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In the Day’s News esac | GALE NEARS JAMAICA HAVANA, Sept. 29.—The tropical storm that killed over 200 Monday night in San Juan and other parts of Puerto Rico whirled on towards Jamaica today, but its force had diminished. HALF TRUTH BY BUTLER Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, at the Co- lumbia University opening exercises, said both the Republican and Demo- cratic parties had no program of any sort. Butler failed to say what pro- gram he had, and also failed to point out that the capitalist parties have a program, but it is a program of war and terror for the workers, se NDIAN MISLEADER POONA, In- dia. — Fearing Mahatma Gandhi's hun-| ger strike} stunt was not} enough to fool | the Indian masses int 0} letting them-| Gandhi, British SCREE) be officials have banned all interviews with Gandhi. } . HAVANA COPS “FIND” BOMB selves doped by HAVANA, Cuba, Sept. 29.—Police | came forward today with some dy- | namite they claimed to “found” in the Colon Cemetery, where Dr. Cle- mente Bello, a boss politician assassi- nated recently by rival racketeers, was supposed to be buried today. | HANG ON TO" JOBS LONDON, Sept. 29.—Walter Runci- | man, president of the Board of Trade, and Sir John Simon, foreign secre- tary, hung on to their jobs when their fellow liberals left the British Cabinet Yestetrday. ITALY WARMS up FOR WAR ROME, Sept. 29.—The Mussolini government began to get the. city ready for war by staging an imitation raid. All traffic was stopped, lights shut off and everybody ordered in- doors as hundreds of airplanes dark- ened the skies. To mak2 it more realistic ambulances. shrieked their way through the streets as “bombs” without explosives made deafening noises. SOCIAL NOYE NEW YORK.—“The cocker spaniel addicts, newly organized as the C. S. Club of Long Island, will stage an open specialty show of their merry little pets. And who else does one find in this hotbed of wealth and sacial prominence? Who, indeed, but Mrs. Norman Thomas, wife of the Socialist candidate for President. This time it’s dogs that make strange bedfellows.”—-Mary Randolph, society seribe in Hearst’s tabloid “Mirror.” Exhibiting her puppies alongside of Mrs. Thomas is the heiress, Mrs. George Djamgaroff, wife of the white guarg who was formerly stool-pigeon for the Fish Committee, and now for; the 2 Dogancmene vs Justice.” * THOUSANDS MowED DOWN IN CHACO WAR Thousands of Paraguayan soldiers were mowed down yesterday in a series of reckless assaults ordered by the Paraguayan army command in the Gran Chaco région against the Bolivian defense at Fort Boqueron. The “necessity” of capturing the fort before the heavy tropical rains made further military operations impossible was given by the Paraguayan com- mand as “justification” for the reck- less storm-troop attacks. RED CROSS SHAM RELIEF GESTURE Promises “Nightgowns For Winter NEW YORK. —A ni new pre-election gesture of relief made by the Hoover government, in New York State, of which Rocsevelt is governor, was an- nounced yesterday. The announce- ment stated that the strike-breaking Red Cross and the Harvey D. Gibson Unemployment “Relief”? Committee plan to turn 4,700,000 yards of cot- ton cloth into clothing for the un- employed. It is admitted that last year it took 700 women, working six days a week 10 full months to turn 550,000 yards of material into clothing. This means that by the time any appre- ciable amount of clothing is ready the winter will be entirely over, and the unemployed will be left to freeze. And even if the clothing would be prepared rin time, which it will not, it would, according to the announce- ment, consist almost entirely of cot- ton nightgowns, slips for women and girls, dresses and wash suits, and men’s and boys’ shirts, not a stitch of which is protection against the cold. Unemployed workers who have to sleep on park benches will surcly be grateful for the nightgowns. The Red Cross also announces this will be a “war time operation.” Sol- diers in the trenches who received impossible socks and other silly knick knacks will agree with this. Workers will not fall for this gro- tesque method of playing politics with \ their misery, but will organize under the leadershp of the Unemployed Seb te and the Trade Union Unity vague for an organized mass fight ie eal relief for the coming winter. (dathaway Speaks to Italian Workers in Brooklyn Tonight NEW YORK.—Clarence Hathaway, Communist candidate in the Third nal District, will before the Italian Proletarian Club, 197 Humboldt Street, Brooklyn, Fri- day nght Active participation by the Italian Proletarian Club in the Communist Election campaign has resulted in o rapid increase of its membership, The slub has also been carrying on a campaign against fascism and na- tional chauvinism, which Italian poli- ticians have been encouragng among £ ee VOTE COMMUNIST L " ployers. ment and banks; exemption farmers from taxes, collection of rent or debts Unemployment and Social Insurance at the expense of the state and em- Against Hoover’s wage-cutting policy, Emergency relief for the poor farm- ers without restrictions by the govern. FOR of poor and no forced Party (Section of the Communist International) y,<Worker | VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: Equal rights for the Negroes a determination for the Black Belt, Against capitalist terror; forms of suppression of the rights of workers. U.S.A $. Against imperialist war; for t fense of the Chinese people the Soviet Union. Vol. IX, No.? LOWELL, Mass. the war plans of th owns the mill, pt. of the efficiency expert and return of the last 37 and a half per cent wage- cuts they have had. Mass picketing this morning pulled out the Jast four men working and the strike is now 100 per cent solid. Strikers from the Beaver Brook Mill will speak in nearby Lawrence, the main center of the American Woolen Co:, at a big meeting called by the National Textile Workers. The meeting is Sunday. National Textile Workers organizers, Martin Russak and Jack Farrel, are in Collinsville, where the Beaver Brook Mill is located, and have met a welcome from the strik- ers. The N. T. W. urges these strik- ers to perfect their strike organiza- tion, elect broad committees and prepare to spread the struggle to other Amcriean Woolen Co. mills. MOONEY CLEARED BY CALLICOTE Swears Never Saw Him Demonstrate Oct. 8! PORTLAND, Gre, Sept. 29.—An at- tempt by the police to make use against Mooney. of. the » confession here the day before yestobday of Paul M, Callicotte, was frustrated yester- day by Callicotte himself and by quick action by the Internatoinal La- bor Defense. - a The LL.D. has Callicotte’s affi- davit that it was not Mooney or Billing who gaye him the suitcase he says he placed at the scene of the bomb explosion which sent the two workers to prison. Nevertheless, this confession alone is not going to free Mooney or Bill- ings. The frame-up against these two workers has been completely smashed for years. Every witness against them has been discredited, most of them on their own confes- sion that District Attorney Fickert and the United Railroads compelled them to swear falsely against the two strike leaders. Mass pressure of the workers alone will rescue Mooney and Billings. Workers! All out Oct. 8 in the world-wide demonstration for free- dom of Mooney and the Scottsboro boys! Refuses Demand to Release Sam Brown NEW YORK.—The Special Sessions Court in Brooklyn refused to release Samuel Brown, Harlem Negro worker, when the case was appealed there by the International Labor Defense last Tuesday. Samuel Brown was arrested Mon- day, August 26th, for conducting a struggle for relief of starving workers. He was railroaded: to six months in the, workhouse by Judge Aurillio, a Jim-Crow judge in Harlem. The New York District of the In- ternational Labor Defense urges workers all over New York City to demonstrate and to force the courts to release Brown, also to release James A. Ford, who was railroaded several weeks ago to one year in jail for merely attempting to take photo- graphs of a Jim Crow swimming pool in the Bronx. Registration now going on for Fall Term of Workers’ S. government. had just equipped it with $300,000 worth of new speed-up machinery, and installed an efficiency expert to drive the workers while they made up an order for 150,000 army Bipnkels: The 400 strikers demand dismissal ® Union | Special Sessions Court! Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at “EG % = New York, N.¥., under the Act of March 3, 1870. NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1932 CITY EDITION Price 3 Cents STRIKE OF 400 MILL WORKERS AT LOWELL IS BLOW AT WAR PLOTTERS Workers Were Viciously Speeded to Finish) Order for 150,000 Army Blankets Demand Abolition of Efficiency System and Revoking of 37 Per Cent Wage Cut .—The Beaver Brook Mill strike is a blow at The American Woolen Co., which LONGSHORE WAGE CUT OF 12 PER CENT ORDERED Dock Workers Must Rush Preparations For Struggle NEW YORK.—The longshoremen’s wage cut is here, The deep water steamship companies, through their joint committee headed by Oakley Wood and President Joseph Ryan of the International Longshoremen’s Association, have announced their agreement on a 12- per cent wage cut on straight time, from 85 cents per hour to 75 cents per hour. ‘They have announceq the wage cut on overtime to be 10 cents, from $1.20 to $1.10. The contracts will probably be signed today. Yesterday Ryan and Wood met to discuss the checkers’ scale and both state that even these negotiations are practically finished. Never Agreed to Cut The longshoremen were not con- sulted and have not agreed to the cut. Ryan during the last few days bas ordered-ruwnp fake - meetings of various locals, to which the long- shoremen were not invited, which were packed with his henchmen, and which put over the fraud of “accept- ing” the wage cut in the name of the longshoremen. For example, the meetings in New York had only 150 present out of the thousands of long- shoremen. In Philadelphia, no one was allowed to answer the proposal for a cut, and when protests began, the meeting was arbitrarily ad- journed. No delegates elected by the long- shoremen took part in the negotia- tions of the new scale, which is to go into effect on Oct. 1. The Marine Workers Industrial Union has repeatedly pointed out to the longshoremen what a swindle Ryan was putting over on them, and urged them to elect their own dock committees to lead a fight against the cut. It has urged them to organize the rank and file in anti-wage cut groups in each I. L. A. local ang de- mand representation at the confer- ence with the employers, also no wage cut, Revolt in Philadelphia The opposition has been best or- ganized in Philadelphia, where prac- tical revolt against Ryan's wage cut is going on. But now the cut is a fact, as far as Ryan can make it so. His plan, and the company’s plan is to jam it down the throats of the ‘longShoremen, whether they like it or not. Now the Jongshoremen must decide whether they will take this 12 per cent slash of their already low wages, a wage cut on the few hours work a week they get—or whether they will fight. The Marine Workers Industrial Union pledges full support to any struggle against the cut the long- shoremen will make, ’ WM. SIMONS SPEAKS TONIGHT William Simons, delegate of the Anti-Imperialist League to the World Congress Against War, will report tonight before the Downtown Branch of the Anti-Imperialist League at 114 West 21st Street. Comrade Simons also took ‘part in a conference of re resentatives Of anti-imperialist leagues of other countries. He will tell how the strug- School, 35 E. 12th St., 3rd fl. WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 29.— R. B. Ellison, Ex-Chief of Staff of the B, E. F., now National Organ- izer of the Kahki Shirts, revealed to- day that he was seeking to bead off the National Rank and File Sonus March to the Capital, December 5. The following statement was issued by Ellison: Both for the welfare of the un- employed and the prevention of disorders, the Kahki Shirts of rica vigorously opposes any ef- to concentrate any large group of men in the Capitol, and believes that the governors and mayors, if they do not already realize the ser- jousness of the situation, should awaken to its gravity and take such gle against war is carried on in those countries, AGAINST BONUS MARCH Khaki Shirt Head Would Halt It measures as seem necessary to pre- vent the threatened movement,” Ellison, who worked hand in hand with the police in Washington during the July days, now suggests that he and a hand full of his Kahki Shirt staff members be the only ones who should be allowed to remain in the Capitol. © In the place of the bonus Ellison segests that the jobless veterans be billeted in vacant buildings in their respective towns. The veterans at the Cleveland rank and file conference, however declared that they had no desire to be herded into vacant buildings to freeze and BLATVQ rey a Letters of Mass Organizations Prove Vital URING the past week the Daily has been publishing letters from workers showing how indispensable to all working-class struggles our paper has become. Especially do the from different branches of mass organization prove the vital need they have for a powerful Daily Worker. workers’ clubs, letters know until the sufficient fund: The critical financial situation of our paper imperils not only its own life, but entire language press. Daily Worker. Without them it possible to rally effectively the great masses of workers in these organizations to the working class struggles and demonstrations against hunger, boss terror and war preparation. HE “Daily” manages to come out every day only because of the sacrifice and devotion of thousands of workers throughout the country. It is they who form the basis for our life and strug- gles. And it is these same workers who form the of the membership of these mass organiza- bu! tions. So far their response—as organizations—has The International Workers’ Order Others—the Russian been small. has contributed $1,106.72. National Mutual Aid Society, the This, in turn, endangers the lives of our great mass and fraternal organiza- tions, which look for guidance to the language press—the Freiheit, Ukrainian Daily News, Rad- nik, Rovnost Ludu, Eteenpain, Laisve, Uj Elore, Novy Mir and many others—as well as to the the life of the INDIVIDUAL until now, ¢ through, But ACT would be im- I. W. O. TION MUST ers’ Federation, —have made beginnin; Daily is still uncertain. THE DRIVE TO RAISE FUNDS! the Yugoslav and Japanese the Needle Trades workers, etc. But the safety of the Each day we do not last minute whether we will have Is to go to press. workers have, by their steady aid mabled the Daily Worker to pull only the whole-hearted participa- tion of every mass organization will enable us to raise the $40,000 which is absolutely necessary to insure the Daily's NOW! AND EVERY OTHER MASS AND FRATERNAL ORGANIZA- THE RY EVE! ¥ BRANCH OF BRANCH OF E HEARTEDLY INTO Make collee- GO WHOL tions at meetings, canvass the homes of your neighbors, donate part of your wages to the Daily! haye achieved $40,000. $16,100.18. our financial minute you col DAILY Finnish Work- In the past few days donations have fallen off alarmingly. By this late dafe we should more than three-quarters of our INSTEAD WE HAVE RAISED ONLY It is up to the International Workers’ Order and all other mass organizations to revive campaign, Speed all funds, the lect them, to the Daily Worker, 53 E, 13th St., New York City! WORKER MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE Chicago Young Circle Convention Refuse to Endorse Norman Thomas MICHIGAN BOSSES PRAISE THOMAS Police Agent Bingay “Would Vote for Him” CHICAGO, Ill, “Sept. 29. —The youth auxilliary of the Workmen's Circle. under. Socialist, leadership, Young Circle League of Chicago its annual city convention refused by a vote of 27 to 15 to accept a reso- lution endorsing Thomas and Maurer the Socialist candidates for president and vice-president. The convention, representing all branches adopted resolutions con- demning the Republican and Demo- cratic parties, Then it defied, in the | course of three hours of bullying and exhortation by the Workmen’s Circle leadership, all efforts to make it en- dorse the Socialist candidates. Three | days before this, the Young Circle leadership expelled the Friedrich En- gels branch for Communist sympa- ties, eee DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 29.—Pre- ceded by a most intense capitalist press. campaign, Norman Thomas just toured the state of Michigan as presidential candidate of the Social- ist Party. For a period of two weeks newspapers ran front page announce- ments of his meetings, On Sept. 21, Thomas spoke in Grand Rapids, a town noted for its breaking-up of Communist meetings. Next day Thomas spoke to a con- ference of school superintendents in ‘Traverse City, Michigan, scene of the recent state convention. of police commissioners, which decided on an active program of police terror a- gainst the Communist Party and the working class during the coming winter. Here Thomas spoke on “HOW ‘TO BRING UP OUR CHILDREN TO BE GOOD CITIZENS.” The day after; Thomas spoke in Saginaw, Michigan. Despite the fact that in this General Motors con- trolled town the local papers for eleven successive days carried front page notices of Mr. Thomas’s meet- ing, there were less people present there than at the meeting for Wil- liam Z. Foster, which was advertized only through mimeographed leaflets. On September 24 Thomas spoke in Jackson, site of the State Prison which awaits, with open arms, active Communists| under Michigan's in- famous criminal syndicalist laws and where Mr. Thomas received his crowning glory. Thomas Not Revolutionary The editor of the Detroit Free Press, Bingay, Detroit, representative of the McCormick interests of Chi- cago, direct agent of Henry Ford and one of the most bitter, corrupt, and labor-hating newspapermen, opened up the pages of the paper to his friend, Norman Thomas, and printed a 6 inch double column picture of Norman Thomas on the front page, together with an interview of Thomas with Willie ©, Richards, one of Bingay’s press henchmen. Bingay re- cently stated that if he were not voting for Herbert Hoover, he would vote for Norman Thomas. Why does Bingay make such a statement? Let Richards talk: “He (referring to Thomas) is not popular among the Simon-pure Marxian so- cialists and has no sympathy for the Communist movement. In England he would be accepted in the political system of Ramsey McDonald and Philip Snowden.” So Mr. Bingay, a man who aids the police department to map out its strategy for the fight against workers, who, attended the police commissioners’ convention in Travers City, who is the represen- tative of Detroit, newspapers in the iutee of Detroit capitalists ‘Manchurian Rebels Win Ne Send More Troops Manchurian _ insurgents. Ayiterday tightened their control over Heilung- kiang Province, Northern Manchuria, | following their success in driving the Japanese invaders out of Manchouli and other towns. Most of the Jap- anese consuls and several hundred ANTI-NANKING REVOLT IN SHENSI | Warlord Flees, Loots Treasury, Balks SHANGHAI, Sept. 29—The Nan- king government in Shensi Province has been overthrown by an anti- Nanking uprising in that north-west ern Chinese province. General Yang Fu-cheng, Shensi warlord and gov- ernor of the province is in flight with the remnants of his army. Prior to evacuating the Shensi capital, Sianfu, Yang looted the provincial treasury and banks and seized all available automobiles, carts, horses and mules. The Shensi Provincial bank went} into bankruptcy following his depar- ture. Yeng, who is an adherent of Chi- ang Kai-shek, head of the Nanking butcher government is reported with- drawing into Kansu Province, west of Shensi, General Ma Lin, the Kansu warlord, is reported heading a sepa- Tratist movement aimed at bringing his control. The meager reports of the revolt received here indicate the uprising to be an armed struggle by the im- poverished and starving peasants against ,the Nanking militarists. Similar peas- ants’ struggles are occurring in North Anwhei and other regions still under the control of Nanking. SECTION WEEK-END SCHOOLS CLOSE OVER WEEK END Owing to a very important meeting of all functionaries on Sunday, Oct. 2, the Section Week-End Schools will not be held. The schools will con- tinue on Sunday, Oct. 9 at 11 a.m. The district class on Negro problems started Saturday, Sept 24. While there was a good response, all the students who registered did not at- tend the first session. The district wants to call this to the attention of the sections as well as the individual comrades. The class is held every Saturday at 3:30 p.m., at the Workers Center, 35 East 12th Street, Room 308. who dominate the economic and po- litical life of the city, assures the capitalist class that they need have fear of Norman Thomas, who time and time again has shown his loy- alty to the capitalist class, Bingay’s reporter goes on to say “Norman Thomas is not the soap box style of socialist.” But They Arrest Reynolds On the very day that Thomas was being backed by Mr. Bingay, William Reynolds, Communist candidate for Governor was arrested in Van Dyke. a| Michigan, because he refused to obey the orders of a deputy sheriff who ordered him to stop talking about starvation and talk about taxes—an action which was taken thru instruc- tions issued by prosecutor French, acting for the Republican governor, Brucker, Kansu, Shensi and Szechuan under | tax extortions of the) w Victories Tokio Plans to Lise FBevalt as New Pretext to| rs to Soviet Frontie Japanese civilians haye fled to Soy- iet territory. Most of the troops of | state have joined the rebels. The Manchoukuo government is reported | “helpless” before the tremendous up- | surge of the anti-Japanese, national revolutionary struggle. The insurgents yesterday captured the town of Angangki, just south of Mukden dispatches claim | Tsitsihar. the Japanese, although previous dis days ago by the insurgents. | ‘The insurgents are operating a 100- mile stretch of the Chinese Eastern | | Railway, which they captured after |flerce fighting with the Japanese. Japan is reported preparing a huge | offensive against the victorious in- millet which affords a cover for the | insurgents against the. activities of | Japanese bombing planes. Tokio dis- | patches indicate that the insurgent successes will be used by the Japan- | ese as a pretext to further increase | | their SoRGE tee Soe RE UeS on the Soviet frontiers. STILL HOLD CARL Parole Has Already Been Granted SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 29.—In {spite of the reports in the capitalist press that Carl Sklar has been granted parole, he is still being held in Folsom State Prison. Carl Sklar has been granted parole pending in- vestigation of the jobs obtained for him in New York. Three lenghty |reports on these jobs have come from New York to Mr. Whyte of the State Parole Board. Usually Mr. Whyte is the final one to pass on jobs obtained for -paroled prisoners, In the case of Carl Sklar, he states that he has seen the reports of the jobs but that he will not act on them, or take any responsibility in making the decision, and that he is going to turn this matter over to the State Parole Board and have them pass on the jobs. In other words, the state authori- ties are again “passing the buck” to each other. We call upon all indi- viduals and workers’ organizations to | immediately send their protests to Mr. Whyte, Room 6, Ferry Building, and to the State Parole’ Board, Re- presa, California, demanding the im- mediate release of Carl Sklar as per decision of the Parole Board. Send protests to Wm. Knuckles Doak, Department of Labor, Washington, D. C, and back up the delegation that is going to Washington to de- }mand the release of Carl Sklar and the withdrawal of the deportation | Warrant that is being held against him. This delegation will be headed | by Frank Spector, former Imperial | Valley prisoner, and National Secre- tary of the International Labor De- | Tense. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR Against Moovers wage-outling the Japanese puppet Manchoukuo that Tsitsihar is still in the hands of | patches reported its capture several | surgents. In preparation for the “a Japanese drive, Chinese farmers and | tet ae |workers are being recruited to do| collection of r | forced labor cutting down the tall/|! SKLAR IN PRISON) SN ors, the “Citizens Budget ‘Commis- BULGARIAN GOV'T EXPELS Need of “Daily”|MRS. WRIGHT TO PLEASE U:S., ADMITS ITS MINISTER Sofia Workers Answered Mietheke on Scottsbor Campaign With Overwhelming Vote for C. P. Throughout World, Toiling Ma: Are Pre- |paring Huge Protest Demonstrations for Oct. 8 SOFIA, Sept. 29.—In this city, in which the Communist Party has just won the elections, a Scottsboro Defense meeting, at which Mrs. Ada Wright, mother of two of the boys, was the main speaker, was broken up by police | and Mrs. Wright arrested and escorted to the frontiers. Mrs. Wright had previously headed a delegation of Bulgarian workers —_———-- which visited the Minister of the In- COURT INNEW Suer" | the ‘ban on t Accompar | Louis Engdahl LYNCH VERDICT IN icisceteact | the U. S., and Atana retary of the Bu EUEL LEE CARE Sead, Mrs. Wright pressed her claim to, be permitted to appeal to Bul- ELD, ie “Appeal, garian public opinion against the 5. frame-up of the Negro lads in Protests Grow Scottsboro, Alabama, Gutrgumott * | openly admitted that he feared the American Legation in Sofia would be angry if the Bulgarian govern- | ond trial of Yuel Lee ended with a | ment permitted the ‘Scottsboro new lynch death verdict against the | meetings. He expressed conf: ged Negro farm laborer framed up | in the “fairness” of the American on a charge of murder. lynch courts. The International Labor Defense | Mrs. Wright wa is again appealing against the lynch | potel during her stay in Sof | verdict. | eution resorted to every legal trick- | ery to effect the exclusion of Ne- groes from the jury, as in the first trial. The I. L. D. had forces a reversal of the first death verdict | en the grounds of this exclusion. The court this time permitted Ne- groes on the jury panel but held the number down to two, thus de- | Hberately co-operating with the prosecution, which had the right of ten peremptory challenges and ated the Negro jurors. ‘ | BALTIMORE, Sept. 29.—Over 600 | white and Negro-workers ‘turned out } | Sunday night to protest the frame-up | activities of the Maryland courts and authorities against Euel Lee, aged Negro farm hand. Bernard Ades, one of the Interna- tional Labor Defense attorneys con- |ducting Lee's defense, gave a report |< on the present fight to prevent the/ exclusion of Negroes from the jury.| William L. Jones, editor of the Afro- | American, also addressed the meeting) FREDERICK. |and pledged the support of his paper} meeting Sunday to the fight to free Lee. ted Farmers League. Paul Gline, representing the Com-|¢rS of all mass organi jmunist Party, outlined the Commu-|invited, 100 pled |nist position on the Negro question | forced sale of the | Kotilla, a farmer h The court and the prose- | numerous delegat'ons of work’ |Peesants, who expre pathy and their sol | American working c gle to free the | boys. is | came in constantly |garian towns protesting th tion against the Scotsbc The Communist Part ing this growi: |The Bulgarian press |tensive interviews with Mrs. \and Engdahl. WILL PREVENT GRAIN SEIZUE South Dakota Farmers Plan Mass Action | easily eli D is) i D.. Sevt, 29. to Kotilla is an ex- has a wife and The North only nine d stead of the usual 30 days m to haul his : i|to partly pay the rent | Co The farmers declared | Pree picketing of Kotilla | vent seizure of the gr: | |opted a resolution de farm debts, rents, tax gages were contracted for constant pre- a farm in. when were high and the farmers can not | prices | pay any of these. The farmers’ cash income is now too small to give a decent living for his family. The Farm Holiday Strike has been declared in this section, but the farmers want to go further and by mass action save their toms and grain, Euel Lee (right) being taken to | jail handcuffed by policeman (left). land appealed to the workers to vote for Foster and Ford in the approach- ing Presidential elections. Cline also ieee called on all who could make the aap NEW YORK.—William W. Wein- to attend the white chauvinist trial|stone, editor of the Daily Worker, | which the party is staging in Wash-/and Communist candidate from New ington on Monday night. York for the U. S. Senate, and Iry- A mass delegation of fifty workers |ing Potash, secretary of the Needle will make the trip. Some of the dele- | Trades Workers Industrial Union, gates were elected at the mass meet. | | will be the main speakers at an elec- ing, others by mass organizations and |tion campaign meeting to be held by Communist Party units. The trial is|the Millinery (opposition) group on being Held at Pythian Hall. Raw-/| Wednesday, October 5th, 7 p. m., at bitzky, a member of the Party, is Bryant Hall, 40th Street and 6th Ave. charged by the Young Communist |J. Galstuck, secretary of the Millinery League with an out and out act of|Left Opposition in the American white chauvinism ,against several | Federation of Labor will act as chair+ young Negro workers. man TEACHERS OPPOSE CUTS McKee, Big Bankers Demand Cut NEW YORK. — Delegates of the )sion,” which is leading the fight for various teachers’ associations will £0 | wage cuts of all city employers, is to City Hall Monday to protest May- | now discovered to be in reality ® or McKee's orders for a flat six pe A meet. |committee of the 25 biggest banks Milinery Workers to Hear Weinstone Oct. 5 cent “voluntary” wage cut. ing of 2,000 teachers at Public School and real estate companies, Peter 27 called together by the Kindergar-|Grimm, who is chairman of the lten 6-B Teachers Association, and|board of trustees, and an active pro- other organizations, voted practically | ponent of wage cuts for the teachers unanimously against accepting anyjis a big real estate shark, and is | wage cut at all, |connected with William a. White & It has developed that if the teach- | Sons, which handles the business’ of ers, who are on civil service rates, |the Rockefeller properties. The banks do accept’ the wage cut, it-becomes|back of the Citizens Budget Com- ‘a permanent cut and besides that, it |mittee have made enormous profits | cuts their pensions they are supposed jeven in the industrial crisis. Thirty- to get on retiring from the service./three New York banks distributed Furthermore, McKee's pet advis- dividends amounting to $55,985,000 tm the first six months of this years ,