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THE STRUGGLE AGAINST THE SAVAGE ATTACKS ON FOREIGN BORN IS A FIGHT IN DEFENSE OF RIGHTS OF ALL WORKERS-- ACT NOW! BOSS PRESS INCITES AGAINST UNEMPLOYED IN BLOOMINGTON, ILL. Workers Demand door Food for tunes Children 3; Newspapers Call Call Them Li Lawless Lot Manager of Store ore. Titeatenk to ‘Call Cops; Committee Forces (By a Worker Correspondent) BLOOMINGTON, Ill.—In order to make it appear that the unemployed are becoming lawless and to Incite the police to more terror, the local press ran scare headlines, “Three Threaten, Take Food.” sroceries Obtained Through Intimidation,” after three unemployed workers went to a store and insisted that the owner give food to a family of five, four of them children, the father unem- ployed. This worker had been refused help by the Civic Relief, because he re- fused to work in the community garden on the now widespread forced labor plan. He had been getting $3.25 worth of scrip each week for his hungry family, and this was en- tirely cut off after he refused to slave and see his family starve. The Unemployed Council elected a committee to go to the stores and ask them for food. We three were on the committee and went to a large grocery store where we asked for the manager. We told him what we Him to Give Food wanted and he got it off the shelf. The whole order didn’t amount to $2. |'Then the father of the family told |the manager that he didn't have any |money, but that he must have the food beeause his family was starving. The manager threatened to call the | Police, and. we told him that we weren't interested in the police and that we were thinking of the star- ving children, and that he could go ahead and call the police, He gave us the groceries and we went away. in the local press the manager was. quoted as having said that the un- employed worker “promised to pay ‘for the food, if he ever got any money.” In spite of this the paper isied to make it appear that we held |up the manager and threatened to | wreck the place if we didn’t get the food. Of course you can see what a lie this was. We call on all workers to refuse |to starve, to join the Unemployed Council and fight for unemployment |insurance, against the forced labor agencies and the so-called relief or- ganizations. FOSTER PROVES MAHONEY PARTY STARVES JOBLESS | Fascists Feast Farmer Labor Mayor as Foster Denounces Him (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) nist Party at the Duluth meetings. a Blow to Fake Farmer-Labor Party ST. PAUL, Minn., June 7 (by mail) Three Foster meetings, packed to overflowing, in the “Twin Cities” of St. Paul and Minneapolis, was a pow- jerful answer to the betrayal of the ‘workers by the Farmer Labor Party. land it was right in their stronghold, ‘too. In Minneapolis, after the Commu- nist Election Campaign Committee had secured a permit for a meeting to be addressed by Foster in North High School Auditorium, and had sold enough tickets to fill the hall, the Farmer-Labor members on the school board voted to cancel the per- mit and the board did cancel it. Fos- ter spoke in two other halls in Min- neapolis instead. Scores of Negro and white workers, many of them from metal and rail- way shops| and from the packing houses, joined the Communist Party at these meetings. The capitalist press here admits that the foster meetings in the “Twin Cities” were “impressive demonstra- tions of strength.” Foster was greet- ed by tremendous ovations at each meeting. Radio Speech, In addition to those at the meet- ings, thousands of Minnesota work- ers listened in on Foster's radio speech Tuesday over WRHM, in which he made a magnificent ap- peal for support for the Communist election campaign platform. (See the six main planks published at ‘he top of the first page of the Daily Worker.) “Capitalism must give way to so- cialism,” Foster declared, “capitalism will not die of its own accord—it ‘must be killed. We are fighting for a ‘Soviet government in the United States.” ‘The tadio address and the St. Paul mass meeting in Central Ball Room took place on the same day that Wil- liam Mahoney, the new Farmer-La- bor Party mayor of St Paul, was in- augurated, Mahoney Ignores Jobless, “Mahoney raises such fake issues as gangsterism, cheaper electric rates, and less taxation and clean govern- ment, but ignores the most impor- tant issue, that of relief for the un- employed workers of St, Paul,” said Foster, and continued: “Tt is like trying to paint a house while the whole structure is in} flames.” “Let Mr. Mahoney go to the work- ers who live on garbage dumps in your ‘Hooverville’, and see how much they are interested in cheaper elec- tric rates and taxation, “Mr. Mahoney, on the question of unemployment relief, tries to pass the buck to the Federal government, in line with other fakers, the mayors various cities who are now in ‘fashington hypocritically pretend- ing that they are concerned with the problems of the unemployed.) The Hoover government passes the buck right back to the cities, and mean- while the unemployed starve. “The Farmer-Labor Party, just like the Socialist Party, is a party tox capitalism against the workers. 5 ‘30,000 SEATTLE UNEMPLOYED IN DEMONSTRATION Denounce Mayor Dore for Breaking Pledge | to the Jobless (CONTINUED FROM PAGE UNE) meeting, he did not succeed. He was | allotted 20 minutes, which he spent partly in defending landlords who want to evict unemployed tenants, though .the opposite] was. what he promised when he was asking for votes. Expose Dore and League. The 30,000 (mostly unemployed) workers present refused to allow Dore to talk more than his 20 min- utes, and loudly cheered when lead- ers of the Unemployed Council, in- cluding Fred Walker and Jack Tay- beck, district organizer of the Young Communist League, not only exposed the demagogy of fDore, and de- nounced him for his already broken election promises, but showed up.as well the Unemployed Citizens League the leaders of. which are attempting to swing the thousands of Seattle jobless into support of the Chamber of Commerce forced labor “self-help” program. The leaders of the Unemployed Citizens League tried to prevent the rank and file of their organization from taking part in the demonstra- tion, but the rank and file insisted on going, and forced the use of the name of the League in the call for the demonstration. Workers in| the demonstration cheered especially the denunciation of Cronin, Brannin, Hulet M. Wells and other leaders in the Unemployed Citizens League, for their willingness to betray the struggle of the jobless, once Dore is elected. Committees of action are spring- ing up in the League, and trying to take control away from the leader- ship. The Seattle newspapers state that the demonstration was “one.of the largest crowds ever to gather in City Hall Park”, but represent it as mere- ly an “ineugural ‘greeting” to Mayor Dore. They suppress the demands of the jobless, and everything said by Walker and Taybeck. ‘The mass meeting at the city half opened and closed with singing of “fhe International.” Scores Betrayal of Debs—In Debs’ Home Town, TERRE HAUTE, Ind, June 9.— James W, Ford, Communist candi- date for vice-president spoke here Sunday to 800 workers from the court house steps. After Ford ex~ posed, in this, Gene Debs’ home town, the betrayal of Debs’ fighting spirit by the Socialist Party leaders who now use his name, 300 workers signed pledges to carry on the Communist election campaign. In spite of radical phrases, the Gov- ernor Olsens and Mayor Mahoneys of Minnesota, just like the Socialist Party Mayor Hoan of Milwaukee, ‘have proven themselves the enemies of the workers.” : Fascists Banquet Mahoney, While Foster was thus exposing Mahoney, the mayor was doing the same himself. He was gorging at a banquet attended by thé Italian Con- sul eneral (an agent of Mussolini) and leading Italian fascists. One of the new mayor's first acts was to address and reassure @ con+ vention of Minnesota bankers. The Great Hunger March of December, 1931, 1931, to Washington Which Included Werner Nets rest of their back wages, the so-called “soldiers’ bonus.” war and they hayen’t given a cent for unemployed relief,’ shouted the hunger marchers of last year. “Millions for War and Not a Cent Yet for Hungry Veterans, say the ex-servicemen. Photos show the 1931 hunger march going down Pennsylvania Ave., and a group of the vet- erans today at “Camp Camden” where the capitol police have been forced to give a little shelter and some food, In the dead of winter last year, 1,500 delegates of the 12,000,000 starving unemployed marched from all over the country on the Capitol building to demand unemployment insurance at the expense of the government and the employers. In November of this year many of these jobless who sent delegates to Washington will vote for the same demand by voting Communist. Today ex-servicemen, world war veterans, are streaming in ever greater numbers to demand relief in the form of the “Millions for (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) diers in the American prison camp in France in 1917-18 patrol Anacos- tia Camp arresting, persecuting, and turning over to the police all vets suspected of being members of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League. Herbert M. Young, treasurer of Post No. 1 of the Workers Ex-Ser- vicemen’s League, was seized yester- day by Waters’ military police, given the third degree and a court martial on the charge of attempting to over- throw the government. Try to Starve Militants. ‘Waters has also put into opera- tion a policy of trying to starve out the militant section of the veterans, On the chow line, where the miser- able rations are handed out, known militant vets are made to stand at the end of the line and often get no food. Many of the vests have gone without food for two and three days. Chicago Delegation Grows. The Chicago delegation, which is the backbone of the whole rank and file movement is rapidly gaining new adherents. Vets from all sections of the country are forming themselves around this group. The delegation from Chicago suc- cessfully fought jim-crowism in the parade and is leading the fight for rank and file control and against po- lice supervision and the bulldozing tactics of the police imposed fascist leadership. Socialists Aid Bonus Enemies, Chief among the bonus enemies, who are working in cooperation with MOTHER MOONEY, MOORE, IN WEST Workers Back Mooney Scottsboro Fight (Wire to the Daily Worker) GREAT FALLS, Mont., June 9.— More than 1,500 workers and farm- ers filled the Grand Theatre last night in support of the campaign to free the Scottsboro boys, Tom Moo- ney, and all class-war prisoners, The crowd enthusiastically greeted Mother Mooney, now on a national tour on behalf of her son and the other frame-up victims. Richard Moore, national organizer of the International Labor Defense, was the principal speaker. One hundred and __ thirty-nine workers signed pledges to support the Scottsboro-Mooney campaign. A significant feature of the meet- ing was a 15-minute radio broadcast. Resolutions were adopted and sent to Governor Rolph of California, the U. &. Supreme Court, and Secretary WASHINGTON FAILS TO DRIVE OUT VETS; GOV'T CANCELS ARMY LEA the Hoover Wall St. government to split the ranks of the veterans are the leaders of the Socialist Party, Norman Thomas and Daniel W. Hoan, Mayor of Milwaukee. A cir- cular signed by these two gentlemen and distributed among the vets urged them to give up their fight for the bonus. Mayor Hoan, who had workers jailed for demanding unemployment insurance and relief before the Milwaukee City Hall, March 6, 1930, advises the vets to turn their efforts into a demand for unemployment relief and insurance. The Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League, in a statement issued today, Pointed out that the socialist cir- cular was part of the campaign to defeat their struggle. “The struggle for the bonus is part of the great struggle against hunger,” said the statement, “It is and must be tightly bound up with the struggle for un- employment insurance and relief. ‘The veterans, while fighting for their bonus, must raise the slogan of un- employment insurance and relief for the unemployed; at the same time the massés of jobless workers and workers with jobs must support the fight for the bonus.” Morgan’sDollars | Beget| Others Thru Our Labor Accountings filed in the Surrbgate’s Court of three trust funds $3,000,000 each which J. Pierpont Morgan created in his will for his three daughters show an increase of more than $6,000,000. Of course the three daughters will accept this ad- ditional cold cash without asking how it came about that nine million could make six more out of thin air. One dollar begts another, like a bible hero but only after the workers slave for it under the complicated system the bosses control, of Labor DORE. . Parade In Spokane. SPOKANE, Wash.—One thousand workers paraded from the station after reception to Mother Mooney and Richard B. Moore, on Scottsboro- Mooney tour. Six hundred and fifty workers Reerd, wei ie later, Four Meetings in Seattle, SHATTLE.—A otal of 3,000 workers attended four meetings at which Moore and Mother Mooney spoke. Five hundred workers greeted them at station and: vate formed parade. Moore and Mottier Mooney will be in Stanley, N. D., June 10; Grand Forks, N. D,, June 25; «Aberdeen, S. D., June 13; Minneapolis, June 16; St. Paul, June 17. A banquet.is being arranged in Minneapolis for June:18. Meetings will also be held in Supe- Unemployed. Councils Call for Support of Bonus March “Signal for Renewed Struggle; Organize and Fight for Bonus, Relief and: Insurance” By HERBERT BENJAMIN Ten thousand unemployed veter- ans are on the march over the path that was marked out last December by 1,670 elected delegates in the Na- tional Hunger March. Scores of hundreds of thousands more are eager to move upon the same road. Millions of jobless toil- ers are following with their eyes, the course which their fellow-sufferers are pursuing. ‘These new recruits in the war a- gainst hunger, give powerful evid- ence of the growing desperation and fighting will of the poverty stricken masses. March Against Hunger The jobless veterans are making the same demand that the National Hunger March made—they demand the right to live. They too, are marching against hunger. They too, are facing the same enemies. They too, must therefore adopt the same militant methods of mass struggle if of} they would win their demands. ‘The capitalist government, which stands guards over the wealth, pro- fit and priviledge of the multi-bil- lionaire ruling class is prepared to use against the war-veterans the same brutal terror which it employs against all who refuse to submit to mass starvation. Demagogy—The First Line Of De- fense For The Bosses When the National Hunger March revealed the fighting mood of the masses, all the agents of the bosses hastened to the defense of the mo- ney-bags. Vilification, threats, ter- ror and demagogy were unloosed in floods, in the effort to stem the mil- itancy of the masses. Matthew Woll, treacherous mis- leader of the American Federation of Labor and his whole army of red- baiting fascists, were among the first to launch the attack. These were followed in quick succession by the Department of Justice; by municipal authorities and by gangs of organ- ized hoodlums, ted by officers of the American Legion. While these open enemies directed the attack upon the advance guard made up of the delegates in the Hunger March, other agents busied themselves with the task of copfusing and deceiving the broad masses of workers. First came La Follette, Costigan, Wagner, Wheeler and other socalled “progressives” in the Senate. These brought forward a whole series of} i ae relief bills. In all parts of the country, lesser, but not less effective demagogues likewise Jaunched various fraudulent “relief” campaigns. The charlatan, Father Cox, was brought forward by the steel and coal barons of Penn- sylvania. Roosevelt shouted for “un_ employment insurance” in New York. Mayor Murphy wept crocodile tears in Detroit. All bent their efforts to one purpose—to prevent the organ- ization and defeat the struggles of the unemployed, The Garner—Wagner—Patnam Schemes ‘Today, when the unemployed war- veterans are giying evidence through the Bonus March of @ renewed and greater mass militancy, the defend- ers. of the money-bags (they call themselves defenders of “our great American institutions”) are again unloosing a flood of vile demagogy. ‘The Garner Bill which passed Con- gress on June 7, is typical of the fraudulent measures which are being brought forward as relief bills. This Bill appears to be appropriating Two Billion, 'Two-hundred and Ninety Million dollars for relief. Actually it sets aside only One-hundred mil- lion dollars, or less than 5 per cent of that amount for actual relief. And this amount is to be put at the dis- Posai of President Hoover. What percentage Hoover will dis- tribute to the unemployed, may be easily guessed by all who have seen the chief executive of the Hunger government in action. ‘The Wagner Bill would make $20,-|she will speak at the South Slav Hall,| “The labor , Wis., June 19 and Duluth, Minn., | 000,000 available for public works |5607 St. Clair Avenue. e 20 during the coming year, amount, $15,000,000, or 75 per cent would go to real estate sharks for building sites. The balance would give work to at most 10,000 of the 15 million unemployed throughout. the country, at less than $10 per week! These shameful deceptions are be- ing put over béhind a smokescreen of sham battles between Republicans anf Democrats. The jobless masses, whose starvation relief rations are being drastically cut and in many cases discontinued altogether, are confused by means of every known trick of parliamentary chicanery. The capitalist press runs screaming headlines announcing the introduc- tion, debate over and passage of each such proposal as a great vic- tory which will put an end to suf- fering and want, Intensify, Sharpen, Raise To Greater Militancy The Struggle For Real Unemployment Relief! While the army of jobless grows by leaps and bounds, all available relief funds are everywhere. reported exhausted. We Must Fight For Our Lives! The capitalist class understands full well the significance of the Bonus March. They realize that it is part of the mass struggle against unem- ployment and their hunger policy. They know that if the workers or- ganize and fight, if they show the determination which is expressed by the Bonus Marchers, then indeed, the workers can win the fight against hunger. The present situation calls for the skarpest and most bitter struggles in the history of the United States. Every block and _ neighborhood, every flop-house and soup-kitchen, every shop and union, must have its own elected committee to lead the struggle. The theory that unem- ployment and suffering is not so acute in the summer time, is with- out foundation or justification. Right now when this will be the excuse given for cutting relief, we must fight most stubbornly against every such attempt. Mass marches, similar to the pre- sent Bonus March, must be organ- ized in every city, county and state, that fascist elements, spies and dupes of the bosses shall not worm their way into leadership as they -have done in the Bonus March. The growing army of demagogues must be combatted, exposed and de- feated. Their every scheme must be revealed as part of the hunger of- fensive of the ruling class. We must oppose against them a united milit- ant workingelass stubbornly fighting for, Unemployment Insurance at the expense of the government and em- ployers, as provided for by the Work- ers Unemployment Insurance Bill, Our united forces must be rallied for support of the candidates of the workingclass in the election cam- paign. Our struggle for Foster and Ford and our fighting program must be our answer to the fraudulent schemes of the capitalist politicians of the Republican, Democratic and Socialist parties. Sister of Scottsboro Boy Speaks in Cleve. Sunday y and Monday CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cleveland workers will have an opportunity to see and hear Lucille Wright, 11-year old sister of two of the Scottsboro boys, and to support the fight for their release, on Sunday and Monday, June 12 and 13. On Sunday after- noon, Lucille will be guest of honor at a house party in the Kinsman district, and in the evening she will speak at a Scottsboro rally in Ray- ford and Jackson Mall, 3804 Scovill Avenue. On Monday evening, June 18, she will speak at the South Slav Hall. On Monday evening, June 13, Upper Of this! While her mother is touring Europe ' peace and socialism.” LOCAL LEADERS QUIT SOCIALIST PARTY IN SEATTLE, WASHINGTON Officials and Members of County Executive, Declare “S. P.” .” Has Betrayed Workers a Ringing Statement Re Re Workefs to Join ad at Meeting Calls 61 Communist Party a SEATTLE, Wash. June 9.—Four Socjalist Party members, very active in its ranks up until now and all of- ficials, threw a bombshell into a mass meeting called by the Socialist Party here on June 3 to hear the socialist candidate, McKay. speak. Thes? four members, Olga Hoglund, secretary of the county executive committee; Ira Ball, member of the county executive; Winifred Black, secretary-treasurer of Local 2 and Anna Bolin, chairman of Local 2, pre- sented @ signed statement declaring that because of its treacheries against the working class, they were with- drawing from the Socialist Party and joining the Communist Party. (As finally issued the statement includes another signature, Ferris, of Local 2). Evades Challenge During the consternation among the Socialist Party leaders after the state- ment was read, Alex Noral, district organizer of the Communist Party Tose and pointed out further proof that the Socialist Party was the third party of capitalism and not a workers’ party, and challenged McKay to a| debate. McKay madé a demagogic speech evading every issue facing the work ers, evading the wage cuts, unemploy- ment, imperialist war plans, etc., and completely overlooked the challenge | by the Communists, Socialist officials shouted that the worker reading the statement of the | four who had quit the Socialist Party | should “be smacked,” but the crowd, | including many rank and file so- cialists, refused to permit it. Two more at the meeting immediately as- sociated themselves with the four| joining the Communist Party, and took the same action they did. The statement of those quitting the Socialist Party reads as follows: “We the undersigned, members of the Socialist Party and County Ex- ecutive Committee of the Party, wish to make the following statement: “In joining the Socialist Party we were guided by the perspective of} Joining a fighting revolutionary or-| ganization, whose tasks are those of organizing and leading the workers | in a struggle against capitalism which is responsible for the suffering | and misery of the working class. Jim Crow Party “While actively participating in| the work of the party, we have closely observed and carefully studied its program, methods and leadership, both national and local, the national and state conventions, etc. For in- stance: In the national convention in Milwaukee there was not a single Negro delegate. They refused to call | for struggle for the liberation of the | Class war prisoners in the capitalist | prisons, while at the same time they demanded freedom for the food pris- | oners, saboteurs, counter revolution: | aries and supporters of the war mon- gering capitalists in the Soviet Union. They nominated Norman Thomas who speaks over the same hook-up with J, P, Morgan in support of the block-aid system, and who openly | These must be carefully prepared so|SUPPorted the capitalist Reconstruc- | tion Finance Corporation. The par- ty accepted the capitalist slogan in| the last world war, “The war to end war,” “The war for democracy,” ani now in the national convention we saill raise the. slogan of Democracy, which can only be democracy for the ruling class, in fact supporting! them, in their present preparations for war against the Soviet Union. Hillquit’s famous law suit against the Soviet Union in the interest of Rus- sian white guards. Norman Thomas refusing to debate and defend the perty’s program and policies with Wm. Z, Foster, presidential candid- ate of the Communist Party, and lo- cally giving leadership to the Dix Chamber of Commerce Unemployed Citizens League, etc. Join Communists! “In view of these ranx betrayals of the working class, we, the undersign- ed, have decided to break with the Socialist Party, the third party of capitalism, and are joining the Com- munist Party which has proved itself to arouse the workers of the whole world on sbehalf of the Scottsboro boys, Lucile is touring Ohio. Besides speaking in Cleveland, she is also ap- pearing in Youngstown, Warren, Akron, and Toledo, Following are the dates of her meetings and the halls at which she will speak: Youngstown, June 9, Ukrainian Hall, 525 West®Rayen St. Warren, June 10, Hippodrome Hall, High St, Akron, June 11, Workers Center, 9 West Bartges St. Toledo, June 14, movement will gain the hand and show the way to LENIN, that of George} the only party fighting in a revobue tionary way in the interest ef thé working class- We call upon the ranks jand file to join us in the Communits’ Party in waging a struggle against capitalism, against starvation, against wage cuts and unemployment, againsg capitalist wars, and for the liberation! of both Negro and white workers ang} for the proletarian dictatorship, for} the defense of the Soviet Union, and Soviet China.’ (! (Signed): ae WINIFRED BLACK, 7 { Secretary-Treasurer, Kocal@) IRA BALL, | Member County Exec- Comm, j OLGA HOGLUND, Sec., County Exee, Comms, Fr ANNA BOLIN, q Chairman, Locab 2 | GEORGE FERRIS, Member Local 2. MINE UNION URGES FIGHT & ON DIES ACT | (CONTINUED FROM Pace omm ©), fundamental rights of the woriers,’ and for freedom of speech, gsseme |blage and the right to organize,” ew ap ¥, Wants Communists Off Ballet, — WASHINGTON, June 9.—A de-, |Mand that the Communist Party ba | Prevented from appearing on the bal« lots in the elections was made on the floor of the House of Representatived | by Congressman Blanton, democrat, during the discussion on the Dies"Bill, it became known today. The Dies Bill was passed by the House and is soon to come up for consideration by the Senate. Mean- while, a national wave of protest is developing against this bill, which, if’ enacted would result in the deporta-| tion of additional thousands of for« eign born workers. Wants Action | “Now the time has come When we ought to stop putting on our ballots | any Communist ticket in decent Am- \erican elections,” the vociferous Texe |@s congressman declared. Earlier in the discussion Blanton | volunteered to furnish a precise defe inition of Communism. “I shall ex- plain it,” he said. “Affiliateq with Communists means when they meet with Communists, when they en= courage Communists, when they spealt | Communistic language to Commus nists from their Communists’ plate forms at Communists’ meetings, They are affiliated with them wher they do that.” Socialist Party Approved a At the same time an approving nod |to the Socialist Party came front | Congressman Stafford who said that he “would not like to see a law passed) | that would give the right to immigra~ \tion officials to deport socialists’ Not only complete asylum but un official approval is given to the white guard troops in the United States by jthe phrasing of the Dies Bill aimed q | against militant foreign-born workers which defines a Commu who “believes in, advise the overthrow by force or violence of goernments, constituted authority, on | social order, existing in countries ad under the control of C This provocative slur agains} ay workers’ and peasants’ governments $e | the Soviet Union at the same time implies the aiding and abetting of the sinister anti-Soviet agencies now operating in the United States- Essence of Bill The high point of the Dies Bill is that before a foreign-born worker charged with being a Communist can be deported the authorities, according to the present immigration law, prove: in each case his affiliation, and that his. political views make him subject) |to deportation. The Dies Bill, hows ever, contains a so-called definition o fa Communist. In the words of Congressman Bachmann, member of. the notorious Fish Committee and tool of the open-shop coal opératers of West Virginia, “should the bill un~ der consideration become law @ Come munist may be deported on his ade mission or on proof that he is @ Communist or affiliated with the CoMmmunist organization. Therefore it will materially aid in the deperte~ tion of all alien Communists,” Protest Continues With an increasing realization of the sinister nature of this bill, the protest movement against it is grows ng. Trade unions, workers’ organizations and individual worl ire called upon by the Internati i { 4