The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 1, 1930, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

\ - a town dominated by the coal oper-| | tore brirging in its verdict. iy Si é WARDEN ORDERS ® PRISONERS TO. “BEAT UP GUYNN Rat WOOLLEN WORKERS TAKE THE FIELD MASS STRIKES AGAINST WAGE REDUCTIONS Police Attack Pickets ALL WORKERS SOLID AND WEDNESDAY, JA’ i “ P REVOLUTION IN | PRINCE'S JAUNT 3/Young Workers On INDIA GROWS. | 1 tya.e cee ‘Cfithinal Syndicalism’ By SENDER GARLIN PITTSBURGH, Pa., Jan “You'd better keep your opi es, beca there are 640 ex- | ice men here. and if you don’t get a jab on the nose.” t DP Penitent Guynn a entered the ons to] at Goelumbus told C ‘Tom Johnson when they tution December 21 ng sentences of ten under the Ohio ciiminal syndicalism law. e SOCB’_DEATHS IN Guynn, zer for the | CINEMA, FRE tional came to Pitts- baa emma for the burgh: toda first time s sed on $5,000 ‘bond ince that time astern Ohic mine f n with works. iS is also out on bond pending appeal, and Lil An- drews, the third defendant, whc was sentenced to a n-year term in| Marysville Reformatory for Women| union ail Our Fighting Brother—The Br Daily Worker! DAILY WORKE itish Parkers of the Weald Unite? YOIWORKER (NUARY 1, 1030 Dae Peony DETERMINED TO WIN Fi Ose CHT | PONDRIELD, SCAB 4° DEFIANT stint Labour Prepares 29 Smash) Determined Resit Lower Woot Sirk ages was released at the same time. three are being defended by the Tn- | ternational Labor Defense, which} War of Jobless Rises | vaised the bond necessary to brine’ Phruout All Europe about their temporary release joks Fine Outside”. “The outside of the prison looks fine,” Guynn says. ‘Lawns, shade trees, flowers and all the rest that makes the place look like a swell country club or college.’ But once inside the unscaleable eighteen-foot well with its ‘high turrets upon which rest mack guns and hand grenades this pictures changes uvickly, he says. Though he has «a powerful physique, Guynn lost fifteen pounds as. the result of his confinement and the prison diet. So intent were they upon sepa: ing the two workers that the prison authorities piace Johnson in the knitting mill, where he sat all day in idleness. (Continued from Page One) Tod: on the door of a so-caile * aritable” place, where they been getting a few’ stale bread doled to them, raided a near- by “co-operative” store and carted off piles of bread and sausage be- fore the police arrived. At Bremen today, battles between and fascists occurred, when ts tried to hold a meeting. Evidently the worke: are deter- mined that if the police forbid them the workers will see that ts are not allowed to meet in plots against the workers were injured and some a: ted. The government authorities them-! selves admit that more than 2,000,- Ordered “Americanization”. 000 are receiving doles, that an ad- Both men were well known to ail | ditional 1,500,000 are entirely with- the guards and to many of the pris-| out help, and that 10,000,00 people oners when they arrived at the pen-| are affected and facing starvation. itentiary. They later learned that) Economic “experts” admit that cn the morning of their arrival the |the technical changes in industries. warden had called together a group jallowing for speed-ups and whol! of prisoners, ex-service men, to his |sale discharge of workers, is making | cifice where the deputy warden told|great | numbers “unnecessary,” | them that “two Reds”, Bolsheviks | though production continues, they who are opposed to our form of say, at a “high level.” They state | government are coming in today to that the output of coal per miner | start a long stretch. Eager to in-/has increased 8 per cent in the past | cite them to violence against the|year, for example. Moreover, they -Workingclass fighters, the of-|have no way of giving work to 400,- | 1 told the men that “these fel-|000 young workers who every year Jows are against the U, ment for which you boys risked your | lives in France. . govern-!reach working age i y' The economic It'd be a good idea | crisis, the general e financial s, in fact, | tion throughout Unemployed United Nationally in Czecho-Slovakia. PRAGUE Prague Central Committee of the Un- employed Workers for coordinated action on the part of unemployed all over the country has had a magnifi- cent respons: The demonstration of unemployed in Komotau which the police tried to break up, and the demonstration in Brunn, are signs that the masses are taking tp de- termined struggle. The general discontent is ing even nationalist and fa: 1 he of appeal! affect- t cir- d unemployed Czech legion- demonstrated in Prague the decision of their leaders to reduce the support paid to them. Troops were used against the dem- | onstrators and one shot was fired. The s ift growth of mass s the world among millions as the world economic crisis deepens and attains permanency, is driving the interna- tional working class into action. No longer willing to starve peacefully in hope of better days that come, the jobless of the whole world the jobles are beginning to take the offensive | in struggle against being starved to sm. death by capita In every country, masses are ral- ng to struggle, uniting the job- with those left at work, but speed-ups, | hours victimized by and longer who are wage cuts faced themselves any moment. In daily meetings be- neVer | and | ER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, TOTHEROW TELLS HOW BOSS GANG KIDNAPPED HIM Union Youth Organizer Came Back, Fought | Bq ELBERT TOTHEROW | (Youth Organizer for ihe NTW) | | Charles Summey and-myself went | to Li ‘on Jan, 2 to go on with} orga jon work that had been; started a week before by Fred Toth-! ere another and ar other -f mine. } Summey. and I arrived in Lum- {berton about..5.2000n tlie bus.’and} |were spotted immediately by bosses thugs who followed us (o ihe home jot Local Organizer T.-M. Caulde. | Afterward we were told by the gang} to leave town. When we started} from the mill v lowed by the gang which increa’ ell the time. Th about and their They 0 ts, mostly to freighten us, | I think, bat that failed to scare We went to the Western Unio d sent a telegram and while wait- | ih to ng for an answer we were ay proached by the gang and told that | we had only 35 minutes to leave | town. | We got the answer and went to a hotel and were followed in there | by the mob, which waited all night | {in the lobby for us | ‘Told You te Get Out.” | When we came down in the. morn- | jing the chase started again. Sum-} mey said: “Well. Tut, let’s go eat.” | We went ta cafe. Summey was eating and I-staited for my brief- ease. I got a taxi. When I started| | to get in the taxi, a Chrys ypped and Walt Ble You god damned Red, I te get out of town.” | There were five of the thags in rysler which belonged to an overseer of the Mansfield mill, I got in the taxi and started. We got jonly 5 or 6 blo nd the driver ; noticed the big machine following | us. ® | The criver stopped and put me! and drove on. The cther machine loaded with} ganmen stopped and took me and| drove to the house of Fellow Work- | ow JANUARY ¢ Aviators Gromov (left) and Sperin who led the second expedition in search of Eielson. These | rom the very day that the or- heroic Soviet aviators, similar to the of the toilers of the world. Crisis Grows in U. S. Showing Hoover Lies (Continred from Page One) less textile workers are searching garbage cans for food. Of course, Hoover and Davis’: were exposed even by such capitalist agencies as the comm oner of la- bor of the State of New York, Francis Perkins; the capitalist f nancial mouthpieces, the Annalist and the Journal of Commerce. very facts of the deepenir itself explode thg feeble lies of ng Hoover’s “re- announcement for the week January 13, the Ameri Association publishes vised” ended Railway figures on freight car loading cover- its ing the week ended January 18— much later date than that of Mr. Hoover’s propagandist Department of Labor. These figures show that production has declined sharply even below December, or the first two weeks in January. alggmese nomen noe Searched For Eielson fighters of the Red Army and Navy, are the staunch defenders the truth. An unemployed council Suh ’ . should be at once formed there by/BUS Drivers’ Strike the T.U.U.L, _» Spreads from Ohio In Greenwich, Conn., out of a total working population of about to Scranton, Penn. 2,000, more than 60 per cent, or 1,200 are out of work. This is ad mitted by the bosses themselv SCRANTON, Pa. (B: Thirty-two of the 37 driv Mail).— s of the in a dispatch to the New York Times Great Lakes Stages operating out (Jan. 29, 1930). of the Scranton terminal have One of the industries in which joined their fellow bus drivers of Hoover announces a “rise in em-| in a national ’ strike. ployment” is the tobacco industry Here are some facts from workers in the heart of the tobacco industry in the South: From 300 to 500 workers apply | cos to the Reynolds Tobacco Company for jobs eve y. One or two More are fired than imported from Syracuse, headquar- shrift to sell-out tactics by the A. Speed-ap Cigarette Machines— F. of L. and Workers. Jn 1928 the machines run by the! Wages were cut from 3 1-2 to 4 ist” elements have clearly proven s a mile, to 2 1-2 to 3 cents a} their anti-working class cha’ The dr-vers have to pav half !py going over to the bourgeoise hotel expenses and eating | hand and bagage—affiliating them- when they have to lay over |celyes with the bourgeois sport or- away from home. Scabs are being | ganization—the Amateur Athletic. , are hired. ye ;ters of the Colonial Greyhouhd employed because of the terrific|Lines. The men have decided to speed-up introduced in the toba unionize. Their militancy seems to | plan} indicate that they will give short workers in the Reynolds Tobacco ‘is in the steel industry, despite the 'Co. in the cigarette department | attempts of the Hoover publicity turned out 36 packages of cigaret-! agents to make it appear that things er Caulae, While they held me in| There was a decrease of 15,833|tes a minute. In 1929, new mach-| are bettering in this ‘sphere, is con- the machine, the criver, a big burly tears shipped during the week ended| ines were installed, which packed tained in a Penna thes ausnabet ithug went into the ho’ of Fellow | January 18, below the previous week.| 72 a minute. Since January, 1930, | Commerce, January 29, 1930, which | Worker Caulde to get my bries cases} Mrs. Caulde wouldn't let them haye my thin so they took me in and} got my brief case and then they tock me back to the machine and searched me and found I didn’t have | me and began cur: ing they were goir ing me and say- | rg to lynch me. | |and called out the second and This more than -any_ soft-soan phrases of Hoover shows a steep drop in production and an inerease in the unemployed army. The same report shows that there was a drop of 84,508 freight cars loaded with low the same week in 1928, With the sharp speed-up intro-/ purposely curtailed their production | ‘They took me to the Dresden mill duced by all the capitalists in the to the low point of 40 per cent of} present ¢ if you Avericanize ‘these birds.” And before he had finished his may ual of arms the deputy warden hint- : anxious to get, but which can mean ade ‘Work or Wages,” ma: ed broadly that if the two workers no more than further help to the |i.) theie forces 4 ach | “String him up,” a i ing their forces to protect each Wete not ameneale to the American-| capitalists, while more workers Eee abrecess that slugging | starve. : lof rent, joining the fight for the | him or drown him!” SR as Conta aa tena : . | jobless with a fight against wage Raney were Guynn and Johnson! Employed and Unemployed in |Cuts and speed-ups, millions are locked into their cells when secret notes began to come to them from | several friendly prisoners on the | same. range, telling them of the/| meeting in the office of the warden. Get Vile Food. Fer hreakfast--mush, syrup and black’ésffee; or bread, gravy, black | coffer, ‘without sugar; for lunch— steW6r hash, bread and black cof- fee.°°Fér supper—gravy and pota- toes*ahd tea without sugar. ‘This is the diet served the inmates of the penitetitiary. And no food is per- mitted to be sent in from the out- side“é@xcept on ‘Thanksgiving and Christmas. Their reading watter | ix limited to Wild West stories and} the “fiiberty” mayazine. They can) write ‘only two letters a month, and/ thege'only to theiv nearest relatives. : Prison Congested. The Ohio State Penitentiary was built originally to “accomodaie” 2,-| 760 prisoners. But now 4,700 are confingd within its walls. Nearly} 3,000 prisoners work in the woolen,| Socialists Vote Against Unemployed | murderous capitalist police when we | cursing and trying to make me her imitting and cotton mills. Others | work in the machine shop, pianing|lin city council, the Communist of living, and clearly showing us |left me to get out the hest way T) kers defense | mill, soap factory or laundry. For } this work the prisoners are paid | four cents a day (for single men) | and ten cents a day (for married men), and the prison authorities let | it be strictly understood that no sum to exceed $50 can he “earned” ly any vrisoner regardless cf the| Tength of his term—and this, in-| _cidentally, to be paid only upon re- | lease. Bosses Behind Conviction. | The three defendants were con- -vieted by a jury of farmers land housewives in common pleas court, . Belmont county, on the basis of a) leaflet distributed in connection | with the August 1 anti-war demon- stration held in Martins Ferry, Ohi ators and steel bosses. The jury “deliberated” for five minutes be- | National Miners Union Leaders at Mass Meet : | BURGETTST: Pa, Jan. 31— lwhere on the pretense that they w they figure, can only be relieved fore factory gates, refusing to ac- y foreign loans, which they are bd e cept discharge when they are fired, Battle. (Wireless by Inprecorr.). BERLIN, Jan. 31.—Police attacks agai the workers of Hamburg yesterday united the employed with the unemployed in fierce battles of resistance to police attack. Severe collisions took place when police at- tacked groups of workers eve’ | preparing for the giant demonstra- tions the world over to take place jon February 26. ‘Miners United Front for Defense Corps; | Scores Katovis’ Murder | re prohibition against yiolating the WHEELING, W. Va., Jan. 30. open-air meetings. The unemployed] —The United Front Conference who were waiting at the govern-|Against The Criminal Syndicalist ment labor bu us to register,/Law and the W » Terror, at its were attacked. Also construction | meeting held here Jan. 26, adopted workers who were at.work on build- a resolution: “Registers the fight- ings. Other construction workers |ing protest of the workers of the went to their support and a stiff,| mining section of Eastern Ohio and fight followed, with the police using’) Wheeling, W. Va., represented here their firear The construction | by thirty delegates against the workers are now striking against | brutuality of the New York City police brutality, many workers be- | police who have recently murdered ing injured. During the fight the | Steve Katovis. It i workers built a barricade to stem only to the workers of New York, the police attack but to the workers of the country, ¥ showing us what to expect from the In the Jan. 9 session of the Ber-| go on strike for better conditions council members proposed numerous |that we must form w motions to help the unemployed, |corps to protect ours among others the abolition of what jsu is known as “waiting time” which} s the jobless wait a long time |» ators they ave entitled to relict, 9000 Jobless Apply for Jobs As Show Extras; Few Hired The “socialists? voted against all) Ives against proposals, and the only one adopted | was one carried by the Communists | together with some of the bourgeois | | votes, for to free the unemployed of | PHILADELPHIA (By Mail). — the so-called “rent tax.” This tax| No le than 5,000 unemployed is a percentage added to the rent,|workers, men and women, stormed allegedly to bulid new houses for|the Shubert Theater when the show workers, but which under the city|company advertised for extras. But government of “socialists” is used ja few were hired, at $2 a day. Police for giving enormous graft to pri- | reserves brutually handled the vate building contractors. |workers. The seriousness of the ‘AAO, LE 4 ; unemployment situation here was jclearly shown. Strike Against Dismissal From Factory! LONDON.—A thousand and two hundred workers in the London fac- | tory of Crosse and Blackwell have gone on strike against the speed-up | system and against dismissals of workers from their jobs. The strikers are mostly organized in the Transport and General Workers’ Textile in Atlanta 'Negro and Worke ATLANTA, Ga., Jan. 30.—About 90 workers, half of them Negro and a warning, not | fixers and said: “Here he is the damn organizer, red and all.” “String Him Up.” Some of the bosses tool: and other yelled, | workers when they are cutting down | speeding-up the workers left on the After three different places like | job, on the other hand. this, there was another thug got in| These whole-cloth lies cannot stop the machine with orders from the|the mass army of unemployed gat, so tuen they threw me back | commodities below the same week in |is not hiring workers because a large in the machine and piled in around ; 1929, and a reduction of 37,330 be-} part of those already working are} | ™/ An indication of the continued cri-| or bosses to “Take that god damned} the United States from organizing | son of a bitch of a Red out of town | and fighting against their growing and see that he don’t come back.” | miseries, and mobilizing, under the They filled their tank with gas leadership of the Communist Party, and started out. They took me down | for the world wide demonstration to No. 20 highway toward Wilming- | against unemployment, to reach its ton, N. C., about 25 or 30 miles, | climax on February 26. then turned off on 2 lonely dirt ri | 36,000 Jn Cleveland. through a very swampy ¢ While Hoover talks about “in- All the way I was shoved abc \efeasing employment” other capital- cussed, and ‘was toid that t ist politicians are frantically appeal- the la: the bosses to hire time that I would see any| ing to friends and that I had better | workers, because the unemployed . They told me that they were | army is becoming gigantic. In Cleve- going to go back and get that “god! jand, Harold H. Burton, acting city damned old cripple son of a bitch,! manager, appealed to 2,000 indus. Summey,” and “that old bastard of | trjalists in the Cleveland area to an old Caulde,” and thai they were | stop firing workers, because he es- ing to kill them and all other} timated that the unemployed army of m union organizers that came around | jn Cleveland already numbered more Lumberton. | than 50,000. Mr. Burton’s 50,000 We were about 10 or 15 miles} can be doubled without stretching eut on the dirt read and they stop- | ped and told me to get out. When | of the court hoyse I got to the door I got out, they al! crowded around) end was met by the same gang. Lenin Memorial Union, the bureaucratic officials of textile mill workers, attended the _ Pat Toohey, secretary-treasurer of National Miners’ Union, Fred | which are trying to drive the work- president of District 5, N.|ers back without gaining any 0 | U, and Isiiah Hawkins, negro | their demands. The London district and member of the National | committee of the Communist Party ive Board of the N. M. U./is working to secure the election of a strike committee from the strikers themselves rather than one of bur- eaucratic officials of the union, and mass meeting to be held afternoon, Feb, 2, at 3) Lenin Memorial meeting here on January 19. The Communist Party and the Young Communist League held the meeting. Great enthusi- asm was shown by the workers who took part in their first Lenin Me- meorial. Speakers were Leslie Adams, of the Communist Party, to carry on the fight against the “at Granish Hall, Burgetts- ; union officials if necessary. and R. H. Hart and Max Weitzman, jof the Young Communist League. and pray. Then they drove off and/ could. In leaving they said: “If) | you ever come hack or say anything | ‘ahout this we will hunt you up and kill you.” After walking and hitchhiking to Marion, 8. C., I sent a telegram and | | hitchhiked on to Florence, S. C., and | sent a telegram, and spent the night and Friday morning came back to | Charlotte, N. C. Attack on Cauide, H The thugs had the sheriff disa*m | fellow Worker Caulde on his way jback from Charlotte and pyt “him | jail on the framed-up charge of ult, And-when the trial came} up, I was in Lumberton court house |but they wouldn’t let me testify on the threats that had been made against Cauide, | | The trial all the way through was ‘ene of the rotténest frame ups T} Jever heard of. The proséeutor was one of the biggest clowns } ever wand he acted all the way thru t like some coredian. This was | for a purpose. The purpose was to railroad a worker to the chain gang, ond but for the Internationa! Labor Defense defending him the bosses would have given this worker all the time they wanted to. But the case was appealed, and Caulde will be bailed out. Plan With Prosecutor. While the jury was out, some of the thugs walked up to the pros- ecutor and they were talking and all the time they would glance at me and just roar with glee. Then when court adjourned and I started out % They rushed onto me and began raining blow after blow on my head. Some workers just flew in and began knocking thugs in every di- rection. thug and just knocked the hell out /of him and then went smashing his way through to my side, for the thugs had me surrounded... And in came Fellow Worker Bill Hadden knocking thugs with each |fist. Bill Hadden is one of the many world wav veterans that went over there and fought “for democracy” and is now a mill slave. He is work- ing for $@ or -10 for a 65-hour week. In came Joe Carr, district organ- izer of the Young Commynist Lengue, like a battering ram to my le, and we began fighting. our way out, Out came Mother Ulla Reeve Bleor, one of the oldest labor organ- izers in the U.S.A. She shouted, “Let that boy alone.” “Peaceful Little City.” We fought our way out to our waiting machine and came back to Charlotte N. C., with three or four knots the size of marbles or hens eggs. ANl of this happened right in the court house door, where only 20 ininutes before the bosses had a worker “found guilty,” and in his trial the prosecutor had said that this was such a quiet peaceful little city. The workers of the South are de. termined to have a union and that union is going to he the workers union, the National Textile Workers Union. One youg worker, Elbert | {Smith by name, grabbed one big} more the machines have been speeded up|‘ to produce 88 packages of cigaret-| tes a minute. More is produced with | less workers, The steel industry, about which Hoover and Davis boast so much, ume of business be- ing received by the steel job- bers ir the New York metropo- litan district is nothing to be- come boastful about. The ag- gregate of sales is poorer than was December, and is probably lighter than January of last year. } on part time basis. The steel boses For the workers, this means in- sis, in order to produce capacity in December, and closed | creased unemployment. . boys, | more with less workers, and to aid| production for more than a week, | 6,000,000 unemployed will be added their fight for more world markets, : in order to give the appearance when | to by hundreds of thousands is clear- | Hoover wants the unemployed to|{hey started up again that produc-|ly brought out by the facts of the yelled, | believe that the bosses are hiring | tion was increasing. That the | growing crisis of capitalism, not The crisis in the steel industry|only in the United States, but in of the big slump in the building in-| dustry and the 80 per cent out in| unemployment! other from eviction for non-payment | “Take him to the swamps and hang/ production on the one hand, and! wit) continue to grow worse because| all capitalist countries of the word. Organize for the fight against Participate in the the output of the automobile planis.| world-wide demonstration for work wages on February 26. SPRING TERM at WORKERS SCHOOL Starts Mouday—Enyoll Now! Many courses offered in Marxism-Leninism, History, Problems of the Labor Movement, etc., a few of which are:: Fundamentals of Communism—every night. Theory and Practice of Trade Unionism Problems of Communist Organization —Fri., 7 p. m—J. Schmies Fri., 7 p. m—J. Williamson Capitalism and American Negro (symposium) Tue., 8:30 p. m. Otto Hall Stuyvesant 7770 26-28 Pe heer Time OUT OF A JOB! By EARL BROWDER z 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 Hoover-A.F.L.- socialist combines to cure this evil, now facing millions oY workers in this country. Not a REMEDY—but a rrogram of STRUGGLE! FIVE CENTS Help toSpread It Among Ypur Shop Mates Order from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street New York City * SPECIAL DISCOUNTS ON ORDERS IN QUANTITY LoTs UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK ‘Review LABOR SPORTS UNION PASSES | 3 ANNIVERSARY History Workers Sports af 3 43 ngs.on the third anniversary of organized revo-+ lutionary workers sport movement in the ieading imperialist country in the world—the United States of month 1 his Americn. In this period of theee rea e Laber Sports Union of A ica has grown in numbers ‘till it now has 7,000 members. It has * 0 grewn considerably in revolu- ° tionary class understanding, being now a section of the Red Sports in- ternational. e Against Bosses’ Agents. The history of the growth and oe development of the Labor Sports Unien a history of struggle against all reformist tendencies and jagainst the social-democrats—the agents of the bourgeoisie. ganization was formed the workers sportsmen were vonfronted with \these bourgeois agents in their !yanks, who used every means in | their power to stifle the growth of j ihe organization, to deplete it of its |class character and to make it an |instrument of struggle against the revolutionary workers movement |that is lead by the Communist ty. The early defeat of the social- reformists in the I. S. U. proved the soundness of the class character of the organization and ensured its fu- ture growth on the basis of class struggle. The former “opposition- ter Union. (For the sake of clarity it might pe added that their total member- p is less then two hundred mem- | bers.) ‘ Reformist Sports Disintegrates. The fast disintegration of thes |other reformist sport organization lin the U. S., the Workers Gymnasti¢ ion of the Lucerne Sports Interna- |tional, and the coming over of its {members into the ranks of the L. |S. U., brings closer the day when {all the workers. sportsmen. will be | [united into one class organization | under the banner of the Red Sports. | International. und Sport Alliance, which is a sec- ~ | The Labor Sports Union, besides _ |carrying on a rel-ntless and deter jin and outside its ranks has also’ |conducted a sharp struggle against ” | the | for the winning of the workers -in the bourgeois sports movement to the banner of working class sports und class struggle. The successes in his divection can be recorded on the basis of the hatred it has earned from the bourgeois sports move- ment. It is not only hated but feared by the class enemies of work- evs sports as it fearlessly unmasks the role of bourgeois sports and | more and more d ‘7s new numbers of workers trom the bosses sports movement. into its rank. Greater Success Coming. The Yeurth year of the organi- \zation should bring greater succes- ses to it. In this period—the period of revolutionary class struggle of the workers against their explcit- evs, with the intensification of the class struggle in America by inten- ng its activities among the worker sportsmen that are still in the ranks of the bosses sports move- qwent it should and will bring many new members into its ranks, and build the movement into a powerful instrument of the workers to serve them in their struggles against the capitalist class and for’ the victory of the world proletariat. Jong iive the Labor Sports Union ef America, Section of Red Sports International! o Long Jive the revolutionary work. crs sports movement! es Long live the Red Sports Inter, .. uationai, the leader of. the revolu- tionary worker sportsmen! To Celebrate Int’l- : Women’s Day, Mar. 9” in Cleveland, Chicago On March 8th, this. year the inter- national working class again will °< celebrate “International Women’s ~ Day. This day is devoted to a gen- eral. mobilization of the working, > women and working class house: < wives, to demonstrate and to pre- pare for the fight to free the work- ing women from the inhuman ex+ ploitation of the capitalistic. class. The Communist Party of America-; the only Party leading the working 7 class. to fight for better conditions,. °> will hold its International Women's Day mass demonstration on. Sun- day, March 9, in Cleveland. at. 1.30. p. m. at the Sachsenheim. Hall, |: E. bbth St. between St. Clair and :~ S. Superior Ave. oth A confeernce will be held on Sun- day, Feb.9 at 2.30 p. m. at the Com-- munist Party headquarters, 2046 bourgeois sports movement and ™ wned fight against the reformists: ~ cm y: E, 4th St. Third floor, All working class organizations are urged -to.: )send delegates aig TWO MORE KILLED. - q BROWNSVILLE, Pa., Jan, 30.— > James A. Halley, 50, of Ronco, died jas a-result of injuries sustained jwhen he was caught beneath a fall of slate while pulling props in the Ronco mine. He leaves a wife and three daughters, ) yn

Other pages from this issue: