The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 26, 1930, Page 3

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; DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1930 Page Three | Thousands Will Demonstrate Workers Delegation to the Soviet Union for! SPORTS BOOKS the Labor Athletes. ents by on May Day in South for May First The Communist International Issues Slogans for | | May iews and Notes of Interes eee First First Time in Histo , it School Irs Ime in Ss y Vesa By VERN SMITH The L. is planning a five mei H AP A - FROM CHARITISM TO LaA- weeks’ full-time athletic taining Call for Unity of Negro and White Workers: | Long Live the Political Strike Agains BOURISM by Theodore Rothstein, school, whose members wi ve Te- . | s ts brie raaticnal ai untinherse ge5 Heeent lcruited from clubs, unions, and other Against the Bosses | Capitalism nternationa 5 F workers’ organizations from many | . | | The author, now a'member’o (pests of the country. It is to have | By TOM JOHNSON ) League was the work of these fas- | (Wireless by Inprecorr.) the only representatives of the| Communist Party of the Soviet , We complete course in physical and’ poy the first time in history thou-| cist gangsters. i | MOSCOW, U. S. S. RB. Abril 23.| workers” interest! working on the Collesinm of eoretical training, which is to in-| .ongs of Southern workers, Negroes! Despite all terrorism, _ despite he agitation and propaganda| Workers shock brigades represent h e. Peoples jude a well balanced program of actice in physical ‘activity and in and white, led by the Communist Party, will join their Northern fel- this year will be an historic event, lynch law, the workers of the South | are on the march—mobilizing for | labor henchmen. In Chattanooga, sub-committee (“Agitprop”) of the Executive Committee of the Com- | political and working class education. | low workers in revolutionary dem- struggle. , On May Day they will | | munist International has issued the] _ Down with the second interna- The aim of the school is to develop | onstrations against capitalism on give an impressive answer to the | following slogans for the May Day tional! ae directors, who will have no illusions | fay First. May Day in the South | boss men of the South and their | struggles, strikes and demonstra-| Long live socialist competition, | jof sport for sport’s sake and who tions all over the world. | jthe advance guard of socialist in-| \herald of the triumph of Commun) dustrialization in the Soviet Union! | f 1891 nd will understand the objects of sport’ signalizing the growing solidarity | in Birmingham, in Rome, Georgia, | Long live the first May Day gen-| ism! f : | : 1920 a for the bosses and for the workers. of the American working class, where the textile workers are pre- | eral strike and revolutionary demon- _Long live revolutionary interna- journalist on The school commences on June 1st Novth and South, white and black. | paring to strike; in Atlanta, where | stration of the international pro-| tional competition which means the various Eng- and is to be held in the vicinity of) Terrible Conditions Powers and Carr stand in the shad-| letaviat! ..,.,; mutual incentive of the world's lish papers | Detroit. | In the South close to half a mil-| ow of the electric chair, hundreds | ——» Long live May Day—United | worke: and a special ] May First lion textile workers—men, women /and thousands of workers will leave | ! Front’ Day of the world proletariat Imperialism mobilising the writer on econ- | May Day is rolling around, and | anq children—slave 10 and 12 hours | the shops on May Day to join the | GAS MEMES a 4, {church for s against the ache Sira omic and labor as is the practice of worker sports-| 4 day for wages of $4 to $15 aaveek. thousands of unemployed workers | | Workers, Women, Working Youth | soviet Union. ern Smith ub jecuesee One men in the United States, there iS’ Thousands of steel workers, Negro in revolutionary demonstrations. £ ,and Unemployed W orkers, demon- Workers, br the chains of re- | Pumerou continental European OA epee ety the! and white, are paid the starvation —_————- | | senate ugdet Me Cee ot Wer Prele: | tgtaua: sertddh papers. He was also, during this jay Day demonstrations. There will wages of 23 to 30 cents an hour. P | arian revolution! ; ee eee err yt ae tinieieall eorimiet en Icke pingemein ee lings of the capitalists to terrorize workers, toil long hours for $10° to | é into a civil war of the exploited pene eee ae Sokal naE HI eHHCe the workers so that they will not) go, crn es | ———— — against the exploiters! Soldiers and sailors in capitalist e ings or * 520 a week. And on the farms the ON PQWERS AND CARR qi i : Long live May Day, the day of | count r to be misused and other re- a ic venen oe men. | Toe eran eee ne Opn ee | - Make Millions.in Fake/ Anxious for Study jrevoiutionary struggle! jagainst your class brothers! |f0"ists heve, and in_ the AA Sieh ile tanta sey iit a voan while the fauna I, . “Workers! Death sentences are’ Mitten Stock Scheme Classes | Long live the land of the prole-| proletarian Youth, rally to the|/ mnt” will turn out in great numbers borers put in 14 and 16 hours a day eel: being sought in the South oss |tarian dictatorship, the — Soviet | flag of the Young Communist heen Usiveeet & Baseball in dherdicldactor littl .'s against the organizers and spokes- | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., April 25 By | Union, successfully building up|ternational against world imperis deere, Universities pene Mi She Pavelcey for ae itHiles AS $105 4.| apn obo he Av ORRIN EN class ey ataten “Uaraccimaaoiuauer cee aes. ce | Umar the aiitodar@e acl | socialism! lism and for the world dictatorship | Reform ¢ ar, . Baseball is with us again, and the month a ’ = the International Labor Defense in!.~ SE i ag ei e Students Counci WV orkers | Workers have no fatherland cx-| of the proletariat! Soviet mini aim of the L, U. is to develop The conditions of the white work- | 4 yecent relea: (through the much-touted employe | School of New York.) NeanGnthe Soviet alinionl | ee The first feurhe Heagues that will be real workers’ ers are terrible, The-conditions of © (eo wart ctece sdettce ie cocking (otek oemetsniP Scheme of the Mit-| While arguing with my fellow-|““Mobilize everywhere to admin-|,, ?°lling Farmers ae can The Aether Hleagues. Many teams that are to| the Negro worker are worse. Given 1 ene guBice is Bec eoey| ccouaien anti-union Philadelphia | workers in the shop, on the need of | ster a crushing defeat to the im. | th? assistance of the proletar’ avaiable asvorimeen j participate in the leagues are taking | the horiest, dirtiest work to do and ‘he lives of M. H. Powers, southern | Rapid Tranist Co. is bared here) working-class education, I fre-|perialists who are prevaring war {P¢, °ePitalist, noble atd chur fiedeaveeycclont: ladvaniege of the empty sand lots | paid the lowest wages in the shop, district organizer of the Communist | again. got one and the same an-| against the Savints Unione) landowners! ism i known to lin their neighborhoods and are pre- denied the right to vote in ciections | Party, and of Joe Carr, organizer “On Dec. 31, 1927,” the Philadel- ‘There is not enough time| “The Five Year Plan represents| Long live the revolutionary elli-/t45.6 who have heard of it at all | paring for the regular games. or to run for office, Jim Crowed of the Young Communist League, phia Record declares editovia or, I don’t have to study|the way to the world victory of |@n¢e of the workers and the toili Shah cnoveimenh dnote TeaGieaee | "If your team has no. uniforms,| wherever they go, the Negro work-| because they dared to speak to the | “the men’s total hoidings were about the class struggle. I can feel | <ocialicm! ¥ OF peasants! Pale RE | don’t let that stop you. We play) crs are treated like do; Tene 5 oF a Titan | 221.475 shares out of 600,000. And it every single day, in the shop, at) ist industrialization and the | Working women of all countries, reform, and, after some ludicrous | the game, not the uniform. Every attempt of the workers to ‘© Mstuiute working Class “itera-' on that date their trustees, acting, home, everywhere. ‘collectivisation of agriculture will |Join the revolutionary ranks, under} figccoes in the way of public peti- There will be plenty of competi-| fight back against these conditions ‘Ye for them to read. | employes charge, under circumstan- _ Well, this is rapidly changing. free the Soviet village from misery {the flag of the world wide Bolshe~| 4:0 and demonstrations. and. afte I tion and the teams appear to be’ is met by the clubs of the police, the, The statement of the Internation. ces amounting to undue persuasion, Workers are already realizing the | and bockwardnes: vik revolution! Bena GREGG E “RET Lae eee good. One important difference be-| bayonets of the National Guard, long |al Labor Defense points out that the | compulsion, and duress, and by un- 1 y of revolutionary educa- The Collectives ave forging a new| Only the proletarian revolution | poaog 4 Pa eee bere tween the bosses and the workers) jail sentences, and by open fascist |law providing the death penalfy for true inducements, exchanged the tin, ae Sa life! ; HEY ocd Ca te pathy Rothstein does not deny the fias- f can best be emphasized on the base-/ lynch tervor. The battle at Gas- | “inciting insurrection” under which | Whole lot for stock in Mitten Bank | That can be proven by the suc-/ Long live the collectives of the| Colonial Masses, freedom’s path he q them as the fatal results of a mixed ideology, a mixed tonia, the murder of Securities Corp.” cess of the Wo In this manner, as soon as the lished by the Con ball diamond ,the most popular the Hin Aimcrica. The more wo ers’ Schools estab- munist Pari Powers and Carr are charged is one | passed in 1866, to aid the victory of | jleads through revolutionary alliance vith the revolutionary proletariat! Soviet Union! | Answer the new capitalist off teams! we get to participate i northern “carpet bag” capitalist! employes’ accumulation of P. R. T, Particularly I would like to deal’ sive with a counter blast! } Long live the flag of struggle ee oY eles GOL NOn leagues the greater the wedge we | Carr in the electric chair—such are conquerers in the South, but it is stock was large enough to carry, With our central school in New) Down with unemployment and/ against imperialism! Se ee Bid drive into the system. Piay ball!| the bloody landmarks of the class’ now used by southern mill owneys | control of the company, the Mitten Youk City. capitalist rationalization! | Long live the Chinese workers But what Rothstein does do, is to | Batters up! struggle in the South. on militant workers. | group deftly took it over, and in the | The school is at present engaged Form United Front of workers.and peasants, rising again in a from Sae Te WSpaper To make this united front of} The LL.D. shows that this case | manipulation realized a profit of in a $10,000 Expansion Fund Drive and the jobless! revolutionary wave! CSS Bk NOE NOY, The Scott-Sharkey fight is an- bosses, government, Ku Klux Klan, | is but the latest of a long series of *several million dollars at the ex-| for the purpose of enlarging Be Long live the seven hour day Down with the counter revolu BL lee aD the, Charley other example of the difference in etc., against the working class com-| attempts by terror to keep south-| pense of the P. R. T. men: | school in New York City, to estab-| Down with fascism and the bl: tion of the Kuomintang! ; movement, led ; by such men as | style between the B And Amer- plete, the American Federation of ern workers unorganized and in! Ma cMittan plan 4 dreads \lish self-study courses, and a school | flag of world reaction! Long live Soviet China! __|Bronterre O’Brien, Julian Barney, | ican boxers. Whereas the tendency Labor steps forward as the loudest | slavery: the lynching of Wilkins,! ing orate qe the eres PY | in_the South, Long live the red flag of world| Revolutionary India will win and to a lesser extent, Feargus | of the Britisher is to resort more to champion of lynch law for the work- | the 117 years of sentences against | ‘acsceiaticn or ihe Amalgamated | 7 remember in Philadelphia about revolution! junder proletarian leadership! O'Comor. These men, particul | light footwork and faster movement ers of the whole filthy crew. In the Gastonia defendants (now on Migal Ratlond . Raed ee Bat five years ago a group of comrades,! Answer the fascist terror of the; Down with British imperialism! the first two, tried hard a | Vin general, the tendency on the part | Atlanta officials of the A. F. of L. | appeal), the chain gang sentences | jury re Siet h papas ieee and these | eager to gtudy for the class strug-| bourgeoisie by the organization of; Down with the treacherous par- succe mee ) | [Jot the American is to shift heavily are playing the role of police in-|in Winston-Salem and Chattanooga, | urgaucrats pear gee nena written isle, formed a study circle. A com-| proletarian self defense! ities of the Indian bourgeisie, its mous mass \ m his feet and to conserve as much formers and are testifying in court | the dynamiting of the home of Gig-| semen was ees not to jrade from New York would come, Fraternize with the soldiery! jpreachers, capitulation and pas- its ings of of his movement as pessible. The in an attempt to send an organizer lio, Metal Workers League organ-| paalaied any ey of their lines u: |once a week to Philadelphia to teach | Release the revolutionary prole-|sivity! , a ,._ fense corps” into a proletarian re- American depends on one or two of the National Textile Workers | izer in Birmtingham, the kidnapping | ere est has show that htey are/uys, Not much -vas accomplished. | tarian political prisoners! Long live the great Indian revolu- yolutionary movement. Years socks, and ke expects to ring the Union to jail In Birmingham the ‘of Anna Burlak and Doran, National | 2°,US¢tt! t0 the company as a com-| Ang what about the hundreds of| The reformists are betraying the | tion! / fics Mac Ringel qiinted eo button with them. While the Brit-| Labor Advo ial organ of | Textile Workers organizers: at Se-| PREY Ou cnaeenlisbes jother workers who could not get strikers, sabotaging the jobless] The Communist Inte: the proletat the class on I isher leans toward boxing f' and| the A. F, of L., screams in each is- | neca, S. C., to mention only recent | Even Bought Gravestone. even that ntuch? Two vears ago a} movement, and assisting the shoot-|the leader of scGh tthe cigs order depend- then the sock. Whict the sue for the blood of the Communist cases, 3 | Mitten controls every means of STOUP of us working in a camp|ing down of demonstrators. {struggle of the toile id: “Whatever the best is doubtiul, zs the proof can Party and Trade Union Unity! “Raise the demand again for ‘no| transportation here. The city’s cor- wasted a whole winter on study! Workers, demonstrate in ; [eos sates ‘ not as yet be determined, due to the Leegue organizers in the South. and 2. | death sentences, no prison sentences, Consequently without direction we concilable struggle against social ver taken into hi rupt Vare-Atterbury gang forked | boxers we have had so far being) There is every reason to believe |no sentences to the chain gangs!’”| over at e 1, failed in our attempt. \ fascism! Peoples, rally to the banner of the | 0°) donlelecel aaa ; + | tt nother $10,000,000 city built | ta F } i F t inter world |t9 the people's ¢ mainly interested in the gate re-*that the cowardly bombing of the says the LL.D. “Defeat the lynching, | subway to eat Le ie built | THe school must enlarge its quar-| Long live the Comintern and the Contant, the banner of the worl and fraudulent therefore, as the ceipts and not so much in the form. home of the Birmingham organizer | legal and extra-legal of the Negro Red International of Labor Unions, When we will have an interantional, of the Metal Workers Industrial and white workers!” The company assessed the men 10 |ters. In the fall term many work- |producing classes intend to regen- | per cent of their wages for a period |°'S Were turned away or had to be erate their country, they must rely workers’ boxing exhibition we will be in a much better position to judge. The battle of Scott ard Sharkey was a good gate battle, but in the fight the Frame-Up in the to build a $250,000 memorial for old man Mitten, founder of company unionism in Philly. Although the men objected they had to pay, be- dropped from school due to over- crowded clas: { In other words, that means that to workers anxious to learn have French Woman Worker on themselves and on themselves alone.” And in practise he showed it by “people” and “pro- the proletariat and ’ : cause the company union represen- | “2! for another oppoxtunity, tosdo . These left \ wing ‘ language of the Labor sportsmen, ees. 'tatives had alr , 80. Furthermore, self-study courses | t O tood the and “When foul meets foul there's an I mperia l V a l l Pf deal before. they tg maersed the and branch schools will provide the 71l€S O vrowwn, ig Ss Pantie cae tieronenal eee awful stink.” And the stink re- é y ’ a Z e | vote. ° ‘training for those who live or work Mekong sh could’ be tuntied soundedjan;the naval conferenc | |_ Accidents are increasing on the |£@" #Way from the center, or those 7 : Sea) Weitag into an volt, but which (a SE aE oe ae ne Crnel| Agricultural W, PRT, because of boss economy, "ho have not time to attend school, “Afow T Would Like to Have a Rifle!” Writes eo es dicatists have States is still having palukas prop- 28*eultural Workers Forge Ahead With New °?cct-up and undermanning of cars Dut who. co | Rebel Woman not the revolution ped up before him for flooring; ! $103,000 was his income for these Battles and trains. The answer of the Mit- ten company to the depression and | HOLD MASS MEET | The letter printed below from | zh the maneuver who go ale boxing ‘fiascos. His boxing skill is pea workers out, . come to Champigny, though hey ee ioete anne ISCOS. is Se y,| hot. sun continuously burns] urging a united front of all work The fare is 8 ts, Everybody French woman worker, em- | knew what they had to expectthere.) 7 oe 4 , yt r se a a rker: s cents. Everybody a Frenc 0} * against k reaction until they not nearly as much advertised as t'e and 120 degrees farenheit is the| regardless of color or race, and mass |St0¥ls, while Mitten takes in over| FOR H. CANTOR | ployed in an cngineering factory, | “Our last battle was fought on ee io ant, then unite with the Final few beats, which are not very “SU, thing in the Imperial Valley.| picketing. The Mutual Aid seeing |# million a year on a subway the | shows clearly the rising tide of (the railway platforms. The police | jy cjost tyranny to crush down their 3 THTEhe Citing. ill ¢o inito fie In this hot desert sun, 9,444 Mexi-| the strikers accepting a militani | City built. Called Fuller Murderer. | militancy among the working |were bringing their batons into 5” Tics, the won Oe any mailions His ‘management eee raruncindd Negro and Japanese program betrayed the strike. women of France, as of every | play and many people fell on the peasants saw the capitalist f if agricultural workers slave for Organi: BOSTON, April 25.—Harry Can- italist country. leyag ton tt ilway dine: peasants, — aw th bee ec paltaien gies : z : ‘ganizers of the A. W. I. L. ve- LO N, Apri y Can-| capitalist country way to the railway vente ow tariff movement, ail ly ty ee to $2.00 a day—in season; picking) mained in the Valley ey nen SAILOR COMPARES tor, released Tuesday after serving ag | “f assure you, comrades, that I ata c oe ai Ha sae roy es profes ig jeinre arid cantalowtpes (back and| strike, A recruiting campaign was US.-SOVIET CREWS 2 term in prison for calling former| “yesterday the socialists organ-| have never held a rifle in my) yes of the corn laws. Peace Tun to AGA nee) in fields without drinking begun and workers of all ‘races —- Governor Fuller of Massachusetts ized a demonstration in Champigny | hands, but how I would like to 9) 0000) aE ‘Aimeteries athletes paths. they water or toilets and in packing joined the A. W. I. L. in suprising. Americans Get Scum Not Food | the murderer of Sacco and Vanzetti, The Communist Party issued a call! have one in moments such as oo att ee anficibations of t are ripe for the army and because ae hi thesia 4 ial is ly large numbers. A strike was 8 will be welcomed at a mass meeting |to the workers to form a counter-| these. I hope not to be bedridden thenky” Gan be. eeew fa OP islents ‘anching in the Imperial 8! planned for early May, during the (By A Worker’s Correspondent) | arranged by the International La- |demonstration, and I must say that) too long, otherwise I will feel y the bosses fear the rising tide of the workers in the present radicaliza- carried on on a large scale by such huge corporations as the El Monie cantaloupe season. | The ranchers alarmed at the rapid | SEATTLE, Wash. April 23.—|bor Defense Friday night at the |we achieved a great success. Young | About one week ago, a ship arrived ;New International Hall, 42 Weno-| Communist League members organ- | erable about the long spell of in- statement in the 3¢ The history of mankind shows that from the be- tion, are becoming very popular and! Packing © faniahere ak ts activity! gi x of the world, the rich in fais | i Corp., ete. The ranchers} ne pa ey elie here from Boston, Mass. S. S. Lake|nah St., Roxbury, Mass. J. Louis! ;;, agai continpentar anit also! ginning of » the seorrecciving mun attention. They.|iconorol the «Valley officials: inn} ecu, vce Tene. instituted @/ Tandon, which has been bought by |Engdabl, General Secretary of the hee Noes Paccaeweeis| : all countries have been in a pov- Know that the bulk of the workers| manner similar to that in industrial | Pog OF Pause terror. Whe labor the Soviet Government and is International Labor Defense, will be /eyy responded to our call. ‘They; Start Campaign for AD inanent state of conspiracy to Keep cannot become pros and the army! areas, s ail ate neg : ii obeneiie jers res ‘ : I. ,|down the poor of all countries, and must come from the workers. And|" 7, : ‘ workers and organizers and .broke apne eh ANE OVICHEGHES |among those to greet Cantor and | wore in fighting trim. It was mag-|Tractors and Trucks °° ‘| ne cee a they are giving much time to the| . /28t fall during the lettuce sea-/ up meetings, but to no avail. In- ompared the conditions of these address the meeting. \nificent and the fight went on all) : i TO a Lees Ee so pl al a Me es me ‘the | son, the workers unable to bear the | Stead oeginieationgl Werk “ehiSon Soviet seamen, with the conditior The release of all class-war pvis-| day long. But what a smack in the for the Soviet Union of the poor is to the riches ue aoe a ads eae intolerable conditions any longer | even more rapidly. of the American seamen, The dit-|oners and the defense of those now | gace to the socialist detective. | of the 1 an only on paper, All the Dourgeols | struck spontaneously. The Mexican A tawssliciatas mereeaey ference is like between day and|in jail awaiting trial will be dis-| «a, example I will tell you] The workers of America have Roth raises the problem of newspapers are giving ever increas-| This Sheriff GiWet is the person San’ exaMp! 3 ji ict ing space to amateur athletics and organizations that are sponsored by such institutions as the American Legion, colleges, and by the papers themselves, such as the Graphic) Punch Ball Contest and the Daily News Golden Gloves tournament. But the masses are not respond- ing. All the official amateur in- door meets this last season have been failures. The stars played to empty houses. They broke ~ecords tothe applause only of the news- pers. How these “stars” travel from one place to another is puzzling to any worker The girl stars were in Flor- ida for a month preparing for their Mutual Aid, a reformist union im- mediately undertook the task of seperating the Mexicans from the other strikers. The Agricultural Workers Industrial League (a sec- | tion of the T. U. U. L.) exposed the dividing tactics of the Mutual Aid |Office Workers Union Holds Street Meetings The Office Workers’ Union held a successful open-air meeting last Tuesday at Battery Place and State St., despite the attempt of the po- lice to break it up, threatening to jail the principal speaker, Primoff, president of the union. About 300 that brutally beat up workers dur- \ing the strike, insulted Attorney \Gallagher of the I. L. D. and kicked | Mr. Taft of the Civil Liberties. It is well known that he raped a | Mexican woman in his jail, but be- \ing a faithful servant of the ranch- jers, is of course not removed. With the approach of the canta- loupe season. the police under the |direction of the ranchers and the Camber of Commerce have begun ‘a reign of terror without parallel in the history of southern Cali- ‘fornia, Over 100 workers and_ or. gonizers were arrested and thrown linto the Valley’s torrid prisons. | | Thirty-seven are being charged with night—for example: Russian seamen work on deck 8 hours. American seamen work 12 hous. The food of the Russian seamen is of the best , and is the same as the officers food. On an American ship the officers get the best food, and the sailors get the scum. All the working clothes of the Soviet sailors are supplied by the ship, their laundry is all done free, if the sailors are out at sea and they have to wash their clothes the ship pays them for it. On an Ameri- can ship you not only don’t get your clothes, but you have to buy from the Slop Chest which soaks you about twice the amount you would pay ashore, and when you cussed. They include Leonard Doherty, arrested in Boston during the recent needle trades strike and held in $25,000 for action by the grand jury. Children’s University in U.S.S.R. A university for children between the ages of 12 and 16 will be opened in Leningrad soon, according to a United Press dispatch. The course jof study will include the fight \against religion, problems of indus- trialization, the collectivization movement, ete, nds in cru- about my contingent and how I had} sponded in tens of tho ‘my knee injured. We women were| protest against the religious | marching at the head of the proces-| sade of the clergy and the |sion, shouting: “Organize Soviets in|maneuvers of the imperialists. France! Long live the Red Army!) a token of solidarity with the Rus- |Down with the social assassins! sian workers and peasants in their Tore Dawn Banners. struggle for socialist construction, | “We tore down all the red-white-| workers in America, through the | and-blue banners with which the) Friends of the Soviet Union, have | municipality had decorated the |streets. Tore them into shreds and |dragged them on the ground, What la magnificent scene! | “Just at that moment the police, In sending to the Soviet Union, who were beside themselves with! the Friends of the Soviet Union has rage, attacked us with their baions,) succeeded, in addition to <he | striking us on the head. Many were | tion of 25 sent last November, injured and taken to the hospital. | other delegation to present offi \lective farms—one on the Lower Volga and the other located neat Moscow. a- an- all, already sent 15 tractors to two col- | the extent to which Marx and En- els are indebted to the Charitists ‘or their theory, and leaves it un- olved. The answer seems to be, very little. The Ma s had access to the facts, and th ved at simil- }ar conclusions, better formulated. |But this does not detract from the importance 0: the Chartists. _ In the days at the end of Chart- ism, these left wingers, those who had not gone off on a tangent to- wards fa and frivilous utopian schemes, id even O'Brien, did e the way for the First thstein proves nationalism was in , and that under the leader ‘ ae riers ‘ children gr e |The poli a i ; etor: rucks e work- ship es Ny of Ernest Jones, ‘meet, and the track and field stars ‘ criminal syndicalism and such ri-|want to wash them by yourself, yoa When the children graduate they | The police agents were following us, | the tractors and trucks to the work- ship 3 ' s were concentrated about New York La daa gti diculous charges as conspiring to|not only don't get aid, bat: ee will be sent into elementary schools |and though many of us fell they|ers and peasants, and at the same younger than the others several ra- for:an entire season for the indoor} Another open-air meeting will be /burn packing sheds and planning an| pretty hard to get a piece of soap, |t© teach other children. The school | did not take any notice and went on |time participate in the May First ical international political =move- meets that were held there. Who pays their bills? held Saturday noon, at Madison Ave, and 23d St. Monday, April 28, the armed insurrection. They are be- in held for the unheard of amount from the ship. The wages of the Soviet seamer is based on the theory that children can best be taught the above sub- beating and trampling us under \foot. It seems as if they did not Celebration. The delegates are now in Berlin and a reception is being ments had been founded in London, and had died out, immediately be- peas ts of $40,000 bail each, making a tota!/are $86 a month, and a fireman |Jects by other young people rather | know how to give vent to their fury. | given to them by the German ESU /fore the Virst International was Boe nace Members tans junea wt mole eae BSN of $1,480,000 for all. The capital- $89, and double time for over time. | than by adults. “There were demonstrations in| on Saturday, April 26, 1930. formed: most important of these qed ceetiabrire ple still) Gnions at its meeting hall in Labor |i8t court working hand in hand|On an American ship the average all the streets of the town. In many} The delegation has pledged fjwas the Frat Democrats, Most | in its infancy, has set itself a gigan- Temple, 14th St. and 2d Ave. | with the ranchers have set the date | is $55 a month and $57.50 to $¢% families are supported by insurance, | places the socialists, who were pro- | to tour the country for the Jj of tt m even sp istence ng into tie task of recruiting 10,000 mem- oT SAR of trial for May 1st, hoping to/and no money for over time (and On an American ship when the sea-| tected by the police, were shouting uyon its veturn from the Soviet in ways precisely similar to that in bers within this year. This was 81 RUSH TARIFF, BOSSES ORDER ‘cripple the coming strike. you get plenty of it too,). If you|men are sick, they are thrown off |to the latter at the sight of the dem- | Union. |which the First International was agreement they came to with the Si- id Meanwhile strike plans are going|dare to ask for the over time they, the ship, and not only don’t get|onstrating workers: ‘Kill them, kill) The Friends of the Soviet Union launched. berian athletic organizations in a ie f ioe WASHINGTON, April 25.—Hoo-'on even more rapidly then before.|owe you, you're pretty sure to get|paid, but it is hard to get medical) them? is now entering upon another cam-| All in all, an excellent book, a socialist competition, and we'll ride| ver wants the tariff speeded up for |The T. U. U, L. has already sent fired, aid, “And like wild beasts the police-| paign for 40 tractors and trucks, real seavchlight of history into a a our horses until the bosses feel as! the big bosses. The other day he | additional organizers to the valley.| The Soviet firemen work four} So American seamen—get wise|men threw themselves on us who! and we urge every worker tc do-his dark but promising land in labor y tho they received a sock in the solar | held a conference with Congressional |The I. L. D. has sent Attorneys|watches in a fireroom, the watch |to yourself! were shouting to express our hatred share toward this campaign. jtheory—-and what orators they had J plexus. jleaders, instructing them on what |Gallagher and Sokol to the Valley |is four hoyrs on—twelve off. The| ORGANIZE AND FIGHT THES of them, The lesson I learned from | - css jin those days! O’Brien, Harney, and t Wall Street required in regard toland is mobilizing the workers in| American firemen have to work DAMNABLE CONDITIONS ON) this demonstration is—that if the| GOV'T AGENT IS GRAFTER |Jones spoke with tongues of fire, — MORE BANKRUPTCIES. There were more bankruptcies in| the first quarter of this year than i any first quarter since 1922, aceord ing to Dun’s. Revi 7,368 failure: for liabilities totalling $169,357,551. a | the tariff. A conference is being held between the House and the Sen- te on the final form of the tarif! Many changes are being made to + the interests of the various banking and industrial groups. Los Angeles and southern Cali- fornia to smash this new American frame up and the W. I. R. has be-| gun a campaign to raise strike! jinnds, Thus the Aimerican working | jclars answers. four hours on eight off, and on top of that they have to work all kinds of over time. nd when the Soviet seamen get, » they ‘get the same wages ‘as | when they are working, and their BOARD THE AMERICAN SHIPS. JOIN THE MARINE WORKERS LEAGUE WHICH IS VIGHTING AGAINST THESE TERRIBLE CONDITIONS ON BOARD AMERICAN SHIPS, Communist Party knows how to go! A bribe of $15,000 was paid to jabout its work, the masses will be Myer Bronin, internal revenue tax ; with us. One could see yesterday | agent, to cover up tax irregularities, that the workers are feeling that/it was testified yesterday in the THE the Communist Party is their only | Federal Court in Brooklyn, by Leon-' ‘bulwark; they were not afraid to ard Martin. it should warm the heart of even a tired radical to read their speeches, | WRITE about your conditions for the Daily Worker. Become | @ Worker Correspondent. 5 Ae

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