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ATURDAY. » M AY Be 1930 Rp Li five DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, § SHOW BOMB IN SOVIET EMBASSY IN POLAND ot HAD POWERFUL CHARGE —| ize ‘Boss Press Admits It Was Attempt to Start) War on U.S.S. R. | ;Demand Outrage Be Investigated and Envoy a Be Protected | ao F WARSAW (LP.S.).—Police in-{clares that the affair shows “with quiries into the bomb discovery in| what drastic means those interests Warsaw show that the explosive|which want eto provoke an armed Me powder of the charge concealed on |conflict with the Soviet Union are the premises of the Soviet Embassy | Prepared to attain their end.” at} —_was even greater than at first sup-| The newspaper decl openly - posed and would undoubtedly have |that a definite plan is being followed — completely wrecked the building. | in order to rush Poland into an An examination of the clockwork |armed conflict with the Soviet | mechanism revealed the fact that|Union, “to force Poland by fatal the charge was timed to explode be- and unwelcome events along a path tween 8 and 9 o'clock in the eve-|which the Polish people have no ning. desire to take.” At this time a film performance| The newspaper then draws atten- K for the Soviet colony in Warsaw|tion to those foreign financial cir- would have been in progress in the jcles which are interested in provok- main hall of the embassy, with the |ing a war between Poland and the yesult that the whole Soviet colony, | Soviet Union and which have de- acluding the children, would have |clared themselves prepared to pro- een wiped out at one blow. It is | vide the Polish government with the .nysterious that strangers could |finance necessary for the conduct of have been at work on the nearby |such a war. A Bovswade « on n Parade ‘ => BET INTO THE — [Comstion Sor New. 595,000 DRIVE! Daily Worker Wants. Support of All The Communist Party languag press has mobilized thousands of {workers to give it loyal suppor ; When our Jewish organ, The Frei- |heit, called for financial aid two months ago, New York workers rushed to The Freiheit office in large numbers and stood in line waiting to give their contribution. The Daily Worker is the main or- gan of our Party. When it calls for assistance, thousands of work- ers, more than support any of our language papers, should help in- stantly. Every workers’ language organization that aids the language papers should also aid the Daily; Worker. Every language comrade should help—and especially help to ¢secure American workers to read) land support our English organ. i Additional contributions received | |since campaign began on April 1:| The above photo shows Diego Rivera, the grease-ball in the center, | parading on May Day in Mexico City, But since the fascist Mexican government tries to fool the 3 with pretensions of being “revo- lutionary”—and thus had its own May Dey “demonstration,” Rivera’s part in this was to help the government. This is clearly seen in the (Continued from Page One) the electric chair, will be held May 28 in McAllister Hall, Forest near ass Sts. The fight against terror, and the) struggle to build a powerful metal | | wcrkers’ industrial organization in ee face of auto company stool pig- eons will be a major issue in the election campaign. The Detroit dis: trict of the Communist Party is ral- lying foree and making prepara: | tion for state conventions in the} near future. Organization of the unemployed, particularly in the auto industry, | where 20,000 apply to the Ford plant whenever a rumor spreads that a few hundred are to be taken on, is| one of the main tasks of the new| union, of the Trade Union Unity League and its Councils of Unem- | ployed, and of the Communist elec- tion campaign. Leo Thompson, district organizer | of the Young Communist League | has been sentenced to 90 days at Highland Park for taking part in| the factory gate meeting before the | Briggs plant. Last week, four others were given 90 days each at the same place for the same offense. George Dobos was found not guilty yesterday in Detroit. He had) been charged with hitting a police- Cleveland District luck, Boston, Maxs, roofs without the police noticing} The article concludes by declar- anything. ing that the honor of the Polish It is suggested that White-Rus- |state demanded that all possible ef- sian emigrants are responsible for |forts be taken to secure the arrest the outrage. The police are still |of the criminals responsible for the conducting their investigations and joutrage. It was intolerable that the the newspapers report that a series | Polish ambassador in Moscow should of arrests have been made. lenjoy greater protection at the Today’s issue of the national dem-jhands of the Soviet authorities than ocratic Gazieta Varshavska deals|the Soviet ambassador in Warsaw with the attempted bomb outrage |at the hands of the Polish authori- against the Soviet Embassy and de- ties. . Soviet Territory Grows in China HANKOW (IPS).—Hankow news-! Tchunyan districts. A cosiderable papers report that the Soviet power | area of the Toshan district has al- has been set up in the Yangsi and | ready been cleared from the popu- Kuanan districts in the north-east) lation which is solidly hostile to of the province of Hupeh. The land | | the governmental troops. has been confiscated and distributed, The Shanghai newspaper “Tsiang amongst the peasants. The red army | Nan Wanbao” reports that a rey- has the enthusiastic support of the | olutionary army of 5,900 men has ments are being rapidly organized of Chekiang and Kiangsi. to cooperate with the Communist, Nanking reports that a division troops. The governmental troops has been despatched by the Nan- have also been driven out of the| king government to mect the re’ neighboring districts Kuanbai and | olutionary army in the north-east Dajan. Fighting is still proceeding |of Kiangsi on the Chekiang fron- in the Jainin, Tanshan, Tonshan and! tier. ORGANIZER OF Rie" Naas JOBLESS TOURS (Continued From Page One.) used to be in naval war, and that | the money saved might be spent on airplanes where there are no r | strictfons, Churchill Spills Bezns. ‘ Parliament, Congress (Continued From Page One.) gles for work or wages, resistance to evictions of unempoyled workers, assistance of the Trade Union Unity League campaign for 50,000 new] while, Winston Churchill, speaking members before June 1 and other | for the Torp opposition, or as events activities, Another part of his work is to; read a cabinet document supposed arrange for the election and finan- | to be secret, sent to the first naval | cing of delegates to the huge na-| conference in Washington, ordering population and volunteer detach-| occupied the towns on the fronter | In the English parliament, mean-| turned ,out, for a part of it, only,| man with a lead pipe in the March ;6 demonstration. Maurice Sugar, 7 attorney for the I.L.D. handled the| | defense. | | fact that he is marching side by side with the Government Minister of Public Instruction (the hombre with the cane). Rivera, once an artist, was expelled from the Communist Party when he refused to give up connections with the government. As a Party leader he was an artist—in opportunism. Seeing one day a woman, one of Mexico’s 4,000,000 oppressed Indians, half-starved and draped in miscellaneous rags, he exclaimed on the wonderful contract of colors—not on the mass misery typified in the attire. Expelled from the Communist Party, Rivera had no difficulty in finding out that he had a spiritual affinity with the international Right Wing of Lovestone, Brandler, Jilek and Co., though being broad-minded enough to please even Weisbord, he also pays his respects to Trotskyism. Perhaps between Trotsky, Lovestone and President Rubio of Mea- ico, his artistic soul has found a certain chromatic blend that is simply irresistible. The case of six workers arrested bell for a meeting in front of a school Zinn | house on May Day were postponed Y : 0 one day, yesterday. David Yeldiny Brookish: "0 | Lithuanian Workers W. Alliance, Brooklyn, N A. Young, Cleveland, Ohio H, W. Bohn, Cleve in Imperial Valley 0 (Continued from Page One) "ternational Labor Defense or make 00 | any defense whatsoever. i | Prepare For Strike. Thousands of agricultural work- ers in Imperial Valley are actively »| preparing for a mass strike, to take 9.00 |place within a few days. Organizers Easly and Woll Quiet as Whalen : (Continued From Page One.) | &: Rupert. Huge Parade in Bombay Spurs Fight (Continued From Page One.) it Lake City + Whipw: Prepare Melon Strike [ment can do nothing for (PHILADELPHIA LOCAL OF PROLETARIAN PARTY JOINS COMMUNISTS In Statement Calling All to Do Likewise, It Recognizes the P. P. Has Nothing to Offer ‘Any Movement Which Keeps Workers from the Communist International Aids Enemy”. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., May 16--| The local of the Proletarian Party in this city, after a long and pr | tracted struggle with their National Secretary, Keracher, of national and inter has issued - declarat with the P. P. and c workers to support | Communist Par’ really represe’ the working class. says in part: “We are thoroughly that not only has the P. Party nothing of ¢ ance to offer the workers, that it is develo anti-Comintern group; t as it keeps a single supporting the Communist Interna- and American section, it o the hands of the reac- With such policy can have nothing in jamin over questions | common. “The members of this local feel that it is their duty to set an ex- rest of the Proletarian n example which we hope d unhesitatingly. We icly declare this local We call upon our rs and support- upon a th join he Pe nent convin very least give e Commu- sistance, ing ir letarian vie- Unemployment Is § TOKIO, Japan, May 16 employment situation so serious that the was forced to ma calling upon th “effective measure: The un- pan of the in- plan of this According to s, the total num- for the relict of unemployment. As all capitalist in Japan is about government, the Japanese govern- | 350,000. It is contended that the | the mass | a n most probably of the unemployed except by pro- that. always remained faithful to the | happens that every time Deterding | Uryninn (Workers Clu Hart- s.oo|for the Trade Union Unity League British, has actually risen in arms. | visits a country, a series of anti- eee = |are in the field. foo ae aetdieis eenibiters (are) die) Soviet plows rand #ormeries spring up] Se “| The Los Angeles local of the turbed by the f that some of the | ;) pis footsteps. Work International Relief is tribesmen are said to be “wearing |the hammer and sickle badge of the | Soviets.” They were not seriously jalarmed by Gandhi's light opera antics. But the rousing of the masses to real armed revolution has jbeen giving them delerium treme! While the forces of revolution ar Gandhi’s fol- Since Ralph M. Fasley is the ont im lontion ge eenainette beeen busy arranging affairs to raise the standing anti-Sovieter in the United! An effort to dig up something even} funds necessary to feed, clothe and States, having written two books|on the printer, Max Wagner, who/house the strikers. The W. I. R./ against Communism, one entitled) had complied with the forgers’ re-|of Los Angeles has set aside Sat- | |“Why the U. S. Should Not Recog-| quest to print forged letterheads of|urday, May 24, and Sunday, May | nize Soviet. Russia,” and since Eas-|the Communist International, has|25, as tag days for the Imperial ley gets his living by contributions | been made—and the fact discovered| Valley workers. Collectors report | from capitalists to fight the Soviet that Wagner, who was hard-boiled | to stations at Co-operative Center, | gaining momentum, Union, what more natural, one | enough to print such forgeries was/ 2706 Brooklyn Ave. and N. T. W. lowers are playing opera bouffe.| might think, than that Mr. Easley, also bad enough to have been con-/T, U. Hall, 604 E. 8th St. Pesgegiaeteai larry the ‘poetess | and Sir Henry should find much in! victed of immoral offenses some] eae eae hae a Rigen Place | common, and that after Deterding’s| time ago. + cuen| , Demand the release of Fos-| Se eee eset ~ visit, a fresh crop of lurid “Red”| But outside the range of suc A sistance” campaign, and a small de-| ‘ccuments should appear. | cheap ‘“‘come-backs” and underhand| ¢c'» Minor, Amter and Ray- tachment of the police allowed them-| "OF egurse, in this little matter, attacks on the Daily Worker,| mond, in prison for fighting ue to be arsled ayay ty their the passion of Easley against the Whalen doesn’t go. He is silent. for unemployment insurance. | patience as y squatted on the | go; Ti * F spo-| And Easley, th irming snake in| <> | h ‘oviet Union might at least hypo-| And Easley, the squirming snake in| Sign wo box 7s DAILY |dusty road leading to the Dharasana | thetically have crossed with the|the grass, is also silent. palatal GR Et aL | salt pans, which Mrs. Neidu and her idea that the forgeries he was car-| | followers attempted to raid. Pinpnahontaimalien nackhG aeaecine Instead of arresting the poctess | juring American foreign trade to and her followers, the police merely | the possible benefit of British trade. | |forbade them to continue their |But what is patriotism to a patriot march, As a result, both groups | wonrk- as against a checking account? {camped in the middle of the road| Like the Greek sophists, Easley tional congress on unemployment to | | the British negotiators to break off! outside of the village waiting for be held in Chicago July 4 and 6, ES there were any restrictions on the other politely to withdraw. Ac- | | Raising Quotas. cruisers. This conference agreed on| cording to later reports, however, To this convention Philadelphia | parity of battleships only. \this poli encounter terminated is assigned 200 delegates and must| Lloyd George was premier of that |with M ‘aidu’s arrest and quick raise locally $150 to finance them; | Cabinet, and now lines up with Mac- Irelease, while come of her followers Buffalo is assigned 100 delegates| Donald, along the same program as|were detained, and must raise $50. | Pratt in Washington follows. So hej All Communist Party members | ¢xpressed his “indignation” that his are assisting in the drive to organize | Warlike message of ten years ago) the Councils of the Unemployed and | Was made public. Lighty of the 260 Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become a jis ready either to defend his coun- |try or to defraud it, but preferably to defraud it while pretending to defend it. That he is an essential link in the chain of plotting that has led up to the “investigation” proposed against the Communist Party, and the Daily Worker, is evident. Whether Whalen can dig up any “come back” before his inside dis- To Moscow May 28 ! IF YOU ACT NOW! Jubilee Group of the World Tourists leaving on the AQUITANIA May 28. Most attractive tour Splendid vacation. of the season. You Can Still Go Leningrad, the T. U. U. L., while at the same | Would vote with Churchill. the militant unions and leagues of Tories in parliament stated they | Worker Correspondent. |pute with Tammany leaders forcés| Moscow and all of the Soviet land. time pointing out that complete solution of the problem of unem- ployment can be obtained only by the overthrow of capitalism and the establishment of a workers’ and farmers’ government, controlling factories, roads and land, and re- fusing to support an idle parasitic class of millionaire The Communist election campaign will make the struggle of the job- less a principal issue. eos ye Cripples Starve. In March 50 per cent more crip- | ples applied for jobs at the employ: ment bureau for cripples than in 14 January or February, normally the stockholders. | Much tyhocritical, disgusting talk about the nation’s casting their lot for peace is being vented by Mac- Donald and Secretary of State Stim son, while both prepare for war. left their fisher nets to look for gold in America. Arrived in Milltown, they found the $12 a week wage paid adult men didn’t mean what the equivalent in francs would buy back in the old country, In New Brunswick the Reichardt |cocoa plant has closed down, throw- jing 300 out of jobs. At Plainfield the International Truck Co. has cut operations, throwing 600 out of CAMP WOCOLONA WALTON LAKE, MONROE, N. Y. Will Open for Decoration Day Week-End Special rates: $12.00 for week-end, $4.50 per day. Musical and Educaional Attractions Boating and Athletics Reservations with $5 deposit to be made at : NEW YORK OFFICE: 10 EAST 17TH STREET 2D RAILROAD TICKETS OB’ Phone Gramercy 1013 orF TO 4 175 FIFTH Al P, S.—Steamship tickets to all parts of the world can be obtained thruogh the WORLD TOURISTS. Write, telephone, call personally: Fon? DRISTS AV) il NEW YORK @ Igonquin 6656 peak months. One of the appli- eants was a mechanical engineer who used to earn $500 a week, but work, THESIS and was crippled by an explosion. The engineer told how he was! sent out on a barge to sleep be- | cause the municipal lodging house was overflowing. There were so many lice crawling on the barge walls that he went out on the stfeet again and finaly slept in Madison Square. Eight men who slept to- gether there had only 38 cents be-| tween them to pool for coffee to sustain them for the day’s job hunt- ing. Seven were white collar work- ers and one wee an expert chef., * Charity Gives Pellagra. RALEIGH, N. C., May 16.—Job- less workers and their families can get pellagra by knocking at the door of the Raleigh Associated | Charities. Organized charity can give the families of the destitute only 10 pounds of meal, 2 pounds of meat and some coffee each week. Such a diet invites the dreaded scourge of Southern poverty—pel- lagra. . . * Michelin Ousts Hundreds. MILLTOWN, N. J., May 16.— With the closing of the Michelin Tire Co. works at Milltown, near New Brunswick, hundreds of French workers imported from Brittany are jobless in a strange country. They staged a short walkout two years ago, in revolt against a wage which sounded good in Brittany when they & & 4 Ar fy te hr hy hm tr, hr tr, tr, SO7nROZOH _ ab bb AA AAL & & & 4 S > = RESOLUTIONS for the SEVENTH NATIONAL CONVENTION Communist Party of U. S. A. 25 Cents Delegates from Shops, Trade Unions, Workers Organizations and Workers Clubs at the MASS PROTEST CONFERENCE @ by the INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE NEW YORK DISTRICT IRVING PLAZA Fifteenth Street and Irving Place ORGANIZE TO FIGHT AGAINST The conviction of the Gastonia strike leaders Lynching of Negro workers and all race discrimination Persecution of foreign born workers Against capitalist terror and persecution in all countries FOR ‘ Freedom of Powers and Carr Unconditional release of the Unemployed Delegation Release of Harry Eisman, and against persecution of working class children Release of all class war prisoners. ta By CENTRAL COMMITTEE PLENUM MARCH 31—APRIL 4, 1930 EVERY PARTY MEMBER AND EVERY WORKER ACTIVELY ENGAGED IN THE REVOLUTIONARY MOVEMENT MUST READ AND STUDY THIS IM- PORTANT DOCUMENTARY PAMPHLET Order from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street, New York City GRAND OPENING OF |UNIT'Y CAMP Decoration Day, May 31 Musical Program — Dancing — Boat Racing Camp Fire :—: i—: Other Attractions Call at 1800 Seventh Ave. Tel. Monument 0111 or Down Town: 30 Union Square, Barber Shop, Tel. Stuyvesant 8774 DIRECTIONS: By Bus from 1800 Seventh Ave. By train from 125th St. or Grand Central Station, direct to Wingdale. Registration open. EVERYBODY COLLECT Today and ‘Tomorrow = Borker: BROOKLYN RS CENTER 68 Whipple Street SVB Ten Eyck Street 2KERS CENTER Avenue LE WORKERS CLUB et > YOUTH CENTER 2RS CLUB FOOD Work! 16 West 21st = a Sek: $1st St. ARKWAY WORK, CLU venue HARLEM ne SECTION 4 WORK. | CLUE 08 Lenox Ave. Avenue NON-PARTISAN, WORK 143 Tast 10ard FINNISH WORKERS CLUB 15 West 126th UNITY COOPERA 1800 Seventh Ave HUNGARIAN. WORKERS 350 East 8tst St. CZECHOSLOVAK WORK. 347 East 72nd Str: barr he YOUTH Ne Madison Avenue SPA SH WORKERS CLUB 2b West iisth Stree: Ve HOME HOME Cenfral Station: (Baily Sas Worker rk NON-PARTISAN SC. *HOOL 1400 Boston Road LOWER BRONX WORKERS CLUB 600 East id4ist St, | Racin 201, 26 Union Squar New York City a,