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DATLY WORKER NEEDLE WORKERS TURN LOCKOUT INTO STRIKE AND WIN ALL DEMANDS Workers in H. and M.1 M. Knitting Mill Force the Recognition Of Price And Shop Committees Win Victory Over Spe torfous strike is shown by eve ago in the H. and M. Knitting Conditions in this shop were going from bad to ‘worse, }'s lttle doubt that Wall St starting with a 5 per cent wage-cut for all the week workers im April and being followed by a® steady price slashing for all the piece workers. Terrorized Workers. Besides worsening the economic eonditions of the workers, the boss turned the shop into a veritable hell- hole by abusing the workers and threatening them, using vile lan- @uage in the presence of the women and terrorizing them in every man- ner conceivable, hoping in this way to make them submissive and meek, which would allow him to continue his wage-slashing program unmo- Tested. But the boss was sadly disap- pointed. It was these unbearable conditions that led to the steady unionization of the workers in the shop into the Needle Trade Workers’ Tadustrial Union. Lockout Bedomes Strike. The incident that brought matters to a head was the demand of the shop committee that the boss stop discrimination against a particular Woman in the shop and that he stop laying her off too frequently. ‘This demand made the boss fly into one of his frequent fits and he or- dered the workers from the shop. ‘The workers complied with his re- Sailors from U. S. Fleet Support Unemployed Council (By a Worker Correspondent) SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.—The navy is anchored out in the bay here and thousands of sailors are on leave. ‘These sailors witnessed our mass Sacco and Vanzetti demonstration and parade. These sailors received our leaflets, and we must not forget that the navy today is a different one than it used to be. Today there are many young workers driven by hunger and desperation because of unemployment into the navy. The sailors of today are workers and workers’ children. These sailors must be won over to the side of the strug- gling workers. Later that day a meeting of the unemployed council was held at ‘Third and Minna Streets, and in the large crowd of workers were a few sailors, who listened very attentively and expressed agreement with what was said by the speaker. A collec- tion was taken up to help the Unem- ployed Council to carry on its work. Every sailor in the audience gave at Teast a half a dollar, but what im- UMWA Misleaders Force 50% | Miners and LineUp With Bosses | » BENTON, ug Aug. 28.—The close connection of the strikebreaking UMWA machinery with the capital- ist state apparatus for oppressing the workers, was made clear in Franklin County three weeks ago, when the arrival of John L. Lewis to force the Orient strikers back to work coincided so neatly with the beginning of Sheriff Browning Rob- inson’s drive against the “Reds.” Now once again this connection is revealed by the arrest of three mili- tant fighters at a meeting held by John Walker, prize UMWA scab- herder, president of District 12, Joe ‘Tash, District NMU organizer, de- manding the floor in the Walker meeting. Walker, knowing the min- ers are sick nad tired of his dirty work for the bosses, had a bunch of deputy sheriffs in the hall to protect himself from the miners he has so often betrayed. When Comrade Tash tried to speak, these deputy sheriff Defeat Reading “Socialists” Attempt to Sell Workers (By a Worker Correspondent) READING, Pa.—Over five hundred workers from the neighborhood gath- ered at the house of Edward Taylor, 334 Harold St., to prevent the sale of a worker's furniture by the con- stable. Taylor is.a Negro worker, unem- ployed for over six months and un- able to get any work. The “socialist” city administration has not given any relief to this worker who has a family of four. When this case came up, the Unemployed Council went down to the neighborhood, which consists of white workers and mobil- ized all of those workers for the Must Intensify Fight For Relief in Cal. (By a Worker Correspondent) STOCKTON, Calif.—‘If any of you fellows are Reds, you wanta lookout thassal.” One of the supervisors of the San Joquain Board of Supervi- sors thus let the cat out of the bag when the Unemployed Committee went to demand an answer to their demands. It shows they were more interested in red-baiting than in giving relief to the unemployed. The supervisors confessed their tota) bankruptcy and inability to Increase In Wages For Finishers , (By a Worker Correspordent) ! NEW YORK.—HoW a lockout can be turned into a vic-| ed-up “and 5 Per Cent mts that took place two weeks Mills. quest and left the shop in a body. They began at once to picket the shop. The boss called the police, who tried to make things uncomfortable for the workers. The solidarity of |the workers, however, overcame all) obstacles and finally the boss was compelled to call the strike commit- tee in and request a settlement. Win Demands. This strike, which succeeded in scaring the boss in a period of ‘two days, achieved the following: 1, The boss agreed to treat the workers humanely. %. ‘Whe check-otf system, used to speed up the workers, was abol- ished. 3. Raising the wages by 5 per cent of all finishers earning less than $15. 4. Recognition shop committees. This shows what can be done by the mass solidarity of all the work- ers in the shop, under the guidance of a proper militant organization, It proves that only through joining the knitting section of the N. T. W. I. U. can the knitting workers demand and receive recognition of their rights. of price and pressed me most was that one old tar came over after the meeting was nearly concluded, handed up a dollar and said: “Boy you spoke nothing but the truth, here take this, and give old Hoover hell! Give him hell!” That action. of the sailor was cheered for ten minutes by the work- ers especially in view of the fact that this sailor openly exposed himself in front of a crowd that might have contained a stool pigeon. Every worker must back up this simple action of this worker who despite the fact that he in the navy is with the workers in their fight for better conditions. Into the Unemployed Councils and fight for immediate relief. Demand social insurance. Organize your fel- low workers and make a more de- termined struggle against the terror of the boss class. Build the Com- thunist Party, the parfy of the work- ing class. Fight against war—defend the Soviet Union! —A Worker. Wage Cut On | “buddies’ ‘of Walkers, arrested him— also two others, Zip Kushinsky and Joe Lednicky, who objected to the high handed proceedure. According to the capitalist press, the three are to be returned to Franklin County for deportation proceedings. What will happen to them there’ under the rule of the Franklin County coal operators can be seen from a state- ment of prosecuting attorney Marion | Hart, himself a son of a coal opera- | tor: “If we ever catch Joe Tash, his | name will be Hash!” Workers all over the country must protect agianst this terror directed against the Illinois miners, and es- pecially the foreign born. Telegrams and letters of protest should be sent to Sheriff Robinson of Franklin County at Benton, Illinois. Other- wise, these organizers will be brutally beaten by the deputies as those ar- rested before have been. Furniture support of the Negro family. The constable who had come down ready to sell the furniture had to re- treat immediately when he saw the mass of workers gathered around the house and heard the sentiment ot those workers, He postponed the case for a week, but the workers are go- ing to be ready next week to pre- vent the sale. The Unemployed Council is covering that neighbor- hood in order to establish a branch. The Unemployed Council will mean- while demand from the “socialist” administration of the city to get this worker a home and give relief for his family. cope with conditions. They told about a conference of mayors, su- pervisors and othr politicians to dis- cuss coordination and cooperation in this “gravest problem.” This shows what we may expect from these full bellies. We must work harder and organize more block committees. This shows that we must administer our own relief which we will force from the bosses and fight all the harder for unem- | Paz, Bolivia, state that the Bolivian WALL STREET BACKS CHILE EXPLOITERS Offer Ex-Soldier $3 A Week As Counterman)| {CONTINUED ¥ROM PAGE ONED from this report is that the Chilean government is receiving assistance from American and British im- perialism, as well as from mercenary Yankee aviators. Recently two such | aviators took part in an action | against the Ibanez government and | in favor of the present regime. There et is sailors and workers by putting into service air mail planes to shoot down Chilean workers and sailors. The United States state depart- ment “denies” sending warships to Chilean waters. This is the usual Wall Street lie to feol the workers | at home who are faced with the same conditions of starvation that the Chilean masses are fighting against. There is no doubt whatever that a large portion of the Pacific fleet of the United States navy is at this moment sailing at full speed to Chilean waters to help the Chilean government shoot down the mutinous sailors in the event the “bombing” proves futile, and the workers on Jand are able to form a united front with the sailors to carry forward the revolution. Terrorize Jobless That the Chilean government is doing all it can to terrorize the workers is shown by the fact that the unemployed are being put into stockade. The New York Times say: “Thousands of unemployed have been assigned to live in designated quarters and are being kept under strict guard to prevent their being influenced by Communists.” What is still further true is that hundreds of other unemployed are being shot down, Government troops, composed mainly of whiteguard elements re- cruited from the exploiting class, are attempting to force railroad workers to quit striking and to carry troops against the revolutionists. Thus far they have not been able to force the workers back to work and troops are operating the railroads at certain points. Conceal Secret Report U. S. Ambassador William S. Cul- bertson, now in Santiago has sent a secret report to the state department. While the state department said that Culbertson reports that “all is well” they added that there are many de- tails in the communication that ‘must be kept secret at this time.” The state department is now pre- paring its excuse for sending Unitell States war ships to help the Chilean ;Sovernment put over its wage cuts. The Hoover government says in the event “shipping is interfered with” the United States navy would take a hand in the mutiny. However, the Wall Street war ships are now on their way to be handy at the call of the copper and nitrate trusts. Bolivia Cabinet Falling Associated Press reports from La Cabinet has resigned. The unem- Ployed workers have been demon- strating for relief in Bolivia and on many occasions clashed with the police. -Seven were reported killed recently. | Starvation, is graphically shown in a ‘helping put down the uprising of | forced to admit the miserable con- Horrible Conditions, DENVER, Sept. 7—How Mexican | | workers in this country are forced to undergo a terrific exploitation be- fore they are kicked out by the bosses’ government as “undesirables” and members of an “inferior” race as soon as they begin to fight against report just made to the State Indus- trial Commission by oe of its inves- tigators, J. R. Ruberson. In this report, the bosses are ditions under which the Mexican workers are forced to labor in this country, working for starvation wages ad held in.actual slavery, The report declares: “They are starving to death while being employed. They are in a state of industrial slavery which is worse than the old chattel slav- ery, because in the days of chattel slavery the owner of a slave saw to it that his property was properly fed and clothed.” ‘Thomas F. Mahoney, of Longmont, chairman of the Mexican welfare committee of the Colorado Council, Knights of Columbus, whose organ- izatio nrenders service to the bosses by helping to crush the struggles of these workers, is forced to admit a Water: in Baines Starving to Death On the Job Report of State Industrial Commission Admits | Slavery Worse Than Chattel System that the workers cannot exist on the With Workers in miserable wages paid by the beet | Sugar bosses, Mahoney declares that | “there are approximately 20,000 | Mexican men, women and children in the fields who are paid $18 an acre for caring for beets a whole Season.” The starvation conditions of these workers are duplicated in many sec- tions of so-called “prosperous” America. The Negro workers in the South suffer from the same terrific exploitation, with tens of thousands of them starving even on the jobs with, in addition, other tens of thou- Sands unemployed and forming part of the vast army of 11,000,000 unem- ployed workers in this country. In the South when the Negro} workers revolt they are met with the lynch terror of th ebosses. In the | Southwest when the Mexican work- ers try to organize they are met with police terror and thrown into jail, as in the Imperial Valley cases, or they are deported. ‘Thousands of Mexi- can workers have been deported in the present deportation drive with which the U. S. Government is try- ing to terrorize the foreign born workers into acceptance of wage | cuts and driving them to act as strikebreakers, “Socialists” Aid War, Wage Cuts As World Crisis Grows NEW YORK.—While the economic ) crisis in Germany and Britain grows worse, with attacks against the work- ers increasing in all forms, the “so- cialists” supporting the capitalist regimes in these countries are pre- paring for a new imperialist war. These facts became clearer as the | League of Nations Assembly opens with the question of arming for a new war constituting one of the ma- jor topics. The “socialists” are lay- ing the basis for a war on the work- ing class and to arm their imperial- ist masters for a new world slaugh- ter. Despite the action of the “socialist” MacDonald in England and the “so- cialists” backing the Bruening regime in Germany, the latest nws reports show the crisis growinw worse with greater misery in store for the work- ers. The New York Times’ cable from London says: “At present, British industry, taken as a whole, shows little sign of recovery. . . . In the basic in- dustries depression _ continues acute.” Another cable from Berlin relates: “The Prussian trade ministry's report describes German industry as almost universally unfavorable. Productive activities declined dur- ing August in coal, cement, wood products and cotton weaving and spinning. The home steel market is also weaker, and in the steel ex- port trade there is sharp French and Belgian competition. . . . “The Federation of German In- dustries and all associations of em- ployers are demanding wage reduc- tions, but the labor union congress | attacks aginst the unemployed, but | :. intensifying its activity on every | the “socialist” leader of the opposi- | tion in the British labor party, Ar- jing role. | hypocrisy to aid MacDonald’s at- if ically. Alfred Lansburgh, editor of | Die Bank, declares that wages must | come down.” Thus not only is the crisis grow- ing worse, with the “socialists” lay- | ing the basis and carrying through | we see the bosses encouraged in the | matter of. further wage-cuts. On Monday, when the League of Nations meets under the pretext of Peace, we will have “socialist” min- isters aiding the imperialists prepare for a new war. Even the capitalist Papers in the United States cannot hide the growing antagonisms. The Associated Press says: “The political | | situation in Europe, observers here | agree, continues unpromising for the success of the arms conference.” Behind the scenes armaments are | increasing. As P. J. Philip, New York Times correspondent, points out, “France has nearly doubled the number of regular re-enlisted sol- diers, having now a professional army | officials, | t FOR DEPORTATION Falsely Claim Illegal} Entry NEW YORK.—Because he obeyed the patriotic injunction to “see America first,” a young New York worker of Polish ported to Poland, county jail at St. charge of having try illegally, As a matter of fact, the yound pedestrian, whose name is Richard Newman, never left the country for a minute since he first came here, legally, seven years ago. Newman, on a walking trip in New England, decided that he wanted to visit Canada and tried to get across teh border in Vermont. The Cana- dian immigration authorities refused to let him in because he didn’t have | at least $25 with him. Albags, Vt., on a entered the coun- dian immigration station to and questioned. The immigration whom he had passed only an hour before, decided that he was trying to get into the United States illegally. He was sent to the jail at St. Albans and held in $500 bail. In a letter to a friend in New York, which was forwarded yester- day to the New York Committee for the Protection of the Foreign Born, his plight as follows: “Tm in jail, being held for depor- is a terrible one. No soap, no towel, no water. I haven’t washed my face | since last Sunday morning. is most terrible. | pritish imperailsm raised their pro- | “The ‘grub, too, Three slices of white bread, a small chunk of butter and a cup of liquid, called tea, three times a day. Day after day, the same thing. No light in the cell—in short, horrible.” In answer to this attack on a for- eign-born worker, which Secretary of | Labor Doak wants to multiply 28,000 imes this year, the Committce for the Protection of the Foreign Born score, WORKERS SCHOOL YOUTH COURSES Early Registration Is} Urged Upon All ‘In view of the increasing import- ance of the young workers in in- ries and in the class struggles, | the Workers School for the fall term | this year will give.many courses aim- \ing to training leaders for the re- of 240,000, of whom 130,000 are col- ored.” He goes on to say: “There is, indeed, scarcely a single country in Europe tcday where the ‘national policy’ as prac- ticed by its government does not run directly counter to most of what the representatives of these countries agree, when they come to Geneva, should be done.” In this hypocritical task of talk- | ing “peace” while rushing to war, thur Henderson, played the outstand- He will use the same tempt to put through the attacks has rejected the demand emphat- | against the workers. PASSAIC YOUTH At Broadway Hall PASSAIC, N. J. — International Youth Day, world wide fighting day of the working youth, will be ob- served in Passaic on Tuesday, Sep- tember 8, at 7:30 p.m. at corner of Oak Street and Myrtle Ave. Young textile strikers will be among the speakers. Organized cheering and a kazee band of Young Pioneers, along with drawing of rapid fire sketches by a young artist, will be among the features of the demonstration. All workers, young and old, colored and white, native and foreign born, employed and unemployed, are called upon to demonstrate on Interna- tional Youth Day against the per- secution of Negro and foreign born workers, against bosses wars, for the Defense of the Soviet Union, for freedom for the 9 Negro boys in Scottsboro, Ala., for complete free- dom for the five Paterson textile strikers, held on a frame-up “mur- der” charge. All out Tuesday Sep- tember 8, 7:30 p.m. at corner of Oak Street and Myrtle Avenue. eee EUG The Buffalo Young Communist League is expecting to have the big- gest youth anti-war demonstration ever held in the city on September 8, International Youth Day, at the Broadway Auditorium, at 8 p. m. The Niagara Frontier is being pre- pared most feverishly for the next war, but the YCL of District 4 is working hard to counteract the bos- ses propaganda for the next impe- rialist war. IYD will be a demon- stration of hundreds of youth, es- pecially Negro young workers against the bosses war and for the defense of the USSR. Soviet “Forced Labor”—Bedacht’ series in pamphlet form at 10 tents ployment insurance. per copy. Read it—Spread it! ; READY FOR SEPT.§ Buffalo Demonstration WINNIPEG WORKERS CENTER {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE local $50 with the message, for only the organization of the masses can end this present system.” Miners’ organizations at Nova Sco- tia, Coleman, Blairmore, Bellvue, Kirkland Lake Fitzroy Harbor and other mine centers have forwarded funds. Ukrainian workers’ organizations have sent money through their re- spective offices, and Finnish workers at Toronto and other centers are rallying to the defense. The sedition laws and section 98 of the criminal code that 1s being used to try to railroad the leading group of the Communist Party of Canada to long jail terms was pro- mulgated by the frightened bourgeoi- sie during the height of the Winni- peg general strike in 1919. Desperate in its effort to break the six weeks’ long general strike the bourgeoisie forced through the following law: “Any association, organization, society or corporation whose pro- fessed purpose is to bring about any governmental, industrial or economic change within Canada by use of force, violence, or physical injury to person or property, orby threats of such injury in order to accomplish such change, or for any other purpose or which shall by any means prosecute or pursye such purpose or professed purpose, or shall so teach, advocate, advise, or defend, shall be an unlawful asso- ciation,’ This is followed by eleven other clauses along similar lines, the meaning of which is that if any or- ganization is ruled “an unlawful association” then any mounted po- liceman or officer of the force can without a warrant search, confis- cate, seize any property belonging to any member of such an associa- “carry | | on the fight of our leaders for a more | militant spirit among the workers, tion—the range becomes so wide in +? tat thet there ia ne end to the WRECKED BY FASCIST BOMB AGE ONEY | persecution and terror that its ex- ecution entails. The penalty for belonging or de ling such an as- sociation is 20 years. The arrest of the Political Com- mittee of the Communist Party comes at a time when unemploy- ment in Canada has reached tre- mendous proportions , when the workers still in the shops are having their wages cut relentlessly, when the additional burdens of balancing the budget will be placed upon the work- ers and farmers. The same law that was used to crush the Winni- peg general strike in 1919 is now be- ing used in an effort to crush the rising struggles of the Canadian workers and farmers under the lead- ership of their Communist Party. American workers and farmers should come to the support of their class brothers in Canada, to defeat the attempts of the Bennett-bankers government to crush the Communist Party and thus prepare the way for a smashing attack on the Canadian workers and farmers. Organize demonstrations and pro- test meetings and show the Canadian that the American workers and farmers are solidly behind the Canadian toilers in their struggles. Cement the bonds of solidarity be- tween the American and Canadian working class and farmers in the common struggle for unemployment relief, against wage cuts, against im- perialist wars and overthrow of capi- talism. 2 YOUNG WORKERS! Join the Young Communist League during the week of the 17th Inter- national Youth Day. Join in struggle of the Youth to- gether with the adults against starv- ation, wage cuts, speed up. For more information about the Young Communist League write to: Y CL, 50 E. 13th St., 9th floor New York City, N. ¥. Name volutionary youth movement. Course: |as Fundamentals of Communisn | Political Economy, Marxism, Lenin- ism, Trade Union Strategy and Tac- | ties, ete for both young and adult | workers. Besides, special courses for | he training of capable cadres for the | youth movement are given. | these courses are: Organization | |Problems of the Youth, History of titionary Youth Movement, |the Rev Many workers have already regis- |tered for the more than forty cour | given. Workers are advised to reg: ister early, as the number of students in each class will be strictly limited. Registration is taken at the School office, 35 E. 12th St, third floor. Some of the many new courses for ‘this fall term are: History of Class | Struggles, Social Insurance, Drawing Hel sone ie ay Posters, etc., His- . U. S. A, Revolutionary | History of the Three} pean, Internationale, History of the C. P.| S, U., Course for Financial Secre- taries, ete. A catalogue with descrip- | formations about the School can be obtained upon eae HOLD 5 ILLINOIS NMU ORGANIZERS Threat Deport Two of The Organizers BENTON, Il—The cases of Aiman, Tlyevich and Safron, organizers of the National Miners’ Union, who were arrested about a month ago, came up for a hearing August 2 be- fore Commissioner of Immigration fash. The ILD was represented by ttorney Bental. ing the hearing took the cases under advisement. These three organizers are also being charged with criminal syndicalism as threatened by State Attorney Marion Hart, Joe Tash, Joe Lednicky, organizers of the NMU, and Zip Kushinsky, youth organizer, who were arrested on August 25 in Carlinville, Tll., in connection with a meeting where John J. Walker, District President of the United Mine Workers of Am- erica, spoke, are also being charged with criminal syndicalism. The “crime” of Tash was that he dared to ask for the floor at that meeting and that he took the floor. Led- nicky and Zip Kushinsky were ar- rested after the meeting and taken to Benton, a hundred miles away, The miners of Southern Illinois, supported by all the workers in the State will mobilize their forces to prevent the jailing of workers and charging them with criminal sedi- better conditions. The ILD will in- itate a broad campaign against the revival of .criminal syndicalism law ‘nd for the immediate release of Address chese workers birth may be de- | He is now in the} When he turned from the Cana- | 32 Union Square, Newman tells of} tation to Poland. The hole I'm inj Some of | and Principles Working-class Child | z eee tions of the courses and other in- | Mr. Nash, follow- | tions because they are fighting for | | DRIVE 10 | (CONTINUED FROM P. ONED these conferences should be held, if Possible, in the first week of Oc- tober. Calls for these conferences, say the directives, must specifically invite the revolutionary unions of the T. U. U. L., the locals of the American Federation of Labor; r | and file members of the Ama] ted Clothing Workers of Ameri and other unions; the Communist Party and the fraternal organiza- | tions and all working-class members f the Socialist Party. the demand for the release of Tom Mooney as a symbol of the growing boss terror against the workers, the demand for the release of Mooney and Billings will be interlocked with | the campaign for the freedom of the | Harlan miners and the Scottsboro [es the Woodland prisoners, the | Imperial Valley and Centralia pris- the American one, he was stopped again | While bringing to the foreground | FRAME WORKER I t D. CALLS FOR NATION WWE FREE TOM MOONEY | oners, and terror inte: the Canadian Go’ Communist Paz trade unions of C: against the The I. L. D. directives warn again-s any tendency, on the one ha replace the campi dom of Tom Moone and Scottsboro camry other hand, to minimize the ¥: and Scottsboro cases in the fi the freedom of Mgoney. The United Front Moo I Defense conferences are to be fol lowed with nation wide demons+-2- | tions on October 24. All I. L. D. d tricts are instructed to hold s wide defense conferences in the mid dle of November; these conferences to arrange for state delegations and participation in the National Huncer March on Washington, D. C., on Des cember 7 (CONTINUED FROM AG DN |fense, made mighty demonstrations | before the American c onsulate. “at Paris a demonstration before | jthe American consulate was broken up by the police. “In South Africa native and poor white workers themselves down under the heel of Boer and | test. “At Hamburg and extending into the country districts over mass meetings and demonstrations | have been held; Comrade Andre, the | Fighters, and others have spoken. Altogether over 20,000 workers have |taken part, and the wave of protest has been great. On July 9 a great mass meeting | was held at the International Sea- | men's Club at Hamburg in which African seamen took part. Repre- sentatives of the International Labor | | Defense and the International Trade Union Committe: of Negro Workers | spoke on the history of the case and | jits class significance. workers expressed their indignation | by protest resolutions denouncing the |frame-up of these boys by the A \erican capitalists their immediate ri same day a demonstr: the Smach Windows of Con: “At Dresden and Colog Ger- many, windows of the American onsulate were broken in and the hurled bottles into the win- containing messaze: ‘Stop the Ly |the 8 Negro~Workers!’ In th many other towns of Germa |workers haye demons‘rated |the leadership of the | Party and the I. L. D. “At Geneva, Switzerland, on the joccasion of the holding of the fake International Conference on African children, the frame-up was denoun and y the under Communist tive of the League Against Imperial- ism. On the following day a protest meeting was held in Geneva at which | representative of the International baeeee Union Committee of Negro workers sp lot the Swise sGction of the 1. 1. 1 workers demonstrated before American consulate. They paraded through the streets despite the po- |lice order against it and then held | their meeting but the workers fought back; several were arrested. The ground | 5 huge; well-known leader of the Red Front | The mass of | Hands off | before this body by the representa- | Under the leadership | the | “NEGRO WORKER” TELLS OF WORLD WIDE PROTEST ON SCOTTSBORO {wens ati the American c32 te building were painted with Big Red |letters: Down with Lynch Rule im | the U. S. A.! Stop the Murder of thr 8 Negro Boys! | Huge Demonstrations in Soviet Union “Workers in many other count ics —England, Cuba, etc.—have joitcd |in the International protest. In Mios- cow and Leningrad and many other | cities and factories throughout So iet Russia mighty mass demonstratirns arose in indiginant protestailm against this mest brutal frame-uy sf 8 children by Am “Comrades, this international spirit of solidarity is the only kind of lan- guage that the bourge: will heed, This mass movement bringinz about | the solidarity of ers threughout | the world, will bring so much press- ure upon the blood th: y capitalist | bosses that they will forced to be | release our class brothers. | Urges Increased Protests | “The International Trade Union |Committce of Nezro Workers calls upon the internationc! proletariat to increase its vi increase its Det © before the Let the bosses hty fis it of the interna- ce, to tional prol “To the wo white and blac’: workers! Defend fense Corps of bly! Defend > pas!’ Demon- strate the releas2 of the boys! You are fighting for bread and life! The bocses trying to crush your strucel> stion end un- ite end black for They employment are trying to divide you and thereby dectroy your movement. Down with white terror and nehing! Death to Lynchers! “Long live Internetional Solid- larity!” Baltimore to Elect Delegates to USSR BALTIMORE, Ma., Sept. 11.—The local brar of the “Friends of the Soviet Union’ ann a mas. meeting, for the purpose of electing a worker's delegation to the Soviet Union. Julia Stewart Poyntz, and Violet Orr, both of the National cffice of “the Friends of the Soviet Union” | will speak at the Vagabond Theater, 3 West Read St. on Friday, Sept. .1, at 8p. m Prepare for the Fifth Annual || DAILY WORKER MORNING BAZ FREIHEIT YOUNG WORKER AAR MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, NEW YORK Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 8, 9, 10, 11 to Name .... Address City .. 17th INTERNATIONAL YOUTH DAY SPECIAL TRIAL OFFER Twenty-Five Cents for Two Months Subscription the YOUNG WORKER (Published Weekly The only youth paper fighting for the every day needs of the young workers YOUNG WORKER Post Office Box 28, Statin: 1D, New Yer': C