The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 23, 1932, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 99 23, 1932 ————"" Page Three NEW ADVANCES IN USSR. INDUSTRY’ Tool Production Is In- creased Greatly MOSCOW, U.S.S.R.—At a farewell celebraiton for the departing Amer- jean engineers who were in charge of the building of the huge Dnieperstroi Dam, Chief engineer Cooper de- { clared: “During 1930 an average of 30,000 men and women were employed on the building of the Dnieverstroi Dam | and a world record in f>r~n-covcrnt- ing was set up. The full capacity of the werk is 810,000 h.p, and over half is already being produced.—No thinking man who hes seen the Dnieperstroi station can doubt that Russia is becoming an industrial power. Giant Iron Foundry Near Tula work has now begun on what will be one of the bizvest irom | foundries in the Soviet Union and that means in the world. The first of seven blast furnaces will be lit on the Ist of next January. The others will follow rapidly. A cocking battery, ® pipe-moulding works. and a power esnter of 50,000 kilowatts will also be build es part of the Tula industrial combination. The workers of these rew factories will live in a new so- cialist town of 35,900 inhabitants. _ CONTRIBUTIONS TO “DAILY” FUND Total donations Sevtems" 21. for Wednesday, reathed $342.22. Be- ears of lack of snac2 we gve detailed list for New York only, The Acme Theatre. Uniry Square, N. Y. devoted to shewing Soviet films, gave $7 70 per cent of its grors orocesds for wer ond ef Sept. 7-8-9. added to it $30, making total donation of $100 to the |‘Daily’ Erserveney Drive Pund. es’ Gatment Workers’ Cthe> large sums: R. 1%: Helem De. D: 8: B Pi Wo Finnish Working tis members of the! Sentence ja labor hating judge after they had | | mitted by these ten workers was that comb County and picketing the trucks the county sent to the few who were willing slaves. Armed thugs attacked the workers and ar- rested the ten heroic.men and women leaders. Macomb County is notorious for giving the most miserable relief in the state of Michigan, amounting to |1 3-4c per meal per person. The ten workers sentenced have DOLL WORKERS | EXPOSE SELL-OUT |\AFL Pact Lets Seabs, Replate Strikers NEW YORK.—The _ treacherous agreement engineered by a Love- sioneite and Musteite leadership has not only sold out the doll workers, making them accept worse conditions than existed before the strike, but has actually bound the workers to prevent any real strike action in the future. A delegation of workers re- vealed today in the office of the) Daily Worker. | This agreement, signed by the Doll and Toy Makers’ Union, affiliated with the A. F. of L., allows the bosses © keep all the scabs imported dur- ing the strike. It keeps wages down to $15 and $25 a week, by allowing to classify workers with many years of experience as “helpers.” By a check-off system, said, the bosses take off $1, $2, or i} workers Worker Correspondence Workers F ighting Forced Labor in Macomb Co. miserable welfare junk given by Ma-¢ MT. CLEMENS, Mich.—Sentences of 90 days each were given to a | group of seven men and three women workers at Mt. Clemens, Mich. by | IN THE S AME CITY jury of six court-room bums, and relatives of officials. been found guilty by a hand-picked of refusing to do forced labor or the 15 children, two of the women ha young babies, and one is an expect- ant mother, The case has aroused the workers in the entire district and Detroit. A crowded protest meeting was held in Vandyke in spite of police threats of violence and arrests. The cases have been appealed by the Interna- tional Labor Defense and the workers will be releaséd on bail. =A. W. CARPENTERS HIT Wingdale Rank and File Oust Agent (By a Worker Correspondent.) WINGDALE, N. Y.—The carpenters in Wingdale, New York, Local 1190, had a wage scale of $10 until May 1. When the bosses got together with the high officials of the A. F. of L. and attacked the wage scale of the Building Trades Workers, the Car- penters Local in Wingdale resisted the cut, proposed by the bosses from $10 to $8. The officials maneuvered so that | under the new scale. This construc- tion work went on until Aug. 1, when the rank and fle of the Carpenters Local 1190 saw that this new wage scale is permanent. | who was at that time in the hos- The “crime” com- | AR.L. WAGE CUT ‘The strike was called by the tem-/| | porary business agent, Jack Sianton, | SOCIALIST VICEGGOVERNOR IN AUSTRIA BARS SCOTTSB FOR FASCIST MEET Vienna Workers Greet Scottsboro Mother and Engdahl | BULLETIN | NEW YORK—The Scottsboro Defense Committee has issued a | call to all organizations to elect delegates to represent them at a | Scottsboro Defense Conference on | Sunday, Sept. 25, at 3 p.m. at 330 | Lenox Ave., it was announced yes- | terday. «eae | VIENNA, Austria (By Mail).—The social-democratic vice governor of the rovince of Steiermark, Machold, acting in the place of the fascist gov- ernor, Bintelen, on vacation, was di- rectly responsible for the prohibition jof the Scottsboro protest demonstra- jtion at Gradz, Austria’s second city. When a delegation uf workers came | to Vice Governor Machold, demand- ing the right to proceed with the meeting for the Scottsboro Mother, |he even refused to listen to them, | |but declared through a subordinate official that all meetings had been prohibited. Unity of Fascist-Socialist Leaders | The united action of fascist and so- \cialist leaders against the Scottsboro |campaign, however, was clearly re- vealed in permission granted to the the carpenters went back to work|Nazis to hold a meeting in the same | |hall and on the, night following the |proposed Scottsboro meeting. The | workers of Oradz will continue their jefforts to carry through the Scotts- boro meeting at some later date. Dr. Franz’ Littna, the attorney for Mrs. Wright at Prague, in Czecho- | Slovakia, has informed her that Pres- ib ee Workers! Demand Release of Scottsboro Boys, Tom Mooney’ GRANTS PERMIT ORO PROTEST MEETING IN GRATZ Worker Delegates at | | World Anti-War Meet Outline the Struggle 1000 Representa s of All Kinds of Unions Demand United Front on War Makers To Be Based on Broad Committees, Particularly In Munition and Transport Industries At the held we in rid C Amsterdam “oO, rie ht in the indus- and the spy and hate- ains recently ism and tr rep! support to the tion of the co- peoples. De- Defehd the The nine Scottsboro boys who are facing legal lynching in Alabama and whose case comes before the United States Supreme Court on Oct. 10. Seven of the boys are under sentence of death, Thirteen-year old Eugene Williams, one of the eight boys sentenced to death in the first trial, has been remanded for a new trial as a result of a partial vicior gained by the International Labor Defense, backed by world-wide mass protest. In the case of 14-year old Roy Wright, a mistrial declared the congress. Thi sued a statement t claring: “The imperialist po present at work to f of ithe unprecedented ar In : c ening world economi | at the original trial. In upper right inset is shown Tom Mooney, who is | of an imperialist w still held in jail although proved innocent. At lower left hand, Mrs. | “New wars are no: | Mooney, and Richard B. re, noted Negro orator, now campaigning | na, Latin America, Ind with Mrs. Mooney for the release of the Scottsboro boys and Tom Mooney. | rica, and other ec of thousands murdered on in, “The attack on the the only country which has or unemployment, the land of truction is being rker battlefiel of w the ' ! PROTEST OVER (MESSAGE SENT ALA. TERROR BY MRS, WRIGHT |Bosses Try Disrupt the Thanks Czech Women Scottsboro Defense | for Support VIENNA, Austria—The Scottsboro ro mother, Mrs. Ada Wright, thru Dr. Franz Litna, at Pra- A tory council elec- 9 in the er shop in Vienna 0 workers. feverish | LF.T.U. Maneuvers The declaration then | point out that the Inter eration of Trade Unior | conference recentl: case of another its unions to oppose it, and if J did not stop her war camy huria, would proclaim a boyeo istian one seat. je union list nd wor nine seats. ime that-a revo- jist was put trad forward in the BELGIAN WORKERS AGAINST REFORMIST CAPITULATION e is great anger BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. Landy, Burke and Keith were re- sh pn Women, $10 | 1 or] Wi : on a sia, addressed a let | eseh. “ionds cf Soviet Union, Wiscon: $3 a week off the workers’ salaries pital. ident T. G. Masaryk has refused to| leased here to; after 27 hours ne members of the Women’s | @8ainst Japan. . at the wagk and pay that to the socialist and| Send Scabs. receive a delegation that asked for| grilling by the police. The authori- | Delegation who called and demanded| After theis, the Wo: ling off of the the re- > | Lovestone rack~t:ers. The bosses are} ‘The general office of tne Carpen-|an opportunity to protest against the| ties are still maintaining a terror | of the Minister of the Interior Slavik, | ttade union delegates py formist 1 r have is~ Rudoshn allowed to change to week work any) {ers Union, which is controlled by | expulsion of herself and J. Louis Eng-| situation in, the effort to prevent (hat she be permitted to rem in| there came the bloody at ed an a ig for a united OD | Ee Balakokt: time a worker makes too much un-|the Hutcheson machine, played into| dahl, general secretary of the Amer-| the Conference. The raid has in- |the country, The letter follows in | Shanghai, and the pre return to work i ine and self- gelhaa te der the piece rates. |the hands of the Merit Construction ican section of the International Red| terfered with the financing of the | part: tion of all Manchu: confidence. 1.90 | Stlenoopiel 29, Sonakisher rox 109 Tehmen “44 The most militant workers in the} Co., which is doing the state job in Aid. The appeal against the expul- troops—and the res the strike to Conference. Funds are urgently At the Ideal Novelty and Toy Co., Van ‘Sindern Ave., Brooklyn, the strikers had been offeréd a 15 per. general office of the union was not notified in time about the strike. One Monday morning, the old busi_ mass meetings held on the same eve- ning in opposite sections of Vienna vgorously denounc=d the expulsion of ing-class protests began to pour in here today in condemnation of the police raid on the Southern office of ‘Dear Comrades and Friends: fact, I understand that the minister of the interior would not even listen to it and turned you out of his of- 5.00 | bap | strike ar2 blacklisted, and the union| wingdale. This company claimed |sion, however, has been filed and will| needed. Send to International La- “Words are too weak to give ex-| leaders did noth: been victorious. “In order to sean | So eepenets | acts as the bosses’ stoolpigeons. The/|that the general office of the union | be fought out immediately. bor Defense, 80 E, 11th St, New | pression to my appreviation of your | ‘Hing. The Amst up their tracks and to split the 2.99) Paby bosses get information from the union | permitted them to hire any union peti “eat York. s on my behalf. Although your trade union and shop delegates of the miners the -reformists nao. Keeviets office on workers aplying to get their) men that they saw fit, because this Protest to U. S. Embassy tee lee demand’ that f pe allowed to remain | DOTee: the same time conducting a ake 5 et eer jobs back. strike is an outlaw strike, as the| Thousands of workers in two great} BIRMINGHAM, Sept. 22—Work-| in Czechoslovakia was rejected, in|. The fight against imper urious campaign of incitement must be carried of the day to da pera of the masses for bread and for their t the Communists who are de- red to be allies of the employers, New arrests of Communist work- agi cl NW, Paeder 1,09 | Charly cent increase, but they stayed out in| noss agent, Jack Stanton, all of a|the Scottsboro Negro Mother, Mrs.|the 1 ‘i . i ae i 2 rae very existence. In the daily struggle: rs 5 PHien Plo: Setner aaas os » a * international Labor Defense in| fic, nevertheless, masses of workers | "3 " . ers are reported from Liege and Brus- We ub y04 | Sehwrarts solidarity with the union, and now | sudden got well and came to the job| Ada Wright, and J, Louis Engdahl,|the Martin Building here. The raids| and sympathizers will understand | the German and Polish proletariat <3. at many meetings resolutions '. rn) a Friend | under the-agreement they get no in-|in a new car and ordered the strik-|general secretary of the American | were carried out in an attempt to/ your rhotive and be inspired by it. I Sass Fas 2, in the hero c fight in favor of the continuation of the Pwr x a ; = lisrupt the Scottsboro Defense cam-|know that your problems in Szecho- % Sei strike have been adopted. earperoel 3 Sarees crease. ers to go back to work, and threat-| section of the International Red Aid | di; i the Scottsboro Defi be e miners in Belgiu: WG A Geen Strikers who have been out five|ened that if they did not ‘go back |from Czecho-Slovakia. paign and to stop preparations for|slovakia are the same as ours in| Sl0Vakia and the United OO Brov~ Workers A. Shapiro weeks and are starving are denied | to work New York members of the| The account of the imprisonment the all-Southern Scottsboro and) America, the fight of the Lencast . Pee ore ciab 2.30 | Bevale all relief by the union racketeers, who | Carpenters Union would take their of Mrs. Wright, with the finger-print- | Civil Rights Conferenc> called for) “I was not allowed to meet with| Workers. in such strugel Lancashire Weavers Terran Sriate Fae cae eee >| ar now collecting big money from the| places. About 40 out of the 100 out| ing and photographing of the Scotts- | Oct. 2 at the Masonic Temple inths| you in mass meetings, This I regret, TOR’ of the prolet Union Lead Mov LEGA. Wkes, 90.00 | A. Albromson geared Boe sine ive: dgeaepenit on eee ene hen to ypiaay py boro Negro Mother like an ordinary | city. |I did meet with many women of our | alas coer kbs /nion Leaders Move Helen Yurmus 1.09 | M. Rosenweis rkers, r the a e rank an le in Local S| criminal, rot e rage of the two rotary as: i ris i | r agents, the war moi re . mn eras * a.nd | Peters 0] are promised a 44-hour week aiid bet-| still fighting, but without proper ion taunt fie rt ek haath ob Hee ork, | was kept ducing the few days that «| cruamiere of the’ new Toward a Wage Cut Moheram Colony 604) Jobn Soteros 95 | “@" Conditions after January 1, but) jeadership. Through a leaflet re-| Mrs. Wright and Engdabl spoke at| ang Fred Keith, the three workers|wes in your country. ‘These women | “@% e Ww MANCHESTER, England; Sept, 22. Se ee ree 19 | after Christmas the season, which has} cently issued by the Building and|hoth meetings. Resolutions of pro-| arrested in the raid, are still being | Prisoners, especially at the Fishpane|,,.Ca7tY [he appeal of the World) 2 prove tn Ch Unit 6 1.00 | ©, Eustathron 's0| just started to be busy, is over, and|Construction Workers Industrial © Taid, are & mead Ee ere aged "4 = Congress Against Imperialist War to |—The strike of 200,000 we: Unit 12 1.99 | List 5996 30|thete is very little work, even at 10|eague the rank and file of Local | c%t,,ceuns the Scottsboro judicial | hela incommunicado by the police.|Prison, understood my problem and/ the masces—fight for the adopsion of | Cotton mills of Lancashire is still Unit 2 3.00 | Marya Pokas 55 | Noirs a week. {190 Ousted: the ‘ld: AXA NAW. bilel- lynching were adopted. The resolu-| ajthough not convicted of any crime | our problem, this program in all trade unions | solid, but there are disquieting re- Unit 9 10.00 | Tom Miulin 10 le tion will be taken to the American} they have been photographed and; “I am sure that your attempted ag Bog i) a ; ta Unit 5 5.00 Uiank mbtera 10 ness agent and elected a strike com-| embassy in Vienna by a delegation | atrigée-printed Lhd bi | protest to the minister of the interior | Stop Munitions! ae of a sell ger by ee eae Unit 1¢ 30) Tony Nosek 7 . mittee of five. of non-Party, social-democratic and 3 F will only be the bes inning of your| , “Organize to fight against the pro- ‘The weavers’ officials have been Alelem Farewell John Triangle 05 Deny Relief Because Only through an organized fight| Communist workers elected ab the Cae bald Preparations Me the eaten a ths’ Sootabars iaepilen, duction of war munitions, prevent | meeting, under auspices of the Na- 10 ' |by the rank and file against the Th gee Horthy | COMference are being made, despite | — i ; a ve | the transportation of troops, muni-| tional Government's minister of 4 Woman Has Only Been union racketeers will the carpenters peat] Zi tel ie kas ‘ai YY! the police terror. Scores of dele- ba om ay only a baciniag to aie tions and all kinds of war materials, | labor, with the mill owners for sév- | *. . é ‘fascism of Sallai an erst was de- ‘ the lives of my two boys and the | “ons Ne ‘ar mate! boa - s Sie Nits te In City For Eight Yrs, | in Wingdale get back the $10 scale.| nounced and demands made for the Anaad dus ted at ia other Scottsboro children, it is not ‘ha HHLGA chee TERE Fe paar ‘ee that ins cotp aataneibe to John Wioch 19 —_— RNC RR freeing of Karikas. th i ricts, especially | Only a struggle agains the persecution vorks. Apply all meth- ' L ; : 3 Bewoks ‘on A @ agricultural districts, especially , Felten ++|0ds and means however difficult in | discuss was whether the wage cut ; 3. Wussles to| (BY a Worker Correspondent) | Pray on Sundays, | Speakers stressed the mobilization | Camp will, Alabama, where Nesro|f my race—the Negro race—but it) Coa one means noweles difioult 'n | would be two shillings on the pound Laval Jaoshién Meouj Stooloy ‘i0| . BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Sept. 21.— . |for the World Congress of the Inter- croppers are carrying on a militant ‘8 @ struggle of our class, the work- abt: dpaitiot it eee | om dhe abelian: four pence, that is ‘Acllison Woks Anna Kustera _'23| Because she was not, born in this city, Evict on Weekdays | national Red aid in November in| ffrnegie against starvation and. the iD class, Your act of class solidarity ight against imperialist iipose | 0 Ste SnAg: tour Desi Myer Weonmar Demi 1.00) relief was refused to Mrs. Lela Mont- pita Moscow and the necessity of build-| cutting off of relief. will not close the bonds of unity of | he methods of camou: oe eta tse ieee Deka mane et $8. Gero! ‘50 . He pellet 2 cutting off of relief. ‘ duction and transportation of war | OF Seven per cent, roughly, Ss. Feld ‘59; Somery, who had come to the relie CINCINNATI, Ohio.—Being res- |ing the Austrian Red Aid into a pow- "AM sovkars dewanientt ‘athiiteed the tdiling masses of all countries, In . F eink ot : “ : L. deena x1o0| station with an Unemployed Counell | yectable church members dosn't keep |erful. mass organization. Scores. of | , Silew DEStadte aiaieatataly ‘to Com, | this spirit I greet you and thank you var ute bee bal ; Pie Lif eg broad beer eee ae B. Lerner 1.09 | committee. eople here from evicting poor fami- |new members enrolled in the organ- ; ‘ ee HE "| “Signed: ADA WRIGHT.” | 72 \ Srey} abies atin is ene LN hgh ao yd too|, Although this woman has lived lies. William A. Koetter, 2107 Colum. | zation, more than one-third of those ralssloner of Public Safety John Tay- pga tages the lies of the bourgeois press. another session Friday, and that the Ree addins X00) here for eight years, married and| pus Ave., a member of St. Rose |being social-democratic workers. ee pigs: aha sare ea jr p r Hands Off China! difference between them has been Goldbers 1.09| gave birth to children here, the su-| church, recently paid $7.50 for a (oR Cacia Tee thet he te nate | Eee EBON Fur Workers | ycFight for equal rights for foreign | Feduced, Nick Pongas Gregory 1.00 | perintendent of welfare, Thorne, pro-| court order to evict a man who had PORTLAND PRESS LIES “Seca heal alae dik dacirrgeg 1s born wor and those of colored| The left wing and Communist ee: Setres 35 | Gone Chang 1.00 | Posed to deport the woman to South| a wife and four children, PORTLAND, Ore—The bosses of | C7 ii see and mae wor kets vis in a Militant Struggle | races. rignt in defense of your wages | weavers are conducting a struggle for 3, decthewts $50 | Steve 1.90 | Carolina. Henry G. Krehnbrink, 1871 Fair-|Oregon ran a vicious campaign | 76 eat Bootai eNece ey) Against 8 Cent Wages 2nd, uemployment reiiet ware cut at all. The employers’ Robt, Parsos 2% | Jones 1.00] A demonstration was held in front | fax ave, Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, | against the Communist Party in an | /0eent Scottshoro Negro boys =a bie oe “Build committees on the bre inal demand. which brovgat on Fos gael} oot a 5 | of the relief station after the refusal.| another prominent church member, | attempt to incite the hooligans of | SOTA ARR TO ees PATERSON, N. J. Sept. 2. — A united front basis on ships, doc tike was for two shillings nine , {30 | Rosen! In this city there is a Hooverville| was the agent that evicted the man|the American Legion at their con-| agein EE RS EIR se Ld SE railways and watery on the pound, or roughly 14 A Friend 50 | Rosenberg et t Trrange scottsporo hvidred fur workers Are on strike ‘T. Viahies Oo | Karpeloff .50| With about 200 to 300 families who| with his wife and three children, He | vention here aganist Communists. A “ r loa red fur é Sts ure ef st mel rise 2 bats] diis be get their food from the dumps. was helped by Mrs, Elmer Reis, 2485 | coast ry eno in Astoria was ap- | Demonstrations m 42 Seat Fahad Toes oh op. ney i In the WestEnd every time a truck | fastern Ave., another “good Cath- | proached a gang of gangsters and | A ‘ 2. me... ERECUIE Rinne’ = 19! goes to dump its load on Tuesday olic,” i —M, B, | robbed of @ machine gun and some | Midwest, Oct. 5 to 8 des | Workers Industrial Union, Kinderland guest and Thursday a crowd of children _| pistols, ete. The boss press was full when they struck last Thursday the 5 eam cottbetton 8.05) runs to see whether they can get any to stand for this much longer. | of filthy propaganda trying to link| CHICAGO, Sept. 21—In order to “ye workers came out also. bag Pherae ‘xa | ‘Total Dis. 2 sis9.69| f00d or clothing from the truck. ‘They will fight under the leadership | up the Communists with the gang-| force the United States Supreme | var ane is ee, wages as low Matushek 3 Tt to date $5,520.94 The unemployed workers are not ‘of the Unemployed Councils. sters. Court to grant a new trial to the 2% 8 cents per hour in some cases. A | rgentine and Brazil Preparing to Join Spreading War Movement in South America } | and if these demonstrations are car- | Alter SHAD, OO: WRRINES,: WEEE ae | ried through successfully the victory | Pull unity, cof | egre. ane white | BOLIVIAN “TIN KING” DONATES BOMBING PLANES Rockefeller Oil Trust Backing Up the been frustrs ting th ine with red flags. king butcher, War Moves santas on: theit fronted in Mintser: ae oe paar Mie maga: nee Decatur, Ill, speaker \ Poindexter; | surance, welfare (?) fund, always in Standard Oi! Behind Bolivia nasse they sang the “International” | vince is helpless against the workers | Oct. 8, Hammond, Ina, speaker | debt. ‘The mill burned down one hot While Argentine continued yester-| From his safe position in La Paz, | to the horror of the French bourgeois | and peasants Red Armies, Chiang, Lightfoot. windy ay, Lae with Poa insurance day to threaten armed intervention ;Simon Patino, Bolivian “tin king,” |on the platforms. howevr, holds out the hope to his Tag Days. money Wegerhauser built a more on the side of Paraguay in the un- y and to finanes hostilities a- The loan was offered bourgeoisie and landlords, It is un- derstood that most of the loan has been taken up by foreign imperialist interests. The Peruvian Congress has also approved a war loan of $5,000,- 000. The Paraguayan troops were re- ported gaining yesterday at the end of the 12th day of the battle in the Gran Chaco region. The Bolivian forces in Fort Boqueron are bottled up and all efforts of Bolivian rein- forcements to break through have has donated two tri-motored Junkers airplanes to the Bolivian army for use against the Paraguayans. The Bolivian bourgeoisie press is continu- ing its agitation for the bombing of Asuncion, Paraguayan capital, by airplanes. The Standard Oil Company in or- der to exploit the Gran Chaco oil deposits is supporting the Bolivian mobilization. The British rivals of Standard oil are secretly supporting Paraguay. WAR REPARATIONS (By « Worker Correspondent) ROCHESTER, Minn.—A two weeks training course for officers of the Medical Reserve Corps will start here October 16. Only military subjects will be given, The Mayo foundation 500 French Soldiers Sing “Internationale” On Train to Paris PARIS, Sept. 21. — Five hundred reservists of the 117th Infantry Regi- ment returning by special train to Paris from their manoeuvres in Au- vours carried out revolutionary de- monstrations on the whole journey, singing revolutionary songs and de- INTERNATIONAL YOUTH DAY IN FINLAND NEW YORK.—According to delayed Teports from Helsingfors, youth dem- onstrations took place in all large towns in Finland despite the police prohibitions. Large quantities of propaganda literature were distributed and numerous red flags were hoisted at prominent points. Pa Iilegal demonstrations of young workers marched through the streets bearing red flags and singing revolutionary songs. The police bru- tally attacked the demonstrating young workers and many arrests were made, includng a number of girls, VOTE COMMUNIST FOR Against tMoover's wage-cuttung clinic will sponsor the courses, | poliey. CHIANG IN NEW “ANTI-RED THREAT Gets Armored Boats From Imperialists SHANGHAI, Sept. 22,—Hankow dispatches report that Chiang Kai- imperialist masters that armored mo- torboats will achieve the ros'its nis army has failed to attain, The armored motorboats were conttrutced in the United States and other coun- tries whose ruling classes are sup- porting the butcher Chiang. Many of these new boats will doubtless find their way into the Chinese Red Army through fresh desertions of Chiang’s troops, Rear Admiral Wu Kwang-tsung. one of Chiang’s cronies, was killed yesterday by four persons who in- vaded his home and engaged in a battle with his body guard. ‘The anti-Japangse boycott is being daily tightened by government which does its utmost to suppress the mass resistance to the partition of China by the Japanese ane ebhes sugerialist brigands, up om Oct. 10, the.Chicago District of the International Labor Defense is organizing protest demonstrations | in many cities. The forcing of the Washington! | hearing was a great victory for the | mass defense policy of the I. L. D. will be extended. All organizations are asked to help in the tag days on Oct. 1 and 2 to raise funds for the Scottsboro de- | fense. The meetings to be held are: Oct. 5, Waukegan, Illino’ paker | Poindexter; Oct. Ind., Scottsboro boys when the case comes | Wage increase is demanded, and re- | cognition of the N.T.W.LU. Half of those on strike are American born. The strikers are showing much mil- itancy on the picket line. Tuesday they stopped the boss’ nephew who was bringing in scabs, and a regular fight took piace in front of the shop. workers is seen in this strike. Work on Land Only Yields Bigger Debts AUBURN. Wash. For a whois , Gary 2 speaker Lightfoot; Oct. 7, in Chicago | Year I worked for Weyerhauser, the | Coliseum, speaker from New York; | timber king, at Snouqualmie Falls | Oct. 7, Terre Haute, Ind., speaker| ®t $3.00 a day, 4 days a week, three | Poindexter; Oct. 8, Indianapolis, Ind.,| weeks a month, with $10 a month speaker Poindexter; Oct. 8, St. Louis, | "ent for a company house, and after Mo., speaker Joe Gardner; Oct. 8,| Paying for wood, water, lights, in- | modern mill, eliminating many men, myself included. For three years I had no steady work, “I peddled wood, coal, fruif, | ete. I finally got three acres on al share rent basis, cut 2,000 pea poles | jup in the woods. and after working | like hell day and night, and starving till the crop came, I had to eat what | |T could of the crop, as I couldn't sell | jit, 2m@ so I'm deeper than. ever in| Chicago, Oct. 1-2; St. Louis, Oct. 1-2; E. St. Louis, Oct. 1-: il, Ul,, 1-2; Gary, Ind., 1- Belleville, Salvation Army Try to Break Hunger March McKEESPORT, Pa.—The day be- fore the Allegheny County March, organized by the Unemployed Coun- cil, took place, officials of the Salva tion Army in Duquesne for the fir: | time put meat into the soup they handed out to workers in order to keep them from the march. After the hunger march the soup was as watery as ever. ‘The McKeesport National Tube, which gives its miserable relief to workers in shifts, on the day of the hunger march gave relief to al) the workers on that day in an attempt to keep from the march. TS Pes) SOBRE RI ani FARMERS 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 : National Election Campaign Committee P. 0. Box 87, Station D, New York, N. Y, Only solution 1 see is for the w 's and farmers to own the and the machinery of production, | and right now to vote Commiiis®. | T. 8. LUMBERJACKS STARVE | BANGOR, Me. The lumberjacks j here have been cut to $1.25 a day | for the hardest kind of labor. The | majority are without wok and many ave working just for board TOM G. Con " 5 la atlbesen

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