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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1930 Page Five Al Smith Sold Pardons While Governor; Takes $70,000 Bribe trom Capitahst By ALLAN JOHNSON ¢ Smith wants to talk about, and Kenny manufactures. Kenny paid of Smith’s attention. New York Workers Cheer Red Attacks on ‘Socialist? Fakers The Communist Party and the| League! Workers Ex-Servicemen’s held a gigantic meeting at Tenth St. and Second Ave., this wee Workers gathered by the hundreds to show their solidarity with the ENTERNATIONAL o Pi Fe The halo that capitalist news- papers have enveloped around Al Smith is woven of the same mater-| what he has done to “break their| Smith $70,000 for this privilege, | hold”’#upén the water power sites| and it was cheap at that. Kenny) in New York? How curious it is! likewise “took care” of the Fire De- that while Smith was governor that| partment by presenting it with an Prohibition a Fake Issue Communist Party Election Cam- Smith’s preoccupation with pro-| paign and to register their contempt hibition is another matter worthy of | for the rotten platform of the yel- ial that clotled Woodrow Wilson,! the great “liberal” who “saved the) world for democracy” by sending | same power trust was able to steal every important power site in the i 4 | state? Or is it really so curious, Amerie intl Me ae niente) after all, when one considers that ba ali ie! 8 5°) Smith has always been on the pay-| roll of the power trust and has re- cently introduced Governor Roose- velt to the same well-paying in- terests. Under the guise of being the “workingman’s friend,” Al Smith has done more to drive workers Smith is pictured as a cross be- tween the Horatio Alger hero who} “rises” to capitalist success upon the backs of exploited workers and} Sparticus, the worker who led an armed revolt of Roman slaves against their masters, Actually Al| deeper into the hell of capitalist Smith is an Alegr hero only in the) exploitation than his employers, J. sense that he rose from bootlblack| p, Morgan not excepted. For Mor- to bootlegger. |gan or his capitalist colleagues Smith, to put it gently, is a hypo- | would have rough going if any of critical demagogue who is paid hard them were elected overnor. Work- hard cash by capitalists to mislead | ers rightfully fear and hate million- the workingclass into believing that | aires in the seat of governing power he will lead it into the promised | and are consequently liable to fall land of booze and honey. ‘ Smith| under the spell of an All Smith, | the valued friendship of his friend had more than enough opportunity | who is hired by capitalists to carry | and colleague Al Smith, for a ca- to prove his “sympathey” for work-| out their demands while he at the| pitalist ers while he was in Alabany, where | same time appeals to the workers to as assemblyman and governor he help him “fight the capitalists. “represented” them for almost a| Smith and Thomas—Colleagues generation. that he boasts of? His labor laws,| mon interests with cillionaires are | utterly without value by design and | being recognized to some extent by | edness, his friends often point to| n his| the number of gunmen, murderers | pire State Building is not a reward | unenforced since the day they were|the Acerican workingclass, passed. His “emancipated” treat-| function as the “workingcan’s ment” of prisoners, evidenced by | friend” and the capitalists’ under- prison riot after prison riot? His | cover man is being dsplaced by Nor- construction program, designed to| man Thomas and his | ambulance, a coffee wagon and two| the return of the “workingman’s | | searchlight trucks. Fortunately for! beer” is the most arrant kind of | Smith, the searchlights were never | demagogy. His real motives in es-| | turned on him. | pousing the repeal of the 18th While Smith was in Albany a/ammendment are twofold. Firstly baseball pool which gave its players | he distracts the attention of work-| | a chance in ten million of winning | ers from the real issue, shall work- |a lonesome quarter was bringing} ers submit without fighting to the | | millions to its operators, The leader | slavery of capitalist exploitation? | |of the pool was O’Connel, demo-! and focuses it on a problem of ab-| | cratic leader of Albany. Another! solutely no importance,for the fact | member of the pool was Governor! remains that if workers want beer Al Smith, who always did profess a/ they can get it with as little diffi- liking for baseball. The complaints | culty as they dd under the saloon! of disgruntled gamblers started an’ system. | “investigation” of the pool and, DuPont Wants Dry Law Repealed. O'Connell was sent to jail for three} DuPont, gunpowder, manufac- months for refusing to answer) turer, war-monger and one of the questions that would have pointed wealthiest exploiters in America, | to his leadership of the ring. While| openly declared to a congressional | | in jail O’Connell continued to hold! committee this year that one of his firms alone would save $10,000¢! 000 in taxes if the dry law were re-| newspaper printed the pealed. Inasmuch as DuPont is one | rather astounding news that O’Con-|.of the largest owners of General} nell had nominated severay justices| Motors stock, and Raskob, Smith’s, for the Supreme Court, forgetting | backer, is another, the basis of the | The trick is as old as capitalism| to mention that O’Connell was in| comon desire of all of them for aj What are the accomplishments | itself, and now that Smith’s com-| prison at the time. | repeal of the amendment is quite As evidence of Smith’s goodheart- | clear. Smith’s connection with the Em- and robbers he pardoned in his offi-| or his good nature. He has more cial capacity as governor. These, than earned his enormous salary by pardons are certainly evidence, but | “smoothing out difficulties” be- brother | not that Smith is goodhearted. The | tween the contractor and the build- attention to workers. His plea for | low socialist party. That third party of the bosses, the socialist party, had been con- ducting a mecting on the opposite corner and had succeeded in more or less holding together a large erowd of skeptical workers until the Communist speakers set up their stand. The Communists were not speaking long before the workers left the fakers and enthusiastically crowded about the Commu: . The socialist fakers were soon left talk- ing to themselves. Large quantities of were sold. Daily Worker were avidly bought. And the socialist party, along with that pack of lies which it calls a platform, was com- pletely exposed. When the speaker asked all those who would vote Communist to show their hands | the response was great cheering and @ unanimous showing of hands! literature | last | Out On Strike! BERLIN, Oct. 28—The 140,000} metal workers out on strike are! keeping their ranks solid. Due to| the activity of the revolutionary | trade union opposition several fac- tories not involved in the strike have been pulled out. Kitchens to feed the strikers have been opened. Five more will be started tomorrow. | Dortmund police prohibited a re- volutionary hunger march of unem- ployed workers of the Rhine and Westphalia. | | Commemorate the Noy. 7 revo- | | lution with greetings in the Daily | Worker. Special Edition Nov. 7. | Workers! Into Factories with the ‘Daily’! $ Picture the “socialist” party face to the masses in the fol- lowing item from that great “socialist” organ, the N. Y, Times: - attracted a crowd of 850 persons, most of them ® “Broun . . in evening dress.” Face to the warmers. the Shops, masses of boss thugs and chair- | play with cries of “C | Negro culture,” which, t lis “ruining German culture. FAVORING NEGRO National Socialists Aid Racial Oppression STUTTGART, Oct. strating the internationa 23.—Demon- reaction- | ary role of fascism as the final weapon of the bosses against the rising revolutionary temper and rowing solidarity of the working masses, German fascists staged a ‘icious demonstration at the open- ing night of Ossyp Dymow’s “Shad- ows Over Harlem,” a play d the brutal oppression to which t Negro masses in the United Stat are subjected by the Americana imperialists. Fresh from their riotous anti- | semitic demonstrations, the national socialists (fascists) interrupted the yermany, wake up!” whistling, cat-calls and a ba rage of bad eggs and vegetables. The fascist press had incited their followers during the day by attack- ing the play as “an mple of allege The real motive behind the attack, however, lies in the hope of the German capitalists to someday re- regain their African colonies, lost to More German|GERMAN FASCISTS Soviet Press Hit Metal Workers ATTACK A PLAY False Charges ot “Dumbing” | | MOSCOW.—The “dumping” cam- paign has obviously been organized, | writes the soviet press, in order to |prepare the ground for measures jagainst the Soviet Union. The wriginator of the “dumping” incite- ment is the French government which openly placed itself at the led agrarian block at the last se mn of the League of Nations, The campaign was particularly strong in France and in those coun- ties which took part in the “agrar- ian” conference in Warsaw. The soviet press accuses the french government of dumping in and declares that its grant of mium of from four to five sterling per ton of wheat for export represents dumping, and that the sale of ench grain in Great Britain at a ing the quarter less th the French price represents a 1 example of dumping. Poland’s agrarian dumping is also well nown. Poland has expended s much as 40 million Zloty in one year in support of its grain export trade, The “dumping” incitement against the Soviet Union is nothing but a cover for pol 1 aims and not a result of the foreign trade of . the Soviet Union. fill the pockets of Tammany con-| “socialists.” Charles Tuttle, a re-| great number of pardons is due|ing workers and will be useful tractors? | actionary and stupid never uttered | to Smith’s practise of selling them’ Smith Bought by New York Central. a truer word than when he declared, | to anyone who was wealthy enough | Or is it his deep-felt sympathy with the New York Central Rail- road while he was in the assembly ? | How touching it must have been to see the young Al ‘Smith, just mak- | ing a bid for recognition in a cruel and thankless world, going out of his way to help Mastick, the poor| young lobbyist for the New York Central who himself was just start; | ing on a prosperous career? And how delightful it must have been to Murphy, one of Tammany’s greatest grafters, to see his young pupil lead the fight to impeach Gov- ernor Sulzer, who Tammany wanted | to “break” because the governor balked at one or two outrageous | demands. | Or it is the power trust that during the presidential campaign,! to pay the high price demanded. that Al Smith was a “socialist.” | The price varied with the crime, and | Smith undoubtedly is, in the same! gunmen were forced to pay as much sense that TThTocas is—both are| as $100,000 each for their freedom. “friends” of the worker, but that} And the receipts were made out by | doesn’t prevent either froc being, Smith’s sons, two extremely pros-| the servant of capitalits. | perous young lawyers who were in again when he “convinces” the sub- way lines to build an extension to the basement of the gigantic struc- ture. Smith’s facility as a strike- breaker has been evidenced more than once, particularly in the pas- sing of the infamous paragraph 600 which makes violation a picketing injunction a criminal offense. Worker. Join the 60,000 drive! motion. Readers! Daily at 1 cent, sell it for 3. one in a dress suit! When Soviet ships met Bri raising the Red flag. that will come in handy later. _ Smash the social fascist mobilization of silk hats and diamond stick-pins with a mass circulation for the Daily fellow robber imperiali as a re- sult of Germany’s refeat in the CHINA RED ARMY Set your organization in Not only did Smith knuckle to| the habit of representing criminals capitalise but he personally was in-| volved in the crookedest schemes | | that have been hatched in the cor- ridors of Tammany Hall. who were willing to pay for their/a sneaking fear that workers will} release from prison sentences. Owney (the Killer Madden, a con- victed murderer and a close friend One of Scith’s best friends, Wil-| of Cardinal Hayes, was thus able to liac F. Kenny, a power in Tammany | own the Columbian Steel Tank Co.,} which profits to the extent of mil- lions yearly because the Fire De- partment has drawn up specifica-| Patrick’s Cathedral. buy a parole, and today is one of the most prosperous gunmen in New York, with powerful friends in Tammany Hall as well as in St. And the same tions for gasoline trucks which can! brewery that occupies so much of only be fulfilled by the trucks which | Madden’s time also receives some! near the City Hall. wants the workers to believe this is just Communist propaganda. An SWISS Y.CL. HOLDS Perhaps it is because Smith has discover his long anti-labor record that he asked New York City to provide him with a bodyguard. The| police department aquesced readily. And quite in character with the man he is guarding, the police | seargent assigned to Smith, owns one of the most profitable speak- changing figures. easies in New York, located directly| | '*tins- behind the Supreme Court building ) Read this: su pay my fertilizer Commemorate the Noy. 7 revolution. Work up your own routes. Send greetings. Read the secret of Garvey’s Wall St. Jowls and beef- trust bay window. Series starts Oct. 28. 'HIRTEEN THOUSAND new readers in 5 months for the Daily Worker shows this is the time to build the Daily to mass pro- “Am starved out—at my row’s end! Buy the On to 60,000 readers and not ) hn’ ships in Phaleron Bay the growing strength of the U. S. S. R. was revealed in the British It’s the sort of practice for British seamen Immediate mobilization for 60,000 circulation drive. Tables Wednesday. Every bit of activity will show in Letters from all over the U. S. prove it. Can’t world war. German capitalism is, therefore, opposed to enlightening the German ma: nature of imperia sm. The fascists, however, did have it all their own w Hun- dreds of militant workers defended ever weapons came to hand. The |management, encouraged by this support, has announced that it will continue the play. This fascist manifestation of hat- red against the Negro masses is in marked contrast to the action of the Soviet Union a few months ago in expelling two white Americans guilty of attacking a Negro worker. It should give additional signifi- cance in the eyes of the Negro s on the vicious not the play with their fists and what- N - IN KIANGS! ADVANCES SHANGHAI (LP.S.).—The ad- vance of the revolutionary troops in ‘oceeding rapidly, The iang to the south west of hang has been occupied, the government troops offering but little resistance. The revolutionary {troops have now all the important | strategic points to the south and {aierth east of Nanchang and the cap- Jital of the province is thus threat- jened. The government press is very |anxious about the fate of Nanchang | because there is only a dviision sta- ioned there, whilst at least two di- sions would be necessary to hold winter time coming. Herewith $1. Please rush me the Daily Worker! masses to the world struggle be- tween capitalism and Communism, | which in Germany is rapidly devel-| bill. No job to go to and Be quick! editorial in the liberal New Free- man on the event says: (Oct. 29). “Testimony to the brutality of the THOMAS LIES ON. NESSIN SLUGGINGS wae on Rees ie a ° ' ot b ded as mere Com- Covers’ Up.His Acts'to| suis pomgenie? Fool Workers Saw Blow After Blow. : ~ Thomas watched the whole pro- (Continued from Page 1) ceedings; saw blow after blow six were thrown out of the room, 7TH NAT'L CONGRESS: BASLE (IPS)—The 7th congress of the Young Communist League of Switzerland took place in Basle on the 11th and 12th October. The con- gress dealt severely with left-wing sectarianism as the chief hindrance for the mass work of the League, but concentrated its fire chiefly of Mayor Murphy (Continued from Page 1) | Ave., to the City Hall, behind the 10,000 DETROIT || JOBLESS MEET, Expose Fake Promises. Aer gs tarved out, vorkers and poor farmers are reedy for the Daily Worker. “Stir Up Lots of Hell.” “Stir up lots of hell! the workers to subscribe for the Daily Worker and Vote Red. Communist this time. just like me around this place. South Planter, Round Mountain, Ala. Am asking all Am voting Lots of them IM.B., but he has $1 for the Daily. The struck, and his silent approval after they had been severely and | which was proclaimed to the whole world by the Daily Worker will not | Thomas, should collaborate with| ng scribblers if he wants his | be wiped out by the oily editorials | League and the Party. or speeches which this contemptible | against the right wing opportunist | danger as the chief danger for the! 26 youth delegates were present faker is now manufacturing. committee. At the City Hall, an- other mass meeting was held. The committee went in to see Mayor Murphy to present the demands, and WORKMEN’S SICK AND DEATH BENEFIT FUND oping to its highest stage, Vote Communist! WINTER IN THE SOVIET UNION! The Theatres The Russian Landscape in Full Glory | | in Full Swing OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA — ions to stand up. at the congress and the Party was also represented. A representative of the Central Committee of the Swiss Communi arty greeted the to expose his fake promises. The crowd of jobless workers, in-' ding many women and Negro ORGANIZED 1881—INCORPORATED 1809 Main Office: 714-716 Seneca Ave. Ridgewood Sta., Brooklyn, N. Y |) Over 61,000 Members in 348 Branches Every capitalist newspaper re-| This quotation from the Telegram porter coverin gthe demonstration |is typical of what all the capitalist admitted that the slugging began/papers said: “Sam Nessin, whose Special Winter Prices: in the Board of Estimates chambers, | and continued and lasted until the delegation was shoved into the base- | ment of the city hall. | Why Didn't He Speak. I sat right next to Thomas. He harangue against the Mayor started rioting in the Board of Estimate Chamber itself, was still in Bellevue | Hospital today, his jaw probably fractured, etc.” In other words the slugging took ed to the congress on the fifth con- gress of the Party. A representa- tive of the Central Committee of the League then delivered his report and | ongress in the Italian language. A |g half in the cold for the report of second Party representative report- the committee visiting Mayor Mur- bless, waited for over an hour and Death Benefit: $4,399,910.97 phy. The committee reported the re- fusal of Murphy to consiler the de- Reserves on December 31, 1929: $3,158,239.43 Benefits paid since its existence: Sic. Benefit: $10,776,019.01 Total: $15,176,529.98 Workers! Protect Your Families! $260 up | ($260 return trip includes fi at the expense of the World Tourists) arrived late. He came to speak on|place “in the Board of Estimate “gnemployment.” Why didn’t “he | Chamber itself.” Thomas moves it| mands “because it made the bosses | sharply criticized the previous n It was unanimously decided | wrong policy of the party towards | Pay.” Death weuelt accoruing to tue ag In Case of Sickness, Accident or Death! © at the (ime of initiaation in one or Sailing: Nov. 12, S. S. ACUITANIA speak? He would have had to say something about the beatings he saw: He thought it best to keep his mouth shut. While Nessin was speaking and Thomas was staring at him intently. On Thomas’s left, about two feet away, sat Stone, Lealess, Maude White and Allen, the remaining members of the delega- tion. When Walker gave the signal, Nessin was grabbed and_ struck. Thomas was looking right at him. Everybody’s eyes were fixed on Nessin. Then, as the Herald Trib- une reporter says (Herald Tribune, Oct. 17): “There was the sound of a blow and a falling body at the rear of the room, then general turmoil. That is, right next to where ‘Thomas and I sat, a gang of dicks rushed upon Stone, Lealess, Allen and Maude White. Everybody stood up. Thomas was right by my side. I stood right with him all the time. ‘The “sound of a blow and a falling body” took place six inches from where Thomas sat, and he hasn’t yet made the excuse that he is blind, or that political astigmatism affec- ted his vision. Stone went down with a bang. He was pulled down from his seat and stamped on. Thomas looked on and smiled! The Daily Worker never said he laughed. There is a difference. It was a grin smile, quite in spirit with his expression that “any presiding officer would have had to have him silenced.” ‘Thomas recognizes a good job when he sees it, Stone and Lealess had to be picked off the floor, in front of Thomas and literally thrown out into the hall. There followed crie: Thomas doesn’t claim he is deaf, Maude White (as every capitalist paper has recorded) yelled out: “They are murdering us!” Thomas to move it out of his sight. Thomas is Lying. The Daily Worker story exposing | hi ssilent approval of the whole proceedings has caused Thomas much worry. He dwells on it fre- quently in his speeches. At a banquet for ex-Judge Panken, so- cialist evictor of workers, Thomas said: “I did not know there was any beatings going on.” Trying to Fool the Workers. Thomas cannot justify his actions before the working-class so he re- sorts to the Hoover trick of delib- erate lying. What happened is very clear now to every worker. The Unemployed Council, supported by 15,000 unemployed workers, ap- peared at city hall to demand im- mediate relief. It had a definite working-class program. Nessin ex- posed Walker and his bunch of grafters to their face. Broun an- other socialist has already defended Walker. Now Thomas tries to cover his dirty tracks. He thought he was unobserved. When he saw the report in the Daily Worker he became dismayed. He was aided by the capitalist press. Not a single one of them reported Thomas’s pres- ence. They did all they could to help him. He admitted he was there only after the Daily Worker eposure. Thomas’s actions is only one step away from the actio nof Scheideman and Noske, when these socialists murdered Liebknecht Luxembourg, and thousands of other of the best proletarian leaders. It is similar to the action of the socialist police chief Zoergibel, and his bloody May Day attack in Berlin. It is in per- fect harmony with the wholesale jailings of unemployed leaders by the socialists of Milwaukee. This is an example of social-fas- cism in action. The socialists try to | succeeded in carrying out a rally re- the youth and.the lack of effettive support given to the practical work of the League. The discussion was very thorough and 18 speakers took part. It was frankly recognized in the discussion that the League had not! volutionary youth policy and that! in consequence it was not yet the| leader of the Swiss working class youth. The necessary political and) organizational measures to alter! this state of affairs were taken by | the congress. It was decided to organize a coun- ter-demonstration to the meet of the social-fascist youth organization in Schaffhausen. A new Central Com- mittee was elected consisting almost exclusively of young workers from the factories, appear before the workers as being in favor of “unemployment insur- ance.” When representatives of thousands of unemployed appear before a capitalist city government and militantly demand immediate unemployment relief, exposing the grafting, Norman Thomas, in line with the socialist party program comes out in defense of the capital- ist mayor and condones the slug- gings of the unemployed workers’ representatives. Give Your Answer! Eveyr worker should answer Thomas and the whole social-fascist crew by exposing their rotten deeds, by voting Communist, and by fight- ing behind the banner of the Com- munist Party whose fire is directed not only against the capitalists and their syste mof misery, but against their best supporters as well, the | Council which meets on Monday. All’ that the unemployed council com-!} both classes. mittee would again present the de- | mands of the jobless at the City | at the age of 44. Death Benefit according to age $20 to $200. Sick Benefit paid from RS fer dare $15, respectively, per week, another forty weks. unemployed are urged to appear be-| fore the City Council chambers at/ 11 a. m. on Monday to back up the} demands adopted by the 10,000 job- | less at Grand Circus Park. These! demands are: S for another forty weeks. For further information apply Secretary, or to the Financial Secretaries NEVIN BUS LINES 111W. 31st (Bet. 6 & 7 Avs.) Tel. Chickering 1600 TLADELPHTA HOURLY EXPRESS SERVICE $2.00 One Way $3.75 Round Trip Chicago ..... oe $20.50 Los Angeles ...... 55.50 Pittsburgh ....... 9.50 Washington . 5.50 Baltimore . 4.50 Cleveland .. 12.50 Boston . 4.00 Detroit .. 15.50 St. Louis - + 22.50 Lowest Rates Everywhere Return Trips at Greatly Reduced Rates “MAINE TO CALIFORNIA” 1. Immediate relief for the un- employed workers of $20 per week, and $5 for each dependent. 2. No, evictionas. 3. Free gas, light andj heat. 4. Free fare for the unem- ployed seeking work. 5. Free lunches and fare for the school chil- dren. 6. Abolition of the vagrancy laws, and the release of all workers | sentenced on vagrancy charges on| order of Mayor Murphy. 7. Free medical service. 8. The city to take) over all vacant houses and hotel rooms for the use of unemployed workers, 9. All jobs secured by the city employment agency must pay a minimum of $30 a week, and} not less than the wages paid to the last worker employed. 10, Exemp- tion of taxes and mortgage pay- ments on the homes of unemployed workers, The unemployed voted unanimous- ly to fight for the passage of the Unemployment Insurance Bill. The announcement of the tremen- dous meeting scheduled to greet I. Amter, one of the released leaders of the New York March 6th dem- onstration, was made, Amter is to speak in Detroit on Oct. 28, Tues- day, at the Armory. “For All Kinds of Insurance’ (CARL BRODSKY Yelephone: Murray 11) S55¢ Unpublished secrets of the strange cruise of the Booker T. socialists. poems ce cate Sear 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York CLASS A: 40 cents per month—Death Benefit $3: death up to the age of 18, the first day of filing the doctor's certificate, for the first forty weeks, half of the REbntE ‘ht the Branches, Plan to bring your friends for luncheon or evening dinner to this beauti- at the age of 16 to $175 CLASS B: 50 cents per month—Death Benefit $550 to $230, Parents may insure their children in -ase of Sick Benfts for women: $9 per week for the first forty weeks: $4.50 each at the Main Office, William Spuhr, National ful dining room. 4 West 28th Street Dee. 6, S. ive days in the Soviet Union S. 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Administered by the Workers and Jobless! Vote Communist .~ Against the Lynch Terror—Against the Injunctions. & bile.