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ay WORKER, NEW 3 YORK, SATU RDAT, MALICH 26, 1932 * ao Page Three _ U.S. Entered World War on A pril 6th---Make It A Day of Demonstration Against Imperialist War THOUSANDS STARVING IN LAWRENCE, MASS.; FAMILIES DENIED AID Thugs With Guns Drive Workers in Washing- ton Textile Mills Workers Prepare Giant Hunger March,to Demand Unemployment Insurance (By a Worker Correspondent) LAWRENCE, Mass.—Lawrence is a city where until re- cently all the business men and small time Hoovers have been bragging about prosperity. Today for a majority of the work- ers Lawrence is a place of hopeless starvation and misery. Thousands of workers have been out of a job ever since the last strike, six months ago. Thousands more are working part time, not making enough to live on. The city welfare department outside of giving relief to a few needy families who had to fight hard and bitterly for it, is only giying relief | to their political friends and election campaign supporters. Here | is a sample of the impartiality shown in handing out relief. Refused Aid A family, an aged couple and two children of school age, were refused help because this man’s son in law was getting a $6 check weekly from the city. The son-in-law has. five children of his own and a wife to feed besides paying his own rent, light, gas, and other things. Still the city’s charity department expects him to feed four extra people on a measly $6 a week. Another family who happened to be friends with David Burke, the head of the charity department, got a check for themselves and their son-in-law. Two weeks after they got relief the man bought his wife after wage cut. The mill owners have not been satisfied with the ten per cent cut. They have been cut- tnig as high as 50 per cent. Efficiency men are walking around with guns, Sixteen Al Capones in the Washington Mill alone speeding up the work throwing out hundreds of workers more into. the growing army of unemployed. On the other hand the city welfare refuses the maid. What is he to do? Starve? NO! The workers must or- ganize. Join the revolutionary union, the NTWU. Join the Unemployed Councils who fight for relief for workers, against shutting off gas or electric, against evictions and for Un- employment Insurance. Workers organize! Reach other 2 fur coat. What is a worker going|workers and organize them. Fight to do? for the right to live decently. Join Discriminatinon and support the state hunger march ‘The mill owners discriminate. If a worker gets a job he gets wage cut in Massachusetts, which will demand Unemployment Insurance at full pay, Nation-Wide Fig't Spurred To Save Boys (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) In an attempt to justify the fren- zied speed with which the boys were rushed to “trial” and speeded thru to death sentences, the majority opinion drew a parallel with the trial of Czolgosz for the assassination of President McKinley. Significantly seizing on the name of Victoria Price, the one of the two prostitutes who has stood up more brazenly in her boss-inspired lies that she was “raped” on the freight train by all nine of the Scottsboro boys, the ma- jority opinion states in “justifica- tion” of its parallel with the Czolgosz case: “But we are of the opinion that some things may happen to one worse than death, and if the evi- dence is 0 the believed one of these things happened to this defense- less woman, Victoria Price, on that ill-fated journey from Stevenson, Ala., to Paintrock, Ala., = March 25, 1931.” The “evidence” was the unsupport- ed testimony of the two prostitutes! The International Labor Defense and the League of Struggle for Ne- gro Rights issued a joint call yes- terday to the entire working class to rally to the task of building a tre- mendous mass defense to smash the lynch verdicts against these innocent working class children. Every organ- ization and| meeting of workers is urged to at once rush telegrams of protest to Goy, B. M, Miller, at Mont- gomery, Ala., and to the Alabama Supreme Court st Montgomery, Ala. Protest meetings should be organized at once throughout the length and breadth of the country. The anti- war meetings during the week of March 31 to April 6, nad the demon- strations on April 6, must militantly raise the question of mass defense for the Scottsboro boys. B. D. Amis, president of the L. S. N. R. and J. Louis Engdahl, gen- eral secretary ofthe I. L.D. in a joint statement declared in part: “The decision of the Alabama Supreme Court upholding this erude and vicious frame-up against seven innocent Negro boys will go down in history along side the Dred Scott decision of the U. S. Supreme Court jin 1956, declaring that a Negro cannot be looked up- on as a human being, but is only chattel, no different from a piece of furniture. “The decision of the Alabama justices amounts to the same thing. It proves that in the South, the Negro workers is still denied the elementary human rights which the constitution supposedly grants to all men. It proves that in these so-called ‘free’ United States, work- ers, and especially Negroes, are railroaded through a legal lynch- ing machinery which is simply a somewhat more subtle and refined improvement on the ruling class procedure of hanging Negro work- ers from telegraph poles or burn- ing them alive.” HALF DOLLAR CAMPAIGN Detroit and Chicago now to the front! Creeping up on Boston and New York! Kansas City awakens! Half dollars and more half dollars! - In one day New York district sends in 195 of them! From ail over the country the stream of half dollars comes, increasing into.a torrent —to saye the Daily Worker! Boston keeps up a slow but sure pace. Detroit sent in 409 half dollars since yesterday. Chicago is now on the map at last with almost 200 in one day. In all, 8,097 half dollars since the half dollars campaign started March 16! Those farthest in the rear are the districts of Dakotas, San Fran- cisco, Seattle, Philadelphia, and the Carolinas. Some of these have not been heard from in two days. The tempo increases! Every worker at least one half dollar! Every workers’ club at least $5.00! All districts prepare! . ’ Catch up and pass New York! Watch this daily report! Important Article on German Elections Today On Page 4 On page 4 of today’s issue of the Daily Worker there is published an important article on the recent presidential elections in Germany. This article takes on added impor- tance for American workers, in view of the fact that this year presidential elections will take place in the United States, It will be well for every class-con- scious worker, therefore, to study carefully the lessons of the Ger- man elections, TAMPA WORKERS BREAK TERROR; HOLD MEETING Expos e “Cultural” Exec. Committee As Stool Pigeons TAMPA, Fla., March 24.—For the first time in months the workers here broke through the reign of terror and attended an open meeting on March 18, called by the International Labor Defense, Despite the presence of two car- loads of cops, including Police Chief Logan, the meeting did not falter and the 125 workers present passed re- | solution demanding the freedom of the 15 workers arrested in this same hall Nov. 7th, when the celebration o fthe Russian Revolution was raided and attacked by the police. The meeting dtmanded the release of all class war prisoners and pro- tested the massacre in Detroit in the assaults in Chicago. The committee elected to go from house to house and collect funds for the Tampa prisoners netted $95.20. This is high testimony to the solidar- ity and fighting spirit of the Tampa workers, who although in terrible conditions have responded time after time to the call for support. A number of the workers have been discharged from their jobs for having attended the March 18th meeting, A meeting of the “Cultural” on Tuesday, March 22nd, to which all to- bacco workers are members further exposed the open alliance of all but 3 on the executive committee with the police and the tobacco manu- facturers. To begin with the execu- tive committee permitted or perhaps invited the immigration officials to enter the hall and spy on the workers. Then when workers demanded from the floor and the Young Communist League be given the Labor Temple for an Anti-War meeting the committee ended the meeting on the excuse that there was no quorum, Worker branded them as stool pigtons, { Chinese Troops Clash | with Japanese Invaders in Deftance of Nanking N. Y. Times Writer Lauds Chiang Kai-shek for Betrayal of Shanghai Defense, Says | He Held Army for Use Against Reds Admits Nanking Government Is Military Dic-| tatorship Against the Chinese People The praise of the imperialist world for the base betrayal of the heroic Chinese defenders of Shanghai, is tendered Chi- ang Kai-shek and the Nanking government in an article in | yesterday’s New York Times. Sokolsky, feature writer of the Times. “General Chiang faced the al- - ternative of fighting the Japanese or being ready. to firht the Com- munists) HE ACCEPTED THE LATTER COURSE, with that Fa- bian wisdom which explains the strength of his leadership.” The “strength of his leadership” consists in maintaining a bloody mil- itary dictatorship against the people of China, when, as Sokolsky admits, his “emergence to power is not wel- comed by any large section of the Chinese people” and that his govern- ment controls “only an army, but no population,” “only the capital city and no territory beyond it.” The article expresses the frantic alarm of world miperialism over the rising Soviet government” in South China, where the Commu- nist menace (to imperialism and its Kuomintang tools—Daily Work- er) is becoming daily more serious. The armies of the Nanking and Canton cliques of the Kuomintang are now attacking the Chinese Sov- iet districts, while the Japanese in- vaders of China are permitted to dig in and strengthen their positions around Shanghai. A Shanghai dis- patch to the New York Times re- ports that the Japanese are erecting brick and [concrete airdromes and barracks, building military replace- ments at the Woosung forts, con- structing many military highways linking Woosung, Kiangwan, Nanzi- ang, and Liuho, drilling artesian wells in the vicinity of Nanziang (about twelve and a half miles in- land from Shanghai, and continuing to land huge quantities of munitions and arms, New Split ‘Threatens Yn Canton A new spjit is threatened between VOTE DOWN SALES TAX; PREPARE NEW ROBBER SCHEME (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) cate that the Democratic “revolt” The executive commitiee | against their leaders in the House tried to stem the workers anger for | will be used to lay the basis for a sending the meeting by saying that the immigration officers were there to find a New York organizer, one of whom was in the hall the entire time. Open intimidation, house to house threats of deportation increased fol- lowing the Tuesday meeting, YCL ORGANIZER IN BOSTON GETS 1-YEAR JAIL TERM BOSTON, Mass.—Irving Keith, dis- trict organizer of the Young Com- munist League in the Boston district was sentenced to one year in jail on the notorious Deer Island hellhole for his participation in the leadership of the February 4th demonstration for Unemployment Insurance, The specific charge on which Keith was jailed was “inciting to riot.” Four other workers arrested at the same time as Keith were given sentences from three to nine months and one was placed on two years probation, Keith made a public statement to the members of the Young Commu- nist Learue and to the young workers generally of which part, is printed before: “I have been sentenced to serve one year as a result of my arrest in connection with the Unemployment Insurance demonstration of Feb. 4. Thouth If am in jail, I want you comrades to know that I am still with you in the struggle. “The bosses have murdered our comrades in Kentucky and Detroit. They send us to jail. But our an- Fy i i i . # : j iii ee as 3 % 66141 1. Boston 1,851 173 ra 1163137 2. New York — 18,808 Prt #9 , 828.023, ia 6,487 6,344 14 193.74 4. Buffalo 2,818 2,12 at 258.18 5. Pittsburgh 2,087 1,984 34 1,147.21 6. Cleveland 6,273 5,707 8. 128721 7. Detroit 6,221. 5,45 iat 1,393.54 8. Chicago 11,232 10,354 18 393.19 9, Minneapolis 3,273 3,215 © 18 66.67 10. Kansas City 1,485 1407-12 1051 1N.& S. Dakota 279 279 0. 238.79 12. Beatle 2,351 2,393 11 653.48 13. San Francisco 2,708 2,693 _ 412.88 15. Connecticut 1,896 1,674 3 15.40 16..N. & S, Carolina 269 269 90.25 17. South 125 120 63.75 18. Butte 292 273 164.75 19. Denver 492 4m MOTI CEN oS $19,445.75 68,295 097 148.01 Miscellaneous 7 ibe 420,56 ..76 Total swer as young Communists must be to intensify our daily activity, or- ganize the young workers and lead them in strugle. “My jail sentenc> comes at a time when the League is enga~ed in the Harry Simms Recruiting Drive, The best answer and the best protest against the boss class terror is to recruit young workers by the hun- dreds and thousands into the ranks of the Young Communist League.” With Communist Greetings, IRVING KEITH, District Organizer, Boston. Wave and Television Apparatus d Recording and Reproducing B. BARTHEL RADIO ENGINEER Expert Repair and Service SPECIAL RATES FOR WORKERS 211 W. 58th St, Tel, Circle 7-4563 demagogue resort by the Democratic Party in the coming presidential elec- tions to a “radical” appeal for the vote of the masses. The failure of the House Speaker and Democratic floor leader Garner to appear when the vote on the sales tax was taken, or to issue a statement on the sales tax before the final vote, was also a political maneuver by means of which Garner hoped not to commit himself any more than he had already done in the statement issued in support of the sales tax | three days ago, The release of Republican repre- sentatives from party “discipline” at the last minute, as sentiment against the sales tax grew, was also made with an eye toward the 1932 elections. All the shifting and changing and crossing of party lines was clearly made in order to use the sales tax as an issue in the coming elections. ‘ True to form, the “Reverend” Norman Thomas began to spread confusion in the ranks of the working class by holding up the defeat of the sales tax as an indication that “dem- ocracy” still exists in the United States and that the masses should have faith in capitalist Congress. In the New Leader for March 26th he states that the defeat of the sales tax is proof that democracy still exists: “Once in @ while our creaking Political democracy, dominated as it is by an economic plutocracy which owns both parties, shows that there is some life in the demo- ocratic principle . . , The tempta- tion of both old parties to cater to the income tax paying group which finances their campaigns is very strong. But the gains I bave no~ ticed constitute something of 2 case for substituting for our cynical or irritated despair of political democ- racy more efficient machinery of Political action.” ‘The same hypocritical attempt to make use of the defeat of the sale: ta: as the basis for reviving the « is-shaken illusisons of the masses 1 the democratic nature of the Wall _creet. government at Washington was made by Prof. Dewey. In a radio speech Thursday night, Dewey stated: “But what has stirred the pop- ular heart to a much greater degree is evidence that the government of the people, for the people has not yet completely surrendered to gov- ernment, by the rich, for the rich, Millions have had a waning faith in democracy stirred again to life, even though as not yet fully re- stored, by indication that the inter- ests of the masses are at last |the rest of China. The article is by George E. The article states: the Nanking and Canton factions which recently united in order to present a united front avainst the | revolutionary struggles of the toilin: masses. British-inspired dispatch from Hongkong report a movement | in Canton to split South China from | This is in line | with the plans of the imperialist | powers for the carving up of China. The manouvers of the Kuomintang factions reflect the conflict of inter- ests of the various imperialist pow- ers controlling these factions, A secret conference of Sun Fo and other Canton leaders is reported to | be taking place in Macao. General Chen Chia-tang, Cantonese military commander who had lined up with Chiang Kai-shek, is reported to have fled from Canton. Increasing defiance by Chinese rank and file soldiers of their officers is indicated in the growing clashes between Chinese soldiers and the Japanese invaders on the Shanghai front. In spite of the efforts of the Kuomintang officials to preevnt such conflicts, the Chinese soldiers seize every opportunity to attack the hated invaders, Such attacks are at present confined to small clashes and sniping by groups of soldiers. The revolt in Manchuria continues ‘to spread, with the Japanese suffering several reverses and many casualties. The Japanese invaders were driven out of another Manchurian town yes- terday when Chinese insurgents cap- tured the town of Ninguta, in Kirin Province, southeast of Harbin. Chinese insurgents also tore up the tracks of the South Manchurian Rail- way, near Tatun, southward of Changchun, receiving consideration from the politicians who for years have been doing the bidding of organized weall With the sales tax defeated, and} but slight possibility for a reversion of vote when the vote is taken on the bill as a whole, a struggle has begun in the House over the question of what new taxes to levy in order to balance the huge budgetary deficit. Two proposals have been made, one for a tax on beer and the other foi @ return to the original bill for a series of “nuisance taxes” on amuse- ment admissions, autos, gas, elec- tricity, checks, stock transfers, postal rates, phonographs and tobacco. These taxes, while not as direct as the sales tax, can very easily be shifted onto the masses, Several of the taxes are levied on articles of mass consumption, such as tobacco, amusements, gas, electricity, etc. The otfiers can be passed on by including them as items in overhead expense and using them as a basis for raising the prices of the various other articles. War is jimminent! Order your bundle of the April 2 Daily Worker now! Daily Rovnost Ludu Czechonlovak Org. of the ©,P. U.S.A 1510 W. 18th St. Chicago, Tl. To the Readers of The DAILY WORK BR eariy subscription $6, f0 wont y subscr' lon. or mo. | Write tor tree eimple copy Mosselprom Candy (IMPORTED FROM SOVIET ark 5 1b, Can Golden Fruit Fill Mixture | $1.25 Plus Postage Many Other Varieties in Stock RED STAR IMPORTING Co. 41 St. Nicolas Terrace, N.Y.C. | Mimeograph Supplies | Mimeogrnphs, up, repaired, | cleaned. Stencils 3.28, ik $1, Bond Paper, hite i Colored | er, Write for price list. PROLET MIMO 108 EB. 14th St. N.Y. ©., Near Union Sq. Pi ALmonguin 4.4763 Room 203 DETROIT, | students representing 25 'Schmies. to Speak On the Next Ford Hunger March! Mich, Mare! h 25.—John | the Auto Work- former candidate of Schmies, secre ers Union and the Communist Party for Mayor of | Detroit, will speak the Workers Educational Forum on Sunday, March 27th, at 7:30 p.m., at Northern High School, Woodward and Owen on “Our Next Hunger March | Ford's,’ First Group Of 150 Students Reaches Knoxville, Tenn. at to \Arrival Marked By |New Threats of Terror NEW YORK.—The irst students who left under aus- pices of the ional Students League to investigate the ter- ror and starvation conditions in the Kentucky coal fields arrived in Knox~ ville last night and is awaiting the arrival of the second group before leaving for Harlan, The arrival of the students was marked by a new outburst of threats against them and warnings that they would be arrested if they attempted to hold mass meetings or make public speeches, The original plan of Kentucky busi- ness men, shop keepers and mine owners to meet the student delega- tion at the Kentucky-Tennessee state line with an armed fascist band pa- rading as college graduates has been dropped. The danger that the stu-| dents may be however, Declaring that the Bell County of- ficials had denied the 150 college stu- dents protection against threats of violence as they prepared to enter the state on a survey of coal mining con- ditions there, the National College Committee of the National Student League wired William G, Mitchell, at- torney General of the United States that he “take immediate steps to in- sure the safety of these American students and citizens travelling from one state to another.” The telegram signed by Donald Henderson, instructor in the econo- mics department at Columbia Uni- versity and president of the National Committee states in part: “One hundred and fifty college leading colleges and universitiess through- out the country will cross the Ken- tucky-Tennessee line tomorrow and make a survey of conditions in the Kentucky coal areas, Press reports and threats by Bell County author- ities imply violence,” The telegram cites the casse of the writers’ delegation that was attacked and as a result of which Waldo Frank and Allen Taub were seriously in- attacked still exists jured. The demands that immediate | steps be taken to. insure the safety | of the students and that a repitition of such attack be prevented, Student delegations from Mount Holyoke, Smith University University of Chicago, University of Cincinnati, University of Pittsburgh and other mid-west and southern colleges are expected to arrive here this morning. ROCKFORD, Ill—Three hundred workers in the IA.C. Hall passed a resolution denouncing the murder of the Detroit unemployed and pledg- ing to [continue the fight against hunger and terrorism enforced by the bosses. Concert, Samovar Tea Party LL.D, BRANCH OF BROWNSVILLE Saturday, March 26th AMERICAN YOUTH CLUB 78 Thatford Ave., Brooklyn When the Winter Winds Begin iste est ti pated apeed Camp Nitgedaigt d frosh and especially well prepared. SPECIAL RATES FOR WEEK. ENDS 1 D: 3 For further information cal} the COOPERATIVE OF FIOB 2800 Bronx Park Enst ‘Tel—Esterbrook %-1400 ‘Havana Toilers Greet Ford 'Workers in Common Struggle NEW YORK aati Aah tnnsenie lint I ceived a letter from the National Workers eague has just re- Confederation of | Cuba, dated March 14, addressed to the workers of the Ford | fac tory in Detroit. The recent demonstration in Havana by the revolutionary workers before the Ford Agency, smashing jthe windows in protest > — — | murder of the four unemployed work- ® 2 barbarous fascist Jers in Detroit, is a of the carried on by the butcher | paign carried on ado, agent of Wall Street, |Party of Cuba, the N ne live the solidarity of the ers Confederation of Cuba, and the ee { of the United States, International Labor Defense of that |®"d the oppressed peoples of Latin country. | Ame in their common struggle The National Workers Confeder- |*##inst Yankee imperialism etire ling LINCOLN, Neb.—A protest out- door meet was held here in front of the Ford Agency at 1800 “O” St. to protest against the murder of 4 by Ford in Dearborn Herbert Holbrook spoke, jation of Cuba demands the punish- | |ment of Ford for the murder and calls for the release of all working class prisoners in the U. S. The re~ yolutionary workers of Cuba have |carried on campai for ree- oup of the delegation of 150 | “The struggle of the |workers against Ford, Bethlehem Steel, Sinclair and other capitalist | bandits is a part of the same strug- the imperialists, like Chadbourne in the sugar industry, Houston in To- bacco, Steinhart in» street railways and other sharks in the service of Yankee finance capital, “The working class of Cuba con- tinues its fight bravely in spite of American | gle which we are carrying on against | dom of the Scottsboro boys. Last summer the Trade Union Hall in |? ing the cold-blooded murd- Manzanillo was shut down for cares coulis. on the workers to months because they held a m pote atl Melty enred Council to con- | meeting on behalf of the Scottsboro | tinue the struggle, | | boys followed by a public demonstra-| GARDNER, Mass. — The Labor tion. The letter says in part |Sports Union Club, “Atlas” A. ©, | passed a resolution of protest against |the murder of the four workers by Ford-Murphy ehiaiiae 3 * DALLAS, Texas.—A mass meeting of Texan unemployed workers sent |protests to Mayor Murphy of De- |troit, Mayor Cermak, of Chicago, | protesting the murder and shooting of workers. The resolution demand- ed the release of all class war pris~ |onera, DULUTH, Minn.—Here’s a few of the conditions that I have seen per- sonally in Duluth, A Negro family of two, with the| water and light shut off for months, getting only an $8 grocery order each | month, and each time the county charity gives him the grocery order, he threatens it will be the last. Seven hundred men, wornen and children lined up for relief in the | St. Louis County court house, and, though there are empty court rooms with seats and the county commis- sioners meeting place with seats, yet these destitute workers are compelled | to stand for hours before they can get their grocery order, Poor Commissioner Gets His, | While county relief is being cut missioner, finds relief work profit- jable for himself. In 1928, he received $3,000 a year; in 1929, it was raised fo $3,200; in 1930, to $4,200, and that down, A. P. Cook, county poor com- | ‘Poor Commissioner Gets Big Yearly Rake-Off in Duluth is the salary that he is drawing now. At an Unemployed Council meet- ing one of the members expressed the fear that his relief might be cut off if the county poor commissioner found out if he belonged. One of | the members of the council pointed to a member of the Communist Party who has let it be knewn pub- licly, and to the poor commissioner as well, that he is a memier of the Party, and because of his amilitancy has been getting La gar service than the others. Commissioner Warren "Moore, red baiter and head of thé" police department, voted “no” on'the re- quest of the Workers’ Interhitional Relief for a tag day, His excuse was that if there is any money available it should be used for the destitute of Duluth, And yet this local fascist refused to endorse unemployment in~ surance or any federal aid because that would be 9 “dole.” : MAY FIRST DNIEPROSTROY 12 THRILLING DAYS 12 in the Soviet Union Itinerary including Leningrad, Moscow, Ivanove Vosneséiusk- Collective Farm and May ist Celebrations in Moscow, This tour One way $230 » $175 This tour On Shorter Tours Itinerary including Leningrad-Moscow-Kharkoy-View and May Ist Celebrations at Dnieprostroy. $250 ws $1950 as Low as S1Ss Sailings on SS BREMEN—MAURETANIA—NEW YORE 1i5 Fifth Ave. New York | i WORKMEN’S SICK AND OF THE UNITED § ORGANIZED 1884—INCORPORATED 1899 Main Office: 714-716 Seneca Ave., Ridgewood Sta., Brooklyn, N, ¥ *World Tourist tours are complete from embarkation to termination of tour in the U.S.S.R.; with » return steamship ticket from France on the round trip, WORLD TOURISTS, Inc, Phone AL. 4-6656-8797 DEATH BENEFIT FUND TATES OF AMERICA Over 60,000 Members in 350 Branches Reserves on December 31, 1930: $3,314,672.32 Benefits paid since its existence: Death Benefit: $4,635,677.04 Sick Benefit: $11,453,774.93 Total: $16,089,451.97 | Workers! 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YOUR FIFTY CENTS WILL HELP SAVE THE 70,000 Half Dollars by April 1st DAILY WORKER! Send to Daily, Worker NEW YORK CITY Paered a Rete USA Chey ats State. < .ccnavee