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=: > | DAILY W ORKER, FIGHT BOSS BUDGET IN REICHSTAG DEBATE Social-Fascists Abstain From Voting on N Confidence Vote ‘Admit They Support War Armaments of the German Bosses BERLN (I. —The voting on|complete marine building program the Communist no-confidence mo- | which will include the first install- tion took place in the Reichstag sev- | ment for armored cruiser ‘B.’” eral weeks ago. The Communists| The social democratic police chief, were the only members who voted |darsouatio declared that the social against Groener. The social demo-|democratic party supported the cratic fraction withheld its votes, | army and navy, and that in adopt- with the exception of the former | ing the complete marine building minister of the interior for the} program referred to by Groener, Reich, Severing, who violated party |the social democratic ministers in discipline and demonstratively voted | the former cabinet had only done for Groenez. The voting on the sec- their constitutional duty. ond installment for armored cruiser |. The Communist deputy, Neubauer, “A” then took place. Two hundred | exposed the hypocrisy of the pseudo- and seven voted for and 184 against | opposition made by the social dem- with 7 abstentions. A motion of the | ocrats, and in particular the virtu- German nationalists to grant the|ous questions of the Berlin social first installment for armored cruiser | democrat, Kuenstler, who put Groe- “B” was rejected on the ground that |ner various queries concerning the ! armored cruiser “B” would be put |illegal armaments. Neubauer into the budget next year. Reichs- | pointed out that under the Mueller- wehr Minister Groener declared: | Severing government the social “In the name of the Reichswehr |democrats could have put an end) and in the name of the government Ito all illegal armaments, instead of | I inform you that in accordance | that the social democratic ministers with the decision of the Mueller-| encouraged them as any German Severing cabinet, the present gov- | nationalist ministers would have ernment will next year present a | done, New Stock Crash Reflects Deepening Crisis The bottom dropped out of the stock market again during the last few days. The decline in stock prices is the worst for the year to date. The fact that United States Steel led in the decline is only another indication that the break in the stock market is an expression of the deepening crisis. The continued decline in production, particularly in the key in- dustries, such as steel and railroads, naturally smashed the pious “hopes” and other empty nonsense about “business recovery” into ewitherenes. This decline, which means a decline in corporation “earnings,” is reflected in the price of stocks. On the other hand, the heavy drop in stock prices only confirms the fact, which Hoover and his ballyhooers have been trying to conceal, that the crisis is con- tinuing, with no one having any more definite notion as to when recovery will set in than the “hope” that it will set in some time. The Journal of Commerce offers the following explanation: “Dis- pucritient over trade prospects and fears of additional bad news about business and individual companies over the next few months were the major factors in the prevailing pessimistic sentiment in the financial district.” (June 12). Salvation Army Barracks Instead of Wages NEW YORK.—Tomorrow the Sal-j hinders any inclination to organize. vation Army will open one of its| With the workers living partly on) flop houses for young girls work-| charity, their spirit is broken, and ing in offices whose income is not| they can easily be frightened and| high enough for them to pay the | persuaded by threats to evict them, | regular rates of rent. This form! without their directly blaming it on of charity has the good wishes of | the industrial system. the employers, who prefer it to} The place is to be called “The paying real wages. It keeps the John and Mary R. Markle Memorial Sie much better disciplined and| Resident of The Salvation Army.” LOBBYIST TO GET HIS |WIND- UP ON PRESS USUAL WHITE WASH WASHNGTON, June 13.—Claud- | DETROIT, June 13.—The Com- ius H. Huston, chairman of the re-;munist Party, in co-operation with publican national committee, the various language organizations, , ‘i 5 i lis conducting a Press Week. Both earthed sometime ago as a grafter |Party members and workers in the who got large sums from the Unio | yarious sy mpathetie Carbide Co., has come out of a deep|are raising funds to veil of silence with a statement that fares Worker. few more days are still left for t te t hi Were oUt 40 BAU RMN che finaliwindeup of there: tag days un-} organizations sustain “partisan foes” and that he is innocent of the} avgek which will end Sunday, June 15, W Wiulevithe vepabliéan: oriaticnall urge all Party members and sym |pathizers to intensify their activity politicians would like to dump him, | by devoting an evening or afternoon} embarrassing them as he did by his , too open methods of working for the | auavare Ee wea end: “The power trust, his refusal to budge) “polish Workers’ Club (East Side) from his lucrative position has corner Grandy and Honda : forced them to resort to other meth-| Crs) Home, 1343 East Ferry, Jewish pi | Workers’ Home, 9148 Oakland; Rus- sian Workers’ Home, 2934 Yema: oe Armenian Workers’ Club, 72 Today in History of Gould; Polish Workers’ Club (West | the Workers June 14, 1823—Peter Lavrovitch Lavrov, pioneer agitator for over- throw of Tsarist rule in Russia, born. 1839— First petition of Chartist movement for reform of British clection laws, presented in Parliament. 1848—Revolutionary Hall, 5969 14th St., near McGraw; ‘garian Hall, West Jefferson, near Post; Trade Union Center, 3782 Woodward. Write as you fight! Become a worker correspondent. WEEK IN DETROIT the head- | COMMUNIST DEPUTIES CANDIDATE LIST We Need EW YORK, SATURDAY, _ JU E 14, 1930 Page five $1,000 a Day POLICE FAIL IN FOR NEW JERSEY But Only $150 Received WANY BATTLES |Communists I Have Full Ticket in Election For the first time in the histc of New Jersey, a complete tick has been filed in the Autumn elec- tions by the Communist Party. It is headed by a Negro worker for U. S. Senator, who was convicted on a charge of “sedition” with a possible sentence of seven years in \prison for organizing the unem- ployed workers. Congressional candidates from the First to the Twelfth Congres- | sional Districts are: First, William Hartman; Second, Claraon An- brosh; Third, Anthony German, Sr.; Fourth, Joseph Wishnefsky; Fifth, Morris Langer, also charged with “sedition,” who will be tried ne: week; Sixth, Charles Dzevetzko; Seventh, Morris Kushinsky; Eighth, Albert Heder, charged “sedi- tion” to be tried next week; Ninth, Dominick Flaiani, dition” and facing 17 years p | and to enter prison June 16; Samuel D. Levine, convicted of | dition” and facing 10 years pri Eleventh, John Zatko; Twelfth, than Honig. Na- The complete list of candidates |} for County Assemblymen and for | County Freeholders, is being filed. | The Communist Party election | Campaign Committee of New Jer- ' sey is planning an intensive drive for organization of the workers of the state into the revolutionary | | trade unions of the Trade Union | Unity League and for mobilization behind the platform of “clas: against class” to lead +2 wi Ts \into struggle for their ily inter- ests and to accomplish their eman- cipation. Against Dwight Morrow, the chosen candidate of Wall Street, the Communists are running Dozier W. Graham, Negro worker. All the other spokesmen of the bosses and |the bosses themselves in the shops and factories will have opponents from the Nica class, not only on election day, but every day, or-| | ganized in the places of work, by workers and for workers. | U.S. HASTENS 10 “HELP CHIANG The Chinese Tilitarist war has }reached a familiar stage when “sil- |ver ‘bullets’ are again destined to! play an important role. A Nan-. | king government despatch announced | \that Feng has made an offer to sur- jrender if Nanking will pay him $3,- 000,000 in local currency (approx-| limately $900,000 gold at the current | rate of exchange). It is said that! Chiang Kai-shek has refused the of-| |fer unless Feng first prove his si cerity by attacking Yen Hsi-Shan. Feng answered by a drive all along} the line and claimed Friday that he has succeeded in making a general| break up of Nanking armies on all fronts in the north. This, of co s merely Feng’s way of bargaining. The fact that the recommendation | jof Mr. Johnson, the American 1 ister in China, to remove the Am ican legation from Peiping to Shang-| hai comes at this particular moment jis quite in accordance with the; course of events in China. At no other time than the pres-} }ent does Chiang Kai-shek the} Nanking clique need more vigilant coaching from his imperialist mas- ter. And further, it is becoming more and more embarrasing and in- | } ;|conyenient for the United States im- 7 | perialists to have its legation sit- uated in the capital of a de facto| Side), 28th and Magnolia; Finnish | government against which it is at Chiang out of the jaws of death in | open warfare through its agent. The Ukrainian Hall, 4959 Martin; Hun. removal of the American legation to | December. Shanghai which is the stronghold | of the Chiang clique makes it con: |venient both for Chiang Kai-shek and American imperialism. quickly supplied with the necessary workers Of Berlin captured ar- senal. 1922—Hundred and fifty thousand coal miners in Harz mountains, Germany, struck for wage increase. 1922 — Railroad Labor Board cut wages of clerks, freight handlers, station workers, and signalmen $50,000,000 a year. 1924—Mob raided I.W.W. enter- tainment at San Pedro, Calif., —__ $1.25 2 Come where you are welcomed! M18 FIFTH AVENUE, COR. 171TH ST. Banquets and Parties Arranged. COMRADES, WE ARE SERVING DINNER FOR EVERY DAY 11 A. M. TO 9 P. M. Vegetables ROYALTON RESTAURANT NEW YORK crry Don’t Miss This Great Clothing Sale WHICH IS TAKING PLACE NOW AT THE WELL-KNOWN CLOTHIERS Noble’s Clothes Shop, Inc. 117 STANTON STREET, NEW YORK CITY $23.38 $27.63 $31.88 Special sacrifice Sale of 740 SUITS—all sizes, made of the best materials and real fine tailoring. All at $1 9 Noble Clothes Shop, Inc. 117 STANTON STREET, NEW YORK CITY \ convicted of “se- E ' up for | confidence of the workers of Mil- Chiang Kai-shek can thus be more | We are reporting two days’ re-|V, Jnnuska, Laisve, Bklyn., 0 2.00 ceipts for the Daily Worker fight-| “Hrs Brookisn Monn?” 10.00 ing fund. They total $351.28. The) §, Gorbach, La 1 total should have been Eu Vs: |reetheld oiteane. Fillmore of Vancouver, Canada,|_ writes: “Too many comrades are Reiter P. taking the appearance of the Daily; Collected Worker every day as a matter of| , ple, course and are leaving its worries to only a few of us.” Exactly! Too many comrades|J. F. have failed to realize what being | \\°5 without the Daily Worker would) F. méan to them and to our revolution- | Oye ary movement. Day by day passes|A friend. Rock Springs. Wyo.. and they do not get into the fight|Maveock Workers Club, Hav- to save the Daily Worker. Every| nought time we publish a list of contribu- | | Hosht tions like the one below, we prove| “Waukee wis that funds can be collected and are MAG ikneweniee being collected by hundreds of our! coittteq ne Roun supporters. But we want thousands| Chicar of our supporters to get into action,|* eroup of workers in Yh Why not a little action from you/0. K. Moreland, Baltimore, Ma. toda Hawthorne, Cal.. pringfield, H.. aeska, Akron, 0, Andvaieff, Roxeburg, Ore. 5.00 1.00 ONG 10.00 men’s Club, 5.00 Club, Mil- Workers by Anna Okichich, Three friends, Newark, N. J. Matt Anich, West Allis, Wis. 2.00 Donated by_ member 6 Workers Order Br. 84, field, N. Worcester, Mass....$ ASK. Mass. Society, cr 0 AL Kronberg, Bridgeport, Conn. 5.00 Sam Bearde, Chicas 49.00 | Joseph Barta, Chica |S. Martinez, Ybor City, : 1.00 Palacigix, Ybor City, Fla. 1.00 arcin, Ybor City. 1.00 M. City, Fla. Party Unit, | Ukraininn Workers Cluh | eapolix, M | Members of 3.50 ‘Minn | Club, Minneapolis, | Constantier, Dearborn, 1 Collected by Wm. Field, Prince Rupert, B. C.. Can. Concoop, Ine., Bronx, A. Rosenthal, Bron: Belixerkov Br. 17, 6.00 3.00 New York City... Louis Missender, Portage, Pa. JN. Gordon, Mt. Vernon, Wash, Urbanis, New York 1 10.00 | Sdward Frank, Berkeley, Cal. Henry Henrickson, Port ‘alien, ers Order, Bronx, es Andrew Holt, Ba Charles De Kyne, Phila. Pa 30 2.50| Thomas Morgan, Phila., Pa 3.00 10.00 5.00 2.00 1.00 10.00 ON acca Emergency fund needed . Contributions received . Balance still needed CONN, ELECTION MEET ON JULY § MILWAUKEE, Wis., June 18—] NEW HAVEN, Conn., June 13.— | The Communist Party is daily gain-|The Connecticut District of the Com- ing influence among the workers of munist Party has issued a call for | Milwaukee. This is seen not only | a State Election Ratification Con- by the success of the Party in mob-|vention, to be held on July 6 at) ilizing workers in large numbers|Waterbury, Conn. This call is being for all campaigns but from the| sent to trade unions, shop commit- | response of the workers to the|tees and working-class organiza- every day work of the Party. | tions throughout the state. Every other day, meetings are| The call of the Communist Party tea at the Public Employment Of-| points out that this year’s elections fice, known here as the “Slave! come at a time when this’ country | Market.” From 300 to 500 workers|i; in the throes of a deep-going are there every morning and around | crisis, which is rapidly lowering the 9 o'clock they gather on the lot op-| standard of living of the workers posite the Employment Office wait-| |throughout the country. ing for the speakers and especially | In the brass and metal industries | to get the Daily Worker. There is of Connecticut, way » Wage-cuts, speed-up no need of advertising these meet-| 44 longer working hours are the ings as the workers themselves start order of the day. The call points | calling everyone to the lot as soon i as the clock strikes nine. At these| meetings the Daily Worker and Labor Unity are sold in large num- bers and on many occasions there) are not enough papers to satisfy the| °° Wazes ance, etc, demand for them. 2 ‘ All working-class organizations Ee to Kb lock are asked to send delegates to the calera. Sihese Wonka ave das oeeee Ratification Convention in fended the Communist speakers Waterbury, Conn., on July 6, 1930, from attacks of the police on more than one occasion. The Communist Party is going ahead winning the Hii .K. Laisve, Brookls JOBLESS TOILERS| AID COMMUNISTS the necessity to support the strug- gle of the Communist Party and the | | Trade Union Unity League for work for unemployment insur- office of the Communist Party at 36 Howe St., ticut. New Haven, Connec- waukee, Write About Your Conditions for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. “dough” and diplomatic “advise” for | his “silver bullet” policy by his im- perialist master, the ever helpful Uncle Sam, who snatched President BUNGALOWS SPORTS, TENNIS, }his war with Feng Yu-Hsiang last | ae ARM IN THE PINES. Situated in Pine Forest, near Mt Lake. German | table. Rates: $16—818. Swimming, fishing. M, OBERKIRCH, R. 1, Box | 7S, Kingston, } Reservations with $5.00 deposit 10 EAST 17TH STREET 4 5.00) | | Minn..... 3.51) out the growing unemployment and | «CAMP WOCOLONA : WALTON LAKE, MONROE, N. Y. WILL BE OPEN DURING JUNE $19.00 per week—$4.50 per day WITH ELECTRICITY, BOATING, Musical and Educaional Attractions Railroad fare at reduced rates obtainable. | Bombing ae Pelee Shooting in Bengal BOMBAY, India, faivune 13.—Police attempted to break up the various sections of the commemoration par- ade held here yesterday one month| after the seizure of the textile city of Sholapur by the demonstrating workers, and the expulsion from it] of the police. Most sections were smashed, but} one large one of 25,000 workers formed after midnight, stormed the| oie “fort section” and held a s meeting there. Many yo age part. Call For Troops. The Bombay city authorities have) called frantically for more troops. | mutiny exists among the native troops. It is un- derstood, the British labor party government is rushing more regi- ments to kill the Indian workers and peasants. Seventeen men of the Eighteenth Garhwal Rifles, the regiment which mutinied in Peshawar when ordered | to fire into a crowd of natives, were yesterday sentenced to ten, fifteen} |years and life terms. Even three of four years means death in the Brit-| ish government’s prisons in the| colonies, | | Battle Rages. | The situation in Peshawar is con- lcealed by censorship, but enough is| {let through today to contradict the} [British army's boast of having| |“ended the insurrection of the tribesmen.” Today extensive bomb-}| = ing operations against the Haji of| Turnagzai are reported. | Word is received here of police | firing into a crowd of peasants at he village of Khaira, near Midna- ore, Bengal province, but all details) are suppressed. | * * i} 20 Cents A day. | A United Press Service corres-| pondent who has just finished a/ {4,000 mile trip through India re-} | ports that Moslems and Hindus are| making common cause in most {places against the Lease aa Grievances are: 26 per cent of the} | government revenue spent on the} army to suppress the workers and peasants, 9 per cent on jail and} | justice, 9 per cent on police, and! | only 6 per cent on education, Most }of the rest goes in pensions, etc., jto make life soft for the British| | ruling caste. | Meanwhile, the bourgeois news- | paper man finds the highest wage] paid in India is that of the Assam| miners: 48 cents a day. Unskilled; liabor gets 15 to 20 cents a day. | Women get 12 cents a day, and | children over 12 get 8 cents. W‘ANTED Comrades) to go upstate to collect signatures to put the state ticket on the ballot | {and building the circulation of the| Daily Worker. at the call of Write or the office or to communicate with the district | District Campaign Committee ee Communist Party, | | 26 Union Square, Room 202 WATER, DANCING RUNNING SWIMMING, > > > to be made at New York Office Phone Gramercy 1013 eae FIFTIETH STREET AND EIGHTH AVENUE i Greet the 7th National Convention COMMUNIST PARTY and participate in MASS DEMONSTRATION for the release of the UNEMPLOYED DELEGATION FOSTER MINER AMT IN MADISON SQ. GARDEN Friday Evening, Admission 35c in advance. a ‘ER RAYMOND June 20 | b At Last! Ne, SOVIET UNION! $280 (and under the auspices of the World Sailing June 28 on the MAURETANIA and July 16 on the BERENGARIA. Register Now! The Rush Is On! Remarkable Vacation and Opportunity to See the Five-Year Plan at Work. Write, telep rists) one or call personally WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. 175 Fifth Ave. New York. Algonquin 6656 (Tickets to all parts of. the world can be obtained at the WORLD TOURISTS, INC.) British troops are desired, for 2 | VJ... i te Sa Tse a ;|constant threat of EXAMINE YOUR EYES BEFORE YOU LEAVE FOR THE COUNTRY! eed should eaamine the eyes of yourself and your children before you leave for the country. If you need glasses we will fit them according to the latest methods and with the most modern instruments at very reasonable prices. . If your eyes are well, your general con- dition will be well. If you suffer from your eyes in the country, the country will do you no good. Therefore we ask you to visit any of our optical offices before leaving for the country. Offices Open Daily Until 9 P. M. OPTOMERISTS-OPTICIANS 609 WEST 181ST STREET Cor. St. Nicholas Ave. NEW YORK CITY 1690 LEXINGTON AVE. Corner 106th Street NEW YORK CITY As Always= Spend Your Vacation at Camp Nitgedaiget FIRST PROLETARIAN NITGEDAIGET CAMP—HOTEL eX Se » Hotel with hot and cold water in every room. R Bungalows with electric lights. Tents—to remind you the old days. Cultural Program for the Summer of 1930 The Artef Studio (Mass theatre with Artef) Comrade Shaeffer will singing. the conduct mass Cultural Program—Comrades Olgin and Jerome Athletics, games, dances, theatre, choir, tures, symposiums, etc. lec- CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. PHONE BEACON 731, N, ¥. PHONE: ESTABROOK 1400 a | By Train: From Grand Central every hour. By Boat: twice daily 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 C.P. U.S.A. : By MAX BEDACHT ‘The Crisis in the United States sand the Problems of the CP, U.S.A. By 8S. MANGULIN il Some Burning Orgunizationat Questions By J. WILLIAMSON Some Problems tm the Building of District Leadership By J. STACHEL New Trends of Agriculture in the United States and the Crisis By P. LOUF-BOGE) A “Fellow Traveler Looks at Imperialism,” a Revigw of Scott Near- ing’s Latest Book “The Twilight of Empire” By E, BROWDER BOOK REVIEWS———"My Life” by L. Trotsky. Combination Offers: INTERNATIONAL PRESS CORRESP: TOGETHER WITH THE THE PARTY ORGANIZ TOGETHER WITH THE SEND ALL ORDERS AND S$ WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS Reviewd by W. $6.00 86.00 50¢ at the door. 39 BAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY