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. Move. Her requests to be permitted ~ quested that a deputy accompany her “and that the presence of the large and the leaders of the lynch gang. > She was'placed-under $500 bond. DAYLY WORKER, NEW Y ae *. Page ORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1931 _ SNOWHILL JUDGE AIDS a oe D. Agents Beaten Up By-Rich Maryland Farmers Workers to Protest at Nov. 7 Celebrations of Overthrow in Russia of Capitalism and _Its Race Hatred, Starvation aE BULLETIN. SNOWHILL, Md., Noy. 6.—The boss court in Snowhill today denied right of Orphan (Lec) Jones, aged Negro farm hand, to select the Inter- national Labor Defense to defend him, Judge L, Bailey declares that ne will not recognize Bernard Ades, 1.L.D, attorney, as counsel for Jones. Bailey asserts_that “no representative of an organization like that has any standing in court.” The LL.D. is an organization of Negro and white workers, Z This action-of Jndge Bailey follows the refusal of Ades to withdraw his motion for a change of venue for Jones when threatened Tuesday by a lynch mob in Judge Bailey’s court. The court has selected its own counsel for Jones in order to deprive him of militant defense and to stop the fight for a change of venue, This is a further step in the brazen frame-up, torture, and attempt to legally lynch this innocent aged Negro worker. Governor Ritchie of Mayrland has at the same time refused to inter- vene to protect the constitutional rights of this Negro worker, « a ae NEW YORK.—Suffering from severe pains in the head and bruises-on her body, 22-year-old Helen Mays, investigator for the International Labor Defense, yesterday afternoon told the story of:the brutal lynch gang attack in Snowhill, Mary- land, Tuesdav on herself, Oscar Robawsky and the Interna- tional Labor Defense attorney, Ber-> nard Ades. Ades is conducting the! of protest to Gov. Ritchie of Mary- defense of the 60-year-old Negro|jand and the Worcester County farm hand, Orphan Jones. The law- judges: yer and his two companions were s « ite threatened with lynching several os Sane ee, eo eaanS ot WH times during the day. All three were badly beaten up. Robawsky received | damages in one of his eyes and is suf- | tering from internal bleeding. “Ades, accompanied by Helén Mays | and Robawsky, had-gone to Snéwhill to file a motion for a change of venue | for Orphan Jones, who is to be placed | on trial for his life on a framed up| charge of murdering a rich farmer of Worcester County, and his family. | Judge Encouraged Lynch Gang. | When they got to the court hou: they found the court crowded by rich farmers, local merchants and. their | hangers-on. Lynch threats were | flung at them. The clerk of the| court and Judge George Bailey open- | ly encouraged ‘the lynching atmos- | Phere, both at- first refusing to ac- cept the motfon for filing. The judge repeated: the slogans of the lynch gang to “bring Jones. here.” ‘This demand was resisted by the I. L. D. attorney, who pointed out that | there had been already several at- tempts to lynch Jones at Snowhill, threatening crowd showed plainly that Jones would not have a chance if he were brouchi to Snowhill. The} demand of the jrdve to bring Jones to Snowhill was Inter renested bv a delecation of Teaders of the lynch rane who pressnted an ultimatum to the I. L. 2D. attorney to produce Jones in Snowhill, = Given 20 Minutes To Leave Town. At noon, when the I. L, D. lewyer and Felen’Mays went out to lunch they were surrminded by the. hostile bess Jenchers.- Thirty of the leaders followed them into the lunch room| and there, gave'them 20 minutes “to get out of towh if you know what’s good for you,” An appeal by: Helen Mays to Sher- | iff Pennel to.‘protect. the attorney | wes ienored, the sheriff telling her to wait a,mintite. He then disap-| Deared uic' did not return. When they returned into the court | house the situation became worse, anq| Helen Mays decided to call up the office of the I. L. D. in Balti- to use one of-“the phones in the hui ding were-denied. She then re- senoss the street to enable her to to make the fhone call. This was also turned doWn. ‘She then decided to cross the Street by herself. When she returned te: the court house she Was searchedand when a pistol was found in h€f's pocketbook, placed under arrest..The warrant for her ®rrest was sworn ou tby Mayor Byrd Car Pampered With In the meantime, their car had been tampered with and when finally the judge permitted:the filing of the motion for a.change of venue for the Negro farm hand. they were un- able to leave town. On their way to the car they were again attacked. All three received Blows on the head. The two men were badly beaten up. The anger of the gang-was espetially di- rected at the I. L. D. attorney be- cause of his refusal to bring Orphan Jones to Snowhill so the rich farmers. could lynch him, Finally the sheriff permitted them. to enter the jafl. Under pressure of the I. L. D. attorney, he then pro- vided a car te take them out of Snowhill, explaining that the only reason they had a ¢hance to escape was that the leaders of the gdng had gone after carn whiskey in order further to inflathe the crowd. ‘This brutal attack occurs at a time when the imperialists are intensifying their terror against the Negro masses and rushing their preparations for wer against the Soviet Union, and when the Workers and colonial mosses are preparing to celebrate the 14th Anniversary of the proletarian revolution and the overthrow of cap- ‘italism in Russia, and the emancipa- and Negro workers we denounce infamous attempt to lynch laywer, Bernard Ades, Helen Mays, Oscar Robawsky, I. L. D. representatives at Snowhill yesterday, “We protest vehemently against arrest of Helen Mays on charge of carrying wéapon, and denounce en- tire campaign of mob and police of- ficials to railroad, torture, deny all rights and lynch aged Negro farm worker on frame-up charges,” RAPES JOBLESS NEGRO WOMAN Boss Lures Her On Job Promise CLEVELAND, Noy. 6. (CNA),— Hazel Ford, unemployed Negro wo- man, applying for a job as a servant, was forcibly carried in a car to a woodshy a white employer here and raped. Miss Ford had advertised in the newspaper for employment. The white boss, reading the ad, called her and told her that his wife wanted a girl to care for his children two days a week for which she would be paid $5 weekly. She was instructed to take a car and get off at.the end of the line. Strivers ,the white men, nret her and told her he was going to LYNCH ATTACK ON LAWYER DEFENDING NEGRO Superior Unemployed Will Hold A Hunger March on November 24 SUPERIOR, Wis, — Under the auspices of the Unemployed Coun- cil and the Trade Union Unity League, a call is being issued for a City Hunger March on ‘Tuesday, Nov. 24, to the City Hall at the time when the City Council meets. ‘The Hunger March will rally thous- ands of workers in Superior to fight for immediate cash relief, and to support the National Hunger March to which Superior is sending a delegate, The National Hunger March delegate will be ratified at the City Hunger March demon- stration on Nov, +24. US. ‘Supplies Arms to Japanese for War in Manchuria (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ability to pay, follows closely the at- tack in connection with the rises in | the price of wheat. The imperialists | attempted ‘to explain this rise by | claiming that Soviet exports of wheat | had fallen off. This is a lie, Their purpose was to make American farm- ers believe that Soviet exports were | responsible for the sevére agrarian | lerisis in this and other capitalist | countries. This was part of the ideo- logical attack aimed at destroying the support of the American workers and poor farmers for the land of workers and- peasants rule. They carefully | covered up the fact that the rise in | wheat prices was due to the huge | purchases. by’ agents of the Farm! | Board for the war they plan on the | Soviet Union, On the eve of the 14th anniversary | of the triumph of Socialism, the im- | perialists, standing aghast at the tre- mendous achievements of the Five | Year Plan, are frantically trying to | destroy the Soviet Union by a com- bined military attack and financial blockade, They are engaged in a final, desperate attempt to save their own system of mass unemployment, hun- ger and suicides, at the expense of the toiling masses in their own coun~- ‘tries, at the expense of the achieve- | ments of the world proletariat in | building Socialism in the Soviet | Union, | Japanese Strengthen Military and Economic Strange-Hold In the meantime, the Japanese Army is consolidating its occupation |of Manchuria and pushing nearer and nearer to the Soyiet fronteir. It has-already occupied several points on the Soviet-Chinese owned Chi- nese Far Eastern Railway. Yesterday heavy fighting occured near Tsitsi- har between Japanese and Chinese -orces. The Japanese are strengthen- | | Spy Is Crown’ Against 9 Cana “Moscow Dictation” Is ; secutor and the Judge In Trial (Telegram to the Daily Worker ) TORONTO, Canada,— Wednesday the Crown called its star witness, Sergeant John Leopoud, alias Essel- wein of the Royal Mounted Police. Spy Esselwein stated that he was in the Mounted Police since 1918, that he joined the Communist Party in 1921 and was expelled in 1928, Esselwein said he was secretary of the Regina branch of the Communist Party of Canada and was present at conyen- tions and plenary meetings of the Party, ‘The Crown played up Leopold’s testimony about the existence of the former underground Communist Party and the Workers Party, The spy Esselwein then said that three thousand dollars had been received from Moscow with instructions and stated that Sen Katayama, Charles Scott and Louis Fraina directed the formation of the Party while Zino- viev, Radek and Bukharin gave Can- ada their attention. Esselwein told of what he claimed were the secret codes of the Party. Somerville, Crown prosecutor, then read the twenty one points of the Communist International in regards to work in the army, anti-parliamen- tarism and defense of the Soviet Union. Hugh MacDonald, defense attor- ney ,objected to the use of books seized in the raids as evidence but the bench overruled the objections. The nine Communist leaders are out on bail on the condition that they take no part in demonstrations directed against the government per- secution of the Communist Party. Detective Nursey attempted to evict Ryan, reported of the Canadian {Mellon’s Aluminum Co In Oakland Cuts Pay of Workers Ten Percent | inns (By a Worker Correspondent) s Star Witness daCommunists Chief Emhasis of Pro- OAKLAND, Cal,—Modern Alumi- num Company, a subsidiary of the * | Alumimum Company’s plant of Ame- rica (Andrew Mellon's interests) has ye Sled, cut wages of workers 10 per gent Fine Printers $25 Each / ‘ The Moulders’ Union (A. F. Lo) Printers of the leaflet calling for| soimed they would fight the wage mass demonstrations, Kleinstein and | cut, but knowing the policy of the Meslin were fined $25 each, | A > 4 ‘ A, F. of L. nothing effective has been Esselwein testitied the fourth dV | Gone, although the question has been of the trial again telling the usual | 72% et ques | raise abor il, The stor‘ f .|Taised at the Labor Council Be ree emery, Sisepsion iaog: | workers have to accept a lowered legal activities, MacDonald cross} a examiried Leopold who admitted |S'@ndard of living, — ‘ membership in one Big Union prior |, When workers learn to organize to joining the Communist Party, also | into a militant union of the Trade his activities in°the Party and as | Union Unity League and under’ its seeretary of the Regina ‘Trades Labor |leadership organize to strike against Council and his arrest at the Toronto | W48e cuts, then their militancy will Sacco-Vanzetti demonstration before | Win out. the American Consulste, Leopold alias Esselwein sent frequent reports | Moulder, to the Royal Canadian Mounted uli Colbrooke S ry date seventy-seven ete 0 r00! J cores have been shown, with emphasis on the Party training directed by Mos- cow. Somerville stated that the Cana- ‘NAACP Betrayal of gards to civil war. MacDonald ob- | jected to the reading of the C. I.) information bulletin on China, but the bench admitted it subject to further objection. The theses of the BOSTON, Mass.—Before a large, enthusiastic audience of workers, Lieutenant Amsell A. *Colbrooke, World War veteran, attacked the | Sixth World Congress of the Com- munist International, the Communist Manifesto and sections of the C. I. program were read. ‘The Crown prosecutor emphasized opportunities in the Communist Party of Canada and the subsequent explusion of MacDonald and Buhay as evidence of Moscow dictation. ‘The correspondents of Vapaus, Lithuanian paper and of the Uk- rainian Labor News were excluded | Worker despite official permission, from the court room, that the struggle against the Right | W. Virginia and Ohio Miners take her to his brother’s wife. When | ing not only their mililary position they had driven some distance out of | but their economic hold on Man- town, Miss Ford became alarmed and | Ciuria, demanded to be taken back, He| Japan Sends More Gold Here forced her to stay in the car and then| A dispatch from San Francisco left her in the woods after he had shows that Japan is continuing her raned her. > | shipments of gold to this country in The shock from the assault was so| preparation for the purchases of great that Miss Ford attempted to| huge munition supplies. The dis- commit suicide by drinking poison but | patch says: ‘ her sister stopped her on the moment. “Fortilying her position in the Although the name of the white| United States and preparing for rapist is known as well as his license | any eventuality that may arise plate numbers no action has been) from the Manchurian crisis, Japan taken against him by the authorities. today landed $22,500,000 jin gold Members of the white ruling class do here, bringing her total shipments with Negro women as they will,! of the yeliow metal to this port in knowing that they will be protected | thirty days to $75,000,000, by the lynch law system. In furtherance of her prepared- 25,000 Miners’ Children Starving Charities “Admit That Situation Is Grave ‘That 25,000 miners’ children are facing starvation. in Pennsylvania, Kentucky and W. Virginia is admit- ted in an appeal for funds made by the American Friends Service Com- mittee, a fake relief agency operate ing from Philadelphia. The report states that clothes for the children are made gut of flour sacks and they aren’t even enough to allow a change once in a while. The committee states that the cost of feeding a child is about five cents a day, so it can be imagined what sort of a meal these starving children are given. Not only the children are in this condition. Thousands of miners have been blacklisted because of their ac- tivities in the last strike and the com- mittee states that over 100,000 miners have been thrown out of work per- manently because of rationalization and closing down of mines, The only organization that provides relfef to the blacklisted miners and theri families is the Workers Interna- tional Relicf at 799 Broadway, New York City. —NOTICE— Due to technica! difficulties, halt page grectings of the International ness campaign, Japan has also con- tracted for 9,000 tons of Guggen- heim process niter, due to pass through here soon. As this became known the insurance rates on ship- ments to Manchuria was elevated 1 per cent above that applicable to O.uuer Chinese ports, bringing the first inquiries from shipowners on war-risk insurance.” A dispatch from Tokyo stating that the United States Ambassador Forbes | had delivered a note to the Japanese Government declaring American ad- hevence to the League of Nations resolution calling for the evacuation ot Manchuria by Nov. 16 was denied in Washington. Washington has con- tinued to express “grave concern.” Japanese Paper Praises Stimson Following a conference between United States Ambassador Forbes with Japanese Foreign Minister Shi- dehara, the Osaka Mainichi, leading Chinese newspaper published an in- spired statement praising the attitude of Washington as “both prudent and admirable,” The article warmly Sec- retary of State Stimson’s attitude on the Manchurian situation, This was followed by a statement from M. Briand in Paris that the Leagu eof Nations Council had de- cided against holding a special mect- ing before Nov. 16 to consider the Manchurian situation. The state- ment also declared the Nov. 16 meeting would be held in Paris’ in- stead of Geneva. Dr, Alfred Sze, Nanking delegate to. Geneva declared he was opposed to. the meeting being | held in Paris. In this he is supported “by several unnamed delegates who | declare that Paris is too pro- Japanese. PITTSBURGH, Pa.—The miners | Who took part in the recent great |strike in the Eastern Ohio, and the | West Virginia coal fields have joined jwith the unemployed miners and steel workers of that section in pre» paring for the National Hunger March to Washington on December Tth, Concentration points in the prepa- rations in Eastern Ohio and the Pan- handle section of West Virginia are Ohio County, West Virginia with Wheeling as the Center, and Jeffer- son County Ohio with Steubenville as the center. The preparations call for the es- tablishment of Unemployed Councils in Wheeling and Steubenville. Meetings be held in Wheeling, Warwood, Elm Grove, Triadelphia, for Ohio county, W. Va, (in the two weeks up to No- publication of a secret declaration made by Baron Tanaka in 1927 when he was Japanese Premier. “Japan’s aggressive tendencies will not end with China,” the Prayda declares. “She thas designs on the Philippines, the Malyan ar- chipelego, Guam, Tahiti, Samoa and Australia, To eapture China we must also capture Manchuria and Mongolia.” ‘The Tanaka statement published by Pravda says, in part: Prepare Nat'l Hunger March City and County Hunger Marches and Open Hearings During Next Week vember 17). Similar meetings in Jef- | ferson county, Ohjo, are to be held in Steubenville, Toronto, Follansbee, Wellsburg, and Mongo Junction, On November 9 a mass meeting and | public hearing is being held in Wheel- | ing at which a committee will be/ elected to present the demands for | immediate unemployment relief to | the city councils, * | Alabama lynch law frame-up of the | nine innocent Scottsboro Negro boys | and exposed the traitorous activities | |of the NAACP misleaders in support | | of the Alabama boss lynchers, Lieutenant Colbrooke, a vivid and} brilliant mass speaker, spoke at a Scottsboro defense meeting called by the North End Scottshoro Defense | | Committee at the Olney S\eet Bap- | tist Church. The audience applauded vigorously | | as he told of the great mass fight, led {by the International Labor Defnes jand the League of Struggle for Ne-| | gro Rights, to smash the lynch frame- up and free the innocent working | class children. A veteran of the World War, Col- | brooke told of yarious authentic eases, where in several, southern states the uniforms of colored sol- | diers were ripped from their backs by the imperiatist bosses and those under the influence of their race hatred poison. He scored the bosses government in its discrimination against colored workers in various government departments in Wash- ington. Telling the audience of the mili- tant struggle of the textile workers | against wage cuts and the lowering of the standards of the working class, Colbrooke called upon the workers to} defend Ann Burlak and other strike | JOBLESS IN STOCKTON — | DEMONSTRATE, FORCE IMMEDIATE RELIEF | | | 1,200 Workers Rally in Mass Demotistration; Get Relief for Starving Family |Stand Ground in Face of Solid Line.of Police; Expose Charity Swindlers.” | (By a Worker Correspondent} | STOCKTON, Calif—Here in Stockton, Calif, in one of | the richest valleys in the world, workers and their-families are |forced to live in the city dumps, This was proved recently | when one of the workers from the Unemployed Council found |a family of twelve living in the dump with no food and little | better off for clothes, as they had scarcely enough to cover their backs. They were refused help from the‘local fakes, mas- |querading as charities, and welfare organizations, on the | grounds that they were not residents of San-Joaquin County, | as they had not resided here a year, | The mother of this family, was ill » —— from lack of food and shelter as was { | her 5 weeks’ old baby. | | A committee from the Unemployed | Council went to the County Welfare Department with the family, where | they were promised food, clothing and A) WEEE shelter for the family. But the para-~| LAWRENCE, Mass.—The young sites, living up to their “creed of| workers in the Washington Mill, greed,” failed to keep this promise.| which is now on strike against a 10 So the Unemployed Council called a| per cent wage-cut, received $14 to $18 mass meeting in Washington Park,|a week. We had to work so hard where talks were given by two of the | that when the day was over, we had workers, Then, forming a line, oyer|no ambition left ‘for recreation. We 500 workers, with banners and pla-| were always tired out,..I am giving cards, marched to the Welfare, where |my wholehearted suport to this strike. they were joined by about 1,200 more A Young Striker. workers. Here a demonstration was bd held and relief demanded for the) family. The demonstration was par- | DEFENSE ticipated in by workers, cops and| CHICAGO.—W; B. Jones, secetary parasites, the workers demanding | of the United Mine ‘Workers of Am- food, clothes and shelter. The cops|erica and W. M. Hightower, presi- and parasites, shouting no money, | dent of the Pineville, Ky., local of | Correspondence Briefs TEXTILE WORKER PAID $14 * * TRY TO SMASH HARLAN were going bankrupt and can’t take are of foreigners from Colorado. But he workers remained until they ob- tained a promise to meet their de- mands and the workers gave the parasites to understand they would return the next day if the family was not cared for properly. Try to Avoid Demands. But after the grafters got the fam- ily alone they offered them only gas and oil to take them out of town. This the family refused and reported back to the Unemployed Council, whereupon another mass meeting was called the next day in Hunter Square, where the Welfare Department was exposed as being a bunch of liars and fakers, The workers were determined not to be fooled again. This being the second demonstration it was better planned and organized. But so were the parasites, as we were met at the | door by a small army of cops with the same union, are doing all in their power to disrupt: the defense of the Harlan miners. They *spoke here re- cently calling on; the Yorkers not to support the Intefnatiqnal Labor De- fense in their drive to-free the min- ers, The boss-class rolé of the U. M. W. A. should be ‘blear.to all. workers by this time —J. R. o fs j BANKER FEAR RUSSIA GASPORT, N.*¥.—The other day I was in the offige of-the fruit buy- ers. The banker'‘said“we can’t sell much fruit because everybody has no work and no money. Then I said, | “I know one country that works full | speed and that’s the Soviet Russia.” |The banker answered, “What is the juse of work when the~ government | takes everything frommthem?” I anse wered, “If our government would buy, |everything from @s in Russia everything would be O. K.” t A Farmer. gee Gee at which unemployed | committees are to be selected are to! hegemony of the Pacific with the) On November 10 city, hunger | leaders arrested by the bosses in their | marches take place in: Wheeling and | effort to break the strike. He pointed Steubenville. On Tuesday November | out that Ann Burlak is one of six 17, a hunger march to the county | White and Negro workers facnig elec- seat at Wheeling will take place in| trocution in Georgia for their activ- Ohio County, W.-Va. | ities in fighting the imperialist race |hatred poison and organizing white | On November 24 the unemployed of | ang Negro workers together for joint Jefferson County, Ohio, will march | struggle against their common oppres- to the county seat at Steubenville and | sors. He urged the Negro masses to | Present their demands for relief be- | unite with their fellow white workers | fore the County Commissioners. in the necessary fight against starva- | | tion, against imperialist war on the | Soviet Union, and for unconditional | equal rights of the Negro masses. Nor has the financial campaign for the hunger march been forgotten in eastern Ohio and the Panhandle section of West Virginia. Financial | quotas of $225 have been set for both | Wheeling and Steubenville. Tag ys throughout Jefferson and Ohio counties will be held on Friday and Saturday, November 27 and 28. \Berkeley War Veteran) |A Suicide When Fear) jof Misery Grips Him) their guns and clubs, who attempted to break up the demonstration, but, | CHILDREN EAT GARBAGE due to the fact that the workers were | p not easily scared and ready to fight if necessary, the cops failed, The} demonstration continued, with two speakers, a man and a woman, who showed up the fakers and capitalist system for what it is, and compared conditions in this country with those in the Soviet Union, The committee of workers and the family attempt- | ing to enter the building were met by police, but the workers cleared the way into the building and remained | until their demands were met with. Workers Force Demands, They also told the Welfare fakers that when the workers demanded food and shelter they didn’t mean gas and oil, After this successful | AKRON, Ohio.—Children on’ their | way to school here were seen eating |from a garbage pile in the rear of |the Newton Proviston Co. A worker from the Workers fInteenational Re- | lef called them and fed them. Upon investigating the family the WIR found that 11 people were receiving $2.80 every two weeks for groceries, The WIR is orcanjzing a milk came | paign school children here, | ee. 4G « ¢.*% A. F, OF L. HELPS EAWRENCE | SCABS | LAWRENCE, Mass—The A. F. of |L. leaders here are trying to do all lin their power to.bréak the strike. ATLANTA POLICE KILL NEGRO LAD ATLANTA, Noy. 6. (CNA).—A 15- “Japan must remove her ditfi- | year-old Negro boy, Frampton Will- | (By a Worker Correspondent | BERKLEY, Calif, — Despondent | | because of inability to find» work, |George Fuller, 37, of Berkeley com- | mitted suicide by hanging himself | | from a tree near Pittsburg, Cal. The | | badly decomposed body was found | dangling on a limb of a tree. demonstration was oer and the work- | when they come dpwrt_to the picket ers were leaving the cops, brandish- | }ine they tell the strikers not to stay ing their clubs and shouting, rushed | long at each mill. Any-worker knows up and down the street, trying tO) that pickets should ‘march around the make things look good for them-| min again and again so as not to let selves, and succeeded so far as the | the scabs through. The fakers tell capitalist press was concerned, @5/tne pickets not to boo the scabs, they reported the police broke up the | why shouldn't we boo them? They demonstration, in spite of the fact) a1 trying to cut our throats, there- | that the workers stood their ground, culties in Eastern Asia by estab- lishing a policy of blood and iron. If we intend to control over China, we must first crush the United States.” ‘The conflict’in Manchuria, warns Pravda, might presage a fight for a new division of the world, for it is inseparably linked with con’ among imperialist nations for con- trol of the Pacific, The Japanese oc- cupation of Manchuria was de- nounced as “the worst kind of ag- gresion, typical of imperialistic policy, and an interlude for a new impe- rialistic war.” According to press from its position | formed a line and marched through iams, was shot to death by the At- |near-the Tunnel ri id the loca- Janta police, in circumstances which Lo: Avan yng ect “ : |tion of discarded clothing it would point to another lynching by these jappear that Fuller, while on a pil- thugs of the white ruling-class. grimage in quest of work, on foot, The police showered bullets at the | pecame disgusted with life and enter- -boy, one killing him. The police claim-|ing the thicket, threw his coat, evid- they. shot the -boy because he had |ently being carried on the arm, and stolen @car. Neighbors found the |then-and there decided to end it all.” boy the next day under a house in| puller was a war veteran. He went the neighborhood. This terror against the jim-croyed anq now the bosses democracy threw | thru hell fighting for “democracy” | and prosecuted Negroes of Atlanta can only be fought with the unity and assistance of the white workers; the toilers of both races fighting together for emancipation. Noy. 7th, a page of material to b ‘paper “Trud” (Labor). on Oct. 21, saying it was sent. Also, “Trud” dated Moscow, Cct, 21, statin; 1. ‘Tractor works. 4, Two drawings by Moscow. .5. A\uew photo of Comrade Sialin. Why We Publish No “Trud” Page September the Daily Worker announced “that it would publish on e sent us by the Soviet trade union As we go to press this material has not arrived, although a cable on Oct. 4, we reccived a letter from ig they were “sending” the following: An article by a noted French journalist, Paul Vaillant Couturier, on his seven months visit to the Soviet Union. 2, Magnetigorsk Steel project, by Lenoid Lossy. 3. workers by both the Soviet and American workers of the Stalinzr A story of the great A letter to American a Fred Ellis, American artist living in 6, A cable to be sent him out on the scrap heap. Workers, especially the war veter- jans, must use their fighting ability | to fight for their lives, organized into | Unerapioyed Councils, Prepare for | |Hunger March on Sacramento Nov. | 16th, , Veteran, Federal Militia Dept. Orders National Guard | 24-Hovr Mobilization ‘The Federated Press reports that | the Arizona National Guard has | | recelved orders from the Mulitia | Bureau of the War Department to hold all contingent sin readiness for twenty-four hours mobiliza- tion, No reason or explanat‘on for this orler has been given the re- | port continues. | The Federated Press report goes | the business district shouting their and placards and ended up a suc | cessful day by singing the Interna~- | tional, Many workers joined the | Unemployed Council. Although there is no money in the county for relief, the capitalist press | reports that the police have just re- ceived a shipment of tear gas bombs, | machine guns and ammunition to fight the workers this winter when they demand relief. No money for relief, but ptenty for ammunition. ON GLORIFYING COPS OAKLAND, Cal.—Hooey Hoover urges us to glorify the policeman. How can we? of the cops, it is impossible. Beating up and murdering workers is their chief -job- nowadays. Perhaps they are to be glorified for taking their | | toll from the streetwalker, bootleg- | send money order ‘for ger, burglar, murderer and dope A WORKER, slogans and displaying tieir banners | Knowing the yecord | fore we should ngt let them wall | along the street ag decent people, t E. Cc. ee { . FORCED LABOR IN PENNA. NEW KENSINGTON, Pa.—At the Kiloch mines if you set dirty coal | you must take three days off and ong, |day you must work on the tipple | picking bone. There is 2 miner that |I know who works in this mine 6 days a week and .never draws one cent money and damned little scrip, We miners will not stand for this | forced labor very long—W. H, ¥, PROLET-MIMO SERVICE ond SUPPLY ALgonquin 4-4763 | STENCILS—Letter Size $2.25 Legal. Size $2.50 MIMEO INK— Grade A $1.50 | Grade B $1.00 per pound lorders.,, We handle ally » the mimeo,_ 108 EAST 14th SPREET, N.Y. INDIAN 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 SUMMER Workers Order on the 14th Anni- Sary of the Russian Revolution had to be omitted. It wil lappear in the Tuesday issue. Through this greeting the membership of the In- ternational Workers Order will show their solidarity to the workers and peasants ef the Soviet Union and their suppert of the et regie against American Traperiaicm, tion cf the national minorities. é Magro, white:workers! All out No- vember 7! Defettd he Negro Masses! “Defend the Proletarian Revolution!’ Defend the Soyipt Union, the citadel cf the world revolution against, cap- italism and its race hatred-poison and starvation program for the masses! ‘The Internetional Labor Defense Defense sent the following telegram Geneva dispatches declare: - “League officials were relieved by the statements of Kiementi Voro- shilov, Soviet War Commissar, in an interview with the United Prevs _at Moscow yesterday, when he said Russia desired friendly relations with Japan.” Tre Povd yertorday backed. vn ite Jcba.lus wat Japan is amis at ihe | when the Ameri¢\n Workers’ Delegatino would arrive in Moscow (they should have arrive! there Oct. 28) giving their first’ impressions. Not one of these things have reached us, not even the cable. the Daily Worker does not know. We DO know that the U. S. Postal authorities in New rk employ special Russian White Guard censors ‘who do pretty much what they like with mail from the Soviet Union, regardless of capitalist Jaw prohibiting censorship of mail. ‘We are glad to say one thing: The materiel sent “Trud” by the Milv Worker for its nove in “Trud’ on Noy, 7, went through and was already in Mcseow on Oct. 1, . on to say: “It is believed by some to be in line with the quiet shifting, in the last few months, of regular army soldiers from the West to the Middle West and East, possibly in anticipation of hunger riots or like disturbances in the big centers of population during the winter months” } THE PRICES ARE THE SAM§ A WARM COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE WELL-PREPARED HEALTHY MEALS f } 4 PROLETARIAN ENTERTAINMENTS Large Comfortable Rooms are Available in the Attractive To enjoy your vacation or week-end, go to Camp Nitgedaiget The Only Fall and Winter Resort HOTEL NITGEDAIGET Why, |