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22 Workers in Budabest Trial | Hand eee | an Cu tte | BERLIN—Unemployment is in- creasing rapidly in Germany. The (Wireless by Inprecorr) | official labor exchanges alone re- BUDAPEST. Sept. 12.—The trial | gister an of 80,000 the of 22 workers accused in connection | fi week in st. The total | figure is now 2,845,000 as compared | with 2, 00 last month. A large | number of workers are on part time. * # with the September 1st unemploy- ment demonstrations here that ended in street fighting, began here | yesterday morning. This is the * first group of workers of the many| HELSINGFORS, Finland. — The \ | 7 The accused | number of workers arrested under the fascist terror in Finland has arrested to go on tri: cheered for the Communist Inter- national when the trial opened,| reached 517 by August 15th. whereupon the presiding judge or- + eae dered them to be handcuffed and BUDAPEST.—The city is becom- the court room cleared. The ac-|ing an armed camp, because of the "cused refused to answer questions | fear of the bourgeoisie of tle grow- while the publie w: xcluded from | ing mass discontent. Four regi- the court room. |ments have been called from the provinces to Budapest. * * * LONDON.—The three Commun- ADMITS ECONOMIC CRISIS : campaign against the Daily Wor- ker, Frank Priestley, Brenan Ward ME, (LP.C. —The latest sta- | published by the “Gazetta | PT Sons. He ate soreed to: admit the Mf pitprv cx Reports, tron: Sc el: “ow. state that the Fourth Corps of Both imports and exports have de- | tra~Red Army of, Chin te ke clined alarmingly. During the first | Gotmrade Chb Pho(fD aefeaten the seven months of 1980 Import, | government troops\anpl occupied the amounted to the value of 10,630 town of Luyang nel Changcha, the mil. lire, exports 7,272 mil., as com- | ‘°W ae | rg capital of Hunan. After these suc- cessful operationg, the Fourth and pared with ) and 8614 mil. lire respectively in the corresponding | ®esSful_ ope ; months of last year. The costs of | Fifth CorpS~ah the Chinese Red 4 f la Army joined. 7 living have increased. A Extend Tax Strike in German Cities The number of bankruptcies has reased from 1040 in June, 1930, ily, 1930 (July, 1929 the number was 1086). The number of bill protests rose from $3,360 m : July, 1925 to 90,211 in July, 1930], BERLIN (LP.C.) — Every day The number of unemployed has fresh municipalities * declare their sen from 201,868 in July, 1929 to| imtention of refusing to collect th: 061 in July, 1930, or by more } taxes imposed by the dici than 70 per cent. And yet these the Bruning government. figures, already falsified. do not | ™unal council at Kunnersdorf near contain the unemployed agricultural | Pitma, Saxony, has resolved unani laborers. |mously, on the motion of the Com- taxes. Simila2 decisions have been | made by he town counc.1s of Wild- berg near Dresden, and of Dieskau {near Halle. In Reinsdorf near Ar- tern and in Runthal tke workers ki to organize and carry out tax strikes. Slow Lingering Death for Workers (Continued from Page One) N. C., a business mob simply rode up in their swell automobiles, walked unchallenged into the jail, found the key of the cell, and took their victim out, lynching him fif. ‘Persecution for Revo- teen miles away from the jail. The| . : aan Neriff next day had no diffieuty| Utionary Propaganda i finding the body. He knew where | Aladar Tamas, proletarian poet, ree |writer and editor of the world. At Emele, Ala., the capitalist) litor world. authorities not only cooperated with |f#™0us magazine “100 Per Cent, oo ee members |i8 now in jail in Budapest, according 2 Be esate ah ‘he uorer’|t dlepatches received today st the nor of Alabama offered a reward| of $300 “dead or alive” for three who had escaped the mob and taken refuge in a swamp. ¢ Lynched in Two Days. HUNGARY JAILS WORKER POET Labor Defense. A cable of protest has been sent by the International Labor Defense to Minister-Presient Bethlen at Mass lynchings have becurred dur- | Budapest, demanding the immediate ing the present week, with three|Telease of this workers’ leader who Negro workers lynched in Darien, "8S earned the veneration of work- Georgia, and two in Scooba, Mis-|¢S and artists as well as by his sissippi.. All five lynched within | "evolutionary writing to stir the working masses of | downtrodden the year ‘a little more than Hungary to unite for their mutual two thirds spent, the number of |ights and for better living condi- lypch weaiders are more than dou-| tions. Ue the tclal of il recorded for las: | | Aladar Tamas was arrested by veut And thin’ diag Hee inctarie | the authorities of Hungary before the many mysterious disappear. | the August Ist Anti-War Demon- ances of Negro workers, whose Sttation, together with 300 students, Hsdive dee. later iid) in lonely.| 88 part of the white terror of the places ur irretrievably swallowed up| anti-labor government of Hungary. by the ewampe info witch they | He is accused of advocating revolu- have been ‘hrown, Nor does it in- | tion clude the rumerous legal lynchings|he is now suffering in the unspeak- in which the bosses utilize their) #ble conditions of the Hungarian state machinery agamst the Negro | Jail to which he has been sent. workers, and the white workers as| Protests are pouring into Hun- wells [ery SM ales and artists 2 see i | throughout Europe. | Workers! Fight Lynchings! « | All organizations are urged to The bosses are throwing white send cables of protest to Minister. and Negro workers on the streets President Bethien, Budapest; to starve, They are instigating and organizing lynchings of Negro| workers in order to sow race hatred | and prevent the growing unity of black and white workers. Workers! Fight the lynching terror. Organ- ize defense corps of Negro and| white workers and poor farmers! | Defend the Negro workers and! farmers from the murderous at-| tacks of the white ruling class! | Support the struggles of the Negro} masses tor full political, economic) and social equality! Demand their) right to set up their own govern: | ments in those sections of the South | where they form a majority, as a) guarantee against the terror of the| white bosses! Vote against Negro| oppression an# lyaching in the com A, ist! Communist! Wekets in advance DIRECTIONS :—Take Astoria —_——_—. BUILDING SOVIET SHIPS two blocks LENINGRAD,.—Although Soviet Russia has been limited by insuffi- cient shipbuilding equipment; twen- year. During the years between | 1980 and 1933 the launching of 91 | large ships and 178 fishing steam | ers is plan 1 93 Avenue A. INTERNATIONAL 3 WI EW. |and Paterso, are kept in different » gained by the coal miners in 192 national office of the International | tionary doctrines, and for this crime | THE UJ ELORE CONFERENCE, THE NEW YORK HUNGARIAN WORKERS ORGANIZATIONS AND SOCIETIES are giving their annual great VINTAGE FESTIVAL SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28TH in the Bohemian Hall . Second and Woolsey Avenues, ASTORIA, L. I. Moving Pictures Will be Taken of the Festiva PARK CLOTHING STORE | Briefs From |7o Call Mass All Lands| Strike Protest Polish Terror (Weretess by Inprecorr.) WARSAW, Sept. 11 Unions called protest demonstrations here yesterday evening against the order of Pilsudski arresting all left wing members of the Sejm (Polish Par- liament). The protest meetings were directed against the Pilsudski | fascist terror, and a general strike was decided on. Yesterday 81 Communists were arrested in Warsaw and Cracow. | At Tarnow workers stormed the city hall demolishing the fittings. Textile Workers struck for hours against the arrest of several of their fellow workers. ADELAIDE SHIPWORKERS STRIKE HARBOR IS IDLE SYDNEY, Australia (i. P. C.)— The dock workers of Adelaide, who carried on an energetic struggle in 1928 for increased wages, and against the restriction of their trade union rights, have again gone on) strike. The strike is bemg ied by a strike committee elected at mas: meetings of the strikers. The strike | leaders, who possess great inflience among the revolutionary elements, | have organized picketing on a mass scale. The wives of the dock la-| borers take part in nicketing work. The social Fascists have called upon the police against the strike committee and the pickets. The police attacked the pickets, wound- ing several, including women. strikers, aided by the experience | have formed a self defense corp The harbor is laid completely idle. THOUSANDS ARE MADE JOBLESS Salvation Army Insults Unemployed Workers (Continued from Page One) his wife that something would be | 'ccause of r jdone for them. He and his wife| were offered a place as a janitor} for ten dollars a month and two| tive jurors we easily brought out cell-like rooms for doing work in a| their prejudice against the unem- But when | ployed, against foreign born and es- | pecially oriental workers (defendant Horiuchi building on E. 28th St. the Salvation Army found the old couple had neither home nor furni- ture the boss said he couldn’t us them. ce ne NEW YORK, — The capitalist; the prosecutor looked like wet rags, newspapers are becoming experts in juggling unemployment _ figures. Every worker remembers how each decline in employment was greeted as an “advance” by Hoover, Klein. Lamont and the entire reptile pres: The latest figures on New Yor | State unemployment, which | tinetly show a decline of one per cent during August in all manufat- turing industries, according to re- ports from 1,800 plants, covering all lines of work, is faked to indi- |cate an increase of 1.6 per cent by | the capitalist newspapers. The New | York Times headlines the story with | the words, “Finds Factory Jobs | Gained 1.6 per cent in city.” They hope to wipe ont increased unem- | But | | ployment by a flood of lies, | it won’t work. | The figures show that for entire state there was a decline, but in one \industry—the needle trades—which |has been practically shut down dur- ing the summer months, a seasonal | upturn takes place of one per cent, and the boss press entirely forgets that 1,800 plants show a decline. For the first time in ten years un- |employment in New York State | drops, when previously, even during crisis years, there always has beer Ie slight rise at this time of the year. ing elections! Vote against the| wUNTTONAL. COBTOMER A wad Y bosses’ starvation policy for the) STEALING AND OTHER INTERESTING Ri white and Negro workers! ! Vote, DOUBLE UNION ORCHESTRA contiaat the Rox Office 60 cents. or Subway to Hoyt Ave, Station, The Muli from there, ty-four sea-going vessels hi FOR BETTER VALUES IN constituted hide The pretend the 50 wens ann vouNe MEN'S 50 gram calls for the construction of Suits and Overcoats peti 10 large motor ships for the current WwW go to vy Cor Sixth St. two | } \ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEP’ WON'T ALLOW ANY Jailed on MI RECORD AT TRIAL Judge Threatens Jail \°,. : te If Notes Are Taken (Contmuea trom Page Une) answer, the judge ref-sed to him to continue questioning. When defendant Kioscz smiled : he outrageousness of the judge’ decisions, “His Honor” threatened him with a summe sentence for “contempt of court.” The defense is deprive iets 2 Communists in Jonald Government TEMBER 13, 1930 rR Egypt &! Order of the NEGR 10 HIT BY GRISIS Singled Out By Bosses For Hardest Blows Communist E Donald go he aid Pa By MARTIN SAYLOR AGO, CHIC orkers ever c. irely of any power to pre mmperialst domination in Egypt and work. Many bui packing of the jury. The judge is | uie fascist government of , 1 WY On determined to get a conviction, no ae 3 a. eal n Chicago ler matter what exposure he makes of he Commur arty of Egypt! street. gro labor alway capitalist “justice” in the process. | has been extending its influence employed on this kind of work, but Sklar Tells of First Day. ong the masses, and has car: RgE Raw. Da aent | _ Writing from the county jail, Carl |" excellent work in exposing the | hire Negro work Sklar tells of the situation on the of tne Later Govermeet O68) cic, work is so first day of the trial, Monday foremost tool of British im- s city job, The “The case opened with attempts nt ee Meany MacDonald) ccs; white’ and colored, vito t6-| of the prosecutor to have the de-| dered the arrest of the a) give the colored worker |fendants tried separately. I made } [ead Communists in Cairo, Re- |, 1. who starve the eath, |a statement that we workers have ; Membering the history of the Mac-| yi) 4, around |worker witnesses and we cannot | Donald murders in other British tin¢ November make them stay away from work | ©lnies, an immediate mass protest | vorkers to vote several times as the separate trials; °f all workers must be aroused to| nq candidates would necessitate. Secondly, we are| Prevent the murder of these two!” at the Central Steam not Sinelairs or Dohenys or Falls | '¢Vlutionists | Franklin and Grand Avenu and we cannot afford to hire a 'many colored girls are employed lawyer nine times in nine dif Demand the release of (os-| the wages were r ntly cut from trials when only one is needed. St ter, Minor, Amter and Kay. $17 per week to , and from $12 procedure eee aa “| mond, in prison for fighting ce files aoe aces nonce it easier to convict us. empha- 2 9 » Taylor Street they k sized the real issues of the unem- | for unemployment insurance. | them 101 hours a day and thirteen ployed demonstration and the attack —— ‘hours per night at the magnificent by the police on the workers and the Communist Party. The judge) Wage-cuts! Organize and strike against { wage of 40 cents per hour. These are just a few examples of had to concede our point. | Challenge Jury. Spector take adv “Then we presented our challenge | terms they are to the whole jury panel on the fol- lowing ground “1, —The jury is selected on al of class discrimination. There | s a complete exclusion of that vast | bulk of the population with is com-| roséd of the most exploited, under- | paid and unemployed workers. | “2.—The jury, is selected on the| 4 basis of race discrimination. There | (., is a complete exclue'on of Negro, | Mexican, Filipino, Chinese and other government, he was powerle th at the san ment could be a ears long s cha he was going tc Spector from thi pound their particular views on on the legal grounds that ion in our terms or parole, the intensified exploitation to which the colored workers are subjected to, Why thisgspecial discrimination | against the colored workers? antage of the heavy already serving to profits they e would have | ta of workers and are able to ce to prejudice reduction of| wait for “better times” when they the judge said} expect to make more profits, the > dismiss Sklar and | unemployed workers are starving. a cnael They are beginnig to revolt. Under 1ade from the exploi-| 0 HARDEST German karm in orn . @ Page Five ers Example War on High Taxes Should be Followed Here n League, Prevent Auction of Cattle Seized by Gevernment; Organization Wins capitalism Da ) We'll help we will be Vv uggle! Call elp or est Commun: organiza They are under Write For Program. method truggle the U: Farmers Bismarck, North h is soon to open up © tion drive n Chicago. ‘ to fight for what you p depending on Legge he “Farm Bloc” politicians. in case you want to at a fore- closure, that i he fact ee that you idea from Ger- Ownae ie many the . Star “Yesterd. ta . nging rmhouse there and to y f auction off the « : to meet a $100 ar a Py had gathered in the bailiff demanded t UL brought forth. Nobody moved | the order himself. a minute, the owner inter 1¢ halter | belongs to me The ked. “Do at $50,’ the Whereupon What am I offered? ‘Ten ce You can’t use that.’ bailiff argued, while the 300 stood closely packed around Will Endorse Commu- nist Program economies, ete. That| The capitalist system under| him. s to stop us. But | which we live is undergoing a deep| “The bailiff decided to send tol | 00°) = ——— me time, no punish-| crisis. The capitalists are unable| the village for a halter, with which pea R. I.,. Sept. 9— dded to our already | any longer to provide any work. | the two cows, after long “lay, were | OM Sunday, September 14, at 10 a. entence. While they live in luxv on the|e-entually led “orth m., at 470 Main Street, the workers organizations of Rhode Is- land will gather at the Ratification Conference to endorse the platform of the Communist Party. Many or- ganizations have already answered the call of the Communist Party and are now actively engaged in collect- the bailiff bailiff the n’t t lared sternly closely packed races that are the most exploited | fee ‘ Famer oi e | the leadership of the Communist! 390 farmers began to sing the na- y and constitute a large bulk of the | « paane it wee s ay ote | Party they are beginnig to organie| tional heat af mg the na-| ing signatures in order to put the population, There are 250,000 Mex- | /Udge as though he at a and fight for unemployed relief, for | : ; x Party on the ballot. Many shop Teaietta ioe YA RERIEL clone. meant it seriously, F ela Uist nd wages, for social insur,| Couldn't Hear Bids. delegates are also expected at the 43. —The jury panel, composed al- | ¥& pointed cout that Boast G he |ance. By uniting their forces the! “Their voices exasperated the | Ratification Conference. moat Sntively of bankers, bucinces | (0° * “Yost teins ane would ne | orkers will be able to foree the | ballitt and he called in three police-} Rhode Island, the smallest state men, retired people living on income | P¢ ‘dismissed too bosses and their government to give/ men. The singing continued un-| of the United States is a sample of “And “Horiuchi imn from property, ete., that is, of ex- actly those groups whose interest it to con workers who fight inst wage cuts, speed-up, better conditions or for the overthrow the capitalist system. e evident ause they of | be Sp “We argued that for the above | tig k reasons we demanded a panel of! Kreizberg. The workers, without any discrimination fused, but fing of it. “We certainly “The judge refused our reque We ice. “In the examination of prospec- with Sklar and perial Valley ¢ a Japanese), their pre- dice against those who fight for higher wages, etc.” By 3 p. m. both “His Honor” Becker, Holub and Irvin first trial in Jul reement on ni one, Evelyn Mz jurors Rose and and then the judge, stumped and exasperated, issued a remarkable statement: That the Sklar defendant and | for it. the judge, “No.” pointed out that Sklar and Spector ; being dismissed then, in court, and he demanded also the t to speak for himself. So did | Those on trial now are: Horiuchi (sentenced already to who dared conviction was afterwards arrested mediately arose and| wage cuts, to better conditions, Thi | means profits for the The bosses know this and they are afraid of it. For this reason they are trying to prevent unity working class. They are | to divide the workers by race, color, | nationality ete. They are discrimi- nating against the colored workers less boss voke for themselves >mpting judge at first re- ally thought better exposed capitalist ' in order to believe their enemies, They are discrimi-| 2-years along, Mating against the foreign born Spector in the Im-, Workers in order to make the native e the foreign riminal syndicalism| born wor'ers be “ase), A. Yamaguchi, George Hoxie, | born as their enemies. George Joe| For the same reason we witness The | now a wave of boss led mob lynch- ings not only in the South, but also in the North, as recently at Marion, Indiana. Down with lynchings! Down with race discrimination! Long live © solidarity of the working ! Kiosz, ng Kreizberg. ly ended with a dis- ne and acquittal for ; artin. One of the to vote against ! Only Three More Weeks Left to the Gigantic DAILY WORKER Morning Freiheit \ Million and One ‘rticles “old at Proletarian Prices Workers’ Organizations and Individual Comrades, let us know at once what you have done already for the Bazaar. If not, tell us what YOU ARE PLANNING TO DO. October 2, 3, 4. and 5 ISON SQ. GARDEN | relief to the unemployed, to stop abated, however, for there is no law against drowns “The ‘Deutschland ueber Alles’ f the completed three times, and reluc- tantly that th le make the white work- 300 holding themselves in readi that the Negroes are? repair to the next farm whenever the bailiff Listen, you farmers who are get- ting bankers, rs! Why not try this on your own when the evict you for non-payment of rent, | or to foreclose the mortgage, or to your ‘arm, seize taxes This Commu yourselves b; making hen | Hoover prosperity. Even the census admits that there are over 93,000 patriotism, when yen it out any possible bid unemployed in this small state. It bailiff gave up when!is a fact that one out of every 3 had been | workers are unemployed and starv- ing. The manufacturers take ad- vantage of this situation to intro- duce wage-cuts and speed-up. The response of the workers the Communist Party is evident in the response to the Unemployment bill. Many workers are walking with copies of the bill treasuring the document and showing it to their friends. consented to sign auction had a report proved fruit-} to the crowd the dispersed, appears.” Try It! tired of being gouged by| James P. Reid, the candidate for landlords and tax collec-| Senate will give the main report on the outlook for the tions and the issues. coming elec- sheriff comes to FARM IN THE PINES Situated tp Pine Forest, near M1 Lake. German ‘Table. Rates: #16— land and animals for is the general idea that the | nists want you to get—the idea that you can do something for || "1% “vtmmina and Piehing. sticking together and M. OBERKIRCH a real fight. To stop | R. 1. Ros 78 KI STON, N. ¥ CAMP WOCOLONA on Walton Lake, Monroe, N. Y. will be Oben Through Sept. 24th Phone: Gramercy 2862 T.U.U.L. Members $17 per Week Daily Rate eo 5 $3.50 per Day Office: 10 East 17th St., N.Y.C. his New Vol. Ther The will of o the “Like a brilliant meteor crossing a dark sky, it held me tight.” “The most important book of the year 1926, Six volumes, paper bound, these boks or colleg! Chis is Bishop Brown's quart rent subjects. The American Race Problem stion of Rome. Bishop Brown's Books COMMUNISM AND CHRISTIANISM 5th thousand, paper bound, 247 pages; twenty-five cents. MY HERESY is an autobiography published by the John Day Company, York; second printing, cloth bound, pages; price $2.00, KRUPTCY OF CHRISTIAN UPERNATURALISM THE BA 56 pages each; twenty-five cents per volume, stamps or coin. re primmers for children, yet a post graduate course They are written from the viewpoint of the Trial, 1; The Sciences, Vol. II; History, Vol. III; Philosophy, Vol. IV; The Bible, Vol. V; Sociology, Vol. VI. e are twelve chapters of about twenty first and second volumes have been publis! be ready in September and the other six months, pages in each book. hree at Send fifty cents for copies of Communism and and the first three volumes of the Mankrip' Christian Supernaturalis~. HERESY Each number consists st timely among eur- January, 1980, e's Crusade Against scow and the Super- ‘eatest and ye nef his lectures on the So far the: been as The Soviet Union, and July, Send for a free s Subscription 25 cents per year. Single Copies 10¢ each. 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