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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1931 German Reichstag Ferces Trial ARL. Misleaders |N.Y. Red Builders Order 2,105|SOVIET VOTING ‘Radek Praises Romain Rolland for of Deputies; Fascists Walk Out; Support Thompson, at Jamboree in New Quarters;| SHOWS GROWING | Agreeing to Civil War in Event of Socialists Support Bruening Gov't in Chicago Election Many NewClubs Being Formed MASS SUPPORT —_Imperialist War; Shows His Faults A total of 2,105 papers were or- ERIE, PE a | | Communist Deputies Expose Fascist Maneuvy- “Big Bill” Gearing Up dered tor Monday at the N. Y. Red| WAKING UP |StreamInto Communist Should Summon Sufficient Determination to ¢ a Cae : | oa nals uilders’ News Club Jamboree he! nor Nieminski, section Daily | 2+" Q. a f : Xe ers. and Pron os _ Limitation of | His Machine lin the new eadaliatters 102 W. 14th | Worker representative, jearttad Par ty Speak to Masses Instead of Litera ry C ircle j f iti | RIS oy | St. last Sunday. Last week's sales} “Please send 50 copies daily. We ie 4 : ——$<$ (Cable By Inprecorr.) _ that the Reichstag was the executive | campaign workers and his Heuten-|i"& @bout 1,000 papers a day. With | ployed Council that have promised (44° yeningrad, ete, show clearly | I BERLIN, Feb. 11.~-The Reichstag ierman parliament) yesterday at its sessions decided to withdraw the im- munity of many deputies. It voted this measure without examining the individual circumstances of each case. The Communist deputies protested energetically. ‘The socialists voted solidly to withdraw immunity At the beginning of today’s session the fascist deputy, Stoeher, read a declaration on behalf of the fascist fraction in the Reichstag announcing the latter's refusal to participate fur- ther in the Reichstag’s proceedings. He pointed out that despite the resvlt | of the last elections. the minority gov- ernment, formed in violation of the constitution, excluded fascists. Since yesterday's limitation of parliamen- tary rights of the opposition the Relchstag’s decisions, he said, are un- constitutional. He went on to state organ of the Young Plan. The na-| tionalist fraction made similar dec- | larations and left the Reichstag with the fascists. | The Communist deputy, Stoecker, made a declaration for the Commu- nist fraction announcing, despite the brutal limitation of the rights of the opposition, the Communists were re- maining in parliament to continue the struggle in behalf of the interests of the proletariat. He characterized | the action of the fascists and nation- elists as a comedy, viewing the: fact | that both voted down the Commu- nist proposal recently that the Young Plan payments immediately be stopped. Their action foreshadowed the unity of the fascists and bour- geoisie against the Comniunists. He | declared that the fascist action was intended to exert pressure on Brue- | ning to secure admission of the fas- | cists into the government. | “Mayor Eats My Food”, Says Negro; Ta- | “Big Bully” coma, Benton Have First Demonstrations (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Day, Feb, 25, Rie plans are also being made to advertise the meeting to be addressed by William Z. Foster, Feb. 24, at Car- penters’ Hall at 8 p. m.* Hit we Defy Oakland Police. OAKLAND, Cal. (By Mail).—Defy- ing the threats of Chief of Police Drew and the mobilization of all the police resérvés in the city, the hun- ger march led here Feb. 10 by the Council of the Unemployed got one block on its way to the city hall be- fore it was dispersed. When members of the Unemployed Council demanded a permit of Drew two days before the march, he said: "We have 1,400 men ready to get pe upon phone call, and anyone nat starts a demonstration will be @rry he was ever born.” Police held the streets for blocks around Ninth and Franklin, the place set for assembling the march. No one could get near that corner. The state employment agency at ‘Tenth and Franklin was used as an armory for the city police. ‘The parade formed at Tenth and Broadway, and Ed Tomlinson got up to speak. The crowd and the police both gathered rapidly, but the po- lice held back their attack to catch those with banners. The placard carriers, however, formed some dis- tanee away and marched to the cor- ner. The parade got part way, and was attacked. One motorcycle cop was pitched off his machine. Some oth- ers got bruises, Five workers were injured by police clubs badly enough to get treatment at the hospital. Some of the paraders got to the city hall, where police attacked them. . First Time In Benton. BENTON, Til. (By Mail).—About 300 out of the 2,000 unemployed here cemonstrated on Feb. 10. It was Benton's first hunger march. The jobless paraded around among the residences of the rich, giving them the seare of their lives, and then back to the miners’ hall, where they held! a meeting. The mayor said: “Well, Tl) see what I can do.” The jobless told him he had better look damned good, because the “hungry wolves” might turn into tigers, aand the cage is too small. Benton’s first hunger march in his- tory, and the next is Feb. 25. * 8 « Thousand In Rockford. ROCKFORD, Ul, Feb, 13,—A thou- sand demonstrated for unemploy- ment insurance here on Feb. 10. They were addressed by Louise Mor- rison for the Trade Union Unity League and by Carlquist for the Ccmmunist Party. . . 300 In Chicago Heights. CHICAGO HEIGHTS, Ml, Feb. 13. ~-An indoor meeting of over 300 he: Feb, 10 was addressed by Bill Ma- ‘chewson for the T. U. U. L. and by Williams for the Communist Party. Clark was chairman, . ¢ 6 200 In Moline. MOLINE, Ml. Feb. 13—~An indoor .meeting here Feb. 10 had as speaker Joe Dallett of the T. U. U. L. bcaaes: 3 . . ° CHICAGO, Ill. (By Mail). —Those n the Chicago demonstration Feb. © filled the street cars and rode rome, refusing to pay fares. Eight vere hoe ve fr” = Ohio, Pa., Towns. AKRON, Ohio (By Maii).--On Feb, court house); New Castle, Pa. (1,000 | at mass meetings after the hunger} march); Warren, 300; Erie, 700. Sean Sibi. “Mr. Hunger.” ARNOLD, Pa. (By Mail).—Two} hundred and fifty took part in the| | unemployed mass meeting here in support of the Workers’ Unemploy- | ment Insurance Bill, Feb. 10. | Mr. Hunger, the honorable burgess of Arnold, is terribly afraid of Com- munists. There are 2,000 unemployed | cut of a total population of 10,000 here. The others get two or three| days a week work in plants of the| U.S. Aluminum and American Win- | dow Glass. These must give one day’s pay a month to the Salvation Army or lose their jobs. Hunger told the committee he would be present to see that no Com- | munists spoke, and the police chief promised to come down and try out some new tear gas bombs, but neither showed up. The meeting was very militant. Unfortunately, it was not used enough to build the Unemployed Council and the Trade Union Unity League. Delegates Arrested. NEW YORK.—The National Cam- paign Committee for Unemployment Insurance has learned that one Southern delegate to the National Conference in Washington was ar- rested in Alabama and one in Chat- tanooga. Two more, beating their way by freight, did not arrive and may be in some Southern jail. (WRC NEW HAVEN, Conn., Feb. 12.— Tuesday morning, when 100 men working for the city were told there was no-tmore work for them, they marched all the way from Fair Haven Heights, a suburb, to the Mayor's office, and demanded the return of their jobs. Cowed by their anger and desperation, Mayor Tully was forced to order that they be given their jobs back. The ntws- papers carried sensational headlines, “Angry Jobless Storm City Hall.” A similar occurance took place in Hartford last week, when 300 work- ers discharged by the city marched to the Governor’s office and the Mayor's office, and forced the return of their jobs, ‘These spontaneous demonstraitons are a direct result of the campaign conducted by the Unemployed Coun- secure these books. cil of the Trade Union Unity League. Endorse C. P. CHICAGO, Ill.—In one of the most enthusiastic conferences ever held here, 242 delegates representing 131 | Mass organizations endorsed the elec- tion program of the Communist Party, The meeting was held at, the Peoples Auditorium, 2457 W. Chicago Ave. on Sunday, Feb. 8. Among the organizations repree sented were the Unemployed Coun- cis, five Vote Communist Clubs or- ganized within the last five weeks of the Aldeymanic campaign. Industrial resented. The conference enthusiastically seated the ten delegates from the John Brown Club which {s the 14th ward republican club, This was an expression of the fact that the Ne- Communist Party, He pointed out that the increased our petitions, intimidating our Alder- manic candidates must be answered by & mobilization of the workers of Chicago in a struggle against the \general political and organizational growing fascism. He pointed out that. le ruling off of 9 out of 14 alder- candidates must be answered ants in the A. F, of L! unions. Ac- cording to the “Herald and Exam- iner.” he called in his campaign wot s, and, instead of cheering them up, he bawled out his ward leaders as “a bunch of lazies,” tell- ing them that unless they stepped | on the gas, they will not be consid- ered at all “when the time comes to distribute patronage. By record will these leaders be judged. It will be very casy to determine who my, friends are when it is over.” | After the storm of self-criticism | Thompson threw a bouquet to the A. F. of L., or, rather, to some of the misleaders. He told his lieutenants that the A, F. of L./ is doing better than ever before. The | Hod Carriers’ Union, for instance, | instructed its 10,000 members to can- | yass their precincts for mayor, and act as watchers, and to secure tens) of thousands of pledge cards. In fact, Mr. William J. Balmer, campaign manager, boasted “we are getting the strongest labor support ever given a candidate for office anywhere.” ‘This | statement, together with the support. of Nelson, Fitzpatrick and other fak-.| ers of the A. F, of L., exposes the | leadership of the Chicago labor) movement as the worst fascist trait- ors—by selling out the workers to In- sull, Thompson, Capone interests. All the members of the A. F. of L. must raise this on the floor of their union meetings and protest against this rank betrayal and endorse the only workers’ candidates—the candi- dates of the Communist Party. SUBSCRIBE FOR WORKING WOMAN free Books With Re- newals and Subs ‘The good response of the districts | JOBLESS DEMANDS shows how easy it is to get subscrib- | ers for the “Working Woman.” At the present moment we have} two thousand subscribers, and print 12,000 papers each month. We must | increase the number of subscribers to five thousand. Our paper has had | a steady increase in circulation, which shows that we need only to approach women workers in the shops, factor- ies, on the farms, housewives, in order to reach our goal of 5,000. i Starting January 1st and culmin- ating March 8th—International Wo- men’s Day—we will give free books for subscriptions and renewals to the Working Woman. We are sending you advance notice so that you can By special arrangement with the International Publishers Company, subscriptions for one year for the Working Woman and any of the $1.50 books that are listed below, will be given to the subscribers for the total amount of $1.50 or one year’s subscription and any of the one dollar books can both be gotten for the total amount of one dollar. ‘We can also give the following $1.50 books free with ten subscriptions or renewals: Memories of Lenin, by N. Krups- kaya; One Hundred and Twenty Million, by Michael Gold; Cement, By Feodor Gladkov; Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, by Ryazanov. We can give the following one dol- lay book with 5 subscription or re- newals: | their chief concern being the activity | to sell the Daily in the streets and from house-to-house.” JAMEST'N STARTS OFF WITH A BANG Please send the Unemployed Council 100 copies of the Daily Worker each day until further no- tice,” writes B. T. Robinson, “and please send them at once.” How about a Red Builders’ News Club in Jamestown? over 100 attending, the meeting was one of the most enthusiastic and pro- ductive since the inception of the Club over three months ago. Many new unemployed workers were drawn into the club and as- sistance in selling the Daily Worker was promised ther by volunteers. | Reports from Stokes and Turner, two | members now serving 6 months pend- ing appeal for selling the “Daily,” show that both are in good spirits, of the Red Builders. John Ryan,| SOUTH BEND himself beaten by the police, visited| ON THE JOB Stokes and will visit Turner as well.! rom R, ‘T, we received an order ‘The Club is now concentrating on | increasing its membership, inten- sitying methods of selling the Daily, canvassing from house-to-house and organizing a defense group to resist police attacks upon the Red Builders. The Club will hold a banquet in two weeks to celebrate the opening of its new headquar- ters. MY Boss any ne? S Ay epics " PITTSBURGH, PA., PROVES METAL Life and Death of Sacco & Van- zetti, By Eugene Lyons. ’ Subscribe to the Working Woman! 131 Chicago Workers Bodies Election Drive Communist Clubs in each ward, to collect 25,000 signatures for mayor and put up a struggle for the right ballot, A presidium of three were elected. Comrade Wangerin, who is the Com- munist Party candidate for mayor was chairman, Wella Clinton, @ Ne- Gro woman worker, against whom especially the terror wes directed and | of the Communist Party to be on the | aldermanic candidate in ward 35, sec- retary, Then resolutions and cred- entials committees were elected and Comrades Godos the Agitprop of the District made the report. The conference adopted a motion to greet and support all the class war prisoners. A motion was also adopted to participate and support the International Unemployment Day on Feb, 25, and the demonstration on Feb. 10. A resolution of protest against the ruling off the ballot of 9 of the 14 Communist aldermanic candidates was carried as well as a resolution. A committee of 7 was| elected to go to the board of election commissioners to protest the ruling off of ow candidates also to go to the chief of police, Alcock, to protest against the mass terror. A large city election campaign committee of 26 was electted and with the singing of the Ini “We are making arrangements for mass sale of the Daily Worker in working-class neighborhoods because this will be the only way we will | break through the police terror against the sale of the Daily on the streets of Pittsburgh,” writes J. M., Daily Worker representative. “We have now witnessed the third time where comrades were arrested for the sale of the Daily Worker.” J. M. orders 100 copies for the | to meet here, but we will talk to the striking miners of Edna No. 2 Mine | workers anyhow through our Daily and 15 copies daily to the South Side Unit, “the beginning of a car- tier route in South Side, Pitts- burgh.” That's the stuff, Pitts- burgh! Live up to your traditions! TO ONLY “REFER” (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) jobless workers starve or die? Senator Hamilton F. Kean an- swered: “Dear Mr. Wagenknecht, I have your letter of the 7th relative to the payment of Adjusted Compen- sation Certificates. I am very glad to have an expression of opinion from you regarding this matter.” Just that and nothing more. And Representative McCormack of Massachusetts answered: “Dear Sir, I desire to acknowledge the receipt of your recent letter and you may rest assured that its contents will re- ceive my consideration.” Just that, and nothing more. Sent Statement, Too. On Feb, 9 the full statement the delegation intended to make to con- gress, together with its proposals for unemployment insurance, was mailed to every senator and representative. None of them answered. On Feb. 10, the delegation went to the capitol building and was refused opportunity even to see Speaker Longworth, to say nothing of being hustled by throngs of detectives and police, and menaced by machine guns, pistols, clubs and poison gas. But they left the copy of the Work- ers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill, and their statement to congress. On the same day, Speaker Long- worth answered by mail to Alfred Wagenknecht, chairman of the dele- gation, ‘This is what Longworth’s letter said: “My Dear Sir: I have for ac- knowledgement the petition you left in my office this morning pro- posing a workers’ unemployment insurance bill, It shall be prop- erly referred. Very truly yours (signed) Nicholas Longwarth.” Nothing more, “How does he mean ‘referred?’” asked Wagenknecht. “Referred to the waste basket?” It is apparent that congress has no intention of saving the lives of any of the starving millions. It wants all that money to kill them with in the war towards which the ruling | class of the United States is driving with full speed. The jobless demonstrated all over the country on Feb. 10 for their in- surance bill. Now on Feb. 25, they will be out in an international dem- onstration, every city of the capital- MELROSE D. AIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine et Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD. Bronx (near 174th St. Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—0149 A NEIGHBORLY PLACE TO EAT Linel Cafeteria tre Food—100 per cent Frigidair: Cyotr * Yencheonette and Soda Fountain 830 BROADWAY Near 12th Street Worker.” CHICAGO CLUB SPEEDS | AHEAD WITH 500 DAILY A few days ago Thos. Lambrau, secretary of the Chicago Red Build- ers’ News Club, increased the order from 300 to 400. Here's the latest: “Please change our amount of | papers, as we are going very good. From now on send 500 copies every day. We had lately an increase in our membership from 9 to 14.” AKRON NEWS CLUB |TO PATCH CUT “Cut our order for Akron to 75 cop- ies,” writes G. C. “We will try to raise the amounts a little later through the organization of a Red Builders’ News Club.” MILWAUKEE, WISC., STARTS NEWS CLUB Neil O'B, section Daily Worker representative, writes: “Please send bundle order of 5 Daily Workers every day. We are planning on building 2 Red Build- ers’ Club in the immediate future.” MT. VERNON, WASH. ORDERS BUNDLE ‘The Mt. Vernon unit of the Party, covering 2 whole county, cannot hold but six or seven meetings per year, A. Y., unit organizer, writes: “The branch has done practically very little to support the Daily Worker in the present drive. We have therefore decided to order a bundle of 10 Daily Workers per day as a be- ginning and we promise to increase the size of the bundle as quickly as possible.” ALBANY SHOWS MORE ACTION “Please send 150 copies each day to the Red Builders’ News Club,” writes M. Pell, who started the ball rolling only a month ago. “With co-operation from your end, the Red Builders will increase up to 500 per day in the near futare.” You'll get plenty of co-operation, Albany! STOCKTON, CALIF., RAISES BUNDLE From W. F. Roberts: “In Stockton we have only been re- like for you to send 75. Kindly in- crease the order, please.” 7 Eyes! Scientific Examinetion of eye glasseo—Carefully adjusted expert optometrists—Reason- able prices. 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Fall Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL FRICES .. for Organizations - ceiving 50 Daily Workers. We would masses- has jand that they are enthusiastic for |the carrying out of the Five-Year | Plan in four years under the leader- ship of the Communist Party. | year’s poll was large, but this year's | poll will be still larger. A feature | of the elections is the broad stream | of new members into the Communist |Party. The best members of the shock groups are being elected into the soviets everywhere. These men have already proved their capacities |in the factories and understand the |needs of soviet production. portunism, The foreign-born workers at pres- ent in the Soviet Union have taken an active part in the soviet elections. As workers they have, of course, both the active and passive franchise. The American colony at the Stalingrad tractor works held its own @lections. Cook, the chairman of the colony, read the most important provisions of the Soviet constitution to the ac- sembled workers. The American workers Raskin and Sheriff were el- ected members of the Town Soviet, and the American worker Sarkis was elected a substitute member, The American workers Hopkins, Hany and Jackson were elected members of the district Soviet. The American workers who were elected declared that they were determined to give of their best and work in co-opera- tion with their Russian fellow work- ers to increase production and carry out the Five Year Plan in four years. In particular they promised to work for the abolition of all hindrances of a bureaucratic nature. Their ideal would be to work for the production of the best tractors in the world, and for the training of highly-skilled Russian workers. GERMAN JOBLESS BERLIN, Feb. 12.—The officially registered employed in Germany on January 31st, reached the highest figure ever recorded in this country. There were 4,894,000 out of work, an increase of 129,000 since January 15. ‘The actual number out of work, of course, is much greater than this and is probably closer to 6,000,000. This is a tremendous figure for Ger- many, and skows the depths the economic crisis has reached there, Phone: LEHIGH 6383 {nternational Barber ‘M, W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 108rd & 104th Sta Ladies Robe Our Sperialty Private Besuty Parler Vegetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year round 4 WEST 28TH STREET 37 WEST 32ND STREET 225 WEST 36TH STREET NEVIN BUS LINES 111W. 3ist (Bet. 6 & 7 Avs.) ‘Tel. 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He writes:| presence in the soviets ensures that | “We will form a Builders’ Club here | a determined struggle will be con= | storm of lies and columny and late | soon, ‘The police do not give us right | ducted against bureaucracy and op-| sg die a ela tadek congratulates Romain Rolland on the latter’s 65th bir day: The article contains the following: The declaration of the French author in his latest great article that the best answer to the War is the answer given by Lenin in 1917, i. c., the insurrection of the European armies against the war-mongers and fraternization between the sol- diers of the various arm does him great honor. It is not sy task at the age of 65 to throw overboard the old prin- ciples of non-violence and recognize that Lenin's great slogan for the transformation of the im-« — perialist war into a civil war is cor- | co r their ideas. rect. One must be a courageous man and @ courageous thinker to express such an idea at, a moment when ir perialist France is arming for The answer to Romain Rollani courageous declaration will be a change in Romain Ro We wish Ro- will summon tion to speak the’ people, up suffi | to the instead of people people in these perhaps still harder measures. We know very well that Romain Rolland does not accept. ev which logically follows from t ¥ ceptance of Lenin’s slogan, but we warmly welcome Rolland’s declara- tion and regard it as a political sym- bol of general historical impo: The petty-bourgeois masses did not grasp the lessons of the world war. s of the rily interested will have to nperialist war ) put Lenin's We hope with UP TO 4,894,000 The international bourgeoisie is about e can to repeat the lesson. It is showing trength neces y wher its bestial face again without the policy of blood and mask. Those who believed that the world war was the last war must re- n put openly into opera: Some ‘Convict Labor’ Lies On the very day that Mellon and Hoover, through, the Treasury De- partment, ordered a ban on the im- port of Soviet lumber and pulpwood, based on white-guard affidavits, news comes from London disproving | the “convict labor” campaign. J. F. Stewart, British consulting forest en- gineer and university lecturer in for- est engineering, who has wide ex- perience in lumbering all over the world, publishes an article in the Manchester Guardian on Feb. giving some facts about the Soviet lumber industry. He says he does not agree with the Soviet Government, is not .aCom-| munist, but that from his personal’ investigation of nearly all of the Soviet lumber camps, he is forced | to say that the white-guard propa- | ganda about “convict labor” is a pack of lies. Stewart goes on to say: “The camps themselves are quite good, mostly a deal better than T have built for my men myself in other countries. They are con- 10, | | moss, and the larger ones have separate apartments for eating, sleeping, drying clothes and cook- ing. All are well heated by flues from cooking stoves, and firewood is naturally plentiful.” Answering the propaganda about | no medical attention to the workers: }in the lumber camps, Stewart de- clares: | “That the Soviet makes no at- | tempt to provide medical comforts it. not quite accurate, I have been in hospitals in forest villages where they were well equipped and excel- ently managed by a ‘felsheritca,’ a partly qualified medical woman, kept spotless and in their small way the last word in efficiency. “Very good mail service is kept up throughout the entire north, as | well'as efficient telegraph service.” Return your Red Shock Troop | Donation List and get a free -opy | of Red Cartoon Book or Lenin Medal- structed of heavy logs caulked with | lion. MIDNIGHT PERFORMANCE IN THE BRONX TONIGHT SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14th at 12M Bronx Playhouse SOUTHERN BLVD. PROGRAM—CAIN & ART i ADMISSION 50 M. by Gorki; CENTS » BET. FREEMAN AND J. ISA KRAMER IN A VITAPHONE PROG NGS STS. 1 Record (10 min,) AM —Bronx Workers School TREASON TRIA ESTHER’S SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 1606 MADISON AVENUE prices.—60 CENT MEAL SERVED Between 107th and 108th Street, New York, N. Y. HAS DECIDED TO GIVE 15% SATURDAY AND SUNDAY TO THE DAILY WORKER OF THE WHOLE INCOME OF This restaurant is serving home made vegetarian meals for proletarian IN FOUR DISHES—No Tip All workers and sympathizers are asked to patronize this restaurant and help support the DAILY WORKER! $17.50 $12.50 All Our Suits and Overcoats REDUCED PARK CLOTHING CO. 93 Avenue A, Cor, Sixth St. from $22.50 | | | $15.00 Last Winter Sailing to U.S. Winter in the Soviet Union has added charms— Clubs, Theatres, Factories in full swing. SPECIAL WINTER-PRICE: S.R. $260 INCLUDING FIVE DAYS IN MOSCOW & LENINGRAD IN CARE OF THE WORLD TOURISTS Sailing Feb. 17th, Via the Europa March Gth Via,S.S. Mauretania Ask (Particulars: WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. 175 FIFTH AVENYE, (Algonquin 4-6656) NEW YORK, N. Y.