The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 21, 1930, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YO..K, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1930 Page Three LETTERS ‘EK’ Ex = a S&S EPO FS 10-HR. DAY, SPEED ALTERATION TAILORS ARE FORCED TO WORK 10-11 HOUR-WORKDAY (By 2 Worker Correspondent) BRONX, N. Y .—The insanitary conditions and the ex- EF Be cP Hs UP AT THE HIRLET KNITTING MILLS COMMITTEE FAKE) Workers Must Fight for Real Relief (Continued from Page 1) clashes. They are collecting their forces to keep the workers in star- vation. In Evanston the’ rich para- sites are arming against the unem- ployed. Walt Street Fakers. The fake nature of Hoover’s “Un- | | Boss Has His Spy System Organized (By Worker Correspondent.) BROOKLYN, N. Y.—A little short mousy eyed old man met me ploitation of the alteration tailors are well known to the tailors in eral and to the bushelmen in particular. the center of Broadway and Sixth Ave. where the merchant tailors’ stores are the most attractive with expensive clothes, the tailors have to work 10 and 11 hours a day in the dark basements or on the low balconies of these stores. The} whole day by electric light, without air and no sunshine. at the door when I came in to ask for a job in the Hirlet Knitting Mills. This was the boss himself. The bread and butted of 110 work~ ers, men, women, young gris, almost | children is in the hands of this crea- ture. He expoits them to the ut- Wages Are Low. The earnings under these sweatshop conditions are as low as from $25 to $28 per | week, re Raat “CANT DEPORT employment Committee” is admit- ted by some of the foremost Wall Street organs. The Journal of Commerce, a Wall Street newspaper which speaks for the leading ex- ploiters of the country—but it is not meant for the eyes of the workers —devotes its leading editorial show- ing the mockery of Hoover’s prom- ise of relief. They say: “Mr. Hoover wo' of course, be politically doomed were he to HOOVER HUNGER |SO. WORKERS RAP ATLANTA TRIAL Denounce Lynching Terror of Bosses CHATTANOOGA, Oct. 20.—About | three hundred Negro and white workers gathered at the corner of Market and Main Sts here last night answering the call of the American Negro Labor Congress and the In- ternational Labor Defense to pro- conditional release of the Atlanta organizers, whose “insurrection” trial is soon to begin. Frank E. Wallis, secretary of the Provisional Organization Committee for the South of the A.N.L.C., spoke on the recent lynchings, pointing test lynching and demand the un-| INTERNATIONAL NEw GERMAN SOCIALISTS VOTE TO CUT WAGES AND TO SAVE BRUENING GOV'T Socialist Party In Same Sewer As Other Boss) [Amo Workers Over Mark of 5 - Year Plan MOSCOW.—Four workers here | With the support of the socialists, | Bruening government the is en- | abled to remain in power to carry Cliques, Worker Shows; Communists Only Workingclass Party German bosses and the holder’s of (the writer included) have just paid Ja to the “Amo” Motor Works, jin Moscow. Eighteen months ago, the factory out the exploitation basis of all) on the exploitation of the masses lynching and the need for unitedi ynder the Young Plan yoke. On| organization of the working-class Saturday, the Bruening program of | along militant lines. wage cuts, attacks against unem-| Mary Dalton, one of the Atlanta ployment insurance, and general) the Young Plan bonds, the New employed 00 workers; today it York Times declared that “the employs 7,000; and at the end of the United States (Wall St.), in com-| Five-Year Plan it will employ 13,00 mon with other nations, has a great stake in the financial recovery and een per cent of the workers political stability of the German Re-, ate women who have been specially public.” To save this stake of in-| trained in the school attached to the ternational finance capital, the so-| factory. Nearly 40 per cent are fail at this time, particularly in view of the coming elections, to defendants and at present Commu- nist Party organizer in Chattanooga, “economy in the interest of the German bourgeoisie and finance-| “ialists are preparing an attac ung workers. A majority of these young work- most. I was handed over to the foreman | and pointed out a place to sit down | to work. All the workers were sitting with | their backs bent and heads lowered over their work. No one raised his | head, no one smiled. No one said | a word until lunch time. Soon I found out the reason. I noticed that the 3 foremen and the | Not better are the conditions of the bushelmen in the big depart~ ment stores as Wanamakers, Rog- ers and Peet and the like. Though the conditions in these rich busi- ness houses are somehow more sani- tary, but the earnings are still lower than that of the merchant tailors. Piece Work Speed Up. These big parasites as well as the smaller bosses are taking advantage | boss were always hovering ry : crows over the workers watching ™ent crisis against the workers, like | by utilizing the present unemploy-| tion in Los Angeles, Cal. evate anage 68 theatre! j urging them to work piece work | in order to squeeze more profit out of its slaves. These rich millionaire concerns are aware’ of the fact that its toil- ers are powerless because they are not organized and are therefore ready to rob the workers without | any mercy. No attempt whatsoever to or- The girls say wherever you turn you see the boss’ watchful eyes. I was not told the price right | away. It is up to the boss to de- cide’ at the end of the week. We are working 10 hours a day foythe most miserable wages, from 8 to 6 are our regular hours. ‘Then | ganize the bushelmen was ever made. Not by the Amalgamated, nor by the A. F. of L. union of the tailors, i. e, the Journeymen Tailors or the United Garment Workers. Company ,Union Only. one hour till 7 we are compelled to work overtime on straight time. | The boss’ relatives, the spies and | the right wingers get much higher | wages and with this nice bunch! around him the boss feels quite safe against the rest of the workers. ‘The hire and tire system is freely | used. f g ___ | These burocratic leaders of these Kecently a girl fainted. It was | mentioned craft (and company) | a care day aa she re ba | unions were never interested to or- stand the speed-up any longer. anize these tailors who are = | was told that this is not the first | Felled to toil under the saat Ane ease in this shop. conditions and for starvation wages. | Underpaid, and therefore un- | These generals are the agents of| dernousished, overworked every | the masters and are rewarded with once in a wile anotiver girl | medals by them. breaks down. Even girls who The alteration tailors as well | ought to be in school yet are | gs the tailors in general must not working these terrible hours for | he discouraged, but join the Trade $11-513 a week. Union Unity League needle indus- Must Organize. : trial union (the Needle Trades The only way out 9 orogens Workers Industrial Union) and into shop committees of the Needle) help. build. a powerful militant arene rau pied HAR rank and file union under a shop e mus! Si elegate s; i i - conditions in the shops, the spies, eee biAdes ee ee iy eae Bet more often ose hour day and for a decent | ie . i —Hirlet Worker—G, K. | UVM I. Amter to Tour Couniry in Red Drive (Continued from Page 1) this sticker campaign been that the bosses n the Corrigan McKinney, Steel Company has issued special notices to the straw bosses to fire —Ss. W. PHILA. BUDGET FAVORS BANKERS PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — The anyone suspected of this activity. The Communist Party has issued |budget estimates for 1931, submit- ted by Mayor Mackey to the City Council, are characterized by “eion- a call to all workers for a mass demonstration on the arrival of I. Amter in Cleveland. The demon- stration will take place at the Penn- sylvania Railroad station at E. 55th and Euclid Ave., when Amter ar- tives Sunday morning at 12:30 p.m omy.” Being that last year ended with a deficit of over 12 million dollars, the present budget is only four and a half millions above the 89 million budget of 1930. The in- rrease is due to the raising of th, amount for the municipal debt ser- ivice to over 34 million dollars, while |the appropriations for tse Dept. of ,Publie Welfare were reduced. This year, the department spent less than $200,000 for emergency unem- ployer relief,—due to the reduction, it will not be even that much the coming year.’ In other words, * * * Largest Hall in Detroit Taken to Greet Amter DETROI!,, Mich., Oct, 20—The State Election Campaign Committee has issued a statement to the work- ers of Detroit about the release of pray ines earths oe while nearly 40 per cent of the GEckee Sich. and tha peeeice ct! budget is spent to repay the debts Corads Actas in Delco on Octo-| to the bankers and other capital- pti th. TThe Detroit workers,’ its there is no provision for the I » i ! this statement says, will have an} sellet 14P arirehihc Sy ha opportunity to greet es eee | This exposes clearly the sham Hera OTe. ¢ He Nee eyed ot gen fight between the “two friends” of Lites is . e ae or. ¥ a atutee the people in Penno. Pinchot and the d BAT ration, who aa fy ~~ wet- democrat Hemphill. Thye keep in jail for leading je workers ID on throwing dust into the workers’ the struggle for “work or wages.” eves with their fake issues, while Unemployment since March 6 has the Vare machine keeps on plunder- increased tremendously. ‘ing the city without making any Many working class organiza- provisions to relieve the misery of tions have taken up the question of th unemployeed. Against these ene- this meeting, and have decided to mies of the working-class, the Com- come to the meeting in mags, with munist Party is making unemploy- their banner, to greet Comrade Am- ment the main issue in its election ter, who will be the main speaker campaign. Beside the fight for the at this meeting. : | Workers’ Social Insurance Bill, the A good musical program has been Party candidates demand an emer- gr iene pew coy fan ve 50 illen dollars es- sion is 25 cents. Unemployed work- ishe the city. ers will be given their tickets free Big Rally 24th. at 1967 Grand River Ave. | The Huge Campaign Rally on ——— Friday, October 24, at Broadway Arena, will be a demonstration for I Remergueny elit wil bo o rou mergency Relief. It a rous- Photographers ing welcome for the released leader . ‘of the New York unemployed dele- All workers interested in photog- gation, Comrade I. Amter. The ar- raphy or merely taking pictures are rival of Comtade Amter to the requested to become Workers Cor- Broad Street Station, at 7 p. m., will respondents for the Ohio Page of give the opportunity to hundreds of the Daily Worker. All Cleveland unemployed workers to demonstrate workers who are interested in this right in front of the City Hall for work are invited to organize into the Emergency Relief. All workers Call on Worker a Workers’ Photo Correspondence and organizations are invited to be Group that will shortly be organ- next Friday, 7 p. m., at the station ized in Cleveland. Anyone interested and to participate in the parade to should come to the Daily Worker Broadway Arena. ‘ , COMMUNIST IDEAS’ Boss Gov’t In New Ter- ror Drive INGLEWOOD, Cal. Dear Comrades: I’m taking this opportunity to let the Daily Worker know that I am one of those on the list for deporta- I am and have been out on bail since February 26 which was furnished by the LL.D. Deportation Charges. They called three more comrades for deportation charges: one is an Italian, one a German and the other a Mexican and myself Spanish. All| four cases were stopped by the LL.D. by writ of habeas corpus and we have to appear in the Federal Court on October 18. The results of which we don’t know as yet. Whatever will happen we will take our medicine as rea) revolu- tionary fighters, they may deport us but they cannot deport our | ideas of Communism, which will stay right here to destroy this form of lousy society. Leaves Children. In case they deport me I am leav- ing eleven children without support which I hope at least some of them will take my place that I am leaving vacant in this country and continue the fight. For my part, I will continue my | revolutionary activities wherever I may be until the end of my life. —John Vilarino. P.S.—This letter is written by my own son, Liberto Vilarino, as well as the other letters in Eng- lish I have sent already. I am 27 years in this country and I haven't had an opportunity to learn to write English, because of the slavery and the miserable condi- tions in this capitalist system we live under. —JI. Vv. give evidence of activity in en- deavor to ‘relieve unemployment.’ “It is therefore hardly fair to criticize his efforts on the ground of their inevitable futility.” These words should impress themselves into the brain of every worker: “Inevitable futility!” The bosses know that Hoover’s promise of relief is futile. It will not save one worker who is out of a job from starving or freezing to death this winter. It is an election maneuver. Tt is a sham, which will be followed up by the organization of the local Police forces, , judges and jails against the unemployed, to get around the demand for real relief} put forward by the Communist eee in its Unemployed Insurance Bill. Will Deepen Crisis. Worse still! The Journal of Com- merce “fears” that Hoover’s tamp- ering with the unemployment situa- tion will worsen the crisis, as did his formation of the so-called Na- tional Business Council last Novem- ber. The Journal of Commerce says that “his (Hoover’s) plans for re- ljeving unemployment have carried, and apparently still carry, pro- grams that definitely tend to make recovery more difficult.” They say he should pay a little more at- tention to cutting wages. They think Hoover is looking to much for! votes at this particular moment when he should be telling Green, Woll & Co. of the A. F. of L. how to slash wages of millions more workers, That the whole Hoover unem- ployment committee is full of liars and fakers is an admission made in the leading editorial of The New York World (Oct, 20). The pur- pose of the World is not to embar- rass the bosses in their attémpt to fool the workers, but they feel that the men Hoover put on his com- mittee are so thoroughly discredited | that they cannot perform their! proper function of hoodwinking a spoke for the International Labor | capital was upheld in the Reichstag Defense and exposed the boss policy of race separation among the | ists united with the parties of the workers. The spirit of the workers | small and big capitalsts to put over | was good. The Liberator, the! the Bruening plan. The whole crux Southern Worker, pamphlets and leaflets were widely distributed. | j.5 vote. World capitalism was not fooled in its implict confdence n the German social-democratic (socialist) | party. | It came through for them again. They Tell of Liars. The Young Plan was put over by The World says: “Two of them| the aid of the socialists. It is now (members of Hoover's “anemploy- | being carried out through for the ment committee”) secretaries La- ses with the support of the so- growingly militant working-class faced with the bitterest winter in American history. Mont and Davis, for months past| cialists. have been making themselves look| In view of the strike of 140,000} silly in the eyes of the whole coun- | German metal workers, the support try with their efforts to belittle the jof the socialists of the Bruening | amount of unemployment.” They | program has especial significence. | tell of Davis’s lying when the faked | It shows that they solidly back the | figures of his own Department of | program of wage cuts for all work- Labor showed the opposite of what ers. The strike was called only be-| lieve. They pan Mr. Lamont be-| opposition exposed the betraying cause his census bureau deliberately; tactics of the socialist trade union |faked the unemployment figures.| Jeaders. Even now, a battle is go- by a vote of 318 to 236, The social-| | ship of the revolutonary against the workers and a reritable | blood bath, paving the road for fasc- | ism. | The latest action of the Socialists | will have profound effect on the the social-democratic party. In the ‘impending struggle between ascism and Communism they are goin over more and more to the leade: workng- ers are in the Young Communist League; and, so far as available igures indicate, are 100 per cent orga d in “shock brigades.” In t just concluded second ear of the situation rested on the social-| rank and file workers still left in) 9 the Five-Year Plan the “Amo” actor surassed its estimates b 12 | er cent. | A factory meeting was attended, as well as talks with individual workers, revealed how ths was done, class party. In the present crtical The mention of the young worker economic and political situation, the who had done the best work as a socialists, to save capitalism, are) brigadier was received with cheers. forced to discard their mask and step out as an open ally of th bosses and especaily of the imperial- ist creditors of Germany. They have taken up their dirty work where they left off, when they re- fused to vote for unemployment in- surance cuts asked or by Bruening. Now they vote for these unemploy- For Foreign Travel. He, along with two others, it was reported, were to receive rewards for their endeavors; h2 to attend a technical college, the other two to , receive a bursary for foreign travel. | The “Amo” Works is not simply a place where people work; it is the | pivot of their lives, he tried to make the workers be-| cause the revolutionary trade union ™ent insurance cuts since the elec- | 2 poh ‘ The workers have three meals tions are over. Their previous step daily in the huge, welllighted res- was to fool the masses. But hund-|tayrant attached to the f. 4 3 ‘a h tory. reds of thousands of rank and file) Hore also they have ihaie panel The World wants stronger action against the demands of the unem- ployed, and feels that Hoover has made the job more difficult by his open faking. Ks It should be plain to every worker that no relief whatever will come from the bosses or Hoover’s new slimy committee. only when it is forced by the or- ganized class action of the workers. The Communist Party is leading the fgiht. The Hoover committee is out to win votes for the bosses. It is a complete alliance of the bosses, reaching from the rotten Tammany porters, up to the Wall St. bosses and Hoover, who ordered the club- bing of the Cleveland unemployed. The workers must be aroused for a more determined fight for unem- ployment insurance. Only the Com- Relief will come) grafters, and their socialist sup-| their enemies. ing on to prevent these leders from | throttling the strike to help the along. Several days before the Reichstag | vote was taken, the Wall Street| Journal devoted a special editorial | to the German socialists party, and} how much hope Wall Street pinned on the party’s action. It said they| | were the foundation of the “present | order,” capitalism, in Germany and that they could be relied upon. Wall | Street knows its friends. The Ger- man workers are rapidly learning| | On Sunday, following the socialist | party’s lickspittle service for the Program for 60,000 munist Party leads this fight. In the coming elections vote Commu- nist! circulation in tomor- row’s Daily Worker. Police Head Takes $1,000,000 Bribe to Shield Rich Murderer By ALLAN JOHNSON Part of the $63,000,000 that the police department spends every year goes for statisticians, who must prove, willy nilly, that crime is steadily decreasing. Capitalists can do almost anything with statis- ties except make them reflect the truth. Hoover has made public fig- ures which purport to show that the federal government has spent hun- dreds of millions of dollars on a construction program to “aid the jobless.” Actually the government has expended $24,000,000 for that purpose, or less than was spent in “prosperous” 1929. Similarly with the cerfsus figures, which indicate that there are less than 3,000,000 unemployed in America, although the director of the census later let the cat out of the bag by blurting out over the radio that there were really nine million jobless in the country, a few hundred thousand more than the Daily Worker figured at the time. The truth is that criminal activ- -, most of it with police approval and connivance, is increasing at a tremendous rate. The police depart- ment “reduces” crime in the follow- ing way: Murders are classified as suicides, robberies as assaults, and grand larcenies and burglaries as “investigations.” Moreover, serious crimes are not entered at all if it is at all possible.- The standing or- der is to “kill everything” unless the victims have influence or may raise a squawk. The possibilities of blackmail under such a system are limitless. For shielding the meni- ber’ of New York’s “400” who had Dot King, the Broadway show girl, killed, Commissioner Enright de- manded one million dollars and got it. Most crimes, furthermore, are not reported to or by the police. At any given moment New York’s under- world is seething with activity. Tammany is tolerant. For the greater the crime the greater the “cut” to Tammany. Just what are the possibilities, for example, that the crimes of Bill Dwyer, New York’s Al Capone, will ever be recorded? Brewery Owned by Fire Chief Recently there was a fire in the brewery in the East Twenties which supplies midtown New York with a| policemen commented wittily on the | reported is that cops are often too good deal of its beer. The plant, owned by Dwyer and a deputy com- missioner of the fire department, | has huge stills. ploded two men were killed. men, at the order of their chief, spent most of their time destroying | window in the mob’s headquarters | parking is limited to an hour, these alcohol tins to destroy evidence that would certainly fall into the hands of the dry agents when they arrived, and they jwere expected momen- tarily. . The federal agents were soon in- formed of the fire and were gloat- ing over the opportunity of getting|the three East Side private hospi-) long as they wish, The cop takes} the democratic fire chief in hot water and so helping the republi- cans in the next sham political bat- tle. For months these dry agents had been trying to raid the brewery with this purpose in mind, but were always prevented by cops and gun-| murdered. The coast guard, which creased by laws which were passed men who guarded the doors. When the agents demanded admittance to the plant they found that they were doomed to disappointment again. This time it was by the firemen,| who held them back by threatening | to decapitate them with fire axes. The brewery is running full blast today. Dwyer’s influence extends far into | the confines of city hall and police | headquarters. It was Dwyer who inaugurated the very practical method of running rum into New York on city garbage scows, there- | by the necessity of sending the seows back on the twenty mile re- turn trip without a pay load, The capitalist press reported the rum! sunning but they were too embar- rassed to mention some of the fur- ther details. Target Practice in Garage When Dwyer and Vaccareui and Deputy Street Cleaning Commis- sioner Laura landed their rum it} was immediately transported to subsidized garages in police trucks at the order of the then commis- sioner, Grover Whalen. In one of these garages, on Watt Street, the children of the neighborhood were afforded a daily thrill by watching Dwyer’s gunmen engage in target | which “proved” that crime in New | York is on the wane. When the stills ex-| ing on West 54th St. he was al- | mounted policemen in New York The! most hit by the stream of bullets, who have become wealthy men fire spread rapidly because the fire-| that Dwyer’s mob was firing at a| through a skillful handling of the! practice with .45 automatics while Another reason why crime is not marksmanship of their particular busy carrying on little private busi- cronies. nesses of ther own, which occupy a One day while a cop was stroll- | good ‘deal of their time. There are rival on the street from an open | traffic laws. In the districts where | above a night club. The cop looked American counterparts of the T'sar- at the corpse, turned his stupid eyes | ist Russian Cossacks have canvassed | toward the window and then slowly | the office buildings on their beat walked to the next corner to call | and secured a large clientele of an ambulance. If the racketeer, business men who are willing to were still alive the cop in all proba-| pay five dollars a month for the| bility would have notified one of| privilege of parking their cars as} tals which cater only to wounded) the license number, notes it in his| gunmen, | stole a truck load of liquor from! inspection of parked automobiles. Dwyer’s men. Retribution was) Graft from Fake Laws swift. Within a few days one was| The income of many cops is in- was running rum for Dwyer, was/ only to permit the police department | |in a summer resort. | him immediately and “walked” him | to the edge of the town, where they ordered by him to be on the look- out for the other and to shoot him on sight. A few weeks later, some guardsman met the second hijacker They killed flung his body into some bushes. In their death march through the streets they waxed merry and oc- casionally poked the corpse in the ribs to give the impresson to pas- rying was drunk. Police Audit Gangsters’ Books The police audit Dwyer’s books much more carefully than they do those of the department. Every night the night clubs in which Dwy- er has on interest are entered by several cops who carefully count the receipts and take a percentage .which they deliver to the captain of the precinct, after first taking a “cut” for themselves. Neither these, nor thousands of | Similar instances, are ever recorded on police blotters, and consequently when Whalen resigned at Walker's request he was able to cite liter- ally hundreds of pages of statistics ’ UNIST! sersby that the man they were car-| ‘to sell immunity to those wao want | ‘to break these laws. In this cate- gory are almost all the laws relat- | ing to the control of taxicabs. Hack | drivers are subjected to a multiplic- ity of laws that are staggering poth to the imagination and to tne cab- drivers’ thin pocketbooks. .The po- | lice maintain that these laws are necessary to keep in check the} |many thugs who are active in tne | industry. | As a matter of fact the only cab- drivers who are free fram police | supervision are these thugs, and the | large majority of underpaid, over-! worked drivers are forced to set aside a certain amount of their in- come for “protection.” “Protection,” of course, is sold to gunmen and non-gunmen alike, although all things being equal, the | gunman will pay less for the ‘same privileges. .A gunman at election time can account for a dozen op- position votes as well as some of ‘his own, and Tammany is always mindful of this aid. Nor does Tam- many make any great effort to hide these things from insiders. About| workers were already disillusioned. The actions of the socialists in off the revolutonary development of the masses and to save capitalism. Their action, however, will not in- fuse new life into decaying capiial- ism. It just gives heart to the im- perialist creditors, but it will inten- sify the class struggle in Germany and clear the road for the impending revolutionary battle. BIG MEET GREETS MARCH 6 LEADERS, Red Candidates Speed Jobless Fight (Continued from Page 1) ert Minor, who is the Communist candidate in the 20th Congressional District, Harlem, will delve into the issues of working-class voters of that district as well as the issues of the employed and unemployed work- ers in general. Comrade Sam Nessin, Communist candidate for tSate Senator in the 22nd District, Bronx, will be brought to the meeting and he will tell the workers what occurred inside the city hall last Thursday when he to- gether with Milton Stone and Rob- ert Lealess were butchered by | Mayor Walker’s thugs. Workers to March to the Garden, The factory and theatre districts surrounding Madison Square Garden| will witness today streams of marching workers leaving their shops and factories to greet the re-| ased candidates at Madison{ Square Garden. The workers in the shops and factories of the needle trades and of other trades are mobilizing to} turn out 100 per cent. Collections are being made at the various shops and factories for the Communist {book and thereafter will “overlook” }campaign and will be presented to| Two over-ambitious hijackers once| the car when he makes his hourly|the Communist Party at Madison! Square Garden. The Workers League will march in a body to the Garden. Every group of workers marching into the hall will be heartily greeted by the crowds in- side. Discipline, maintain revolu- tionary discipline! The maintained by every one inside and outside the big hall, is most im- portant for the effect of tonight’s demonstration, as well as every otker revolutionary demonstration. No walking about, no conversation: whether by rank and file worker or by members of the various com- mittees, will be tolerated. Choose your seat as you march into the hall and keep the same seat all through the demonstration. Con- duct no conversation whatsoever, aloud or in whispers, with your neighbors or with anybody else. Do not help maintain order, leave it to the various committees. Me order, leave it to the va mittees, Maintain yourselves in order! Maintain revolutionary discipline. vited several reporters to attend a murder which was to take place a few days after. The reporters came. So did the cops. two years ago some racketeers in- afterward. and their concert meetings. A Pl) Ex-Servicemens' Revolutionary discipline | / They all drank) A school (used by young workers Bruening program of finance-capital | Germany show the lengths to which in their working hours) and a sports j the social-fascists will go to head | stadium are also attached. 'ARL. ATTACKS FOREIGN BORN To End Immigration; | Suggest Registration | BOSTON, Mass., Oct.,19—The A, F. L. convention yesterday launched a blow at the foreign born workers with a resolution calling for “prac- tical prohibition of the immigration” until further orders, and with dis- cussion of measures by which the capitalist government could more easily deport workers who had ar- rived. Frank X. Martel, president of the Detroit Central Labor Union came out openly for registration of all foreign born workers, lining up with the finger printing and exiling terror plan of the most rabid labor hating employers. Martel also advocated the passage of the King anti-foreign born work- er bill now before congress, which calls for a stricter border patrol to prevent immigration over the Mex- ican line. The resolution was adopted, but whether with the proposal for re- gistration or not was not clear in the proceedings. Woll and Green will write them any way they think they ought to go, anyway. The convention decided on spend- ; ing a hige sum to move the bureaus cract delegates to Vancouver, B. C, for the convention a year from now. A suggestion by those who were talking for Salt Lake City that Van- couver was chosen only for the beer | there was repudiated by many dele- | gates who proved in their own per- son that they could get drunk in Boston or anywhere else. Green and his Whole official fa- mily were re-elected. ARI. MAKES JANITORS EOOKERS FOR COMPANY NEW YORK.—Anbdther case of L. official lackey service to the s in a letter sent to nbers by the chiefs of Lo- , Superintendents and Jani- tors Union of the Building Service Employees. The letter is written jon stationary of the Coney Island Laundry Corporation and begins: ‘Dear Brother—You are not doing | your share towards recommending | customers to the Coney Island Laune {dry Corp... . You are noe responds ling ‘o the Cause as well as you should and we are again reminding | you through this means to get be- [hind this company and give them |all the business you can... .” The janitors are thus ordered ‘o {scab on the employees whose busi- ness it is to solicit trade for the boss, and to double their own labors without increase in pay. | Complete picture of Daily Worker circula- tien in tomorrow’s Daily. ’ VOTE AGAINST THE BOSSES LYNCHING TERROR AND MASS UNEMPLOYMENT! VOTE NEGRO WORKERS! VOTE COMMUNIST! FOR FIGHT ON LYNCHING AND FOR SOCIAL INSURANCE TO EVERY JOBLESS WORKER! say

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