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RALLY TO INTERNATIONAL YOUTH DAY ON Worker Correspondence Epidemics Grow in Phila. As Result of Starvation 324 Cases of Infantile Paralysis in August (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Unemploy- ment and starvation are resulting in epidemics here that increase daily. During August 324 cases of infantile paralysis are admitted by municipal health officials, with 35 of the chil- dren already dead of the disease. The Officials claimed the pools were over- crowded, and ordered the pools more chlorated than heretofore. Malnutrition is not offered as a possible reason by these capitalist officials, Typhoiq fever has also broken out here as a result of the conditions, In the suburbs surrounding Phila- delphia conditions are even worse,| especially in the small towns in Delaware County. Worker Killed Seeking [ce on Hreight Train (By a Worker Correspondent) DETROIT, Mich—I witnessed a railroad accident a few days ago on the Michigan Central Railroad. Every morning, groups of workers gather around the ice box cars to get a piece of ice, because they have no money to pay for ice. One morn- ing, when workers, including my father and me,were collecting ice, an engine connected with the cars with such a bang that five workers fell off, and one fell under a car, getting both legs cut off. While the worker was under the car groaning, the breakman calmly passed by and paid no attention to his moaning, which could be heard plainly. The worker died from loss of blood. (By a Worker Correspondent) PINCONNING, Mich.—The Golden Pickle Packing Co. in Pinconning, Applicants Terrorized at Illinois Free Employment Agency (By a Worker Correspondent.) “ CHICAGO, Ill.—Each day there is a longer line of unemployed workers, going in and out of the Ilinois Free Employment Bureau. A_ detective sitting near the elevator. Once inside, the girls are not al- lowed to talk to each other. If a group start talking, they are told to keep quiet or get out, and this is emphasized by the calling of the dick if the girls do’not obey. No one is allowed to stay more than 30 minutes. They tell them to go out and come back later. The clerks admit that hardly a dozen jobs come in a week, Building Unemployed Council in Lackawanna (By a Worker Correspondent) LACKAWANNA, N, ¥.—We talked with workers from house to house, and after the third or fourth visit we gave them the address of the un- employed council. The result was that 26 workers in one day came to the unemployed council headquarters and signed up. overtime for holidays. Girls work nights during rush orders for 10 cents per hour. There are abcut 15 girls working, and they have not been paid regu- larly. The company owes them two months back pay. They promise to pay them, but so far they got one pay SEPT. 9th OHIO YOUTH WILL DEMAND RELIEF ON SEPTEMBER 9th To Hold Hunger March on International Youth Day On September 9th, International Youth Day, a Jefferson County Youth Hunger March will be organized to march into Steubenville, Ohio where | demands for relief for yuong workers and miners will be made from the County Commissioners. At the head of the march will be Tony Minerich, member of the National Committee of the Young Communist League and who is now on tour to mobilize sup- port for the Communist presidential candidates. A mass meeting will be held at which Tony Minerich will speak, ‘He will_expose the hunger policy of the present administration and urge the young workers to sup- port the Communist candidates. Minerich will speak in three other cities in the same county previous to the Hunger March, They are Amsterdam, September 5th; York- ville on the 6th; Dillonville on the ith and Bradley on September 8. At each of the mass meetings of these cities, Tony Minerch will call on the young and adult workers pre- sent to endorse the demands of the Youth Hunger March and organize a committee to visit the City Coun- cils demanding provision for imme- diate relief. Each one of the com~- mittees formed will be headed by Tony Minerich, who is widely known in the territory because of his lead- ership of the many -miners’ strikes that have taken place here. ' The march to the County Seat— Steubenville—on International Youth Day, the international day of struggle against imperialist war, will be closely bound up with the election demands of the Communist Party and Young Communist League. The following demands will be pre- sented to the County Commissioners: 1, County to keep the following soup kitchens: Yorkville, Amster- dam, Smithfield, Bradley, Wolf- DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1932 AGAINST IMPERIALIST WAR! Millions for War! } unemployment insurance the U. S. high power fire works as shown here. bellowed and is crawling back into While 15,000,000 unemployed workers are denied a cent for re! ad ef or government spends millions on such . A 14-inch disappearing gun has just its hole. Japanese Start Terror Drive in Chinese Cities Page 'rmmree U.S. FLAUNTS — | APPROVAL OF INTERVENTION See, Adams 0.K.s Med- als for Service In openly approves the role of American imperialism in the armed interven- tion against the Soviet Union follow- ing the World War. This is the clear import of the an- nouncement that Secretary of the Navy Adams has approved the recom- mendations of the Board of Awards of the Navy that the date for issu |Enthusiasm for Inte Despite Campaign of GILLESPIE, Ml, pie at the inter-state con Kentucky. A delegation ¢ administra ude all officers and men of the/are openly in fa y and the marine corps who en-| bulk of ed the service subsequent to the | Illinois, where a Noy. 11, 1918, and| going on for t tached to the American Expe-|® wage cut of 18 ditionary Forces in European Russia Reacts | district: offici a between Nov. 12, 1918,| twice voted it ac eee Enthusiasm w Admits Intervention eucipes ay sue and istrict Pr was the American forces 10 | tinois dintrigt nich co-operated with White | (Cheers For I, L: D. in the attempt to break] william Browde the backbone of the proletarian revo- | International Lab lution, Naw, with the imperialiss|a tremendous ove openly turning to war against the | dressed the conference Soviet Union as the capitalist “way |Setvices of the I. L. D. out” of the crisis, the Wall Street | tested strikers government has abandoned its policy| A Tank oe of refusing to admit that United|™oved that the 7 States forces were engaged in inter-! tempt tee vention. It intends to honor mem- | County offi bers of the forces sent to fight | machi against the establishment of the first | miners and workers’ and peasants’ government. | alread; se Armed Marines In Provocative Actions In Shanghai, Japanese Gendarmes Raid House In Peiping Workers’ Quarters | Entire Third Japanese Squadron Now Mobil-| ized at Shanghai In New Blood Bath Threat BULLETIN The headquarters of Chiang Kai-Shek’s “Communist Suppression” army in Hupeh Province, Central China, was thrown into ce: yesterday by the appearance of*a squadron of Chinese Red Arm: ation planes Previous to Adams’ action, only|miners and woundir members of the military service who ; others. served between the dates of April 6, 1917, and Nov. 11, 1918, were eligible for the award of the victory medal. 2 |The government thus kept up the)” seaeiptitae |pretense that American forces were | ancbury. a local leader with not engaged in the intervention | inclinations, against the Soviet Union. | Now, however, the official publicity | report of Adams’ ai |the navy press room, Campaign of Slandner This motion concentrated Ansbury w repeat- nt to the limit admii RANK AND FILE DEMAND VIGOROUS STRIKE ACTION AT MINERS’ CONVENTION Siberia ete Bie Fvke oral Oppose Musteite A ipt to Make New Union WASHINGTON, Sept. — The ° 1 ‘ ° : ges Hanger aed War Goverment Main Problem and Let Strike Decay nal Labor Defense Slander Against It miner delegates gathered in Gilles- in Hlinois, Indiana and e the Rank and trong that the United red to agree to the cut, though nofion to refer the 2 and relief to the lared the T. L. D. ional Relief to undertakings it the miners.” He ace of the fact that f so far in Illinois coal by the W. I. R., and munist Party has offi- t proposes mili- the strike, rank and file t supports the strike any- which is the exact opposite of x the strike. Lusteite Tactics apts were made by Musteite ers to make the formation of a new union the central point of the conference, instead of winning the nt Tactics ‘ile Opposition delegates winning the _ strike, which action only the an have a union of their ey called for preading the strike through marching on Franklin County, Election of rank and file strike mittees in all locals, federated on a sub-district and district basis, hands and the district alone to negotiate with rt to legalistic injunc- court action in place ke and picketing, be- illusions and take every month, and the rest of their) Run and Glen Robin. | which bombed the Nanking troops on the Peiping-Hankow Kailway, Mich., 30 miles north of Bay City, employs girls for 10 cents per hour, and they work 10 hours per day. If you work three-quarters of an hour, you get paid for only a half hour. No pay is ih the hands of the company. | They laid off 10 girls last week, and | these girls were only given their last week's wages, and never told when they would get the rest. New York Increases Donations in “Daily” Fund Campaign Minneapolis, Seattle, N. Carolina, Denver Fail 2. $3.00 a week for unemployed and part-time single workers, where the County does not have soup kitchens. uh 4. Workérs committee to dis- tribute the food in the soup kit- chens, 4." Free school supplies, clothes and hot lunches served at the School for all school children, 5. No discrimination against Ne- groes in giving -out relief in. any form, One hundred seventy-eight dem- onstrations will take place through- jout the country on IYD, traditional day of struggle against Imperialist Japan Prepares New Blood Bath The openly announced plans of the |Japanese militarists for new blood baths against the Chinese workers of | Shanghai and other Chinese cities |were pushed yesterday and Saturday | with a series of terroristic actions by | the Japanese forces in several Chin- \ese cities, deliberately aimed at pro- | voking the Chinese masses In Shanghai, armed Japanese ma- |Tines almost precipitated a clash be- | tween Chinese workers and the Jap- |anese marines when a group of ma- |vines in an auto truck ran down a | The Red Army planes were captured from the Nanking forces and, in some cases, brought over by deserting Nanking troops. Se ae. 4 ‘Urge Protests. on Ruegg | Sentence \AntiImperialist League Denounces Outrage NEW YORK—The Anti-Imperi “after the signing of the Armistice by of the the Allies and the Central Pow i bias ibe during |the United States Naal forces were ta anthers kare Ww. ged in ‘guarding’ the ports in : Pb the strike: northern Russia and vicinity and in| provided the on r’s Note.—Capitalist press | co- 3 with the miliary and | naal fore the Allies there.” The what, “co-operating” means in this | publicity “handout” does not state | sense, but the Russian workers strug- gling to build the Soviet Government | knew it meant fighting for the return of capitalism and tsarism in the USSR | Used U. S. War Ships Against Soviets The U. S. S. Galveston and the | U. S. S. Chester arrived at Archangel \in April, 1919. The U. SS Des Moines, the Yankton, the Sacra- latter part of the Mi and the Sacco-Vs and from the fir fender of the Scottsboro boy The delegates were un Ss say the Gillespie confer- for a new union without or Lewis in it. Our corre- has not informed us on this Green Calls tor Workers to March! Against What? y 4 to Send Funds During the Last Three Days ($i. (nS, demonstrations will| Chinese street railway worker and| sod a statement. yechaday oa the (Monto and a number of Eagle boats,| A warning of the Trade Union| ‘Then he goes on to urge mass bring the election demands to the|callously flung the injured worker| sentencing to life imprisonment of | With 12 submarines, chasers and| Unity League, contained in a recent meetings, demonstrations By eet See Pasay: Bees received | Prager 1.00 Unit 9 10.00 | forefront. into their truck and started away. | tne Rueggs by the bloody Nanking | Patrol tank steamers reached Arch-\| statement calling on w 's to take | of r of Labor. It sounds totalled. $909.66 "ah intréene “or aly sia, Ge ae we ves Instantly Chinese workers swarmed|eovernment. The statement follows |20gel later These yessels remained | Labor Day away from the A. F. L.| something like a call to arms—but Suen qPievices zesalptsy, whieh being) total Severnson 33, Unit 3 30 Petar neicmenk Sots The! in part: “The recent sentencing to | until June, : bureacracy and make it a day of ing lacking, What is District 2 New York tops the list with| Hart ‘5 Unit ree: RY forced 40 take action against the life popr ner oe Paul (ey Gex- During the: period eared by class struggle, has already be 2 cut, or unemployed $216.13, an increase over Wednesday's con-| Harding 25 Unit 11 5.00 |trude Ruegg by the Nanking gov-| Adams’ approval, other naval vessels} fied. That warning was o] " tributions, District 8, Chicago, sent less| De Pietro 105 Unit 6 3.50 tapaneso marines in order to steMlernment under the orders of the!attached to the U. 8. naval forces| reactionary officialdem ot | r plan worker will see in a than $10 as against’ nearly $90 the day |Mardimi (35 Unit? 3:00 |the anger of the Chinese workers. teading i (aise petits was one es Bet) eaten .Otcrs | een cee spans Noe | before, With hitherto unflagging. activit, 45 is +7. | leading imperialist nations was operating in Turkish waters were | While singing the 1 5 01 a hy the Unicee ravi onninn ase s 'y, | Friend Unit 5 3.10 The marines were taken to the poilce of the most outrageous acts of sup-| z Pie eaReatie ten aces na n calls for “highpurpose*—but PEN a Po Sea cod aad erp or va Ce ce RR Ree station where four of them were de-| pression carried on by the world im-|“S°d im the evacuation of Russian |) io" Conaitions to the wh He calls to march— Despiie ‘appeals te send afl funds in| Priend ‘28. J. Leesos 1.01Ousted from Y. C. Li, |e” apanese Government) rerialists against the revolutionary | “0n-Combatants” from the Crimea | control, would at the sa He does not say. His mediately Inte the Dally, no matter how | Aneel Rivera 35 L. Maldonoto 10.00 for Wh + U. Ly | has early protested against their! movement since the murder of Sacco | Nd other ports in the Black Sea. | atement is more import- small, the following districts for the past | Bese : arlin: 10.08 b=Aigy it ini | arrest. impri: “Non-combatants” in this case, | es not say than for what 1.B 25 ae 1 and Vanzetti and the imprisonment , t say r wha' psiped lade etre becca x. Testrepo. 125 Barblerl ey 4 Chauvinism ae Exodus From (Chapel of Mooney and Billings. {means the fleeing Tsarists, nobemen | s le - sae or ae havin, t not Saket L. Restrepo 25 NN, 103 ily armed “sight-seeing excur-| « ; i i e ital ied | se cuts. © does not Call for office! District 9, ‘Fioningetss tte, Beatiies Sec. 7, Unit 11 H.Casainuovo 05, NEW YORK.—A jury of young gine er enanineds ite the Chapel | Repub en teed cae Sea bs ou ae = fake ai capa ht for unemployment insurance 16, North Carolina; 19, Denver. No funds | Clien “$0 Mt. Costa 10] white and Negro workers, at a mass | district have caused a mass exodus (S'S Most vehemently against this ae en the Russian tollers re- relief, He does not call for work- " ‘asner ‘50 3. R. Riechib “10 | trit whi i r Vanking ce . | volted. | contr the uni ‘and today District 18, ‘Milweukee, Chinsky :50 Carty Omt 1.00 |, ENP, nanimously decided to ex-\ty1 memory of the bestial butchery | eeee gear rapid Cee eee ote -| paragraph: equality for the Negroes. The Daily Worker looks to these districts | I: Jasobson 1.00 Hogar o5/pel from the Young Communist |of over 10,000 civilian men, women|S0Ve™nment, as well as the B navy also “co-operated” with the | “Because I feel so keenly. ot call for struggle against to wake up to the fact that It must se, | Rosengard ‘50 Pera Omt .20| League, Herman Sachs, member of ildre: wae French and Japanese governments, | Japanese and other imperialist forces h adept imperialist war. These are the strug- ceive $500 day, in. this emergency, in| #- Cohn ‘50 B. Tacolina 95) the Yorkvill i an dehildren last January when the| responsible for this atrocious crime |); tensly, the tre: : pee 7 order to operate, No worker from Fierida | OT@2ick ‘50 Scararitino ‘05 | the Yorkville Section. The charge of | Japanese carried out a murderous |7sPonsible eA alpsedks at Vladivostok, Siberia. of the problems with w gles the Trade Union Unity League to Seats” wants “the” “Duity® to stop | PE nit 2 Metomascta “to which Sachs was found guilty was | bombardment by bombing planes apa aera Tesch call — Bae a nation and we as an es on, sec. 15, G. A le acl i A ‘ puting e. ba alist ague calls aed * daeeticl to cates Ps Sea aE FORE tang M hotonicdinis anltdeas ie oiler ,mperialist / warships and land artillery against! 4. ‘ai! workers’ organizations in the | “Pialii Talk” Confiscated in Cuba | labor movement are cc n’s subtlety consists in this: the Daily. The next few days are crucial, | J Bespalow 25M. Sala 20 hatred in the ranks of 4 Jue | {iis unfortified an densely Pop-| tnited States to send protest reso-| HAVANA, Sept. 4—All copies of| YieW the approach of cis wage cuts, unemploye Beare ner acne? Santee 6 Primos 10H: Vacker iad ee es gains ee Pg ive ulated proletarian district. lantions to. the Obinese eprom PGi (eRe Pa. a Amarin thagasine | cle vith desconcern ‘acketeering, Jim Crowe * * * mt 5 3 S rot. i phen of ne if " i s r Bh | ni st and in ia war—| ij 4 eae Bit dearbor 2% sear Yoo] ten ‘with this vicious boss poison, eee Oar ERAN trnkcas an | Weeblogton and to the Chinese con- | were confiscated by the Cuban Gov- ee ee ; cand Japesaliat: wat ty lenocing Amount received Friday, Sept. 2 _$909.64| i. Rubin Brahe hl 1oo| With which the bosses strive to di-| that bombardment, is i bi | sulates in their respective citics.”" {ernment for an article attacking the| <ome of the aed the hicks v tl Tl be your’ leader!” “And Total to date $0,247.78] B Blumenfeld 28. Harry Dents! too| Vide the working class and set white Matedn ice inceeceret| CRT SG) OTST Machado regime. | pose, missi d lofty Ideals wi r er hi 2. war agai Dist. 1, Boston E. Cohen, ‘25 Sol Cohen. 4 100 and Negro workers fighting against Bee enee wer ta Bony at This article is said to have caused | whicl i aioe eed Pe eene tlleraaerte E i i js ‘i s vhich it was d nown enemy—but whatever it P. Panteley, F. Altschuler 1.00] N. Singer 1.00 Sam Kroll 1.00] each other, re Shanehal: ft: readiheas: £6r the’ un r zine. | “Gre re y C. P. Unit 5.00 Gass "50| Carp "35 b Goldstein ron . leashing of the new blood bath , = |® large demand for the magazine. Green Calls For Der: is your enemy. New Ipswich G. Jackson 100| H. Arbor (25 H. Aranowitz :50| Comrade Israel Amter, Commu-| which Japan is threatening to inflict | y | YCL 5.00 H. Weinstein 1.00 | Coll. by B. Houtos Dave Asch '50/ nist, candidate fo 1 th ‘hi | eit “ sagsen ta a FR See John E. G. 1.00 A. Racheis .25| Karahoine 50 8. Latakin 150 x governor of the|on the Shanghai masses in her at- | Signal Shoe a. Bernstein Toa: touts to aichman 30| State of New York, acted as prose-| tempt to force them to buy Japanese 1 ° ° . Nuelet 1.30 P. Waters Co, .50| T.Reynolds “10 3, Apple ‘$o|cutor, Sachs conducted his own de-| goods and to discontinue the anti- ; " 2 5 00 000 \ \ . S } t ie ie Eat eee oe ee 30, Babe 50 oe and conrad 4 himself out of Tepenete boycott movement, Brae saga E 3 ) OY & ers m ovie U nion End Unit— piel Pf eone t ‘to Korte ian wn mouth. He advanced the op- . 8. Imperialists Quiet on TOL, ana xposes Total Dist. 1 $20.80 M. Mitelonea 25. Bertalmy ‘59|Portunist and completely erroneous Mobilization ° . edi? fe r MV nee Dist, 2, New York Duskoin 115. Bzibson 1100| “theory” that the Negro question is| The Japanese flagship “Idzuma”| U.S. War Mongers P W t 2G M d H rer ie. pita: ‘eas Bill Houtas 4 haa bed not a ce re of the Ameri-| arrived at Shanghai yesterday and ibid YOUU (i U co Ww 6 ern omes Blergarten 1.00 1.00 "00 8. Kon 00/2 working class, but only a very|took up its former position in front| PARIS, Sept., 4—In the largest de- je Becttoporo se, X00 M. Levin 1o0|™mor problem to which the reyolu-| of the Japanese Consulate in the|monsiration neld here sines the tras j rege See The: eto ae 2.00 3. schwartzman 1.00\tionary workers need not pay much | International Settlement without pro-|mendous Sacco-Vanzetti protest ac- During the last four years 2,500,000 | Rebecea Sosol 1.10 1.00 tay ae 10.08,| attention. test by the American and British | tions, thousands-of French workers on ‘orkers in the Soviet Union have | ho} tide rat 1.00 be Sec. 8 (rec'd, 8 Chen 50] He further exposed his complete authorities in the Settlement. It Saturday night demonstrated th ven provided with homes in newly | ‘July 23-Aug. 8 5.00 Ross ne ea 31)— ——-|domination by bourgeois anti-work-| Will be remembered that last Jan-|hatred of imperialist war and their |Duilt modern houses. In the same wait 1D, Sec2 2.00 Bagrey 5 icy Hoagie fc hi ia 2 216.13) ing class ideas by declaring that Ne- | U&@Y these powers permitted theliron determination to defend the Period millions of workers have been | Workers Co-op, 14.000 | Figo Mthuantan Plenic,’ Baltimore 4a] sroes should stick to themselves, | Japanese to use the Settlement 85 &|Chinese People and the Soviet Union, | flung out of their squalid homes tn i i ~—|Negro speakers sh ase of attack against the Chinese} at an early hour, thousands of CaPitalist countries owing to their! Problems Club 3 "Mig Senor pide tae woke Heer Henmailiecoe eo in pbee pel aee cana a the Same | workers began pouring into the huge | mability to pay high rents. Sec. 4, Ui 50 Pronevich 1.00 Dist. argued, i open fire on the| Salle Bullicr which 0 ked Bec. 7 ual 15 5.00 Grelitzki 1.00 | Dr. Realla 2 Bor sane Bs sinas 50 ee ML LH Ene Chinese soldiers and _ revolutionary 2 Marea, ‘while Liisidesae ann ee “es piicart aaeveee urate Sect, Unit 29 425 8. Brusin {oo | Sonrewesle, , 80 SteveR, Ambridge "| white workers “will be antagonistic | WOTKers if they tried to attack the|could not get. in gathered in the | me 4.03 Weintrob Tools wire bad Picnic 350/ and the Party will “lose votes.” Japanese positions in the Settlement.| streets. These workers were brutally | The housing problem in the Sov- 2.00 Haniedvitzkt — 1.00) A. Slobodzian 25. Total, Dist. i025| Amter pointed out that if Sach’s Prepare Jehol Invasion attacked by the military and police |iet Union is however by no means Be ae ary area 50, bourgeois ideas were tolerated in the At Peiping, North China, armed) anq fought back militantly, Several | satisfactorily settled. ‘In the same 2.00 100 level et: Wide NOTHING revolutionary movement, unity would Japanese gendarmes raided a board- policemen were hurt. Over fifty of |period the number of town. dwellers 1.00 100) wm. Pluckett 5 700 |never be achieved between the Negro | Shouse in the Chinese city and/ the anti-war demonstrators were ar-|in the Soviet Union increased from te 100 Ukrainian Women's Ed. Assn. 100| and white workers. Amter denounced eae an anti-Japanese fighter| rested, but were later released. The |19 to 27 millicns and by 1938 it is} 400 100] Total. Dist. 7 ‘oo | SA0h's ideas an ddeclared them in| Tounced charese, ‘The cena ese nnn Police attacks spread to the hall expected to inerease to 48 millions E 1.00 Dist. 8, Chicago “"|complete opposition to the funda- ih -|where the assembled thousands de- | te housing plans aim therefore to 1.50 1.00} L. we. 7.00 Worker .50|mental program of the mander at Shanhaikwan has re-| fended the meeting, which was then |inerease the housing area available | . E Smith 1.00 Belleville U. C. G. Mikailof ‘25 | Party abl cine Young Goat quested all foreigners to evacuate permitted to continye. |from 126 millions square meters to * ike 1.00 Klmoviteh 1.00 ott by W. Toten "FG eet <i veneue on the Negro question, and Risa Stn Reeder es The speakers included Professor 286 million square meters which Klein 1.00 Yuchnevitch — 1.00] “ and G. Mikaihoft y —|recommended expulsion of Baehs ove rpre' @s preparatory | ronry Wadsworth, Longfellow Dana, means that the housing area will be Poleway 1.00 Kohan 2.00] N, Tolef 1.00 Total, Dist. 8 9.63 | without ae bik for Japan's long-threatened invasion tA aad sthe {more than doubled. From 16 to Borisoft 1,00 Zelikman 1.25] Dist 9, Minneay ee NOTHING lout any conditions for re-admis- f North Chi one of the American delegation to the 4 seat 100 F. Lorenko x if sion, The reco1 _ | 9 ina. On the same day, ar Wi 18 billions are to be invested to this | rer ac H Ghiis” Bee mayan eon NZ" "ggg |Imousiy aocepted by the Jury and |, Japanese puppet, state in MAN-” yay recon) held i Améterdamn who | ond. 00 “Jacobs ; . McCartney , applau ; | : eae ‘ > AY Pantiouk 100 ee é pulsion from the umns of the troops of the puppet Ms; vile and : Pree cuieee peiaa Pi é Be Kasner 1.00 _ Total 32.00| Dist, 1f, Seattte of the renegade Eat Mes ad government were dispatched to Man- ceri bs piroonenet Nieeas AOS meine smercnnne “extent | in the Magnitogorsk, U. S. S. Re i {ao “Brighton Bch, 41.00] Pt 3% canto 1, N recognizing in Sachs a fellow falter fhuria to xelnforce the Japanese) carrying munitions as far as Japan thi batons fe toe the ane ieete a seale will bea great help in f ‘Torsher tae WeGvomstet Oe me Cts to the working class, sought him out [Lea de oeideoglact thet gr <munitions which will be used (jem is one of the most complicated | .inereasing the number of new modern houses for the workers, bok Hy 1090 | Sone, Cg Branch 456 bees hind ie putea tig for admis-|heen held up by the heroic resistance | *88inst the workers all over the problems facing the Soviet Union. Seth one 4 Ivanowski 1.00 9.10 Tenegade outfit. of Chinese volunteers who are defy-| World. x From the begining of the war) i Ponieodl an $.00/ Total, Dist. 14 J ing the policy of the Nanking gov-|_ 7¢ meeting unanimously adopted throughout the civil war and inter-|more important tasks which de- aggravates the shortage of houses. Moskoviteh 1.00 31 ti Deke oe et TE MCER MOONEY IN LYNN |ernment of passive surrender to the |%, Tesolution denouncing the hideous | vention, and during the first phase | manded immediete attention, | “A eigentic step toward the solution Lipman 1.00 2.00| " “rotal, ‘Dist. 15 28°00 | Ri , Mass.—Mother Mooney and | imperialists, attempt by the American imperialist | of reconstruction practically nothing | Toward Solution of Housing Problem |of the housing problem has already : Levanuk 1.00 2.00 Dist 16, Charlotte norning | Richard Moore will address a mass to burn the nine innocent Scottsboro | was cone to alleviate the housing] Only since 1928 have the authori-| been made, however, in the last four Greenko Be 2.00 Dist. 17, Birminchem meeting here Sept. 6, at 8 p.m, at VOTE Negro boys, problem, ties in the Soviet Union been able years during the second five year Wilea 5 ‘$0| Jim Ceplist 1.00 H Schitiman 1.90 the National Shoe Workers’ Hall’ 190 eee | ei ; ° had he fed 4 During the war, civil war and inter-|to turn their attention to this prob- | plan the proletarian energy will un- 1,00 Total, Dist 17 Foo |O%ford St., under the auspices of the| _ Against Imperialist War; for the VOTE COMMUNIST vention enormous housing areas were |lem which is complicated by the fact | doubtly fully cope with it, getting a Rashtak 1.00 Dist, 18, Milwaukee notmng | William Heywood Branch of the In-| ‘defense of the Chinese people and Against Moover's wage-cutting | destroyed, and during the first phase |that the number of town dwellers is | stranglehold on this problem as on Pribish 1.00 1.00| Dist. 19, Denvor NOTHING | ternational Labor Defense, 4 of the Soviet Union } Policy, Grr ceconsiruction there were even! increasing enormously—a fact which | all others facing the Soviet Union,