The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 6, 1932, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Dz AILY WORKER, | NEW Ys ARRES T “MOTHER” Hoover Message Tells of BLOOR AT MINOT War on Jobless, Employed | Recommends Billions dor R. R. Bond Holders; a, WEDNESD DAY, J ANUARY 6, 19: 2 We Are Out to in, Says Ky. Miner; Send Strike Relief Foreman of Fox Rid Ride ve Mine Turns in Keys and Negre ‘desk duke | 518 Months of Subs Monday Christmas P 1 a y Is Workers’ Answer to The growing militant mood of the Negro youth is reflected in the fol- Jailing of Kentucky Strikers _ lowing two incidents reported by the | Police Break Meeting | } Joins Strike On Eaneer arch | Baltimore Afro-American of Jan 2. ‘ eer oom | eee | Unemployed Councils Call for Nation- | corey meer rears ial HE campaign for 5,000 12-month subscriptions to the / Pee | ere omer and bas he Wes, s0lne)| SMONOT, N. D) Mota Ei | Wide Protest, F ebruary 4th siuteni! of the Gomes ky atonkag Jim Daily Worker has started this week with a bang. Five BLANCH, Ky.—We had a mee « ee Se in their strike | peeve Rtoor, veteran Communist es. Gebe oiis oneciee by He Wwashin-| hundred and eighteen months of aube cataclin MiAaiine = anem Thien ae the Fee Ridge Nic, on| The foreman then asked us if we{9s after police prevented the North.|__ WASHINGTON, Jan. 5—Comparing the action of the eap- | ton. Baltimore avd Ann av P| New York and Chicago districts, both of which are in Soeial- Tan ieee our inti Aor ‘ove: | “ould stick to him and see that his |west contingent of Hunger Marchers | italists in the present crisis to “a war on many fronts,” Pres- | 744 between Baltimore and Annap ist competition to see who can get the most subs, were the Several trains have been dam family got relief the same as the rest olis of the miners who were on strike. We returning Washington, D. C.| ident Hoover New York from se mes sent a surp to Congress leaders for that day sending 172 months of subs the boss of the mine asked the chair- yesterday | aed and the police have been called man to be allowed to speak. We voted | eee ea een oe are ae | from holding an open air meeting in) putting forward relief plans for the big bosses, but telling the | on to protect the sacred rights of] and Chicago 151. Seattle is showing signs of life, sending Mee ved he on fheldest of ws if he would abate in| ee ee | workers to jatarve or, depend an charit ity. | property against the denied rights! jn 26 monhts, Detroit sent in 37 months and Cleveland 27. He said that if we would take him } the fight About 12 of the marchers had stop: Combatting a depression,” @ ———— =z | of the suppressed national minority.| 4 good starting point has been set for good steady UPWARD : ped here for a meeting before pro- nation-wide mass demonstrations"gn | Colored girl students at the Doug- into the union he would come out on} We are out on strike now. We went ceeding to W state ana| Said the mouthpiece of Morgan | progress for the rest of the week." shington Tigh School staged an anti-r an Tete: uoser ioe tis.caee ee ieee 2 = i is a yr {Oreeon to render their reports on the |nad Co., “is indeed like a great ne Pane OF GE ose, aon S ion during a The new fascist terror in Kentucky demands much meno ig are out to win We call on all Ou |sunger March and the answer of the| war in that it is not a battle| sands of workers wil pelak out th performance at the school.| greater efforts. The bosses realize that the Daily Worker pany. friends all over the United States to In order to prove that he was sin-| send us relief. fe One eee upon a single front but upon the Hoover-Morgan government read- evan) Wie ene iA ve is a powerful force in keeping solid the ranks of strikers. cere he asked ten of us to come to| Editorial Note:—Workers are |‘. Unemployment Tsurance, Bee cee perc cally, OF eos] omen Pillons for the bosses, but | ry che ciuccdiaeek to aamitha| Lost is\why: Vern Smith, the Daily: Worker repocen, aaem the office the next day. The men| urged to support the courageous | Mother Bloor was arrested by the | Hoover was referring to the attack on | refuses one cent of relief for the un-| gency, the church, seek t tum tne| arrested yesterday in Kentucky went there and saw him turn the| strike of the eKntucky miners by |Chlef of Police, W. J. O'Leary, leader | the unemployed, through resistance of | employed. On February 4th, National | ¢ves of the pr Fike ie ; Do hot lek the bosses hude-the-tcueh aqrad-< eee eee keys over to the big boss. He told| rushing funds for food and clothes |i? “patriotic” organizations particu-| the demands for uncmployment in-| Unemployment Insurance Day, tne | n of rugele & = x by | 3 bosses hide the trut ieee t the big boss that he was tired of| to the Workers International Relief, ry, the American Legion. She was] surance, and the “war front” against | Workers, unemployed and employed, | BED ratsiae them ante A CBG RY eR) wOrke Spread the Daily Worker subscription campaign working for a cheap company as a 16 W. 2Ist St., New York City. jlater released under $25 bond to face) ihe employed, through wage cuts,| will strengthen the work and organ-| You die.” _ into every working class neighborhood, into every mine and [eel tecmnlealy for violating an al-| syeed-up, stagger plans, etc. ization undertaken by the National| Three of the students were singled] factory oe 2 jleged city ordinance preventing the} admitting the ‘continued shocks | Hunger March when 1,670 hunger|out for suspension as an example | <hr he : . hee, a Press Forced to Admit Soviet Success [holding of street meetings without a som world instability,” Hoover press. | marchers from all perts of the eoun- |to the others Form new Friends of Daily Worker groups. 8 permit from the city commissioner.| ¢q several proposals all designed to|try put the demands for unemploy-| ‘The entire student body of the] Get Daily Worker subscription committees active in Toledo, Ohio. {against the Czar and his slave-driv- |An indoor meeting was held in the ment mass organizations. 001 should org insur relief n- | your put more profits into the pockets of Dear Sirs: ers. Tn. the USSR they tthe working evening with hundreds of workers| ine rich stock and bond holders. st lize te aidatan de thatatelinipae ite ae: Geb. new: contacts, tighten [oose contacts, fin eanaea ae 4 The capitalist press even had to Pancreat setae since they ees ee : ‘The most outstanding point was the | Congress. |ligious freedom which this arbitrary} tions to the Daily Worker. admit that the 14th anniversary cel- a ‘as inot is hard hit by unemploy-| “creation of a reconstruction finance ae action of the school authorities de- | bration held in commemoration of |YRst People in capilalist counties |ment and this is one of the reasons|| corporation” which would. get 2,000,- |ny. Demand the immediate rein- the new Soviet Union was of great |*7° unable to get, g namely, Sey for increased ivity against milit- | 990,000 of government money to p: CHINESE RED | statement of these students! Pro- s. The following ev- |ment and prosperity. ‘The starving Jants, Large rumbers of jobless rail- | railroad profits mainly. This, Hoover = religious ceremonies and performan- joy and suect cerpt is taken from an article appear- ing in the Toledo News-Bee: ‘White Admits N.A.A.C.P. Is {workers here in America are under road workers are working two days the miserable influence of the said, was necessary to “restore con- e-/a week on the roads in return for ces! s | fidence in the bonds of our railways.” “Thousands of banners, floats and caricatures reminded the Soviet citl- zenry of their good luck in being out of the bourgeois morass of unemploy- ment, bank failures and hopelessness. ie a five-and Against these were contrasted re- minders that the Soviet Union had abolished unemployment and was speedily catching up with foreign production.” The capitalist press mentions “So- driving capitalists. The capitalist press put over a hot one on President Hoover when they {published a photo showing him \spending his tightly-pinched money en-store. He is show- ing what he is doing to strengthen the tottering capitalist system—by patronizing the the five-and-ten cent stores—as if that could bring back a never-permanent capitalist prosper- ity. But, comrades and brother-work- macaroni and bean: VIG LAYOFF IN ILLINOIS STEEF Aged Work Fired, Kills Hiraself Many other measures to help the bankers and other exploiters were contained in Hoover's message. One measure provides for greater robbery of the deposits of the workers who still have anything left in the banks. Hooyer proposes that the banking laws be made easier so that the banks can hide their failures. Hoover insisted on greater taxation which would hit the workers mainly. ARMY IN BIG VICTORY, ROM PAGE police have fired into cotton mill strikers, killing two men and one woman worker. Martial law has been | declared in an effort to crush the strike. The strike began on Dec. 19 (CONTINUED ONE) and the United States because of the | numerous protests in regard to Chin- chow.” ‘These residents unlike the | Japanese government have been tak- | ing at face value the fake protests of {the British and American imperial- ists. Anonymous letters ordering them to leave Manchuria have been re- |ceived by British and American | business men. A Shaughai dispatch accuses the Japanese with killing Chinese resi- Boys ¢ Negro Lackeys NEW YORK.—Admission that the National Association for the Advance- ment of Colored People was out of the Scottsboro case was made Sun- Out of Sc -o ttsboro Defense and Par oie Firm in ‘Barring White and of Imperialists have clearly stated that they want to fight, that they will not permit themselves to be forced to plead guilty of a crime they did not commit, and viet good luck” in this article. But fers, we must expect this from the This is another of Wall Street’s|~ 7°: so9 workers of the cotton mills | dents and looting shops and houses| day night by Walter White, national ee bre ony aspen Bui is the Russian masses deserye what |hypocritic supporters of the worst Leora battle fronts. in Wusun near Shanghai. After the | When they entered Chinchow last) secretary of the organization, at its| the militant defense o nterna- they now possess because they got it {capitalist system. (By a Worker Correspondent) Conscious that his whole message | firm cwingon & Co.) had rejected | Week. annual meeting at St. Marks Church, | tional Labor Defense, backed by mil- not by good luck, but by revolting 4 Do Work of 120 in Milwaukee Factory (By a Worker Correspondent) MILWAUKEE, Wis.—A word to show how the speed-up system, and rationalization has been introduced in Seaman Body Corporation. There —From a Daily Worker Reader. men do the work 120 used to do, One hundred sixteen are thrown on the streets in this department alone! The company has the wooden doors ; Made in the South because the labor CHICAGO, Ill—The Illinois Steel Co. at South Chicago laid off 36 per cent of the work that were work- ing there on the stagger system, A worker that is working at the Illinois steel told us there is also to be a y-off on Jan. wage-cut, The foreman this, 15 and a 10 per cent told him tems with billions of expenditure for the bosses, to keep up their profits, Hoover has a word to say about the unemployed. “Out people,” he says, “through vol- untary measures and through state and local action are providing for dis- tress.” That's all Hoover offers for the un- the demands of the workers a strike meeting was held in front of the works. A number of windows were broken and machinery damaged by the angry strikers. On the next day, about 6,000 other workers joined the strike, which is still proceeding. Seven thousand workers of the British- American Tobacco Co., are also on Nanking To Confer with Japanese rts that the counter-reyolu- Nanking government was preparing to open direct negotiations | with the Japanese looking towards | official recognition of the Japanese seizure of Manchuria are further confirmed in a dispatch from Nan- The dispatch states that For- eign Minister Eugene Chen and Jap- 138th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue. The announcement came as a re- sult of the firm attitude of the nine boys, their parents and other kin and of the tremendous mass pressure of Negro and white workers against the traitorous activities of the reformist NAACP leadership, who have done everything in their power to disrupt lions of white and Negro revolutionary workers throughout the world. While admitting that the NAACP had withdrawn from the case, Walter White made no reference to the large sums of money his organization has collected on the false pretense that they were defending the boys. The rank and file members of the NAACP must raise the demand that this rs ii s 4 William Auld, a 74-year-old worker | employed. After requesting billion: } . is also a strike of used to be 120 welders in one de-|is cheaper. Onl: ne-fourth the employed. zh 4 } is i the defense of the boys and strangle & Scotts- partment, Now the company has in-|used to be employed. ‘The men say |“ Worked in the Tilinois Steel for | for the Morgans, Rockefellers, Mel- {50,000 workers in Hankow see eee Shigem! icc | the ‘mass defense movement which ee oe et Neato troduced welding machines, and four | ‘we go to do something.” Seas and was recently Jaid off, | lons, Hoovers, Lamonts, ete, he tells! Japanese Workers in Anti-Wat |iment of the Manchurian conflict,| Alone can save and FREE the nine| ena white workers throughout the Wisconsin Bridge Workers Get Pay Cut (By a Worker NORTH MILWAUKEE, Wis.— About 50 men are now working in the Wisconsin Bridge Co, where over 300 used to be employed. The speed-up is terrific, a couple men doing the work a dozen used to. Correspondent) Some work 6 to 7 hours a day—but some must work even 12 hours a day. On Jan. 1, these workers all re- ceived a 20 per cent wage cut. The MWIL is going to call these workers to fight against the wage-cut. Call on Workers of W. Virginia to Support Ky. Miners’ Strike {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Mine Workers of America in Ken- cucky, sold out to the bosses’ govern- ment and the coal bosses of Kentucky by the UMWA, the miners of Ken- tucky saw that this same scab bosses’ organization, the UMWA, was playing the same despicable role of agents of the bosses in this district that the UMWA played in Kentucky. The miners of Kentucky saw in this strike of the miners of West Virginia, East Ohio and Western Pennsylvania the rising of a new power in the coal fields, the National Miners Union, the only union representing the in- terests of the coal miners, the only working class union in the coal fields. Penna. Strike an Inspiration In the strike of the miners of our district, the NMU organized the workers by the thousands and fought effectively against starvation, against Pennsylvania, Ohio, of the strike of the NMU which be- gan Jan. 1 in Kentucky, we must build a powerful mass NMU, not only in Tennessee and Kentucky, not only in this district, but we must build a powerful mass union which includes in its ranks every miner in the coun- try who digs coal. The miners of this country, especially of this district, where the NMU has had its strongest base, must help win the strike of the Kentucky miners. A victory of the NMU in the strike in Kentucky means a victory for every miner in the U. S.A. Misery Throughout Coal Fields Today the same conditions of mis- ery and starvation, with only slight differences, exist thruout the whole coal fields. The miners of this district are suffering one wage cut after an- other. Thousands of miners are being laid off, added to the large army of the unemployed. In their continued | ers’ killed himself because he had no means of support. The only salva- tion for the steel workers is to unite and organize to join the Metal Work- Industrial League, both Negro and white, The Jackson Park Hospital at 75th St. and Stoney Island is laying eff its whole crew of Negro work- ers, that is, the kitchen help, por- ters and chambermaids, and hired all white at a wage-cut. the unemployed to depend on the charities and “state relief,” after every leading charity head has been in Washington and has testified before the Senate Committee that the pres- ent local, state and charity funds will deem hundreds of thousands to death by starvation. Aganist Hoover's program of billions for the bosses, the National Commit- tee of the Unemployed Councils is mobilizing the American workers for Textile¥\ orkersin India Stone Mill; Most Militant in Strike NEW YORK.—Sweeping laws against the Indian masses were put into effect throughout India on Tuesday. This is the fruit of the imperialist policy of the British labor party, which has actively co- operated with the British imperial- ists supporting the war against the | Indian masses. Ramsay MacDonald is the British “expert” on Indian policy, It was Ramsay MacDonald, the socialist, who predicted (with full knowledge of the approaching events) that such suppressive meas- ures and greater slaughter were com- ing in order to keep the British hold on India, At the last minute, rich business men in India, both Indian and Brit- ish, appealed for collaboration of the British government and the All-In- dia National Congress, in order to prevent the real uprising of the In- sides, they report, “The Indian Mer- chants’ Chamber adopted a resolu- tion deploring the Viceroy’s attitude and requesting the government to release Gandhi,” ‘That the suppressive measures are | designed particularly against the: workers and peasants is shown by the fact that the third ordinance is directed against “illegal refusal of the payment of certain liabilities.” This refers to the “no-rent” cam- paign which Gandhi and the other rich landowners in the All-India National Congress do not favor. By this measure the British imperialists protect the interest of the Indian money-lenders and bankers. In many parts of India a strike or hartal has been called. It is sig- nificant to note that in Bombay the | mill workers at Ahemadabad yer the most militant in the strike. | Big s demonstrations against the Japanese adventure in Manchuria took place in Tokio on the day of the opening of the Jap- anese parliament. The demonstra- tions shouted Communist slogans against imperialist war and for the defense of the Chinese masses and distributed Communist literature. The demonstrations were everywhere at- tacked by the police with great brutality and broken up. Eighty-five workers were arrested. Admission that the Japanese ad- vance on Chinchow was considerably slowed up by the resistance of the Red partisan troops in Manchuria is made in a Peiping dispatch. A Tokio dispatch reports a determined attack was made yesterday by Red partisan troops on the Japanese forces in Sinmin. There was violent street fighting in which the workers in the city took part in support of the Red partisan troops. Light and _ tele- phone wires were cut, Red Partisan Troops in Battles with Invaders Another partisan force cut railroad near Paichipu. A partisan force estimated at 2,000 is reported near the town. The Japanese are rushing reinforcements from Muk- den. Japanese subjects are concen- trated at the military police station. U. S. Press Score Japanese Beating of Consul Arising out of the beating of an American consular official by Jap- anese sentries in Mukden, Manchu- ria, a tense situation is developing the |. |The conference is expected to take | innocent boys place within the next few days. Chang Accuses Chen of Secret Agreement With Japan. In an effort to cover up their shameless betrayal of the Chinese masses, the Nanking government is accusing Chang MHsueh-liang of abandoning Chinchow “against or- ders.” Chang has retorted by accus- ing Nanking of denying him ammu- nition. Pointing out that the Nan- king government permitted the con- centration of Japanese troops in Tientsin, in the rear of the Chin- show army, Chang has made a clear case of joint complicity between him- self and the entire Kuomintang gang in the sell-out of Manchuria. Chang further accused Chen of hav- ing a secret agreement with the Japanese over Manchuria. In the meantime, the Nanking gov- White admitted Sunday that Clar- ence Darrow and Arthur Garfield Hays had been informed by the boys that they could not participate in the defense as attorneys of the NAACP. Tne boys plainly told them that they had no confidence in the NAACP, whose acknowledged attorney, Stehen Boddy, had tried to get them to plead guilty to a crime they did not com- mit. Darrow and Hayes were ad- vised to co-operate with the attorneys engaged by the boys, their family and the International Labor Defense if they really wished to help defeat the lynch verdicts against the boys. This the “liberal” attorneys refused to do. White tried to explain the rejec- tion of the NAACP by the Scottsboro boys with the slander that the boys were too ignorant to know what sort of defense they wanted. The boys country must make this demand. Fearing the anger of militant Ne- gro workers who are familiar with their attempt to betray the boys, the NAACP misleaders had a huge police guard around the church while their meeting was in progress. In spite of the presence of the police, members of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights distributed leaflets inside and outside the building, demanding that the NAACP turn over the funds col- lected in the name fo the Scottsboro boys, and challenging white and other NAACP misleaders to defend their conduct before the Negro and white workers at the Jan. 10 mass meeting at Star Casino, Park Avenue and 107th St. At this meeting, Gen. George W. Chamlee, Irving Schwab and Joseph Brodsky, three of the ILD attorneys in the case, will report on the present status of the case. ernment is further aiding in the proceeding partition of China. Japa- nese troops are being landed in In- ner China without the least gesture of resistance from the Kuomintang officials and their huge armies. A strong Japanese force was landed yesterday at Choofow, midway be- tween Shanghai and Canton. The Japanese advance guard from Chin- chow yesterday occupied Lienchan in a movement toward Shanhaikwan, inside the Great Wall of China. Japanese troops were landed from Japanese troop ships. Great tension is reported at Tientsin, where a few weeks ago sharp fighting occurred between the Japanese invaders and Nanking troops on one hand against angry Chinese workers. Fighting Between Chinese WIN A TRIP TO THE “i SOVIET UNION © for the MAY DAY CELEBRATION FIRST PRIZE IN te tae Campaign for 10,000 New Readers fe : ef : dian workers and peasants. The As-|They stoned the mill, calling on all; between the United States andj ct a $ . m onths the Soenbined ‘attack of the Bee eek Can tee ying, conditions of the: sociated Press reported thai “some| workers to come out, Their action; Japan. The American sensational | and White Guards. 7 Rates— 1 per year, 60¢ Six 30c three government, the UMWA and the] miners, the bosses and their govern- ity A = e Severe street fighting occurred Socialist Party and the 1 trust, | ment are shutting down many mines members of the business community | was independent of the All-India | press yesterday carried scream head- abet ht to the city of Harbin th 3 5 ial t t Io coal trust. a] y S, | show is $ i oi i fines Monday night y ‘ar 7 ed Altho the miners of this district lost | speeding up those still at work, put. |S20Wed a disposition to deprecate the | National Congress and did not fol-|lines like the following: aeeeey Chinese and Russian white |{} MOMUS, JC per copy. Special rates to unemploy their demands, they came out of the strike not crushed and defeated, but, on the contrary, with their own union, the NMU, steeled in struggle, which had brought the message of working class organization into every coal mine in the district. The strike of the 40,000 coal miners of this dis- trict, under the leadership of the NMU, not only gave the miners of this district a union of their own, but served as a guide and inspiration to the miners of the anthracite, South- orn Illinois, Tennessee and Kentucky. Miners and steel workers of the ‘Tri-State area, the struggle of the Kentucky miners against starvation and for their demands is your fight! ‘The NMU is your union! In the heat MASS ORGS ADVERTISE Your meetings Your hails Your “affairs’’ Your demonstrations ting other thousands on part time work, blacklisting the leaders of the working class, discriminating against the Negro miners and foreign born miners, instituting a reign of terror thruout the coal fields, attempting to deny any miners the fundamental right to organize and strike for their demands, attempting to deny the miners the right to speak, hold meet- ings, picket, jailing the most active leaders of the miners’ union, using the spy system against the workers. All these conditions against which the miners of Kentucky are now go- ing on strike, exist to only a lesser degree in the coal fields of this dis- trict. If the miners of Western Pennsyl- vania, East Ohio and West Virginia are to save themeelves and their fam- ilies from starvation, they must im- mediately launch in every coal mine in the district, local struggles for the demands and needs of the miners. Miners! Join National Miners Union Tt is now high time that the miners organize into the National Miners Union and declare that in not a single mine in this district will the miners allow a wage cut to be put over by the bosses, in not a single mine in this district can we allow that the bosses and their government and their slimy agents, the U.M.W.A. of- ficials, and the socialist party, shall proceed one inch further with their starvation attacks on the coal min- ers. We demand not a single wage cut in the mining fields in this dis- trict; union check-weighmen, en- forcement of the 8-hour day, no dis- crimination against Negro, foreign- Viceroy’s rejection of Gandhi's plea for an interview last week.” Be- Jow the “non-violent” betrayal pro- gram of Gandhi, Father Cox Jails 17 Jobless; Begins Sham “Hunger March”, 6 ONER (CONTINUED PROM AC city of Pittsburgh put them to work at union wages building model houses. Arrest Eleven Unemployed. Cox’ stool-pigeons, many of whom are always hanging around, seeing that the Shantytown unemployed accepted these demands, as well 2s the demands for unemployment in- surance, put forward by the Unem- ployed Council, called the police and after a fight 11 were arrested. ‘The “Hunger March” of Cox, which was started to try to counter-act the growing influence of the Unemployed Councils, following the National Hun- ger March, ts organized by the Mer- chants Association of Allegheny County together with the American Legion. Mondey night 18 auto loads left Ambridge to go on the “March,” filled with business men and Amer- ican Legion officials. The police in arresting these 11 workers, confiscated some Daily Workers, and some leaflets issued by employment of all miners victimized during the strike, the immediate re- lease of all miners arrested and jailed as a result of their strike activity, and the ot}4r demands of the N, the Unemployed Council which were distributed in “Shantytown.” The capitalist press is highly in favor of the “March” which is not taking up unemployment insurance of course, and which is trying to keep the workers from organizing and strug- gling. The coal bosses and business men are also praising it. Cox refused the challenge of the Unemployed Council to debate him on the question of Unemployment Insurance, Tn the past week 21 members of the Unemployed Council have been arrested, 17 of them by the request of Cox for their activities in fight- ing for Unemployment Insurance and | | immediate relief from the city goy- ernment, Gov. Pinchot, who refused the de- mands of the Unemployed Council for immediate appropriation for re- lief and unemployment insurance, and who advocates a program which would tax the workers and make them bear the burdens of unemploy- ment, will welcome the business men’s march when it arrives in Har- risburg. The delegates going on the “march” have been handpicked as far as possible by Cox,,who is dis- “JAPS SNEER AT FLAG IN CURT ‘APOLOGY’ (Hearst's N, Y. Mirror), “JAPS ‘EXPLAIN’ U. S. INSULT” McFadden’s N. Y, Graphic), Stimson, seeking to maintain the agreement with Japan for armed in- i tervention against the Chinese Re- volution and the Soviet Union, at- tempted at first to treat the attack lightly. He demanded an apology from Japan and “adequate punish- ment” of the sentries involved in the attack, The Japanese replied with a curt apology. Gen Honjo, the Jap- anese commander in Manchuria, ex- cused his man, and accused the U.S. consular official of affronting the sentries. Say Japanese Offered Only “Regrets” The American chauvinist press is making much of a report from Tokio that the Japanese did not apologize for the attack, but merely expressed regret. The Tokio press has accused Americans in Manchuria of adopting a haughty attitude towards the Japanese. A Mukden dispatch to the New York Daily Mirror describes the panese “apology” as “highly pro- i The dispatch is headed “Jap Military Apologizes With Stu- died Insolence.” In the meantime, the American imperialist press is retalliating against the Japanese by an exposure of the savage terror instituted in Manchuria by the Japanese im- perialists. A Mukden dispatch to the New York Times reports that all foreigners in Mukden “have been subjected for months to the trucu- lence of Japanese sentries.”” A Darien dispatch reports “evidgace of deep- Guards. Harbin is on the Chinese Eastern Railway, which is jointly operated by China and the Soviet Union, The White Russians are re- ported to have made an appeal to the Japanese to occupy the city. The imperialist press is peddling the lie that this appeal was participated in by citizens of the Soviet Union in Harbin. A dispatch to the New York Times attempts to make out Official Organ of the 50 East 13th St., Room 201 workers, fraternal organizations, workers clubs and trade unions», One cent for ten or more. Order a bundle today THE LIBERATOR League of Struggle for Negro Rights c New York, N. ¥. that Soviet citizens were involved in the fighting. This is given the lie by a United Press dispatch, which h states: f “The chief incidents were be- | tween Chinese and White Rus- sians, There was no indication that Japan would intervene to maintain order, despite Russian appeals to Japanese officials,” When the Winter Winds Begin te Blow You will find it warm and cozy Camp Nitgedaiget You can rest in the proletarian comrnadely atmosphere provided in the Hotel—yrou will also find it well hented with steam heat, hot water ond many other tm- provements, The food ix clean and fresh and especially well prepared. SPECIAL RATES FOR WEEK- ENDS 1 Day 2 Days 3 Days .. A private automobile leaves the Cooperative Colony for the Camp everyday nt 10 a, m, for the price of $1.50, Thursday before Christ- mas car leaves 2 p.m. and 7 p,m, Vor further information call the— COOPERATIVE OF FICE 4 are | Street wyys cise bern or youth miners, no blecktisting criminating against, foreign, born and | enin, . i I g animosity of Japanese residents 3800 Bronx Park Fast mt ay miner for nnlon activities, nay! ——.,, (To he continued) 4, Neenpens In Manchuria, tonal Grents garitain | ag, “ee eelerbrock 51400 . wr Date... City and State .......cescscees Fight for the } §,000 Subs C (WITH CASH ONLY) t& ae deecsecaca it want to get the DATLY WORKER every dar! | For one year $6.00 ($8.00 in Manhattan and Bronx) | For six months $2.00 (84.50 in Manhattan and Brong) | For three montis $1.50 ($2.25 In Manhattan and Bronx) | For one month $0.50 ($0.75 in Manhattan and Bronx)

Other pages from this issue: