The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 2, 1930, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1930 U.S. DEPORTS WORKER’S WIFE AND CHILD; TO 'PICK ON HIM LATER Detroit Worker Tells of Rotten Tricks of Immigration Officials { | Auto Bosses Afraid of Growing Influence of Communist Shop Papers (By a Worker Correspondent) h School Boys Learn Art of Murder Oakland Hig PROSEGUTOR ASK DEATH FOR ALL COMMUNISTS Answer Atlanta Fiend in Election Campaign (Continued from Page Ones workers of the entire South to mili- tant str abor laws all forms of oppression of the § Page 1) DIPLOMATS OF FRANCic AND POLAND SIGN PACT CLAIMING SOVIET SOIL JoinWith Czarist Cossack Emigres and Ukraine Counter-Revolutioni White Guardists Gran sts in a “Protocol” t a “Protectorate” to France and Poland Over Soviet Regions MOSCOW (L.P.S.)—The last num wish to be independent of the Soviet jer of the Zarskoya Westnik (C Union, whilst No. 2 points out that DETROIT, h.—I feel it is time that the rotten ways of the ern working class will pl oh monet ley Ae i in accordance with tis decree of the United States government should be exposed. I paid my head tax into aie inter tion campaign of | '** < fap , een published tesident of the Ukrainian People’s the States from Canada on July 23, 1923, I asked for something to lehee Ghia y in the South, |™ Sofia, strived Notes. TU lec nublic and tha: cheHaanual Tene show it had been paid. They told me it was not necessary as it was | Workers, Negro and white, | o?H AEE CERT ca pen lake of tie Ateman qh. toaveeneaek recorded in their books. My wife paid hers a little later on. She got | throughout Georgia, are urging that | 70" Bo aed cedar | aeoopa oes ennenre DOR Ieee” Ine i a paper showing she paid hers. |Henry Stor Negro Communist Letter to the Russian People. ’ Later on they took it from her and told her they would give it back to her as soon as they made an investigation. But she has never been able to locate that guy. Now they are holding her and my boy at immigration detention quarters for deportation. My wife was in Canada for about ten years before she paid hers and entered the state at the Detroit port. |now facing death, be named as Com- |munist candidate for governor of |Georgia by the coming state rati- fication convention of the Commu- |nist Party.” “Defend Them.” Lanind quotes the text of the pro- tocol signed on January 18, 1929, in Sofia by represents of the As- sack Peoples the Don, the Cuban and Terek distric the protectorate of France and Poland over the districts mentioned in Ar- ticle No, 1 is recognized, and that the peoples of the ern Union” shall send representatives to the »| capitals of the two countries men- plenipotentiary of the “Ukrain- | oned. I expect by what I hear they will be looking for me to give me An immediate call was sent out |ian People’s Republic” General Bo e es protocol also rs the sig- | some of their rotten two-faced medicin. She may face being sent back by the Communist Party and the gayevski, Professor M Bar Rosie GF hon tive cf tho | to Scotland and my boy deported to Canada and likely myself. International Labor Defense, whose | Shuk of the Lember Univers And | Pench embassy in Sola. | Let every one of us organize and put every bit of pep into the fight national se , J. Louis Engda'tl, | * delegates of the Caucasian peo- | It must not be forgotten that be- i gainst the rotten affairs of the bosses. The “Blue” army defeated the “Red” army in a “sham” battle between high school boys in Oak- |is in Atlanta, for the masses of Ples” Mdviani, Pasimir and Sul-| I am an aute worker, just making enough to get by on. Working land, Cal., the other day. These boys are being prep red for the com ing war and arg being taught to p | hind this comic opera mummery the tanov. | . x i mot : workers, all over the world, to re- spectre of armed intervention is for the Hudson motor works, where they are making as much hell for war on Reds as well. The Daily Worker exposes and fights capitalist war preparations, attacks against alize that this case is the begin-| The protocol was drafted in the| hidden, These “representatives of us as they can by speed-ups and layoffs, and haye threatened to fire the Soviet Union, against the Communists and workers in this country. Help the Daily Worker Wo | ning of an attack on them, and to| presence of the Polish ambassador ie comseck paccles” and a5 bi anyone buying the Communist papers. —A Hudson Worker. more fighting by getting new readers and by contributing to its $25,000 Emergency Fund. save these six representatives of|to Bulgaria, Baranovski, and of the National Tea Pays $17 a Week (By a Worker CHICAGO, Ill. — Disregarding a large sign well known to the unem- ployed “NO HELP WANTED,” a tong line is waiting outside shiver- ing in the cold ’til the doors of the employment office. of the National- Tea-Co., Chicago, Ill. open. Now, that I am on the door I might say after kissing their hands, they put up the question if I am willing to work in the bakery-shop. As I was up against it, I accepted it. In high tones I was told that the National-Tea-Co., furnishes the bakery-worker with a white uniform, Correspondent) of a cold dash, and then he had to go back to work, Nearly everyhody works nights and not any medical help is on hand. Another case of the speed-up sys- tem and economic, shows the fol- lowing example: A $17 slave was happy to be picked out of this long line before the employment office, he had to go quite often to the quiet place. The boss did not like that very well and fired him. Shortly before the March 6th demonstration, a comrade and I We want to interest you deeply | in the dollars and cents aspect of | our campaign for the $25,000 Emer- | gency Fund. Every contributor writes: “We must save our Dail; And it can be kept going, it can be| made a power, we can secure mass | circulation for it if all our readers and supporters will work diligently | tions which piled up during the last six months and which threatened to help us meet our financial obliga- | © Oliver Page, St. P; Collected by P. c c Collected Portlan Fin Today’s “Daily” Receipts Necessitates Warning You t rhill, Mass. don list, Tony J. Sus~ effield, P: Worker Agen 4.00 2 $.00 10.00 £0.00 2.00 10.00 | 1.00! iW RED. ARMY theirs from electrocution—legalized the mill henchmen in state . office, lynching by Georgia and t and A, F. of Assistant prosecutor in the Powers and Carr case and the cases of the other four, |also issued a public statement as |soon as the indictment was rendered. ince the cases began, and was Suppress Revolts imply one long howl by a blood- os thirsty jackal of the mill owners (Continued from Page One) and lynch gangsters. sieged city have deserted to join! To Ask Chair For All Communists. Hudson said, in part: “As fast as these Communists come here and publicly preach their doctrine of violent opposition to the laws of this state, we shal! indict them, and I the revolutionists. Government of-| ficials in the city are reported to have resigned, thus trying to save their ins, becanse the besieged city is alsa attacked from the in- Solicitor Hudson, the| interests itish Gunboats to! It was his first public statement/“<f abhor? Fi | would be torn into little pieces if they showed themselves to the masses they are supposed to rep- sent, but for the imperialists they gisters the commonality of| serve as a moral stamp on the in- of the peoples of the] tervention game, a stamp calculated Ukraine, the Caucases and the cos-/| to deceive public opinion in the cap- sack dist®icts and sses their | italist countries. |French diplomatic representative in owners of! Bulgaria, de Chemineau. | The protocol contains two 2 No. 1 re; xp akers Reject Dover Tunnel Project LONDON, June 1.—Sitting on | the same Committee of Imperial | Defence with Stanley Baldwin and Lloyd George, the British leaders | of the “labor fakers,” MacDonald and Snowden, turned down yester- day the project for the construc- tion of a tunnel beneath the strait of Dover which will join England posed by the army, navy, and particularly the air forces, as un- desirable for defense purposes, was obviously vetoed by the com- mittee primarily on this ground, despite Snowden’s attempt to cover up the incident by other explanations. War is the word that hovers in the mind of those from the Y.C.L. tried to get the | Ste: |side, the workers of Changchow | Shall demand the death penalty in| and France by steel rails. This | war makers who rejected this h | , chow 5 which is exchanged twice a week. | permission to talk before the audi- spare, i Ma mo [having risen to co-operate with) very case. ... We will not tolerate) project, which was strongly op- | proposal. (That would not give me the butter | ence of the bakers union meeting.) We made our first call for your bor their comrades outside the city| Communists in Georgia.” on the bread.) Besides this I would |The business agent told us if we;quick support on May 9. We had | ete | walls, | In answer to Hudson by the I. L. | . : m have the privilege to buy food at aj did not have a credencial from the | before us at least $5,000 in bills | Sectio | Communist troops and peasants,|D- it is pointed out that the prose- Belgian Bosses Attack Smoot Tariff reduced price. A. F. of L he never would give us| that had to be met at once. Many | Na¢ which have been in the vicinity of| ¢utor includes in his death listmem-| ; My salary for 51 hours a week of |the floor. We did not have this | other large obligations which we had |. 1.00} pect hi cae: avs, are |bers of unions, defense bodies, Ne-| With Belgian exports to the; commercial treaty dating from 1878 ly ty Y | Hankow for a number of da are manual labor at $17 a week. The orking hours as follows: from 12 loon to 9 p. m. including Sunday. have Saturdays off. A little while ago one baker fell unconscious (the cause: bad ventila- kind of creddencials so we had to turn back without success. This is a fine example how the A. F. of L. protect the interest of organized labor. How would they participate with the unorganized? If it had postponed paying also faced us. | Take the $5,000 we had to meet at once from the total received so far, | and there remains $3,750, We need $350 a day to publish the about. | 5; 5 Morn! 2.00 | 2.00 50 0 approaching Hankow. ‘ 1 ment troops are busily erecting de-|munists, and that the attempt to es twenty miles south of the| kill these six is openly an attempt Q devlared in| to kill anybody who fights for the s in the city | cause of labor The govern- y and the we gro organizations, as well as Com-| United States dropping steadily and American trade has shown a steady threatening to be curtailed still fur-| Crease. ther should the Smoot-Hawley tariff |, bill become law, Belgian capitali The imperialist struggle for mar- ts is assuming the most colossal proportions and is speedily driving i 4 | a@re becoming more ahd: #88. acl... Powers and Cart ted| are reported to have urged their} towards another imperialist slaugh- tion). How easily could this man|been for the benefit of the bosses Ne |tive. Kuomintang government ati-| March 9, and go on trial June 17,, 8°vernment to follow the example! ter. This struggle will not be fracture his skull, A doctor was | or churches I am sure that he would | ges, Indus ws | anoelttes da Sado ase seer | for holding anti-lynching meetings; | 0f Canada and introduce a special! abated even should the Smoot- not_on hand, the nurse went home| give me the floor. ee gett ae ered te mest pr accrued | section 3. X 5.00 panicky at the imminen danger of the four indicted Friday were ar-| ede ihe Rage a ee ee hl fait Beem at 5 p.m. The first aid consisted —Baker. Son recat nee a ek: . el s.0o| losing this important town to the|rested for holding an American Ne-| Under the Belgian-United States| law. és bettered cae situation becatias ou} ers Club, ei ae Neuere and peasants and have | gro Labor Congress meeting on May | ao * ; : GhabIdd saa-to Gas old obll aage | received’ thro: jagain tightened the rule of terror.|21, and trial date has not yet been | Soviet G ia Ends Bie Job fis Centreville Local Won’t Have Anything to Do | contributions it AG a i eae hese es so|A decree has just been issued by | set. | oviet Georgia Ends Big Jo me Hay iz i i pane the government forbidding strikes | a Pak Seis : : Wi tion, covering cost of publication. 1.00 | os | TIFLIS, U.S.S.R. (LP.S.)—The|garden land. The representatives of ith Fakers and mass meetings, Yesterday’s income again falls be eer low the needs of the situation. Com. tades and readers of the Daily Worker, allow us to impr you | with the quick action and action by | s. all of you. v May 20 Contributions. the Trans-Caucasian government and numerous workers and peasants delegations weré present. The speeches enumerated the great suc- cesses of Soviet Georgia on the way to the building up of socialism. | Tiripolsk canal has been officially |opened in Chivali, in southern Os- tia. The new canal is 42 kilo- metres long and will irrigate 26,- 000 hectares of agricultural and 0} very active in the neighborhood of! Shasi, a very important port in the | province of Hupei, along the upper |All GE |Yangtze. The British fleet in |## i j a China, which is patroliftg Chinese waters by order of the social-imper- (By a Worker Correspondent) MYSTIC, Ta—Sometime ago when 125 or more miners of Central- ville local met they decided to have nothing to do with the U.M.W.A. or the Howat fakers, but would decide at a later date what to do. This can give you an idea of the situation here. se’ 7.00 6.00 20,00 01 Worke 25.00 Direct imperialist intervention in| China for the purpose of suppres- sing the present revolutionary tide is already an established fact, In ‘ i 3 1 ria veek-end by dis- | the days to come more revolution-|‘"¢ Memorial Day week-end by yar fetitiek Wi 4 (charging 600 workers, most of whom | bert nes Will also be followed | ios¢ their jobs as a result of the fi by tore ihtensiffed Setivities on the) Stiation of the dial system. || tas ree » of the Cha. |Many workers are also being fired nese Revahition"thie will ke rie|bY the Southern Railroad, the main | volutio is will be the| 7. tati Ke dee EN ansiver of the proletariat in tie ith. Pate all artery through thi | ee ea ie eae ake! | Yet it is under these conditions t bosses to suppress the Chi- i ife.” ¢ ip bally: nage Avelatlece that “Atlanta Life,” a weekly balls - hoo organ of big business issues it Socialist Party last week, much to| ake Be follows: “Dor net #hed! a tll to help the bosses fight the organ-| the delight of the lawyers, clergy-| 7 ri : ail Wotbere Ww ince tri ization of the jobless into militant) men, shopkeepers, ete., who belong BAY LO BECK— WRITE TO Rage Ee Rie deaths aah unemployed councils under the rev-|to it. While joining the soctal-|] BOX 75 DAILY WORKER | 0M {are | olutionary leadership of the Trade| fascists, Broun, “of course,” re-| ic Screen ¥ Union Unity League, and who/ served “the right to his own opin-|j~ hands out his “liberal” slop in! ions.” The dear fellow just hasn’t weekly radio addresses and nitwitty| the temperament for being a hun- newspaper columns, finally landed} dred per center, he says, even if it| in the camp of the social-fascists. | is a hundred pet cent social-fascist. | Admitting that he is himself fed| We needn’t comment further on the | up on “liberalism,” he joined the! “Socialist” party. the workers of the Alfred Decker and Cohn Tailoring Co. are becom- ing worse every day. The officials of the Amalgamated Clothing Work- ers Union are not even trying to im- prove our lot. On the contrary, it is only necessary for our bosses to wink with an eyelash and the renegade officialdom of the Amal- gamated stands ready to fulfil every wish of our bosses. Our bosses, with the active assist- ane of the Amalgamated Union, use variou8 means to reduce our pay- envelopes; adjustment of prices of particular operations, demanding high quality of work, the price of which operation was cut, because the bosses claimed it to be a cheap grade of work. Part of the work- ers in our shops have been working nly two or three hours a day for he last five or six weeks. A great any of us are staying home al- together every other week. The coming busy season promises to be a very poor one, two shops, No. 1B, and No. 4 have been closed down altogether. of living has almost reached the bottom level of pre-union sweatshop days. The Amalgamated has be- come part and parcel of the slave- driving system of our bosses. It is true that we, the tailors are com- pelled to maintain even the ignorant and bulldozing business agents, at | the rate of $65 a week all year around and two weeks vacation with pay, let alone the enormous salaries of the “big shots.” Their services, however, they render entirely to our bosses, A worker is sure to be kick- ed out of his job if he ever dares to demand the same standard of living that the business agents by hook and crook have acquired for themselves, Workers of Alfred Decker and Cohn, do not permit yourselves to be misled by the corrupt Amalgamated officialdom, With the aid of the Trade Union Unity League let us build a ra fighting industrial union of al workers in the needle trades. —Shop Committee Alfred Decker & Cohn Tailoring Co. speed-up with the resulting lay-offs. Fire 600. | The Bell Telephone Co. celebrated | Ij » Britle, 1.00 | Ni ialis Es tinned m Page One) i = ies 4 ‘ iy Heim x Mawes En ria pa i aa Sevatuttont (fOr tac abhe EME wilh 45 taints | .C.W. Helps Worsen Conditions in Chicago Wee Wilkow ve |om behalf of their lackeys iv Crise [for Iunch,. Under piece-vork con | THESIS and t ini 200 | Emer ativ rds Fi |ditions it is difficult for the work- | (By a Worker Correspondent) Yio" Clay Workers ir ete ae Fmerzeney, Fund 0 el mieteve tend (Cees nd he Uae ae ie 2a $10 or Kid: eke CHICAGO, Ill.—The conditions of] As a matter of fact, our standard | Mrs, Holauist, Chivas 73.00 Plans are underfoot to intensify the || RESOLUTIONS | for the SEVENTH NATIONAL CONVENTION of the Communist Party of U. S.A. 25 Cents ‘Argentinia Workers Fought Police BUENOS AIRES, May 30.—Workers of the town of Andradas, in the State of Minas Geraes, fought a political battle with the police yesterday. Eighteen persons were killed and thirty wounded. The police commander and the local political chief, the instruments of the bosses, are reported to be among the dead. Heywood Broun with Social-Fascists Heywood Broun, who did his eal By CENTRAL COMMITTEE PLENUM MARCH 31—APRIL 4, 1930 Every Party Member and every wor olutionary movement must ren study this important documentary pamphlet. ORDER FROM | WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CIty 8. ker actively engaged in the rev- WORKERS! YOUNG WORKERS: Build the Fighting Youth Paper! Help Maintain the Weekly YOUNG WORKER [PRERE is only one youth paper in this country that is written by and for the working class youth—it is the YOUNG WORKER, The YOUNG WORKER is being published weekly, It ix a real Hive paper; fall of work: ondence from shops, factories and mili many cartoons Lc Pictures of t | nd demonstrations of the workers. ‘The YOUNG WORKER has 2 full page of sport events, aews from young workers in the army, navy, National Guard, ete. Every young worker should read the YOUNG WORKER. Send in Your subscription today. $1.50 a year; 75 cents for six months and 50 cents for three months, Act today! OFF THE PRESS! Special Convention Issue of TY COMMUNIST Central Organ of the Communist Party of the U. S. A MAGAZINE OF MARXIST-LENINIST THEORY AND PRACTICE Contents NOTES OF THE MONTH Major Tasks Before the Seventh Convention of the or. a By MAX BEDACHT The Crisis in the United States and t ‘oblems of the C.P, U.S.A. By 8S. MANGU 1 Questions By J. WILLIAMSON Some Problems tn the Building of District Leadership By J. 8’ SHE! New Trends of Agriculture in the U: By P. LOUF-BO A “Fellow Traveler Looks at Impertalis: ing’s Latest Book “The light of By EB. BROWD “My Life” by L. Trotsky. Combination Offers: Relgjum Miners Kick Out Misleaders in Strike (By a Worker Correspondent) BRUSSELS.—On February 14, 1980, a strike was called of miners in Limburg mine Flardrio on account of increased exploitation. At first the reformist syndicate led the strike, but the strikers noticed soon enough that the leaders, as usual, intended to sell them out. There- fore, on February 17, they elected a rank and file committee which now neads them on a class struggle basis. . —Belgian Miner. Ex-Guardsman Tells Colonel Where to Get Off At (By a Worker Correspondent) KENOSHA, Wisconsin, — After| unemployed demonathatore, and said the successful March “6th whem-| that he ‘hat explained enough of ployed demonstration here a friend) such matters and also hinted of a job (ex-guardsman and now classs| if he'd discontinue keeping company conscious worker) and I were sien with them, and stick out his chest, home when we met one Colonvl| and be one of the “good boys.” Alexander of the Kenosha National) The ex-guardeman felt disgusted be ny sar: @ueaaaleek ‘i be von a ey that he e colonel immediately recog-| was in the country seventeen year: nized my friend and greeted him. ‘isch ea U.S.A. Some Burning Organizat 2P.M. | &.S. CLERMONT to HOOK MOUNTAIN States and the Crisis N STRIKE AT THE BOSSES! Tama young worker and wish to subscribe to our paper—the YOUNG WORKER. Pléhse find a remittance of & a Review of Scott Nenr- pire” BOOK REVIEWS: Reviewd by W. ” e viin,| with an empty stomach and besides! | WORKER. Piéise tind a remittance of #.,...... to pay for. ...months. Will leave Pi , SOEOIURE Wave ton, COMEURIER eee pi Pennie Aue ae and Lo cg dd exist on hot air and NAME .... ria haan Will leave Pier A at Battery and Land Street ow PAY, ‘OnGA Zit, one ene hagpbbin 8 jomething abort Hoovers! pri 8, kets at Pier $1.50, in adv: 1.25. Freiheit Office, 3 i i bi i lve ash Aators “prosperity” being rotten to the eore.| The eotonet Felt cheap over the ar-| | APPRESS sere x 3 Ded eee eee SEND ALL ORDERS AND SUBS TO WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 EAST 123TH STREET NEW YORK CITY Then the colonel wanted to know why my friend kept company with a “bunch of foreigners” meaning thé Mall to: YOUNG WoRK®PR, 28 UN. » ATATE TON SQUARE, | { { | NIZE! |]] TOGETHER WITH ‘THE | | ae ee hers non POR 4 Lines to Whiteha T. to Bowling PW YORK crry. cen and all Elevated Lines to South Ferry, )

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