The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 13, 1930, Page 3

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| Unity League into a powerful WEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1930 Page Three SCOTLAND YARD FIXED KOUTIEPOV FOR DRIVE VANISHING ON SOVIET | French Police Unload Scandal on British and_ a | “Pravda” Cites British Imperialist Crimes ‘Forced to Admit Police! Koutiepov “Strings Lead to London” and the| Secret Service of Fake “Labor” Gov’t MOSCOW (By Inprecorr Press Service).—Referring to the Paris report, according to which Scotland KOUTEPOFF. Yard organized the disappearance of Kutiepov in order to cause an anti-bolshevism scandal, the ‘“Prav- da” writes: “Monsieur Perrier, the head of the French police, is compelled to ad- mit that “the strings lead to Lon- Nanking Again Aids Against the Soviet Government Shanghai reports Tuesday night stated that the Chinese minister at | Berlin had éabled the Nanking “gov- ernment” asserting that the Soviet Government was “holding a number of Chinese in prison in violation of | the recently signed Harbarovsk agreement”—the agreement settling the conflict over the Chinese East- ern Railway. This new duplicity of the Nanking Refutes “Socialist” Lies BERLIN (By Inprecorr Press Service).—In today’s session of the Reichstag the Communist deputy Stoecker refuted the “Vorwaerts” story of the “maintenance” of the ‘Rote Fahne” by the Soviet Em- bassy and the Soviet Trade Mission. Tne statement that 5,000 copies of the ‘Rote Fahne’ were taken daily by the two Soviet institutions was a foolish invention. Expelled Renegade ATHENS, Greece (By Inprecorr Press Service).—Serafim Maximos, a former Communist deputy and the | leader of the Greek liquidators, who was expelled from the Communist Party two years ago, is now pub-; Japanese Silk Workers TOKIO, Mar. 12.—The world eco- nomic crisis is affecting the silk in- dustry of Japan very profoundly, and, of course, the Japanese capital- ists, as those of other countries are trying to unload it all upon the workers. The industry has a plan to reduce production in line with the shrink- ing demand, and 60,000 workers now working are to be thrown out of work to starve on the streets. And to make matters still worse, months of back wages due to the girl work- cash hittin aioe oan ese Protest Grows Against Jailing of Committee (Continued from Page One) to demand the immediate release of the leaders of the mass unem- ployed movement. We will continue our fight for Work or Wages, and against Whalen and his class jus- tice, and against the capitalist state, the watch-dog of the bosses.” Capitalist Answer to Jobless, “The answer of the bosses,” said James Ford, National Negro organ- izer of the T. U. Us L,, and their lackeys to the unemployed workers who were demanding Work or Wages in their brilliant mass demonstra- tion on March 6, was brutality of the rankest sort. The capitalists are now attempting to railroad the lead- ers of this mass movement to jail. It grows clearer every day that the bosses answer the demand of the jobless by class vengeance for the Yeaders, Foster, Minor, Amter, Ray- mong and Lester. “The workers of this country, white and black, must mobilize their forces for a determined struggle against the bosses courts, and their don,” to that house from which money, intrigue, forged documents and murder are poured over the whole world. Forged letters, forged documents, forged instructions, these were always the weapons of the most infamous capitalist secret. service in the world in its campaign against the Soviet Union. “The workers of the Soviet Union | are well aware of all this. Is it incredible that the intelligence serv- ice should have persuaded Kutiepov to disappear in order then to con- duct a furious campaign against the Soviet Union and light the flames of war against the Soviet Union. “Where it smells of oil the intel- ligence service is to be found. It is not for nothing that the Anglo- Dutch rogue, Deterding, has fi- nanced a special press campaign, that he has bribed all sorts of doubt- ful persons in France who are con- nected with the oil business, it is not accidental that the Tchervonetz forgeries smell so penetratingly of oil. “The venal French press now pub- lishes the eighth version of Kutie- pov’s disappearance, this time it is the intelligence service. The French police have called off their agents and are doing their best to get out of a disagreeable situation with a good face and pass the buck to their colleagues of the British in- telligence service.” Imperialist War Plot band of murderers in peddling such lies against the Soviet Government, is coming at this moment in con- junction with all the other “religi- ous” anti-Soviet propaganda, the imaginary “disappearance” of the Russian white guard general Koutie- pov, from Paris, and other slanders, all serving as a “moral” preparation for imperialist war on the Soviet Union. The actual number of copies deliv- ered were 12 to the Soviet Embassy, of which the most were then for- warded together with copies of all other German newspapers to the Soviet Union, and two copies to the Soviet Trade Mission. Stoecker declared, “The statement of the chief editor of the “Vor- waerts,” the social democratic mem- ber of the Reichstag Stampfer is an infamous lie.” Plays Stool-Pigeon lishing a series of articles in the Veniselos organ, “Patris,” of “The organization of the Angora Move- ment by Moscow. Maximos thus places himself openly as an informer in the services of the bourgeoisie. Lose Jobs and Wages ers who reel the silk in those mills, where they are paid by the year, at the end of the year in a lump sum, are being withheld by the bosses on the excuse that the bosses cannot pay. Furthermore the ~:: industry is to be reduced in production, that the farmers growing the silk worms are now finding themselves in a big per cent, with nobody wanting to buy their product of cocoons, and intense poverty threatens the al- ready poor peazantry, ———_— National Executive Board of the Na- tional Textile Workers Union said: “The action of the police and the court in arresting and jailing the delegates elected by the 110,000 workers at the March 6 demonstra- tion against unemployment, to go down to see the Mayor and demand work or wages for the unemployed, is similar to the action in convict- ing the 7 Gastonia defendents to 20° years imprisonment. In New York City as in Gastonia the government has demonstrated that it is nothing but a tool of the bosses against the workers. The N.T.W.U. has mobil- ized the textile workers both em- ployed and unemployed to fight to- gether with workers in the other in- dustries under the leadership of the T.U.U.L. “The demonstrations of our union in the South, Paterson, Providence, New Bedford, Lawrence, Allentown, and other textile centers, has shown that our union is backing the work- ers in the struggle against starva- tion and are going to intensify our activity to free the workers dele- gation, Foster, Amter, Minor, Lester and Raymond, as well as to carry on the fight for the release of Harry Eisman, a Young Pieneer, who is whole capitalist system, against the Wolls, the A. F. of L., and the “socialist” supports of the capital- ist state. Behind this rush to rail- road these leaders of the unem- ployed movement to prison we see ‘an attack upon the 7,000,000 unem- ployed workers. Negro and white workers! Build the Trade Union pe of the working ne in danger of being deported to fas- cist Rumania. “Only the organized efforts of the employed and unemployed workers under the leadership of the T.U.U.L. can free these victims of capitalist oppression.” | ‘capitalist papers. He evidently kept WHALEN CHIEF. LIAR IN COURT MADE TO SOUIRM Attacked Crowd (Continued from Page One) ers of the Communist Party and the Trade Union Unity League. Whalen also admitted that he had among them hundreds of stool-pigeons and proyacateurs armed with blackjacks and guns. Under grilling cross-ex- amination by Joseph Brodsky, at- torney for the International Labor Defense, Whalen very unwillingly admitted that many machine guns were mounted in Union Square to be used against the unemployed masses; that tear gas bombs were amply supplied to the police and the emergency police wagons were filled with them. Committee Elected. Whalen said that a committee of five, elected by the mass of unem- ployed workers present (he did not mention the fact that there were more than 110,000 who elected the committee), came to see him and demanded the right to parade to city hall to present the demands of the unemployed. He admitted that Foster pointed out that every labor exploiter and royal faker who came across received the permit and that he denied this right to the unem- ployed, and he also said that Fos- ter refused to take his denial as final, but said he would ask the thousands of workers present wheth- er they wanted to present their demands to Mayor Walker. Brodsky forced Whalen to admit that it was the police who began rioting, beating up workers, riding into the crowds on horseback, and injuring hundreds of participants in the unemployed demonstration. Gunman Whalen was very uncom- fortable under the grueling cross- examination of Brodsky. Many times Magistrate Flood had to come to Whalen’s rescue in tight places. “Break It Up.” Whalen opened his testimony by saying that the March 6 demon- stration was ‘a peaceful mass dem- onstration of thousands of unem- | ployed workers under the leadership | of the Communist Party; that the | parade started peacefully, but that he gave orders to break it up, and that his gunmen, stool-pigeons with Hl their blackjacks, broke it up. He did not say what is known to every worker in New York, that in the process Whalen’s cossacks also broke many heads, trampled and beat men, women and children, “Didn’t you say, in interviews with | the press, that when you ordered | the demonstration broken up,” ques- tioned Brodsky, that ‘then the fun started?’” “No,” answered Whalen. “You never said to anybody: ‘I thought I would crack my sides laughing?”’ “I did not,” replied Whalen, growing more uncomfort- able. “Or that one of your undercover man razzed the police and nearly got hit in the eye?” “No.” “Then,” continued Br-"s'y, “if the New York Times reported you as saying these things in its paper the day after the demonstration, they are lying?” Whalen flinched, mum- bled some answer but the Judge de- flected this very disconcerting line of cross-examination. On the witness-stand Whalen was not so much of a hero as he tried to picture himself to be through the his eyes closed most of the time during the time that his cossacks were mauling, beating and hitting the workers, as on cross-examination his memory seemed to fail him very badly, or he “couldn’t see.” After a sharp questioning by Brodsky he said that there were over 800 cops in and about Union Square, and that he had telegraphed for more re- serves.” Spy For Bosses. When Brodsky asked Whalen if he wasn’t acting as an industrial spy by furnishing names of alleged Communists to the bosses so that they could be fired, again the Magi- strate intervened and Whalen did not answer. Whalen blandly denied that the police or undercover men (stool- pigeons) carried arms. “Undercover men never are arm- ed,” said he, and “the uniformed police were specifically ordered not to have their night sticks.” “Did they carry blackjacks?” said Brodsky. “Yes, of course, all the police had billies,” Whalen answered after some hesitation. “Undercover men too?” “Ye-e-s” (somewhat confusedly). “Just Blackjacks” “And a blackjack is a rather dan- gerous weapon?” from Brodsky. “Objection sustained,” from the judge. “Don’t you think that the mobili- zation of riot trucks, armies of mounted police, patrolmen, under- cover men with blackjacks, tear gas, machine guns, and pistols, was a provocation to the unemployed?” But Whalen thought it was not, because “nobody could know that the tear gas and machine guns were there, and anyhow, why should a law abiding person be objecting to tear ‘ela Workers Defy Orders of Socialist Police Chief Zoergiebel Workers of the Siemens Works demonstrating on the streets of Berlin as a protest against the ban on demonstrations issued by the socialist policeman Zoergiebel. SMASH FEDERAL TUUL Calls for Ac- tion Freeing Fighters: ~ CASE-ON LA RUE (Continued from Page One) a reign of terror against our move- ment. The delegation which was elected here in New York to rep- resent the demands of the unem- ployed, Comrades. Foster, Amter, Minor, Lester and Raymond, are still in jail, “As the situation stands now, the city government is working fever- ishly to railroad these comrades into jail, Mr. Woll and all the bureau- crats of the American Federation of Labor are working actively for the bosses in their attack ‘on our move-' Leaflets on Emden NEW ORLEANS, La., March 12. —La Rue has been released. This young worker was arrested for dis- tributing to sailors on the Emden leaflets calling on them to fight against the next world war, and to defend the Soviet Union. The In- the entire country in the demonstra- | “make the federal bulls look like tion. Woll, the notorious strike- baboons in a cage full of tigers,” breaking agent of the bosses is tak-'and the attempt to make a case of ing an active and leading part in violation of neutrality laws of it this attack on the unemployed move- | was a failure. ment and against the Traae Union! Unity League,” as follows: The instructions embrace a com- “Several days ago I was helping prehensive plan to arouse all work- jsome of the comrades who are sta- ers, in shops, in local unions through | tioned here to distribute some leaf- the T. U, U, L. industrial leagues jlets to the German sailors of the to support the demand for release Cruiser Emden. (This is the same of the workers suffe-ing from capi- ‘cruiser upon which there recently talist class vengeance as a result of occurred a mutiny, accompanied by the gigantic demonstrations of the hoisting of the Red Flag.) March 6, and to expose the fascist | “These leaflets were printed in character of the attack against the German, warning the German sailors | workers by the city, county, state of the impending new world war, and and national governments. jthe necessity for fighting against | “Special emphasis,” says the let- such a war, also the part that capi- ter, “must be laid on the mobiliza- | talist governments play in world tion for the energetic intensification events and class struggles. | of the unemployment campaign, con-| “Just as I was leaving the cruiser, | necting it up with the general task stepping on the gangplank, an of- of cur unions in their respective in- | ficer, a policeman, stopped me with dustries.. This tremendous move-'a question as to what I was doing, | ment must now be properly organ-' or words to that effect. He then | ized, and we must start the broad- | showed me a leaflet similar to those | est possible campaign for the liber-'I had been distributing and asked ation of the arrested leaders and a German stool-pigeon (who had | for the definite and concrete organ- been trailing me with about ten ization of our unemployed movement others) if the leaflet was ‘Nicht under the leadership of the T. U.'Gut’? The reactionary counter revo- UL Jutionist replied that the leaflet was: “The March 29th national prelimi- ‘Bolshieviski, Red, ete.” Then the nary conference must be the central ' American bull took me into custody point and the delegates to this con-|and with a guard of four other ference must be immediately elected, ‘armed thugs he guarded me in a and we must begin at once to pre- warehouse office until the patrol pare for the state unemployed con- wagon arrived to carry me into the ventions which will follow the con- ' precinct station. ference, leading to the building up| While waiting there I learned that of a mass national convention to be the cruiser was closed to any more held in the future in Chicago.” visitors while in port, and that an alarm was sounded, and all visitors rushed ashore. There was also some official or dock executive who put in a call for three more watchmen to be sent to the warehouse at once, sue if a parade marched down the streets to the City Hall.” “Is it not true, as Foster stated | to you, that every committee of La Rue tells the story himself, | |from the slack time. bankers, everybody but the unem- ployed have paraded on Broadway?” Whalen was asked. request in proper form.” “That is they applied to you for permission?” “Yes, and it was always granted.’ “But when the unemployed applied through this committee of five you denied them permission?” “Yes.” The judge sustained ob- jections to further questioning along this line. Some More Liars. Then followed C. Worth, a yellow journalist for the New York Eve- ning Post. Whalen’s figures of 4,500 on Seventeenth Street alone was too high for this paid hireling of the capitalist press, and he just simply reduced the whole demon- stration to 5,000. Brodsky, however, reminded him that his own paper said there were more than 60,000 present, Worth’s testimony showed he acted like one of Whalen’s stoo!- Pigeons. Assistant Inspector Mulroney, in direct command of the Cossacks at Union Square, testified, merely a re- hearsal of what Whalen said. Three beef-headed members of the “radi- cal squad” got on the stand. The first one, Glanders, was very ner- vous. He said he kept his eye on Foster after Foster returned to the speakers’ stand, that he (Glanders), stood right alongside of the stand and heard Foster ask the 110,000 workers whether they would take Whalen’s “no” as final. Not only was Glanders confused on the wit- ness stand but he said he “lost all sense of direction” during the dem- onstration, but anyway, he said, “Foster went north.” “Radical Squad.” It was incidentally brought out in the detectives’ testimony that the “bomb squad” and the “industrial and together are now called the “radical squed” All the police from Whalen down denied seeing any cop uniformed or otherwise strike anybody! Detective Dunne of the “radical squad” ad- mitted seeang the Movietone n2ws at the Paramount Theatre afterward censored by Whalen to take out the police violence, but the judge saved him from telling of the many scenes of brutal slugging, kicking of women lying on the ground, and other acts gas and machine guns?” Evidently in Whalen’s opinion you just turn a THE NEW DAY MOSCOW, U.S.S.R.—An agricul- socialist eck to be built in machine into a crowd, and if a man has @ good conscience, the bullets won't hurt him. photographed of the “gentle, good- natured police.” Since this was a preliminary hear- | ing, no evidence was offered by the| it defe The dat of the trial be- county to be} Whalen recited in pitiful fashion|fore general sessions was not an- “Yes,” he said, “but they made} squad” have lately been combined | showing how the business men co- operate with the forces of oppres- sion. ' “Due to the prompt action of In- | ternational Labor Defense in taking proper measures for my defense, de- |manding an immediate hearing, the jcase was brought up before the U. S. | Commissioner, and dismissed. | “The charge, fellow workers, was |to the following effect: ‘Wilfully, | | maliciously, and knowingly, did the | ‘said party distribute literature on | the German Cruiser Emden, calcu- | lated to stir up a feeling of enmity | between the United States and Ger- | many.’ ” Marion Sheriff Won’t Arrest Scab Who Shot Child of Mill Striker MARION, N. C., March 12.—Al- though Sheriff Adkins has been able to arrest three textile strikers on a charge of trying to burn a scab’s house, he has made no move to bring to justice the strikebreaker who: fired a load of shot into the face of Dave Buckner, 14, son of a striker. The boy lies in Marion Hos- WORKERS CORRESPONDENCE -FROM THE ‘SHOPS IMINERS DESPI “EX-SERVICE MEN, JOBLESS WORKERS, LEGION YOUR FOE” L (By a Worker Correspondent) call to the attention of the soldiers of the world war that there are thousands of giving the police all assistance pos- service men down and at the same time they are trying to enroll a/ naires |membership of ‘one million to assist | Cleveland to break the steel strike |the millionaires in making this coun- | in 1919? try safe for a few millionaires. e organizations. Have you forgotten |how you were lied to and starved | now the capitalist class is trying to | (By a Worker Correspondent.) | worker here in Kensington. Years way back we always had seasonal slow times, and scrimping got us work a day we produce more now than enough for market This is plainly seen here in the mills like Bromley. working part time. The bosses in Philadelphia are not satisfied with the misery they have forced on us but are doing everything to make the most of it. Big wage cuts and speed-up are com- mon. The bosses have all the hench- men to fight the workers when they strike. Judge McDevitt and the po- (By a Worker Correspondent) The famous lantern company R. E. Dietz, 60 Laight St., New York City, has gradually laid off all its workers. In the rush time there was over 300 workers, and now not 100 men are left. Always there has been a speed-up system and slave driving, especially on press hands. Many of them get as low as $18 for a 49-hour week. Tool room help, (Bu a Worker Correspondent) DETROIT, Mich—A man work- ing in the U. S. rubber plant in De- troit was hurt and when taken to the hospital an operation was per- formed. After the operation the company refused to pay the hospital bill and insisted that the injured man pay half the bill and the com- pany will pay the other half. The company claimed that the man’s injury was caused through the carelessness of the man himself. The (By a Worker Correspondent) BELLINGHAM, Wash.—I have worked in saw mills a good many years, but never have I hit such a highballing outfit as Bloedel and Donovan's of this small town of Bellingham. Talk about your speed- ups and low wages, nothing else but. We work eight hours straight, 15 minutes to eat (a great many of the men eating on the job). RATIONALIZATION ON FARMS. WASHINGTON, D. C.—In the last four years agricultural produc- tion has increased 16 per cent, with | at BRONX DEPARTMENT OF CU! Former Ausptces: FRIEN WORKERS INTERNATIONAL d Speakers: WILLIAM MONTGOMERY BROWN pital critically wounded. less farmers and acreage cultivated. DEFEND THE SOVIET UNION DAY! Answer the War Crusade Against the Workers’ Republic! COME TO THE Mass Demonstration Sunday, March 16, at 2 p. m. COLISEUM 1ViTH STREET AND BRONX RIVER A Mass Pageant | “The Soviet Union Forges Ahead” Presented by the LTURAL i th al RELIE! WILLIAM Z. FOSTER J. W. FORD, Trade Union Unity League CHARLES SMITH, American Ass'n. for Advancement of Atheism JOSEPH LEWIS, Freethinkers of America .__ MAX LEVIN, Icor WALTER RURKE, Labor Sports Union HAROLD HICKERSON, John Reed Club TICKETS 25c.—On sale at Friends of the Soviet Union, 178 Fifth Ave. DS OF THE SOVIET UNION ai The N. T. W. Needed egion and Veterans of Foreign Wars Scab Agencies and Aid the Bosses |Says Unemployed Worker Who Fought in Im- | perialist War; Join TUUL, He Urges SE FISHWICK-MUSTE CONVENTION | Howat Gesture Is Only Move to Confuse (Continued from Page One) | | | the Fishwick and Muste forces. The elimination of Farrington, the $25,- 000 a year henchman of the Peabody Coal Co. is merely a trick to mis- lead the miners. Yesterday, when a motion was |get the working class of the world | made to expel Fishwick and Nesbit CLEVELAND, Ohio.—I wish to/| into a war on the Soviet Union over | his associate in district office, John ex-service men | Foreign Wa‘ Young Worker Handed | who are on the bread lines in Cleve- | munists, tell you that a soldier has|and Nesbit was elected permanent jland, and the American Legion is|the right to vote in Soviet Russia |chairman of the convention. Nesbit sible in keeping the unemployed ex- | vote here? We have been fed enough of capi- | into the firing line of class struggle : | n- | talist bunk, and I wish to urge all| ment and against all of our com-|ternational Labor Defense was, in| -service men to join the I.L.D. and | ity.” We want work and unemploy- rades who were jailed throughout the words of a spectator, able to | _ : err Wy the eae, the T.U.U.L. and the other militant | ment insurance paid by the govern- in the trenches during the war and |—Cleveland Worker, Ex-service PHILADELPHIA.—Am a textile | strikes by protecting the scabs. The |through the best we could. Now you |boys of the Full Fashioned Hosiery can hardly tell the season apart of the A.F. of L. are hand in hand In a few hours’ | with Aberle Many hosiery | mills are laying off hundreds and | | | Dietz Lantern Co. Lays Off Hundreds Old | Hands |field gathering proves the claims of U. S. Rubber Cheats Injured Worker | | ex- | the religious question? | Do the Legion and Veterans of | which hate the Com- |and they do not have the right to Do they tell you how the Legion- donated their services in Wake up ex-service men and get and out of the bread lines of “char- ment, out of taxing the bosses, and administered by the workers, Man. Badly in Kensington jlice are working to break up the courts are trying to scare the mill- tant workers with jail sentences, McKewen and the rest of the fat against the Aberle strikers. They tell the strikers to fold their hands while scabs break the strike, taking their jobs. In- stead of having mass picketing these officials bring Brookhart of the Re- publican Party to Allegheny The- atre to tell the strikers to wait and vote “friends” into office who will | “not permit” injunctions. | We hosiery knitteds are getting | to know there is one union that fights for us—the National Textile. —KENSINGTON MILL HAND. where there has been over a dozen men, there are now two left. Some | of the men in the tool room have | been working in that company over 10 years, We workers in machine shops and tool rooms should organize into the Metal Workers Industrial League, which fights for a seven-hour day | five-day week. —DIETZ WORKER. | capitalists don’t give a darn for the working man and would rather see us die of hunger instead of giving a relief fund to help the working man and his family. There is only one answer to this inhuman system, Hindmarsh, a former progressive rose and denounced the motion, then on the vote taken, it was defeated jis Fishwick’s agent, and both take orders from Farrington. John H. Walker, president of the Mlinois federation of labor, with- drew his name as candidate for pres- ident of the new fake union, and announced that if Howat is elected president, he, Walker, would expect tc be secretary treasurer. Both jobs draw the fat salary of $6,000 a year and expenses, liberal expenses, This contrasts with the National Miners Union officials’ salary, which is just that of a miner in the pits, Howat Calls in senate. | Howat emphasized his complete |treason to labor and should disillu- sion any who still believe him a mili- tant, by proposing to the convention to send a telegram to Senator Wheeler, urging the senate to start an inquiry into the United Mine Workers of America, which “for the last ten years Lewis has ruled with |the merciless hand of a Borgia and |has ruined with the recklessness of |@ power-drunken Tamerlane.” No one disputes the facts stated above, but miners look askance at the idea jof placing any organization calling jitself a union openly in the hands of the U. S. senate of big business representatives, Freeman Thompson, N. M. U. president, whose challenge to Howat to debate on what the split U. M. W. A. will do for the miners but sell them out as Lewis did, has never been answered, stated yester- day: “The Peabody Coal Co. is using Howat, Brophy, Germer, etc., in the effort to further their plans of speed-up and wage cuts. The Spring- the N. M. U. that the so-called Muste group is a wing of the coal industry and an instrument of the operators to confuse and divide the ranks of the workers. “The struggle of the N. M. U. in Illinois and all mine fields is now directed in ever sharper fashion against the Howats and Brophys by the most essential preparation of a series of district conferences previ- jous to the national convention of the N. M. U. in Pittsburgh, June 1. It calls on all miners, bituminous, anthracite and metal, to form rank and file committees of ection, and resist all speed-up and wage cuts, and prepare for a strike in the whole industry on September 1. and that is organize under the Trade Union Unity League. Just a few words to thank you for the good work the Communist Party is doing for the workers. —RUBBER WORKER. A Highballing Outfit—Bloedell Sawmill | They also have a shop committee | (a company one), a bunch of yes | men. Well, I am not much of a| writer but I hope the Communist | Party gets busy in the lumber oe dustry and organize a union. | —SAWMILL WORKERS, Saturday Evening MARCH 1§ Dancing until 3 A. M. VERNON ANDRADE ORCHESTRA 155th STREET a 75e at tl NEAD AND SUPPORT umrense th ntinae arvensis Baily Sas COSTUME BALL Red Dancers and other entertainment ROCKLAND PALACE THE DAILY WORKER Correct Dangerous i Bladder ana e & m™, Kidneys Don’t neglect burnit page eke ainful elimination, bd Parmfal irritation. Take the advice of famous doctors. Correct such ailments at once before they become more serious. For quick our ist the ly used for nearly half a century by specialists. Santal Midy Worker nd 8th AVENUE To reach Hall—6th or 8th Ave. L. to 155th St. ADMISSION 50c IN ADVANCE he door IT FIGHTS FOR You:

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