The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 8, 1932, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1932 ’ Page Three | LANGSTON HUGHES SPIKES LIES ON NEGRO FILM By MYRA PAGE. (European Correspondent of | the Daily Worker.) MOSCOW, Sept. 7. 8 Cable)—The reasons (By for the postponement of the pro- duction of the film of Amer- ican Negro life are of a purely technical nature, the Meschrabpom Film Com- pany stated today in an in- terview with your corres- pondent. Asked about the rumors Seoffed at Rumor | Film Was Abandoned | In the meantime, the scen- ario is being re-written. The | Group will continue to re- | ceive their full salaries as called for by their contracts. | By MYRA PAGE. (European Correspondent of the Daily Worker.) | MOSCOW, Sept. 7. (By Ca- bl).—Langston Hughes, lead- jing Negro poet and writer and | '|a member of the Negro Film} {Group now in the Soviet Un-; fon today issued the following state- | gro Associated Press, with Loui Thompson and many, others of t group were interviewed by your cor respondent. They all expressed in- dignation at the utterly unfounded allegations carried by the foreign press that the film has been post- |poned because of politicdl consider- ja cardinal principle of Sovi S | is allegation was branded by | “oren Miller as a deliberate slander | against the Soviet Union by its emi “for,” declared Miller, have seen with our own en-| “we | gro} how | declaring expressed similar sentiments, “we have been accorded eyes this is the one country where all|every accommodation and the finest races and peoples are free and have | treatment and have received a cor- achieved real equality including the | dial welcome wherever we have gone. We have been afforded opportunities here that as Negroes and working people would néver have been open to us in any other country.” As guests of the Meschrabpom, the is life. The Soviet Union is the best friend of the Negro and all oppressed peoples.” | right of self-government. Louis Thompson, organizer of the; group recently completed Odessa, Sea district. within a few di of Central Asi novogorod, Staling: a tour of| the Black is 1 the Crimea and on id will v d and Dr dant ind troi, three, of centers of the US the R. Several members of the group have signed contracts for concert, theatrical and newspaper work, while one member formerly em- ployed in the U. S. Post Offce, has accepted the post of consultant in the Rationalization Department of the Sovigt Postal System, re- ceiving salary as specialist of five hundred roubles a month. He is one of those who intend to remain in the Soviet Union. apanese Fascists andPriests in War Ceremony COMMUNISTS IN ILLINOIS M E STRIKE DEBATE WITH MAIN BODY OF 42,000 - ue a a spread by Americah capital- ment to the press: | BILL THOMPSON ist newspapers to the effect | “The film “Black and White,” raj aga postponed on account of scennvio — _. that political reasons had in | Gitneulties, will be made in the | Expose Republicans’ duced the company to aban- | Spring. Newspaper reports that 1 | 5 t don the film, Meschrabpom | | and other members of the Ne-ro Jim-Crowism and sot, ronp are a in loscow 3 +: ‘. + i officials declared that, in the P without: tacts ace. ubeolutely vuti« Discrimination | first place, the film is not | true. Our contracts and salar‘es | with hrabpom continue to CHICAGO, Ill, Sept. 7. — Ex-| abandoned, but merely post: | October 26. The return passv ye | mayor Thompson of Chicago, sub- | r “ : 8 ” + poned; and second, that qe See | to the United States is guaroa- stituted for ex-governor Len Small] But New “Progressive Union” Leaders Chart there are no politica ide i 4 teed. Several members of the of Illinois in the debate before 4,000 | eee 2 sys ee ae 1 consid: Communist Lecder and Candi- | Group intend to remain in the Chicago workers, many of them Ne- Dangerous-Course; Dampen Militancy era Lage fee on d_ per- date for Vice-Eresident of the oe Soviet Union. | Many have already groes, in Washington Park, Sunday. | ie err agen ae a ar suade e Sovie tim 3 § es who immediately | secured positions here. I plan to The Republican Party spokesma ‘ a g ak y a pany to abandon this pee branded Loan egtaciied false the | use the next few months to mekn talked for only a few atria Gey Rank a en ak cpg ol Through Beny - | rumors spread by the capitalist | a study of one of the Soviet Na- . ing to say he and his party had wn ected Strik AC 3! ject. Work on the film will | Press that Meschrabpom had given | tional Republics.” | Christening artillery guns before they are rushed to China to /done something for the Negroes ot gomitnes eee e Committees! begin definitely next Spring, | %?,,it* Plans for the production of | Hughes and Loren Miller, both of wreak havoc and destruction in Japan's robber war, Chicago during the brutal attack on BULLETIN a film of Negro Life in America. whom are connected with the Ne- i “ them in the so-called “race war” WILMINGTON, Ill, Sept. 7. — Over 400 miners marched on the several years ago. He did not ex-| Northern Illinois Coal Co, strip mine here tq picket it today. The mine EPT Troops of Manchuokuo |e Sorts et assis) * a 3 oe my i | I 8 ' eer ene | Ww ] § EMBER OPENS ; bie Repisise Bact ies Sas of| GILLESPIE, Til, Sept. 7—Only)strike committee. ' . é any-|7,000 of the 42,000 miners in South-| But bury’ Cy | . ; i. eladct uth ut Ansbury’s policy committee | OoYrkKer Correspondence | Pu et State Desertin |thing ‘against the wave of lynching Jern Titinois are working. ‘There is a| went further. It ignored entirely the g ne jouth. pate i | strong strike sentiment and a strong of mass picketing in Colterville ’ iompson was followed by John jsentiment among the rank and file|and in Franklin County. Instead, { OF BANK FAILURES a Se ge at means ie the ee aL Elec- a nt new mass march on Franklin | Jerry Allard, the Trotskyite, inspired | ~ oa 12, ion Campaign Committee, Poin- | Co y.. Ent asm is hig mong mit TS. HARTEN WITH OGDEN WORKERS AILURES |one Army Corps Goes Over to Anti-Imperialist 2%, 0°2"NE2.c°toruee ant Com: | the miners ithe main seas cre, isting et, wo bo tthe AN Fighters munist candidate for congress, and |ters: Springfield, Taylorville, Peoria, nois legislature this week and “re~ | | Leonides McDonald, a Negro worker | Gillespie and Belleville. quest the right peacefully to proceed JIM CROW Gi ANG FORCE RELIEF 10 Idaho Banks Close - F and Communist candidate for gov-| But the leadership of the new) into Franklin County.” a ee On Sept. 1; Tie Up Volunteers and Partisans Massing for Huge jernor. aia Aviv retouressive Miners of America,”| Other members of the committee S peaananas a — ead *. . . , ese e] ie crowd, intensely rmed out 0: he Gillespie confer-|to the legislature are Dan Magill, Gets Under Wing of | Unemployed Council | Workers’ Savings Offensive Against Invaders interested, while they pointed to the [ence Sept. 3, is clamping down on|Crony, and “Father” McGuire of St. D P - i 4 . Republican Jim Crowism, the Re-| the strike enthusiasm. | Viators Catholic College. He is @ emocrat Party Lead> Fight Right in the face of Hoover's bra-| With the Manchurian volunteer and partisan troops massing for a huge | Publican refusal to stop Iynching Terrorizea In Franklin, |friend of John Walker and preached Dede ae yen lie about the financial crisis be- | Offensive against the Japanese inyaders, wholesale desertions are occurring | boaie airy Cele te reir The Hines ot Fanklin Coiinty| Coe ge hee iy aes 'y_a Worker Correspondent) (By a Wo:ker Correspondent ing ove | among the troops of the Japanese puppet Manchoukuo government: Yes- | 5 g | ; their iy | There are rumors that MoGuire is BROOKLYN, NY The “Rev.| OGDEN, Utah—Under the lead- a rea eae) re iw seen peing | terday an entire Manchoukuo army in the Pitaiying district went over to | Wage Culting and starvation of the Fale te etrusele coat ie ag tnd connected with “Father” Cox ang the ‘Thonfas 8. Harten hitched his wagon |ership of ‘the Unemployed Councils, | ~~) ay, bank failures | the anti-Japanese fighters, carrying the arms and large stores of munitions |JPless, Negro and white both, but| con wage-cut decreed by the oper-| “sc s) Bue Shirts. bin the democratic fimecrow. bard. |a committee of 200° warkers forced {continue to increase robbing thqu-| which had been furnished them by¢-—-—————_-._| Worse for the Negroes. ators and aereed to by the United|,.The, conference was attended by | wagon, it became known on August| the reinstatement: of relief for un-|S@%ds of workers of their hard-earn-| the Japanese. The army is com- The Communisis outlined @ cam- | ren) Workers’ officials, but they are |272 delegates, said to represent 34,000 21, when, under the auspices of the| employed workers which had been| °4 Savings. manded by General Yu Tze-shan, BOLIVIA WAR is pelgn of Negro and ‘white Workers | terrorised by the deputies and the| nes They elected @ scate ‘come National Afro-Protective League, a|cut off. While in August, bank failures| Who is reported to have joined the ees en Rig aria yibetoy fou (thugs of Edmundson, the Lewis| mittee, “prepared to meet all qpera- Necro organization backing the| Open-air meetings are being held|@mounted to 83, September opened anti-Japanese national revolutionary eeu Derarnnatibe id ed ‘Black | Henchman in Southern Tlinoi: Bare 301 8) Beit §. Of Oo-Cpet airman Democratic Party, the Rev. Harten| here at Central Park every Friday | With the suspension of ten banks as | struggle, TROL D as jare lashed by anti-foreigner hysteria | 9/80 declared, “certain allowances in wes nominated for Con7ressman-at- | evening to present the program of, the First National Bank of Idaho | eee cece and threats of deportation. the wage scale may be made in par- relly was held at the ely Trinity |the Communist Party. collapsed on the first day of the| is Pian Big Offensive. es — | | ticulgr cases,” which, in plain lan- Iorge from New Yor: Stete. The . month. This suspension tied up all is reported that the anti-Japa- “ ‘ Rejects Unity With Jobless. guage, means wage-cuts will be Faptist Chuch, Dekalb and Frank-| ,jat° Oden Jton Works here em-| the ‘workers’ savings amounting to | nese forces will open.s big offensive | Order New Advance in \2 000 BRIDGEPORT |The slogan of Pat Ansbury, the teed to lin Avés- Pe ale nec ae n hs me. | millions, ‘The exact number of work- | 0 Sept. 15, the date on which Japan Chaco Region | mg) | Musteite leader at the Gillespie con-| Stuyvesant Peabody, president of The Rev. Harten had previously | hase and ier tiias is x seh ers affected by the failure of the| Plans to extend formal recognition to ) ference was: “Conditions, not| the Peabody Coal Co., the largest in declared) he was a “non-partisan” |jated that the workers never rags First National Bank of Idaho is not | her puppet Manchoukuo state. In| ajesing that Bolivian outposts in |wages.” He fought continually to/ Illinois, stated today that he would candidate to “emancipate the Negro | now much the 5 known, but it is estimated that it is| the meantime, the volunteer and par-| the disputed Gran Chaco region were |evade the main issue of strike against | 0b deal with the new union. rece . pas ich money they will get. very large. en bierd A uiaicen ait oe attacked yesterday by Paraguayan | apa the wage-cut. He campaigned for a e meeting was followed by a par- bd * ° laring raids on Mukden and o' atrols, the Bolivi General Staff | - the six-hour day on the argument: ede to Public School 45 at Classon SAVIORS OF THE BOSSES atat he ee an | strategic centers. Railway service Parcoderea, oben adeieice GF ite Mayor Hides From Un fy Rill ring the. unemployed" fn DUTCH SE AMEN’S and Lafayette Aves. where Rev- Har-| (By a Worker Correspondent.) _| stating that the failure OF Rees ce ane clued troups, ostensibly in “pursuit of the employed with us.” He forced the committee | a wr ten and Edwin Coffin, Democratic! porryar w. y—one 7 See ae ee tae ese delivers t| A specially heavy mobilization | of |enemy patrols.” to turn down telegrams of greetings | - Assemblyman for the Eleventh Dis- , N. Y.—Ons recent eve- i fc u Both governments continue to push ” from the St. Louis unemployed coun-|{ trict, ke for the De ti ning I listened’ to three different So- | Crushing blow to the entire financial volunteer forces is reported occurring E Pp (By a Worker Correspondent) 7 J et, spoke for the Democratic Party. | Osotict sneakers in Olean, N. ¥., and|sttucture of Idaho. The editorial, long the Mukden-Haicheng Railway their war moves under the secret] BRIDGEPORT, Conn—Over 2,000| ‘is which led the magnificent strug- aS cde Hrsg ngeridticy pire fe me ‘a |however, cynically calls upon the | @nd in the vicinity of Yung-pen- vee vented tities and ae workers participated recently in ae oe ae ater’ one ered IC f —— * .| Chang. Sha fighting is taking | imperialist whose fierce rivalry for hunger march and demonstration. | Het, likewise re- 2 aa GAME ros bach way of Fesoulng the old partes, by Sic pee aaa oe place at Anta, Hailung and Tunhus|markets and control of natural re- |sthe march was from the Plaza to| {ected the greetings of the Interna- - on Wa Collapses ‘or a Worker Correspondent f . and south of Taonan. sources is the real cause of the pres- it 11, ere the rkers | tional Labor Defense on the plea,| Vi PHILADELPHTA, PaWhile the | THY lav great stress on the 2¢-| sptuman hearts were as k’nd and at. Gevisd olesir patWean the, GO| to nay te neute temed trese of the| “We Cat get slong without outsiders; SESS, Rates depositors of the Bankers’ Trust Co.,| combasnments ot Iwaukee, Of! rirestdes were as bright when there| A%ti-Imperialist Fight Effective. {semt-colonial South American coun-| city concentrated around the City|We Can take care of ourselves, and) 7415 se stall 9 Watch failed here a year ago, re- Sige ada tea!) any ng tee, was no such thing as the dollar ...| The upsurge of the national revo-| tries, The war policy of the Bo-| Hall, we don’t want to be associated with | ./,' sel ok al Holland, Sept. 7. | \eelved only 20 per cent of their sav-| Shore narteisants ae onstraHOns | ret, us not lose sight of the truly |lutionary wat is taxing the Japanese| livian Government is dictated by the) A delegation of ten was elected to, Reds.” | iccase statue caRGAR OE Gee ara jings, Robert von Moschzisker was or failed f pene fe clubbed | valuable things of life because our | Military resources and has caused a/Guggenheim and Standard Oil in-| present the demands of the Bridge-} Ansbury assailed Bill Browder, asjof a prs ig, preventing the sailing | Jawarded $55,000 by Judse Finletter | jailed for asking for relief. dollars are tried up or even if delay in the Japanese plans to push|terests which chiefly dominate Boli- nh h t when th ig od et ae ces oe ry ” Never once in the evening talk carer & bg port unemployed to the mayor. When|a Communist, when the latter spoke| The Dutch st for his services” in liquidation, Vor | aid any of them’ mention ning talk) have lost some of them.” Be Aivealcs, ete ee oe Wan eoohomy, aid sid ow wine | tne committes tried to enter the clty|befare the) conference and brought| government compact commtnans Bo ‘oschzisker's only excuse for grab- r I : 0 attack the Mongolian Peoples’ Re-|their Bolivian puppet government in| ‘ idarity fr eele Ps mmission 1 Moschaisker's only, excuse for gtab-|man discrimination and exploitation | Senator Walcott admitted that “the | public. In addition to rushing troop|the fight against the British for con- ty police So ee tO oat | cee soncomuy irom the Ta: | yesterday, with ths deminda ‘ot the i of the Negro workers, nor did they| cause of the bank faiiures has be by police with the order that a com- | ternational Labor Defense and Work-| Dutch Seamen's Federatt ings was that other lawyers would} ‘3 , ey _ as been | reinforcements to Manchuria, the|trol of the exploitation of the Chaco} f rt 1d go in and! ers’ Inter i | rks eration before have grabbed more, |i any shape protest against devor-|the practical forcing of small cor- | Japanese are increasing their efforts] region. wane ee Ricoiites, 2 ere’ International Relief. | them. tations of the foreign born. Here| respondent banks by large city banks | to bribe certain unreliable Chinese] The Paraguayan Government, on byl irs i 3 Browder was refused a chance to| Five companies agreed to the de- chativinien was quiet in evidence.|to wabsoribe to securities which had| generals who are now trying 1 ad-|the other hand, te bel ‘ The delegation went in to find) oy "although his speech of greet-|Mands of the seamen to maintain 4 “6 + - | the other hand, is being secretly sup- | yays -|F A 4 speech of greel-| A a be B Columbus Workers Mr. Hoffman soferring to a trip as been advanced to dizzy he'ghts by | vance thelr personal interests by! ported by the British who edd iF bses Buckingham conveniently ab-| 5 0." 'was met with cheers from the present wages until next March, The Force Release of i legal Re uber a Pid of pow pool pedi And yet some sec-| coming forward as leaders of the|jose out in the Gran Chaco if that| The Unemployed Council therefore delegates. iQ ' seb inlet did not agree, and | ney met in a fine, elaborately fur-| tions of the capitalist class ,Spread | national revolutionary movement, region passes over to Bolivia. Not! decided to present these demands at te citeady evudent 5 deabaee negotiations broke down. Pl It is already evident that Ansbur; * * * 7 Negro Jobless | e470": esi aioe kts water Yh tes oe ee content with sponsoring civil war be-| the meeting of the Common Council is learning John Walker’s trick of is in : | g is alk rick a iF a ay ae tell of the Social. | patens are responsible for the bank tween their puppets “in Brazil and| which was held on Thursday, Sept.| bursting into tears, a nt that May Stop Statendam COLUMBUS, Ohio, Sept. 6—The hand in Miliwaukeh ate EGE bil bag HUNGER MARCH other Latin-American countries, the| gn at @ p.m. The city hunger march | gained the UM.W.A. district presi-| and Ameres line mone they od Infemnational Labor Dafense Het’ haa | disdloss thst affiliation. with the two imperialist rivals are now un-| will be there to demand immediate |dent the name of “Weeping Johnny"|try to take the Soe en tee suecesded in getting out on bond|capitalist system of strike-breakers | a ee ete anne ia and | action. ; | Walker, Ansbury likewise shed tears] port, the Statendam, out on Friday even Negro jobless. workers. who|they preten dto fight. No wonder | VOTE COMMUNIST FOR I ete Re Ue d ahectct Ae Mel cata eee, Se eine the Nee uo of the Sona, and acréss to Holland. There is were artested as a result of an evic-|the police never molest vaather! c es, @ demand to ‘ during his last demagogic outburst. | s¢ talk ‘ ‘ tion struggle which took place lere|do the ‘coal miness or the searving| Eaual rights for the Negroes and Lae Geeta aah paar bere ated ere Pande biEh ies 18°] Not "isis fet Reparkie Setticmalte, |e gna Bsa Mook on Aug. 22. farmers of the West. These people| self-determination in the Black CRA \ TON FEL (i : factor Mints pace ppecge hoo raged 5 7 icy 1 ae arrest me wee the Negro| want real relief from their aoe Belt, E Geedtinattly ae forth | ie new cain dation a een workers is further evidence of the| while the socialists desire the masses Oe EL : Peeps ,,| tion and tract blanks | special persecution which, the white | to starve in sllznee. R.A. S. Unemployed Miners to International wes cults aie Se re Up. | and peated penetticer oth peal ruling class here subjecting the 4 e politi iS, m » in- “a shpat: 3 ¢ Neero workers to. Help Employed Fight Notes cluded, Keep quiet about it The. Hank and File Opposition as | campaigned from the beginning for as x VOTE COMMUNIST BUILDING SOCIALISM IN THE U.S. S. R. Wage Cut 3000 DYERS ON .STRIKE IN |eontrol of the strike by strike com-| All-Union Company For Trade Against capitalist terror; against oat weclnae te Carreney Eanands i. SRG: BROS eee Rena mittees elected in each local and fed- with Foreigners ? i i Pa. ei se ‘" erated on a sub-district and district | liad a torms ot suppresson ot tne | + OO recuction In urrency EXpands IN | 4 inceting of delegates of the Unem-| VIENNA. — Three thousand dyers olpo neg : : | ‘Anw ts basis, with tiations with the op- MOSCO Sak political rights of workers, USSR Increased 6,5 USSR As Turnover of |Plovea Councils of Lackawanna oe | Bee an aeme teye fe 66 LY 29 FUND beige nee the Ravan cbse istrict ANNOU W, U.S.S. R. " : oe | County, was held here Sunday to . The remicticsc anes Mes: | Against Imperial'st War; for the | Per Cent in 6 Months) Commodities Increase | discuss the next steps in the strug-|break the strike write scab ae ae Daily Worker Send UNCES THAT defense of the Chinese people and a gle for the immediate needs of the|merous collisions veel i = ally orker Sends | Money remitted by mail, cable or ken place.| Donations up to Tuesday noon, amount- : radio, b; idents of of the Soviet Unicn, ‘The Soviet food industry increased| Soviet currency increased from |unemployed workers in the county. jand scabs hae already ta . * . |Tadio, by residents of the U.S.A. x its production by 65 per cent during | 8,400,000,000 on uly 1st, to 6.800,000,-| Thirty-five delegates attended, re-|Communists are leading the move- 18 0 FAT te nee eet cot thls Greetings to Uj Elore | ana Canada, to beneficiaries residing the first six months of this year,|000 on September Ist, according to a presenting the Unemployed Councils | ment against, the acer $115 came from District 2, New York. On 13th Anniversar ,|in U.S.S.R. (Soviet Russia), will be -ccordinf to a capitalist press dis-| dispatch to the New York Times. of Scranton, Taylor, Old Forg, Dick- In this trying period for the “Daily, 'Y | placed to the credit of the named patch from Moscow. The gold reserve increased corres-|son City; Olyphant, Archibald, Ey-| FORCE TRIAL IN PEC UBAR | verna aa eeare grog beneficiary at any one of the Torg~ INTENSIFY THE ‘The increase was, however, regard- | pondingly during the same month so | non, Mayfield and Jessup. After the BUPGAR rece ae separ. “Branches. of. the. International | NEW YORK.—The 13th annivers- |sin stores located in more than 150 e4 as unsatisfactory by D.' Levitin, |that the ration remained at 13 per|main report, made by Joe Dougher, BUDAPEST.—It was officially an-| (ir order, chiefly in New York, are|aty of the Uj Elore, Hungarian daily | cities. ° . a member of ths Commissariat of|cent of the total currency in circu-| secretary of the Lackawanna Un- nounced that the men recently ar-| siready planning such affairs on a branch | printed in Cleveland, was greeted by| ‘The beneficiary in the U. 8. 8, Re Rloction Cam AIT || Seovis.. who sald. they the plan for |lation see Noaet Council; a lively discussion |rested, including Alexander Poll and seate, besides "etreulating collection sts) the Daily Worker yesterady. hs erence ie eee WUb D * 1982 called for a reanetied axeiwa- The Times correspondent admits | too kplace ‘a the beh which re- ne ren yet oe it planed. Nacentd | guiong, thele one Ste = Ceeraah ARVIN GAR it fi evistevice.”'a|actiolen Of toed, aunt ht ear oe t rts wer2 made on the conditions xceptic a yhout thi try have pledged sup- ‘ re ; 1 Every Worker Must Wear a bone ah) mee oe ene poreaunen ee aera eae rained bat of the unemployed in the various | but will be ee by the a bed port fo the financial appeal by taking Yo eg rade tactenidrty in the periad {ith oegatti ee ae Mt 4 = test | the tion of the Dat a y ref ocpe 2 FOSTER-FORD With unmereiful Leninist setf-erit|the fumdamental reason for the in-| cities. ‘The proposal recently ad-| The idighant. wate O° Eis. | meeting for. the next few weeks. of {ts revolutionary Communist lead-| tn the event that. the beneficia icism the Soviet official attributed | rease is that ‘the new construction | vanced by government officials to|against the planning of new murders | meni oe oe ate affairs are difficult to] crshin, Uj Elore has stood in the |resides in a town, where th ry : the unsatisfactory result of indus-|8"d industrialization program far | use the a ee Ae eee ee hae cart Mis note ee a ae Horas rie rong here louse |forefront of the fight in defense of |branch of the ‘Torgsin, desired a . § no 8 T 4 i t¥¥ai activity to a poor supply of raw|‘T0M slackening is being pushed with | ‘ng Was see aii tte Camp aIEN MUS GO TO arrested | TateSinedue is obteined through sate of|the oppressed Hungarian masses and | modities will be mailed to him from m materials and carelessness ix faking |Tedoubled energy throughout the|a forced la he-county. loan Feresuments, a ratfle and s ealeetion. | |as raised high the banner of strug-|the nearest shipping base of Torgsin, steps to preserve perishables country.” 4 A resolution was adopted embody- ‘ Pee ‘These gatherings will help get the Daily) .1, against oppression of the Amer- The foll si B U i AM Ay Although there 1s a shortage of|ing the main demands for the un- Worker out of its financial crisis. Speak | ; ri foreig1 a) oe e following companies are ON un- | BRAZIL FEDERAL TROOPS CAP- er out cichbors, friends, shopmates! | ican toilers, native and foreign born. : A A consumption commodities, the total| employed and part-time employed. TURE TWO TOWNS. AFere as neh 68 you ean, and rush it into authorised by Torgsin to re- Ban on Soviet Trade commodities in circulation are stead-| The conference instructed the new- i the office, 50 E, 13th St., New York, < SER ceive money and/or issue mer= $20 a Thousand Hit U [aI We 1m ily increasing as industrialization re- |ly elected county executive commit-| RIO DE JANEIRO.—Two towns, bad * pau i VOTE COMMUNIST chandise orders for trarismis- S Us. CYKers, quire increased production and cir- | tee to take steps to organize a coun-|Mogymirim, an important R. R. cen- | Amount | new gine tes ey al Against Imperialist War; for the sion through Torgsin to persons in large quantities fays Cotten Exporter culaiton of productive commodities, | ty hunger march to the county seat.| ter, and Pinheiros, were captured brie Feber $217.68 ceipts (list defense of the Chinese people and residing in the US.S.R. od P' machines, etc. Another resolution adopted deals| by federal troops loyal to Getulio | rq, to date $8,038.00, follows next a 7 hi : of the Soviet Union. Amalgamated Bank of New York $3 a Hun dre d MOSCOW.—Tens of thousands of with the 20 percent wage cut which | Vargas in the course of, the new gen- cue ae day) $118.75 ete aca we vat a the coal operators intend to put over |eral offensive against the rebel forces | | District 1, Mase, oot nie © sta5.00, —_ Deru rans} ‘orporation ARAVA Water oH tea ee Soviet Women to Spend ipa the Geek {ae ase of the state of San Paul. : oa Loo Dsttel Fa, | nist. 8 chleare Tos German American Express Company ‘ * rs. , Mutanen 5 00! unit 2 1.85 1 Send Money with order or || American government would utt its|2 Years in Arctic Area |thempioyed councils to organize the ae ot Ee eae pics 9. Te SRE 1 Orr ip ee ed eran aak yes will send C.O.D. ban on trade with the Soviet Union, pawn unemployed of His county in 4 solf- |TOLMSH PEASANTS IN UPRISING | rotat Dis, 1 8.75 Total Dist. 8 $8.00) tat George 3.00 FF. 8. U, s.09| Postal Telegraph-Cable Company .O.D, it was declared here by Samuel C.| MOSCOW,U.S.S.R. — Four Soviet| darity struggle with the employed BERLIN. — The Boersen Zeitung pitas & ey oe ute et OE ONY er ens A. dL, 1.00) Public National Bank & Trust Lamport, en ee fied soientists who fre returning from a| against the wage cut. reported pees toe ou Polish | Ainerican Liths District es i por petal Company 0" exrortcr, after intervi ing iet |two years exploration of the Arctic peasants in the western raina, | yanian W.L.A, 1.50 Thos, Richter 1.00 ICOR Br. 10.00; Radi pontine 5p wigs officals. soviet tinton myNorthermiand will bo replaced by near Volhynia and Polisje. ninite Party 0.00 ee ae aLaS pe eres [Rivet ed arene Ss istrict or from Lomport said the Soviet inion | four more observers, one of them a OMMU! A strict censorship on dispatcties | Or. M. Mls! 3 OR ee 09 Total Dist. 14 22.00) . cou sect 25 Lage of ee ae thal cs lish bes reporting the uprising was establish- ay colina eet Werk ianguet manigren 1460 w. Bist, 15 Conn, Office of the General erican surplus cloth. He stat ie| The four returning scientitsts were Unemployment and Social ‘In- |ed. according to this newspaper, by fy 1.99, Unis 468 1.80 ——. W. Simon 2.00 | j Py had Bean Ragouiing a textile deal| headed by a acetone Ushakov. es the expense of the state the Polish eoverament sneak fr tartinkeviteh 1.00 sotat Dist, 6 927.06 | Total Dist. oe al Rep res en tativ e of Communist Party, UL S. A. for his and other firms, They are in good health on the Yee-| | The uprising started about al ATM 9 aook District 7 Mich. |" 'N. ‘Mak’ Nothing Dit..16, N.C. notning| TORGSIN in the U.S.A. The restrictions on Soviet trade | breaker Sibiriakov. employers, month ago when a number of villages | “‘s." Hook 2.00 V. Kass 0! District 12, Disttict 17, ry ¥ P. O. Box 87, Station D bod part of the official gees "The We who with three men were burned down by policemen who B. Todd 2.00 vi orga Nothing: boutcrne nothing] 26 1 Fifth Avenue . S, imperialism, and coincides companions replace them in the failed to collect taxes from the in- gees kt we re District 18, istrict 18, take ame D ite attempts to brooke war against | polar expeditionary activity is Trina lol ahe ts experienced in polar ex- habitants, The Boetsen Zeitung sald anne saan Eevee 6.50} "Cat, | Nothing | Montane’ xotniog| New York City, N. Y. ‘g-4 usinova, Althoough on! years lons e continues, M. Gardner 150 Total Dist, 7 7.00/ Edgar Altenburg 5.00 Colorado Nothing | Sener ° ’

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