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DATEY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 15, 1930 COMMUNIST DEPUTY N GERMAN REICHSTAG OPPOSES TAX ON FOOD tich Landowners Propose to Impose Tax on) Food and Agricultural Products ial Democrats Support Agrarian Program of Industrial Capitalists ERLIN (1L.P.S.).—In the Ger-, which ‘he declared was extremely n Reichstag during the debate on} sensible. budget for agriculture and food;} In the name of the Communist Reichs Food Minister, the rich| fractia¢m, Deputy Hoernle described rarian Schiele, made a speech in| the effect of the customs increases ‘ich he announced that further|on the standards of the working avy import duties would be placed | class and pointed out that the cus- almost all articles of mass con-| toms robbery only benefited the in- mption in order “to assist Ger-| dustrialists and rich agrarians. He nm agriculture.” Describing the | condtuded: “In agriculture as in in- uation of German agriculture, he| dustry, the bourgeoisie is striving slated thé following: “The Job’s| to load the burdens of the crisis ings of a bumper harvest (!!!),| onto the shoulders of the toilers, e falling price of eggs, the in-| bué there is no way- out for the easing supplies of fodder grain, all | bogirgeoisie. The only solution of B Self-Criticism A Weapon In Winning Masses for Struggle _s New York. |the revolutionary party of the work- Daily Worker:— |ing class are due not to “human )} In reference to the letter of Com-|nature” so much as to alien and rade Keller of Chicago in the Daily | bourgeois class influences and pres- Worker of June 23, {sure. The Party being a section of There is no danger in exposing |the working class, and the working shortcomings and errors to the/class living in a bourgeois society, osses Wage-Cut-Drive Grows AGES OF COPPER START CUTTING W MINERS, TEAMSTERS IN MONTANA Open-Shop Corporation State Start Vicious s of Anaconda Owned| Drive on Workers To the Daily Worker: Butte, Montana. ese factors threaten agriculture nce again.” As the bumper harvest | ich Schiele fears would result in| lowering of prices for agricul-| tal produce, he recommends fur. per customs increases in order tc wt prices at a satisfactory | el, | Speaking for the social democratic {be formed in Germany to fight ‘action, Deputy Schmidt declared favor of the agrarian program it forward by the National As~ veiation of German industrialists _ Chinese Commun | Chinese workers and peasants are arrying out, not only in words, but iso in action, the slogan of trans- tring the imperialist war info a volutionary civil war. A New ork Times dispatch from Shanghai | the agricultural problem can be seen ag work in the Soviet Union where Teetty-bourgeois production is devel- qping into large-scale socialist pro duction. The basis of this trans formation is an alliance between | the workers and the toiling peas- | antry. Such an alliance must also| the customs grab, against capitalist | anarehy, for the overthrow of capi- m and the building up of so- cialism.” ists Attack Cities ine conditions and emboldened by absence of government troops, scourged towns along the river.” The same dispatch also reported that Communist troops are attack- | ing Yochow in Hunan province and unday réports that “in the great angtzé Valley, thousands af ban- its and Communists, born qf fam- Many Greetings to 16t MOSCOW, (IPS).—Mesgages restings were received, by Presidium of the XVI Gongress of) he Communist Party of! the Soviet Jnion from the Roumanian Com- nunist Party, the Communist Party f Norway, the Italiamy Communist Party, the Yugoslavian Communist Party, the Spanish Communist Spanish Railway Wo of | the | rs of the Andalusian Railtoad sys- tem, which covers southern Spain, h Congress C. P. S. U. MADRID, Spain.-—All the work-| tervene. Shasi in Hupei, both of which are cities of great strategical impor- tance in central China. Party, the Belgian Communist Par- ty, the Communist Party of Lux- emburg, the French Communist Party, the Communist Party of | Latvia, the Communist Party of | Esthonia, the Communist Party of | Lithuania, the Communist Party of | Holland, and many other sections | of the Communist International and lyevolutionary organizations. rkers Soon to Strike After the last serious | strike of Spanish railway workers, the government, as a boss-tactic to} keep the workers down, trained) vill strike on Twesday, July 15.'iarge numbers of soldiers for rail- [The sttike-object is an eight-hour) way operation. To defeat the Span- day and extra prey for overtime.| ish workers in their present strike, Stations are heavily guarded and the bosses will no doubt use the ithe government iis expected to in- PRAGUE, (¥PS).—Following the example of the employers in the jmetal industry, the coal owners are jnow carrying out mass dismissals in Czechoslawakia. 1,500 miners have been dismissed at the pits of the Bruch Company. A further 400 miners will be dismissed in the 420,000 Unemp BERLIN (LP.S.).—Despite the fact that the building trades and other out of door seasonal occupa- tiots aré now working at high pres- MILITARIZING THE FACTORIES Wright Airplane Firm Finger Print Force (Continued From Page One.) done in the last war, only after the war was declared, except in some plants producing for the Allies. Finger Prints to Washington. As further proof of this being a war move, it was revealed, rather carelessly, that the Owl Detective Bureau was acting for the U. S. Government, and that “copies of the finger-prints will be sent to Wash- ington,” while the Paterson police and this private (supposedly “pri- vate’!) detective agency keeps a file of the workers’ finger-prints. In addition, it was said that work- ers of the Fokker airplane company would be “next” and then other large firms doing “responsible manual work”! The Wright Company posted a bulletin in the workshops ordering the workers to submit to this mili- tary order, as usual, under the lying pretext that it was to ‘protect the workers from undesirables, reds,” ete. The most of the 3,400 workers were being finger-printed, when the Communist Party leaflet crystall- ized @ storm of protest, and the company pretended that the agents took finger-prints “without author- ity,’ the Paterson News publishing a string of boloney about the prints being obtai “under false pre- tenses.” To bolster up this thin lie, the police took the detectives “into custody” but released them, and the Wright Company “refused to press Mass Dismissals in Czechoslovakia soldiers as strikebreakers, next few weeks. Other companies j are preparing to do the same. Spe- cial police reinforcéments aré being drafted into the mining districts. Six thousand workers demon- strated June 27 in Vitkovitz under the leadership of the Communist Party against the mass dismissals. loyed in Berlin sure, the number of unemployed workers in Berlin-Brandenburg has again increased by 7,800 and totals 420,000, which is an almost unpre= cedented level. DEFENSE CONFERENCE IN SEATTLE, JULY 19 SEATTLE, Wash., July 14.—The Northwest district of the Interna- tional Labor Defense is making in- tensive preparations for the district conference to be held Saturday, July 19 at 110 Cherry St., Seattle, Wash. Plans will be laid not only for the campaign for the release of the | Imperial Valley prisoners and ail working class prisoners, but for the building and strengthening of the LL.D. in the Northwest. All workers should discuss the im- portance of the conference in their unions, clubs and fraternal organ- izations. They must fight to have the unions and organizations sup- port the I.L.D. financially. Send contributions to ‘the district office, 110 Cherry St. Seattle, Wash. ne ann nn ERTUER ETE OuRETE Snes son, as in the whole country and throughout the world, is calling the workers to protest on August 1, against the feverish preparations of imperialism for war; pointing out that the U. S. government is spend- ing $1,000,000,000 for warships alone, is attacking the Communist Party which is leading the workers’ struggles, while refusing to give one cent to the 8,000,000 jobless and their starving families. Workers in all shops, everywhere, are asked to form Committees in their shops, to fight and strike against wage cuts and speed ups, to unite with the unemployed de- manding full sogial insurance, in- cluding unemployment maintenance, aid not a cent for armaments. The Shop Committees, when formed, should get in touch with the Comunist Party to prepare to march from theit shops when work is over on August 1, in the general | | | workers made by the Party. The Communist Party is not of the same kind as the capitalist and social- fascist parties, where collusions are frequently manifested. These par- ties make errors not due to the sus- eeptibility of human nature, but to their wickedness and evil purposes as regards the workers. They re- fute candor, discussion and criti- cism. All these contrivances are instru- mental to them to cover the truth. Their conspiracy against the work: ers may abate their powe: Thus, in such an. instance, self-criticism is | unfavorable and dangerous. Party of Masses. The Communist Party is a party | of the masses. It endeavors and fights for the interests of the work- ers and farmers, who contribute the majority of the toiling class. It fights for the economical and social conditions of the masses and not ot a minority. Discrimination of race has no place in the Communist Party; secret organizations are in- tolerable to the Communist Party. Errors are always apt to cecur, due to human nature. Without er- rors we never learn anything, if they are made unconsciously. We need the confidence of the people, hence we must appeal to the masses for wise and faithful counselors. Shortcomings must be exposed in order to eliminate them. due partly to negligence and oppor- tunism. Thanks to self-criticism leaders or cadres are checked up |and shortcomings ate corrected. The more self-criticism will be in prac- tice the more progress will be ac- quired. Nothing to fear from the foes because the continued self-criticism will drown their flimsy influence. Long live self-criticism. SYMPATHIZER. Lar ets Editorial Note : —“Sympathizer” correcly points out that the Com- munist Party, as the vanguard of the massés, bases its fighting pro- gram on the immediate and his- torical interests of the working class and poor farmers. As such, it has nothing to hide, either in policy, tac- tics, method of work, leadership, etc., from the broad masses of the | workers. On the contrary, search- ing inquiry of weaknesses, throwing lights in the dark nooks of bureau- cracy, wins greater and greater con- fidence of ever-broadening masses in their vanguard and increases the! capacity of the Communist Party to lead the workers through all stages of fight for the overthrow of capi- talism and the establishment of a revolutiénary workers’ government. Errors Are Class Errors. “Sympathizer” must understand that the sotirce of errors, made by Five Mines on Strike in Southern Illinois (Continued from Page One) spread the sttuggle to other mines. The strikes ate die mainly to the pressure of the rank and file, al- though outwardly they are under the control either of the Lewis or Howat-Fishwick-Farrington f a c- tions of the United Mine Workers of America. The sentiment for the National Miners Union is growing and N. M. U. organizers ate busy in the strike areas holding meetings. The N. M. U. has faised the demand for a five-day week, six-hour day, mini- mum of $35 a week, social insur- ance for unemployed miners ind for the local demands in each mine. Broad Committee Needed. The N. M. U. calls upon the min- ets to set tp broad rank and file united front strike committees in- volving all tank and filers who are ready to fight for these demands, calling also upon the unemployed miners, uniting the struggle of the employed ahd unemployed miners. The N. M. U. calls upon the miners in Illinois to spread the strike, to smash the check-off, to withdraw from the U. M. W. of A. and build locals of the N. M. U. The Trade Union Unity League has sent the district organizer, Nels Kjar, to the strike aréa. All avail- able forces in the coal field have been mobilized to lead and spread the strike. Negro Organizer. A Negro organizer is to be sent from St. Louis, as there are a large number of Negro miners in Saline County. Workers throughout the country They are | h its dominant ruling class lideologies, has had and still con- | jtinues to have, elements susceptible to bourgeois influences. | The right wing opportunist rene- gades recently expelled, Lovestone, jet al, reflected a petty-bourgeois| ideology in the ranks of the Party foreign to the immediate and his- torical interests of the working class. The right-wing group in the Com- munist Party of the Soviet Union| that, at the recent Sixteenth Party | Congress, was successfully routed, reflected the lingering fears of the |kulaks and the nepman in the sweep- ing away of the last base of capital- ism in the Soviet Union—the kulaks. CUT ARIZONA MINERS PAY. Mexican Worker Tells: of Conditions Oakland, Cal. To the Daily Worker:— | The following letter ha» just been received by Oakland comrades from a Mexican comrade working this summer in Swanson, Arizona. Dear Comrades: “This is hell. It is so hot it can’t be worse in hell. From the time the shift goes in it’s nothing but sweat and hustle and hurry. Can not get | good breath. Wages was good last | month, $6.00, but this month down to $5.70 for miners and muckers $4.75. Now again down to $5.10] and 4.42, You can see what a re- duction for the working man in this mine, and this is the only company working in Arizona. So I ask you to take this to the Daily Worker so that they can see the conditions in the state of -Ariz. Men coming and going 2 and 3 a day because they can’t stand the heat. | Living is high, $1.50 a day for board and ten cent for a bed. So we do not make very much, but better than nothing. I am going to stay as} long as I can. I will try to be there | by August 1. I wish I could be with you all to help as much as I could for you know that I am willing to do my part. If the revolution comes I am ready for it any time. The faster it comes the better for me and all together. I see by the paper that the Indi- ans are fighting like hell as we Chinamen. I hope they don’t lose | the battles. My best wishes, From your comrade,, F. BE. POLICE FIRE ON WORKERS IN CUBA HAVANA, July 8 (By Mail).-- More than a hundred police rushed into a crowd of workers who were demonstrating against white terror in Cuba and fired volleys of bul- lets without warning. More than twenty workers were wounded, in- cluding four seriously wounded, The demonstration began 2 o'clock | this afternoon on the dock, when a large crowd of workers gathered to bid farewell to five workers who were deported by the Machado but cher government. As the steamer, with the five deported workers on | board, sailed out of port, the dem- | onstrators raised their banners bear- | ing slogans in protest and started | open air speeches During the speeches, a Polish worker was arrested by a detective. | The crowd immediately surrounded the detective and demanded the worker’s release. Just at this mo-| ment, about a hundred armed police! arrived and fired point blank into the crowd, | a | het fascist Lewis gand and the, | social-fascists, Fishwick and Howatt. | There is also a__ so-called) Belleville rank and file group whieh, under the cloak of opposition to Lewis and Fish- wick, is misleading the miners and | demoralizing them. The miners} must organize their forces and fight against all of the agencies of the bosses, the Lewis-Fishwick-Howatt gangs and so-called Belleville group. The open shop forces of Buite have started their campaign of wage cutting and degrading the conditions of the workers, by driving the first wedge of their campaign into the Machinists’ Union which split off 14 of the machine shops from the fair list, representing the auto dealers Page Three The Socialist Party and the Mooney Case (Continued on Page Five) these gentlemen and gentle ladies, “it prejudices the ‘good people’, the capitalists, and their votes are needed for the socialist candidates.” Those were the days in California when one was never sure whether a fellow speaking of the S. P. meant the socialist party or the Southern Pacific Railway; both were synonyms. And the Southern Pacific stood for a classical example of political corruption. Those of us in the socialist party who were revolutionists were “not respectable”, were condemned as anarchists. Mooney was such a revolutionist. In an effort to organize the slaves of the United Railways, Tom Mooney, Reena Mooney and other revolutionary workers were extremely active. They boarded the street cars and took down the scabs; they enrolled motormen and conductors into the union. They were neither afraid to make noise in doing this, nor were they afraid to offend the honorable shareholders of the United Railways. This “anarchist” activity of Mooney disgusted both the United Railway and the socialist party, so both, the United Railway and the socialist party, decided to frame up on Mooney. The United Railway framed up in the bomb case to hang Mooney; the socialist party framed up to expel Mooney. BODY SNATCHING. The socialist party had its frame up all fixed. The expulsion of Mooney was all planned. The party unit Mooney was a member of, an English branch in San Francisco, was all ready to proceed with the performance. \But the left wing got wind of the conspiracy and Mooney transferred his membership into the Hungarian branch. This was a left wing unit. This branch was sure to refuse the expulsion of Mooney; if ordered by the city committee or state executive, it was ready to of that industry. their stand against the action, and b eae oe ees Wage-Cuts For Clerks. The Butte Retail Clerks Union is | confronted with a proposition} offered them by their open-shop employers which includes a sub- stantial wage reduction and other readjustments detrinféntal to the already poorly remunerated work- ers. Teamsters Face Cut Also. The Teamsters’ Union contract with the Silver Bow Employ sociation expires on June 29 Anaconda Copper Mining Co., one of the largest employers of this craft, and it is rumored that this company will issue the call for a reduction of wages as they are sponsofing the open-shop movement | which was organized in Helena last | spring by the political machine of their state. is es GRAS Copper Miners Pay For Crisis. When the bottom dropped out of the stock market, the Anaconda Copper Mining Co., bought up their stock as it was dumped on the market so as to keep the price of their stock at $80.00 per share, The continued selling eventually brought the price of copper from 18¢ down to 14c. The wages were cut from | to $6.00 per day. When the| copper again went down to 12c, the | wages were cut to 0. Now copper is on the toboggan again, and no doubt the workers will swet in the “hell-holes” at another 50¢ cut. These conditions are educat- ing the miners rapidly, which is evinced by the growing numbers of applications in the National Miners Union which has just taken out a charter for the purpose of regain- ing the conditions which have been lost in the past while the workers | have not been organized. The wage-cut was $1 per day. hai e if The men are firm in ve the support of all other crafts. STEEL SLAVES GET 22 P. 6, OUT Md. Baltimore, To the Daily Worker:— In the Sparrows Point plant of the Bethlehem Steel Corp. the Hoo- ver “prosperity” has hit hard. For weeks wage slash speed-up and lay-offs were the order of the day. About four weks ago the tin mills received a 4 1-2 to 10 per cent wage. cut. Two weeks later these mills were shut down completely, throw ing over 3,000 workers out of jobs. Now another wage-cut has followed in the sheet mill. A new type of mill was intro- duced, which is more “efficient” and productive. The “benefit” derived by the workers from this “reor- ganization” was a 221-2 per cent cut in wages and a 200 per cent increase in speed-up. Where worker produced under the old mill 40,000 tons per day, today he has to produce 100,000 tons per day. Workers Fight Back. This wage-cut and speed-up was met by the workers with resis'ance. For several hours the power of the mill was shut off and the workers refused to work under the new sys- tem. The police force of Sparrows Point, which is on the payroll of Charlie Schwab, forced the workers back to work. The Trade Union Unity ‘“eague immediately issued a leaflet to the s, calling upon them to or- ganize and prepare for a strike in the Bethlehem Steel. The shop committee in the plant has arranged several meetings at the mill gates. —A WORKER. worke TERROR GANGS RAID NECROES Oust All From 2 Towns Frame One for Gallows SHAMROCK, Tex. July 14— Over fifty Negro workers and their!one hundred and eight delegates in | families have been driven out of| attendance at the Minnesota State| Ne this town since Friday. The Ku| Klux elements posted signs in the} Jim Crow section telling the Ne-| gro workers to leave town before sundown yesterday. Sheriff W. K. McLemore of Wheeler County failed to take any action to protect the Negro work- ers, he is working hand in hand with the terrorists in framing up} a Negro worker by the name of} Jesse Lee Washington and whip-| ping up mob activity for whole- sale lynching or murdering of Ne- gro workers. Washington is framed up on a eharge of having murdered a white) woman and has been iaken by an- other sheriff to Oklahoma and placed in jail there to await legal lynching within the next few weeks. Similar to that of Rainey Williams, | who was sentenced to death at Beaumont, Texas, last week by a} jury which “deliberated only 18) minutes.” Three Negro workers have been lynched in this state this year, one of them, John Hughes, was burned at Sherman, Texas, on May 9th. RATIFY MINN, PARTY SLATE 108 Delegates From Shops and Mills DULUTH, Minn., July 14.—With Ratification Convention of the Com- munist Party, candidates and the program of the Communist Party were enthusiastically endorsed. Rep- jresented at the conference were dele- gates from trade unions, councils of the unemployed, co-operatives, workers’ clubs, women’s and farm- ers’ organizations. Many delegates came directly from the shops from such indastries as dock, metal min- ins, railroads, ete. Karl Reeve was the convention's choice for the Comunist Party can- didate for governor. Rudolph Hargn was nominated for senator, A. Roine for lieutenant governor and Rebecca Greeht for congressman. Resolutions were adopted in ac- ceptance of the Communist Party Jelection program, against govern- ment fascist persecutions of the rev- olutione trade unions ahd Com- munist organ‘zers. Special endorse- ment was given the Daily Worker land the foreign language workers’ press. A special report on the anti- war demonstrations August 1 fea- tured the convention, * * 8 Drive 25 Families Out. | ERICK, Okla., July 14.—White| terror, raging in the nearby town} of Shamro over the line in) Texas, was prevalent here last night also. An armed gang of 250, white planters and businessmen Hold Chicago Needle Picnic On July 26th CHICAGO, TIL, uly 14.—Special preparations are being made for im- mediate struggles among the dress- | makers and millinery workers here. a| deliver battle to those bodies. But meantime the frame up of the United Railways was perfected. | At the preparedness parade on July 22nd, 1916, a bomb squad exploded | on the corner of Stewart and Market streets where the parade formed with murderous results. Shortly afterwards, Billings, Tom Mooney, Rena Mooney, Weinberg and Nolan were arrested and charged with being responsible for the throwing of the bomb. From the moment of Mooney’s arrest the frame up of the United Railways and the frame up of the socialist party against Mooney worked hand in hand. The frame up of the United Railways was clear from the very start. The case against Mooney, Billings, etc., was clearly recognized by all revolutionists as a class case in which the all-powerful Public Service Corporations of California intended to get rid by hook and crook of dangerous workers’ organizers. The revolutionists therefore immediately organized a defense committee.. This defense commitfee endeavored to mobilize all workers organized in San Francisco, in Cali- fornia and in the United States against the dastardly frame-up of Billings and Mooney. It was here that the frame-up artists of the socialist party did everything to support the frame-up artists of the United Railways to send Mooney to the chair. On the instigation of Cameron H. King, the local secretary of the socialist party, is Lillian Symes, sent a circular letter to all socialist party branch warning them against participation in the defense of Mooney. This cireular letter declared Mooney to be an anarchist. It suggested that Mooney was ‘guilty, Aside from this letter, this group of respectables in the leadership of the socialist party used rumor and other channels to create a belief in the guilt of Mooney. Thus the United Railways, with its district attorney, Charles Fickert, had an ally in its campaign to send-Mooney to the gallows; and this ally was the socialist party of San Francisco and of the state of California. A BLACK RECORD. This is the black record of the socialist party in the Mooney case. 4nd now the comrades of Cameron H. King, Lillian Bishop Symes, the Reverend Norman Thomas, the honorable capitalist ex-judge, Pankin, the equally honorable corporation lawyer, Morris Hillquit, are appear- ing in the ranks of the defenders of Mooney. But Mooney is where he is partly because of the treachery of the socialist party, because of he treachery of the same scoundrels who are now performing the act { political body snatching in the Mooney case. If the leaders of the socialist party would know what proletarian mor means, they would have to come before the workers of the nited States and tell them: “We scoundrels were responsible for the vutrage perpetrated against Mooney. We have helped put Mooney where he But the gentlemen and gentle ladies of the leadership \f the socialist party do not know proletarian honor. The only thing they know is how to betray the worker. That is why they cover up their black record in the Mooney case with a loud noise for the release of Mooney. In good old “catch hief” style they helped to convict Mooney and are now trying to cover up their treachery by joining the chorus for the release of Mooney. ) The Reverend Norman Thomas, the honorable capitalist ex-judge Pankin,:and the equally honorable Morris Hillquit will have to answer to the American working class for their treachery. They will have to answer for the record of the ist party in the Moeney case and for their contemptible act of political body snatching now performed by them. GANDHI'S DUPES. | READY TO REBEL. w Plan for Him to Betray Movement | e | Today in History éf the Workers 187: Industrial Con- national federation organized at July 15, gress, early of trade unions, Cleveland. 1876: International Workingmen’s Association (First International) dissolved at Phila- delphia convention. 1918: 10,900 Workers at General Electric Co. plant in Schenectady struck. 1920: City firemen of Memphis, Tenn., struck for wage raise and right to organize. 1921: Business men’s | BOMBAY, India, July 14.—Seven ‘eotten mills here will close for an \indefinite period beginning August | |1 as a result of the growing crisis. They will throw out of work 15,000 | employees. | mob drove 103 I. W. W. members * * out of Aberdeen, Wash. 1927: SIMLA, India, July 14. _There| Vienna uprising, workers burnt |are many indications that the In-| law department buildings in pro- | dian masses are waking to the fact| test against acquittal of fascists | that independence requires fighting | Seneral strike started. for. Coupled with these is the plain leiradtiae that vith} TWO MINERS KILLED |intimation that the bargain with | $ Lore i |Gandhi is about complete, and that AS CAGE-HOIST FALLS he will soon call off the “non-co- operation” movement as far as he is | still able to do so. It is openly stated that the yp antry, whose demand for a_tax- strike Gandhi very — unwillingly agreed to when he saw they were going ahead with it anyway, are seizing this weapon, the most serious except for the armed up- risings so far employed in India, with great enthusiasm. They are | ne as Gandhi urged, limiting the strike to the Gujerat where the government collects taxes directly, {but are hitting at the whole zem- indar system in all the British In- | dian provinces. Zemindars Are Parasites. These zemindars are a species of landlord tax collectors created by the British government, the name LEAD, D. the building from which a cage-elevator was op- lerated burst into flames two min- ers, Scotty East and Sydney Well- man, were dashed to death at the end of a 2,000-foot plunge dowr mine shaft here. |none which Gandhi has defended more vigorously. Delegation to Gandhi, The Hindu moderates of the leg- jislative assembly have sent a dele- | gation to Gandhi to ask him to stop | the campaign, “before Bolshevisn begins. There is open talk that nearly half the nationalist party is tired jof the farcical demonstrations in which they are ordered to practise non-resistance, and are anxious to raided the Negro section of Erick) Thousands of dollars are necessary and drove 25 Negto families from to carry out successfully this or- their homes into the open country,| ganizational drive. For this reason threatening them with death if they, the Chicago Needle Trades Workers follow the example of Chittagong and the Northwest provinces where ned revolt is the order of the day supporter, the |and apparently a suggestion of the | type coming from the old Mogul) |where the zemindar was a tax|°?™ | The government returned. Industrial Union expects every, Het, a ae for tne taxes! pimes of India, in a special aticle The agricultural crisis and unem-| Worker who will go out for his va-) TOM in Tie 0 He made as per.| Saturday headed, “The Economic ployment has roused the Negtoes| cation to make it the week of July) Unite Te Agee, o% Magh a Mig | Ruin of India” urges “both sides’ to resentment against starvation,|26 in Camp Nitgediaget. All ar-|S0nal profit whatever he coud) s wiske a truce” and asks, “Are and these mass perseciitions and, lynehings are the white landlord’s attempt to frighten fhem into siib- mission. | squeeze out of the villagers above |what the government demanded. Industrial Union for an entire! The new zemindars retain all the week’s vacation which will include, worst features of Mogul tax collec- a literary program, games, dancing, tion, and added to that are recog- ete. Comrade Ben rangements are being made by the Chicago Needle Trades Workers’ we being driven headlong to bank- ruptey of Bolshevism, or both?” _———— FARM IN THE PINES » ‘i - y Gold, Gene nized by the British imperialists as rab angel an oie g world-wide demonstrations against] mst give full support to the new They must have full confidence in Demand the release of Fos: (Secretary of the Rewile dal fatidlueds of the viluesa cart icc tee: iw; Slag Wagent: See Dy Reethat he “destroyed the prints.” | "4" |wave of struggle of the miners, who |the N. M. U. leadership, under which | ter Minor, Amter and Ray | Workers Industria! U'on is expect-| fax list, collecting rent, selling the | '"¥r. Connie ienseaesay he > In Paterson, the August 1 demon- re fighting not only against the |alone they will be able to wage a) .. nd, t ha for fly el to be in Ch m4 ¢ that land, mortgaging it, and generally GIA Switeaittin and) Fieethae Protest August 1. stration will be held at City Halliwist enemy, the agcies of the|successtul strv=rte weainst the coat) “7 In Belson tor Th time and paiiake in the we yopressing the pessestry. There | M KIRCH The Communist Party in Pater-! Plaza at 6 p. m. coal op etalots und slate puwet,|op2ralors and their agencies. ‘for usemplyy neat insurance. | ouiings ‘ ‘is to mee ated class in India, and |! pets) : aceite \ 4