ated by the hypocritic efforts of the Hooyer-A.F.L.- socialist combines to cure this evil, now facing millions of workers in this country. Not a REMEDY—but a program of STRUGGLE! i FIVE CENTS Help to Spread It Among Your Shop Mates Order from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS . 39 East 125th Street New York City SPECIAL DISCOUNTS ON ORDERS IN QUANTITY LOTS But this CHARLEY SUMMEY. and 40 per cent. les |spinners’ purchases of | smallest of any corresponding month | 1920; motor ince the beginning of 192 activity car over a Building Shows More Decline” capitalist takes no stock in the Hoov middle of s than last May; | | “eonspiracy to prevent Peabody employees from working.” Hun- dreds of miners greeted Themp- son on his release at a spetial mass mecting edly called. The arrest was a plot to keep him away from the Peoria strike, where Fishwick had called a meeting to try and sell out the miners, Thompson left for Peo- ria to-day, and is calling a special strikers’ meeting there. 1924 cotton the output the | re-| | November’s | Build the United Front of the newspaper, Working Class From the Bottom avis! Up—in the Industries! SMASH CAPITALIST JUSTICE AND TYRANNY Demand Unconditional Release of All Class-War Prisoners! BREAK THE BOSSES’ ARMED ATTACKS! INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE CAMPAIGN Beginning January 16, Anniversary of Liebknecht-Luxemburg martyfdom Goals set for March 18, 1930, Paris Commune Anniversary. 1 Millions of workers mobilized to smash the boss terror and save workers from prison. 2 Thirty thousand new members; 12,000 of them Negro workers. uw 3 4 ‘ $50,000 for defense (legal, pro- test, publicity, literature, organi- zation). Five thousand new affiliated or- ganizations. Fifty thousand readers of Labor Defender; 25,000 subscribers, I. L. D. Campaign Program January 16—March 18, 1930 1, Hold mass protest meetings and demonstra- tions promptly everywhere. “. Build up immense conferences, as broad as possible, representing factory committees, all unions, workers’ societies, Negro, youth, women, cooperative organizations, etc. Carry defense struggles into shops, mills, mines, ete. Enroll members, collect funds, sell Labor Defenders, build the sinews of class war. 4. Organize collections in shops and factories, streets, house to house, in workers’ and other sympathetic organizations. 5, Arrange for city-wide and branch affairs to raise funds. Ask sympathetic groups to do the same within three weeks and during fol- lowing five weeks. §. Rush in all funds on the coupon books issued in December. Use up all these books. Emer- gency collection lists and special stamps will follow soon, and systematically. 7. Each branch and local set itself a quota (money quota) to be raised by Feb. 10, thru March 1, thru March 18-22, 8. Organize speakers’ squads immediately to be ready for action Jan. 26. Hold “I. L. D. weeks” before each Tag Day. Speakers and literature distributors to go before all or- ganizations and factories to gain new af- filiations, individual members, delegates to conferences, get donations and collections. Organize nation-wide mass Tag and Re- cruiting Days Feb. 1 and 2; Feb. 22 and 23; Conduct factory-district and worker-neigh- borhood parades. Use signs, posters, trucks, autos; distribute leaflets, take up collections Get new members, sell more initiation and dues stamps; get subscribers to the Labor Push the pledges to’ the Prisoners’ and De- Increase the affiliations and the per capita 9. March 15 and 16. 10. in boxes or on lists. 11; Defender. 12. fendants’ Fund. 13. affilation fees. 14, Literature, ete.: Every city and branch must have a literature agent to handle and push Labor Defender, to see that I. L. D. corners and wall bulletins are set up in all possible headquarters and meeting places of I. L. D, branches, affiliated unions and so- cieties, and friendly organizations. (Space on walls, tables for free leaflets and sale of literature.) MORE MILLIONS OF WORKERS MUST MOBILIZE TO AR Fos SAVE their persecuted comrades from prison death and fascist gangs. FREE the seven Gastonia prisoners, Saylors, Saul, Graham, Shifrin, and their fellow vic- tims. INCREASE the class militancy and resistance of the workers-masses. BREAK THE BOSSES’ TERROR-OFFENSIVE in U. S., Mexico, and Latin America, ADD YOUR STRENGTH—AND HELP! Give at least 75 cents (one cent each) for the following cases, defendants and victims of capitalist tyranny: 1.0. D. Saylors, perjury—union and defense or- ganizer, 2. George Saul, rioting, ete.—I. L. D. organizer 3. Stephan Graham, inciting Negro workers to rebellion—facing deportation, 4-10: Gastonia Appeal—Pioneers struggle. 11-35. Mexico, fascist terror—save workers from death and prison. 36. Wm. Shifrin, murder frame-up—self-defense case, 37. Caudle (Lamberton), rioting, ete—N. T. W. U. organizer. in Southern WE MUST HAVE AMPLE FUNDS AT ONCE! International Labor Defense 80 EAST 11th ST., NEW YORK, N. Y. 87-46. Tapolscanji, Osaki, and nine other depor- tation cases. 47-51. Martin’s Ferry, sedition and criminal syn- dicalism, 52-56. Yucaipa Women, sedition and criminal syn- dicalism, 57-59. Bethlehem, sedition’ and criminal syndi- calism. 60-61. Philadelphia, sedition and criminal syn- dicalism, 62-64, Chicago, sedition and. criminal syndical- ism. 65-74, Illinois Miners, on strike, many arrests, Many of these Cases come up before February 1. Most before March 18th And the Gastonia Appeal Comes up in the Noith Carolina Court April 1. “alow > ROOM 402 Ce een eee