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“fst press stated some days ago that} government, but quite the contrary?| DA ILY WORKER, N aW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTORFR 17. 1931 -— Page Five French Imperialists Sharpen Attack in Finance War on U.S. Growing United States Financial Crisis Just as the United States capital- this attack is not “favored” by the Hoover did not have a program all| the government has also no power worked out for the visit of Laval, so | to check it. the French government now denies “Confidence in the dollar and in that Laval has such a program. The French goverriment had to deny this because the New York Times already ard is being slowly undermined here by the use of the same methods its maintenance on the gold stand- | as were employed to destroy con- fidence in the pound sterling. “The French public is being ted to believe that the United States is going in for wholesale inflation, and that in such inflation there is im- mense and immediate danger to the dollar. “In virtually all this comment it has become customary to deseribe the American situation as “critical,” and as if there were likelihood of a forced departure from the gold standard. “Under the guise of commisera- tion with this “critical” situation, published What" it said was the basis of this plan of Laval’s, The French capitalist class’ has already rejected through its press the attempt on the part of Hoover to draw Laval out by intimating that he was in favor of a revision of’ debts based’ on the ability of the warious countries to pay. Laval demanded, in the struggle that has gone on through the capi talist press atid is therefore not “of- fical,” that the United States agrees to cut the debts of the European countries to ‘the United States by fifty per cent if they cut their arm- Miner Murdered; His ‘Little Daughter Is) ‘Hungry; Send Food! HARLAN, Ky, Oct, 4.—Widowed | | when her husband, Joe Moore, was | shot down by gunmen before the National Miners Union soup kit- chen in Wallins Creek, Ky., Nan Moore and her children are now | destitute in this city, | | “My little girl is now going to | school and half the timel have nothing to cook for her when she comes home,” she writes to a | friend in the International Labor Defense. “I am keeping house with my kids, but T am having a hard time and if I don't get help I just don’t know what I'm going | to do.” | | Nan Moore and het children are BULLETIN { | BIRMINGHAM, Ala. Oct. 16.— Willie Peterson Defense Committee | {have been formed in Birmingham, Ala., and Chattanooga, Tenn., under auspices of the Southern District of the International Labor Defense. At- torney Rosenthal of Birmingham has | been engaged to defend Peterson. The general sentiment in Birming- ham among both Negro and white | only a few of the 50 odd depen- | workers, as well as some other dents of class-war. prisoners in) groups. is that Peterson is — being | the Harlan céal field for whom framed. the International Labor Defense is | raising relief. Send contributions to the Kentucky Prisoners’ Aid, | Room 450, 80 E. Ith St. New) | York Ci | A protest telegram has been sent to Goy. Miller of Alabama by the Chat- tanooga branch of the I, L. D., de- manding Peterson's release and hold- ing the sheriff and the gor or | responsible for the cold-blooded | shooting of Peterson in the Birming- | Negro Boss Barber Help: Ala. Frame-Up of Negia Tells Birmingham Police Willie Peterson Said Others Arrested in Frame-Up | Were Innocent to view Peterson. There he declared that Peterson had taken a shave in | his shop and had discussed the murder of the two society and expressed the opinion that Negro workers then held by police were victims of a frame-u attempt. Although this opinion wa expressed” by thousands of workers, the police are now trying make out that Peterson thor others -were being framed he knew that he himself had mitted the crime. It is on this ri culous “evidence” and the “identifi cation” of Peterson's hat by Williams, as the hat nm by murderer, that the State hopes fasten the crime on Petersor thus build up a “justific: the murderous ult on him by Dent Williams in the county jail. Nell Williams is the sister of one of wor 0 “t the Becwuse com- and Socialists Aid Bruening Gov't in Fascist Moves whet unde, | COMMuN ist Remelie Declares United Front of Workers Will Smash Fascism olidarity” Shows Up the Milk Racket ; Cct. Issue Now Out g in of cl Cable By BERLIN, Oct. 14 Bruening’s speech b: ational | noon, The (Che Inprecorr.) The an peaker, | appr Octobe in the | debate on | benches The Bruening g ceeding with the transfc Jorgan of the Relie announe iaheren 4 Patek yr- | the socialists oppo: of government toon & favoring ¢ pared to yo! ernment and t the withdra Pe of the decrees. (Laughter from the proposed in a Paul Claud lenalie : Communist ber The sociali Hindenberg The fight . to bolish 1h Gieik Raa rises ot pa men s 1 ity : ine oe “loose miik”’ is ainec * je tie ey . thes “Grade, A” “the obly form o1 (2D! burden ‘on German: ihe formation F ; next of leading exe bottled mil rgument former mini: exisis on core of cleaniiness, | hd of ; ent fields of ecohomie costs 19 ¢ Seine WoW ore, | Of That delivered 4 endeavor, including. representatives t nts to buy from SPeech, the only interesting point in| >) ©mPloyes, as an economic advisory gunman | DS statement being t ne fascists | DO@rd which, with the- government, mn were now prepared to ive at an, Sal iss the whole realm of ention and social probien to arrive at uniform s un F nding co-German under ays declared by the with rance, The anding cists to be Raymond panic is being surely spread more 4,000 HEAR | ham county jail. and more extensively, just as was . . . in History” (The y Grace Hutc ament expenditures by 25 per cent. Hoover has answered also “unoffi- s “advisory board,” of w con: illusionary and impossible, The third the deed women. She was ith ernme will speak Rem- Herman cially” through the statements of| done some months ago with regard FOSTER IN | SrAMTINGHAME Ala. Oot! ige-| thet ab-ttie- ime of the attdok. Dent al Hunger || The thitd speaker nan Ren sary. | Bitelae ties various senators, that the United) to sterling.” The traitorous role of the Negro | Williams is her brother. enecht: an | aad. that bie Oats Patty, de- | against the ers, not only through 5 States is going to demand cuts in the| The attack in Poland has already | petty bourgeoisie (andlords, shop| The Negro workers of Birmingham by Vern Se my ; ae Ss would was nd cute in relief, but armaments before the debt question | resulted in a flight from the dollar LAW RE NGE | kecvers doctors, ete.) as betrayers | Sr¢ indignant at this further : Pee ae, eu Stushing wit ay ne organization of all the | is discussed. 5 | which has played g very important |of the Negro masses was once more | Of the co-operation of the Nevro pet- aes Sek ig Ae re aie nage fascist hordes with the armed fine The struggle ‘between the United) role in Poland as currency. The sf Di \sharply exposed when a prosperous tY bourgeoisie with the Alabama an aio cae ae ae bags 8d rees for the erushing of the States and France is around the|French attack through rumors has (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | Negro barber of the city came for- | boss lynchers. They remember that re . Hea! ae nae a an lees masses who in nfilliin question as to which set of imper-|been “successful” because the fin- $< ward to help the white bosses in their | early in the case this same traitorous i, ey ‘ ae pate ie declared | masses are stirring for a decisive ate | jalists is going to get the most out | ancial conditions in the United States | candidate for mayor and also a strike murderous frame-up of Willle Pe-|@roup had joined the white ruling tha Dieing he eichswehr police in| tack on the etttite capitalist system | ot Germany row. The United States! which the French have said are seri-| leader, were on trial yesterday On /to..65 wnemployed Negro miner.|¢lass in putting upia reward to 4 [Pe bands gk Grownsr Wea 4G Of | oF unger and siikety, othe leading | bankers are trying to save their in-| ous, are very serious. The attack of | charges of speaking without a permit Peterson is how néar death in the | facilitate the frame-up of a Negro COR FI ICT CF weakriees and not of st rengt . Groe- experts ih different teide -of eeant j vestments at the expense of France, the French imperialists against the and creating a disturbance. They si...) wospital as a result of a | Worker in connection with the murd- ANE hail J net's. teak 36 tO suppres sthe Workets, | oie endeavor” | are the wage-ctitting monopolist owners of trustified in dustry and the bankers who ate real chiefs of teh tions of Hitler, but the government, which is sup- ported solely by bayonets, rupt. He exposed ohrases of Bruening | bankers of the United States, as the | were railroaded through, in spite of attack by both of them against the! a brilliant defense and fined $20 British potind, are based on such sub-| each. The two workers sconducted stantial facts of the worsening of the| their own defense and proved the and if necessary by cutting the war »- debt to the government of the United States. A | The Fretich imperialists are strug- | cowardly attack on his life in the |@rs. The petty bourgeois misleaders County jail here, Peterson is the | 4l80 gave their support to the police latest of many Négro workers to be | terror “and wholesale arrests:- of arrested in the police attempt to|Negro workers and the searching of is bank- the _ pacifist and declared U. 8.-JAPAN fascist ofganiza- P the League of Nations to be an in- Seldte, Duestetber; ; ‘ | ataiiee ; ; g gling to get’ the reparations out of | economic situation and the approach} charges were rtumped up for strike framedup any innocent Negro worker | their. homes .for Communist litera- SHAR PE NS dap raas isin ae gel and Hugenberg, ‘The “representa- Germany before’ the United States) of financial instability that they have | breaking purposes. ‘The court took) “Mn I fos tins NOUS Nor | ture, as well as supporting the hide- ¥ ! strument for imperialist war, 88 tives of prhploy bankers get their investments back, | their full effect in actually helping | great pains to bar workers from af- ‘August! 4 of two! society wonten. ous frame-up of the nine innocent proved in the attitude of the brutal | sootaucts, the Japanese invasion of Manchuria Remelle stated that the League of ,| Nations was the capitalist interna-, and whether or not the United States|to bring this about. The financial | tending the trial. | Scottsboro boys, eight of whom are situation is connetted with the ques- (CONTINUED FROM PAGH ONE) have given their full support to the present Bruening govarnment in i ‘The Negro barber, who was evid- 4 sptaker 86 the Noster, mass mere | ently picked by the: bosses for’ the:| still confined 4n the death. cells of tion of war not only in the fact that ing was Fred Biedenkapp, secretary investments are ever paid back. Th New York Times reports that ne ee ening of the the fascist program. Hindenbereg. the attack aaginst the United States | the reparations debts are involved but | of the strike committee, who reported | Purpose, was taken to the hospital Kilby Prison, Montgomery United States Japan, tional eh Bolshevism, The Com Was “officially” responsible for ‘in Europe is proceeding at full force,|in that the imperialists are preparing | on the results of the arbitration s- ree Wat re te Sorin Rob Te Ns ‘The reaction in Tokyo to the vote| Munist Party demanded that Ger-/ oi to rthe onganiedtion of this 1 particularly in France and in Poland. | to carry on the financial war through | far, The State Board of Concilia- in the League was so sharp that the Many leave the league. council, gave the instructions of capitalist class to Hitler and Hugen- ber gprior to the fascist “National The Times points out that although’ armed struggle. tion and Arbitration is meeting be- hind closed doors in the City Cham- Remelle declared that Bruening’s economic policy was solely in the in- United States counselor immediately had a conference with the Japanese eam arm azete ae, Boston ‘Workers Demonstrate MAKE THE LINE OF THE HUNGER MARCH AN UNBROKEN CLASS FRONT! GE ONE) (CONTINUED FROM P charity, collected by a combination of all anti-working class organizations in the country, administered by the federal army, the,national guard and the police forces, moldy crumbs from the-lavish tables of the well-fed bosses and bankers who grow’fat on the misery of the masses, given only to those who with becoming servility accept the murderous mercy of their rulers—this is the Hoover-Wall Street pro- gram. ay 3 It is a_program of action AGAINST the unemployed and AGAINST the whole working class. \ _ Wage. cuts and speed-up beyond the limit of physical endurance for workers still employed, mass starvation for the millions of unemployed and their families—murder in the streets as’in Chicago, Cleveland and New York, gas bombs, clubs and.mass jailings for strikers and unemployed demon- strators; feverish preparations for a new imperialist world war—this is the Hoover-Wall Street program in action. The Unemployed Councils in a dozen huge industrial cen- ters and the Trade Union Unity League, in issuing the call for the. National Hunger March, realize the gigantic nature of the task undertaken but above all is realized the vital need forthe working class, through nation-wide agitation, organization’ and discipline, to strike a mighty blow at the drive of the billionaire robbers and their government agains she lives and liverties of the American working class- The National Hunger March is at this time the major struggle on a national scale, uniting the em- ployed and the unemployed, in the elementary fight for food, clothing and shelter! The National Hunger March is a political struggle on a national scale. It brings the elected representa- tives of hundreds of thousands of workers into direct struggle with and against the national representatives ef American capitalism under whose rule the entire American working class is bein: driven daily deeper into pauperism, starvation and slavery! The organization and support of the National Hunger March, from its starting point of local strug- gles, mass meetings and elections, gathering greater mass. force as the march proceeds, to the demand on Congress and the return of the delegations reporting | to huge mass meetings as they go back, is the major immediate task of all militant working class organ- izations and of every militant worker. The National Hunger March will expose before the whole -working class the traitorous activity of the leaders of the ‘American Federation of Labor and its socialist party | supporters, whose recent convention in Vancouver, B. C. went on record against unemphyment insurance and im- mediate government relief for starving millions with hypo- critical phrases such as “the dole is an insult to the dignity of American citizens,” but who loudly applaud the Hoover program of wholesale degeneration of unemployed workers to the statis of beggars herded and driven by bayonets and police clubs, their misery mocked and their hunger capital- ized by the jeering mountebanks of the press and pulpit. It will answer the war of Woll, Green and Lewis on the Soviet Union—the only land where unemployment has been abolished,‘ where living conditions get better every day— because the imperialist class is the ruling class! Workers! The Unemployed Councils and the Trade Union Unity League call for mass mobilization for the war demagogy by which the rulers and i ogee nace bet aa, of the mill of the work- it mn and hesitation caused by en ts the workers ranks, and AGAINST the Hoover-Wall ibe Tasehana of starvation and suppression, the National Hunger March emerges as force uniting. the employed and unemployed, white and Us aba born, youth and adults, for protest and action an-event, an action and an upsurge whose very name breathes mass struggle. Of supreme importance to the working class, it calls for unlimited effort @hd support to bring its vanguard of 1,200 dele- gates in a smashing drive for unemployment insurance against the seat of capitalist government, into the official home of Hoover, Mellon, Lamont and the other members of the executive committee of the ruling class which has ordained that millions of workers, their wives and children, | bers at Law-ence. Eleven hand pick- | et leaders of the U.T.W. are with | them, cocking up a plan to make a | settlemert by means of a wage cut. | The Beard of Arbitration will then | | officially endorse the settlement. | | * . * | | Strikers Barred | The National Textile Workers Un- | ion at a meeting held immediately | | after the picket line, mobilized the | | workers for a meeting at 10 a, m.) | Wednesday, where fifteen delegates, | | ten men and five women, were elec- | | ted to met th Board of Arbitration, | | and tell them that they would not | accept the wage cut. | When this committee, headed by | Fred Biedenkapp, appeared at the City Chambers, they were told that) | the chairman {of |the [Board would ‘only see Biedenkapp. Biedenkapp | told them that it was against the | principles of the N.T.W. for an offi- | | clal to discuss settlements or policies | | with the bosses or their agents, be- | hind closed doors. | When this message was given the | chairman of the Board, he sent word that he would receive a committee | | of three. The committee of fifteen | elected three from their ranks. This | committee told the chairman of the} | Board of Arbitration that the Na- | tional Textile Workers Union, and} | the Rank and File Strike Committee, represented the majority of the | workers, and that they demanded th | right to talk before the Board. Th- | Committee told the chairman of the Arbitration Board that all that could be done was to stop the wage cut, | They were told that the Board) | could only see the eleven it had in- | vited today, that the meeting was secret, and that they could wait around. When Biedenkapp asked » them if there was any chance of see- ing the Board if they did wait, the chairman said he did not think so. This Sunday to Free Mooney BOSTON, Oct. 16.—Joining their / protests to the protests of millions of workers throughout the United States and the whole world, Boston workers tomorrow (Sunday) will rally in| thousands on Boston Common, Park- | man Bandstand, to demand the im-| mediate freedom of Tom Mooney, | buried alive for 15 years in ® Cali- fornia cell upon a ghastly frame-up | by the American ruling class, | The demonstration will also de- mand the release of all other class; war prisoners, of the Scottsboro Ne- gro boys, the white and Negro Har- lan (Kentucky) miners, Berkman and Murdoch and other Lawrence strikers, the Imperial Valley defendants, etc. | The demonstration which is called by. the International Labor Defense will begin at 3:30 Sunday afternoon. ‘The Boston Mooney demonstration will be followed by a United Front, L., the Unemployed Councils, Factory Groups, the working class members of the Socialist Party, the Communist Party, working class fraternal organ- izations, especially Negro and for- eign born, and workers clubs to join in the United Front Conferenve called by the I. L. D. for the release of Tom Mooney and Billings, the Harlan miners, the Scottsboro Negro boys, and the Imperial Valley, Cen- tralia, Woodlawn, and all other class war prisoners at the American House, Hanover Street, Boston, Sunday, Oc- tober 25, 1931, at 10:30 a. m.” Hub Clerks to Get Cut In Commission CHICAGO, Ill.—The sales clerks of the Hub Department store, who a year ago were placed on strictly a Mooney - Harlan - Scottsboro Confer- ence on Sunday, October 25, 10:30) a.m, at the American House, 56 Han- | over St., Boston. A call has been) sent to all working class organiza- tions to elect delegates to the con- | ference. The call declares, in part: | “The International Labor Defense | calls upon all workers and toiling | farmers, upon the local unions of the | American Federation of Labor, the trade unions affiliated with. the| ‘Trade Union Unity League, the rank | and file members of the Amalga~ mated Clothing Workers and other | unions independent of the A. F, of } workers the results of the interview. ‘They pointed out that this policy of | stalling the workers is another way of getting them to just wait and be commission basis (no salary) have had their rate of commission cut by ten per cent. The tailors, members of the fake Amalgaated, have been informed, that the Hub bosses are “negotiating” for a reduced wage scale on this year’s contract. That the Amalgamated fakers will assent to this cut is the rumor going about. ' Times Praises AFL | Example to Bosses | Fighting Insurance The New York Times yesterday sditorially complimented the | American Federation of Labor for | | being more willing to make the | millions of jobless starve without insurance than eyen “nervous” | ‘that the Stimson statement of last terests of the rich against the poor and that Bruening’s boast that big strikes had been avoided is solely thanks to the treachery of the socialists, foreign office to “explain America’s position.” It is now revealed that in addition to the published confer- ences which have taken place re- garding the Manchuria situation the United States sent “two memoranda” to ‘an “which had not been pub- lished because the Japanese govern- ment was doing its utmost to prevent public irritation.” These memoranda were & very sharp statement of the position of the United States im- per sts to the invasion of Man- churia., In addition secret conversa- tions have been going on in Geneva “of so informal and confidential a character that nothing has been re- vealed concerning them.” The New York Times now reveals Referring to teh campaign to force the Communist Party into illegality, Remmele declared that the workers would answer as the pre-waf social- ists answered the anti-socialist laws. The capitalist world is approaching collapse rapidly and it was no longer a question who would win in the class struggle, but merely a question of when the final victory of the workers would arrive. Fascism could not alter the issue, The united front of the workers would smash fascism. | Friday which was the occasion of a sharp attack in Japan was not the real cause of it. The cause was the Martial law is being enforced “be- cause of the fear of a popular up- true, | by the agents of the imperialists. | “conversations” in which the United’ rising.” State simpeWalists had revealed) Due to the continuance of the more of their position. The Times’ struggle of the imperialists and their | reports the following from Washing- ton regarding the massage of Stim- son: “Scanning this communication, diplomatists resident here conjec- tured as to whether the objection voiced toward it in Japan might be largely a pretext and that the resentment was actually felt be- cause of something said in the course of conversations which had led the Tokyo Government to be- lieve that the American attitude agents in the attempt to divide up China the masses are faced not only * er numbers but by death through the bubonic ‘plague. The plague is spreading death among hundreds of thousands of Chinese peasants in Western Honan and Western Chansi. The plague is expected to extend to the Yangste flood area where mil- lions of those hit by the flood will succumb, with starvation in greater and great-/ Opposition” meetirig Sunday at Bad Harzburg, In his speech Bruening openly stated that if the governinent was defeated in the Reichstag it would be ready to govern without the grace of the Reichstag. Brueriing stated for the capitalist class that it is pre- pared, as a last resort to save the Jerman capitalist system, to use the entire armed forces-of the country to crush the rising militancy of the German workers under the leaders ship of the Communist Party of Gere many, NEGRO JOBLESS JOIN COUNCIL CLEVELAND, Ohio.—About 100 Jobless Negro workers joined Branch No, 8 of the Cleveland Unemployed Council on Monday evening at the first meeting since the mass funeral of John Rayford and Edward Jack- son. This is the branch te which both the martyred Negroes belonged. Mimeographing Mlustrated oti leting, xhop pape e poaten| pul- letters, leaflets, Sipplies tor Mimeographing, Cleaning, Repairing Reconditioned Machines $10 up Lowest Rates PROLET-MIMO SERVICE & SUPPLY 108 East 14th St.) * was unsympathtic.” While the struggle of the United continues in diplomatic manoeuvres, the Japanese militarists continue their advance in Manchuria. Against this the Chinese masses are rising in more militant struggle. I Shanghai the Chinese refuse to sell the Jap- anese residents any food products. Japanese marines took part in. an INDIAN SUMMER The Most Beautiful Time of the Year At CAMP NITGEDAIGET All the necessary improvements for the Fall and the com'ng Winter months have already been installed THE PRICES ARE THE SAME a quiet while the bosses greased the| | business men themselves. Writing The committee came back to the| rails for the railroading of the wage | N. T. W. hall and reported to the cuts, | y shall go down into the pit of human misery so that more billions shall flow into the coffers of the robber class. Raise the banner of the National Hunger March to Washington in every city! Rally to the support of the National Hunger March! Organize and carry through the local struggles for immediate rellef—$150 for winter relief for every unemployed worker+$50 for each dependent! Stop all evictions! Speed the 1,200 delegates to Washington with a million mandates and with the message that the American workers have chosen the path of struggle against starvation! Show in every struggle, in every mass meeting, in every election, in every welcome and farewell to the marching delegates, that we know the name and address of our class enemies from the smallest hamlet to the capital city of American tmperialism—Washington, Multiply the resounding tramp of the marching delegates by the active support of millions of workers until the dome of the capitol shakes over the heads of the lackeys who carry through the imperialist program of robbery, murder and starvation against the American and colonial masses in the name of American civilization and its “sacred institutions.” On to Washington! Send the 1,200 delegates as the advance guard of an aroused working class determined to wring from the billionaire Tulers the. minimum guarantee of unemployment insurance—the guar- antee that the basic necessities of food, clothing and shelter shall be furnished NOW to the hungry millions of the working class thrown out of their jobs to beg, steal or starve by a capitalist class so merciless in its thirst for profit that its spokesman Hoover, remains unmoved even by the cries of hungry children which fill the air, “Capital,” wrote Marx, “lives, however, not only at the expense of labor, but as an infamous barbarian slave owner, takes with it to the grave the of these slaves, whole hecatombs of workers, perishing in times of crises.'¥ - We live in such a period. Workers have to fight for the right to live. Today in America a thousand workers will die from hunger and exposure, ‘The National Hunger March will organize the fight against starvation, the fight to force from the capitalist class the bare necessities of life for the millions now condemned to a starvation existence. Organize the National Hunger March! Mobilize the maximum mass support for the Hunger March in every city and town and throughout the countryside,’ Rally every local union of the TUUL unions, of hte American Federation of Labor, every working class fraternal and benefit society for the support of the National Hunger March and the local struggles from which it derives its mandate and mass character! - On to Washington for unemployment insurance! Defeat the Hoover- Wall Street starvation program! on the majority vote against un-— employment insurance in the A. F. of L. convention the Times says: “The action at Vancouver might well selve as an example of stead- fastness and intelligent self-inter- est to nervous business men who have been behaving and talking | American world of opportunity, courage, energy and enterprise were here. They ought to be will- ing to wait a little while longer before throwing up their hands and calling for revolutions and_ miracles. The Federation of La- bor, with a general unemployment | tate of perhaps 25 per cent—and | ‘n some trades nearly 50 per cent | ~—has been as hard hit as any eco- nomic interest in the country.”, | The force of the implied argu- ment that the A. F. L, leadership is more in favor of saving profits than are many of the employers who fear the radicalization of the masses 1s not made less by the! fact that the Times underesti- mates the extent of unemploy- ment. There are many A. F. L. groups with 75 per cent unem- ployment. | The Times editorial actually ad- mits that many business men are convinced “that the special con- ditions under which American labor has existed and prospered have come to an end and that the chapter of higher living standards has been closed.” While lauding the A. F. L, for waiting another year to see what the suffering masses will do, the editorial shows that a section of American em- ployers are in favor of openly ad- justing their class war tactics to this conviction, which means wage cuts and misery for the workers, | as if the end of this familiar] | at the expense of workers’ lives _ A WARM COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE WELL-PREPARED HEALTHY MEALS attack on, the militant masses of | Shanghai but “the ugly temper of the Chinese crowds when the mar- ines appear is becoming more dan- gerous daily,” reports the Times cor- respondent. In Canton thousands of students paraded to protest the mur- der of twelve students last Sunday PROLETARIAN ENTERTAINMENTS. Large Comfortable Rooms are Avallable in the Attractive To enjoy your vacation or week-end, go to Camp Nitgedaiget The Only Fall and Winter Resort HOTEL NITGEDAIGET GR EETIN HONOR ROLL GREETINGS We, the undersigned through the 14th anniversary edition of the DAILY WORKER, greet the workers of th U.S.S.R. on the 14th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution. ‘The success of the Five-Year Plan and the advance in the economic and cultural fields have strengthened our determination to advance our own struggles against the growing attacks of the boss class. The DAILY WORKER, the Central Organ of the Communist Party, is the mass organizer of the American workers and farmers in this fight. NAME | ADDRESS AMOUNT Dollars Cents Cut this out, get busy, collect greetings from workers in your shop, or factory, mass organiza- tion, and everywhere, Twenty-five cents and up for individuals, $1 and up for organizations, Mall immediately to get into the November 7th edition of the Daily Worker, *