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TOWARDS 15th ANNIVERSARY OF RUSSIAN REVOLUTION! SECOND SYNTHETIC RUBBER FACTORY IN OPERATION IN THE SOVIET UNION ocialist Technique Overcomes Difficulties; ‘Shows Its Unquestion- able Superiority in New Unexplor ed Field of Production | On the eve of the 15th anniversary of the Russian Revolution, whieh will further emphasize the contrast be- tween the situation of the workers and peasants in the Soviet Union and the misery and starvation of the} toilers in the “richest” country on earth, the U. S., the main| departments of the Voronezh Syn-| theiie Rubber Factory No. 2 have be- gun to operate and the first eon- signment of rubber will be obtained shortly. This is the second synthetic rub- her faetory put year. The fivst one opsned the end of July, in Yaroslav. Comemnting on the importance of} of the rent for we succeeded in renting estia,” official organ| a smaller place and held a successful of the Central Executive Committee | election campaign meeting on Sept. ouotes Stalin's | 28, the event, “ ef the Soviet Union, capitalist | in operation this’ the denial of the Armory Hall at the { last minute, which we had rented a | ecesch e¢ the first All-Union Con-} erenc2 of Industrial Managers, ollows: "We have everything in this country but rubber. But in a year or two we shall have our own rub- ber as wel ess (van a year and a half has ed since thet speech, and al- ly the Soviet Union has two pow- erful thetic rubber plants, equip- red with up-to-date machinery. No c’her ccuntry in the world has any synchetic rubber factories in opera- t'on. One such factory was operated in Germany during the war, but it ‘esed down as soon as the war was over. The U, 8. S. R. had no models to go by when construction was started, it had no expert, no equipment, and even no literature as a guide. And notwithstanding the facet that ex- tremely complicated machinery is re- ouired in th2 production of synthetic rubber, the first rubber factory was developed in less than a year. Now the second plant has begun to operate, and ‘shortly a third’ will open in Yefremovsk. Ey aM js, being carried on im + Sn of the Kazansk synthetic rubber ant which is to ovsn 33. Shortly, construction will be- en on two other plants, in Krasno- dar and Kremenchug. The plants in operation next year will fully meet the requirements of the growing Soviet, autgmopile. jp- dustry. “Tevestia” concludes: “From a few grams of synthetic rubber obtained by Professor Lebedev in a laboratory in 1930, threugh the experimental synthetie rubber factory in Lenin- grad established in the course of two ang a half months in 1931, to the powerful plants opened in 1932—such it *«.¢he path “of © ie the Sovist- = ¥ from importation of foreign . yeh” «xtention of Warfare ija Grand Chaco Looms \s Antagonisms Grow BUENOS AIRES, Oct. 6.—Dis hes from Paraguay report that 1 en of averting an extention of ‘ present warfare in the Grand ‘Chnaee region inspired by the rival- ries between U. 8. and British im- perialism through arbitration of the dispute is fading away as Bolivia continues its intansingent attitude, Reports that Paraguay intends to seize Samealkai, another important fortified position, before the rainy season sets in, are widely circulated here. A dispatch from La Paza, capital of Bolivia, informs that an evidently in- ppired demonstration against Para- Busy took place there. The crowd lemanded immediate action-in re- aliation for Paraguay's recent opera- pions in the Grand Chaco region, re- The Bolivian press reports that arge seale war operations by Bolivia HE D IN 25 CITIES “hicago Lagging, Ac- tion Postponed District 8, Chicago, finally responds, ough lamely; claims to have writ- n “about a week ago as to’ when ‘ag Day takes place, also on material. o word yet... . We agreed post- ning Daily Tag Days since recently ed almost one Tag Day after an- ther,” Although district promises ‘ag Days some after, “after a number f important meetings,” Chieago ust receive censure for unsatisfac- ry decision. As early as ‘Sept. 12, tariat instructions were sent all istricts; namely, no campaigns to with National Tag Days. Chi- and Sept. 30. Action, not words, ) your resolutiens, Chico»! bright side of ba es >-4s Cleve- district, writiny: ve broad- jour cine $4 to about 28 eities for all anohes. Briefly: “You are aware tt Daily Worker is in grave fin- cial crisis, We have not done our ¢, raising only about $1,200 of $6,000 quota. Many members who‘ shed, aes not donate due to circumstances; but ALL mers ba help in Tag Days. We to devote two hours’ time cles Oct. ne 15, nny t on Days!” Over inches to be covered tonight and t Friday for volunteers, \- of boxes. as| | but when they looked into the hall Russian So jin. the shoe Institute. | Worker Correspondence || 17 JOIN PARTY IN FAIRMOUNT ELECTION RALLY (By a Worker -Correspondent) FAIRMONT, W. Va.—In spite of month in advance and had paid half The hall was crowded, also the sidewalks, The chief of police and the mayor of Fairmont came there, and saw the workers and how mili- tant they were they decided to leave. We sojd all the literature we had on hand, and 17 of the workers joined the Party, We had 400 present, of whom 5 per cent were women and 10 per cent were Negroes. In the same Armory hall that was closed to us the Socialist Party held meeting recently and Norm Thomas spoke without interferen The workers liked the Commun message brought by Comrade Talle. tire, who spoke in Comrade Dunnc place. The Communist rally that w held was the first in Fairmont. Ti owner of the hall also made th | statement that the reason he woulc not let us have the hall was because he thought that when Foster would | not speak, a Negro would, and that | he never would let a Negro speak in his hall. The speakers were: Emilio Garbarino, who is candidate for Congressman of West Virginia; | Norman Tallentire, Ray Auville, and | Jack Stuart, NMU Secretary of the W. Va. District, Daily Worker and on National Guard eetivities. As to news of struggles in the far. Most of the stories sent in by interesting, are too passive. More Stories of Struggle Worker correspondents have responded to the call issued a few weeks ago for news of war preparations and war propaganda. in recent issues has on the manufacture, in New Haven, on a big government order for bandages in the Johnson & Johnson plant, on inere? ‘ng building operations in the Washington Navy Yard, More of these reports, comrades. Worker correspondents write very well and yery clearly about workers’ conditions, and they should write, about struggles to change these conditions, about unemployed council organization work, about the fight against ‘alse leaders in the shops and in the street. The in this way printed a story of accessories for bombing planes shops, we haye still not got very worker correspondents, while very But they do not write, leet aa ae 7 BOLIVIA PLANS NEW.WAR DRIVE Pushed by nif vUS. Bosses” Greed for Oil A new military drive in the Grand Chaco region by Boliyian troops is expected in a few days, according to, reports from ‘Buenos Ayres... The re- ports indicate that a rush order for motor trucks has been sent out by the Bolivian Woops operating in the Grand Chaco regio The order will be considered void unless the trucks are dispatched be- fore Oct. 8th, whie> ‘sdicates that ivi » to launch Paraguan season sets positions before the rai. in. Fifteen thousand troops will be sent by Bolivia in the disputed jungle area. according to rumors circulating widely in well informed circles. This imperialist war is being goaded on by the British and U. S. capitalists who are struggling to grab the rich oil deposits in the Chaco region as | well as other spoils. Columbia Taxes for Arms As a further step in the prepara- tion for war against Peru, the Con- gress of Columbia approved a pro- ject to tax wages and incomes to pro- vide a war fund. Ra sates Foe a Chronicle of Events In RussianRevolution November 6-7, 1917 November 6, 1917 The government declares the Military Revolutionary Committee to be unlawful, The staff of the Petrograd Mili- tary District adopts measures to fight against the Military Revolu- tionary Committee. The Mensheviki declare. them- selves to be against the revolt, in favor of the government com. bating the revolt by military means. In the night of November 6 and 7, the Military Revolutionary Committee goes over to the of- fensive. November 7, 1917 The troops of the Military Re- volutionary Committee occupy the railway stations, the electricity works, various bridges, the tele- graph office, the telephone ex- change and various government | offices. No resistance is offered, -| Jewish Community Center to force | |Center invited the republican, dem- | | workers. WAR LORDS CLASH AT TIBET BORDER Szechuan “Generals in| Revolt A second general's war has broken out in the great, Western province of Szechuan, which borders on Tibet, according te a refart from Shanghai. About six war lords started a milit- ary offensive last Sunday against Governor Liu Wen-hui. The war lords are led by Liu} Hsiang, the military leader in con- trol of. Chunking. He is a nephew of the governor. The clash was pre- | cipitated by General Liu Hsiang’s | seizure of a $3,000,000 shipment of arms and ammunitions addressed to Chengtu. The war is now raging at Litu, | Shunking, Chowkow and Kiangtisin, with the generals trying to open their way to Chengtu, the capital of the province, It is reported that governor Liu actually controls 70 counties while the generals control about 70 more. This generals’ war in a province bordering on Tibet is not without connection with what is termed Eng- land's little war on China. In a cer- tain measure it might be regarded as an extension of the military ac- tivity recently started by Tibetan troops lead by. British officers, ‘The Japanese press point out that Tibet is completely in British hands both economically and politically, and that British India is sending am- munitions to Tibet in order to en- able its troops to better carry on the war against China. Thugs Oust Communist at “Liberal” Commun- ity Center in Yonkers YONKERS, N, ¥—Police and thugs were used last night at the through the discrimination against the Communist Party decided upon by the heads of this so-called “lib- eral” institution. Ignoring the letter of protest sent by the Communist Party when the ocratie and socialist parties to send speakers to this symposium, Paul J. Ba » chairman of the educa- tional committee led in organizing and cirenhing the attack of police and ‘thugs to crush the protest of the ‘The Cossacks refuse to fire on the insurgents; Kerensky, in a car carrying the American flag, drives from Pet- rograd to the ‘ont in order..to fetch - The ograd Soviet" declares Nap eyes overthrow of the government, Lenin speaks for the first time at the Soviet. ‘The Bolsheviki are released from prison, The front is informed by h of the events in Petro- i | and ‘the ‘victory of the pro- tarian revolution. Bolsheviki occupy the Win- ter pene and arrest the govern- men’ At 10,40 oe a the Second All- Congress is ae Irwin Wagner, a member of the €dticational committee of the Center, and Joe Brown, were dragged from the hall by the police when they rose ta. protest the action of Bater- berg. and the other heads of the Center, Bauerberg stated that he was the boss of the meeting and that there would be no question or dis- Neen from the floor. This same 8 a “revolutionary” and “radical.” e worl al e Coreen rar which alone has voiced the demands of the starving unemployed of Yonkers and inspired and led their struggles against ger and wage-cuts, Louis Waldman, DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 29 32 19. Page Thre == Builder of New Classless Society new society without class divisions a in the capitalist countries, are prepa Anniversary of the Ru: nd exploitation. His ring to celebrate with him the isth n Revolution on Noyember 7. FIGHT ALSO 10 FREE BERKMAN Menaced ‘By Deporta- tion to Fascist Poland BOSTON, Mass., Oct. 6—While the Scottsboro case is the most flagrant recent example of terrorization against the Negro workers, the Berk- man case shows the inhuman, des- eign-born workers, The mill-owners of New England, through the U. S. Department of Labor, are still hold- ing Edith Berkman for deportation to fascist Poland, because of her or- ganizational activities perate lengths to which the boss class | will go in order to carry out its de- | portation drive against militant for- | during the} strike of the 23,000 Lawrence textile | Election Film Shows Cynicism of Hollywood “™" By SAMUEL BRODY (Workers Film and Foto League) CCORDING to George M. Cohan’s own admission, it required some hundreds of writers to turn out the movie script for “The Phantom Pre- sident.” This film, therefore repre- | sents a fair cross-section of the hirelings. The- thesis of this farce is simple enough: Any capitalist political party ean fool the masses any and all the time providing it nominates a char- |latan and demagogue who can sing | about “Our grand old f! her drag!” and who campaigns on the assumption that “the voters want a workers against a ten per cent wage cut, Since Oct. 9, 1931, Edith Berkman has been held federal prisoner, sub- | jected to all manner of cruelties at | the hands of Doak and Tillinghast | of the Department of Labor. Beginning with her S-month im- prisonment at the Easi Boston immi- gration station, where she contracted tuberculosis, she has been continu- ously persecuted by the immigration authorities. jexample of the “humane” methods jused by Doak’s deportation depart- ment (when police guards were sta- tioned at Berkman’s bedside, harras- | sing and tormeriting*her despite’ her critical condition) are still being felt by Berkman in the form of an ag- gravation of her tubercular condition. with nervous complications. Dr. John B. Hawes, 2nd, leading tubercular specialist, engaged by the ILD, de- clared only a few weeks back, that recovery under these conditions is impossible, and any kind of disturb- ance or forced trayel at this thpe would be devastating. Despite this statement, the dept. of labor continues to hold Edith Berk- man prisoner, denying her bail, and planning to ship her off to fascist Poland. It is barely four weeks since Commissioner Tillinghast had ar- ranged to put Edith on board a steamer bound for Poland; but the vigilance of the ILD frustrated these plans. Just as mass pressure has so far saved the Scottsboro boys from the electric chair, it has held up the de- portation of Berkman, And only con- tinued mass pressure will compel Doak to release her. International Notes SWEDISH COURTS SENTENCE 50 WORKERS STOCKHOLM.—Fifty workers were sentenced to an average of six weeks of hard labor in connection with the Strike collisions which took place in Soederham during the month of July. ee HEAVY SENTENCES FOR LAT- VIAN YOUNG WORKERS RIGA, — Twelve young workers tried in Wolmar on the charge of being members of the illegal Young Communist League were found guilty and sentenced to a total of 58 years of hard labor. The seniences ranged from one to eight years. When sentences were announced, a young worker shouted “Long live the Soviet Union!” He was immediately beaten unconscious by the ploice. me ae Se GREEK COMMUNISTS IN ELECTION FIGHT ATHENS —Despite the arrest “of many members of its central commit- tee and despite the heavy police ter- ror, the Communist Party of Greece is conducting an energetical cam- paign. Numerous working class demon- strations in all parts of the country mark the most important phases of the elecion campaign carried out by the Communist Party on a militant platform which has the enthusiastic approval of he masses. Particularly fine demonstrations took place already in Athens, Kaval- la, Volo, Soloniki, Mytilene and Lar- Pos. tae sa SIX MONTHS FOR INDEPENENCE PROPAGANDA WARSAW.—A peasant by name of Paliushinski was sentenced to six months of hard labor by the Court in Lemberg on a charge of having spoken in favor of the independence of Western Ukrainia from Poland. If you haven't the money, donate rour time to raise funds during the socialist candidate for governor look: ed on in approving silence. | The effects of the latest | musical comedy Presidential cam- ) Paign.” The cynical prostitutes who wrote the script for this film are convinced | that crisis or no crisis, the workers can still be fooled into voting for some | one with sufficient se ppeal.and a good line of bunk. }' In this case some . “thirteen-herb cure” mountebank is elected. There is a very forced hint at the conclusion | of the film that this faker will reform and fight “for the people's interests | It comes as a very discordant note in | this most self-revelatory piece of im- | pudence ever thrust into the face of | | the workers ,by capitalist It int really meant. Varney is just the right scoundrel for this ruling- class. Varney is Roosevelt. Varney is the typical American bourgeois mis- leader of the toiling masses. More and more workers and poor | the Varneys and the class they rule for, I suspect that’ even Director Norman Taurog is aware of the grani fraud of the capitalisi political three- ring circus. If I'm wrong, then I'm at a loss to explain that swell shot in which the rear-end of a cop's horse fades out to make y for the mug of a bourgeois politican shouting “.... of the people, by the people, for the people . . tical convention. VOTE EXPULSION Rowbitzky Guilty, Verdict at Trial |_ WASHINGTON, D. ©., Oct. 6— heartily endorsed the decision of the local sectjon of the Communist Party to expel Stanley Rowbitzky, Party member for five years, for white chauvinism. Rowbitzky had heen charged with excluding two young | Negro boys from swimming at the Washington Cooperative Camp at | Drury, Md., at which he had the position of life guard. A trial board of Negrq’ and white | | workers, selected from ‘the audience | and sympathetic organizations, has brought in a verdict of guilty, Bvi- dence both for and against the ac- cused was presented by many mem- bers of the audience. Paul Cline, Baltimore-Washington organizer for the Party, who con- ducted the prosecution, pointed out that Rowbitzky had excluded the Ne- groes from the beach but had, at the same time, allowed whites to enter the water. He declared that the Party can tolerate no one in its ranks who has elements of race hat- red, especially since Rowbitzky had been in the Party five years and should have known the line of con- duct for a Communist. William Powell, local Party organ- izer, who undertook the defens showed that it is the capitalist sys- tem that is responsible for such acts, It has been learned that Rowbitzky | will also be tried on the same charg by the International Workers Order, of which he is a member. OHIO MEETINGS CLEVELAND, O.—John Marshall, Communist candidate for governor of Ghio, and Joseph Tesitel, Communist candidate for Attorney General, will speak on Oct. 8th in Mansfield, and on Oct. 9th in Galion, I. O. Ford, Communist candidate for United States Senator, will speak Oct. 8th in Cincinnati. Sign up for National Daily Worker Tag Days, Oct. 14, 15, 16. Tag Days, Oct, 14, 15, 18. ‘Tag Day Stations an- Yational Daily Worker Tag Days, Oct, 14, 15, 16 nounced later, creative genius of Hollywood's brain- | —don't let | farmers are beginning to see through | FOR CHAUVINISM : Is | Qver 200 Negro and white workers |filled the Pythian Hall, 12th and U} | Streets, last Monday night, and ILL. “PROGRESSIVE” MINE LEADERS MOVE TO BETRAY STRIKE; N.M.U. BARRED FROM PRESENTING UNITED FRONT PROPOSALS Borich Statement, Calling for Unity, Mas To Smash Wage Cut, Rank and File Leader: 109 Pickets Jailed in 1 Oklahoma; $ S Splitting Miners BULLETIN GILLESPIE, UL, Oct, Progressive Miners of Ameri committee and the Association of small operators has agreed on a wage of $5.50, and the night session of the P. M, A. convention has ra fied it. The leadership of the P. M, A, succeeded in eliminating from the preamble of the constitution any statement of the class strug, or any demand for the full socia value of the miners’ toil, The leadership tried in yain to table a resolution demanding the recognition of the Soivet Union. Many delegates, including Fraser spoke for recognition. The vote was not taken as this was sent. Fraser pointed out the benefits to American workers from trade with the Soviet Union. The Communist Party District 8 sent a letter of greetings to the convention urging militant struggle against wage cuts. | Ap GIT | KINCAID, IIL, Oct. 6.—Firing was heard at the National Guard camp, where militia are trying to break the strike in Peabody Coa Co. mnes here. The shots came just after a meeting of parents 168 children striking in the Kin- caid high school against the use of | scab coal in the school. ph cea McALESTER, Okla., Oct. 6.—Fel- ony charges of “conspiracy” in addi- tion to charges of violating the injunction against picketing are bemg placed on 109 pickets ar- rested at the Little Bolen Mine. The prosecutor threatens to arrest all 2,000 strikers. The arrested miners marehed to jail in proces- | gon, singing. GILLESPIE, Ill., Oct. 6—After two |days of pounding by the conserva- tive leadership of the new Progres- | |stve Miners of America, its conven: | |tion in session here since Monday | | has finally adopted and given to the} |seale committee instructions “to get the best scale possible between $5/ | and 86.10 basic day wage rates.” This | means that instead of mobilizing a mass struggle against the $1.10 wage cut ordered by the operators and the officials ef the United Mine Work- | M. A, are trying to force the thou- | | sands of striking miners here to ac- |cept the $5 seale. real starvation for them. the with such a sell-out.| cision, whieh practically per scale International machine of | deputized whole companies gunners, state the delegates. N. M. U. Program. The National Miners’ Union dele- gation to the P. M. A. Convention came, headed by Frank Borich, na- tional retary of the N. M. U., with an offer of solidarity in the fight) | against the wage-cut. They would} haye proposed united front rank and | file str’ committees in each mine, sub-di district committee, to lead the strug- gle, They would have proposed mass marching on the important |Franklin and Williamson County | sections of the Illinois coal fields, to | close those mines. They would have proposed mass picketing and a na- tional campaign, led by rank and file relief committees to feed the strikers’ families. They would have proposed unity and solidarity of all militant miners around the Illinois struggle. N, M. U. Barred. | This N. M. U. committee was not the P. M. A. Convention, but by a process of ‘executive sessions,” to which only P. M. A. Golegates were admitted, and by simply not men- | tioning the N. M. U. when motions were made to seat fraternal dele- | gates, like the Keeney, West Virginia, | Miners’ Union (Musteite), which was seated, the N. M. U. delegation was barred from the sessions. Leaflets to Delegates. A statement, by Frank Borich and the delegation of the N. M. U., em- bedying the proposals it would have jlaid before the convention, was mimeographed and distributed to the delegates. N. M. U. Exposes Spy. The P. M. A. leaders had seated | Basil Rice, notorious Harlan County | stool pigeon, Thr N. M. U. delega- tion recognized him coming out of the hall, and exposed him to the P. |M, A. delegates. | vention. The constitution commit- tee is expected to report tomorrow, | with a split between the majority and minority, over whether the class struggle should be ovenly advocated in the preamble to the new union's constitution. Conference of Unions. Though the convention is ‘still with visitors, the press and rank and file miners not delegates barred, it has been learned that it adopted a/ resolution for a conference soon, to, | include the Prograssive Miners Asso- | ciation the W. Va. Miners’ Union, | the Amalgamated Mine Workers of | Canada, and another Canadian union, | but without the N. M, U. Some dis- cussion toak place over excluding the N. M. U. from this conference, but the administration raised the “red officially barred from the sessions of | This is the first convention of the | P. M. A., and its constitutional con- | meeting in secret “executive session” | ers in August, the leaders of the P.| proposal from the floor for another be days’ work a month, this would mean} |eided not to s Even the leadership of the P. M. A.| tinuing their demands for a mar |dared not all of them come before | to differences among them/ment for the march to W: Furthermore, the de-|the Waters Executive Cor means to|ted that instead of a ma: surrender the fight against the 18|0f vets to the capital a small com- cent wage-cut and accept the| mittee would be se President Lewis} | of the U.W.M.A. has tried to enforce, | yerge of collapse. with the degel and the operators have so far failed| gemanding the floor {te enforce, even with thousands of | fused and| steam roller tactics were hurled at militia, | the executive committee by the ran .” into a mike at a poli- | brought on a sharp discussion among| and file delegates. ct strike committees and 4 }organ of the W.ES.L,, hip, ¢ Pretense of Unity marked “2” is John Into it, for future ‘The section New York. ens ground monument” to Mare out of John D.’s coal, the miners slaughtered by his gunmen in the Ludlow hing and Picketing, riven to Delegates Ranks Under the D. Rockefeller, Jr.'s rising in Radio profit, is being poured some of the steel and oil workers. It is a massacre. or killed By accidents because it “costs too much” to use safety rules underground. ing, erected with the profits taken ow In the background , marked “1” is the Chrysler build- it of the Chrysler auto workers, B. E. F. Ran Roar Appro k and File val of New Bonus March te to Capitol Waters Leadership Attempts to Sabotage Move As Vets Demand Action New York Ex-Serviceme Lead March ir UNIONTOWN. PaO conventi 1, which is being held here monstration, which came ur cted, With only a few | mittee into a state of panic and it at once went into session wher jonsor the proposal. » hawever, are co The rank and file, - ia the capital when Congress opens. In an attempt to block the move- hington movement t jon was on the Twice the conve and being Charges r by he chair. of k New York Veis Plan March C r NEW YORK. Following short reports b; mber and | §ol Harper on the al Veterans | Rank and File Corfference, the New | York Veterans got down to the prob- | lem of organizing for the march to | Washington to demand payment of the bonus. ded td Veterans at the me de hold a city rank and file confe e October 30 to rally masses of veter- | ans for the march. The following sub-committees were elected: finance: transportation, organization and ed- | ucation, Members of the city committee of | the Workers ExServicemen’s League were present at the meeting and pledged to build up a stronger W.E. S.L. Joseph Singer, circulating man- ager of the “Fighting Vet,” official spoke of the necessity of supporting the veterans’ paper. The meeting voted unanimously to carry out a campaign to expose the plan to sabotage the bonus m; seare” and finally had its way | The Teadership of the P.M.A. i endeavoring to set up a National U ion aimed at keeping the miners away from the Revolutionary Na- tional Miners Union. The convention has adopted reso- lytions denouncing the criminal syn- dicalism laws, demanding release of Tom Mooney, and demanding state relief for unemployed miners | There are no Negro del though there are many Negro miners in Illinois, onus march to Washington. jto Brazil | cessfully ended” {daily mew n Elect Committees to n December Oct. 6—The rank and file delegates at the B.E.F. greeted with a thunderous ovation a This de- the Waters executive com, it de- threw hich is being developed in the Bs vention in Uniontown to ine ie rank and file of the BEF. participate in the rank and file vite |march in December. S. Ambassador Hails End of Brazil Revolt RIO DE JANEIRO, Oct. 6—Edwin V. Morgan, United States Ambassador hastened to congratulate Getulio Vargas, head of the Provi- onal Government, for having ‘“sue- the San Paul revolt. is reported to be Getulio Vargas considering the legalization of the paper money issued in the State of San Paul to finance the revolt against the Federal Government. Such a measure is designated to utiload the “responsibility for the challenge to the Federal Government” |on the shoulders of the workers and | peasants. The paper money in circulation would be legitimized through a bond issue. Have you volunteered for the Na- tional Daily Worker Tag Days, Oct, 14, 15, 16? Get other workers to join you. he Readers of The DAILY WORKER abo! ak or Crech worker? ve him subseribe to the Daily Rovnost Ludu | Cacchostovale Org. of the ©,P4 U,SiAs 1510 W. 18th St., Chicago, DL Phe only Cree! ape Canada, It stands for the vi principle ay THE DAILY. WORKER Yearly subscription 86, for 6 mo, §3. Write for free sample copy today YOUR FIFTY CENTS WILL HELPS AVE THE DAILY WORKER ’ Wrap It In This Coupon and Send to 40 EAST 13th ST. Street City Cee al Pertg USA NEW YORK cIry 50, 000 HALF DOLLARS BY OCTOBER 15