The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 21, 1931, Page 5

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oo DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 193% ‘eee 1,500 Deletates of the J obless Millions Are Ready to March on the Capitol in Washington! MASSESSRALLYING TO GREET HUNGER MARCHERS ARE EAGER TO READ THE DAILY WORKER; ORDER BUNDLES NOW. The masses-are ralying to sup- port the National Hunger March. ‘The enthusiasm aroused along the Une of march. by.the Spokane and Seattle delegates and the active suport given the 385 National Hunger Marcel: delegates in Fay- ette County.::in~ Pensylvania by 15,000 employed and unemployed workers at the steps of the county Therefore we call on all readers, agents and friends of the Daily Worker to be sure to have enough copies on hand. Get in touch with your local Unemployed Councils and find out from them the exact dates for all the activities in connection $with National Hunger March. Send in orders, with cash paid in advance, for extra copies, as many extra co- Railroad and Auto Mergers Expected Within the Year NEW YORK.—Two new mergers and groupings of American capital loom and are expected to take place during the coming year, according to} statements of railroad and automo- bile executives issued Nov. 18. The bigger railroads, according to Ralph Budd, who will leave the pres- idency of the Great Northern Rail- road January 1 to become president of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, will gobble up the smaller ones within the next year. The| strong lines prefer to own rather | than support tthe weaker lines, said | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Marchers, and the endorsement of the demands of the Workers Unem- ployment Insurance Bill. ° ee STEUBENVILLE, Ohio, Nov. .20.— The Jefferson County Hunger March, originally scheduled for Tuesday, November 24th, has been postponed until November 27th, Friday to allow better time for mobilization. Miners and steel workers from Adena, Piney Fork, Bradley, Dillonville, Yorkville, TO DEMONSTRATE FOR HUNGER | MARCHERS OHIO, DETROIT as follows: Today, 2 p. m., Mingo Junction, Ballfield; Monday, 7 p. m., Columbia Hall, Toronto. Tuesday 7:30 p. m., Courthouse, Steubenville. On November 29th, there will re- giona United Front conferences in support’ of the National Hunger March in Steubenville and Bridge- port. The Steubenville Conference includes Jefferson County, Ohio, ang Hancock and Broke Counties, Wesi Va., while the Bridgeport Conferen- | Danish Industrialists See Great Progress of Soviet Five-Year Plan A part of the Danish industrialists have just returned from the Soviet Union. On their way through Stock- holm the members of the party were interviewed by Stockholm journalists, The leader of the party, Director H. Blache of the Copenhagen shipyard Burmeister & Wain, the biggest ship- building concern in Denmark de- clared: “I received the impression that the Soviet Union is on the march. The Russian people are at work under a firm leadership, They have made great progress since I was there last. nae Raise Funds for Expenses! RACINE, MILWAUKEE, BUFFALO | Pan | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | a | parations are being rushed to pre- | Pare the March, and raise funds for pit 8S. 6 MILWAURKKE, Wisc., Nov. 20—The Milwaukee County Unemployment | Insurance Conference (a united front | conference) besides making prepara- tions for the National Hunger | March, scored the fake unemploy- CONFERENCES PREPARE MARCH at the same time the appropriation ;for more and better armed police to persecute the jobless is raised by a third of a million dollars, Another $333,000 is appropriated for golf cour- ses and increases in salaries of city officials. e . BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov. 20.—Thir- teen workers’ organizations, repre- sented by 29 delegates in the Hunger March Conference here on Nov. 16, are backing the National Hunger court house-show the widespread | pies as you can lay out money for, | Budd. Tiltonville, Rayland, Brilliant, Mingo Soe ee we, ae, We saw great electrical plants, ine ae sown bpoacai of read Sh ctpate ape eee Ba q a p ” ssive steel works, f hi party government, It assails y -Uk- approval of the masses of workers | of the Daily Worker to sell to the| A new auto company, it 1s reported, | Junction, Toronto, Empire an County, Ohio. pressive steel works, factories for tl bd Governor LaPollette’s cynical bresk- | rat Amatuer Circle, Finnish Wo- all through..the country of the | fight conducted. under the aus- pices of the Unemployed Councils and the Communist Party of America for unemployment insur- ance. +0 ‘The result of the Hunger Marches and hunger march demonstrations even at this early stage, show that the masses afe ‘ready to support a real workers’ paper. The masses of workers in “‘Ahierica are being taught by the bosses’ starvation cam- paign and bythe: bosses’ wa rplots against the ‘Seviet- Union that the workers have @-common interest in fighting the--bosses; and that the workers must‘‘have nothing to do with the poss"press, but must have a paper of the#™ wn. Now is the time, when the hunger march demonstra- tions are exposing the relief hypo- crisy of the boSes,"to get the Daily Worker into hahds of the masses of workers and“shew-them that there is in existence workers’ paper that fights fer realzélief for the unem- | ployed and forall other demands of | the workers against the bosses. The existence of a real workers’ paper, the Daily: Worker, the central organ cf the Comunist Party, is refully kert<‘tidden by the cepi- “the majority of the of América. When Theodore ceo public a statement he~ gangster rule in , Kentucky, and told how the were -terrorized ~paper that the re- real friend, the Dai- against | crowds of workers that gather to back the demand for unemployment |imsurance and to cheer the hunger | marchers, Form Friends of the | Daily Worker Groups and get the cooperation of your fellow . workers in handling the Daily Worker sales through the crowds and in laying out money for extra bundle orders. Do not be afraid of having too many copies of the Daily Worker on hand for the Hunger March demon- strationss Remember the workers will want to know more about these hunger march demonstrations. They will want to know about the hunger march demonstrations in other hunger marchers that they have elected or that they cheered as the march went through their town. No. other paper but the workers’ only peper will tell them. Use that fact as a basis for selling the Daily Worker. : ‘The workers will also want to know the meaning of the Hunger March. They will learn all about it in the Daily Worker, The Daily Worker will show them clearly how | the fight for unemployment insur- ance is linked up with the fight against wage cuts, and how the fight against wage cuts and starvation is the workers’ fight to block impe- vialist war and the war against the | Workers’ fatherland, the Soviet Union. Build a solid foundation now for the workers’ fight against wage cuts: parts of the country. They will want | to know about the progress of the | that will rank with Ford, General Motors and Chrysler in size will be | formed soon through @ merger that | will take place shortly. Auto ex- ecutives state that it is possible that | the merger wil Itake place within the | next twelve months. Must Raise Funds Now To Finance The Hunger March ited for Pace are «cont F- of L. local unions have been ap- proached? Have all TUUL unions/ and leagues been given a certain | quota of funds to collect? Are col-| lections being made at every street meeting, every demonstration? Have the doctors, dentists and other pro- fessionals and the middle class sym- pathizers been visited? Get the Collection Busy! “When it comes to mass collections, namely, house to house collections, shop gate collections, tag days, etc., how bread have those been made? How many workers have been mo- bilized to participate? “We strongly advise that in every city a conference be called at once, consisting of leading representatives from every workers’ organization, | language, fraternal, women’s, etc., from A, F. of L, and TUUL local | i | Stratton will unite with the workers of Steubenville, 11 a, m, Friday, Noy. 27, where a committee will be elected to appear before the County Commissioners with the demands of the unemployed and part-time work- ers, Mass meetings in every one of the above towns are endorsing the march and mobilizing the unemployed for participation. Broke Terror Before. It was the march of the striking miners last summer which first broke the sharp police terror in Steuben- ville and established for the steel workers and miners of Steubenville at least temporary freedom of speech and assemblage. These “rights” have been recently denied the Steubenville workers who are organizing a big protest meeting and demonstration Tuesday night Noy. 24th on the courthouse steps. An attempt to hold a meeting there 12 days ago was unsuccessful due to strong police coneentration and a lack of workers’ defense committees. But the Steubenville workers have learned from that experience and next Tuesday they will be prepared to protect their meeting. Hearing and Mass Trial, Attempts are being made to secure @ hall in Steubenville for a Public Hearing on unemployment Monday night Nov. 23. The workers of Arena are arranging a Mass Trial of local authorities whom they charge with the murder of the war veteran and ynemployed coal miner who died Credentials from local unions and workers’ fraternal organizations are | beginning to come into the head- | quarters of the Committee, at room 4 Cilles Bldg. Workers organization, in the Ohio Valley that have not yet elected delegates should do so at once. If there fs no time to regularly elect, have your executive committee ap- point delegates. ‘The National Hunger March stops over in Wheeling Friday night, De- cember 3, and proceeds through the Ohio Valley on Route No. 7 Saturday, crossing the river at Steubenville, de- monstrating through Weirton to Pittsburgh. . << 's PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 20.—Po- lice raided a Public Mass Hearing or- ganized by the Unemployed Council on the South Side to expose the starvation and misery existing in that neighborhood. The police broke in, cleared the workers out of the hall, and arrested the committee of six in charge of the meeting. ‘While this was going on, another Public Mass Hearing was going on in another part of Pittsburgh, the Hill. A delegation of workers was elected at this hearing to go to the Chief of Police and protest the raid on the other hearing, and demand the immediate release of these work- ers. The Chief of Police was thund- erstruck when this delegation burst in upon him. He gave the usual ex- cuse “that he had no power to grant the demand of the Committee.” How- ever, morning found the 6 arrested production of aeroplanes, tractors, etc. All these factories and works have been built with the assistance of the best experts to be had on their respective fields. Personally I am convinced that the Soviet Union will carry out the Five Year Plan. In my opinion it is already well on the way to having done so.” BRITISH PASS 100 P.C. TARIFF LAW INECONOMIC WAR NEW YORK —The passage of Wal- ter Runciman’s bill on second read- ing in the British Hause of Com- mons authorizing the British Board of Trade to impose a 100 per cent tariff on manufactured goods from all foreign countries marks the be- ginning of a more intense economic war between British and American imperialism and is part of the new drive of British capitalism against the living conditions of the British working class. One of the purposes of the bill, said the New York Times, “is to prevent an exporter from the United States, for instance, from shipping parts to Canada, assembling them there and then transporting the finished prod- uct to Great Britain under the em- pire preference.” The passage of the bill, which, according to the MacDon- | in gof all the many promises he made |to the jobless during his campaign. | It points out that nothing has been | done except to spend about $8,000,000 |on public works, with a very small | amount of this going for wages. The | state legislature is fumbling around with a state unemployment insurance } Bill of little merit, and which can | not go into effect, according to pre- ears Plans, until two years have pas- sed. | As for Mayor Hoan’s socialist party | administration in Milwaukee, the conference points out that these fak- | ers are not giving relief, they are put- ting through just the opposite pro- gram. Under pleas of “economy” men are being fired right and left, |and the relief appropriation for Mil- | waukee county is cut to $76,000 while EVERY BETRAYER (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON) whole machinery into motion.” Whether Mooney will be freed is of very minor importance to Tammany. The main thing is the gesture magni- ficent. If they were really in earnest | men’s Council, and the International Workers Order. All delegates present pledged to get as many with them as possible and personally go on house to house canvass, Saturday and Sun- day for funds to finance the march. A provisional Hunger March Exec- utive Committee for Buffalo was elected. Resolutions adopted tell of families thrown on the street for inability to pay rent, of savage police attacks on unemployed workers who meet to | protest the inadequate relief and dis- crimination against Negroes and for- eign born workers, of children going cold and hungry to school and unable to study because of their suffering of whole families trying to live on rotten food picked from the garbage dumps, OF MOONEY CALLS WALKER “LIBERATOR” church whose head has cilled for » world war to etxerminate the workers government, the Soviet Union, to bol- ster wp Tammany and the church which supports Italian and Polish fascism. Mooney supports the Soviet Union and hates fascism. ‘Walker will make a pleasant break in his fatiguing trip by stopping off at South Bend to watch Natre Dame 1 . the.eapitalist press, while | ‘The National Hunger March 4s the| unions; from the Pioneers, youth, ete, | Starvation the end of last week. | workers free. ald government, will keep out foreign | them over San Quentin: The bitter it rwbYohod--peet of Dreiser’s state-| beginning of the national mass fight|at this meeting every representative | ToS trial will be held Thursday, sll ce hy | commodities and aid home industry, | Salt of these floods of tears would Vee Bee Ne CER, Da ase ‘s r colutely no report of| against starvation. Behind the | should be given the task of mobilizing | N°V: 26. Houston Delegation Marches. — | Jin) in reality increase the oost of |Tust away the bars so quickly that | Welcome omen by Walker and his x hunger marchers the solid everyday |the members in his organization for| , 4 ass meeting in Yorkville, Tues-| KANSAS CITY, Mo, Nov. 20—A| iving of the British masses, Sixty | Mooney, the Imperial Valley prisoners | Tettue. But will mean nothing so the Daily Worker, friends Deily Weérker, pierce through tha sekusp, bythe capitalists to hide from the.workers the exist- ences of a workers: paper. The Hun- evr March~ gives you your biggest cence to do, that: When thousands of workers rally to take part in hunger march demenstration in other lists cannot step them from learning about the Daily Worker — IF ENOUGH COPIES. OF THE DAILY WORKER ARE..ON HAND TO SELL TO THESE..WORKERS. Daily Worker, | | organization work must go on to make permanent the gains made in the hunger march and to prepare for more progress.. Behind the hunger marchers .must spring up Friends of the Daily Worker Groups to keep the Daily Worker in the minds of the masses and to spread the Daily Worker to all workers. Be- hind the hunger .marchers .must spring thousands of Daily Worker subscribers. Order extra bundles now and sow the seeds for the re- volutionary harvest in the fertile ground of the National Hunger March, Denounces Soft Peddling of Lynchi Lea; ng by South Liberals eof Struggle for Negro Rights Challenges Liars to Defend Their “Statements Before Masses NEW YORK—The white bosses sre Handkerchief Head Negro re- uy on the Southern Commis~- aaa Lynching have been chal- to defend their recent lying veport on lytiching. The challenge and falsely convicted of rape at Scottsboro, Ala. As a part of the general system of terrorization, you seek to cover up the generally in- creasing open lynchings and legal court-house lynchings as well as the the house to house collections, the tag | days, the sale of hunger march cou- | pons. Every workers’ hall and head- | quarters should be madé a “Financc the National Hunger March” center posters and special slogans should be hung. Every worker that can b:| reached should be pressed into seri ic in the finance campaign in the i. days that still remain.” SYMPOSIUM ON SOVIET SUNDAY ‘Foster, Frank, Smith and Stewart Speak A sympostum of varying views on the Soviet Union will be held by the Friends of the Soviet Union at Web- ster Hall, 119 E. 11th St., on Sunday afternoon, November 22nd, at 2 p. m, Wm. Z. Foster, secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, will speak on the “Conditions of the Working Class in the Soviet Union.” Waldo Frank, eminent novelist and critic, who has just returned from the Workers’ Republic, will speak on “‘As- pects of Proletarian Dictatorship.” Maxwell Stewart, formerly associate day night unanimously endorsed the County Hunger March and also the National March to Washington. A member of the Yorkville unemployed committee reported how the Mayor had superficially examined the in- formation presented to him and the town council concerning 38 families who needed relief. Of one man he “said, “Too old—let him go to the poor house.” Another, he dismissed with: “Lagy, he wouldn't work if he had @ job,” despite the fact that this unemployed miner worked on the city streets the last time he could. As for the others he demanded a petition, signed by the citizens of Yorkville, asking relief for them, and he said he would send one copy of this peti- tion to Washington and another copy to Columbus. ‘The meeting applauded one of the speakers, who, after exposing the war preparations in the Far East, called upon the workers to refuse to fight against the Soviet. Union but, on the contrary, to defend it. Unemployed mass meetings are arranged, in part, | delegation of 14 has been selected from the Kanstas City District for the National Hunger March as fol- lows: ; Houston, Texas, 1; Oklahoma City, 1; Pittsburg, Kansas, 1; Topeka, Kan- Sas, 1; Springeld, Mo., 1; Joplin, No. 1; N. Little Rock, Ark., 1; St. Joseph, Mo., 1; Omaha, Neb., 1; Muscatine, Towa, 1; Kansas City, Mo., 2; Kansas City, Kansas 2, ‘The Houston delegation is on the way and will arrive in Kansas City, Mo., on November 22nd, for the Uni- ted Front’Conference. The Houston delegation is travelling in the truck that will carry the entire delegation from the Kansas City District to ‘Washington. The entire Kansas City District delegation will leave Kansas City on November 27th, for Washington, D.C., arriving at St. Louls and joining the other delegation on the 28th. The San Francisco delegation will arrive in Kansas City on the 26th, and will proceed to St. Louis with the Kan- sas delegation. U. §. AND LEAGUE JAPANESE SEIZURE OF MANCHURIA APPROVE OF per cent o fthe food stuffs consumed by the British workers is imported from other countries, and a tarif tax of 100 per cent placed on these com- Modities will increase the cost of living almost an equa Iper cent. The wage-cuts, which go hand in hand | with the tariff, will drag the living level of the masses down still fur- ther. Such commodities as sheet ‘glass, knives, surgical instruments, vacuum cleaners, sewing machines, type- writers, colored cottons, carpets, box | calf leather and tanned leather are especially singled out in Britain's new tariff war, ‘The American capitalists, in order to counter this latest move of the British, are rushing branch factory construction in Canada. Canadian interests, it is reported, are circular- izing American manufacturers, point- ing out the “advantages” which would accrue to them if they moved their factories across the border, The U.S. Department of Commerce is consider- ably worried over this and is calling a special investigation into the mat- ter. In the meantime the economic | struggle, which contains the seeds of armed struggle, goes on between Brit- ish and American imperialism and grows sharped daily. jand all the rest of California cap- | italism's victims would be free. Walker's police last summer and pre- sent them to Governor Rolph to re- !mind him that all men must die— “thin® of thy last end and thou shalt never sin”—to convince him also that |in talking over Mooney with Walker, jhe is dealing’ with an equal— | well understands the art of putting | down worker rebels. | The sweat of Tom Mooney, the |rebel worker organizer whose spirit the United Railways and all the force of the power trust in the Bay Coun- ties could not break in more than 20 | years of struggle, fifteen of them in | jail and prison, the sweat of fourteen | years in the labor hells of San Quen- tin, is to be used to re-baptize Walker, | the badly smudged Tammany lamb. It is not surprising that all or most of the oldtime traitors to Mooney, and the working-class which fought for him for years, are once again in | evidence, | John Fitzpatrick, head of the gang- | ster-ridden Chicago Federation of La- | bor, the cowardly “friend of Mooney” ks lar as Mooney is concerned—ever though the California rulers have de- cided this is the time to let him out Mooney {s caught in the toils of the most contemptible maneuver ‘his enemies, and the enemies of the mili- tant working-class of which he & part, have ever devised. If he is freed, they intend to see that his brave voice will mouth only their doctrine, that by the very nature of his latest “champions,” he will be divorced from the comrades he loved, for the cause for which he fought and for which he went to prison from the shadow of the gallows: ‘The revolutionary workers of Am- erica must and will defeat the plot to blacken the revolutionary record of Tom Mooney, they alone will free him and from their prison. Soviet “Forced Labor”—Bedacht’ series in pamphlet form at 10 cents per copy. Read it—Spread it! Gottlieh’s Hardware 119 THIRD 4VENUB Near ith St, Tompkins Sq. 6-4547 All winds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty i was sent by thé National Executive | present wave of well-known but un-|éditor of the American Engineers’ who with Ed, Nolan, Weinbere,| PROLET MIMO " Committee of the League of Struggle | reported murders of Negroes which | Magazine in Russia—“The Moscow) ‘©ONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Soviet front, is also rushing its war ; Nockels and Gompers sabotaged the| service AND SUPPLY id for Negro Rights, and declares: are a part of the policy of throwing |News,” together with F. Treadwell ing more troops daily. A Washing- preparations. A Washington dis- | a COL Mooney convention in Chicago in 1919 | 10% East 14th BPeet, A o, a tea ta ¢|the weight of the present economic|Smith of Columbia University, will 3 patch reports: | ends and throttled the movement for a/ STENCILS = $155 [Siu ‘The summary of the findings ot ton dispateh to the New York Times| “phe Navy today ordered f BUSINESS SCHOOL “se your Commissio: the press declares crisis upon the shoulders of the ex-| sive their views of the New Russia. says: ie Navy today le rom general strike for Mooney’s release, MIMEO INK $100 Grade 2 that the number’ of lynchings has Paes Negro masses. ; Pinan FASE sana chani ihe ne eS Mii es gaa DAY AND wanes ihas come to scratch with a telegram | Mimgographs $15 Tec eticors 918 i, e accuse your commission of ry Hy » i Stenography— writin, up. A complete line of mimeograph decreased. This is a deliberate dis- |, Or Otis report intended to de.|CHicago Heights, Tl], | wighth pivision and part, or all, of | ninety - three new observation MBeokkeeieg | Aiea ner commending his section. | cipplies at reduced prices to organ tortion which you accomplish by ig- noring the *thormous increase of Iynchings in this year. Your further declaration ‘that “only 21 lynchings occurred last ‘Yéar is also a distor- tion of fact, ‘Fhe figures of the In- ternational Labor’ Defense are 43 lynchings. Thisnumber has tremen- dously increased in this year. Howard A. Kester of the Fellowship of Reconciliatioty, reports that in con- nection with the:death of two society ‘women in Birmingham last August, a reign of terror against Negroes has been launched: by southern slave drivers which, has resulted in the death of at least, 75 Negroes since the middle of August. He further states that “‘six: Negroes were killed on.a freight train near Ensley by deputies. It wes reported at police headquarters..tbhat they had been killed in a wreck.” workers, More and bigger meetings| bales ef every 100 bales sold in | lomatic mersures. That the time | crags “ » Y | —! We have reason to know that| ity in the North where Negroes, al- | wiit follow, Texas and Ok:shoras, spot markets, | ind come for applying economic || $o.7> Round Trip || 623 pp.—$2.00 countless lynchings are committed | though severely persecuted, are not “LEADING HOUSTON COTTON | Pressure upon Janan or adoptiny || BATHS FROME KE) YORK Red Star Press Workers Book Shop whieh ore carefully hushed up by the local press. Moreover, your statement that two of the lynch vic- tims were innocent is a clear infer- ence that the others were guilty of crimes and is an attempt to justify the common instttution of murder by lynching which ‘is supported by the Tuling class and’its newspapers. We therefore charge ‘your committee as an instrument of the white ruling ceive and disarm the masses in their vigilance against the intended legal lynchings of the innocent Negro boys falsely convicted at Scottsboro, the intended legal lynching of Willie Pet- terson at Birmingham, and that of Orphan Jones at Snow Hill, Mary- Jand, as well as others. Press reports do not show that you even mention the Scottsboro case, al- though you are well aware that this is the outstanding case of the present moment of legal lynching in a court house surrounded by a mob enter- tained by a brass band. We challenge your ‘commission publicly to present, through a repre- sentative of your commission, your false findings and hypocritical prop- aganda before the Negro and white masses in New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Cleveland or any other large entirely prevented from’ holding meetings as, they are in your kingdom of lynch law. If you refuse to accept this challenge for a northern city, we are ready to undertake a debate in any of the cities of the South, such as Chattanooga, in spite of the greater degree of intimidation. ‘We shall maintain through our spokesmen, the charges we here make aaginst you, Workers Hit Police | Terror in the City| CHICAGO HEIGHTS, TL Gy, Mail)—One hundred and twenty five workers protested November 13 at the Workers Center, 1444 Went- worth Ave, against police terror and against the action of the police and city officials in closing the Masonic Temple on Nov. 7th after the cus- todian had received a.deposit of $5) for rent for the hall for a lecture | and a showing of “The Oid and the New.” | The meeting was the most militant held in Chicago Heights. A protest | was drawn up which will be presen- | ted to the Mayor, Daniel Bergin pro- testing against police terror and de- manding relief for all unemployed Public Hearings on Suffering | in Superior SUPERIOR, Wisc—The Unem- Ployde Council held a Public Hearing on Unemployment on Tues- day, Nov. 17th, at the Tower Hall, 13th and Tower, to expose unemploy- ment conditions in Superior. The re- cently organized Unemployed Coun- the Second Division. It would come as no surprise if there soon were four Japanese divisions, amounting to a field army of 35,000 to 40,000 men.” That the attack on the Soviet Union is now the immediate objective is shown by the huge Japanese pur- chases of munitions, copper and other war supplies in the United States. A dispatch to the New York | Times from Houston, Texas, reports that Japan is buying huge cuanti- ties of cotton in America for the manufacture of high explosives. The dispatch reports: Japan in Huge Cotton Purelases. “Japanese cotton firms have becn conducting 2 spectacular buying movement for the Inst three weeks, paying premiums as high as 31.25 a bale, to obtain eighty to ninety MEN, AMONG THEM TYE HEAD OF A LARGE EXPORT FIRM, ESTIMATE TRE JAPANESE PUR- CHASES THUS FAR THIS SEA- BON AT 1,500,000 TO 2,900,099 BALES IN TEXAS AND OKLA- HOMA ALON", AN?) AT ',909,099 TO 4,000,000 IN THE ENTIRE SOUTH.” The dispatch ronorts that cotton planes, to cost $1,744,311, as a part of the five-year replacement pro- ” Evidence of support by the Wall Street government: for Japan's ag- gression in Manchuria continues to accumulate, with further exposure of United States domination of secret meetings in Paris of the League of Nations Council. A Wach- ington dispatch, to the New York Times reports the official Washing- ton attitude as follows: “What step Is to be taken was not an- ‘It was authoritative- ly asserted that 2 definite decision had been recched. Several courses of ection are yonder consideration, ia ** but the ir.ucation was given that the world powers, for the preser’ ot least, would not fo beyond moral pressure threwth @'p- some other drastie measure was sconted by administrative officials.” Fro * Comtonanare Continue. ‘The dispatch revorts another se- cret conference between Secretary Stimson 4nd the Japanese Ambas- sador Debuchi. Senator Borah also had @ secret conference with Yukio ‘The dispatch reports @on- ator Borai: as saying after the con- the | former Japenese Minister of; | Individual Instruction idth St, at 2nd Ave., N. REDUCED RATES BUS LINES Lil W. Sist (Bet. 6 & 7 Aves.) Tel: Chickering 4-1600 PHILADELPHIA SURLY EXPRESS SERV! $2.00 One Way Round ‘Trip Richmond Cleveland Akron One thousand five hundred delegates voted at this convention for a general strike. Fitzpatrick broke it- | Labor fakers from all over the |country who haye denounced Mooney | from the moment of his arrest, and | who have choked off protest wher- ‘ever they could, are wiring and writ- ing Walker. There is a great mobi- | lization but not to save Mooney. It jis to save the tottering prestige of Tammany and the prelates of the JUST OUT! P.0.8, 67, Station D, N.Y. of Literature a C THE ROAD 4& KOMANCE OF THE PROLETARIAN REVOLUTION By GEORGE MARLEN (Spiro) Author of PARIS ON THE BARRICADES “For the First Time in the History | Izations. We also mimeograph letters, ts ete. leaf! ALgonquin 4-4763 JUST OUT SOVIET PICTORIAL Sixty Latest Soviet Photos B jen of GO or over at.. Te Siuele copy «..10e SEND YOUR ORDER Friends of Soviet Union With St, New so JUST OUT! ..50 Kaat 13th Street ‘ommunist Novel” INDIAN At CAMP N ‘The Most Beautiful Time of the Year AU the necessary improvements for the Fall and the SUMMER ITGEDAIGET men advance the theory “that Japan, preparing for war in the Far Hast, is laying up stores of the staple, A BASIC INGREDIENT OF MOST HIGH EXPLOSIVES. A SIMILAR class of the Sdiith to whitewash the institution of lynching, framed-up trials and general persecution of the Negro ‘masses, ‘#8 an’ exploited and enslaved race.°:‘Your argument that National Executive Commitiee, League of Struggle for Negro Rights Kansas City Les Anve'rs Atlantic City Jwest aiates “MAINE TO CALIy ference: “I have no doubt that Japan is rein; to dominate Manchuria, and it is my opinion that the Japanese cil is holding regular meetings, and is organizing an Unemployment Mass Meeting on Tuesday night, Nov. 24th, the same night the City Council coming Winter months have already been installed THE PRICES ARE THE SAME A WARM COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE WELL-PREPARED HEALTHY MEALS £vorywhere eae Advertise Your Union Meetings NTA." “the courts will-eonviet Negroes” and|] Here. For Information Write to ag gdb serge bist dieting Be city. OF THE WORLD WAR IN 191¢ 18] ‘The New York World-Telegram| SPURNS LEAGUE BID FOR AID.” hig thgnicagoy vo ccgpeng lec dat grub op onto rds) rogularize lynching under legal forms RECALLED.” yesterday carried a dispatch from]. The dispatch reports U. S. Ambas- | ‘0 enjoy your vacation er week-end, go to Camp Nitgedaiget Ghee theca aie eo rt mae The DAILY WORKER Give verr coovor ta Poover’s U. S. Orders Alrp'anee. Paris, with the cantion: sador General Dawes as stating that The Only Fall and Winter Resort dure: Ia whe 50 Kast 13th St New York Gi) |) "FE 9 hamcey, wace cuts and | he Colca States, eee hs toys] “M$. TO STTAPE ON COURSE | the United States “must preserve its ITG (inocent Negro. jazs. were framed up ) pesicouiiunt }iaj tie leading vole ia tus onlte| IN MANCHURIAN CONFLICT; 'full freedom of Judgement.” HOTEL NITGEDAIGET meets, to elect a delegation to de- mand unemployment relict from the BUYING MOVEMENT IN CER- MANY BEFORE THE OUTBREAK people are practically a unit in this program.” PROLETARIAN ENTERTAINMENTS

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