The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 19, 1932, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBE R 19, 1932 Imperialists Mobilize Troops As Mass Anger Rises Over China ® Worker Correspondence Ready for Strike in Niles Plant, Says Steel Worker | Republic Unit Driving Men in Sheet Mill De- | partment at Terrific Speed | SEES ARON Te Seine (By a Niles Worker) NILES, O0.—The workers in the Niles plant of Republic Steel were ex- pecting to be called on strike when the mill opened up Tnresdav last week after a shut down, and were disappointed when the fact that the Warren | strike had already been teri ated kept the S.M.W.I.U, from calling them out. The men are yery much dissatisfied on account of the rotten conditions in the different departments, thes—— pec system and the coming wage-|mor than another crew, the roller are only getting 2 to 3|0f the crew producing less the day | . which is not a living for their |beforg is called into ‘the mn and e is given a real! calling down, + trouble in the Niles mill on ac adieg 1 his abineeiae elke iva VOUT: mill the | has of the new automat: sly called “the jackyr icover mill, liminated betw (replacing two ci unt place.” Then the roller takes it out en his crew. men Factory is Like Jail mplete sheet mills} The men in the Niles plant of Re- which had be: operating double | public Steel are worse off today than , 32 men to a turn, 3 turns a/men in the penitentiaries. Rollers and also throwing out of em-|in Niles are not allowed to leave ployment auite a few workers from | their standings—that is, when their the sheer floor). Jiron is being sheared, they are not Call in A. A. |even allowed to go over and see that There is no scale of wage signed /it is being opened alright. for on the automatic mill. The shear- nan had 4 days pay coming and'is supposed to stay at his place of on the mill|work—you are not even allowed to loublers|go out and walk around between and maichers—$2.50 a d satchars heats to get some air. even when it end roughers — $3.25; pair-heaters — jis insufferably hot. If you want to $2.50, and rollers between $7 and $10.|go to the restaurant, you have just The men ere demanding a scale of|cne decor to leave by and come in. wages, but the commany has not ae floors around the mill are mark- riven it, Ben I, Miller, vice-presi-|ed cut with white paint in four-foot cent of the A.A., has been called in} walks and you must walk in between to settle the question “without any |the white markings. If you should ble.” ‘happen to get out of the line you are liable to disc’-rge. At the Niles ~">nt there is one boss lim particular that. should be exposed wn the stendings teiting the menj|to all workers. He was formerly a to hurry. They ask “how many pairs | roller, and a rotten one at that, and ” 2 sou how much jhe tries to tell the men how to do reduce to enable the com-| their work when he doesn’t know y to make a pro‘it. If one crew | himself how it should be done. happen to m ake a heat or so'name is A. J. Elias. nin the sheet mill depart- are driven to the highest speed- pessible. The bosses k up and His ater - Shut Off for Over 500 Workers’ Families in Gary GARY, Ind—The conditions in| y have rapidly worsened; out of 12 banks in Gary there is only one ypen. More and more men are laid off each week. Two wag> cuts in less than a year’s time, one of 10 r cent an danother of 15 per cent .feiially, and, others unofficially. The bosses in the mills forced the nen to plant “Hoover Gardens.” They give most of the men one or two days a week so that they can’t get help from the city and charities. The charities refuse to give milk to those families who do not have chil- dren under one year of age. The city doctor, of the Board of Health, Dr. ee published an article in the pa- 2 fa. | Council. i The D. W. must be spread to the | | masses, and we workers must help financielly. The D, W. did not ap- peal to me when I first began to read ig about two years ago, but now I don’t feel right until I have read the Daily every day. —A Worker, Plan Texas Workers’ Circulating Library | HOUSTON, Texas—In many of the outlying towns of the south, like Houston where the Party is weak, we are almost totally without literature. Particularly higher priced books. Now, many comrades in the larger centers possibly have books on the shelf that are not being used, such as; Essentials of Marx, State and |Revolution, by Lenin, and Foster's latest book. If some comrades will send us such books we. can have a circulating lib- rary among the workers. The writer will be glad to from anyone about this. Lewis Hurst Gen, Del. Houston, Taxas. per recently that there are 500 fam- ‘lies without water, but of course we know there are more. He also said he would have to condemn the houses | that they live in, because they were menacing the health of the city, which would mean at least another 2.500 people on the streets of Gary. The Unemployed Council is turn-| ing on the water, gas and electricity of all cases that are reported, and is also moving in the families that are evicted. But it is physically im-| possible to take care of all cases with | the forces they have. That's where! the Daily Worker is a big help, be-| cause it organizes and makes more militant workers for the Unemployed hear | Build 2 workers correspondence group in your factory, snup or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. WORKERS and FARMERS GOVERNMENT This Post Card should be in every worker’s and farmer's home — 50 cents a hundred — $4.50 a thousand. It can be ordered at your district, or direct from the Communist National Election Campaign Committee P. 0. Box 87, Station D, New York, N. Y. Each and every ‘man in the plant | WORKERS SMASH THROUGH TERROR| Hold Anti-Imperialist Demonstrations | WASHINGTON, D C., Sept. 18, — The Wall Street Hunger and War Government yesterday claimed a local success for its Nanking pup- | pets against a force of the Chinese Red Army surrounding the. important | city of Hankow, in Hupeh Province, | Central China. The State Depart- | ment attributed to its Hankow Con- | sul the information of the local suc- | cess of the troops of the butcher | Chiang Kai-shek. It gave no details lof the Nanking success, except that \three important points southeast of | Nanking had been occupied by the Nanking forces which it says had pe @ surprise attack on the Red | Army forces in the Red Lake area. Ordered U. S. Lackeys to Hupeh. The Chinese Red Army recently gained, a number of smashing vi | tories in Hupeh and north-east Ki- angsi province against the Nanking forces. It is well-known that as a result of these victories, the United | States anq other imperialists have {insistently ordered their Nanking | lackeys to rush reinforcements to} | Hupeh and Kiangsi. It is probable that these reinforcements have given the enemy a numerical advantage and forced a strategic retreat .by the Red Army at som2 points. This has |happened in the past five major campaigns against the Red Army. The temporary advantage will be| overcome, as in the past, by the her- | oism of the Red Army and the deser- tions of the Nanking troops. The joy of the Washington Government over the reported minor success of its) Nanking lackeys is fated to be of| short duration. However, it further saa in supervising, through its |Hankow Consul and military at- taches, the Nanking war of suppres- in the Chinese Soviet Districts. SEATTLE TOILERS “B00” DEMOCRATS | Sell 400 Communist | Pamphlets | SEATTLE, Wash., Sept, 18.—A big crowd of workers and unemployed | ployment. office and cheap lodging house district, cheerd Communist dis- | trict campaign manager York, as he exposed the boss parties and ex- | plained the Communist pragram, A truck with a loud speaker drove up to the crowd and a spell binder for Judge Pemberton, Democratic Party nominee for governor tried to out-shout York and take over tht meeting. The workers began to “boo” and sing revolutionary songs so loud that the loud speaker was drowned out. In the effort to make the loud speaker talk louder, the Democrat gang broke the instrument, and had to quit. These poverty stricken workers | then raised a collection of $5 with which they bought and distributed on the spot the following pamphlets: ,Communist Platform, 100; Fight for | Bread, ” 100; “Who are the Friends of the Negro People,” 100; j and Ford Acceptance Speeches,” | other literature, In addition, Daily Workers were sold, U.S. MUNITIONS IN CHACO WAR Colombia Prepares At- tack on Peru The armed struggle between Am~- erican and British imperialisms for South American markets and min- eral resources is threatening to spread to Colombia and Peru. The Colombian Senate on Saturday voted a war fund of $9,500,000 for war with Peru over the disputed Leticia, ceded to Colombia by Peru, under the Peruvian-Colombian boundary trtaty ef 1922, was oc- cupied by Peruvian volunteer forces on Sept, 1, Its importance lies in the fact that the Amazon is nav- igable in this area and furnishes a trade outlet to the Atlantic 2,500 miles away. .... In the meantime, ‘the ‘battle is still raging between Bolivian and Para- guay and troops for possession of the strategic Fort Boqueron in the Gran Chaca’ district, for whose rich oil deposits American and British im- perialists are in fierce rivalry, The battle ensued its ninth day yesterday, The fort is now completely sur- rounded by Paraguayan troops which are energetically pressing the attack to re-capture it fromthe Bolivians who seized it on July 31 in a surprise attack, The local successes of the Paraguayans have forced the Amer- ican Standard Oil Company and other U. S. imperialists to come out openly in support of the Bolivians, helping in the training of Bolivian troops, the organization of the Red Cross corps, etc. League of Nations officials admit- ted yesterday that over $20,000,000 worth of arms and munitions have been sold to Paraguay and Bolivia in the last two years by American and British imperialists. OUSTS HOMELESS WYOMISSING, Pa.—A year ago the Glen Geary Co. published in the papers that it allowed men to sleep in their plant. A good many of these men were ex-servicemen, Now this company is employing gunmen to, run these poor ex-servicemen out, and 200 exposes the role of American imper- | workers on the “Skidroad,” the em- | “Foster | | | Thomas—His Party Jails the Jobless nes Avenue. ‘POLICE OPEN FIRE IN EVICTION FIGHT DetroitW enlcans Resist! Eviction for 4 Days |! DETROIT, Mich., thousand workers, many of them Negroes, engaged in an _ eviction) struggle with the police for four days | in an attempt to prevent the evic-| tion of a white worker living on| Theodore St. | After workers leq by the Unem-/} ployed Council had put the furni- ture back into the house, police| threw it into the streets again and ept. 18.—Three | | then barricaded themselves in the sion against the emancipated worker- | house. peasant masses and their Red Armies | tempted to put the furniture back | Williams, one of the victims of the and has placed “No Tresspassing signs all around the place. —D.%. | given out to better enable the Rus- | boy. The detectives were so intent jon the shooting that one of them When the workers again at- the police opened fire, wounding a shot another. As they fired the po- lice threatened to kill. A machine) gun faced the crowd of workers from | one of the windows, A number of workers were arrested, | | snotuding two Negro workers and Lonnie Williams, brother of Curtis Ford Hunger March, While the above struggle was tak- ing place, demonstrations were being | held by workers in a neighborhood a few blocks distant in protest against the eviction of an ex-service- man. WOMEN VOTERS HEAR COMMUNIST, Eva Hoffman Tells of | Child Dead of Hunger BOSTON, Mass. Sept. 18—Eva Hoffman, 58-year old veteran in the Boston working class movement and | Communist candidate for State Treasurer, threw a bombshell into the well-dressed audience of women comprising the Springfield League of | Women Voters when ‘she presented the Communist election program be- fore them in a meeting Monday. The Springfield Women Voters League had issued a call to 35 state candidates of the 3 boss. parties and one candidate on the workers’ ticket of the Communist Party. The speech of the ,Communist candidate presented a véry sharp contrast’ to the capitalist candidates who came, dressed in the height of fashion, and introduced themselves, giving their college and other busi- ness pedigrees and assuring the hos- ses that they would serve them to the best of their ability. None, but Hoffman dealt with vhe misery of the workers. None but Hoffman found it important to men- tion the fact that rights in Spring- field, Mass, one week ago, a jobless | father brought the dead body of his month old baby to the desk of the Welfare official and cried: “You killed her because I asked you tor milk and medical attention and you Page Three R.R. Brotherhood, AFL Endorse in Elections Enemies of the Workers | So-Called “ cials; Vote Non sae an Policy” deads ye Ww holesale is!. Vote Communist This Ye n Une picture, Niwas (RES presidential candidate of the So administration in Milwaukee. Lower picture shows part of dem manding relief from the Socialist administration of Mayor Ho tr Sie Rhirrs aly LaFollette Running Mate Leads Eviction Of Many _Unemploy ed MADISON, Wisc., Sept. 18.—In fight between the “regular” Repub! the La-Fo! s0-cal cH deal of information is coi The regulars have exposed that LaFollette’s general, Leonard for his real estate ow scores of eviction cases of wor who cannot pay their rent b of unemployment. The Pons family, for attorney gen legal reins, attack: Polish families. The circulating Ic ae giving a 95 such evi In plenty of ‘eases the “reg have done the same, so jobl ers ch e to in voting for either, nism and ui insurance, th the candidate ‘al handlin: but for Commu- and evictions led by Gameiloved Coun- | cils, PHILA: WORKERS DEMAND RELIEF Hold Meeting Despite | Police Ban PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 18—WMore than 1,200 workers demon here near Councilman Frankenfeld’s home for immediate relief despite the re- vosation by the police of a permi that they had previously granted for the meeting. The demonstration was the larg- | jest ever held in West Philadelphia | and was under the leadership of the Unemployed Council. When the first speaker mounted | jthe platform, police tricd to break through and arrest him but were repulsed by a defense they the speaker, The police tried-a second time to arrest the speaker but were again re- | pulsed by the workers. The workers then elected a com- | mittee of three to ques ion Council- jyman Frankenfeld on his activities in the City Council in behalf of the un- employed. The committee was hea Clay, Negro worker who is C nist candidate for state repr tive in the 22d District. gave me one quart of milk for six children and no doctor til today and now my baby is di While Hoffman was addressing the meeting above, there was a Hunger March in process led by the Unem- | ployed Councils, demanding cash re- liew instead of scrip, medi ‘tion, free milk and ice, etc. Eva Hoffman's presentation was so sharp and clear that she evoked storms of applayise even among the pany, middle class elements present. at the relief station at 1013 id evictions is not | guard | which formed a solid front around | al atten- | any candid | Democrat te of tt andidate. given I c Some of tt the A. F brotherhoods are simply r For instance, after Alex Groesbeck in 1930 was picked to run for gov- |ernor and endorsed by the bees and. the hich controls the city ilwaukee workers de- West Lin- he |by the Detroit Fede |Senator Joseph Robinson, democratic floor leader, Morgan man, attorney for four power companies; yet he went to the oie with the endorsement of the Ee RNS Detroit Workers Beat | ‘patel Off Cops’ Attack Jon record is what DETROIT, | was framed and sent t igan, Sept. 18—Ja tool of the s North Detroit; scene of eviction | rations who in which thousands of|was the official s have fought police to pro-| Mooney. Y tect workers and their families from | tells us in his pamphlet “Ti being thrown into the streets, saw |ey Framed by Labor Leade: nother militant struggle when over |“organized labor in San Francisco a thousand workers defended a Pol-|rajied around the banner of the in- famous and labor-bating Fi M dd the workers Ives with ropes uniformed of the San pol plicated in the plot to k in jail, likewise went to the “Senate with the endorsement of labor lead- ers of that city. phens Youn, each serving two times as Governor of California, and both re- |sponsible for keeping Mooney in jail, | |were at all times supported by the leading Califronia labor officials, The mass indignation aroused by the attack of the police led to the workers bringing axes and crowbars to the house and tearing it down. No | arrests were made. On a nearby si workers { another group against the | of pevictlon Ot pos Not only do the A. F. of L. and a police. Railroad Brotherhood officials rkers wer port Democratic and Republican can- jwho were f by 4a dates; they are also, in most cases, | part and parcel of the Democratic and Republican machines. President 1 7 William Green ofthe A. F. of L., for | ih: xample, is a leading Der t and Liberator Came Off {2 forher Democratic Onio state les- Press Thursday islator. That is why he is rooting |for Franklin D. Roosevelt for Presi dent, But Green, though a Demo- |crat, is “impartial” enough to sit on | Hoover's “Unemployment Relief | 15, and contains, among other ma-/| Committee” which is headed by the terial, the Life Story of William L.|open shopper Walter Gifford, head | Patterson, Negro working-class leader | Of the wage cutting American Tele- | and Commifinist candidate for Mayor | Phone and Telegraph Co. jof New York; the Coming Events in Wolts, Srients. An even more outrageous case is | the Scottsboro Case; Eviction in the |tne vice-president of the A. F. of L, |Roarin’ Third—The Story of the| Matthew Woll, big gun in the Re- | | Cleveland Massacre, Oct. 6, 1931; the| publican Party. He is also acting| Gass WAV tid Betale “we Odes oa | Peenidenit National — Civi iest—Excerpts from the trial of | Federatioi nization of bank- | DePriest by the workers of Chicago; | ers, Man nd labor fakers |also many interesting news items,| Which. ca a bitter campaign th worker correspondence: |against the Soviet Union. Woll t number cf pictures and car. ked the National Hunger Mare ed Congress to outlaw the Com- | _|munist Party, cooperated with the d subscriptions and bundl e0r-| pick Goneressional Committee in its to the Liberator, 60 E. i3th Sc., ae “ Room 201, New York’ City | red-baiting activities, and demanded sist he a ec oo eroenal investigation of the a rg, the Soviet’s trading corpo- PARTY ON BAL LOT eee Boog IN MINNESOTA ngham, Wats Bieta aes titer ia bates as demanding this or th rise in the cost of living “in the MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.—The Com- | [name of the A. Pof L." ‘This worth | munist Party has been placed on the | calling: for. ‘the re-election’ of | ballot by filing nearly twice as many | signatures as required, The presi- |dential electors were filed with 3,800 | |signatures, 1800 more than required | The facts are equally by the state law, Comrade wm, |C@l politics, In New York City, | Schneiderman was filed for governor | Well known, the A. F. of L. organiza- with 3200 signatures, 1200 more than | tion is to all intents and purposes a required. |branch of Tammany Hall. All the |'Tammany sachems turned out re- The other candidates for the state | cently to honor at a dinner, Presi- j atid congressional ticket will be filed |Gent Joseph P. Ryan of the New | within a week, as soon as enough | York “Central ‘Trades and | money is collected, The state re- | | The next issue of the Liberator |came off the press Thursday, Sept. | dei Same in Local Politics. in lo- es is Labor | Council. Al Smith, Jimmy Walker, quired that $50,00 be paid for filing | poiiep Commissioner Mulroonev, M each candidate, Ccoey, Cu end all NSS 2 - Jeaders and ward heele: Ryan and 5 wy 09" '§ Vt Young Communist League in Moseow. The Soviet you th pledged to prepare for the defense of the Soviet Bs ely erie tae a ee Ren frontiers hae dr any imperialist pgdbaeceil USSR WORKERS 70 ' jan workers in ‘handling and mas- tering the machines. A year ago measures" were adopted for carrying through a general tech- his Central Trades and Labor Coun- cil will stand up for Tammany even | when Tammany hasn't the stomacch |to speak for itself. When Jimmy | Walker and his clique voted them- | selves salary increases in 1930—while | refusing any unemployment relief— | even stauch Tammnyites were silent, | {but Ryan and the A. F. of L. organ- ation were there to justify Tam- | When District | $ up on char stion in 1930, for ure to prosecute grafters and racketeers, Ryan end the Central) Trades and Labor Councils were among his few defenders, Ryan stat- ing that Crain “was all right with erganized labor.” Even worse, if p uation across the ri where “Czar” Brandle is not only| boss of the A. F. of L. but is also the right hend man of Mayor Frank | to abolish these defects, Hague of Jersey City new directives have just been issued | boss of the state. altering the nature of the mass tech- | out as a gunman, 1 traming. According to these ine: mey Crai + the Bar Ass ble, is, the sit- ' i. she reeent conference of the In order Brandle started then became Bus- Agent of the Structural Iron- | in California did after Tom Mooney | - | the |League headed by Nelson. The other * | bor, | ganically in Jersey City, | 6 Selling of Worker Votes by Union Offi- ut on the spot” by gunmen. Some idea of ndle’s income may be gained from he fact that when Hague was called to account for tax return shortages, t was Brandle, according to the N. Y. erald Tribune of March 29, 1931, “who paid the compromise settle- ment amounting to $60,000,” and Brandle and his partner Hurley paid in April, 1932, more than $96,000 in fines and penalties for tax evasions. Such are the A. F. of L. leaders who “deliver the labor vote” to the political machines of which they are a part. Usually, as we have seen to be the case in New York and New Jersey, is part of the locally inant machine; s0, too, in up- e New York and in Phil- adelphia, where the republicans are in power, the A. F. cf L. leaders are |their staunch allies. Sometimes, as cago, where the political wind s sometimes this way and some- , the AFL leaders find it to divide their forces, some ng the democrats and Mayor hile the rest hang on to Bill Thompson machine. of Thompson’s henchmen is Nelson, vice-president of *the who it was his office that Side him a the recent republican then Nelson sought to nm ation the banker and ece for big-business, Charles And the only reason he t was that pressure brought him ts he voted for Hoo- A funny example of the “non- rtisan” policy were election adver- ements in the Chicago Federa- organ last year. One page imed that boss Thompson was a ‘friend of labor” and was signed by Cook County Wage Earners’ the A. F. of L. do! Typical Oscar Chicago Federation of Labor, mitted thai ge stated that “organized labor was for Tony Cermak,” and was signed by the “Cermak Union Labor Club,” headed by Victor Olander, sec- jretary-treasurer of the Illinois Fed- feration of Labor. With so “many |friends of labor,” nevertheless the |workers of Chicago starve without relief and are clubbed when they protest, For United Front of Workers! It is time to break up this unholy “|combination of dmocratic-republican politicians and labor fakers; to smash, once for all, this stranglehold on hundreds of thousands of workers, which keeps them at the mercy of the capitalist class. The A. F. of L. official political policy, as William Z. Foster said in “Misleaders of. La- ‘holds the labor movement or- looked to the capitalist class.” Every member of every American Federation of Labor pion should ask himself this question. Should he vote for the candidates of the bankers and the manufacturers, just because his union cfficials tell iain to? Or should he join with the workers—employed and unemployed —in a united front in support of the | candidates of the working class? The answer is ARTE COMET COMMUNIST! CONTRIBUTIONS TO “DAILY” FUND Following is list of donations from District 1 and 2 for Sept. 1 Total for entire country was $523. Lack of space did not permit pe rying entire list on this page. Amount received Monday, Sept. Total to date .|_ Dis. 1, Boston — H. Burman | Carl Leldtot€ 1.00 D. Buseh Friends of Pen- A. Buseh ver 5.00 D. Busch A Friend 1.00 Soan Golmquist 1. S. Lerner 1.00 Rose Jewish Mother Reilly League 2.00 8, Cooperman Dis. Committee 5. Lewis Russian Ma- T. Boskko tual Aid Soc. ‘Tannenbaum Picnic 28.00 Schechter Kuptini ‘Total Ris. 1_$88.00 Edelshein Dis. 2, New York T. Paris Grace Hutchins 5.00 Lang F.S.U.M.T.G., Kimet Union Square Bress & Columbus Resnick Cir, U. Coun Durker cil M. Perotsky Arabella Polusky 8. Fallbers Zeldin Berg Rose G. js Shapiro J. Edelstein 7 Rosen S. Miller F LW.O. Br. 17 05, x ® Bruel 2 Loeb - Celia Cooper cS) Hinsrale Work- Boll ers’ Youth oo) Club 11.00 as 1.06 Jennie Stockman 3 1.00 Matty Sherman 20 1,00 Rose Lang cy Camp Croton Lilian Wardan 10 Party 6.40 A Friend 49 A. Rerghaan 1.00 Hf, White a [Pietro Cardita 15.80 G. Steincol a Dryas 2. 19 | Tremont Wkrs. 19 Club 10 B. Orden Col- 8 Democratic | J. 3 lection 10 Anonymous 1.00 Lamra M. Langer 1.00 J. Pica J. Will 1.00 Saumarti S. Fanoris 1.00 Buan D, Feuer 1.06 Fossa 1.00 Branting 1,90 1.00 1.00 1.90 1.00 1.00 1 Merman Fewer Dr. Blimblum — 23, 0 oJ 08 | nical mass training of the workers, directivss, the instruction given must} workers of Jersey City, a job he | Marry M. Ablemout ‘Sa aiming to give the industrial work- be of such a nature that the workers | holds for life. He is also special or- | Yetta, Pieker- he (Sites eed ie a basic knowledge of technique:) first receive the technical knowl- | canizer Ct thea. FOE Ge and Weta | dene aaa _ z But the instructions -were infre- edge ensuring that they do not man-|jn May, 1932, “unanimously” re- Schulberg. Jos, Oliver 33 New AV eactives fOT quently unsuitable and overloaded | age their own machines, enabling |eiected president of the New Jersev . . see | with such generalitis as Marxist his- them to make smell reparations, to| Building Trades Council for the | f°" eat™*" ————- cg Technical Training . | tory of technique, reconstruction of lessen waste, to achieve a higher jeighth time. He is also director-|Solover Boneeee > the Soviet Union, foreign technique, | production and thus to improve their | general of the Employers’ Iron / — W. Kickin, eet. While in the capitalist world in) °te- | own material position. | League of New Jersey, thus heading | & 4 1, atten ‘i = general and in the United States in} The urgent and important ques-| Such a practical instruction as | both the leading labor and the lead- Shapire 2m ular rationalization measures | tions, such as the knowledge of the this, which must of course leave |ing employers’ organization of that A Feet Hd introduced which further trans-| special conditions under which the! room for general technical training,| state! Brandle is so enthusiastic ae = form the workers still employed in| worker-students toil, of their ma-jcan be successfully imparted in two | about Boss Hague that he actually ¥ * mere appendages of the machines, in| chines and workshops, were often and a half or three months if two | forces unfon workers to march in Lee Stapine Biol the Soviet Union new directives are) neglected. \or three hours are devoted to it in | Hague’s political parades. Any one 4 A Tarn Toward Practical Training. | the six-day week wee is leading a revolt in a Brandle-con-

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