The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 17, 1930, Page 3

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BREADLINE IN PHILA, %slinois Miners WORLD COURT MOVE OF } THREE SQUARES LONG = U. S. IS REFLECTION MEETS TQ PLAN SHOWS UP ‘PROSE URITY’ Workers Forming Eight Unemployed Councils, Show They Want Work or Wages, Not ‘Charity’ Huge Breadline Shows fering in City in Great Increase of Suf- | Past Few Weeks DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1930 OF GROWING CONFLICTS Hoover’s Speech to Daughters of American “Pp tevolution” Shows War Moves Also Lays Plans for Attacks Against the Soviet Union |May ke DEMONSTRATION 1 Strike Move- ment Goes Forward (Continued from Page One) BLESS BUREAU Challenge in Page Three | REJECT GANDHI PROGRAM; CALL GENERAL STRIKE Uprising Spreads to Many Cities (Continued from Page One) ‘Daily’ Drive Is Accepted etdrive for 30,000 new read- r the Daily Worker the dis- ye issuing challenges in rev- competition. The first t to issue a challenge is the| Iphia District, which chal- lenged the Cleveland District. In cepting the challenge, the cam- ers tricts olutic distr | ae ges right to use the streets. May Day | 8¢¢ tee of the. Claveluma| ofthe city, and in other parts of pigs eee , na i nust be a high organizational point | PAlgn committee of the Cleveland) India, (By a Worker Correspondent) It is highly significant that, de-) are mot unaware of the useful- |i 41, preparation for the huge mass | District writes: eer eee es ness of the World Court. Particu- PHILADELPHIA, Pa—Philadelphia witnessed an unusual sight spite the recent defeat of the World rid Court. Parti eae canourilaw Fine Oe Dear Comrades: bre apankede rolleamhandc daca on Friday morning. A breadline three squares in length formed upon Court advocates Ganator Deneen, in| ety aiee their failure in biing- | 3) July dth and Sth. On to Chiecaco| District No, Six has accepted the! and stoned police in the streets, in- hearing that the Everyone Safety League was to distribute food and the Illinois senatorial primaries,! ® about an anti-Soviet war : st be impressed firmly in the challenge of District No. Three to| juring the superintendent and the clothing through the police at the Eighth and Jefferson Streets Police Hagven Leeranely Wen Md hig| Wlaree scale in connection with | ues, 6 cet cutcy coving elase, [f ective goule. That Die-| Mention Station. A square is about two blocks long in this city. Breadlines ion in favor of joining the| the provocations in Manchuria, | 17 employment must be a central is.| tri ix has taken the Daily) When the police charged the of one square have been the rule in many parts of the city at various World Court yesterday in a speech| the American imperialists saw in | : Worker drive seriously is shown by the re met with a show- missions and soup society “philantropie” houses throughout the city ‘ore the Daughters of the Amer- ‘he World Court a valuable in- |“ unis to the splendid and unex. | the immediate preparations made by| er of stones, wooden staves, and all winter. : ee fica Revolution: strument for the anti-Soviet cam- | +44 militancy and strength of the | the Bureau—studying and applying] iron bars. The Hindu workers ang But three squares long! This shows the increase in the destitutio: Won’ (courey ins Haare) GER Bee sean the jaherens March 6 demo ions the hosse: the national campaign program to! peasants have definitely shown thet of thousands of workers in the past few weeks. Everybody receiv admitted in his speech, is| © ne Unltears tates he Jor’ are preparing ly for | the District with a detail plan of! in their struggle against British im- the food or clothing had to pass through the station house, thus show- sare Obiiliey methoda of “intema| “or oe ee PUES | roe Day, They work—instituting revolutionary com-! perialism. they will not permit Gan- ing the close alliance of the police with the bourgeois “charity ih y adopted Bu the Gan. | RomeLwory. chrectively. Atcriban < petition among the Section Commit-| dhi to betray them by offering no izations. It is not charity that is wanted by the workers of Philadelphia. Spee je RUE Gt AM UUD NNO oar eect ce or eee | tegeeand ncleieas well ae setting | pesintance to) tHe BGER qactace It is “Work or Wages” which is proved by the growing strength in both erinetnesbet ‘stronger in defense,” te ein: CHUSHale Sarees! citiee | austans fonuthets. «Above alll thell icadadity the MaboMl povamn mente’ numbers and fighting spirit (against evictions, etc.) hy, the eight Un- purpose of preparir the an Hie wore, ment Distriet Bureau elected a Daily| In Bombay street-car wires were lemployed Couneils already organized here. Additional unemployed tha Seuiek, Union: ¢ i ae ss aa of the unemployed Worker Campaign Committee of several street cars burned, and workers are joining daily. 5 poco es ke f “international such as ie BV enaasithe Wo here to th three commades consisting of the des erected. <A firetruck sta- —PHILADELPHIA WORKER. World eval AMS Court to strengthen it by joining their ex-scrvieemen brothers who District Daily Worker Agent and| tion was stormed, and a fireman | ion tre Seema alicia Antacolnane in also ave badly hit by unemployment | {Wo capable comrades to put the| killed. This is the first time in 7, h r iY a my dae 7) “4a ete., of course aring for its effective use against 2nd to bring them to the May Day Plan of the Bureau into operation! forty years that a firehouse had U.S. Rubber Worker Cuts His Hand Off, Fore leet the maneuver of the different | free FOr wys ck eetlve use Be demonstrations not as fascist thues| stimulating the Party as a whole| been stormed. man Swears at Him DO te eee ie Se 2 1 Unig eveutcot sndtien provi, | on if bosste but ak active Fee eee ea pe cee| Mae atte Tee a iii vapidly developing imperi: ie inst the Soviet Unionas {fighting for Wo: Wag | Committees a : volv is very evident from the news (By a Worker Correspondent) eati nst the Soviet Union a: oa <p jaca i canitalis . ERAT ORL 1s it HEME VGIE thacabor mameen te | then, up to the p ihavMtenahucian ticident: no clases * * * levery Party member in the cam- ye rete press that all de- : era ui Geaatitatacd af het lone liars he Ame , conscious worker would be. sur- Based ’on Shops. paign. ! sale | tals are closely censored and the ment 49 of the United States Rub- | and Hetend of that, lousy tard Roy Groves, of Eldorado, elected ed to join the World Court? ‘The| prised to find the World Court | CHICAGO, I, April 16—The} Already eight different charts, eat of the uprising is covered up ber Co. a fellow-worker was op- | conding the man to the first aid cevctary-treasurer of the Illinois |answer has to be sought in / rendering a fake “judgement” | resolution of the united front eon-| covering every phase of the eam-| deliberately. : i : ‘ | 8 g the ma st a i y ee So | ORE aes Net ae he Soviet Union, thus ference held here Sunday calling a Paign have been set up by the cam-| 10,000 Join Strike, erating a rolling machine. Dur- ) he told him to go to the office — 1)! National Miners | I le agatney the Soviet . Uaons. Wis paign commitice in the Distriet Dai-| A cable from Calcutta to the He: ing-the operation the raw rubber and WAIT until he comes in and Union at the district convention ove the London naval confer providing . basis upon whieh the pl strike) afd rinse’ Gera: | alen oe ee an eee Gees cael aldiete cee “Following eh ; ayers + i ng » | held in Zeigler, April 6. ithout ¢ ing the two-po campaign to mobilize the world o 3 ki and ies | Q b states: stuck inbetween the rollers and | gives him a permit to go to the eld in Zeigler, April @. 0 _ | VMNOMN CSN ne teength searalltatagaiue the enly Work: of Cleveland are advised to do like-| serious rioting here yesterday re- the frame. Well, the operator tried to cut the rubber loose, but first aid. So you see, fellow-work- ers and comrades, what conditions POWERS, CARR in, the U |tained by Great Bri | rs’ Republic will be built. This tates were not wi s what Hoover meant when he newed disturbances occurred late last night and early this morning e in their headquarters to cover e Section Committees and nuclei in doi i i exist. How long will the working 1 om ; ject s and nuclei) last ni | early this ee ie sinped gu ee tues Uuleratar sucks onaitiona?” E litsett to a membership in the World said that the World Court will in the shops must set) challenges the Section Com-/ at Bhowanipore—a suburb of the The result was that he lost his | ask you comrades. My answer to | pw {Court, which is still dominated by| supply the “clear need for some up May Day action committees,” | Mittees are advised to keep on hand) city... . Several cars were wrecked, hand: Ab the wane’ fustant the this iat! Bo long, will the working: i H qu British influence. method of mobilization of public says the resolution. “The prepara-|@ eoP¥ of the national campaign). . . Ten thousand workers in the rolling machine (safet 1) | class have to tolerate such heil’s F uU i Hits But the American imperia opinion against violation.” tions will only be sucessful if at| Program and put one on the wall jute mills of Calcutta have walked hroke and the foreman and the | conditions as it stays unorgan- | the ‘same time we build’ tha rada| 107 comiades 10, study it, The Dis-/ ous im support lot the harealy ot Lema gening negara {ERE ONGt itll theny eon cealidle Union Unity League, the youth sec- | ttict Agitprop has already issued| general strike, which began yester- assistant with the superintendent | ized, Not w mn tion of the TL L., the Communist | 2 discussion outline on the campaign GEMS spi came. Instead of paying attention tions be bettered. Comrades and Fight Boss’ Terror | Jobless Demonstrate in Shanghai for the nuclei, | Railway Men On Strike. , A Party a ¢ x Communist to the injured worker they bel- fellow-workers, for the sake of ‘Acainst Workers | SHANGHAT (LP.S.).—In view of Jin Shanghai and propaganda is ie- Pepi aye he) Xoung Commsinist| oe ual eving toe tesue americas abies cette Ruaeymens lowed: “What the hell did you | the working class, organize, and gains: OUISC TS Us ga re ae made against the Nanking gov.) “°I#Ue i eueeliacive . | graph carrier cards for carrier routes | Union on the Great Indian Penin- damn fool break that machine beat those lousy blood-suckers to wa [Phe eeoN ane: eriment for the comeg May 1 ion calls vevery,| £ran 5 el auiay Radway de cull : for? Do you know you're helding | their game. Defend the working . (Continued from Page One) ; ainjed 26 li na civationa and thr col 1 mores HLeSHIOH Ae DATUIELDELe)| Reales aaa ES ahs efforts be aemea iat the production up? Get the hell _ class, but exterminate those blood- awaiting the sentence of the Tam- |number of victims on Mareh 6, and <tyike, On the ar y of the Lietned ey demonstration 88 |i wnatiently for posters, sub blanks |ers to send the men back to work. into the office and wait until I | suckers, the capitalist class. Or- many Special Sessions Court which | the closing down of five universi-| Paris Commune and the shooting an ouraninae body Unset is own and other supplies from the national| The railway workers have been come.” | ganize into the T. U. U. 1. was decided upon weeks ago. They |ties as a result of which thousands down of students in Peking demon . slogans and d ds, Tt) Ohrice ante {ee Stacie & Susea aca There, you see, comrades, what —U. S. RUBBER WORKER. are scheduled to appear for sen- | tence Friday morning, April 18, at tudents have been flung idle,|strations took place whereby col occurred with the police and the ferment is steadily rising. Mass | lision | corps. must also orga When the May Day Committee ize its own defense | | s set April 20,|have had several clashes with the lice. The committee ha | May 11 and May 25 s Red Sundays | Many strikers have been ‘ ‘ the Criminal Court building. They | jemonstrations of workers and tu-|a number of workers were arrested | y canatee. : carrier | killed. fad Wither CHS EEND) tence of three years each and a| e demanded a permit to parade | oo ojos: | “Labor” | DETROIT, Mich ne 5 tell | of fcaine for which ne wes con-| fine up to $500, A P inent Scientists Join Atheists ie ates eee | OT ie Mey 4 will be held} Loxpow. i crshate ee sec- the people about the rotten condi-|victed obtain a parole from a fed- Mass Protest in Philadelphia TOMIReENT Sci f 5 ave lenktie visetesouile: | the first conference for support of retary for the state of India, Wedg- tions which I saw in Federal Prison, | Saturday. eral prison. r 4 In Philadelphia, on April 18, the The scheme cf the offi is to to which I was sentenced through | the perjured testimony of federal use the parole system as a final in- will be a mass demonstration at | MOscOW (LP.S.).—The prom-|Fersmann and Shtcherbinski have | inent members of the Academy of) made application to be admitted as ences in Moscow, Oldenburg, !members of the Athletic Association. | the police, the militia, and if neces- sary the army.” The workers are determined to ._ the Daily Worker and Section Com-| wood Benn, who directs the armed ;mittees are instructed to hold like | forces of British imperialism against conferences. In the meantime the the Indian masses, on behalf of the Bee aah Gane ee, ldueement to the prisoner to “cop | 0'elock noon at City Hall Plaza, to | May Day United Front Committees | British bosses and for the “labor” The food which they receive con- sists of bread and watered milk for breakfast, bread and a sort of slop stew for dinner, bread and a differ- ent sort of slop stew for supper. On Friday they get fish and sometimes the stew is substituted by fried liver. I have seen the livers before they were fried and I would not want to feed them to a dog or cat. On cold and rainy days the pris- orers are compelled to go out and work in the rain. When the weather is nice they are generally confined to their cells. At the expiration of one-third of the prisoner's sentence he becomes eligible to parole. I have never heard of a prisoner who stood trial and who maintained his innocence Drive Slaves of Wes (By a Worker STOCKTON, Calif—I left my job with the Western Pacific he- cause we were fed beans and maca. roni, and macaroni and beans— stale. The cook is a Chinese; he is not allowed to make the grub too good—must keep down expenses. Live in railroad cars, which are up to about 40 feet in length, eight men tothe car, wooden bunks, four on each side- of the car—double- deckers (one above the other); fur- | nish own bedding. Nobody cleans the cars; must clean own room. The “bull cook” fills the kerosene lamps each day. Work-day is nine hours—speed-up; get $3.33 per day; pay $1.10 for board out of that. The workers in- “National Miners Union Here to Stay”—Il]. | Mi (By a Worker ELDORADO, Ill. — In regard to the National Miners Union, it has come to stay, if Lewis and his ma- chine and the Fishwick-Farrington- Howat machine has not punished you enough, stay with them and the operator-controlled union till you are bound up by more injunctions, more check-off, more speed-up, worsening of conditions, with a gang of company gun-men, stool- pigeons, company-sucks, all paid tools of the operators. The National Miners Union is ab- solutely opposed to such underhand Trick Jobless Seamen with Fake Jobs | (By a Worker I am an able-bodied seaman and I have been out of work for four months, looking hard for a job. la plea of guilty,” no matter whether | Protest against the railroading of jhe is in fact guilty or not. |the Unemployed Delegation, repre- Each Sunday a sort of entertain. | senting 110,000 New York workers. ment is given them which generally | Demand Release. is conducted by a sky pilot with “We, the members of the Ashta- the hope of installing a little of the bula, Fairport and Conneaut, Ohio, (mythical doctrines of the various | International Labor Defense, pledge creeds into the prisoners’ minds. | Our support to the jailed and perse- On his release he is given $15 and | cuted March 6 fighters for the un- carfare to the place of his arrest | employed and demand their imme- or no further than the place of his | diate liberation,” reads a resolution larrest. The chief of police of the | Passed by these organizations. place where he is given transporta-| _ Resolutions protesting the jailing |tion to is notified and given the |of Harry Eisman, the committee of name and description of the ex-con- five delegates elected by New York vict who is about to arrive there, | unemployed and the campaign of The workers are the chief victims. terrorism against workers all over In the Soviet Union it’s a differ- the country are coming in daily to ent story. the International Labor Defense. Call Workers Conference. A conference of delegates from shops, fraternal organizations, wom- en’s councils and trade unions te organize for the demand of the re- lease of Harry Eisman, jailed Young Pioneer, and the unemployed delega- tion, will take place Sunday morn- —AN EX-CONVICT. tern Pacific Railroad Correspondent) clude Negroes, Americans and Mex- icans. I worked in a so-called “ex- tra gang”; there are four such ; aa ree aha ee |gangs between here and Sacramento, "8, April 20, at Teving Plaza, New |Our gang consisted of about 100 Sa ke workers, consisting of about 55 Ne- Fee hie Boss T groes. ‘About 20 other Americans,| cinrGagg. Acril 16. Calling. on including young fellows around 20) 111 workers to defeat the attempts jand up, balance Mexicans. All sites of the bosses through the Thompson were SUSTAIN LSS A) (ee corrupt machine to smash militant | organizations of the working class Gilesely. Fellow-wor! and to mobilize for the May Day in the militant Railroad Workers’ demonstration, the district commit- | industrial League, affiliated to the | tee of the Communist Party declares T. U. U. L. Abolish these boss-| that “the Chicago city administ willed dungeons and miserable | tion, controlled by the capitalist wages. Gain conditions fit for the class, is waging fas st terror workers. against revolutionary working class organizations and the Communist | Party in particular,” thru raids and arrests. This, however, cannot stow the movement of the workers, ia Uae Uses Jail Threat as Whip. CLEVELAND, April 16.—Order- ing her to quit the Communist Party jor serve a 80-day sentence in jail |for defending the right of Negro | workers to eat in a restaurant on W. Superior Ave., Police Judge Cor- lett stormed against Lil Andrews, member of the Young Communis? League, who faces a long jail sen- tence under a Criminal Syndicalist conviction. Lil Andrews very quickly told the boss judge that she preferred serv- ing her 30-day sentence than to ac- cept his bargaining and desert the ;vanks of the revolutionary working class. | Foremen ¢rive the w —RAILROAD SLAVE. ner Correspondent) methods, in order to make more pro- fits for the bosses. For instance, Wasson number 1 mine had miners that were working sworn in as depu- ties. | Everyone of the committee said he was a deputy. Miners, join the National Miners Union, a militant union, a class- | conscious fighting organization and win back what rightly belongs to you: 6-hour day, 5-day week, better conditions, the officers’ salaries to be the same as the average miner’s, not more than $3 a day expense. —ELDORADA MINER. “Lae I Frame-up Against a Miner. CINCINNATI, Ohio, April 16.—- A bald frame-up, one of a series of similar kind, has been perpetrated against Arthur DeBarge, 58-year- |old member of the National Miners Correspondent ) ping agency and asked the guy: “What sort of monkey business is this? You make me spend ecar- $00 ELECTED TO “Mien ‘Arrested in 1927 |to admit that he would be defeated if the cases went to trial. The International Labor Defense ‘hails this as an important victory for the American working class and | jappeals to all workers, especially | in Pennsylvania, to fall in line 100 | gation, the other reports indicate | per cent in the campaign just being | that a large number of Negro dele- |launched against the sedition and gates will be at the convention. criminal syndicalist persecutions in all parts of the country and for the | unconditional release from the, This convention will accomplish | Blawnox workhouse of Pete Muse- a great historic event in the marine | jin, Milan Resetar and Tom Zima. industry—it will launch a new{ qalontarh gating anton: aintontaon:| trolled by the workers in the inter- | est of the workers: the Marine] Worker Correspondent. Workers Industrial Union. The} workers in the industry who parii- | cipated in the three regional con- ferences held by the Marine Work- ers League on the Atlantic, West and Gulf Coasts, where a program of action to organize the unorgan- ized was adopted, and the throngs of workers who joined the Marine | Workers League in answer to this organization drive have been clam- oring for a new union that would stand strong against the attempts of the shipowners and their agents, the A. F. of L. and the I. W. W., to lay the whole burden of the present crisis in the industry upon their shoulders by slashing wages, in- creasing the speed-up which results | in less men to a hold and makes | more and more lose their jobs. | This new union will not be con- | tent with being merely a national | industrial union, taking in all crafts | of the marine industry, such as long- | shoremen, deep-sea and _ harbor) workers, regardless of creed, race | or color, but will immediately take | steps to send a delegation to the) Fifth Congress of the Red Inter-| national of Labor Unions, to be | held July 15 in Moseow, where plans will be carried out for the | launching of an International Fed- | eration of Marine Workers under ) (Continued from Page One) |Others to Come; Union Launched April 26 (Continued from Page One) Launch New Union, Write About Your Conditions Become a for The Daily Worker. Attention! All Sympathetic Workers’ Organizations! SEND May Day Greetings for the May First Edition of the DAILY WORKER Especially now should you greet the forward march of the revolutionary movement— now when masses of workers are showing ever increasing resistance to capitalist exploi- tation and oppression—now when workers by the hundreds of thousands are mobilizing to demonstrate on MAY DAY against unemployment, speed- up, low wages, against the coming imperialist war—for defense of the Soviet Union. Indicate to these masses of workers that your organiza- tion is part of this mass move- ment by inserting greetings in the DAILY WORKER. In doing this you will help the DAILY WORKER print addi- tional tens of thousands of copies for distribution at fac- tory gates and thereby help to spread the call for “Strike!— Down Tools on May First!” the leadership of the R. I, L, U. Ad No. 16A Correct Dangerous Bladder SPACE RATES: $10, strike and demonstrate despite all threats. March 6 was ceded by raids, many arr threats in Chicago. ae ae 2 BALTIMORE, Md., April 16.— statement of the Communist Part: Baltimore section, District 3, calls the War Department refusal to al- low the workers to gather in Mem orial Plaza on May 1 and the threats of jingoistic societies against the workers’ May Day demonstrations “part of the general offensive of the capitalist class against the work- ers.” The statement says: “In spite of all the threats of the | war department and the police ter- ror, the Communist Party will zo on with its preparations for the first | of May. We will prepare here in the city of Baltimore a greater pa- rade and demonstration than on March 6.” | will be used to popularize the Daily | government, declared in the House *’| Worker and the supporting confer-| of Commons today that India was ences for the Daily Worker. causing “constant concern to the The District Campaign Committee| government.” The concern results | cannot but feel sure that this cam-| in the difficulty of the “labor” gov- paign will not be superficial but | ernment in heartily carrying out the will involve every member, many/| wishes of the British imperialists sympathetic workers, the Pioneers | in India and at the same time fool- and Young Communist League mem- | ing the English working masses. bers which will culminate in per- ee manently reaching tens of thousands o i. jof workers in Ohio and West Vir-| Bice Mette aaniane euue. vers, which aid British imperialism, District Three challenged us with the International Labor ie has words. We will challenge them with| issued a statement on the jailing revolutionary deeds. ! | of the union leaders in India in the On to a mass Communist Party! | Meerut trial. “In spite of the arrest Build the Daily Worker! of the leaders,” says the statement, Comradely yours, “MacDonald has failed to gain con- JOHN FROMHOLTZ trol of the Indian labor movement M. STAMM in the interest of British imperial- J. MAZEK jism.” District Daily Worker | | Campaign Committee. | Addressed to THE PARTY An indispensable hand book which must be used by every functionary of the Party and every member who must be trained for leading work in the Party. Its contents should be discussed at Unit meetings, at meetings of various fractions and in reading circles. Every Big and Little City CT HE DAILY WORKER, distributed and sold at i shop, mine and mill, will help |] make effective the slogan “Strike—Down Tools on May First!” ORGANIZER PUBLISHED MONTHLY, and will continue to do so pro- || HE DAILY WORKER, viding the Party membership makes its appearance possible through regular purchase of bundle orders and secur- ing of subscriptions. Ten cents per Copy—Yearly Sub, $1.00 Combination Offer with The Communist for One Year for Send all orders and subscriptions to the WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street MAYDAY || *2:: = BUTZONE WITH OUR SLOGANS WORK OR WAGES o- DEFEND THE sold and distributed at shop, mine and mill, will help you mobilize thousands of workers for your May First - Demonstration. HE DAILY WORKER campaign for mass cir- culation is on, You are not participating in this campaign unless you sell and distribute the Daily Worker regularly at factory gates, from house to house, at workers meetings. only Two Dollars 7 , ‘ New York City How many copies do you want to help you mobilize for May First? Also—How many copies do you want to sell and distribute on May First at your demonstration? > © i PLACE YOUR ORDER TODAY! 100 copies at.. $1.00 + $5.00 Six Page Saturday Edition | 1000 copies at $8.00 May Day Edition 11000 copies at.......88.00 SOVIET UNION READ THIS; There must be $5, $15, On April 8 I went over to the In- ternational Employment and Ship- “crtpaes ena ping Agency employment office, and they sent me out to the S. S. Emiled, Bull Line, saying there | was a job there. When I got there and handed him my papers I found out that this was a bum steer. They had been sending a lot of men out to this fake job. Then * came bak to tha shine several thousand workers who, upon their own initiative, could pur. chase one hundred’ copies and sell and distribute them in their shop, in their neighbor- hood. It would be a sign of this fighting, militant broadening struggles period if we would get a thousand orders from individual workers, fare to go to a place and there is no job?” Then he said: “Maybe it’s because you are Russian; they think you are a Bolshevik.” I told him I had been in this country 16 years and have worked on all kinds of ships. This was just a | means of hiding their fake schemes to fool workers about jobs that don’t exist. —SPEREDON SISCO. |Union. The charge against De | Barge is rape. On several previous | loceasions, the bosses instigated this | | same frame-up against DePorge and jhe was d. They are re- hearing this fake charge fn order | to force him to quit his militant, | been by doctors through- working class a¢tivities, The Inter-| out the world for rapid relief. national Labor Defense is a Sant al Mi dy Are Ready nnd Should Re Ordered from the DISTRICT OFFICE OF THE PARTY Prices: 10¢ per button to individuals Te ver button to unttx and organizations COMMUNIST PARTY U.S. CENTRAL OFFICE 43 Enst 125th Street New York City | || DAILY WORKER | _ | 26-38 UNION SQ, NEW YORK Burning passages, tion, night rising may be the warn- | ings of a serious sickness which may affect your entire health. Take steps at once. Get Santal Midy from your druggist. For half a century, it has ATTENTION! DAILY WORKER Rn ESENTATIVES! Visit all workers organizations and request them to insert MAY DAY GREETINGS in the Daily Worker. Get greetings from shop keepers, coopera- tives, and everywhete you ean, DeBarge whose trial comes up April 2ist, in Bloomfield, Ind |

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