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a DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1932 Page Three FATHER WALSH COMES TO CLEVELAND TO BATTLE COMMUNISM Fat Priest Defends Capitalism Before Aristo- cratic Audience Warns Workers Against Struggle; Advises Them to Starve Patiently (By a Worker Correspondent) | CLEVELAND, Ohio.—Father Walsh came to Cleveland | for the purpose of battling Communism. He was given Sever- ance Hall, Cleveland’s richest, to speak in. He charged one dollar a seat for the venemous garbage he handed out. We bet God likes Father Walsh. He’s one of God’s best bosses. Not only does he collect from the Morgans for his rot, but he} gets his money from the idiots and raistocrats who go to hear him. Plenty of Publicity The Press was kind to Walsh; they aid all ministers and fakers. They printed his picture be-¢———————_________. fore he spoke giving him free pub- Germans lancing babies and raping licity. Walsh is a big man and fat, | women, probably weighing over 220 pounds,| Even Walsh, one! of the biggest The religion racket pays like hell for | liars in existence, did not have the those who serve Morgan. nerve to defend capitalism openly. Were I editor, I would have print- | He got around its faults by declaring | ed one more picture next to jolly,| there should be a mixture of capital- fat Walsh. I would take a starving,|ism and yellow socialism, and this consumptive child from Kentucky, | he called capitalism. Detroit, Cleveland, or any capitalistic! Father Walsh tells us that some country where they are always plen- | day the bosses will hnad out some of tiful. I would put in headlines: their profits which we make for Father Walsh is here to take the | them. The D.A.R. had the nerve to} bread from the mouth of this | declare over the radio that there is starving child! no starvation amongst the workers in Later, the press gave the gist of |a recent Blind-the-Worker campaign. Walsh’s speech. It seems he spent | Day in and day out from pulpit, press most of the time in keeping the audi-|and schools, they hand out these | ence on the edges of their seats. He spouted the same type of filthy lie about the Communists now that he and his brethren belched forth back in 1918 when they spread stories of War Vets Denounce Ford As Murderer The following letter was sent to Henry Ford by members of the Work- ers Ex-Servicemen’s League Branch of Terre Haute, Ind. HENRY FORD: Sir: Knowing thet rue facts of the mur- der of four workers and wounding of many more at your River Rogue plant, resolved to send you this let- ter of protest. A few weeks ago, you had every newspaper in the United States full | dirty lies, and day in and day out, jright in the midst of their lying, |men, women and children are starv- ing to death—dying like dogs in the world’s richest country. outrageous trick you were working jon them, against those still employ- led in your plant they got together and organized a peaceful demonstra- tion to persuade you to give them the jobs you had promised, or some relief. You were directly respon- sible for them being there. Instead of giving jobs or bread you ordered your hired gunmen to |shoot at them with machine guns, | which htey did. ‘"e brand you in our minds as the | of stories that you were going to put | cold-blooded murderer of these men, | thousands of men to work immed-jas well as those in hte Kentucky) iately, whcih caused thousands of | coal fields. Although these workers unemployed to flock to your plant.|have died, the will always live in Some came all the way from Calif- ornia expecting to get a job, only to find it was one of your wage cut- ting tricks. Your flunkey plant bosses would tell the men that were still working, how much their wages were to be cut. If they protested against the cut, the boss would point to the great mass at the gate and say “If yo udon’t like it, there are plenty of men to take your place.” When these unemployed saw this Elkton Farmers Pledge Defense of U.S. S. R. (By a Worker Correspondent) ELKTON, Ohio. — Our Anti-War meeting here was a success in spite of threats of dynamite and violence on the part of the bosses here, The town trustees threatened to close down the town hall and let us hold our meeting there. We held the meeting in an old blacksmith shop. We had a good crowd. Men, women and children, farmers and workers came to the meeting. It was a very enthusiastic and determined meeting. The people here are against any war against the Soviet Union. During the course of the meeting Charity Refuses Relief to Sick Child Long Island City, N. Y. Daily Worker: An Italian mother of six small children, with a sick unemployed husband, a world war veteran, re- ceives enough foor from the Emer- gency Home Reljef Bureau out here in Queens “to starve on,” she states. One of her children, a girl of six, is in a very bad state of undernourish- yment, so she took the child to the clinic at the St. John’s Hospital. ‘The hospital, whose nurses are holy nuns of the Catholic church, told her that her child needed cod- liver oil. “Where could she get this medicine St. Louis Workers Protest Ford Murders __ By A Worker Correspondent. ST. LOUIS, Mo. — [Protesting against the brutal murder of the Ford plant in Dearborn, the Unem- ployed Council and Women's Branch of the International Workers Order held a mass picket demonstration and open air meeting in front of the, Ford plant here March 21, ?The picketing started at 7.30 in the morning. The workers carried placards condemning Ford as a Father Cox Feeds Jobless on Garbage (By a Worker Correspondent) BLAWNOX, Pa. — A few workers from Blawnox went down to see father Cox to try to get a basket of food for an Easter present. There were about 200 workers lined up in the basement of the Cox institute awaiting their turn. This is what the fakers gave the workers who were lined up: some de- cayed vegetables, some old rotten to- matoes, a few sprigs of rotten celery other items not fit for a the minds of the entire working class. | We pledge ourselves to carry on their struggle, until we abolish your sys- tem of slavery for the workers, and operate the factories for the benefit of all, instead of for you-and your kind, GEORGE REAGIN NOAH WHITEHEAD, Executive Committee, Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League, Terre Haute, Ind. someone threw a stone against the building. In a minute the crowd was and after the one who threw the stone. He was under cover and could not be found. It would have been too bad for that fellow if the workers and farmers got a hold of him. ‘We formed an Unemployed Council of 14 members in this little farming village. More workers have handed their names in to join. The community is aroused and mad because we were not allowed to use the town hall. But we will be using it soon, We are also organizing the Young Pioneers too. for her sick child,” was her only thought. The holy nuns sent her to the social workers of the hospital, who are rich capitalist parasites. The tich social workers could do nothing for this poor Italian mother but send her to the Emergency Home Relief Bureau. But the Emergency Home Relief Bureau doesn't fill any pre- scriptions, was the answer she got. | The Holy Nuns from the St. John’s | Hospital refused her. The rich ladies of the social service and the fake relief bureaus of this great city of ours also refused her. s A WORKER. brutal murderer of four workers. There were over 150 workers at the} gate at the time looking for a job. The workers from the factories near by were attracted by the demon- stration. Many of them watched , the demonstratoin through the fac- tory windows. Our answer to the Ford massacre | the Auto Workers Union and the , Will be to organize the workers into | Unemployed Councils. Father Cox and his gang picks up this junk at the freight yards near the church. It is all condemned and Not fit to be sold‘in the stores, In the city of Pittsburgh one can see signs which say, “Help Father Cox Help the Jobless.” And he sure does help them. Here in this district the relief has The unemp! are coming to the “The Soviet Union Stands fon Peace” “The Soviet Union Stands for Peace,” is the title of the new pam- phlet just published by the Workers’ Library Publishers, giving Comrade Litvinov's electrifying speech at the Geneva Disarmament Conference in February. This 16-page pamphlet sells for 1 cent per copy. Particularly at this time, when war in the Far East has already begun, when the borders of the Soviet Union have been attacked by the capitalist world, and when the war threatens at any moment to burst jinto flame throughout the entire world, this urgent plea for peace on the part of the spokesman of the only workers’ and farmers’ govern- ment in the world should have a particular appeal to the workers, who are inevitably the victims of all wars. Comrade Litvinov, representing the Soviet Union at the conference which was supposed to bring about dis- armament, clearly demonstrated that the Soviet Union wants peace, clearly demonstrated that the workers of the world want peace, and just as clearly demonstrated that the capitalist gov- ernments are not striving for peace, but are planning for war. Read Comrade Litvinov’s clear analysis of the forces which bring about war and the forces of the in- ternational proletariat which are struggling for peace. “THE SOVIET UNION STANDS FOR PEACE,” by Maxim Litvonov, one cent per copy. Organizations ordering quantities will receive gen- erous discounts. This pamphlet should have a particularly large sale during anti-war week, March 31 to April 6. Ordr from Workers’ Library Pub- lishers, 50 E. 13th St., New York City. LONG ISLAND PREPARES FOR ANTI-WAR WEEK Mobilizing Workers In Three Counties for April 6th /NEW YORK.—Intensive prepara- tions for Anti-War Week have begun in Long Island. Hundreds of milit- ant workers are being mobilized to penetrate into the most proletarian sections of the 3 counties of Long Island with thousands of anti-war leaflets and literature accompanying personal agitation right in the homes of the workers. The follwing plan has been worked out by a united front committee of labor organiza- tions:— 1. In Jamaica, Hempstead, Hick- sville and Huntington, mobilization meetings of all militant workers wik take place Wednesday, March 30. Here the entire plan will be dis- cussed and committees will be up for action. 2. March 3ist and April Ist all forces will be summoned for in- tensive house to house canvassing in picked neighborhoods—on these two days the bulk of agitational literature will be distributed. This canvassing will also be of a week's intensive activity. A series of neighborhood meetings will be held Saturday night. 3. Sunday April 3rd, all forces will pour into the Negro sections of Long Island and link the anti- war agitation with a mighty urge to the Negro masses to fight the bloody murder of the 9 Scottsboro boys, and express their fierce anger at the April 6th demonstrations. April 3rd will be a Red Sunday among the Negro masses, 4, April 4th and 5th will be days of agitation around the shops, slogans against war, hunger and the Scottsboro lynchings will reach the ears of the exploited slaves tn the bosses factory jails. These will also be days of mass street and house distribution of the call for the April 6th demonstration, 5. April 6th, demonstrations will be held in the four above mentioned places. The demonstration in Jam- aica which will be the biggest, will be preceded by a militant parade, which will cover the main working class streets and the main thoro- fares, On the evening of April 6th Jamaica will ring with the lusty and militant slogans against the boss system of war, nunger and murderous lynch terror. Thousands are expected to assemdle at, and march to the court house in Jam- aica, where the role of the bloody American imperialism thirsting for the blood of the freed Soviet mas- ses, and seeking to drown out by murder the rising revolutionary flame of the hungry millions in America, will be thoroughly exposed as well as the more sinister cruelty behind the bestial governmental lynching of the innocent Scotts- boro children, All comrades are being instructed to tinge their agitation with an or- ganizational content; the workers will be urged to flock into the organiza- tions of the class struggle, for con- crete struggles, now, against war, hunger and lynch terror. In the cen- ter of all this activity the Daily Worver will be used and popularized. May Day will be made to stand out @ symbol of class unity and power struggles. Anti-War as @ powerful impetus ndous May Day demonstra- been cut off i the country grafters. thi meetings of Unemployed Councils and joining the organiagtion. Strong Unemployed Councils will expose this | ANY $1.50 OR $1 INTERNATIONAL | $20,046.44 Father Cox and force the bosses to give real relief to the unemployed. a late eennneimns Be Be PUBLISHERS BOOK WITH ONE 12-MONTH SUBSCRIPTION TO Rank and File (Special to the the Federation. McLaughlin, fearing the anger of the 350 reported unemployed who stormed the federation offices to de- mand the right to live, shut and locked the door of his office in the most cowardly way and called the Police to disperse them. Hypocritically stating that there are no jobs, McLaughlin refused to remember that he and the other offi- cials were riding eround in extrava- gant cars, receiving fat salaries, while the hungry union men were paying their last pennies in dues to support these parasites. ‘The demands of the unemployed workers were: the right to check up tthe books on the expenditures of these officials, etc., the right to meet and legislate, the right to start a separate union, the dismissal of three of the four business agents, and that efforts to secure jobs be made. McLaughlin tried to shift respon- sibility for the granting of these de- mands to the internatiana2 office, in Quincy, Mass., and tried to make it appear that the business agents are kept busy, not pointing out that their activity consisted in taking away the last pennies from the un- employed union men, in return for which they received fat salaries, ‘The laborers, who comprised the group which stormed the A, F. of L. leader in their hall, are in a union which has been in the hands of re- ceivers for several years, the Cleve- Jand Federation of Labor, and has the most arbitrary powers including which are the complete abolition of meetings of the laborers, the hiring | of and setting of salaries of the busi- ness agents, the imposing of fines, the collecting of dues, and other measures which take away every bit of rank and file democracy, McLaughlin and his clique are responsible for drastic wage cuts in this city. Building trades workers were cut $2 per day, the lathers were cut $2, the garment workers received a 10 per cent slash, and so on. When the stree railwaymen were cut 12% per cent recently, the officials of the federation did not uttr a word in protest, backing to the fullest extent the vicious cut by the Van Swer- ingen street car interests. The resentment against McLaugh- lin for having shut the door in their faces was so’ great, that when Mc Laughlin was leaving a cuspidor was thrown after him, McLaughlin was forced to recog- nize that his betraying kind, whose interests are at one with his capital- ist masters, who refuse to aid the unemployed in their, misery, although they rob the last bit of bread from their mouths, are being threatened by the increasing militancy of the A. F. of L. rank and file. McLaughlin stated: “They want jobs and there are no jobs; there is a strong undercurrent of revolution which is sweeping everywhere.” The Trade Union Unity League of this city, has continually pointed out the corrupt role of the A. F. of L. leadership, and of McLaughlin in particular, who has aligned himself with the shady republican political influence here. It has continually called on rank and file members of the A. F. of L. to demand an ac- counting of the fund expenditure by the officials, to demand that these HALF DOLLAR CAMPAIGN Carolinas, Birmingham, City, Philadelphia and Minneapolis Are AISLOW! Half dollars rapidly pile in and of most districts being reached in hte next two weeks. But some dis- tricts are far behind. All districts must join in socialist competition as a final answer to the bosses, and to SAVE THE DAILY WORKER! New York, Connecticut, Detrolt, Boston—these are the responsive | districts—the districts which realize most keenly the danger of losing the ALL OTHER DISTRICTS ARE SLOW! Buffalo, Pittsburgm, Cleveland, Chicago, Butte and Denver are all working, but the results in the half dollar campaign are mild and they must increase their pace to come anywhere near the leading districts. They have not as yet, but they CAN gather the necessary speed! ALL DISTRICTS MUST COMPLETE THEIR MOBILIZATNON AND FINISH THIS FIGHT FOR THE DAILY WORKER IN A REAL SO- Daily Worker! CIALIST CONTEST! A HALF DOLLAR FROM EVERY WORKER IN YOUR DISTRICT— A FIVE SPOT FROM EACH WORKERS’ CLUB! Watch this daily report! Revolt Against A. F. of L. Officials in Cleve. By GEORGE GORDON. Daily Worker) CLEVELAND.—A rank and file revolt against the bu- reaucratic racketeering of the leadership of the Cleveland Fed- eration of Labor, affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, took place Tuesday, March 29. The direct object of the revolt was the arch-racketeer, Harry McLaughlin, president of | ee , racketeering officials secure jobs for them instead of taking it easy and continue to draw fat salaries. The rank and file members of the federation should take these de- mands up at a meeting of their own without their officials and fight for their adoption at A. F. of L. locals. The Trade Union Unity League, calls upon the rank and file to fight for unemployment jnsurance to be paid by the bosses and their government and to aid the Unemployed Councils in thjs fight. It calls upon them to force the entire officialdom to go on record supporting the Workers’ Un- employment Insurance Bill, also pre- sented on Tuesday, March 29th, to the special session of the legislature in Columbus, by the Unemployed Councils of Ohio, as well as go on record in favor of the demand for the extension of public works, the building of new, sanitary houses, and to pull down the fire-traps which now exist especially in the Negro section of Cleveland, Scovill, and in every poor Negro and white section throughout Ohio. The Trade Union Unity League calls on the rank and file to develop the broadest action in the struggle for a job and for unemployment in- surance, It urges rank and file op- Position groups to be formed, to fight against the corrupt officials who take their good salaries but refuse to help the rank and file, The T. U. U. L. informs the feder- ation rank and file that it is willing to give what assistance it can to help them in their struggle for the right to live and points out that it has itself participated in this strug- gle in Cleveland. The T. U. U. L. Offices here at 1426 West 3 rd St., Room 210. The workers are informed that they will always receive the warmest reception there, and not the cowardly reception given by Mc Loughlin. Jobless Girl Tries to Kill Herself DETROIT, Mich—Rose McGinnis, 21 year old, swollowed poison as a way to escape the prospects of star- vation after a long fruitless search for employment. She was rushed to the hospital and saved only to be turned into the streets again to face the same problems. ‘This is the of the “qiperal” | CARCe of the mass fraternal organi- policy of Murphy dictated) by the automobile manufacturers. Young girls forced into suicide from des- peration, thousands of young workers slowly starving. ‘The youth of De-) W@ctives in the April issue of Labor | troit will not oblige Murphy and the | bosses by committing suicide; they will answer as 500 young workers did to the murder of Joe York, March 7, by joniing the fighting vanguard of youth, the Young Communist League and force the bosses to grant im- mediate relief. A new World War is being launched by world imperialism. On APRIL 6 demonstrate against imperialist war. San Francisco, Kansas there is no doubt about the quotas | held at Shanghai April Labor Unity Con- tains Important RILU Shop Work Directives The April issue of the Labor Unity magazine, official organ of the Trade Union Unity League, is especially important for the directive material which it contains from the Red In- ternational of Labor Unions, regard- ing the work in the factories, and the preparation of struggles. The article by Jack Stachel on “The Preparation of Struggles” is based on the decisions of the recent- ly held Eighth Session of the Central Council of the Red International of Labor Unions. The proper prepara- | tion of strikes, the development of | local struggles on immediate de- mands, these are among the subjects handled in Stachel’s article. Work in the Factories. In addition directives of the Eighth Session of the R. I. L. U. Central Council on work in the factories are Printed in the April issue of Labor Unity. These directives, of great im- portance to all those interested in building the revolutionary unions, are based on the experiences, the short- comings and the achievements of the ted unions in many countries. The article by Robert Dunn, “The Background of the Ford Massacre,” tells us concretely of the starvation ; of the Ford workers, employed and unemployed, the misery which caused the Hunger March in which four | workers were murdered by the Ford | Police. Ford Tells of Huge Mass Movement in Europe for Defense of Scottsboro Boys | Protests Against Alabama Supreme Court De- cision Continue to Pour in From All Parts of U.'S., Europe, Canada The whirlwind of international protests already aroused the decision of the Alabama Supreme Court upholding the lynch verdicts against seven of the Scottsboro boys gives some indication of the tremendous mass movement developing around the world-wide fight to save these innocent working class vic- | over | working tims of class justice and national op- Pression of the Negro masses. April 6, tthe anniversary of the en- try of American imperialism into the World War, will be a day of huge anti-war and anti-terror parades, meetings and demonstrations thru- out the country with the Scottsboro case in tthe foreground. Protests have already come from leading professional men in Ger- many, from American engineers and workers in the Soviet Union, from women in Soviet Karelia, | from Canadian workers, and from thousands of worker and sympa- thizer organizations in America. Nation-wide demonstrations will be organized to march fo city councils An important issue is raised by | William Z. Foster's article, “The | Unity of the Employed and of the | Unemployed.” The real role of the Musteites and the way to fight them tn the textile Industry is described in | “Musteism in the ‘Textile Industry,” | by Martin Russak. One of the most important revolu- tionary trade union conventions held | in years was the National Miners | Union Convention in Pittsburgh. Here the miners as well as the lead- ers of the N. M. U. discussed their problems and criticized the short- comings of the union, especially in its r¢. Cut big strike struggles. Iu the April Lebor Unity the article, “The Miners Discuss Their Problems,” tells | cf the significance and accomplish- ments of the N. M. U. Convention. The Struggles of the Negro Workers. A very important article is “The Negro Workers Awaken,” by James W. Ford, which tells of the growing economic and political struggles of the Negro workers and peasan‘s in Africa, the West Indies and the United States. Other articles in the April issue are “War and the Marine Industry”; “Two Dress Strikes,’ by Ben Gold, an analysis of the fake right wing | strike as contrasted with the strike conducted by the industrial union; | “Steel, Wages and Profits,” by James | | Seister, and an article on the signifi- | | zations, “The International Workers | | Order in the Class Struggle,” by R. Saltzman. In connection with the R. I. L. N.| Unity, it is well to mention that the latest issue-of the R. 1. L. U. maga- zine, a double number, gives many of | the reports of the representatives of | the red unions of the various coun- tries to the Eighth Session of the R. I. L. U, Central Council. The R. I. L. U. Magazine (20 cents) | and Labor Unity should be ordered | from the district offices of the T. U.| U. L, or directly from Labor Unity, 2 West 15th Street, New York City. FIGHT FOR RUEGG IN AUSTRALIA Faces Death from Kuomintang NEW YORK.—The national office of the Workers International Relief | was informed yesterday that the Workers International Relief of Aus- tralia together with the Anti-Imper- | |talist League are mobilizing workers’ | |organizations to demand the release | |of Paul Ruegg, the arrested secretary | of the Pan Pacific Trade Unions, now | | send a to demand that they protest the Scottsboro verdict. Michigan workers have already forced the Council of that city to protest to the governor of Alabama, Some concept of the scope of these international Scottsboro demonstra- | tions may be seen from the report of James W. Ford, former seeretary of | the International Trade Union Com- mittee of Negro workers, on “Scotts- boro before the world.” Ford states: “The International Trade Union Committee of Negro workers at Hamburg, was able to cooperate with workers in Europe. We receive pro- tests from workers in colonial coun- tries. As far away as Australia, New Zealand and Japan, resolutions of solidarity and protest came.in to us. “In Hamburg special meetings were held with African seamen were resolutions Scottsboro frame-up and the perse- cution of Negroes generally were drawn up, discussed in detail and adopted. African and German Workers Join Protest “In some cases were held on board ships. The Af- Tican workers expressed great indig- nation at the treatment of their brothers in the U. S. A. They re- lated their experiences in Africa, they told of the unspeakable butch- ery of African toilers by the im- perialists in Africa. “On July 9tht, 1931, a-great inter- Tacial. protest meeting was held at the International Seanien’s Club at Hamburg. Many African seamen at- tended this meeting. German ‘sea- men and workers expressed great in- brothers in the U. S. A. They related their experiences in Africa, they told of the unspeakable butchery.of Af- rican toilers by the imperialists in Africa, “On July Sth, 1931, a great inter- racial protest meeting was held at the International Seamen’s Club at Hamburg. Many African seamen at- tended this meeting. German sea- men and workers expressed great “Riegg and his wife were arrested by the Kuomintang agents and | threatened with imprisonment or/| death, although he is a. citizen of | Belgium, | ‘The revolutionary trade unions of Australia, which are affiliated to the Pan-Pacific Trade Union Federatoin are active in the campaign for the release of Ruegg. wrokers have already called on the Chinese consulates at Sydney, Mel- bourne and Brisbane and demanded the safety and freedom of Ruegg. KIDNEY AGONY: fore’s quick relief from torture of backaciies, burn wg Dladder pains. Santal Midy curbs the’ caus Tesaribed by doctors. Bold by druggists throughiow Delegations of | Negro brother workers. Hamtramck, | MOTHERS AND RELATIVES OF SCOTTSBORO BOYS in protest against the | these meetings | dignation at the treatment of their | “German workers held demon- | strations before the American Con- sulate at Hamburg, Germany, de- manding the release of the Scotts- boro boys. In Berlin, Dresden, Col- ogne and other German cities, mass meetings of protest were held. In windows of Amrican consulates, con- some cases, bottles were hurled thru taining messages which demanded the release of the Scottsboro boys: “In South Africa, protest meetings were held in defense of the Scotts- boro boys. Resolutions were adopted in meetings of native and white workers, In Cuba, and Latin and Central America, protest meetings have been held. From Chinese and Indian workers protests poured in. Mighty Protest Movement in the Soviet Union “In Soviet Russia, nation-wide mighty protest of workers and peas- ants against this brutal attack on the Negro workers in the U. S. A was exposed. In Moscow, Leningrad and other large industrial centers mighty mass meetings were held | Cultural and scientific workers alsc took part in these demonstration: and protest. “On the occasion of the holding of the World Congress of the Second ‘socialist’ International in Vienna in July, 1931, I spoke at several meet- ings in Austria exposing the role of | the socialists in helping the imper- | lajists exploit and oppress colonial | toilers. I especially emphasized how the MacDonald ‘socialist’ Labor Goy- | ernment supported slavery and bru- | tality in Africa, how the French so- | cialists support the bloody action. of | French imperialism in the French | African colonies, how the Belgian so- | clalists support terror in the Belgiav | Congo and finally the attitude of socialists in the U. 5. A. to lynching it Negroes and the Scottsboro frame- up. Expose “Socialist” Traitors. “Hillquit of the U. & A. was American delegate to the Congress of the Second International. He was feted in Vienna, while I was arrested held in jail three days and deported from Austria as an undesirable alien for my activities in behalf of op- Pressed people and the Scottsboro boys. Money was taken from my pocket by the Austrial socialist ad- ministration to defray expenses of | two police escorts to the Austrial | border. “The Negro reformists and organi- zations, such as the National Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Col- ored People in the U. S. A. have said that the international protest preju- diced the case of the Scottsboro boys. This shows not only how low they stoop to lick-splittling, but how they actually help the capitalist bosses execute the boys. “Only international proletarian protest and organization stayed so indignation at the treatment of their| far the execution of the Scottsbore | boys!” THE WESTE RN WORKER * RAISE FUNDS! City . Western Worker C A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West BUILD IT! 52 Issues $2 26 Issues $1 NAME co csecceccssccserstereseeceecseres Street 1164 MARKET STREET, San Francisco, Calif. SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c ampaign Committee 50 EAST 13th ST. g g 8 ie 3 rr EF | a. bak & a i 3 as $ 680.47 1, Boston 1,851 224 1,627 12.0 12,076.63 2. New York 18,803 5,952 12,851 31. 868.85 3. Philadelphia 6,437 173 6,264 2.6 | 208.94 4. Buffalo 2,818 99 2,719 35 262.68 5. Pittsburgh 2,057 82 1,975 3.9 1,152.71> 6, Cleveland 6,273 578 5,695 9.2 | 1,291.63 7, Detroit. 6,221 804 5,417 12.9 | 1,356.79 8. Chicago 11,232 944 10,288 84 1401.39 9. Minneapolis 3,273 4 3.199 22 72.67 10. Kansas City 1,485 30 1,455 2. 11.01 11.N,&8. Dakota 279 1 278 a 240.79 12, Seattle 2351 ‘ 32 2319 13} 659.21 13. San Francisco 2,708 26 2,682 x) 427.83 15. Connecticut 1,896 252 1,644 13.2 1540 16, N. & S, Carolina 269 269 0. 90.25 17. South 125 120 olf. | 64.50 18. 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