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Usain ase Sates ad ean A WORKERS OF THE WORLD, a UNITE! Dail Central (Section of the Communist International) GATHER WITH YOUR SHOPMATES IN “FRIENDS OF THE DAILY WORK- ER” GROUPS. READ, DISCUSS, GET SUBS FOR THE “DAILY WORKER.” ENTER SOCIALIST COMPETITION IN DRVE FOR 5,000 “DAILY WORKER” 8U = co <—« Batered as eccond-clase matter at the Post Office at New York, N. Y.. under the act of March 3, 1979 CITY EDITION 3 Cents NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1932 Price Fascism, Fish and Fama of the dearest wishes of the House of Morgan at this moment in history, is to find some excuse to attack the leadership of the mil- \ions of toilers who are now awakening to struggle—to attack the Com- munist Party. The black perspective of American capitalism, the rising mass discontent as seen in the National Hunger March and the Ken- tucky strike, is father to this wish. ‘The fascist’ dictatorship of Mussolini, tottering with bankruptcy and its mouth watering for another Morgan loan, no doubt finds it conven- ient and even profitable to collaborate with Morgan’s Bank. Whith is to say to collaborate with the Hoover Government, as Morgan’s Bank is notoriously Hoover’s master. This joint interest of Morgan, Hoover and Mussolini is, to all ap- pearances, the reason for all the capitalist papers’ alarm about “bomb plots” and the bombs mailed at Easton, Pennsylvania. Certainly all those who aré found on the side of fascism, American as well as Italian, are doing their best to turn the Easton events against the working class and its leader, the Communist Party. It is significant that not one of the fascists who were supposed to be the “victims” of the bombs has been harmed in the slightest, while those dead are workers. And the further the case develops, the more clear it appears that the bombs were a part of typical fascist provocation stich as Europe has frequently experienced, designed both to aid the fascist dictatorship eliminate anti-fascism among Italian worker immi- grants and to realize some political aim in the countries outside Italy, ‘That such a scheme of Mussolini mold should match into the pur- poses of J. P. Morgan and Hoover is due to a happy juncture of events. Tt is also significant that the unspeakable Fish, who apes Mussolini as swell as he is able, should step forward into the picture as a collaborator. Did not Fish act in his role as “red prober” at the approval of the White House? JAPAN PLANS TO INVADE INNER CHINA Aim to Crush Chinese Revolution, Speed War OnU.S.S.R. Attack By Spring Imperialists Rush War Preparations Open intimations are made by the imperialist press of an immediate Japanese invasion of Inner China to attack the Chinese Soviet Government and the tremendous mass anti- im- perialist, anti-Kuomintang move- And as Fish, the.fascist, comes forward as an “investigator of fas- casm,” he brings in the hint that the “reds” may appear “in the pic- ture.” If Fish is to be the artist, the “reds” will surely appear. And to. match this, press dispatches state that two young workers, reported ‘to be members of the Young Communist League, have been arrested ‘on suspicion” at Easton, Pa. ‘This, although none knows better than the police authorities, that individual violence and assassination is repudiated by the Communist Party, and that no Communist would thus depart from the policy of the Party and the Communist International of mobilizing the masses for the struggle against capitalism, the only effective means of struggle against capitalism, whether capitalism still wears its mask of ‘“demo- Stacy” or whether it dispenses with that mask and appears in the open as a dictatorship—as fascism. Such means (individual terror, etc.) are, however, weapons typical of the desperate bourgeoisie, whether in opposition or seeking to maintain themselves in power. It is not the weapon of workers, least of all class conscious workers. But there is another icsson to be learned from the intervention of Fish, the American fascist. This is the “high regard” Fish expressed for Dr: Charles Fama, head of the supposed “anti-fascists” of bourgeois Stripe, who has appealed to Fish to “investigate.” “This appeal of Fama to Fish illustrates the touching fraternity of bourgeois “ant!-fascists” ‘with the leaders of American fascism. -What Fish immediately asks for, is more funds and more power to tie Department of (Capitalist) Justice; means that will only be used to Derseciite, jail and deport workers, including really anti-fascist Italian workers, back to the clutches of Mussolini, Thé action of Dr. Fama, therefore, is a direct aid to fascism, hoth the American and the Italian. Workers, of cours», who are daily suffering the outrage of slow death by starvation and in every strike are murdered in cold blood by the- police agent~ of capitalism, will not be deluded by the alarmist Storlés of “murder plots” cooked up by the fascists and police. There is net térror worse than this capitalist terror against the workers. And the ‘Communist Party is appealing to all honest anti-fascist workers to take up the struggle against this terror, against fascism and against capitalist WArvation of the workers enforced by fascism. And to combat this terror, the American working class, led by the amunist Party. is orgsnizing struggle—for unemployment insurance, for strikes against wage cuts, and they will continue to struggle, rallying ment, to be followed by armed in- tervention by Spring against the Soviet Union, With the occupation Saturday of Chinchow, the Japanese are now in control of the most strategic gateway into China. Predictions are made in the imperialist press of an early seiz~ ure by the Japanese of the cities of Peiping and Tientsin in Inner China with a probable Japanese invasion of all Inner China. The reaction of the other imperialist bandits to this new Japanese threat is'not yet known. Such @ Japanese invasion would {CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) APL. Carpenters In Boston Fight Move To Cut Their Wages Meeting of 175 Men Repudiate Leader’s Sell-out BOSTON, Jan. 3A mass meeting anti-wage cut group was held at Am- bassador Palace Wednesday night. The meeting which was called to defeat the wage-cut moves of the building trades union misleaders was attended by 125 carpenters and 50 the masses against fascism, irrespective of provocation and persecution, ‘until ‘Capitalism is overthrown. Challenge NAACP to Defend other building crafts» workers, all members of the American Federation of Labor. A resolution was adopted unani- mously repuding the 15 per cent WIN STRIKE FOR CHEAPER BREAD | IN CONEY ISLAND Women’s Council Ends Long Fight Against | High Prices The Coney Island strike against the high price of bread ended successfully Saturday night. The bakery owners who had been holding out for a num- ber of weeks have agreed to lower the prices of rye bread. from 8 to 6 cents | & pound, that of rolls from 20 cents a dozen to 18 cents, and that of a loaf of bread which sold for 10 cents to 7. They were also forced to recognize} the Women’s Council and the Rank| and File Strike Committee. The victory came afier the A. F. of L. Bakers union, together with the Socialist newspaper “Forward” and the bosses had conspired to break the strike by forming their own commit- | tee in opposition to the Women’s Council and the Rank and File Strike Committee which had organized the strike. The only bakery boss who refuses | to settle is Yanowltz, who is a mem- | ber of the Workmen’s Circle. | Tonight the Strike Commnnittee is holding a meeting at the Boardwalk Hotel on 22d St. in order to acquaint all the workers with the settlement and map plans for further struggle. 10% WAGE SLASH IS GIVEN N. ¥. CENTRAL ELECTRICIANS A wage cut of 10 per cent was im- posed today by the New York Cen- tral Railroad upon a local union of | electriicans. This electricians’ union is affiliated with the American Fed- eration of Labor which fact explains ; Why the wage slash was “voluntary.” Incidentally, this A. F. of L. union | COPS JAIL WORKERS IN “BOMB PLOT” Fascist Fish In Call for Terror Against Workers Chi. Meeting Raided Fascist Provocation Becomes Clear NEW YORK.—Demands for investigations and further re- pression against Communist and proletarian enti-fascist or- ganizations were voiced by Haimilton Fish yesterday as a result of the recent “bomb plot” provoca- tion. Jack Vill and Anthony Cipallit, reported to be riembers of the Young Communist League, were arrested by the state police in Allentown, Pa. on trumped up charges of bombing and held for investigation. The federal and state police throughout the country have started on a rampage of snooping and smelling, ratding and searching for “bomb plotters,” whom they claim are Communists, but who are, to all appearances, a band of fascist provocatures. Forming in a united front with Hamilton Fish in the call for govern- ment repression” is the notorious counter revolutionist, Carlo Tresco, and the so-called anti-fascist, Dr. Fama, of New York. Both Fama and Tresco sent conimunications to fas- cist Fish offering their cooperation. is the first one to self-impose the wage slashes proposed by the N. ¥. Central. The police, following the advice of Hamilton Fish, have made the tS (CONTINUED ON PAGE TRREE) Mine Strikers, NEW YORK.—Ten thousand work- ers crowded into the Bronx Coliseum yesterday afternoon to hail and pledge support to the Daily Worker upon the occasion of its Fighth Anni- versary. The workers showed the greatest enthusiasm, thunderously applauding the call of the speakers for solidarity with the striking Negro and white Kentucky miners, for the fight to Save and free the Scottsboro boys and wage cut for carpenters put over by to smash the bosses’ lynch terror, for Scottsboro Betrayal on Jan. 10 YORK.—In a statement is- sued last night, the International La- bor Defense challenges the white and Negro reformist leaders at the head of the N.A.A.C.P. to defend their ac- tivities in the Scottsboro case at the ™masSS “protest meeting January 10 at Star Oasino, Park Aye. and 107th St. “At this meeting, which is being ar- ranged by the ILL.D., the attorneys engaged by the boys, their parents and the LL.D. will report on the present. situation in the case. They will also expose the persistent efforts of th’ N.A.A.CP. misleaders to sabo- tage and disrupt the defense. The challenge to the N.A.A.C.P. leaders, which is addressed to Walter White, the secretary, reads in part: “You represent and serve the inter- ests of the white ruling class...That you sought to betray these boys into the hands of the lynchers by co-oper- ating with the Ku Klux Klan lawyer and lyncher, Stephen Roddy....That you have collected large sums of money, falsely and fraudulently in the name of the Scottsboro boys, none of which has been turned over to the Scottsboro Defense Committee or the attorneys authorized by the boys and their parents to defend them. ...'That you stand now exposed as agents of the class of exploiters and lynchers, as treacherous misléaders of the Ne~ gro toilers....” “In the name of the Scottsboro boys and their mothers, Orphan Jones of Maryland, and Willie Peter- son of Birmingham; in the name of Bonnie Lee Ross and the thousands of victims of capitalist class terror and lynching, we CHALLENGE YOU to defend your position before an au- dience of Negro.and white workers of New York at a mass meeting to be held by the International Labor De~ fense in Star Casino, Park Ave. and E. 107th St., Sunday, January 10, at 2pm.” DAILY WORKER CAMPAIGN ABOUT 13 PC. ON WAY TO GOAL; MUST REACH 25 PC. Sqn 'VE hundred and twenty-seven months of cubscriptions to THIS WEEK latter districts. That there is any Progress at all is due to the efforts + the Daily Worker on Friday has| of Detroit, Chicago, New York and made the week just past the best ‘week so far in the campaign for $,000 12-month subscriptions. We are now about 13 per cent on the way to the goal. But the improve- ment has been very slight, and not anywhere near enough to’ assure our reaching the goal on schedule. Chicago did best on Friday with 18% months of subs, which was far better than New Year's 14. Detroit came second with 147 months, Then came Cleveland with 55 and Phila- delphia with 46. Denver sent in 37_ ahd Minieapolis and Pittsburgh 27. “Every day :practically the same districts are in the foreground of the drive. Seattle, San Francisco, Connecticut, Buffalo ere hardly eyer heard from, The slow progress rive is mainly due to these Cleveland. A big reason is that these four districts have held readers’ conferences, have issued specia] bulletins and have definitely gotten their machitviy ‘cto the campaign. ‘This week is another big week. ‘The Kentucky strike is on, pre- parations are going forward for unemployment insurance day on February 4 and for the Party re- cruiting drive to begin January 11. ALL DISTRICTS, ALL WORK- ERS OF THE UNITED STATES, get into the Daily Worker cam- paign. Form Friends of the Daily Worker groups. Form Neighboring Squads. Canvass working class ‘We must reach the 25 per cent mark by the end of this week. the bosses and the union officials}the defense of ihe Chinese masses breaking the stending agreement|and the Chinese Revolution, for de- without a referendum. The four}fense of the Soviet Union and the proposals in the resolution are: 1)| tight against the war preparations Defeat the wage-cut to prevent @ general cut in the building industry; 2) force an immediate referendum to Tepudiata the wage cut; 3) fight for @ seven-hour day without wage cut; 4) demand unemployment insurance. The meeting heard the report of Brother Shaw, representing the anti- wage cut conference called by the left wing rank and file committee of five New York painters locals against wage cuts. They expressed solidarity with the New York building trades workers. A few days ago Business Agent Feeley of Carpenter's Local 51 of Boston filed charges of criminal libel against the carpenter, John Jacobs for distributing leaflets calling Wed- nesday’s meeting.’ The leaflet ex- posed the treachery of Feeley and other officials in their sell-out. Jacobs is being defended by the In- ternational Labor Defense. The ti] is set for Jan. 5 ‘at the Municipal Court. ‘The union fakers tried to bribe the hall keeper to close the hall. Prac- tically the entire district council of the Carpenters Union came down to terrorize the workers. The fakers had the police protection. In spite of this terror, the workers denounced the, wage-cut sell-out. of the imperialist murderers. The workers understood the tremendous importance of the Daily Worker in leading these struggles and pledged their support to their fighting organ. Among the speakers were a Chinese worker; Hudson, a marine worker; Sadie Van Veen, I. Amter, organizer of District 2, the Communist Party; Bill Dunne, and a Y.C.L. speaker. A revolutionary pageant was part of the program. Resolutions in support of the Ken- tucky miners and in greeting \to the First Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China were unani- mously adopted amidst great enthus!l- asm. The resolution on Ching follows: “To the Revolutionary Chinese Workers and Peasants: “Hearty revolutionary proletarian greetings to the First Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China, representative of the millions of struggling Chinese toflers brutally oppressed and crucified by the for- eign imperialist bandits and the blood-thirsty Kuomintang landlords and capitalists, running dogs of the 10,000 Pledge Solidarity to Chinese Soviet center of world imperialist robbery and oppression, gathered to celebrate the anniversary of the founding of our organ, the Daily Worker, greet your revolutionary manifesto, dated November 7, and hail with proleta- rian pride the great edvances of the on-marching battalions of the Chi- nese revolution. The formation of the Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China, es a revolutionary counterpole to the reactionary Kuo- mintang Nanking government, we consider an event of great world revo- lutionary significance. It is @ great inspiration to the million masses of exploited colonial toilers, especially to the Indian worker and peasant mass- es, who are repudiating the treacher- ous leadership of Gandhi and are as- suming sharpening struggle against British imperialism, and to the pro- letariat in the imperialist home coun- (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO) Ky Tenn... ine Strike | preads; Striker Shot {Min | Relief Need to Win Strike Women Behind Strike| PINEVILLE, Ky—"I’m ready to| live on a | thing throug | “unton’ see this |meeting in the le ree her hev owr ber n starved into it our litile going nal hungry— enough to turn blood. The women here solid Strong as the men. We'll be on the picket line every until we win—we can lick we stay solid—and if what y is true (that workers outside is with us aid will send 1 can't help wining.” mo | She caine from Anchor B lock mine, | where two days beiore the strike ¢ n refused to work in end @& mas meeting held by The men out in a In Keatucky Jellicoe close by, the men also walked out, to attend | the meeting. At Anchor Block, the superintend- ent was airaid to fire her husband jor attending the December 13th Dis- trict Convention. He lew the men were “solid” and would walk out im- mediately. Instead, he wouldn't give him his turn—"froze him out.” This man's. two sons worked with him— and the company refused to give {them good places. ‘To a family of nine, they brought in very often less than $3 a day—very often only $1 a day—siow and painful starvation. “When Kentucky blood gits stir- ring—“a miner said—“itv’h be a storm thatli beat in the’ ears of the coal } operators.” The blood of Kentucky and Ten- nessee in en stirred, Stirred be- yond endurance. And the miners on January first have stid STOP. STOP to starvation. STOP to slavery. The storm has been unleashed by the coz! operators themselves. The miners will not stop until they have gained “conditions.” They believe they have the support of the Am- erican working-class. They are “solid.” Workers and working-class organiza- tions must be “solid.” This grim battle of the Kentucky-Tennessee miners’ starvation level is not far— with the miners ragged, shoeless. Their support must come and at once. Clothes to keep the miners, their wives and children from freezing to death, Shoes so that there can be mass picket lines to keep the mines shut. Money and food-—so theat the bony hand of hunger won't snatch victory from the miners. All help to the miners! Give your answer at once! Send food, clothing, funds to 145 Pine Street, Pineville, Ky. PITSBURGH, Pa., Jan. 3.—Father Cox, well-fed and well-housed priest of this city was told in a-letter by the Unemployed Council of Allegheny County that his proposed “hunger March” to Washington was a mock- ery of starvation and misery of mil- lions of unemployed and starving workers.” Father Cox, backed by the retail merchants of Allegheny Coun- ty, is trying to get a number of un- employed to go to Washington, in cooperation with the Hoover govern- ment, to plead for jobs. imperialist powers. Inspiration to Colonial Masses. “We, thousands of workers of New York, the home of Wall Street, the 3 German Ships at Newark Docks Strike at Wage-Cut NEWARK, N. J.—Answering the call of the German Section of the International of Seamen and Harbor Workers for a general strike against a 10 per cent wage cut, the sailors of the S. 8S. Bukerheim struck Jan. 2. The S S. Surbeck and the S. S. Jersbeck are also effected and it is expected that all three ships will be striking 100 per cent within 24 hours. The strike is being led by the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union, American Section of the International of Sea- men and Harbor Workers. ‘The wage cut, which the German seamen are striking against, is a re- sult. of the recent Bruning decree put into effect in order to throw the burden of the crisis of German capi- talism further on the backs of the toiling masses. Wages all over Ger- many, in every industry, were slashed simultaneously on the first “of the year by orders of the Bruning gov- CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO) Father Cox, whose activities as a strike breaker in the taxi drivers’ strike of a year ago, are notorious, rushes to the aid of the Mellon- Hoover-Wall St. government as a greater strike breaker. He seeks now to break the mass struggle of the Unemployed Councils for immediate winter relief and Unemployment In- surance against future wnemploy- ment and starvation. This dignitary of the church, hintself housed most comfortably, de~ nies that he will ask Washington for adequate housing for the thousands of evicted unemployed and part time workers of Allegheny County. For them “Shantytown” Is good enough. He will not ask for immediate re- lief in cach from the government, which can give back to its million- aire rulers $65,000,000 in tax vebates. He will ssk only for “Jobs,” jobs in the fece of steel corporations pro- ducing at 20 per cent capacity, jobs Expose Father Cox As Strike Breaker in Pittsburgh Strike with every industry in the country laying off workers. Father Cox will ask for the Pennsylvania unem- ployed and starving the forced labor road camps program of Pinchot mag- nified 100 times. Father Cox is brought forth from his quiet enjoyment of the fruits of his betrayal of the taxi drivers by the Retail Merchants of Aliegheny Coun- ty as the new savior. Already he has had unemployed workers arrested be- cause they “dared” to warn the un- suspecting unemployed workers who follow this American Gapon. Last Sunday five workers were arrested at his request and given 10 days. —as | order to at- | the | | | Coal Bosses’ Tool Is Ky. Strike Reporter For Associated Press NEW YORK.—How the coal operators ot Harlan and Bell} Counties receive the direct sup- | port of the Associated Press in trying to minimize and lie about | strike of Kentuci ov the he coal miners of is shown in the stories the Associate. Press The Associated Press tries a1 the fact that its "im- ” correspondent in the coal s H nine of | Pineville Su the coal operaior: | men | As head of sent or, editor of} a paid tool of and their gun- ne Red Cross. ne Red Cross in Pine- Evans uses this or- 1 to break strikes, | When rerding the capitalist ports from Kentucky on the strik worker should that this “news” is being | written in the office of the coal operators. They do not want the rs throughout the South and| | to know the real extent of | ! | the strike. They do not waut them | | to know that thousands are out in | the most nuilitant strike ever seen | | in this territory. Expose the lies of the cépitalist | | jPress on Kentucky! Reveal the| | { Rachael NEEDLE STRIKES CONTINUE IN N. Y ressmakers Called to Union Meet Despite the slow season, a number of shop strikes have already been carried through with some improye- ments in the conditions of the work- ers. The following shops are still on strike: London Dress, 245 Seventh Ave.; W. & R. Dress, 253. W. 26th St.; Smile Dress, 122 W. 26th St.; W. Dress, 117 Wf 31st St. Active necdle trades workers are called upon to support the strikers on the picketline so as to help bring these shop strikes to a victorious con- clusion. the Active dressmakers are called to aj meeting at the office of the union, | 131 W. 28th St., to organize the ma- chinery for a mass Organization and remember | | , er’g Wife Tells of' Meeting ot aaa Strike Committee On January 6 Many PINEVILLE, Ky., Jan. 3. The strike is ecntinuing to spread hi among the Ken- Mass Meetings tucky coal miners. More mines came out yester- day st e starvation conditions th afflict the 18,000 miners h At the Miners Creek Coal Co. 400 miners joined the strike; 155 went on strike at the Luna Creek Coal Co. ai Poor Fork, Ky. At Ferdia, Ky., 250 joined the strike; 330 struck t 2 Creech. Ky. é is meeting At the Frances ly. Tenn., all the Three hundred Pruden, n hed over to id pulled out an The miners | Miners’ Union Tenn. Ey me in the Brush Creek section of Kentu. comprising 800 miners, are on st In the’ Gatliff section 700 or ike, closing down all the mines ing at Kertwcky Creek. One miner, Albert Wilson, a mem- ber of the National Miners’ Union, was shot by former Deupty Sheriff Willie Foster at Carey, Ky., yester~ day, ‘There are conflicting reports Eighty are strik- King, near Wallins =| @out whether he died as a result of _ his wounds. Yesterday night 2 gang of Harlan County deputy sheriffs came into Pineville and surrounded the office of the National Miners’ Union here. They tried to enter, but did not sue= ceed. They then rode around town trying to find leaders of the union. They did not find any. No arrests were made. The miners do not con- sider this a raid, but just a prelim- inary prowling expedition pretending to interfere and to terrorize. The miners were not terrorized. Mass meetings are going on today throughout the strike field. First reports show that 500 attended at the P.J. Depot, near Colloway. Other meetings were held in Middlesboro Straight Creek and Bleck Star Mine today. ‘There will be a first meeting of the Picket Committee for active partici- pation in the organization drive in preparation for the United Front Strike uncer rank and file leadership, and for discussion and action on all other phases of the campaign to pre~ pare for a successful strike. At this meeting the dress trade committee will give a detailed report on the activities carried through up to now, the plans for the immediate fu- ture, Taxi Men Called to Central Strike Committee at 10 am on Wednesday, Jan. 6, at Pineville All mines are electing 3 to 7 dele- gates to this meeting. The Workers’ International Re- jief, which is raising relief funds | on a nation-wide scale for the Kentucky miners, fed 660 families on the first day of the strike, It it very difficult to get food out to many of the outlying towns. Often trucks and cars get stuck In the mud and the food has to be car- ried on foot for great distances. On Saturday 199 more families of Y + + were fed. Union Meetings in More food and ciothing( as wel) Bronx and Harle2m | as tunas, must be rushed immedi _ ately. The W.LR. has a food and Now that Jimmie Walker's Taxi Control bill is put over, General Motors will completely control the taxi industry and that means a cut|at Middlesboro, Ky., on Jen. 16. A in commission and thousands of] large number of farmers and small hackmen squeezed out and black-| business men will attend and assist listed. in relief activities. The Bronx Branch of the Taxi} International Labor Defense groups Section is meeting Monday night at|@re being organized in every local of 1325 Southern Boulevard, near Free-|the National Miners’ Union. They man at 7:30 p. m. and 1:30 a, m./Will hold a preliminary defense con- (Tuesday morning) for the night| ference on Jan. 10 at Pineville, to.be men. The Harlem Branch meets at | followed by a larger mass conference 1492 Madison Ave, near 102nd St. at | later. 8:30 p. m. As the strike spreads to dozens of more mines, closing up new coal clothing station in Pineville at 145 Pine. St. There will be a W.LR. conference NEW YORK.—A new revolutionary uprising against British imperialism in India, which has long been stir- ring, is now ready to break forth. No longer able to stop this expres- sion of mass worker and peasant, resentment against British imperialist domination, Mahatma Gandhi who spent many months in England col- laborating with British imperialism, is up to his old stunt of preparing the slaughter of great masses of Giant Battles Loom in India; GandhiAims toHead Them fields, the need of relief becomes greater. The Workers’ Interna-~ tional Relief appeals to all workers not to deley in sending in relief. Funds should be rushed immedi- ately to the W. I. R. 16 W. 21st St., New York City. Food and clothing Indian evolutionists by telling them | Should be shipped now to the Work- to meet the British machine guns| ¢Fs’ International Relief ware- eamae. "| Rouse, 145 Pine St., Pineville, Ky. Gandhi himself quite contentedly is waiting to be taken with all honors Potato Diet For Jobless to some comfortable island under} SPRINGFIELD, Ill—Today I met British protection, Gandhi's hench-/® man that I knew for a long time, men dignified this action of Gandhi|He told me that all he had for his as an “arrest” for revolutionary ac- | family of six to eat was potatoes, He tivitys has worked hard ail his life and is Gandhi who represents the In-|% 00d tather. Capitalism is doing its best to break up the home. —A. B.S. (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) READ DAILY WORKER DRIVE; GET PAPER TO KENTUCKY STRIKERS! }