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Page Three DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1931 BUILD DAILY WORKER CLUBS! STRIKE AREA SPREADS DAILY! j GET SUB RENEWALS, START ACTION Mines, Factories In Today the Dally Worker is play- fog a2 vital part in the organiza- ‘tion of thousands of miners in their militant stew against the hunger murder program of the mine owners and thelr coal them just as easy. went like hot-cakes. to see ome one in Bentwood to sell the Daily Worker every once in a while.” They absolutely | We would like SPRING VALLEY IS CRISIS - H | Tiat London; War Draws Nearer Town Shut Down Spring Valley, y, Tilinols has been especially hard hit by the crisis, The | majority of the workers of the 6,000 | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) that the Communist Party attitude towards the coming People’s Re- ferendum against the Prussian gov- | ernment will depend: upon the gov- ernment’s answer. Hundreds of uniformed plain- The supreme court in Leipzig yes- terday sentenced a Duesseldorf worker to three years’ hard labor on charges of treason and "the ex- Plosive law. ‘This is the first time the courts have denitd a worker the benefit of his political convictions and deprived him of his civil rights Cumberland Workers} to Come Out August 1 CUMBERLAND, Md, July 22.— “Cumberland is not a mining section and the workers of this city have AID MASS MEET | Negro and White Wor Worker | | Imperialist Clashes Sharpen|(0P STOPS MINE [OAKLAND POLICE TRY TO TERRORIZE MEET FOR SCOTTSBOR) NINE kers -3 Mobilize, Demand Release of Nine Negro Bovs fron police, ‘Tae Dally Worker | ,,.¥7°2, ™ners,AtFuReling for the| population are unemployed. Many | clothes police raided the Lichknecht | for tive years. nothing in common with the strik-| Cops Fail to Stop Meeting ; OneWorker Jailed; ~ fi cds sae vert Wie | thelr families, give such splendid | f them have been unemployed ever | House, headquarters of the Commu- ing. miners of Pennsylvania and Prevs for A st First Rensbyivania-Ghio en West vir: Support tthe | Daily Worker it since the crisis set in almost two! nist Party, searching the place for} NEW YORK—A Road on clash| Ohio,” were some of the remarks repare for ugust 1rst poe oye starvation and sinvery | rades everywhere. Now tx. the time | Ye8r8 Now. many hours, and arresting Commu-| between Britain and the United] passed by the chief of police, Oscar SS controlled USEW.A- Tne miners | {2 TeneT that overdue. subscription | are rears bicict Ea found | nist Deputy Gohlke, despite immu- | States, on the one hand, and France | A. Eyerman, in refusing to grant a (By a Worker Correspondent) are realising ‘that the Daily | 5. ont and get five or six new rend. | 20 Steady jobs since the mines in/ nity as a deputy. on the other, over the spoils of | permit for an open air meeting called ‘a ; a] 99 onatratio: Scott ‘ 0 z | ‘a Se stration against Scotts Worker je thelr strongest ally tm | Cos for your fighting paper and start | SPring Valley closed down. Others| Yesterday, the Communist daily. | “saving” Germany has broken out at| by a committee of the Penn.-Ohio| RSS ah say — sb eee a . ie rear And the right to live. The follow. |" QAl'y Worker Clubt are part of the permanent army of | «pusseldorf Freihelt” was suppressed | the London cénference, according ta| Miners’ Relief Committee. When two|boro frame-up was held in Oakland in two places—10th and brates elle AI pager Daily Wor eo epeeer 7 sie eit ine pa thrown out of work, 3 4 and 5 years| under the new decree. ~ | iatest cables from capitalist news| miners of the strike region, Novak| Broadway, and a main one, at 7th and Peralta Sts. Colored their paper, the Daity Worker, by getting thousands of new Yeaders and building Dally Worker Clubs everywhere: for action. See if they aint: “Report of the Daily Worker Club meeting. Decited to keep one dollar out of every pledge for | ago by machinery and haven't found steady work since. Hundreds have | been laid off at the Zinc works, the Collisons occurred at Dortmund yesterday between Communists and fascists. The police interfered, sup- agencies. The Associated Press reported, at the time the Daily Worker went to |and Manuel applied for the permit |it was granted at first, but when the chief of police noticed Howell, an- |and white workers and sympatl This demonstration rallied | white workers. Prior to this demonts hizers participated. about 100 Negroes “A mass meeting was held in the] literature. The Daily Worker | Cement works, Wesclox factory. The ting the fascists. Two Commu-| press, that “it was said in well-in-| other member of the committee, he| " serves and grabbed | the banners out apper part of Bentwood, West Vir-| Club will support the pienie on ‘ paipdesed ; ; i i it, | stration July sth a mass meeting) owd t {nta, by the National Miners’ Union.| July 19. Going to work out a plan | 7CS" cat working pee time 2 or 3 nists were shot dead and two se-| formed quarters that the conference | immediately revoked the permit. +5 held for Comrade Moore. About| ® machine, g the crowd to There were between three -to_four for aprending and bailding the days a week and many of these don’t | viously wounded. One detective was | has been encountering very disturb- | Howell was arrested in this town at | 299 workers of which a majority were |™ove on. Then some f red miners and miners’ wives nily Worker by pledging two | |: at wi i ages i ” a Sy ier FY rovocat: and oblldren present. ST. secre-| houra.e week by every clus mem= | S1OW How long that will last | seriously wounded. Later the police| ing difficulties. F the Tees May 1st demonsiration When | Négroea heard ‘his talk'on discrimi-|Dlgeon Drovooated a A tary-treasurer of the H Local, and| ber. Collected for Tom Mooney Wages Cut | made mass raids on workers’ quar-| In Washington, Dwight W. Mor-/the police broke up an open air| potion ana the Scottsboro frame-up. | Sulted in one white worker, Comrade & comrade from Ohio had brought in| 82.25, for Seottsbo: boys $1.75.” Wages have been cut in all plants.-| ters, arresting thirty. row, former member of the firm of| meeting which he was addressing. Gus Vantjas, who spoke earlier in a large bundle of Daily Workers and he introduced the best paper in Keep the flame rising and spread- ing till Hicksville and environs are Many workers here can’t pay their Morgan & Co., was called into con- He was later released pending an A protest resolution was sent to the the evening bein, rged with as- | Governor of Alabama from this|"". the world, the Daily Worker, andj blazing hot for the Daily Worker] rent, those who own houses can’t} ference by President Hoover. Mor-| appeal. i | sault he said they were for sale at three| Club. Other districts can stand | Cable by Inprecorr : | meeting. Ib Giitite aha on Ha i iat cents apiece, and he sold them inside | litte heat trom: this fire, tet xtartea | Meet the taxes, buying something to) BERLIN, July 21—London reports | Tow, who is a senator from New Jer-| The workers of Cumberland will) > °° 8 | 14 1.2) ‘This was a deliberate provocatio of a few minutes. If he had s|and begin a Dally Worker Club in| eat becomes harder and harder each|that Roy was arrested at Bombay | sey, was called in as a “banker,” it | defy this edict of the bosses’ lackey eaeceaer = as an excuse to prohibit meetings hundred more he would have sold! your own back yard! day. The little money saved up is | today charged with wi war | Was announced. | when they come out in a mass dem- struck terror in the eel of the} in this neighborhood—meetings which giving out. The young workers are against the king. Two Indians were| Ramsay MacDonald, “Socialist” | onstration on August Ist in Cumber-| ‘ity authorities, for they saw the| nave become of late very successful LOW WEEKEND RECEIPTS; DISTRICTS P: 3, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13 STILL FAR BEHIND trict 2 (New York) had one of the lowest totals in a long time—$86. ‘Turn in all coupon books, whether | scrape living off the little their fathers can together, but soon their fathers won't have anything to scrape together. Winter Looms Dark During the summer, these things aren’t felt at their hardest. Many crisis is not letting up and there are arrested for harbouring him. They appeared in court and remanded. Martial law has been proclaimed in Peking and Tientsin today in con- nection with the revolt in Shihyusan. The authorites are requestioning transports to faciliate extensive mi- heim for three weeks. Fourteen lackey for British imperialism, in opening the London conference said the imperialists must come to an agreement to stave off Communist victory and the overthrow of capi- talism in Germany. MacDonald blamed the world econ- Germany.” ‘The “Socialist” premier |land. This demonstration will be| held in defiance of any orders by the) police commissioner or any other lackey of the bosses. The miners of Lonaconing, a mine town 20 miles from Cumberland, will have an op- | portunity to hear the facts of the ing miners, Novak and Manuel. | workers uniting to struggle against |their common enemy. These meet- ings were a part of a mobilization for August First demonstration in the city. Therefore a wave of ter- eee has begun against the workers | here. as a rallying point of neighborhood Negro and white workers. The Communist Party and the League of Struggle for Negro Righis will hold meetings here at 7th and Peralta Sts. despite this terror. Out August First. eu Pen ae ties workers have little truck gardens |litary movements. omic crisis to the fall in prices, ab-| present strike at the mass meeting Arrest Worker. Down with Police terror! Solidar- het a te Gfinneapolis); 19 (Kansas | and a few chickens, and get odd jobs ewe 58 solving capitalism from blame and| called at the Lanoconing Ball Park) During July 9th’demohitration at|ity of white and colored workers | tons.” Collectors “should ask those hia) are the districts that should we | OR farms or around town, But in| BERLIN, July 21—Yesterday the| trying to build up confidence of the|by the Penn.-Ohio Relief Commit-|7th and Peralta Streets, several mo-| must be strengthened to fight this | She sto they want | especially exerting themselves to|the winter, they won't have even| German authorities suppressed Com-| workers in the dying system. He| tee this coming Sunday at 1 p. m.|torcycle cops were riding around|terror! Come out August Ist i | sat i Bad ta mre it ow giricts 9 10! that. ‘They go along hoping some-| munist dailies, the “Socialist Re-| also said that it was the object of | The speakers at this meeting will be| back and forth but did not stop the|the streets to protest against war uty QANTAS Senate ut deo. Baers while 3, 7 and 13, though above 50| thing will happen by winter, but} public” in Cologne for two weeks| the conference to “restore the confi- | Howell, Bradley, Trade Union Unity| meeting. As soon as it was ad-| preparations and against starvation y 68 pm. to Monday 5 pin. Dis- ee gain’ oat tan ae UH en nothing is going to happen. The/and the “Arbeiter Zeitung” inMann-|dence of the foreign investors in| League secretary, and the two strik-| journed, they quickly came with re- | lot! ‘The biggest contribution for the day was from District 3 (Philadeiphia), which sent in $123. Very Tittle as . filled or not! Keep after the half dollars! Get pledges to the Sustaining Fund! Ar- no prospects for jobs or relief for the workers of Spring, Valley. Starvation faces them this winter— Fange affatre! some will be thrown out of their Communist dailies are now sup- pressed, including the biggest and most important. wants investors to have confidence in being able to wring profits out of the German masses. This meeting will also be utilized towards establishing the National Miners’ Union in Maryland and or- ganization of broad relief committees Soviet Workers Write to Phila. Building Trade Workers a.vusersinctan: |Detrot | stl Wepeter, me. *°| homes, for non-payment of rent or | to give support to the striking pa ‘ Sverdlovsk, US.S.R. | as vast as ours, our government, be- a TEnty Mans. #80] F. Smykowsk! — 1.00 | “Vernon, Wash. .20 | their horses will be sold and taken | a APIT ALISM ON TRI AL. ” N AYS ers. All workers are invited to! To the Building workers of Phila. | ing a workers’ government takes care cheater, NH. | .80| Wamtramek: 100 | B. Stanwogd: Wash: || away for taxes or mortgages. ; ‘ 9 | Dear Comrades:— of every worker, = ba og on | F, Jackowink 1.00 M. Afseth s10| Workers of Spring Valley—an | We have received Comrade H. H.) We workers in the Soviet Unior Fitchburg Unit, ee po a 10| unemployed council has been or- A SCORE M Rvs letter and shudder at the con-| don't struggle with the administra Mass. 7.00 | Col. gumery aroend hen | eee 29 | Banized in town. The purpose of ’ j ‘ ditions under which workers work| tion of this or that factory as ee Total eo Wire. Crm, B e- | 50) this Unemployed Council is to or- | Y 7 | g N and bbe in a ait Laggan Lev to bins oe cacy Bai DIST! 2 troft, ial | | ganize all the unemployed workers iH) I JAM | M 6 prosperity, where capitalism sucks] backwardness to an advanced ir © Satkin, Bkiyn 1.00 o ‘3 pred TosraioT is | of Spring valiap“¥ling and old;| (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | put over any working conditions the; '* 7Di+«E- a 1" | out of the toiling masses their last'| trial state with all its riches belo’ Vien ey a $000 | M. Chftman, Oak- * | ; bpeses desire, and smash pposi- | foreas.- “ahd: | ruins‘ their ” health | ing not to a small bunch of capit sekadlnavion Wise. “© | liad Lets Ones. | Bespersageethe pes ar ean at ny fouid Judgment.” ‘The capitalist tion of the’ worker to sence peat teePay het Uaasea ite bik oplkoad at ttle ie League, N-¥.C. 1.98 | town, K3. 30 ee Ge AL a city, | P2Pers. Of course, gobble it up be-| and starvation. ‘This is how Green To Hold Labor Defense There can be no comparison what- | posal of the working class. wteanne, WEG,” 430 Pg ae set | count} "| Ginconteat and ace ative te the tact | and the leading A. F of L. officers} Conference July 27 bet ditions in the Uni-| It is exceedingly dimcult to com- +. eae, ay 0. = ‘oline, tld al at epee: | county or state. | discontent and are alive to the fact want capitalism to “fefors.” y & ever ‘ween conditions nu : zi ae ay re aaah pe : D. Harrigan, N.Y. 100| B. Goslin S| Sau. = wre | All over the state, all over the} that Green is using his new tactics | " Test BHpOGGY’ miisthks Cinsavs take'| “agen ~ : ter States and = in pe phos pare oN t wi A m jana ae 4 Book .. yet hg 30 sympathizer 1.00, country the workers are forming | to act as a lightening rod against oe Ser hon altesk GEILE SE ca J YORK.— ‘The murder of 16-| Union—a country but recently re-/| tions, a our el Ss Be ele sai | py ranean wat ‘ae. ej ‘Los An- bail branches of the Unemployed Coun- | the wrath of the starving masses. {talidts, the patil he aaa feo4 | year-old William Simon while pick-| covered from civil war ,and where | scarcely eas ‘eas "9 are neéar- ‘ot. among comra: JAS. Chicago | 1.00| San Pedro, Calit., | cils to fight for unémployment in-| Green starts off: , y ~ | eting the Gaylord mine, near Mar-| investments in industrial upbuilding | ing its end, and in spite of numerous graphene | sic ar Ort Sg ht pblerman 1.00 surance, $15 a week for every unemt- | ip A sacuenreuene Heong ee it plain | tin’s Ferry, Ohio,” declared M. Sterm;| nearly exceed industrial revoniie. difficulties confronting us, we |. Silberling, Man- Louis, fecha : loyed worker and $3 for each de- sses that he doesn’t want | district organizer of the TI. L. D. yorker »| ly believe in our final success and tn 0 ries | poe —tt*| Sendent. “Come to the meeting.| amd which prompts good and | to disturb their position on the| Pittsburgh District, in a statement | guj protection of their respective | Will construct a Socialist state where ea cael, eel —. 920.75! Wednesday night at 8 o'clock at| 1¥#! citizens to ponder and say | backs of he working-class one bit./on the shooting today, “proves that| trade unions, Of course mechanized | labor will be above all and the riche A Sympathiver = 100| stinnenpolis, Mins! Fe dig tg Prosperity Club. ‘| othe time,ias.arrived when cap- | “1 am not denouncing income.| regardless of locality, whether in| methods are being introduced, but| afd natural resources serve the ben- 5 tam, Bx. 5.00 | "Mrs. Zoht 2 a ‘jae » Guilford, italism is. on trial and must change | I am not denouncing those who are Pennsylvania or Ohio or West Vir- 7 AS 4 edb al efits of the working cl so lanttiioe 1.25| Mrs.K. Anderson .50 ee "Quimby, Wert. 4 its tactics, Capitalism must face | wealthy,” he says crawling on his ginia, the mine owners, their depu-| 07 °0° “im US oan ah |. -SWits Reavonuionads deouuans 3 ye . Kabus 1,00 | “port, Conn. 4.00| _ Workers Correspondence is the | jtg responsibilities and micet its | belly before the bosses. |'Hes and ‘ecabe have been given «| CCmutons of the workers’ lives an t utionary | S. Feo | WD. Johnson 190) Bridgeport Pelish =| | Build your press by writing for it | Cifignion to. society. This cannot | Green is certain to be louder than| free hand to shoot to kill as they|*iitate labor. Every '“tlisabled | Workers’ Committee. wun = New Britain Nuc, 3.00 backbone of the revolutionary press. | be evaded permanently. ¥ must | over in his talk about reforr will” vy worker is being supported by an effi-| With = ae of “ee es 143, Serantom ho erereee, Rebs ‘Gir.e8 | adjust itself to serve society and | capitalism. ‘The workers throughout : cient social insurance system, and! meeting of bui! ing sha ers. sectis ‘Washington, D. ©, med ce Total $17.00 Rg ae Oa! ee Stern scored Paul Waddell, prose-| aitnough the country's funds are not! 5, Kizel mining distric as Cat a ome DISTRICT 17 | must not essay to make society its | the country are increasing their! cutor of Belmont County as an “in-| **?0Ue! ss a es esr A a 35 | w“Niemie, Mar- Bags ig cn xo | Q servitor.” struggles against wage cuts, starva-| strument of the coal operators.” SPT Rige ae * .00| atette, Mich. 50) EMP. Harth ‘as | What is Green’s solution? He] tion, hunger. Green will increase} “The entire apparatus of the ju- Milwaukee Jobless Fight Foreed Labor J. Debiias 1.08 ‘Total 5.23 Sar canes ‘i = Pa Vi wants the capitalists to plan pro-| his lying, his demagogy to fool the} diciary operates according to the will Miemeed Phila, m 100.00 DISTRICT 10 i. Goleh vig ‘25 § 4 y| duction, that is, as Woll, who offers | workers and to keep his fat-salaried | of the mine owners,” said Stern. MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin.— The worth. They try to hold our pay fron: sian | wt, Ne Dakota Brown 15 the same solution admits, to in-| job as the chief strike-breaker of the | “Waddell’s statement actually con-| “socialist” city officials fakers that | the 9th of July till the 18t., so the iad eae wed 1.00 Baly -— — stitute a fascist regime; cut wages,! American Federation of Labor. dones the murder.” they are, claim to help the workers.|could cut off another weeks’ food wreatine, Ix. 1,00| Oitun *©/To Open First Relief | Waddell had said he “didn’t know|Fellow workers, this is the,way they | from our pay. We got busy and orga- breed Orage — ad what charge would be placed”|help us. At Brown Deer Park the|nized the workers on the job, went ‘as City, Mo. Kitchen: Rush Funds! TB P % a 7 | Total $4.50 1tenen; US: nas: ine ee 0 U ni @ ron against the murderous scab, and that |county has about 100 men at work.|down to the outdoor relief, and de ‘Total $3.00 DISTRICT 18 | is i «| the shooter would be “released on|This is @ forced labor job. The out-|manded our money. They agreed to Unessplovens wel ee erie cedar] ee acta 20 sear veel tbe. Sait bond if he can raise it.” door relief gives the workers these | pay our money on the 13th for sure ‘den, N. D. | Ydaho 4,90) &mMs and legs look like spindles and Program Into Action i In Pittsburgh | Stern said: “The International La-| jobs and they tell them, “either take| ‘This proves, fellow workers, we HJ. Johnson, Burke, their little bellies distended, the first | bor Defense will raise sufficient mass | these jobs, or you get no relief.” ‘The | must organize and fight if we will DISTRICT 12 pies, a6n5: ww | telief kitchen in the Kentucky. strike protest among the miners, the steel| fake outdoor relief makes the workers | win le ar Pie a fields, will be opened in Wallens| (coNTINUED FROM PAGE ONE? | all office records. Your correspon-| workers and other groups of the|pay more than the rotten food is -From a worker. H. K J. Miller, Seattle, 3 Wilege a ae nee e cectcr 1 ciecice dent happened to wander in at this| working class in this district to stay et eee a 100} that these children are suffering| be addressed by Thomas Myers-| juncture, and gave the cops an|the hand of the murderous coal op-|1.. i S + a Lr, Olson, Eugene, se Total from malnutrition. 3 cough, secretary of the Miners Na-| argument that their warrant for |erators and their tools, the police Pitt. Unemployed Council Prepares for Con- A. Roberts, W. Wetr- J. Park, Mt. Ver- A. Bako! One little girl, Norma, is so weak tional Committee of Action, set UP| Bele Lewis did not cover the receipt |and courts. The conference to be vention ton, W. Va. co] > Se ny 1.00 ville, she can't speak above a whisper.| by the National Conference. Myers- book of the Relief Committee. So|held July 27, in Pittsburgh, at 2157 Total cnet atte Wash 6.00 Total $1.00 nips ies eyes, round as saucers, ated Pisin ealkgaentee> tot they pinched your correspondent | Center Ave., Mi arnt bs (By a Worker Correspondent) of the local politicians were there ‘is owas forest nag ! p also, evidently on the grounds that | 45,000 coal strikers, an ional] PITTSBURG, Pa.—Regular open é wenn en oe betel ‘Wash.: L. Fillmore, Van- “We can get a large store, kitchen | “incitement to riot” becuse he was|}e was a mates tit i | steel workers and sympathizers, will oe is ee om and tried to disrupt the meeting 7. Lapin .25| “conver, Canada 1.00 the wildwood piéket i hi pestiferous stranger an air meetings.are being held Ugh | but were chased away by the unem- Croxall, Canton, 0. 2.00; Two friends 50 ——| and all, for nothing in Wallens|on the wildwood picket line when} Wonany a vagrant, One receipt|be one of the steps to force the|out the city’to prepare for the big gt ety ne ae os Ware Saliau 23 ‘Total $1.00| Creek for our first relief station,”| the deputies fired into it June 22)).ok they wrapped up, in the face| Withdrawal of the deputies and state| unemployment convention which will |Ploved workers. Many workers pres- Polish Br. 1L.D., Pt, 0: 0 | Total al dist. $331.48 | the Kentucky relief committee writes | and killed one man and wounded) o¢ continued protests of the already | troopers from the coal strike area|is held here July 26 at 2157 Centre |ent were just recently laid off at ee es. cee Marvevtite, Wash: | Prev. recelved 35,788.88 | to the central headquarters, Room | 12 others. arrested aforementioned correspond- | Where they go around killing, shoot- | ave. the Byers Pipe plant and were very ‘Total $12.00! OH. Lask 110 Total to date $30,120.36 | 205, 611 Penn Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa.! ‘The Lewis-Fishwick-Farrington of-|ent and steno, but they lost their| ine and ruling with a high hand.” A big open air meeting was held enthusiastic about the meeting. T enclose a 50 cent piece to build the D. W. Sustaining Fund ............. I pledge .ayself to] WEAP ME UP AND SEND Worke rs’ Militancy Downs Injunction COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa, July 20. ment was thade that the case was dismissed and the costs to be paid by down to the headquarters of the T. U. U. L. and talked oyer the victory and decided that in future eviction cases @ great effort will be made to mobilize more workers to participate in evic- tion fights. applauding. All filed out of the court room leaving the courtroom complete- ly deserted, went marching down the streets singing “Solidarity” and “The Red Flag.” (Put cross here) or monthly sum of The committee of workers marched The county was forced in the case “We are writing this letter at once because we want you to help us at once to get started. We advise money instead of food shipment, be- cause we can’t wait for shipment to arrive. “The family of 13 of one of our most active comrades had nothing but a raw cabbage to eat from Fri- day to Monday,” the relief secretary writes, “Please sénd funds at once!” At the same time the National Miners’ Union is making organiza- tional strides ahead in the Kentucky fields, preparing to introduce mass picketing there and spread the strike. ‘The Kentucky miners are appeal- ing Miners’ Relief Committee urges all syspathizers to send funds to 611 Penn Avé, so that food can be sent to them, One way of defending the Soviet Union is to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor,’” by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. Don’t Let Ailing ficaldom in Illinois is thoroughly hated and despised. Miners are kept in the U. M. W. only. through the compulsory payment of dues through the check-off. The so- called “Rank and File” leadership of Edmondson has controlled sub-dis- trict convention at Belleville, no sup- port was given the strike of the 2200 Orient No. 1 and Orient No. 2 miners. The Howat- Muste move- ment has nothing to offer the min- ers. The Southern Illinois miners are suffering like other miners, from the continual lowering of pay, in- crease of unpaid labor, and growing unemployment. They will be ready to support the 45,000 strikers rep- own demands, will themselves be a part of the strike movement. eo ecie PITTSBURGH, Pa., July 22.—The chief of police of Carnegie seized the head of the local strike com- mi.tee a day or so ago, and led him all over town looking for the type- writer on which leaflets had been written, calling a mass meeting of miners there, Sunday. They didn’t find it. This is something like what two nerve or something, for they allowed it to remain in possession of the steno to the police station and back. Steno, correspondent and unopened receipt book were all released shortly. The striking miners and their re- lief committee are not overburdened with office equipment, but such type- writers and receipt books as they have are evidently regarded here as serious .domestic enemies of the peace and dignity ofthe Common- wealth of Pennslyania. BUFFALO MINERS BUFFALO, N. Y., July 22.—A mass outing and picnic, under the auspi-+ ces of the International Labor ‘De- fense, willbe held this Sunday at Homewood Park, (Eest Sside Russian picnic grounds). this picnic go to the defense of the arrested strikers in the Pennsylvania- Ohio coal fields. The picnic will serve a two-fold ‘The proceeds of UNEMPLOYED GET “HEALTH DAY” ST. LOUIS, Mo., July 20.—Mayor Miller of St. Louis had proclaimed tuberculosis day for next Wednesday July 22nd, urging the people to unite on that day in observance of health principles. Right next to the an- nouncement of this proclamation you find an announcement by the Citizen's Buro that the number of of “child health days” and other days only exposes the fakery of these officials. With the number of unemployed increasing, with the misery of the masses growing which undermines the health of the broad masses of Workers, they call upon the workers to observe the health rules. The workers of St. Louis will ex- pose such fakery on August 1st when they will demonstrate in front of the city hall at 2 p.m. and demand on ‘the South Side at 13th and Bingham Street. Speakers from the unemployed councils called on the workers to form committee in their neighborhoods to send delegates to the convention to fight unemployed and starvation. Some stool pigeons Washington Farmers Daily Worker: Seattle, Wash. ELLENSBURG, Wash., sits in the midst of agricultural Washington. There are beautiful fruits and vari- ous crops raised here. The popula- tion is 95 per cent native-born Am- erican. No one should doubt that tion one finds that is has and with the same impact that it has in the cities. In the schools it was found necessary to feed the greatest por- tion of the children there milk dur- ing recess hours, because of their undernourished condition. The pa- rents paid for it. This is again the endless chain of capitalism. ‘The burden of the crisis is being put upon the shoulders of the poor farm- We are also preparing for a big Anti-war demonstration to be held here on August 1. Speakers from the unemployed councils are visiting all working-class organizations to rall the workers for the demonstration and the unemployed convention Taxed Beyond Income ers and workers who still little left. Over at Issequah, Wash., one farm- er who is considered well off, says that he will walk off and leave his land this fall if prices dont’ im- prove. He says that taxes come to have 2 \| unemployed has increased during the : M4 xe Greenshield and Evarest, workers | ing for food—and the Pennsylvania- resented at the National Conference. first two weeks of July. a the ‘rugged American individualism” | $2.50 a bef which be a < = spontaneously started cheering and| Ohio West Virginia-Kentucky Strik-| and, once having - formulated - their hase 2 teal Jamations |"#8 full sway here, Upon investiga-)more than he is ma s like the American farmers will be better off when they adopt tha tac- tics of their Russian brothers anc fight for actual ownership of the land, free from bank and bank gov- ernment domination. When they fight with the workers in town against their commo nenemy and only then will they find the land “able to give them a living.” A FARMER. ——————————————— e ° . : * ronnie Seigpenreivaye hoffe foc ie ag ge ogg apd Kidneys and tat detectives of the Pitsburg pole | ae, ive for miner” defense | edate ret for the unemployed! Announcement to Organizers of the August 1st Meetings A “a é Fs s | demani e money spent for cause of the evletion of Glenn Fort county was forced to give food to two BI a d d er Se, the Pennsyvania-Ohlo-West Virginia feoondly, ag 8 vwelcome” attair in| war purposes be tumed over to feed | GREETINGS :— a family being put back into| other of unemployed work- triking Miners tional r the unemployed and their families. the house was dismissed July 10 by|ers. Water was turned on for an- headquarters with a warrant for the recently beén initiated into the ranks The workers of St. Louls will not The Bradford-Brown Educational Company have issued a pamphlet of other family at the request of the Ruin Your Entire arrest of Belle Lewis, whom they of the International Labor Defen: starve peacefully, and then listen to fourty-four pages by Bishop Brown entitled: “The War-Vampire and ‘The program, which includes danc- the Chuches.” Copies of this pamphlet may be had in any number the cost to be paid by the plaintiff.| committee of the U. C. Every week claim sent out. several hundred the nonsense of the officials of the A committee of over fifty workers| there are dozens of families taxen| BOdily Health Ree | miners to collect reliet for the strik- ie ere atari’ Velie to Tet icity, Atl out an August lat, api t,| Toreired by organkates of mectings tree carriage propate. appeared in the court room at nine|care of by getting them food from | You'llbesorryif youdon’tactatonce | ing miners and their starving Sa , at the City Hall. If meetings are held under circumstances which admit of raffling, Mrs. o'clock when the case was to come|the county, getting house rents paid | tocurb kidney and bladder troubles. A | families, They found there a sten- | 98¢5- Brown will be glad to send a piece or two of her embroidery to help up for hearing. The judge with the| through the Unemployed Council, serous breakdown yourhealthmay ographer, whom they pretended to] To get to the grounds, take the on with their funds. * lawyers for Greenshield and Evarest| which, through its committee makes fe rep toate gists Tt bas t believe was the woman named in|Lancaster-Bellview bus at Broadway|and Washington, one leaving every Se \NAL COMPEN | was rather hesitating about coming|demands and organizes demonstra- oor aes century by |the warrant, although the steno|..ad Washington St., and ride to Bell-| hour. All workers are urged to sup- BRADFORD-BROWN EDUCATIONAL CO} 2 to face the crowd of workers. tions at a couple of hours notice— Mctent ike world, abundantly proved she was not. But| yiew . From there posters and signs] port the campaign for the defense GALION, OHIO court did not start until 10:45—| against the county, and city govern- then, on this warrant for Belle| will indicate the location of the pic-|of the miners by attending this pic- | L Ps pont ee A A A A A LS LARA EERE RE RI a ER © nagging late then | Paar ent ng the cops proceeded to, demand nic grounds, --Buses: leave Broedway, nic, ar -W Tiedt Ne ENC ag fe chp + t ‘