Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DEFEND SOVIET! ALL OUT AT BRONX MEET SUN JECTS DEMAND FOR Turn to Page 2 and 3 For Two Full Pages of Pictures of the Fight For Work and Wages Throughout the United States on March 6th. as Enterca as second-class mutter at the Post Office at New York, N. Published daily except Sunday by The Company, Inc, 26-28 Union Square, Comprodaily Publishing, New York. City, No 2.2 : : Vol. VI, No. 319 Smash the “Religious” Lie! Defend the Soviet Union!, ‘Tomorrow, Sunday, many thousands of workers of New York and vicinity will assemble at the Bronx Coliseum in a monster demoristra- tion to voice our working class answer to the imperialist war crusade against the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics. : The vicious howl of “religious persecution” from the throats of the capitalist “holy” men must not be permitted to deceive the working class of the world. Every honest member of our class must see through the hypocritical pretext of the. imperialist robbers. Their | attempt to mobilize the toiling masses against their class brothers in the Soviet Union must be made a miserable and wretched failure. The ery against the workers’ fatherland in the name of “religion” has not yet been abandoned. On the contrary it increases and will continue to inerease as the capitalist system goes deeper in the present econ- omic cri: whil the Socialist economy of Soviet Russia rises to colossal success. Workers! Friends of the workers’ Soviet Republic! * Smash this hypocritical pretext once for all! Show the capitalists and their lackeys your determination to defend the workers’ fatherland at any cost! Come to the mass demonstration at 2 p. m. tomorrow at Bronx Coliseum! What Happened to the London Conference? The readers of the Daily Worker and the class-conscious workers will certainly not be surprised at the results of the London Confer- ence, The London Conference only bears out the correctness of the analysis of the Communist International that disarmament is impos- sible under capitalism, that wars under capitalism are inevitable and only under a Workers Government can disarmament be achieved. Basing ourselves on the Leninist conception of war and disarmament, Communists knew that the London Conference will not bring disarma- ment. The Communist International definitely stated that the an- tagonisms between the imperialist powers are growing and they will never agree to disarm. The only thing on which the imperialist pow- ers and the socialists will agree is on a united front against the Soviet» Union. The results of the London Conference so far and the con- centrated attack in the name of religion on the Soviet Union bore out e the correctness of this analysis. We therefore find that even the staunchest supporters of this dis- | armament scheme of Hoover and MacDonald, like the New York Post, | has to admit on March 12th that: “The failure of the London Conference can no longer be dis- guised or doubted.” The well-known European correspondent of the New York Times, Mr. Edwin L. James, writes on March 18tIt: “Thus the world naval situation is no’ being back on the day. when. i T ;Hoover sat on a log on the Rapidan River.” The socialists, in order to. mislead the workers, will, still speak-of, disarmament and peace, but. the capitalist press and its opén spokesmen. frankly acknowledge the fact that the:dondon Conference. ‘will.not only. not result in any disarmament, but, on the contrary, armaments: will grow and the war danger brought nearer day by day. Concretely, the yw regarded here as onald.and President results of the London Conference for American imperialism are that — not only will the United States carry thru its 15 cruiser program, but in addition to that it will have to build 70,000 tons more cruisers, 50,000 tons destroyers, and 30,000 tons submarines. In other words, in addi- tion to its 15 cruiser program and billion dollar naval bill, the United States will have to build additional 150,000 tons of naval craft. The British navy under the Labor Government will equally increase its naval building program, as the interests of British imperialism de- |to be held here Sunday night at 8;demands of the unemployed, but mand. French imperialism with full approval of the socialists will carry thru their naval program of 725,000 tons by 1936. These hun- dreds of millions of dollars will be spent by the imperialist governments in face of a growing unemployment situation, in face of starvation of millions of men and women in the United States and other capitalist countries. The London naval conference also most glaringly exposed the fakery of the capitalist class and the socialists concerning the various peace treaties and peace conferences. The insistence by France for political security thru an agreement raises the question concerning the value of the various peace treaties. Every worker must ask why did France and the other powers insist on another peace treaty? Why does France demand security against war; didn’t the Kellogg Peace Pact which was so greatly eulogized by the entire capitalist world and |! the socialists abolish war? Doesn’t the covenant of the League of Nations guarantee peace? pledge themselves not to resort to war in the Locarno treaty? Why, in the face of so many peace treaties in which the capitalists promised not to resort to war, does France insist on another peace treaty? The answer is evident; because French imperialism knows that peace can- not be maintained between the capitalist powers, that the Kellogg Pact and the other peace treaties are only scraps of paper which will be thrown aside the moment the capitalist world decides to enter into a new imperialist war. This therefore must teach the working class that the peace treaties do not amount to anything, that the imperialists are preparing for war and likewise must the working class prepare to turn this imperialist war into a civil war. We must also expect that the five largest imperialist powers at the London Conference may come to the working masses and claim that the London Conference is‘a success or that the London Conference Jaid the basis for disarmament in the future. They will do this in order to save their face before the working masses. We must expect that the socialist party will keep up its policy. of treachery and betrayal by still trying to create illusions concerning the pgssibility f peace and disarmament, but every worker who followed the events of the London Conference will understand the purpose of such tricks and maneuvers. Even the correspondent from London of the reactionary Republican | New York Evening Post, had to state: “The simple truth is that the hour of liquidation has and the problem is to find some face-saving device.” In view of this situation it will be necessary for the working class to continue to fight mercilessly against pacifism and disarmament ‘il- lusions. The class-conscious Ameri¢an workers are now faced with the great task, as pointed out by the Sixth World Congress of the Com- munist International: ad ¢ “To fight against disarmament, swindle and pacifism is one of. the fundamental tasks in the struggle against imperialist war at the present time. The crisis of capitalism is becoming ever sharper, the hour when imperialist powers will enter into another) imperialist .war is closely approachng. The attack against the Soviet Union .is growing daily. For the working class there is no choice but to follow the Commu- nist Party in the struggle against imperialist war by revolutionary means, by building a mass Communist Party,. by driving the struggle of the unemployed along revolutionary :channels' and by turning the, imperialist war into a civil war. Volunteers For Bronx Mass Meet! A. M. sharp! As many workers as can come early should do so. Ask for any member of the Arrangements Committee: arrived All yolunteers for the mass meeting for the defense of the Soviet Union, March 16, should report at the Bronx Coliseum, 177 Street and Bronx River, at 11:00 i ' Didn’t the capitalist powers of Europe | ©, ANSWER BOSSES WAR PLANS ON SOVIET UNION At 177th St. and Bronx River Attacks of the Bosses Thousands of New York workers will tomorrow give their answer to the savage war-crusade of the im- perialists and their flunkeys against the Soviet Union. Gathering “in Bronx Coliseum, 177th St. and Bronx River, at 2 p. m. at the call of the Friends of the Soviet Union, the workers. of this city will demand a thalt to the orgy of lies and. vilifica- ‘tion by which ‘the religious, “so- |imperialism are trying to provoke a !war to crush the first’ Workers’ and | Peasants’ Republic. William Z. Foster, national sec- |vetary. of the Trade Union. Unity) League, who has just been released from’ jail, will tell ‘the vast- throng | of the glorious achievements~ in | building Socialism wnder the Five- | Year Plan of Socialist Construction that he saw with his own eyes on \his recent visit to the Soviet Union. | Many others: will speak. ssa es * Big Meet in Chicago Wednesday. ; CHICAGO.—A huge mass meeting \to protest against the imperialist | “holy” crusade -against the. Soviet. | Union will be held here Wednesday, |March 19, at 8 p. m. at Ashland | Auditorium, Ashland and Van Buren, | under the auspices of the Friends of C, As Hathaway, district organizer } of the.Communist Party; Prof. Rob- ‘ert Morss Lovett and others -will | speak. Washington Meeting Tomorrow. | - WASHINGTON. — Robert W. | Dunn, noted: labor economist; Dr. Lubin, recently returned from the | Soviet Union, and others will. be the | speakers . at ‘against the anti-Soviet war crusade 'p. m, at the Cosmos Club, Madison Pl. and H St. DAILY WORKER “DANCE TODAY ‘Help Make the Daily a i Mass. Organ To acquaint the. mass of workers | with our central organ means that | funds are needed to print tens of | thousands of extra copies. To raise funds now for this purpose it be- ‘comes the duty of every Party | member and all workers that can be sreachedto attend the Daily | Worker affair at Rockland Palace, |155th St. and 8th Ave., - tonight. ‘Read the advertisement in this issue. Mass circulation for the Daily Worker will build the Party. You must give sincere consideration to ! spreading, the Daily Worker among the thousands of workers now anxious to read it. Tonight, at | Rockland Palace, we are raising a | fund for this purpose. You must | come. Trial Today vf. Toilers Jailed in Washington WASHINGTON, D. C., March 14. —Five workers’ arrested at the anti- lynching: and unemployment, demon- strations here will come up for trial tomorrow. They are charged with “speaking without permission” in this hot air capital where any cor- poration senator gets paid for speak- ing. Those on trial are: Brown, Philips, Carter, Harper and Law- rence. Washington Negro workers con- tinue ‘the fight, and are demanding action against lynchings, and against Jim Crow schools. Robert Dunn, of the Labor Re- search Bureau, New York, speaks against the religious crusade against the Soviet Union at the National Press Club, at 8 p. m. Sunday. Write About Your ‘Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. 20,000 Expected To Be Wn. Z. Foster to Speak Smash the Anti-Soviet cialjst” and A. F. of L. seryants of! | the Soviet. Union, Bishi g ‘ : | Louis Hyman, president of aa Meats WORKER CHIL DREN jle Trades Workers, Industrial Union; a_..protest meeting) Gag Law bv — Soctalists’ | in German) | | (Wireless By Inprecorr) March 14—The Reichstag yesterday before it the socalled “Re- publican Defense Law” for second reading. The “socialist” Severing, | admitted that the bill is anti-Com- munist, arguing that the existence jof 8,000,000 unemployed made re- pressive possibilities necessary. The Communist Muenzenberg, de- nounced the bill, pointing out that under its predecessor, seven thou- |sand workers had been convicted and sentenced to a total of six thousand years imprisonment. The Communists proposed that the bill takes over that paragraph from the old law which prohibits the ex- Kaiser from returning to Germany. The fascists proposed to alter. the name of the bill from the bill to de- fend “the republic” to “the nation” jand to include provisions severely | fone een | yellow, brushed sleeves as th ROTE FAHNE EDITOR (Wireless By Inprecorr) BERLIN, March 14.—The editor ! \of the “Rote Fahne”, Richard | Schultz, was yesterday sentenced to |serve fifteen month? fortress im- |prisonment in connection with ar- ticles published last Augus * * 5 employed. MASS PROTEST GROWS BIGGER Demand Release of the © BATTLE IN SWISS CANTON PARLIAMENT. | | (Wireless By Inprecorr) | |. BASLE, Switzerland, March 14.— {Violent -scéries took place in the Jobless Leaders cantonal parliament yesterday, when a Communist tried to secure discus-| Throughout the country the work- ‘sion of the police brutalities in the |ers are mobilizing a mass protest Affolt strike. Relying on their against the arrest of the leaders of numerical strength, the “socialists” the jobless movement, representing finally attacked the Communist phy- |110,000 New York workers, and the sically..The latter resisted stoutly, | many hundreds of jobless workers jbut one Communist was severely ‘arrested at the March 6 demonstrs mauled. | tions. | Food Clerks Protest. , The Food Clerk: justrial Union (passed=a~resolution against the bo: jobless. The resolution declares: “The membership of the Food Clerks Industrial Union condemns the arrest of the Unemployed Dele- gation and demands the immediate release of Foster, Minor, Amter, {Lesten and Raymond, elected by the 110,000 demonstrating unemployed workers.” To Choose “Labor Jury” A labor jury will be chosen at a series of meetings of Unemployed Countils, unions of the Trade Union Unity League “to try the capitalist courts in their persecution of the employed delegation chosen by 110, 000 New York worke: tity Wide Jobless Conference. to the answ: FIGHT EXPULSION |Many Suspended for “Part in March 6 Working class children are mob- lilizmg to fight, not onjy for the } against the terror that has followed the March 6 demonstration. While they struggle for the release of | Foster, Amter, Minor, Raymond and Lester, the elected representative: lof the 110,000 New York unemplo;- ed demonstrators, the young work- ers have a series of fights to save ‘students in the publie schools, high schools and colleges from demotion ,and expulsion for taking part in the \fight of the unemployed. | Twelve have been suspended and [one demoted in Walton High School. Try Yellow Dog Contract. { wide unemployment con- ference will be held in New York, at Manhattan Lyceum, March 27, prepare for the preliminary national Unemployment Conference on March 29 in New York City. Michigan Workers Protest. : ie The Michigan District of the in- | Sol Wellman was called into the | temagional Labor Defense sent the office of the principal of Brooklyn sojowing wire to the Clerk ofthe Boys High School and told he'would | Court, General Sessions: |have to sign a statement denouncing} “The thousands of members and the Communist movement and swear-| friends of the I.L.D., Michigan Di ing loyalty to the constitution of’ trict, pledge ourselves to a relentless U. S. and New York. He refused,| campaign cf exposure and protest and the principal said, “I'll fix you against the outrageous clubbings, so that you will never get into! arrests, and jailings of New York another school or another college in| unemployed workers and their lead- the United States.” Wellman was eys, Foster, Minor, Amter and others, expelled. \and demand their immediate and un- Mack Weiss was suspended from | conditional release.” the City College for having dis- Hundreds of more organizations tributed leaflets. He served five) are sending the same protest to the days in the workhouse. The student! poss courts in New Yrok. body is mobilizing in protest against Milwaukee Mass Meet. his suspension. In Milwaukee, a huge protest meet- In every school the chil’ ~ 2vejing is being called on Tuesday, being asked whether they ay! March 18, at Liberty Hall, 8th and out on May First or not. chey | Walnut, at 8 P. M., to protest against reply “yes” as most of them «\: ‘hey |the brutality of the “socialist” police are suspended. and the jailing of 58 workers in the Communists Answer. March 6 demonstration in Milwau- The district committee of the! kee, as well as the jailing of the Communist Party and of the Young! committee representing 110,000 New Communist League yesterday issugd! york workers. a@ statement condemning the attack | Many J. Meetings. on the students. On March 15, at 1:00 P. M., an flaca meeting, which will * haga to Today in History of the Workers der the act @ f Ma NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1930 » FOR CONFEREN sh 3, 1879. SUBSCRIP a A k ION RATE Outside New York, by mail $6.00 N.Y. CITY CAPITALIST GOVERNMENT RE WORK OR WAGES; UNITES WITH SOCIALISTS AND A.F.L CE WITH JOBLESS COMMITTEE EXCLUDED FI r year. ImNew York by mail, $5.00 per year. NAL CITY EDITION ‘Price 3 Cents DAY! etings Voice Grow the unemployéd demonstration at Union Square on March 6, of New York yesterday and after once being ejected by police, retur The session became an uproar for an hour and a half as t 0 Y ‘ i 1 ess exposure of the capitalist dictatorship of city and nation. ey passed. ‘Mass Demonstration at Struck Regal Cafeteria Ready for More, Mon. Strikes continue in Benrod, Fai- ragut, “G. & G.” and Regal 2 te Food workers and sympa- thizers are called for demonstration Monday. All food workers and other workers are asked to come to the headquarters of the Union at 16 W 21 St. at 10:30 A. M. Today a m: demonstration to place at the Re- gal Cafeteria, St. Workers re- sisted the brutality of the police who ve attacked the pickets and the police pulled out the guns and black jacks to intimidate the strikers. Hun. dveds participated in this demon stration. At the G. & 4 G.on. 23. St. five the bosses continue, to arrest pick- ets und “Paragraph 600.” Many shops have been forced to settle and the organization drive i developing. At the First District Court today three pickets: Jelapis, Pappini and Constantinidos were held under $100 bail each for special sessions. : BATTLE AS THUGS ATTACK PICKETS Gangsters Stab Seven; Cops Arrest Pickets Six h, fur workers and Irving ganizer of the Needle ‘ Industrial Union, stabbed and severely wounded thi morning by gangsters sent out the Furriers Joint Cotincil (A.F.L.) attack was made by the ‘ont of the shop of B. at 3 Seventh Avenue and workers in othe a W orkers by This vicious in guerilla 1& C picket The picket line, put up a good fight. is firm, which employs about 35 vorkers, ¥ nder contract relation with the N W. 1. U. At the in- stigation of Mr. Kaufman of the Joint Council, the firm ordered its workers to register with the right wing union. The workers refused to do so and the shop was declared on strike. Yesterday morning, a little before 8 o'clock, while the workers were on the picket line in front of the shop, a band of the A. F. L. thugs, heavily armed, set upon them with kni and blackjacks, four of the workers ‘were removed to the New York Hos- pital, two to the French Hospital,! tp union meetings, and in meet-| and one to Bellevue. The injured workers are Milton Kalman, Morris |Lederfine, Sol Jacobson, A. Kramer, 'Pashkalas and B. Kushner; also Irving Potash, Organizer of the Union. Five of them were stabbed in the back, r . Police Help Thugs. While the gang was in the midst jof its murderous onslaught on the | workers, the police stood by without learry on the fight for Work or Wages, and protest against the mass arrests, will be held at Columbia Hall, 385 State Street, Perth Am- boy, N. J. March 15, 1898—Russian So- cial Democratic Party (now Com- qmunist Party) founded. 1915-- First issue of the “International,” published by Rosa Luxemburg, Franz Mehring, and Clara Zct- kin. 1917—Tsar Nicholas of Rus- sia abdicated, revolutionists gained control of country. 1917—Rail- road workers of United States threatened general strike to en- force eight-hour day law. 1919— Communist Party of Switzerland founded. 1918—Mass arrests of Communists in Japan, over 1000 arrested, | States. Another such meeting is called for interfering, and in some instances | March 15, at 12:30 P. M. in Eliza-| even actively assisted the gangsters, beth, N. J., Union Square. | permitting them all to go free. In Newark, on March 15, at 12:30; Rose Auerbach, a member of the P. M,, the workers will be mobilized/ Industrial Union, and also Harry for a protest demonstration at Mili-|Dombisch were arrested. Later in tary Park, Broad Street, Newark. | the afternoon, the reactionary fur- Arrange Hundreds More. |rier’ union in order to evade the re- Already many meetings have been) sponsibility for its vicious attack, held protesting against the bosses|arrested George Weiss, a fur worker, attempts to railroad the leaders of duringphis lunch hour as he was go- the mass unemployed demonstration ing out of his shop where he is em- to jail with express-train speed. ployed. Irving Potash was also ar- Hundreds of other meetings are be-|rested in court and together with ing arranged throughout the United| George Weiss taken to the District Minor, engaged in a yerbal duel with Mayor Walker and a pitil While the police were leading the committee of the unemploye of | h 7a in a committee of the socialist party and the right wing company unions of New York. The two progessions, A sneering, jeering “wise-cracking” mayor of New York City. his trousers shirt, his face the color of rouge, sat enthroned in the center ef fat paunched aldermen and shops who rushed in to defend the! Attorney for examination, loyed out of the chamber, creased TRY TO CHECK WORKERS’ RISE Unemployed Campaign Has 1,118 Arrests The revolutionary onrush of the working class against capitalism as shown by the tremendous demon- strations against unemployment on March 6 has en fright to the : and as their answer is always repression against the workers’ demands, the govern- } ment watch-dogs of the bosses have launched a campaign of cla: re- venge throughout. the country, the calling’ on all) pickéts"Were arrested, although there j ost outstatidiag being the vitious |workers to take part in the protest is no injuneflon. The police serving) arrest and persecution in New York ° of the delegation elected by 100,000 workers on Union Square. According to the tabulation made by the International Labor Defense, on the one day alone, International Vighting Day Against Unemploy- ment on March 6,<a total of workers were arrested that de But even before, and in the course of the campaign of organization of the unemployed by Uni the ide Unity League, there were 838 r ers arrested; which, added tu, the 350 a ted on March 6, nade a total of 1,188 worker: rrested, a total never before equalled in the history of the I..L. D. A partial list, yet. to be completed, tho: arrested on March 6, is as follows: 60 10 Angele, 45 in Detroit, York, 36 in Milwaukee, n New 1 n Buffalo, in Washington, D. in Houston, Tex., 8 in Boston, 5 in Waterbury, 5 in Stamford, 7 in Ghattanoogs in Atlanta, 3 in Springfield, Il, 15 in Pittsburgh, 5 in Wilkes Barre, 3 in New Orleans, 5 in Worcester, Mass., 3 in Malden, Mass, 4 in Columbus, Ohio, 3 in Fast Pittsburgh, Pa. Brutal Sentences. Brutal sentences abound. Speedy railroading is the system the courts are using. Heavy sente 8 (Continued on Page Fi MEETINGS ELECT s of “THE LABOR JURY Unions, Councils, Pick! _ Conference Delegates ings of the councils pl of the unem- representatives of the mass demon- stration in Union Square, go on rapidly. The meetings elect also |delegates to the New York City con- | ference on unemployment, which will | |take place in Manhattan Lyceum, March 2° also in New York. Today here will be a meeting for vur 9se, of the Yonkers council « tne unemployed. There will be also today, at 2 p. m., a meeting at! 13 West 17 Street of the Building Trades Council of the Unemployed. Monday, at 11 a. m., at 336 Lenox Ave., the Harlem unemployed coun- cil will meet. There will be a meet- ing of the unemployed in Marine Workers Hall, 140 Broad St., Mon- day, and of the Unemployed Council at 27 East 4 St. the Needle Trades Workers Indus- trial Union, the National Textile Workexs Union, and the Building Maintenance Workers ed, elections of labor jurors to} sit in the case of the trial of the! On the same day, | Union will; make plans for future activity. New York Conference of Unemployed Delegates Being Elected; Plans Rushed for National Meet; Shop Committees, Unions, Mass Me ing Resentment All Demands for Time to Prepare Defense of Arrested Representatives Are Denied by 3 + Judges; Date of Trial Set for March 24; Workers Denounce Court, Refuse to Plead The Committee of Five, William’Z. Foster, Robert Minor, Israel Amter, Joseph Lesten, Harry Raymond, elected by broke in on the session of the Board of Estimates of the Cit ned and forcefully presented the demands of the un- he spokesmen of the workers’ committee, Foster and were ushering red and other detectiv painfully, wearing a mauye silk others forming the board of estimate and appropriations. of {the city, and flouted the de- mands of the unemployed, [sce not one promise of relief f for the unemployed. Norman Thomas, “socialist” par= ty leader, his neck stiff from old wearing of a clerical collar, assured the mayor from the floor that “neither you nor we can change the system. In Russia, too, they have unemployment. But we socialists and trade unionists of the ‘regular’ unions want to cooperate with you, within the law, to speed up the building program. ‘ou “We are talking today about im- mediate relief measures,” said Thomas. “A proper program for dealing with unemployment lies be- yond the power of the City of New York to put into effect all by it- The mayor smiled sweetly upon Thomas and-engaged with the “so- cialist” preacher in jokes which raised roars of laughter on the sub- ject of 500,000 hungry and jobless workers in New York, The five members of the workers’ committee before the bar in the board of estimates room to present the demands of the unemployed, h%d ; been in jail for a week. They had, a couple of hours before, stood in Special Sessions Court, in the crim- inal cases building, and heard three t hard-boiled Tammany judges, No- lan, Direnzo, and Walling, reject attorney Brodsky’s demand for 30 days in which to prepare the case, and the demand for 10 days. The fixe members of the committee of the unemployed, as a _ protest against this high-handed railroad- i fused to plead at this sitting of the court. The judges, clearly indicating by their attitude that they had decided on a conviction al- ready, set the trial for March 24. The date is important, for Walker’s ; open hearing on unemployment, to | which he sarcastically invited them ‘later, comes on March 25, by which time the five representatives of the jobless will probably be safely rail- | voaded to jail. After leaving Special Sessions, the five went directly to the city hall, where in Room 16 the board of ie imates and appraisal was meet- ing. No sooner were they comfort- ably seated, and had notified the clerk of their presence and desire to partake, than a couple of dicks from the “radical squad” pounced upon | them, | “Get out of here”, they hustling them from their seats. “You too,” said another detective, laying hands on the Daily Worker | reporter who was sitting near. Outside, Minor, speaking for the committee, demanded, “Are we urider j arrest?” “No,” said the detective, regret- fully. “Then we are going right back” into what has been stated as a pub- \lic hearing,” said Foster, and start- ed. A swarm of plain clothes men swirled around, but finally, word came from some inner sanctum that it wouldn’t work, and the commit- | tee could sit in. Mayor Walker, not present in |the beginning, eventually appeared. The board took a ten minute jrecess at 12:40 to notify him that the plan of intimidating the committee of the unemployed had (Continued on—Page Five) said, hold meetings. All of these meetings will protest the attacks on the unemployed and 2