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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JUNE. 15, 1932 rage fhree AMERICAN WORKERS! FOLLOW THE HEROIC EXAMPLE OF THE POLISH DOCKERS! STOP SHIPMENT OF ARMS AGAINST CHINA, USSR! EDGEWATER MINE IN BIRMINGHAM GETS NEW CUT IN WAGES Slash Amounts to 15 Per Cent; Miners Also Gypped Through Short Weight Scheme I am reporting from the Edge- water mine in Birmingham, Ala. We received a 15 per cent cut in May and besides the foreman told us that any miner who ran five loads of tock would be discharged. In some places the boss crowds five men into @ single room and many times miners have to come out on account of needing timber and rails. We have to drag them as much as one hundred and fifty yards and spikes have to be gotten clear from the top. The cars are soaked to weigh a ton and a half water ievel but sometimes we don’t get more than 21 and 22 hundred. When the miners ask the section foreman about anything, he sends them to the mine foreman, who sends them back to the section fore- man. The superintendent is supposed to keep his office open till 8 o’clock Masses of Vets Raise Cry Against Their Leaders, (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) wet, determined mass of unemployed | men muttering disatisfaction against the leadership, against the police, against the government and the Wall Street rich men. Vets Disillusioned. Mud besmeared, gaunt faced vet- erans, workers who been been thrown | . qut of the industries to stsarve, gath- erel in little groups in Anacostia Camp and in chilly vacant buildings and on the streets of Washington. They were discussing the action of Congress. They were disillusioned— most of them were. The trickery of the capitalist politicians is becoming clear te most of the veterans. One veteran, a New Yorker who served in the 27th Division, was ex- plaining the program of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League. “The fight for the bonus is not a fight for special privileges,” said the New York. It’s wages due. Our fight is part of the general struggle of the masses of workers against starvation, “All proposals in Congress but ours are insufficient. And furthermore, the means by which they are pro- posing to raise the funds will not in any way add to the telief of the war veterans and the masses of hungry workers. “We propose that the money be raised by:— “L—Using money voted for im- mediate war preparations. 2.—By taxing inheritences. “3.—Removing the tax exemf> tions on securities. “4.— Imposing a surtax on indus ‘The vets agreed that this was the program for them. Rank and file committees. No ‘High Command” living off the fat of the land and rid- ing around the town with the chief of police. Sickness Spreads, N Sickness spread throughout the tanks of the bonus army yesterday and today. The poor shelter and the starvation rations given by the smug and complacent Washington official- dom caused a marked increase in the sick list. Only the most meagre medical attention was given the men. Demands for Shelter. ‘The demand raised by the Workers ExServicemen’s League for adequate food, shelter and médical attention Ras the mass support of all the vet- @rans in Washington. Commissioner Glassford’s leaflets, ufging the vets to go home because food and bedding was becoming ex- hausted, which were distributed in thé camp had no effect on the vet- erans. The leaflets were either thtown away or used to make fires. But the leaflets distributed by the ‘Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League which called for unity with the whole working class in the struggle against the boses—these leaflets were not destroyed. Here was the language the worker vets understood. Here was their program. They discussed the contents of the leaflets. Against High Command. Resentment against Waters, the present “High Commander,” is high in all sections of the “Bonus Expedi- tionary Forces.” The demand for tank and file committees to lead the army has gained new popularity within the last 12 hours, Bay Born. ‘The first baby wa s born in the camp yesterday. The new mettiber of the army is the son of Tommy Tonip- ‘kins, 2 worker from Galveston, Texas, who brought his wife and six chil- j@ren on the march, Tompkins car- Tied a sign reading: “Here are six Yeasons why I need the bonus.” “Well you've got seven reasons now,” comrades congratulated the father. ‘There is a decided shift in the at- J cate vie teeee aon, Arete Seen, A | | | so that any of the men can see him he doesn’t open it at all now and you have to speak to him on the fly because he runs right thru the works. His name is Robert Flynn. A Miner, | Correspondence Briefs HOOVER DAM HAS “RELIEF” Las Vegas, Nev. Dear Editor, I have surprise for you, Herbert Hoover is going to help the unem- ployed out here, actually! He has ordered the local government experi- mental station to give each local un- employed worker — what do you think?—A HEAD OF LETTUCE! A whole head not half of one. And if you have a half dozen little ones you will get a whole head for each little tot! if I always knew H. H. was all right! I wonder how long he would live on a head of lettuce for himself and each of the little Hooverites. —A Worker. eae SAYS IT’S TIME TO REVOLT Ticonderoga, N. Y. Comrade Editor, We were riding around Ticonde- roga about 6 a.m. looking over the workers’ neighborhood in preparation for soliciting signatures. We stop- ped @ young American worker about eighteen and asked him how things were ardund there. He answered, “Pretty bad,” and made the follow- ing remark: “Our forefathers fought in a revolution and it is about time that. we were having another one.” He also said that their ciiy was not giving any relief of any kind to the unemployed. Comradely, —A Worker. SOCIALISTS BEAT UP WORKERS (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—Gangsters beat up workers who askéd a Socialist Par- ty speaker questions at an open air meeting of the 8. P. on 7th St. and Second Avenue, Tuesday night. An- other was set upon for selling work- ingelass literature. Isidore Korns- weig of the Workérs Sickle Club had his face badly cut-up and had to re- ceive medical attention, also Jack Burns of the Club and Morris Gable- man was badly beaten by the Social- ist gorillas. RUINED FARMERS APPLAUD FOSTER Endorse Demand for Farm Relief FREDERICK, S. D., June 10 (By Mail).—A large crowd of farmers from around here gathered.at Savo Hall to hear William Z, Foster, Com- munist nominee for president of the United States, and cheered especially that plank of the Communist plat- form which demands: “Emergency relief for the poor farmers without restrictions by the government and banks; exemption of poor farmers from taxes, and no forced collection of rents or debts.” Farmers, also remembering how many of their ills date from the last World war, cheered Foster's denuncia- tion of the imperialist war plans now going forward at Washington. Those who think the farmers are perman_ ently tied up with the capitalist sys- tem should have heard the approval of these farmers when Foster told them that the immediate demands in this election could bring only some improvement in their lot, and that to get rid of capitalist terror and capi- talist exploitation, capitalism itself must be overthrown. Foreclosure on” land, évictions of tenant farmers who cannot pay their es rent, ate common in these regions’ today. Teer 5 ao Foster went from Frederick to big meetings in Bismark, Minot, Brush Lake and Great Falls. These meet- ings have been reported in the Daily Worker. He is speaking in Butte, Montana, today, and will go on into Spokane, June 18; Seattle, June 19; Tacoma, June 20; Portland, Ofe., June 21, and San Francisco, Cal., June 23, Stubborn determination great sec- tions of the rank and file are fight- ing to oust the present leadership. The voice of the masses of hungry, Weary, footsore and sick is being héard on the muddy fields of Ana- costia Flats. The final yote on the bonus bill “HOOVER” | | | Tsarist White Guard troops on parade in Shanghai, South China, where they have been used by the imperialists against the revolutionary Shanghai workers. TROOPS REFUSE SHOOT DOWN DOCK WORKERS ; JAPANESE FASCISTS CALL FOR SEIZURE OF SIBERIA Special Troops Organized As Armed Sailors and Regulars Refuse to Fire on the Striking Soviet Newspaper “Pravda” Scores Provocation of Japanese Military Experts & | Polish dockers in the Polish war “We Saw It Ourselves,” Say Delegates Back from USS harbor of Gdingia have refused to load phosgene and other gas muni- tions to b? shipped to Japan for use against the Chinese people and the Soviet Union. A bloody collision took place between the dockers and spe- cial fascist troops organized by the} Polish authorities following the re-| fusal of sailors and regular troops to} fire on the workers. Upon the discovery of -the nature of the material they were loading, the dockers militantly demonstrated their firm solidarity with the Chin- ese masses and the Soviet Union and refused to proceed with the loading. Singing. the “International,” the dockers marched to the office of the sb JOSEF PILSUDSKI Butcher of Polish workers who is to head the Joint Command of Po- lish and Roumanian Armies in planned armed intervention against the Soviet Union, harbor commandant. When the lat- ter refused to negotiate with the:men, they stormed his offices and broke all the windows. « Armed sailors were called out and ordered to fire on the dockers, but they refused to do so, The men of the 11th Ulan Regiment, which is stationed in Gdingia, also refused to proceed against the workers, In the end a special troop was formed of; officers, cadets of the naval college and non-commissioned officers who opened fire on the“ workers, killing two outright and wounding thirty others. Martial Law Declared The harbor commandant has de- clared a state of martiel lew and dissolved the trade union of the) dockérs. The strike of the déckers which began immediately after the bloodbath has been declared illegal, but the great majority of the dock- érs are on strike in defiance of the fascist authorities. The collision oc- cured during the latter part of May but news of it was suppressed by the Polish censor. Other bloody collisions. have since occurred. Hundreds of dockers have been thrown into fail The special troops have proceeded against the striking dockers with reckless brutality. _ Center for War Production Poland is one of the chief centers in Europe for the production and shipment of war munitions and mat- rials to Japan. The Polish muni- tion industry is controlled by the French imperialists. Under the aus- Pices of French imperialism, the Polish and Rumanian governments recently signed a new military pact setting up a single command for the two. armies “in evént of war.” The fascist butcher Pilsudski was named to head the joint command of the two armies. Poland and Rurhania They have been reviewed by the United States, was delayed today until tomorrow|are included in the vassal states of when thé House adjourned following | French imperialisth on the eastern the death of Congressmen Hélick who| frontiers of the Soviet Union. A collapsed while debating the bill of| secret military pact exists between Brit ; ish and French officials in Shanghai | ard they carry, They will be used i | Dockers in Poland (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) defense of the Soviet Union frfom imperialist attacks was a point of general and emphatic agreement among tH delegates. The visit was organized by the Friends of the Soviet Union and the delegates arrived in Moscow in time monstration. in which- more than 1,- 500,000. armed workers and military participated: An unforgettable im- pression was made upon them by this wonderful demonstration of work- ingclass solidarity and power, the delegates reported. Negro Delegate Speaks. Nelson, 2 Negro worker, was 4 de- legate chosen by the Metal Workers Industrial Union, He is a worker in the railroad car shops in Chi¢ago. The tremendous construction thru- out the country was the thing which impressed Nelson most, he said. The attitudé toward him among the Russian workers and~ peasants was one of the warmest frinedship, Nelson said, and oppression of the Negro workers in thé capitalist coun- thies, particularly the United States, was a topic of continuous discussion with him, he said. Vacations in Chicago. Giving a glowing picture of the test homes and sanitoriums in the Soviet Union, Nelson, in response to 4 question said that vacations for the Negro workers in the South Side of Chicago were only for the unem- ployed. “But that’s no vacation, just kicked out of the job, that’s all.” Sickness in the Soviet Union, the Negto worker said, means the best of medical care and continued wages during illness. “In Chicago it’s the county hospital—if you're lucky enough to get in.” Mass Enthusiasm. John ©, Gancz said what impges- | sed him most was the “wonderful mass enthusiasm in the shops, fi tories and everywhere.” Gancz is an old time trade unionist, a machinist for 18 years, and recording secretary of Local 147, International Associa- tion of Machinists, of the A. F. of L. Speaking of a visit to Electrazavod, the gigantic factory for the manu- Gancz said thet the “vim and en- thusiasm of the workers there can hardly be described.” One sees, he rep4orted, “women operating lathes, drill press, milling machines” and working shoulder to shoulder with thé men in the job of socialist con- struction—and sharing equally in the rising material and cultural stan- dards of the country. rank Kedneigh, of Denver, chair- man of the delegatfon, has been a boilermaker for 39 years, and pre- sident of the Boilermakers’ Union of Denver for the past 20 years. His election as a delegate to the Soviet Union was| endorsed by 29 local unions of the city, inclu the car- penters, plasterers, printers, and others Day-to-Day Life. Thé day-to-day life and the -ctual status of the Russian worker inter- ested Kidneigh most, he said. “What I have seen convinces me that the Soviet Union deserves the support and protection of eves, worker in the United Statés. That’, what I’m going to tell the worke’s of Denver when I get Back th*ce—and don’t forget that thé 26,000 unemployed of the city will be keen to know just why there is no unemployment in Soviet Russia.” ‘The Kentucky miner, Tillet Cadle, to witness the gigantic May ist de-/ ® found the Donbas coal region “a long reach from the Kentueky country.” Said Cadie: “No gun thugs there, | and the miners not only don’t have) to live on pinto beans and potatoes, but are their own bosses besides.” Keontucky—U.S.S.R. Cadle told of the new apartment homes, theatre and clubs in the Don Basin and of the thousands of min- casus- and the Crimea each Cadle, mining coal when he was 15. “No, I | never did have a vacation—but have real hungry then.” ‘What appealéd to Cadle especially was the six-hour day for the miners, and pfotection on the job A doctor is found in the mines during the working hours, he said “Everything possible is done to keep the mines ventilated. There is a good system of timbering for the protec- tion of the miners.” While the mechanical equipment of the Russian mines is not as per- fected as those found in the Ameri- can mines, Cadle said, “the work is easier and lighter, the idea is to raise preduction and shorten the hours of labor, and not to speed-up the men to make profits for the bess men,” Arrange Meetings. A large number of meetings are being arranged by the Friends of the Soviet Union which organized the Delegation where the returning workers will describe what they saw and urge a militant united front in defense o fthe Soviet Union from imminent imperialist attacks, (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) edgements from vice_president Curtis and Secretary of State Stimson. These orgenizetions include the All-Russia National Peasant Union; Union of Russian Graduates of Higher Institu- tions Abroad; Union of Veterans; National Russian Student Christian Union, and significantly, the Russian Women’s League Attached to the Re- publican Party of the U. S. The wire sent by the “Peasants’ Union,” undoubtedly a letter head or- ganization whose “peasants” limit anti-Soviet activities from American capitalists and their wives, repeats the usual vicious slanders against the Soviet Union and asks the capitalist politicians in Washington to “reject every attempt of giving moral ap- proval to the numberless crimes com- mitted by the Bolsheviks in Russia,” apparently referring to the rélentless campaign of the Soviet Union against counter_revolutionists. With the copy of the telegram sent to the white guard organizations is to be “sympathetic” to their activities. Wants ‘Patriots’ ” Aid ganization” winds up by calling for a broadcasting of the appeal among their organizations, and declares that it takes upon itself the duty of con- vineing the American patriotic organ: ers Who go on vacation inz-the‘Cau- | year. | who is 30 years old, began’ got plenty of time off, but had to go! WHITE GUARDISTS' OPEN NEW DRIVE ON RECOGNITION protests, but have received acknow!- | themselves to soliciting funds for | A list of 35 newspapers said by them | The “United Russian National Of- | who have saluted the Tsarist stand- | | in the war against the Soviet Union, | Openly stating that the robber aims | of Japanese imperialism, the reac- tionary Japanese newspaper “Nichon” | has published a provocative, anti_ | Soviet series of articles calling for | armed intervention against the Soviet Union and for the seizure of Siberia. The articles are captioned “Japanese- | American or Japanese-Soviet War.” :| They are written by one Kamaizi, | Whom the éditor“of the “Nichon” ‘de- | Scribes as an “expert.on the Russian ae Kamazai chides the Japanése gov_| | ernment for what he terms its “hesi- | tation” in actively realizing its plans | | for an armed attack on the Soviet Union. He asks: | “Are the Japanese anthorities | | really hesitating? Now is the best | fime to carry out this program. We | must not miss a moment which will perhaps never come again.” Kamazai clearly states the pro- gram in the minds of the Japanese fascist-imperialist circles: “If Japan obtains Siberia it will be able to forget unemployment and economic erisis for éver. The sooner this program against the Soviet Union is carried through the better it will be.” ‘The Soviet newspaper “Pravda,” in | an article headed “Down With the Provokers of War in the Far East,” firmly opposes this new attempt to Provoke the Soviet Union and ex_ | Poses the imperialist robbed tenden- cies of the Japanese fascist-imperial- ist circles. Pravda declares, in part: The pogrom article of Mamaizi, whose author has not even built it up ‘logically, is the result of the great difficulties which are driving certain Japanese imperialist circles into a blind alley; it is also the result of the poverty of thought which is characteristic of the Russian white guardists. Kamaizi has no logic at his disposal, but his insolence therefore all the greater. On what does this “expert of the Russian Question” base his conten_ tion that the Soviet Union “wishes |to subjugate the whole world?” We could ask where and when the Soviet | Union has ever taken part in an in- | tervention against Japan; where and when the Soviet Union has ever at- tempted to seize a part of Japan, or indeéd of any territory outside of its own frontiers; where and when the Soviet Union has ever made any at- |tack on Japan’s possessions on the Asiatic mainland. By the way, Ke. maizi, who is it that hag occupied Manchuria? It is the Soviet Union? And, in conclusion, you gentlemen of the editorial staff of the “Nichon,” permit us to ask you where and when an article even faintly reminiscent of this article of Kamaizi has éver ap- peared in the Soviet press: Where and when has the Soviet press ever appealed for a war against Japan and for the severance of any part of Japan's possessions, as this pro- voker and “expert” Kamaizi does to- ward the Soviet Union? With all their cleverness, the warmongers of jthe “Nichon” would not be able to offer a single fact to serve as a basis for the provocative assertions of their correspondent, Kamaizi. Stress Soviet Union's Firm Peace Policy. This gentleman, whose pen, we may assume, is paid by those circles which are thirsting for new adventures, has | quite different ideas. He writes: “There is no need to fear that any- one will protest against the indepen- | | dence of Siberia.” | “Pravda” further declares: The “expert” of the “Nichon” writes | with his own untrammeléd ignorance: | “Therecan be no friendship between Japan and the Soviet Union because their ideals aré diametrically op- is sta ted jfake issue to distract |Relief Worker Reports Beet Field Hunger Worst Ever Seen Sugar Trust Relies On Pelkey to Force NEW YORK.—'Even when “the were working for $23 an acre they required help from charity. Denver | ly flooded by these de: tute families,” Mrs. Adelaide Wa who was present at tb the Colorado beet work in an _ interview Internationa ak of wit Relief, here “Before and during the s charities and wel: bod their relief, “Mrs. Walker ling how the sugar tr quick starvation to force the oft tel- ed on bee sa. workers back at cut wages. Miseries that have no parallel in any other part of the country” were PROTEST AGAINST HOOVER HUNGER — WAR PROGRAM (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) of the counfly has been accentu- ated.” ‘The speech made it indirectly clear that the workers of the United States will have to face more hunger and | the danger of war. Faithfui to their promise of collab- oration with Hoover’s hunger govern- ment made in the autumn of 1929 at the emergency conference of lead- ing financiers and industrialists call_ ed to devise means of solving the crisis at the exepense of the worke William Green and Matthew Wi of the American Federation of La- ;bor offered them co-operation in drafting the starvation platform of the Republican Party. Matthew Woll and William Green will demand a five-day working werk and the modification of the Volstead Law to petmit manufacture and sale of 2.75 per cent beer, A five day working week with a corresponding | reduction of wages, against which} neither Green nor Woll advance the slightést protest, will not relieve the workers but the bosses who have proven to be to anxious to adopt the | “stagger” suggestion of President | Hoover, ‘The manufacture of light beer is the workers from their struggle for real and im_| mediate relief. | “Because of the controversy over Prohibition, interest in other phases of the platform to a large extent has been overshadowed,” declares John Shure, staff correspondent of the New | York Herald-Tribune, indirectly in-| dicating that the whole “controversy” | is a well-staged farce to cover up the | economic part of the platform. | This part does not call, it stated | here, for any new “cure.” It calls for a “furtherance of the policy be_ ing pursued by Hoover,” a policy of hunger and starvation. | al exists between the two countrie known by all the workers and by all) honest people all over the world, and | even b yJapan itself when they com, pare the policy of the two countries, As far as “f ship,” in other words gdod neighborly relat is con cerned, there is no hindrance to it existence and consolidation from the side of the Soviet Union, This, how ever, is just what Kamaiai and those Who guide his hand, do not want Kamaizi does not need the friendship of the Soviet Union. He needs—Si- Berta! And in ordér to get it calls for 4 war against the Sov: Uniot Explaining his ideas, he de_| ela: “Japan is a monarchy which strives for the peaceful co-existence and respect of the thutual interests of the peoples of the world. The Soviet Union, on the other hand, is a républic which is striving for dis- order, civil war and revolution and for dominance over the whole world.” Points Out Robber Aims of Japanese Imperialists. Kamaizi then comes to the unex- pected conclusions from all this: “But there can be no talk of estab_ ishing a paradise in Manchuria be- | fore the Soviet question is solved. The solution of the Manchurian prob- lem depends on the solution of the Siberian problem, Manchuria means life or death to Japan, and in the same way Eastern Siberia means life or death to Manchuria and Mon- golia.” Naturally, is it not @ question of | “Manchuria,” Kamaizi has some, thing quite different in mind. Para- dise—that is a fine word. The ac- tual cause of our worthy “expert” | drawing such unexpected conciusions, | herhakes quite clear hitiself when he writes: | “By an independent Siberia Japan) secures its complete economic inde- pendence from the rést of the world. If Manchuria, Mongolia and Siberia ‘We are not prepared to quarral about ideals, The contradiction which \ mnt are independent, then Japan has hothing to fear even should it be at, tacked by the whole world.” | prohibition, | were unable to crowd into the Watpest | work one or two days 4 week, never been to a Communist meét= | 16. /) encountered in the strike regions. Worst Ever Seen “I thought the minimum in the andards of living was forced on the y miners, but this is worse. ars ago from Texas and by agents of the sugar these Mexican and Spane e forced to le dwellings, chicken es work the elds twelve to fourteen Mrs. Walker told of the high rate lity, the prevalence of child of peonage forced on the beet workers. Stressing the need for quick action part of the workers in all sec- the country Mrs. Walker is absolutely crucial. If is true that workers else- pport their struggles their has tremendous possibili- they where m ties.” Funds should be rushed to the na- office, Workers International 16 West 2ist St. New York, Relief, ‘and to United Front Relief Commit- tee 1154 Eleventh St., Denver, Colo, ‘JOBLESS FLOCK TO HEAR FORD ON INSURANCE 1,500 in Rochester; Negro Workers Pack Lackawanna Hall (CONTINUED FROM Prohibition is not the most importe ant thing for the workers. In trying PAGE ONE) |to put the fight for beer in the place of the fight for bread, the capitalist political parties are putting up a fake | issue Insurance Real Issue. Neither will abolition of the pro- jhibition law and the 18th amend- ment do anything in the wey. of | abolishing unemployment. There is no more room in the liquor busiriess, if legalized, than there is in it now, when it is illegal. “We are againet as we are against all oppressive laws,” said Ford, “but we | put squarely in the forefront as the main concern of the workers, not the fight against prohibition, but the fi against starvation, ageinst fe cuts, against imper inst the deportation of born workers, against Jim Crowing and lynching of Negro workers.” Pioneers March. ‘There was great applause and cheering when Ford brought out the real issues of the campaign, from the workers’ point of view. The foreign | Young Pioneers made a colorful ef- trance, singing and march arotnd the hall. There was further enthusiasm |from the crowd when Ford declaréd that only a revolutionary govern- ment could give jobs to all. The mass meeting unanimously adopted resolutions denouncing the Dies deportation bill now before the Senate, and resolutions demanding release of thé Scottsboro boys and all worker prisoners in jail for labor a tions pledging to tivities, and resol Union. lear Ford. June 12 ay defend the Sov Negroes Flock to LACOKAWANA, N. ¥ Mail) —For more oe three hours, 850 steel workers. tents “of them Négroes, and =) pring who hall in this Bethlehem steel company town, applauded James W. Ford, vice. | presidential candidate of the bic munist Party Most of these workers, wo eae | sider themselves fortunate if \ ing before. They applauded Ford and showed réal pride in him as thei reandidate when he exposed the socialist lead= er of Lackawana who was présent at the meeting. Nearly All Jobless. ‘There are 20,000 workers in this city, and only 3,000 are employed, and these only part time. A plant which normally employs 9,000, hag @ crew of 300 now. The city goveshs ment is bankrupt, and could not evén pay police and firemen for the last two months. Evictions imeredse, and those workers who own own homes are losing them, oe, oom Ford in Schenectady Thursday. SCHENECTADY, N, Y., June l4= Thousands of leaflets are being dis- tributed to call the workers to Ford's meeting here in Crescent Park, June Ford speaks today in Sytacuse, and tomorrow in Utica, After speak ing here he wiil go to speak im Al- bany the next day. The Ford meét-a@ ing advertizes among the 15,000 in@e” off General Blectric Co. war! the Communist State toners whic, — ae HK RRY T ETRY