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'D ATL ¥ WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MAY 2, 1951 Fascist Demonstration Flops; - 1188 March; Partly Conscripted TO STOP FIGHT TO NEW YORK.—A portly colonel; with’ his brown leather belt stretch- | ed across his protruding stomach and | | tilting his nose skyward marched stiffly down Fourth Avenue yesterday, right behind the Fox Movietone News wagon.. He was leading a pa~ dren but those who come to our | shores that they have come to a land | where liberty reigns supreme and op- | view of our “conditions” it would} seem to be rather hard to convince | | TREE 9 NEGROES portunities are manifold.” Yes, in| Pysh Mass Fight For| Scottsboro Lads |KLANTRY TERROR SCOT 7SBORO CASE DEMANDS INCREASED “DAILY” ACTIVITY | Increasing demand for the Daily ) Worker by Negro and white workers | is anticipated as the case of the nine | young Negro boys now being held on a rape charge in Scottsboro, Ala. | woost bundle to time,” the promis r 100 in short , F “Daily” talk to text 's letting the Upon | : | cent a copy jin bundle Page Five Great Demonstrations In Many Cities: 35,000 March In Detroit Two thousand, actual count, we arch to send ¢ Another growp-of 500 demonstratec the headquarters of the rican Federation of Lebor to the trivtic parade composed of exaetly,| The first main speaker let the| CHATTANOO May 1.—Ku Klux | progresses. “Hundreds of mass meet~ | at the end of the week, O. “| rousing cheers of the rank and file : by.count, 1188 men, women and chil- | facts out in another way. His com-| Klan leaflets and a note threatening | ings, indoor and out; hundreds of | Chicago, ll, sent $1 e-cuts and of that organization. he count was made Tank by | plaint was that the children, “th all those engaged\in the campaign | mobilizations throughout the coun-| a @ay. war d placards, de+| ‘The lotal capitalist press admits awk by various comrades, and to-| who will be the-citizens of tomor-| to save the lives of the nine young | try for organized protest against the Th Back Alleys, HW Necessary! ary move ease of the nine Ne-/ that today’s demonstration #8 the tated on an adding machine. | vow, gladly take all the advantages | Negro ims of the Scottsboro, Ala., | attempted legal lynching of mime m~ needere wittes: “Wortk- s of work t tie electri¢ chait in| largest May Day demonstia Of this 1188 “patriots,” some 200 | of our public school system,” and then | lynch court verdict were r d at| nocent defendants will reine @@@i- | ere In ABoise, Idaho, whe have iro et ange for of Sihee 1919. Baw were in the half a dozen bands of music,-privately hired or loaned by turn Communist. He wanted all present to help him “smash out the | Junior Order of Communists.” In- Defense this aft- the Temple Court office of ternational Labor tional bundles of the Daily Worker, which carries latest results of invos- | money can’t buy the Baily. Those working at fillmg stations are this city se fraie-up smashed by the Akron bosses working ¢lass pro- Li alo : ay ley GEROO, tigations conducted from mow wntil| afraid to even look at the Baily fer | e en- among the speakers,” Gom- Russian Whites sen. ~ pence aed iad car | Try Kidn Terror the trial. Districts, sections, wnits;| fear ef @ischarge. Bosses say I ; speakers Bhohah, Jennie Cooper atid "Twenty-seven ranks, . eight men ae aap dune ic eae The leaflets declare in big type| Maternal organizations and trade] should be jailed for selfing such | field, Los’ . platforms At Ib others were arvested’ while wide, wore arm bands labelled, “Rus- as Spt is “The Klan is nob:dead here or in | Mons! Utilize the Daily Worker,| indecent bunk. Yet there are work- | Cabo de C 10 formed with between speaking to an overflow crowd at the siafi American Division,” and march- edbehind a Russian flag (not a Ret Flag). Seyen ranks twelve wide and 40 ranks eight wide, were headed by, | banner stating that they were civil | employes, members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. They had to march. | Eyen the public school teacheds had.been paid for participation. On April 30, Circular No. 28, Item VIII, arrived in the public school, sent to all teachers by Superintendent of Schools O'Shea: “Any teacher or other employe of the Board of Edu- cation.who is a member of one or more of the ‘( list of jingo organiza- drunken bellow, and never finished | @ sentence, | to make out. | it was a little difficult | r eaier Seer Between 2,000 and 3,000 marched} lin the socialist party parade yester- | day from the Rand School to Union | Square about 2 p.m. They merged with the thousand or so who had at- | tended the fascist meeting, be al enough more came in to make a meeting of some 5,000. Others came | later, waiting for the demonstration organized by the United Front May | Day Committee, including the Com- munist Party and the Trade Union Unity League. | boss. agen Alabama.” The Note contained a demand that the ILD and other working class and sympathetic or- ganizations stop their against | the planned legal massacre of the nine boys The local ILD office has sent a-telegram of protest to t or of Chattanooga and the governor of Tennessee warning them that the working class will hold the offi of Tennessee responsible for an roristi¢ activities of the Klan o s against the work fense organization. Roddy Farther Exposed e may | | best rallying force for protest meet- ings to save the Scottsboro youths | | from the electr#e chair, Build routes in’ Negro working-class neighbor- hoods; Visit Negro elubs; attend their | dames. Reach the Negro masses | with the Daily Worker and win them | over to fight together with white | workers to save the Scottsboro de- | fendants and to prevent future legal | | lynchings! Colored Council Gets 16, Marion, Ohio, on tap, organizing sales, requesting deliveries direct from the office. “We are getting wp a colored council now, as we have The official the of | Worker vory catefully, tiren take the | ers who follow me into the back | alleys to read the paper. Tam anx- | ious to put Wall Street off of this | S: roost.” Pierce may be 71 years old, | but he’s already “asked 2,000 men to subs¢ribe.” “we read every article in the Daily paper to the shoe shop, where it is passed from hand to hand among the workers,” tions on the farm is lots ‘of work, but nothing for it. Only one thing ‘to Go, an@ I'll be glad when we get to that.” conditions forces of t tial sup: andino wht A the section, ed | moaument The Hunger Marchers will artive in Bedford and Salem tonight. ONE THOUSAND MARCH IN SMALL STEEL TOWN. VIR A, Minh.—One thousand workers marched in a May Day @em- or ion in unio sveel “toh n. M. M. Karson, addres sed the démon- * Eight Hundred Demonstrate in Hariford, tioys) may absent himself.on May 1} transcript twelve of fifteen in favor of the) forthe purpose of participating inj the .parade.” There follows instruc- tion to get a certificate of attend- ance in the fascist parade, “to be at- tached to the payroll.” At the tail end of the parade were about 200 small boys in sailors’ uni- forms. “The Boys Naval Brigade, Inc.” The jingo parade was much small- er even than last year; though it de- layed its start for an hour, the lead- | ers Chewing their mustaches and hop- } ing some one would show up and march with them. The marchers scattered themselves | out over the square, behind a solid fence ‘of flags, and about 1,000 spec- tators gathered outside of the flag fence. Later the fascists folded up their-flags and carried them away, and-a small crowd lingered to hear ‘he speakers. “Hard to Be a Patriot” Alfred H. Simmons, Commander of tha Veterans of Foreign Wars in Sonnecticut, struck the keynote: ‘When conditions doth economic and otherwise are not as we would have them it is rather difficult and cour- ageous to be a patriot... . we are trying to inculcate into the minds and hearts of not only our own chil The socialist parade was made up ' Weems-Norris case, which was the of young business men for the most first to be tried in Scottsboro, have part, with some workers forced into | been just received here and reveals it-by orders of the company unions | a complete sell-out of the defense by in the needle trades, The crowd was | stephen R. Roddy, the attorney the | spiritless; only one group of Yipsels | poss lynchers and their agents are singing. ‘ now trying to foist upon the boys. A half dozen standards and a dozen| Roddy showed himself so yellow| placards were displayed. The pla-| at Scottsboro that he denied to the cards carried pacifist and reformist | trial judge that he was in. court as slogans: “Not Smashed Heads But | counsel for the defense, although he | Smashed Systems Is -Our Goal”— | had already accepted- money~from | “Join-Work-Fight for a Better Deal | the Chattanooga Ministers Alliance | for Workers Now.” There were no| to defend the boys. slogans in the socialist parade against | imperialism, none against lynching, | none against the Jim Crowing of Ne- | groes, none against the deportation | wave. The Rand School was flaunt- | ing an American flag. The parade nor their parents had been consulted ever retained Roddy fo rthe defense. | Roddy’s Treachery Roddy told the trial judge he was not employed in the capacity of de- | Oriental face in it, “Revolution is not needed, you can make all the needed changes in the government of the United States in | to look things over and help the} counsel appointed by the state. The | | transcript shows that he refused to argue the Weens-Norris case before @ peaceful orderly way through the/| the jury. In the light of this new ballot box,” shouted the fascist | evidence of Roddy’s treachery, it be- speakers, and when the socialists got | came more evident why the boys | there, Panken and others shouted | branded him as traitor to their cause likewise: “We are against a violent | and why 14-year-old Roy Wright told overthrow of the government, ballots, | his mother: not bullets is the way to bring about “Tell Mr. Chamlee and that other the proper changes.” man from New York (Attorney Allan | Taub) to take that Roddy out and | shoot him, Vay 1 Demonstrations Sweep the World; , May. Day; 1.500,000 in Moscow; 150,000 In Madrid 1.300 EXECUTED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Communist League marched in never-chding columns. Thousands of armed police were concentrated in the neighborhood of the Lustgarten. On the way police provoked minor collisions by arresting severel dem- onstrators and by confiscating dozens of placards. There was & sharp col- lision before the University between socialists and Communists against fascist nationalist students. The po- lice intervened, clubbing vigorously to rescue the fascists. There were no serious collisions yet reported. Last night a policeman was shot in a struggle with housebreakers. The botirgeois press reports “Bloody Policeman Shot.” ‘The order.is issued to incite the police to attack workers.” Sen eas 1 “(Cable By Inprecorr.) LONDON, May 1.—Eight contin- gents marched along Thames em- barikment today, from whence thou- sands of demonstrators marched to Hyde Park, where the Communist and revolutionary union speakers ad- dressed the masses from eight plat- forms, proclaiming the message of international solidarity. Many trade union banners were amongst party panners. A large group of colored seamen marched behind the revolu- tionary seamen’s banner. They were greeted everywhere with great en- thusiasm by workers lining the streets: Polite banned May Day denion- strations in the Scottish shipyard town of Greenock. The workers de- cided to carty out the demonstra- tions anyway. ese 8 Capitalist press services give the following stories. Storm Johannesburg | Hotel. At Johannesburg, South Africa, the police attacked a crowd that stormed the millionaires’ resorts, the Carlton Hotel and. the Rand Club, Strike In Paris, 4 In Paris, thirty were arrested and others deported, but the transporta- tion service was hit by a there were also other strikes about the country, Troops of NITGEDAIGET CAMP AND HOTEL PROLBTARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautifal Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $17 4 WEEK | CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BRACON, 5. PHONY 131 church was restored after the World | war damage. 150,000 Madrid. Tn Madrid, 150,000 demonstrated, although the movement was partially a celebration over the downfall of the kingdom. There were celebra- tions in all Spanish cities, One. Killed, Barcelona. In Barcelona, Spain, the civil guards attacked the demonstrators when militant labor slogans were shouted, and in the following fight- | ing, one was killed and several | wounded, | Machine Guns, Lisbon. In Lisbon, Portugal, the “republi- can guard” turned a machine gun on the crowd after it had demonstrated | | | | vigorously against the Carmona dic- | tatorship. Mounted police swung theif sabers and charged thousands | gathered in the central square, which was cleared only after a sharp fight. Many were injured. Bombs were | thrown duting the demonstration. Cavalry, armored cars and artillery patrolled the streets after the dem- onstration. Fight in Australia. In Adelaide, Australia, six were ar- rested when the demonstration led by Communists was attacked by po- lice and fought back, In Brisbane the authorities had forbidden a dem- onstration. The masses carhe out anyway. The police attacked, and after a fight, 20 were arrested. In Sydney the parade was not forbid- den, and thousands marched. 3,000 Parade Bombay, In Bombay, India, 3,000 textile workers on strike, staged & May Day demonstration with red flags, and are holding two big meetings May Day night. NEVIN BUS LINES MLW. Bist (Bet. 6 & 7 Ava.) PHT ADET PHA HOURLY EXPRESS SERVICE © $2.00 One Way $3.75 Round Trip Chicago ..........$19.75 soe 55.50 9.50 5.50 4.50 12.50 4.00 15.50 Lowest Rates Everywhere. Return Trips at Greatly Reduced Rates “MAINE TO CALIFORNIA” 3Y NANKING GOVT IN WEST HUPEE A United Press dispatch from Shanghai tells of the announcement of the Nationalist Government that | 1,800. “Communists” were executed in in Hupeh Provinee after an alleged | Paper,” writes Atehie Reed. We're | speeding 10 a day, Edlitor's Note: The organization of a‘ colored, jim- crow Council is all wrong, as it can) | only serve to divide rather than unite the workers. Steps should diately be taken to remedy this.) Ira A. Roberts, of Spokane; Wash- | ington, keeps bet to buck the yellow | | socialists. “We intend to go over the top no matter how much ex- | | Senitor’"McKay ¢Cusses us,” he writes. Doubles order to 100, part of which Neither the boys | goes to Hilyard, Wash., 8 miles away, | seene of “Great Northern R. R, ter- in the matter and none of them had | minal shops, where a comrade sold | {25 in one hour.” Good prospect for | 98 ‘anizing those railroad men, Rob- | | erts, Carnegie, Pa., which manufac- | tures machinery for terminal shops, was lily white, not a Negro or an | fense attorney but was only in court | | gets 15 a day, and Louperex, Pa., 10. | | John Porter, New Bedford, Mass., | live wire, increases to 60. “Hope to Criticisms, Challenges Welcome. 1=—Tweive imme- | Nick Woreella, Manville, R. I. criticized for criticizing. “Comrades hot satisfied with my article pub- lished April 23, Comrade M. Komin- sky said he will challenge me I should not criticize comrades neglect- ing to sell Daily Worker and revolu- | Gionary literature.” . Criticism is good. | especially when followed by honest discussion, followed by concrete steps to correct the situatfon. We will wel- come Comrade Kominsky’s chal- lenge, but, in the meantime, lead! comrades in Rhode Island sectior must take immedinte steps to see | that the Daily Worker is SOLD on the streets, before textile faci machine shops. Must impress Party membership with necessity to put in time to spread our revolutionary daily paper if they expect to organize em- oe and unemployed workers! ‘100,009 Rally to May 1 Call of Communist Party In New Yor! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) crowd, still being addressed by the socialists suddenly swelled to about 15,000. "These were not socialist sym- | | pathizers, they listened unheedingly and looked over to 15th St. where| the head of the United Front May Day parade was expected. These new crowds in the square were workers who had dropped their tools near quitting time and rushed down to heat the message of the proached up 15th St. from the west fiaere Was a general buzz of com- j ment over the crowd being ejecied | from the square as they saw first Red Flags on 15th © “Let's jammed Boi the Mey First demon- in spite of the mob- 200 heavily armed poliee- Machine guns and tear horde: as the and t thro mina against the Liberation Ardy Sandino, and the svatving w The det nonstration g of the ‘accompan ied by brass Nat Kaptan, a I opened with Interna’ band mius niger of the who pa th avid Mod! the anti-imp ‘ Hatfy Can iné- lee At the same Rgve | a 1 sind otek sent to Hot he “Mem- i abe ap oh gen Patty of the Soviet the t ‘ble- The flagship sent Over with Unien, erecting the sitecess in Carry ing through the Five Year Plan of Socialist Construction, was whani= | mously adopted amid enthusiastic | cheering. Singing of the Itemma= tional concluded the demonstration. The fascist and working-class dem= | onstration with Ham Fish, Governor Ely and Mayor Cufley as speakers | could not muster more than 8,000. | ae pee t the revolutionary lend a helping hand to the gangsters of Mejia Colindres, agains: the oppressed mai ag 1—Fifteen | tke leMonstrated un- | the Red Flag on the Square | CLEVELAND, Fight deporta- Elect dete- gates to your city conference toi Fight tynching. tion of foreign born. protection of foreign born. HARTFORD, Conn.—-Eight hun- d workers demonstrated inan en- astie May Day demonstration here at Windsor and Main Sts. at 2p. in A resolution demanditig the release of the nine Negro youths frafied up in Scottsboro, Ala., Was endorsed by the roar of the crowd. A préyaratory meeting Was held at the Pratt-Whitney Metal factory gates at which three Workers fallied for the bigger demonstration, A big indoor mecting is scheduled (as we go to press) at Lyri¢ Hall with a good pr J. Weber was the chief spe: t the denionstra- ton. NEWARK. J. May 1—Three thotsand to four thousand gathered in Military Park to dethonsttate on the First of May. ‘The meeting Statted at 3 p. m. Several cops were present but. did not attack. Paul, of the Cothinutist Party, ex- plained the origin of May Day. Wil- liams spoke On the Scottsboro case. The workers responded enthusias- Lead Oe | stay, here come the real fighters.” At four different times, in spite of the solid lines of police across the side streets, groups of workers bro through and rushed to the square From the roof of the Workers’ C ter, approximately 50,000 worke packed in the side streets were v sis Communist and militant union ble+great throngs, barred from | Speakers. ‘This was proved by the! tion square by the police, and fact that the thousands of polite) crowing all the time as workers Grove them from the square against their will at 4:15 p. m., and crowded them back up the side streets, and up Broadway and Fourth Ave, as | leaving work hurried down in hopes of joining the demonstration. Thousands joined the parade as it Victory of the Nanking troops over the head of the workefs’ pbarane: ap-| peared Union Square, the Communist forces in Western | Hupeh, While the Nationalist government resorts to executions daily wherever | it is in power, previous reports of its “victories” have proved to be so many lies. cover to the wholesale executions of | workers and peasants in territories | | under the domination of Chiang Kai- | shek. Any worker or peasant who is suspected of being sympathetic to the Communist forces is immediately ex+ ecuted without trial or hearing. The same United Press reports said that thé Red Army forces command- ed by Ho-lung were defeated, METAL MINERS WILL CONVENE: Wrater nal Delegates Invited; May Tenth HANCOCK, Mich, May 1.—The National Miners Union will hold its district convention 6n May 10, at 10 a. m. including the whole copper and iron region of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minesota. All locals of the NMU are to sed delegates and all workers’ organizations, clubs, women’s sec- tions, sports clubs, left wing co-op- eratives, Communist Party and the Young Communist League units, are invited to send fraternal delegates. All should get in touch with I. R. Heines, district organizer of the N. M. U., Box 284, Michigan, for fur- their particulars, The district office states: The miners are determined to or- ganize against the mine owners to fight against the present oppression, the tremendous speed-up and fight against the present oppression, the against throwing thousands of miners out into the streets to starve without any meatis to make a living. Tt is not only the miners who are suffering from the oppression of the mine owners but also the women and children in the mining sections. Since we are all oppressed by the mine owners, by linkig the struggle of all setcions of the working class, we can make # real successful fight against the bosses, ‘Today's condi- tions “are such that no one can stand aside from the struggle. It means that if workers are not organizing, they are only helping the copper and Steel trust bosses to exploit them by wage cuts, stagget system, etc, a n asta . The victory report is just a| STARVATION IN A | FORD VILLAGE Hundreds Fired by Ford (By a Worker Correspontient) DETROIT, Mich.—Hovel Patk, & suburb of Detroit, is a Ford made village, located not in Russia, but in rich United States. Instead of talk- ing of starvation in Russia, the jour- nalists of the capitalist class would | do Well to look into the situation of | the working masses in this town. Hundreds of working class families here live in absolute want. Most of the men were formerly employed by Ford, but were fired during the early part of the crisis, These.men now can’t find and work, some of them are allawed a measly sum’ of one dollar per week per person in the form of relief checks, Which are hon- ored at the county commissary store in Royal Oak, which is quite a dis- tance from them to walk, since they have ho money for bus fare. I per- Sohally know of a working class fam- ily of eight that are allowed eight dollars’ worth of groceries a week. This family is permitted only one quart of milk for six children, their rent 48 overdue, and afe therefore liable to be kicked Out at any time the landlord sees fit to do so. ‘This starvation exists, but in capi- talist America( right in the heart of the most highly developed and ef- ficient industries in the world. Only @ few miles away, in Bloomfield Hill, there live many of the richest peop! “YOUTH IN same kind of a Job that you have, one, worker will want a copy of— Ten Cents Per Copy . Had Been | is the story of Tom, a young American who dreamed of becoming an aviator, but instead had to take @ job in a silk mill at $7 a week, a job that begun early in the morning and lasted until late at night—the Read about the conditions of the young workers in the factories, on the picket lines, in the Soviet Union, For the first time we have a pamphlet on the life of the American young workers, on their conditions at work. This pamphlet tells the young workers how to organize and fight for better conditions. Every YOUTH IN INDUSTRY—By GRACE HUTCHINS ——Rush Your Orders To—., THE YOUNG WORKER—Box 28, Sta. D, New York City | of America, who never have done a (aoe of Wotk in their lives, but | aré entitled to the best of every= ching. | What is true of Hagel Park is true of most of the towns in the United | States, We must organize to forc> ioe bosses to pay us unemployment insurance. =A Worker. FIRE] |SALE = CLOTHING | Slightly Damaged By Smoke SUITS OF WORSTEDS | CASSIMERES | | EXTRA PANTS TO MATCH YOUR SUIT $1.35 BLUM| ON THE SQUARE, INC. 5-7-9 Union Square West § Between 1th and 15th. Streets ‘Next to Anutlgamated Wank Take Rew, or Texihgon Ave. Bl Subway to Lith St, Union Sq. Station VACATION : — Beantiful Mountain Views, quiet resting place, good food, $13.50 weekly—Avanta Farm, Ulster Park, York. INDUSTRY” )o if you ate “lucky” enough to have 3 Seven Cents Per Bundles NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES AS Stk aMnONK = KK ea. 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