The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 13, 1931, Page 1

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GIVE Hm Booze! Taare MAKE HIM STAGGER To —l~. HS Fee is ™ TPAAKE THE COUNTRY NO HE « dees SQUANDER “Als WAGES orf Boor NA, be u orker Zunist Party U.S.A. ( yuk OF THE WORED, ONEFFEI Central «Orga (Section of the Communist International) Vol. VIII, No. 115 thee Yor he tinue ineccime sins 2" NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1931 CITY EDITION Price 3 Cents a] fi] n 66 + 12 39:8 Q : Th t t ’T Cleveland N Church : e ocialsts In Action evelan egro urcnes Vt 4 'HE New York World-Telegram, in a moment of editorial franknes, $ comment upon the events of this week in Spain, explains quite c In United Front Movement rectly the cause of the new revolutionary outburst of the masses, as H follows: | S 9 S b B e “Since the first days of the revolution, the new government 2 Oo Save cottsboro OYS seems to have been going backwards rather than forwards. It has Bee allowed the storing of arms and other subversive activities by coun- g Be <| : ter-revolutionary monarchists. It has modified its original position Send Vigorous Protests to Alabama Governor; n regarding separation of church and state, and has allowed promi- > itti —_Ros M Ss 3 nent churchmen to undermine the republic. It has postponed fun- Sa Pledge Unremitting Struggle—Boston Moth d damental land reform and the breaking up of vast unused estates. | Masses Rise to Crush ers’ League Denounces Frame-Up id It has turned machine guns on labor unions. All of which is the meudal ic a 1 - d pepe ae atta are teh a F ea a 4 tide hold NEW YORK.—Another Negro newspaper came out this 2 nd—we must add—all of which is the work of the “socialist” party rches ogee od a siati ; 1p ae = aod ens > =e , = J K 2 sha i N.A.A.C.P: eadershs: of Spain, a “little matter” that) the World-Telegram “forgot” to mention; Ml C BuCHeS » iti : pen a eee ei os ae st aa Ge ap eee i 'p e Fi . | : perhaps out of a certain tender solieitude for Norman ‘Thomas, whom it || _, a poe imaboent Seatishoro/t “ontral Falls Strikers orce Legislature to Agree : championed in the last election, and in quite comprehensible protection | artial Law Declared | Negro boys. Branding as “hypocritical, snobbish, and too dan- Ls | of its “socialist” columnist, Mr. Heywood Broun. —— gerous ,ucasian-like” tthe refusal of the N.A.A.C.F. leaders ® : 11) to See Them; Two . The World-Telegram, for all its unusual lucidity of analysis was |(,))+ a , Ee «|to co-operate with the organi-¢ es M P k { g t M ll d quite careful not to reveal the fact that the Spanish “socialist” party was ounter-Rev olution Is we ee f N Sy and Fi ito [3 a 8 Ss IC e in a 1 } Day’s Meals +: and is the mainstay and bulwark of fascist reaction and counter-revolu- | Backed by Socialists |##tons of Negro and white lass Support for Saray Raa ea tion oppoced to the Spanish masses. OSE Berane weet |e i ; U T W Tries to Split Ranks by Attack On’ This circumspection, which the World-Telegram is obliged to follow | Taking matters into their own|boro frame-up and legal lynch- Poles Ba i lt 5 ise bale . ;Demand Return Fares because of its social-fascist connections, the more openly reactionary New | hands, the masses of Spain during|ing, the Washington, (D. C.) Saturday Parade Foreign-Born; Strikers’ Mass Meeting Aeibc f S York Times can dispense with. Hence, we see the ‘Times headline of | the past two days attacked the main-| World declares in an editorial cap- J serpin Denounces It: Pledges to Stand Fast at Expense of State. Bia rand ee ee announcing that the “socialists fight agitators in | stay of reaction, the Catholic church, | tioned “Pickens and the Communists,” Borger | i i ‘ . } an effort to aid government,” and the story goes on to recite the details | leading landowner, exploiter and bul-| “It behooves all organizations, || sotes 0, . “¢ | Po Geena. | izahi J of “socialists” in action against the revolutionary workers, wark of the old monarchy. The| whether they be black, white, or To Protest Seottsbor ” CENTRAL S, Lu nee i i Plan Organizational Steps a While bands of “extremists” were speeding in autos from factory to | Catholic church, behind whose clood-| red, to join hands and fight for the Frame-Up | si ia ae a pats aren Cee ene oe TEN | 7 4 4actory to spread and prolong the general strike—and were mecting with | clotted gates, the counter-revolution-| right.” as | mass lcketing today and Neue Paget eons bites Samia In Continued State- sympathetic response of the workers—the Times boasts that the “young | ary forces were preparing a return| Praises Pickens’ Su; YEW AVON Mine) mass pemabiie || 7s due tesiactan’ Worsled Waill alfaoe GatcnIe (oite eee oc, % araeere Teen ; i ae 3 8 3 : s’ Support of LL.D. a Ae < Bricks scMeleenlS Aeine : . z socialist. militia” were attempting to prevent the strike action of the |of the monarchy, was the object of| ‘The editorial Salto Mr. Pickens ‘ation scheduled for Harlem on ‘i ee Mone van pice Ee ipa! s a ek Wide Struggle workers and were “coming to blows with them in the streets.” the revolutionary force of the en-|prompt support of the fight of tho Saturday, May 16 at 128th St. and| mill had f ’ ; Mee cape is While the headquarters of the “socialist” perty was issuing appeals | raged population. International Labor Defense to save di oes : ke Nationa Westie Workees “UR avon : COLUMBUS. Ohi to the workers not to strike, the “socialists” who are participating in the The provisional government, backed | the boys: tee ee eee ne ik ‘through ‘the’ Bia i Sa ee ee | ; U . BUS 5 i hio. capitalist government—the very same which the World-Telegram ¢or- | by socialists and republicans, had ; indignation of the masse sof Negro| “trike through the ars aed ‘ |May 12—A hundred 0 rectly describes as “going backward” and sheltering monarchist counter- |been extremely lenient with the| », Wccent events involving William | ang white workers of New York mn ey Renn aire revolution—were using “appeals” of quite another character; they were [church Traeanng in ae gy eam] Pickens, field secretary for the Na- | Gesinet the tathiees terme of ihe CENTRAL FALLS, R. 1, May 12. The strike of 700,and ninety two dele- . appealing, or rather ordering, the troops and the murderous Civil Guard | revolutionary force against the revo. Sonat Association for the Advance- | capitalist class, and its latest lynch-| workers of the General Fabrics Mill, which started Thursday, gates of the unem- to shoot down the workers! | They were vociferously supporting the capi- | lutionary démands of the workers and | Mt of Colored People, the Inter- | ing campaign which threatens to! ynder the leadership of the Nation! Textile Workers Union, is} ploy ae ; talist and “devout Catholic” dictator, Zamora, in his policy of an “iron | peasants, Emboldened by the con.| DAtional Labor Defense League, and | usr out the lives of nine young|\ .” oe a zeta Union 18 ployed, from “over iva) nm hand” against the masses and the declaration of martial law! ciliatory attitude of the provisional| ‘®, titectors of the NAC. seem | Negro workers in Scottsboro, Ala, |£°NS strong and gaining the stpport of all the workers in the’ cagne of cities and This, of course, is nothing new for “socialists.” On May Ist in Bar- | government, the church authorities! 10 Nave left Dean Pickens in a po- | workers from every section of New| Blackstone Valley. Three hundred textile workers in this re-})~"'™ Rae oe a celona, Emile Vandervelde, head of the Second Socialist International, | were already taking steps to bring! “U®" of sourasephe honor and ue York City, the Bronx, Harlem, Brook-| “7~--~ —rion turned out toa mass meet-|towns in Ohio met in : was interrupted at dinner with Colonel Macia, heading the capitalist Bov- | back the old regime whose roots hag | °''st,leader® of the N.A.A.C m liyn, and greater New York and all ing Sunday afternoon and,the state fair grounds ernment in Catalonia, by his host finding it necessary to leave “between | heen left intact by the socialists aya |e Cboeeon: bondoring on: hypoct! working clas sorganizations, unions 1 ledged their full : coli her sterday i ae ee bead Papeeech dowel tne workers who were! demonatrating’in republicans. , 5 Recognized LL.D. First in Field. |and fraternal bodies are rallying pe Con eee coh auneore sulendidl pe ste ad i a i e street uted § ; ats 1 oor ae ont rok. |2Plendidly organized and dis- in : La , While the American capital: i “Th 4) |their forces for a united front of YW | I@| The National Textile Work-|*P'*! : . ‘ ; R The similar counter-revolutionary role of the American “socialist” | tries to make it appear rar leat ints siesta etic haan ie working class solidarity this Satur- BL 8 DING § Union; ashich led the vic- ciplined conference. They for- - ee onteriar Tn OMe nee aera of the N. Y. | struction of 21 of the leading Cath-| Communistic organization com- |day, to defeat the lynch lay cam- i ious strike of 10,000 Lawrence tex-|Mulated the demands on the co Ot duaisiliee eine avenel eit ails thee Sonireiie Ae, Wreckers | olic institutions in Spein is the work mending it on the fine work it had |°23n of the ruling class and re- , srkers Tell Of ows (lo workers in February and the vic-|state for relief. and the pro- ates Gaulene the Weaker te eo eell Lice crite erie Sere of "a handful of Communists,” no dene in going into the field first 10 [Ieee the Scottcbero boys from the | ¥ erkKers 1e t VY \ torious strike of the Bay State silk|gram of struggle for unemployment t mains the duty of every revolutionary worker to expose the socket facena, |*™ount of lying can hide the fact protest against the uitfair conviction | cluiches of the Synthern bosses who Bldg. Men Died mill here a few weeks ago, is gain- |insurance and relief, and farmers’ re- n to the awakening masses for what they are—demagogues an eee S |tha tthe burning of the churches of eight boys at Scottsboro, Ala., | Will leave no stone unturned to lynch ing t e of all the textile lief and insurance. h of:fisolech and capltallant enders | wa sthe work of the great majority| and that the usually militant N.A. | them legally or otherwise. . By FRANCINE SCHNEEBERG. workers in the region. Dozens of delegates in remarkable te ACP. resented the sending of this | phe mass de t = eorgten The officialdom of t c |Speeches discussed and reported on ee civinrace Phew i e mass demonstration on Sat-| NEW YORK —Capiialist “protec- ne officialdom of the United Tex- ; , ie » | letter and took extraordinary pains | day, May 16 will be held at 2 p.m ee area on the job early,|t€ miserable conditions prevailing » « - e x to disayow any sort of co-operation } es on™. OL. SGRKETS- 00. CONS * | issuing c-breaking: statements. in |i" all parts of the state. They voieed Fi htin For Reliet M § 7 ; with the so-called Reds. Rumor | On Sunday, May 17, at 11 a. m.|is becoming more and more treach-| 21, cffort to divide the ranks of the| ‘heir determination to fight for the . that Pickens was to be’ ousted |*t Finnish Hall, 15 West 126th St..!orous, Recently we had occasion to! wor Two days afer the strike |Pt0stam adopted. ANS example of the proper method of cartying out the fight for unem- n : bhi ce, oe ae ae meg Ae ease ee visit the Empire State building. We] started, John Powers, local U. T. W. ee ae ‘ae Thine ees . Birmneay seuee se even. usin the work of the;south Rnd and Rox- MEETINGS IN CITY coupled ‘with its unesossary profes, |for the unity of Negro and white [asked the workers still on construc-| Soe arate seen ehcp dere aig ome aE TC ei SR wee Arp e Piel ites accent eae eee praia Boot me j eaaey tation against any belief that they | Workers in Defense of the Scotts-| tion to tell us the story of the work-| PGE i ey ae ‘responsibility for |ted a delegattion to see it last night hood, expla tberreanlta Se is gesting th concrete baces eee the |, NEW YORK. — In the campaign] Were working wit’ the “Reds,” it is | boro campaign. Every class conscious /er who had commited suicide sev-| this strike” and branding the strik- | instead of today. starvation policy of the municipal authorities headed by the demagogue, | ciyip, ‘ul Possible support for the | fait te assume that the smoke must wotker and workers organization, 18) roi weeks ago. We were told that) c:s as “poor humans who were ages SU Re each Mayor Curley. The difference between Mayor Curley's pretensions and tig) Oo smash the frameup of the | indicate soine bit of fire.’ a am sp) . © lhe had been fired and came ba brought into this country by the em- ss ir © al : practices is shown up vividly in relating the mayor's bombastic remark | ™D@ Negro boys in Scottsboro, Ala., eae ee demonstration and the United Front! two weeks later, despondent, andj ployers.” This is an outright attack |Tanged for the delegation to appear that: whom the lynch-courts are trying to CLEVELAND, ©., May 12.—The!} ae the following day, and to] a:keq the foreman to give him back] on the strikers’ solidarity, as most of Zags it today at i a, m. and to Dy burn in the electri ir, i - i e the maximum attention to prep- |}; San 4 y he| them a ign-bor kers, the |See the governor at 11,45. Ny 4 “Boston has the best relief system in the country.” Wright, mother Re aeeice ae sits lineata tae ay Bescon aration for these meetings during the asf oe ere ae esrate| el ne eee a ung esata Fifteen spokesmen were elected to S. ‘ Against this, the fact is related that a committee from the Unem- | will speak at four big mass meetings |the nine innocent Negro boys was|¢Maining time. The Scottsboro boys| overwhelming him, he jumped from| foreign-born parent present the demands to the legis- et ployed Branch which approached the director of the Public Welfare De- | this week, the Scottsboro United | further strengthened with the draw- | ™ust not die! the seventy-second floor of the build- Sisikces “Anawor lature and governor. be partment, Miss Shay, with a demand for immediate relief to specific cases | Front Defense Committee announces. |ing in of two of the largest Negro} News has just reached the Daily|ing under construction and went Eyer Demands Return Fare. e; of starving families, had been told by this assistant of Mayor Curley, that: Tonight (Wednesday) Mrs. Wright | churches in Cleveland into the fight'| weaker that a. atrest meetin of 200 through a one-inch tile on the sixth} The Strike Committee drafted a] ‘This delegation will demand trans- ie “I don’t care if they are starving!” Will address a mass meeting at 8 p.|to save the lives of the boys. The! Nears workers hela for the Ad a Hdsk shot. atement in answer to this which | portation at the expense of the state ts ng With this exposure of the hypocrisy of capitalist relief agencies bring- | m. at 1622 Bathgate Ave., the Bronx. |iwo latest churches to join the move. |. ental Bie’ Gan! Keen ante as adopted unanimously by the] for the marchers to return to the lo- ing home the necessary lesson to the rank and file of the Unemployed | celled by Women's Council No. 8.|ment are the Treed Store Baptist wes ae z pees District Ore, |, rne Workers told us of this tragedy | mass meeting Sunday afternoon. |calities from which they came as well 3 Franch, committees were sent throughout the neighborhood to obtain food | Tomorrow (Thursday) she speaks at |churen, with a congregation of 1300 of the Communi Party, District | wie clenched fists, and added that The statement repudiates the at-las putting forth the demands for in- - for the starving families which the capitalist city authorities refused. | 2 protest mass meeting at the Negro| and the Zion Hill Baptist Church with | npn ge ese, Party, District 2,1 this was not all, The suicide of the| attack of the U. T. W. officials and | surance, ete. in Naturally, this work aroused the whole neighborhood to the realization | Baptist church at Crescent St. and 399, * will speak there this Sunday evening. | miserable worker received a tiny no-| calls on all the workers to support] Under pressure of the masses, which of both of the existence of cases of actual starvation and also the hypocrisy | Harris Ave. Long Island City. The] aa De, tice in the capitalist press, but n0/ the strike, which is led by a Rank|are whole heartedly supporting the mn and cruelty to the workers of the capitalist city government, Ti congregation and pastor of this ome: mention was made of forty-eight/and File Strike Committee of 30|demands of the jobless delegates, th ph cadence be TO DISCUSS LESSONS OF GREEN- | Topless Selcgetty dae put out by the branch enumerates the names, addresses, and critical cir- | church have shown their solidarity | At their services on Sunday, May - ~\ other workers who were killed due to} workers, unanimously elected, and by| state has been compelled to serve yu cumstances of the families it had assisted. with the efforts to save the nine boys |10, both churches welcomed speakers POINT STRIKE. faulty construction. This of course] the N. T. W. U. épaked menia vit ys is during the stay here of d, But matters are not left there. Around this fight for immediate re- | Y donating their church free for the | from the International Labor Defense} NEW YORK.—The Youth Section| would be kept from the dear public.) The demands of the strikers are: | the delegation. at, lief, the Branch rallies the neighborhood to the demand for cash inher meeting. Friday night Mrs. Wright |#nd the League of Struggle for Negro|of the Metal Workers League, that |The Empire State workers are sullen 1, No more than 4 looms to a! ‘The conference will adjourn after ue) ployment relief for the whole hun will speak at an affair for the bene-|Rights, and unanimously adopted a|was recently formed will meet this;and morose because of the secrecy} weaver. a session tonight on organizational dred thousand unemployed workers of vy ‘ ii . Ls ope 1e Boston, and all jobless workers of the neighborhood are invited to join fit of the Trade Union Unity League resolution to be sent to Governor B,| Friday, May 15th, 8 p. m., at 16 W.|which has accompanied the murder} » 4) weaving jobs to be mixed; | problems. th the Branch which is planning to send another and a larger committee that has been arranged at New Star|M. Miller of Alabama denouncing the|2Ist St. The main point on thejof their comrades. Al Smith and| no jobs of bags only, or of any one Columbus Meeting. a to both the City Council and to the governor of the state to demand regu- Casino, lo7th St. and Park Avenue. |Sccttsboro boss court lynch verdict] agenda will be a report on the Green-|other Tammany grafters reap for-/ article, The Ohio hunger march, in many rs lar relief and unemployment insurance, Saturday night she will address ajand demanding a new trial for the} point Metallic Bed Strike. All young} tunes out of these murders of work- 3. The price on chiffons, geor-|ways the best organized, best sup- er But while we observe tiis commendable action of an Unemployed | ™S Protest meeting in Yonkers. boys. metal workers are welcome, ers on the Empire State. gettes, flat crepes and white bags|ported and spectacular of the state Branch of Boston, we are forced to record an instance in New York City, Bs pak © is ok {LSS 1 he FE ee Oe ieee marches 30 far, has foneed’ ite Way vit which indicates a policy of inactivity and aban i te, a x i; TRON 4. The price on brown bags to be |into the capitalist press. The Colum- ‘octiarhte tank idonment of this sort of mi 0,000 k bi ws ‘S. 4 ° ry . $2.60 per 100, picks. us, Ohio, Dispatch of May 11 gives 10 A metal worker who has had only ten weeks’ work in two year: A h S Ll 10 M l th F t 5. ‘The 10 per cent bonus on the | an account of the union of thi % ve s, and ] I y) ( , W ee a whose wife and two children were starving, happened ‘to be band a4 e e O ‘e le Ss Wt ea U ascts S; night shift and the 5 per cent bonus|chers Sunday at the capitol steps, re tress by oe Easel aitaten by the Unemployed Council. on the day shift to be restored. and of the meeting that followed. m This jobless worker had tried all the capitalist “solutions.” He had ; Sis Dape Dee oh ee etes | O ‘Two Arrested. i \ 801d apples. He had been “relieved” by the Prosser Committee. He had ammany r ea 5) OSSES, S em ers tarve work to be posted inside the mill} The same paper gives the informa- \, been to the Salvation Army and had tried previously—and in vain—to get esa peste Gt Wepre eee Hon that the food.» turmiekiecs ae food from the Police Department. Yet he and his wife an fi _— ‘7. Only one fixer to a section; the | marchers by the state is from the childved were starving. id two little While many more than half of the! ,, t B Gi P Ss Fike Yoteratanal Uvion of Ope a Nee ns Gib to te LIISA Ge She baniennei d 4 nies 9 ‘dine | Xty, ¢ . of the Interne -| number of looms a section to be | i: s of the penitentiary, and cen- Now, because a policeman had been attracted by the imminence of rea iaaiae prpeeacest bea is avagant anquet iver resident of Hod jating Engineers, whose “superin-| decided in agreement with the fixers. | sists of a quart of coffee, a quart ef a ane taking off the whole family, and the capitalist newspapers |employed, and the rest are mostly Carr ISTS; Hundreds of Plates for Misleaders; Yendents” also had a full table to! 8. A weekly standard pay of $16|beet stew, and six slices of bread Day . ad @ one-day spasm of hypocritical sympathy, TR! : themselves on the main floor. for the drop-wire girls. man, twice a day. * is “the police are taking care of the so a NeW Ton Coe oe Be urea aaae cpio ae co Industry 60 Percent Idle This Huddell has a trick of knock- ; "No aisarimination against any; The Columbia Dispatch also stat cil fails to see any necessity for it getting in touch with th ‘: i i of offi y local officials | worker. | e famil: ‘ 1 ; it ing out of office any local offic! worker. that two members of the council of a its Senge with a view to exposing the inadequacies of the? Teeeant ie Sanineta itu aie wiiae ey pas Ren atte thee, svelte nate ne aera Ripe eb ose USE a ne eV ea Fe ee eee con [ne Une eegee oe CO aa nn “relief” as being equal to that received in the past, and of organie pditeiy? iH hte ‘a » Whose “Union r Life Insur-| yutting over the locals a “superin-| mittee of the National Textile Work-|cus Cohen and Roscoe Vand e ansae 5 . ganizing a | Ttalian fascists and the heads of the|lice to break the skulls of the job- Co. al : ; ae ring id Neighborhood Branch around this case and others in the same nei ape y he job- | ance Co. also had a full table bought tendent,” who makes all contracts] ers’ Unior ver ; : ot same neighbor |'Tammany administration to guzzle a|less; Robert Wagner of the fake em- + Presi seal aod eeearns at pra hd sis nase wore ‘acrected: tor, evlleching terrae . Srgine Gane. certainly be found while rallying support to this |dinner at the Hotel Commodore at} ployment bills; ae Halkett, pve ye SDiaareeeaee rencete Busan) Bea vases Ane eoaee Rae i ae ete sot f Bungee mans And | \chimrger ea t 5 ; cas » ternal union questions. Huddell car-| Mass picketing, in which most of | “begging.” Their trial is set for May in In the re case wo have an example of how to carry on work among nel pct i aaa ie tai aN Leg spe li cna He Eats for You! [tes with nim blank suspension cards,| the strikers are participating, is the|19, e unemployed; in the latter case we have an example of how to d ni e fi i and when offended by a member of} method being used to fight this bat- — nothing—nothing but obstruct the car ating 0 | the murderous Noske from Berlin and] 23 lozals of the carpenters expelled| § ae 5 " i ‘ i pe 1 ry @ 3t &: 4: i out of work among the the union, simply fills in his name] tle, Every morning >t 4:30, after or ce eed che aries ee veer Edis prone ad vena ee aoe ‘Jand throws him out of the union and| noons at 2:30 and .t m..t at 10:30.|1 Seottsboro Defense 3 t ut of his job. large picket lines ire “med, with i of a to Joseph V. Moreschi, who is going] Among the hierarchy of notables Ms t yorker: rching a “4 Wages Cut Nearly 3 of siete: (Aeaitoed ee alae *8Y | to Europe to attend the British Labor|in the graft and explosion system On the “Lower Dias” also app ee he eee Developments Perce : commisisoner Gok # "A o the name of Hugh Frayne, inter before the mills. e .ghters are west an nt in New Yor really has, is to say that thinks w gress, seated on an “Upper Dias” were two determined to stick t the fight in Month + pleven worse last Januaty—in the | Moreschi is general president of Italian military officers: Comm. Gac- Wonal’ organizer of the A. By of a) etree win all thelr demands. | wu, 7m OF Cleveland's largert in Month of April heart of winter! le | the International Hod Carriers and|tano Clemente and Comm. Emanuel and expert in driving workers into] "”! signe cA a Neato. chieaes Jolt. Seiad Doms pee ACR . r. ’ v= defense campaign to save the nine M Common Laborers’ Union of Amer-|Grazzi, With them were Frank Mor- imperialist ‘war. Frayne, while serv Abas Rae ey stilt Elticsittig pant Ping ott Cant ee ica (A. F.L.). He was the most out-|rison, secretary of the A. F. of L: ing on the War Industries Board in| Wage Cuts, Lay Offs, || Scottsboro children, ases in New York State, but ac- percent in April of thi out one spoken defender of the proposal of|John F. Curry, Walker's boss and the last big slaughter, earned whole-| . P h 2, Mothers’ League of Boston cording t othe figures released by the aie. Palit ih ” 5 year, W8PS | Norman, head’ of the employers’ as-|head of the Tammany machine to hearted praise in the official report |i Perth Amboy Works || senas vigorous protest to governor State Industrial Commissioner, wages bavi if Wt per cent.’ ‘The | acolation in the building trades, to} which so many of the building trades of the board’s chairman, Barney Bar- of Alabama against murderous ; are falling off still more rapidly than Entel tsi aa both Hi roe SUA Sieg tHe. wages" of ed!’ bullding (oblets belotigy Gouin Bulllves et thie uch, for his strikebreaking and mili-|, PERTH AMBOY, N. J., May 8.—AS|} frame-up of boys. | jobs, rolls was in the grament ue a ‘I the Communist Party warned in leaf- 2, workers, 29, ‘me . tarism. vy . 3. 2,500 Seattle workers demon- g ‘The state office declares that there | M4 metal trades. ot alesse tyr Teacrkc ati ies eauanee ine ke Tir this dias too, was Lawrence p.| {Cts Gistributed to workers in the|} strate in protest against Scotts- i bbb urs aie sr eet pa am Le NS ove ON ; ‘The banquet of rackctecrs, mil-lislature with the manufacturers’ as- Lindelof, general president of the acrsround Cable Co. a lay-off of|} borg legal lynching and attempts crease in Jobs in April, lower than| WORKMEN'S CIRCLE REWARDS |tionaive craters j aor Peg ci :: sho. won {8 hundred. from both day and night|] of vy, s, immigration officials to | Murotic: my: Mile’ att 4 ionaire grafters who pose as labor, sociation to oppose even the vestige Painters’ Union, who won his office} nitts took place right after May ere ms alls this as “only. tite’ ‘TRAITOR. e}loaders, plain gangsters and big!of a dole system’ that was proposed by bullets, not by ballots. He is als (oS F 8 Y|] stifle protests of working class M usual seasonal decline, about ti | ' ‘ Laas Day 7 & % celine, about the) NEW YORK.—Dr. U. Mendin, ex-. b. opened with a prayer by the there; Joseph Ryan, president of the Chicago gangster and racketeer of} py. x 2 against railroading of boys te elec- af some as in former years.” Bi vith ' p The National Lead Co. has cut eee fee years.” But with-|pelledfrom the Communist Parvy as| priest, Joscph Congedo. Among the!New York Central Trades and Labor prominence and immense wealth, ANY wages without notice, April 20 off" “Bait, by Alsbams Roses. out any oy cular comment, the same}a traitor to the working class, has|spcakers who gave their best. wishes| Council, who recently advised the tied up also with criminal gangs in hind Cage as iat A ch be 4. Another Negro paper denoun- oifice also publishes that the em-| just been appointed Financial Sec-|to Moreschi at this official “Bon}use of militia again el New York. Bente ieie in ces N.AA.C.P. leadetship for sab=\f._, ninwiiles Gude’ teh geinist. thie unem Tt is evident that the managers of ‘i ploy "\ ine HELM pe ata eae ua cary of the Workmen's Circle, no| Voyage Dinner-Dance,” were listed] ployed; and Edward Riegelmann, a On the main floor, one whole table} tne Raritan Copper Works oh ork otaging Scottsboro beg roe Ww was 77. ol loubt as a reward for BF as take) 4 5 yn World calls them ‘normal’ doubt rews service to the} President William Green of the A. F.|Tammany leader and office holder. | _ Joseph V. Moreschi, president of | \’ taken up by the officials of the | ,ering either. a severe lay-off’ or clos- phi Prot wbervon ih was 80 i April ~ . CONTINUED ON PAGH TWO) ing down of ‘the works altogether, _

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