The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 3, 1932, Page 3

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o< Longshoremen! Elect Your Dock Co WORKERS OF USSR. GO FORWARD WITHPUSH PL mmittees ANS FOR WORLD -WIDE NEW VICTORIES 10 15TH ANNIVERSARY SCOTTSBORO PROTESTS; OCT. 8 21 NEW FOOD PLANTS STARTED ' | | | Nov. 7th Will Mark 15 Years of Progress As the workers of the world pre. pare for the fifteenth anniversary of the. Russian revolution, which will be celebrated Nov. 7, reports pour in of new: progress being made on the economic and cultural fronts, and of the consequent rise in the living con- ditions of the workers and peasants in the Soviet Union. The rate of harvesting all over the U. 8, 8, R, is increasing so that the divergence betwen. this year’s figures and last year's is rapidly diminish- | ing. Threshing and delivering, ham. pered at first by the sudden in- creased sabotage of the kulak rem- nants, who in the face of the success of the collectives recently resorted to robbery and violence as a last desper- ate effort to stem the tide of social- ization, is now going forward. Collective farm trade has shown considerable progress, so that prices in the towns have been reduced on a wide variety of agricultural products. For the first half of this year, 21 Gorki Has City brated the 40th anniversary of the Society, | (Federated Pictures) | Here’s Maxim Gorki, world-famous Soviet author, with his grand- children, as it was announced that Nizhni-Novgorod, industrial center on the Volga, was to be named Maxim Gorki in his honor, He recently cele. publication of his first work. He is new food plants have been started, costing 40,000,000 rubles. plants include one flour mill, two margarine factories, one fish and two vegetable canneries. All have been operating long enough to indicate that the equipment, as well as the new production ‘methods, have been mastered, Meanwhile plans are going forward The new/|for an ever greater output of con- | sumers’ goods, A large fruit. and | vegetable cannery, for example, is to | be built next year at Sardar-Abad in South Armenia, at a cost of ‘about 10,000,000 rubles. Raw material for this cannery will be supplied by the state farm in the vicinity. Dear Comrades: me. effect. I will send in another dollar later as soon as I can afford to send one as we are workers and cannot exist without the Daily, Comradely yours, * MACEDONIANS SEND $5. Dear Comrades: Enclosed herewith you will find a $5 bill, our contribution to the campaign for Daily. We, the Macedonian workers, know very well what the Daily means to the American working class as well as to us who fight against both the capitalists and the bloody Macedonian fascists of this country. MACEDONIAN PROGRESSIVE GROUP, B. W. Gushleff, Sec'y. ° * @ Dear Comrades: On account of Hoover's prosperity we can't Support our beloved paper with more than one dollar, A. K. and L. M. AGRICULTURAL WORKERS STARVING Watsonville, Colorado. Dear Comrades: Enclosed you will find $1 for two months of my renewal sub. I have read the Daily for two weeks now for financial support, but conditions and other working class activities here in Watsonville make it very hard for me to vome to its aid right at the present time, Agri- Enclosed find $1.00 toward the Daily Worker fund, as I enjoyed reading it for quite a while, My visit to the Soviet Union in 1931 impressed me so thet I can’t bear to see capitalism in front of I will start out to co-operate with the labor movement for a good cause and will vote the Communist ticket instead of for Hoover, all the working class would soon wake up to that. “HOOVER’S PROSPERITY” New York, N. Y. “No Longer for Hoover After Visit to U.S.S.R.;” Aids ‘Daily’ WILL VOTE COMMUNIST. Stamford, Conn, cultural worke: cent and starv: I am out of I wish for over a yea of mv heart. mane~cd to sc little might in N.L, Madison, 11: $40,000 for the has won over are somewhat T am out of represents the mankind. ers Educational! we decided to These worke appeal of the the Daily Worker, and call cn YOU to at least NO JOB FOR A YEAR; DONATES $1 Dear Comrades: the Daily Worker has struck at the very bottom “KEEP UP YOUR FIGHT!” Keep up your fight; you’re winning every day, only fight harder! ing in the November election. I believe our party ses, but it’s the full-time and part-time workers we must win over completely too; many of them about the Communist Party. family, Our resources are very low, ‘but thank heaven we have $6 to donate to your paper, which GREEK WORKERS DONATE $1 Dear Comrades: As I received your letter for the Daily Worker Emergency Fund, I called upon the Greek Work- | hope every worker shall do the same—or better. demonstrated their devotion to and support for equal—if not better—their efforts, Send in your answer, IMMEDIATELY, to the Daily Worker, 50 East 13th Street, New York City, rs here are working about 50 per ‘ing. Comradely yours, G.D. eee. Los Angeles, Calif. work; have been looking for a job r already, but your appeal to save So enclosed find $1.00 which I rape together. I wish to add my the fight against capitalism. Yours comradely, D. B. aren ae Great Falls, Mont, | ‘We must make a good show- most all of the unemployed mas- in the dark concerning the truth work with two dependents in the greatest cause ever fought for by Yours comradely, BAe Be ee ee Pullman, Ml. 1 League, and with all our hearts | give $4 towards this fund. We Yours, J. B. * rs, foreign and native born, have Opal Jensen, Three Years Old, Dies of Hunger in Omaha ‘OMAHA, Neb.—Opal Jensen, three years old, died in a hospital on the morning of Sept. 26 of dysentery colitis. This disease is generally. found in dirty. congested districts of large cities. Opal’s brother, Walter, also lies at the point of death in the same hospital. Opal's death brought to light the fact that the Jensen family had been evicted from a small apartment, on Mrs, Goldie Cave took Mrs. Jensen and her two children into her tent. Mrs. Cave had been evicted from an- other apartment some time ago and has been li in a small ragged tent on @ vacant lot. Living with her are four of her own small children, Mr. Jensen found sleeping room in the basement of an old church that \ is already crowded with homeless and families, The Jensens had appealed to the vation Army for a tent, but they re told a tent was not a fit place to live at this time of the year. Their only solution was an offer to break up the family. COPS KIDNAP SICK WOMAN PITTSBURGH, Pa,—Mrs, Haywood of 23 Emmit Street, who was sick and unable to rent, was thrown into jail recently, and when she got she found that the landlady had thrown her furniture out into a coal shed, When unemployed workers in the neighborhood mobilized to put the furniture back, the landlady called the police, who came and carried Mrs, pti dea and we have not been ‘ to find her yet—T. S, Worker Correspondence |Dearborn Unemployed Hunt for Garbage DEARBORN, Mich.—Here in Ford's home town, most every day I. see men, womien and children tramping through the alleys picking through j serbage cans in search of food. One jOld lady carried an old burlap bag and filled it up with garbage and went trudging down the alley. Many unemployed are thrown into a large building that has a lot of small office rooms, and no arrange- ments made for private cooking or toilets. Ford’s factory is laying off help day after day, for the merchants are hit and workers are being thrown out of their homes as the cold weather is coming on. An Unemployed Ford Worker. ——_——___ BUTTON SWEATSHOP NEW YORK.—I paid a 6th Ave, employment agency $2 for a job at the Eagle Leather Co., 202 West 35th St., a sweatshop where fancy leather buttons are made by hand, The rates are so fixed that I could only earn 30 cents for nine hours of hard work, The most expert workers get at $1 to $2 a day, When I complained that they pro- mised to pay me 50 cents a day, they yelled at me to go faster, and said I was sick, and they didn’t want sick people around the job, and finally forced me to quit, I made the agency refund half my fee——A Worker, Foster’s “Toward Soviet America” is given free with HIRING BY NYC. BXPOSED AS FAKE ‘Railroad Has Fired Refired Repeatedly NEW YORK.—As part of the elec- tion campaign ballyhoo of the capi- talist parties, the New York Central Railroad, which has ‘hired and re- hired thousands of workers in re- cent months, announces, according to the New York American, that it is rehiring 4,000 workers. That this rehiring is pure election propaganda is proved by the fact that the New York Central called back 500 strippers on February 29, 1,700 on March 7 and then fired them all in May. On July 17 they were all hired back again, It follows, therefore, that the hiring of these 4,000 work- crs has no meaning. It is probable that they will all be fired immedi- ately after election, % Employment among railroad work- ers is at the lowest point in years, More than a quarter of a million railroad workers have been fired in the past year, Workers Are Warned Against Stanley A renegade and free lance soap boxer by the name of Stanley, who Was once exposed and expelled from the Communist Party, is allegedly collecting money for the Daily Worker. All workers are warned a- gainst this renegade. VOTE COMMUNIST Against Imperialist War; for the a yearly subscription to the Daily Worker. | of the ‘Soviet Union, defense of the Chinese people and ~~ BIG SCOTTSBORO | PROTEST MEETS THRUOUT OHIO Workers Rallying to Fight for 9 Boys YOUNGSTOWN, O., Oct. 2.— Youngstown workers are busy mobil- izing their forces to take part in the world-wide demonstrations on Octo- ber 8 to demand the release of the 9 innocent Scottsboro Negro boys facing legal lynching in the courts of the ruling class. The demonstrations will take place two days before the U. S. Supreme Court meets to go through the form of reviewing the lynch verdicts. Speakers throughout the Youngstown district are warning | the workers against’ harboring any |Sllusions in the “fairness” and “fus- |tice” of the Supreme Court—the 64 and an enthusiastic participant in the building of the new Socialist | COUT of last illusions. In the city of Youngstown, there |will be two demonstrations, as fol- | lows: West Lake Crosging in front of the | Market at 7 pm. and at 9 p.m.; a |terch-light parade to the home of | Mr. Vaughn, a Negro councilman, to demand that he endorse a resolution to the Supreme Court, demanding the release of the Scottsboro Boys. Sharon Line Stop 25 at 7 p.m. and after the meeting at 9 p.m. a torch- light parade to the house of the other Negro councilman, Mr. Dodson, with the same demand. Warren, open air meeting at 5 p.m. in /@ workers’ neighborhood. Side show program, 8 p.m. (place to be announced), Niles, open air meeting, 7 p.m. at the Central Park. Sharon - Farrell - Masury, Croatian Hall, Staunton St., Farrell, Pa., 8 p.m. DARROW SAYS “LET THEM BURN” Won’t Sign Protest for Scottsboro Nine YOUNGSTOWN, O., Oct, 2.—Clar- ‘A Photograph from ‘ht of Liberty, justice we see a picture of the horrible per: Belt”, where their right of self-dete: them are annually trapped into the to a guard or was too sick to work. year 1932 is graphica’ x d in by John L. Spivak, just published, clared Hoover in a demagogic appeal for Negro votes on Saturday. Here to white landlords in debt-slavery. This Negro lad probably “talked back” the American Con, zo de- and equal opportunity is yours,” secution of the Negroes in the “Black rmination is denied, and thousands of county chain gangs or delivered over The existence of Negro slavery in the | the senational novel “Georgia Nigger” | CONVENTION FOR LSNR Convention In Cleveland Oct. 7th CHICAGO, Oct —The National Convention of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights will be held in Cleveland, Oct. 7. All working class organizations are requested delegates to this convention. On Oct. 5, just before the national |convention, there will be a city. con. | vention in Chicago. In ation m be obtained by w headqua! ters of the League, 3126 South State Street, Chicago. ence Darrow, member of the execu- tive board of the National Associa- tion for the Advancement of Colored people, who went all the way to Honolulu, Hawaii, to defend a group of white lynchers who murdered a Hawaiian youth, yesterday refused to lift a finger to sign a resolution de- manding the release of the Scottsboro Negro boys and Tom Mooney, Darrow who was approached at his hotel by members of the Scottsboro Defense Committee, answered the re- quest for his signature with the angry shout: “Let them burn! Get to hell out of here! I qon’t want to have anything to do with them!” A few minutes later he was inter- viewed by a capitalist newspaper re- porter on the Honolulu case, declar- ing for the bourgeois press, “I enjoyed the case very much,” This is the same Darrow whom the leaders of the National Association for t he Advancement of Colored People attempted to jam down the throat of the Scottsboro boys, with the ultimatum that they. must turn over their defense completely to Dar- row and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored people. STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MAN- AGEMENT, CIRCULATION, ETC. Ri QUIRED BY THE ACT OF CONGRESS or AUGUST 24, 1912, O1 the Daily Worker, published daily ‘at New York, N. ¥., Oct. 1, 1932, State of New York, County of New York, 88. Before me, @ notary public, in and for the state and county aforesaid, personally appeared Vern Smith, who, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the Managing Editor of the Datly Worker and that the following 4s, to the best of his knowledge and belief, @ true statement of the ownership, man- agement (and if a daily paper, the circu- lation), etc., of the aforesaid’ publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied ir, section 411, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse of this form, to wit: 1. That the names and addresses of the | Publisher, editor, managing editor and business ager are: Publisher, Compro- daily Publishing Co., Inc., 50 E. 13th St. Editor, none; Managing Editor, Ver Smith, 50 E, 13th St; Business Managers, none, 2. That the owner is: (If owned by a corporation, its name and address must be stated and also immediately thereunder the names and addresses of stockholders own- ing or holding one per cent or more of total amount of stock. If not owned by a corporation, the names and addresses of the individual owners must be given. If owned by a firm, company, or other unin- corporated concern, its name and address, as well as those of orzh individual mem- ber, must be given.) Comprodatly Publish- ing Ce E. 13th 8t.; Earl Browder, 50 E. 13th St.; Morris A. Greenbaum, 50 E. 19th St.; Dr. A. Markoff, 50 B, 13th St. 3. That the known bondholders, mort- Bagees and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages or other secu- Titles are: (If there are none, s0 state.) jone. 4, That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names and owners, stockholders, and security holders, If any, contain not only the list of stockholders’ and security holders as they appear upon the books of the company but also, in cases where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the company as trustec or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of the person or corporation for whom ‘such trustee is acting, 1s give 0 that the said two paragraphs contain st ments embracing affiant’s full knowle and belief as to the circumstanc ditions under which stockholders and. secu- rity holders who do not-appear upon the books of the company as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity’ other than that of a bona fide owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association, or corporation has eny interest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds, or other securities than AS 80 stated by him. 5. That the average number of copies of each issue of this publication sold or dis- tributed, thro @ mails or otherwise, to paid subseribers during the six months preceding the Gate, shown above is VERN SMITH, Managing Editor. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 13th day of April, 1932, KITZES, (Seal) Notary Public. ‘ County, N.Y. “(My commission expires March 30, 1934.) Back Scottsboro Fight; Communist Election Campaign ALLENTOWN, Pa., Oct. 2.—Forty. five Negro and white workers partici- pated in a Scottsboro protest meet- ing at the Undenominational Church here, Declaring the lynch verdicts against the Scottsboro Negro youths a part the terror of the white bosses against the oppressed Negro masses, and that the Communist Party was the only political party fighting against lynching and jim-crowism; a number of the workers volunteered to take part in a mass conference to prepare the Foster meeting in this town. The meeting was addressed by Martha Roberts, an organizer of the National Textile Workers Union. Bulgarian Workers meeting organized by working class organizations in connection with t Scottsboro campaign was by the authorities and armed folice occupied the hall in which the meet- ing was to have taken place. The Police cordoned off the surrounding streets and dispersed gatherings of workers. At about 8 o'clock several hundred workers gathered and marched through the streets demon- strating against the prohibition of the Scottsboro meetings and for the release of the young Negroes, They protested against the action of the Bulgarian Government in expelling the Scottsboro mother from Bulgaria, Todor Stoyanoff addressed the work- ers, The porcession then marched to the club of the mass murderer Zan- koff in the Alabinska Street where further collisions with the police oc- curred. The procession was broken up and Stoyanoff was arrested. RECENT SOVIET FILM IN CLEVELAND CLEVELAND, Oct. i.—‘The Diary of a Revolutionist” a Soviet film dealing with the civil war, Five-Year Plan and attempted sabotage of the plan will be shown by the Film League o f Cleveland on Oct. 3 and 4 at the Sun Theatre, Buckeye and E.' 80th St. NEGRO RIGHTS, to send | ~ {ceeding to the Civil Center by 2. of Demonstrate for | Framed Worker Hits) Scottsboro Boys| Frame-Ups SOFIA, Bulgaria, (By Mail) —a|. NEW YORK.—A. Weinstein-Scotts- prohibited | “FRISCO P REPARES| SCOTTSBORO DAY ‘Workers Plan Huge} | Protest Oct. 8th FRANCISCO, Calif., Oct, 2.— 0 workers will prétest | 5 sentences against the Scottsboro Negro boys and the con-| tinued imprisonment of Tom Mooney y parade and demonstra- October 8—International on Scottsboro Day An a Embar ito parade will start at the | lero at 12,30 noon, pro- p. m Half-hour street meetings will be held along the route of march, at |Chinatown, Washington Park, North | Beach, Columbus and Union; Fill- |more and Post; Mission, 16th and Valencia, Mission and 21st, Langston hes’ play “Scottsboro Limited” will be presented at an affair in the jevening under the auspices of the local Scottsboro Defense Committee, ith the aid of the John Reed Club and the “Western Worker.” Many locals of the A. F, of L.| are co- ting in preparing the | demonstration In Oakland the auto parade will | start from 10th and Broadway at | 6:30 p.m. An open air demonstration will be held at 10 and Broadway, fol- lowed by an indoor mass meeting at 8 p. m, at the U. P. E. C. hall, 7th and Henry Streets. ‘WEINSTEIN ON SPEAKING TOUR boro Defense Committee has been | |formed by the Downtown section of the International Labor Defense. The | Committee has announced that it will | hold an open-air meeting at 7th St. and Ave. B. before the International | Scottsboro Day demonstration on Oc- |tober 8, After the meeting, there | will be a street run from Houston St. and Ave. C to Union Square. Samuel Weinstein is a furniture worker who was jailed on July 19 on a framed-up charge of manslaughter | for taking an ive part in the strike of the Muskin Manufacturing Co. workers, which was led by the Fur- |niture Workers Industrial Union. | Weinstein was released on $25,000 bail | after a ff fight was waged by the International Labor Defense and the Union. Weinstein is now on a speaking tour, not so much on his own be- jhalf, but on behalf of workers all ever the country who have been rail- |roaded to jail for their workingclass | activities, | The Weinstein-Scottsboro Defense Committee invites all workers to at- tend their meetings every Monday night at 226 E. 12th St,, Apt. 3-C. Equal rights for the Negroes and ! Fight Again | tically none of the real longshore- Union supports these demands, and | year again st Pay Slash RYAN AND COMPANIES DECREE 12 PER CENT © WAGE CUTS; FIGHT IT! Baltimore Meeting Rejects Slash; Revolt Rises In Philadelphia; Spread the Struggle! Rank and File Should Orgynize; Seamen Called to Aid; Marine Work Now is tffe time for the long hands, form their dock committees, a er’ Union Will Help en to take things into their own nd under. their leadership, with the co-operation of the Marine Workers Industrial Union, smash the wage cut. The 12 per cent wage cut on strai ght time for longshoremen, a reduc- tion from 85 cents per hour to 75 cents, and the wage cut on overtime from $1.20 to $1.10 has been decreed by t organized steamship —_comy ; stevedoring companies, and b officials of the Interr 1 shoremen’s Association. The contract expired S and the w contract was coi d to by the companie: ident Joseph Ryan eral wee! the straight time cut, the main poi He then played with the compan a ntic fraudulent f str jover the less impor ove rates; the companies demanding rate of $1.05 and Ryan $1.15, wil the result that they compromised ju a day before the end of tract on what the compa all along, namely, $1.10 overtime rates. Longshoremen Never Accepted Th's Cut Ryan repeatedly clair thi had the support of the lor for his straight time cut, and toward the end, for his compromise propesal for $1.10 on overtime. The only ve tige of truth in this claim is that in the very last week of negotiations, | fake meetings, attended, except | Baltimore and Philadelphia by prac- | men, voted to accept these cuts At Baltimore the meeting de-| nounced the whole wage cut enti y| and Ryan also. In Phi! It | where revolt against the ct rag- | ing Ryan's mchman, “Polly Ki an internafional appointee, | ed through a motion to accept the | cut, and adjourned the meeting be- fore opposition could get in its word. Philadelphia Demands. The Philadelphia rank and file has} organized and elected a | ing con mittee which proposes struggle for the following demands 1—Against any wage cut or wor. ened conditions. 2—For 8 or more men in hold and dock; 4 men on steel lighters; 4 men on cars on lumber. 3—Reduction of size of loads of all| drafts, slings, skids and trucks by at | least one quarter in size. 4—No man or gangs to work over 8 hours a day. si 5—Full union wages for all car | gangs. | 6—Regular shape up three times 7—No discrimination or favorite gangs in putting out work. The Marine Workers Industrial in its latest issue calls on all long- shoremen in Boston and New York and Baltimore to follow the example of the rank and file in Philadelphia, | in organizing for strike for such de- | mands, and particularly against the | wage cut. Boston longshoremen struck last | st the cut of 85 cents, and | their stril was broken by They are preparing for new st this year. Revolt Rises at New York. Red Hook longshoremen have held | meetings and d mnced the On the Jarca stevedorir Philadelphia, the comy | ready tried to put in a wage cut, aj 50 cent scale, and sharp «struggles have already forced the postpone- ment of the cut. Seamen Showld Help Now is the time for the longshore- men to fight! The Marine Workers! Industrial Union calls on them to form dock committees to lead the strike against the cut when the com- panies try to enforce it. The M.W.L.U. | calls on coastwise seamen to come out in support of the longshoremen on deep water docks, otherwise t companies will try to use coastwi: men to break the strike and enforce IN MONT., N. D. mmunist Candidates id Farm Picketing N. D, Oct. 2—The arty is one the ballot in nd the candidates for 1 office are conducting ign in support of the Communist candidates rmers’ picket lines and > nu in the formation of a e united front of all farmers e rank and file of all farm or- ganizations. The names of Communist candi- dates have also been filed in Mone tana at Helena, the state capital. Amter on Radio in Binghamton Tuesday BINGHAMTON, N. Y., Oct. 2—The Communist Election Program will be broadcast to thousands of radio lis- teners in Binghamton and surround- ry on Tuesday, October 4, P.m., when Israel Amter, munist candidate for Governor of New York, will speak into the mi- rophone at the local radio station. Zaritsky Contract Gives Millinery *° Trade 60-Hour Week NEW YORK.—After Zaritsky’'s wage cut agreement went into effect for members of the Clth, Hat, Cap and Millinery Workers Union in May only one local meeting was called in July at which members’ books were examined through iron bars and some of those who got in had to put up a stiff fight. A number of trimmers, who were outlawed by being given temporary books with no right to be on a shop committee and no right to attend a union meeting, were barred by strong arm organization commit- I rays SMARK, amunist P; h Dak e and loca a strong ¢: | tee men and police from entering the hall. Since Zaritsky’s open betrayal of the millinery workers wage cuts $72 the order of the day. Real sweat shop conditions prevail and many millin- ery workers work as many as 60-65 hours a week for as low as $16-20. Shops are allowed to work on Sun- days. < Only through struggle and unity of employed and unemployed over the heads of the officials can the sweat- |shop conditions be checked and a fight waged by the rank and file for the. 40-hour 5 day week, for minimum | Wage scale and unemployment relief at the expense of the bosses, Immerman Tailoring Strike Victory Won; Workers Join Union NEW YORK —The strike of the workers in Joseph Immerman’s cus- tom tailor shop, 561 Fifth Ave., which started three weeks ago and was led by the Needle Trades Workers In- dustrial Union, is won. The strikers got wage increases ranging from $1 to $3 a week for both week and piece | workers, and recognition of their shop committee The workers consider it a partial the cut, and the coastwise men will | get their cut right after that | “Seamen,” says the MWIU, edi-| torially in the Marine Workers Voice, | its newspaper, “make sure that not one ship sails that has been loaded | _ by seabs!” “Unite and fight this ¥ is the theme of the Marir Industrial Union, and it full support to any struggle the wage cut. Unemployment and Social m- self-determination in the Black Belt. surance at the expense of the state | and employers. i} REPORT NO EXTRA HELP NEEDED New Machinery Speed Out Orders American munition makers yester- day admitted that they are filling huge war orders for Colombia, Brazil and other countries in South America where a war is now raging which threatens to involve most of the con- tinent. It arises from the constantly U.S. MUNITION BOSSES FILLING WAR ORDERS FOR SO.AMERICA | deepening crisis, the rivalry of Am- | erican and British imperialisms, and the desperate drive of the South Am- erican ruling classes for war as a | captealist “way out” of the crisis. Remington Gets Order | | The Remington Arms Company Plant a, Bridgeport admitted that they “had received a very large order from Colombula.” The government of that country recently voted a war Joan of $10,000,000 for hostilities with Peru. The Peruvian government also voted $5,000,000 for war purposes The Winchester Repeating Arms Company of New Haven also admit- ited that it had just received “a large order for munitions” from the Brazi- lian Government? Company officials said the order would be handled | without taking on any new workers. | The plant was recently overhauled, with new machinery installed to per- mit a greater production with less workers, ia Paraguayan troops have captured Forts Boqueron and Toledo in the Gran Chaca region aid are pushing the attack against the Bolivian forces holding Fort Acre. Sixteen thousand troops are involved in the battle. ‘The Brazilian provisional govern- ment yesterday claimed important victories. in the civil war in that country. The insurgent forces have asked for peace terms, it is said, ( ) victory and have decided to join the Industrial Union and help organibe the rest of the trade. This is the first strike in this trade in recent times. It is practically an unore ganized trade. Show Your Solidarity with the Soviet Union WEAR AN Anniversary Button a (This is enlarged; double size) $2.00 A HUNDRED 10 Dollars a Thousand in Quantities of 1000 or More eee ORDER FROM Communist Party. U.S.A P. 0. Box 87, Station D NEW YORK, N, ¥.

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