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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, 932 OCTOBER 11, age Three National Committee of Unemployed Councils Meeting Now in Chicago TOWARDS 15th ANNIVERSARY OF RUSSIAN REVOLUTION! i, OPEN DNIEPROSTROI, NEW MILESTONE IN TRIUMPHANT BUILDING OF SOCIALISM Foreign Workers in USSR Pledged to Increase Tempo of Socialist Construction at Formal Opening of Largest Power Plant in World Yesterday NO SUCH GIANT IN / US SAYS AMERICAN Dont Grain Collections: ENGINEER, WINTER Fine Living Conditions | at Plant Shows Fruits of Revolution (Cable By Inprecorr.) MOSCOW, Oct. 10—As the ~cul- mination of elaborate preparations carried out with tremendous anima- tion, the formal opening of the Dnieper hydro-electric power sta‘ion, the largest in the world, took place | today. In a gallery. constructed along the main concrete road wer: exhibited the portraits of the best 66 shock workers. In workers’ boarding quar- ters, clubs and req corners, the build- ers of the Dniepetrostroi recollected the days of heroic struggle against nature. Foreign Workers Hail Historic Event, At a meeting devoted to the open- ing of the Dnieprostroi, the foreign workers resolved to address an open letter to the workers of the Soviet Union. The letts says: “We foreign workers and special- ists engaged in the building of the Dnieper hydraulic power station— Americans, Germans, Frenchmen— congratulate the workers of the Soviet Union upon this tremendous victory of socialist thought and la- bor. We are proud of participating in this gigantic construction on an equal footing with you. We know and feel, especially on the day of your great celebration, that we are not foreigners but p#rticipators in the general activity.” “On the day of the solemn start of the Dnieper hydro-electric power station,” the letter continues, “we promise to strain our whole energy in the united struggle for a more rapid tempo in the socialist construc- tion. We appeal to all foreign work- ers and specialists working on the territory of the Soviet Union to do a same,” ‘chief ger Recalls Heroic One of the eee of the Dnieper hydro-electric power station, the chief of the construction work, Win- ter, published an article in the “Pravda,” taking stock of the days of heroic struggle ending with the greatest victory, on the day of the formal opening of the Dnieptrostroi. In his article Winter gives various figures relating to the volume and extent of power of the new hydro- electric station and mentions the beautiful living conditions in which the builders of the Dnieprostroi find themselves. He says: “How vivid, how beautiful, how full of life are the pictures of real socialist labor, of real enthusiasm and display of will to vanquish! Who of us can forget the pictures of night work in the pits of the river when human work was in full swirig, all around machines roared, the steel shovel excavators ground against the granite and the trains carrying materials whistled? Who can forget the struggle of months for 500,000 cubic meters of concrete when for precision of work every worker and mechanic was brought up to 100 per cent effieiency? Who of us can forget the heroic ac- tivity of thousands of people in cold wind and frost? All this led to vic- tory. Neither Americans who wit- nessed other constructions, nor the Germans who know disciplined ac- tivity believed in our possibilities, yet they saw here on the Dnieper some- thing new which they have not at home and which could not exist un- der the conditions of capitalist econ- No Such Thing In America, Says American Engineer Another witness of this heroic con- struction tells of a tempo unknown in the history of the world. There is no reason for accusing this witness of being biased. He is the chief en- gineer of a Newport firm. Winter— whose name accidentally coincides | with that of the chief construction engineer of Dnieprostrc<—controlled the assembling of the turbines at the Dnieper Power Station. He stated: “There is no such great hydraulic power station as the Dnieper power | station in America. No such compli- cated electric plant was ever cof- structed’ in the whole world. The tempo of construction of the Dniep- rostroi is much exceeding the tempo of construction of American power stations.” Drawing a comparison, Winter states that 54,000 horse-power tur- bine was erected at the New York power station and that assembling this turbine took over 8 months, whereas the gigantic turbines at the Dnieper power horse-power each were assembled on the average in the course of six months. A turbine wheel in New York was assembled in 19 days, while at Dniep- rostroy this took only 12 days, Winter declares, adding that in America the aggregates after drying fail to work properly and suffer accidents for a Jong time before starting exploita- tion, while on the Dnieper the tur- bine generators are working steadily from the first day. me peut Than According ter him the housing and living conditions ab Dnieprostroi are ¢ station of 90,000) te Our shoto shows a general meeting of the collective farmers of the Our photo shows a general meeting of the collective farmers of the the Soviet Union. They are discussing the decision of the Central Com- mittee of the Communist Party and the advice of the People’s Com- missars on the rain collection campaign. forced collec‘ic: of debts for the farmers here. No mortgage problems and HERRIOT IN ANTI- SOVIET MANEUVER Will ConferWith Mac-| ~ Donald In London | Prime Minister MacDonald ex- tended an invitation to Premier Her- riot for a parley in London, a dis- | patch from the British capital in- formed. The parley, however, was suggested by the French Premier in a move to strengthen the “Entente Cordiale” between France and Great Britain. MacDonald is trying to build a closer Franco-British co-operation as} the base for crystallizing a European united front against the United States and a world line-up against the Soviet Union. A new French proposal, aiming to draw Germany back to the Geneva Conference, calls for a “gradual” re- duction of arms and armed forces. Its main point is, however, the link- ing up of the arms reduction with “universal security.” This involves international “control” of arms and international pledge to resort to sanctions against any “disturber of peace.” 4 This proposal is thus obviously de- signed to temporarily dispose of the German plea by drawing Germany into the imperialist front against the Soviet Union. The United States’ eagerness to maneuver in such a way as to render it difficult for Great Britain and France to “co-operate” in the setting up of a united anti-American front and to take leaq in the anti-Soviet line-up, i s indicated by the presence in London of Norman H. Davis, Am- erican delegate to the Geneva Con- ference, who is reported to have play- ed golf with Sir John Simon and to be expecting a talk with Mac- Donald. VOTE COMMUNIST FOR Against Imperialist War; for the defense of the Chinese people and of the Soviet Union. Better than on the construction sites in the United States. Engineer Win- ter closes his statement as follows: “I am very happy to have had the occasion of participating actively in the creation of such a gigantic hy- draulic power station as the Dniep- rostroi.” An event connected with the open- ing of the Dnieper hydo-electric power station and cf no less impor- tance-took place si:nultaneously with the same. A mechanical and repairs combined plant, and a high-grade steel plant were started. The most impertant of these is the high-grade steel plant, which is the largest en- terprise of this kind in the world. Its yearly capacity amounts to about 80,000 tons of steel ,which, after a technical treatment, will yield over 50,000 tons of high-grade instrument steel The opening of these new giants of socialist u:dustry marks one of the greatest victories of the Five- Year Plan for the construction of So- cialism in the Soviet Union, RED ARMY IN NEW ADVANCE IN CHINA 60,000 Reported With- ‘in 50 Miles of Hankow Red Army contingents totalling 60,000 men are reported in the vi- cinities of Tsangtzelo working their way to Hankow under the fire of Chiang Kai-shek’s airplanes, a dis- patch from Hankow indicated yes- terday. Other contingents of the Red Army are said to be encamped at Hwangan, Twanfeng, Kishui, Kichow and Hen- kwo, all within a radius of 50 miles from Hankow. ‘The Nanking butcher government, while virtually accepting the Lytton report which as Pravda pointed out marks a gigantic step toward the partitioning of China, is said to be preparing to dispatch heavy army reinforcements to meet #be contin- gents of the Red Army herocially marching on Hankow. Sign up for National Daily Worker Tag Days, Oct. 14, 15, 16. Tag Day Stations announced later. By a Worker DENVER, Colo.—A food worker’s a day, no days off, no vacations, and ‘F’ to 112 degrees filled and foul air. Everyone sweats terribly, and it is a common thing to see sweat falling from the cook's face over the foods because of lack of air ang the dense heat. They keep three tubs of pota- toes peeled on the floor in the base- ment with clear water and covered with chippedice, for the next days, run and have several small dogs who use these to get cool drinks all the time. Then these are used the next day. - Eat Left Overs All we get to eat is left overs of the preceding day or meal, and often half sour garbage. One Saturday morning we were given each one fried egg and it was fried in sour grease so rancid the cooks had to get it out of the kitchen at once and bury it in a garbage can in the base- ment in order to stay on the job; and this was the best part of our break- fast too, ‘They are laying everyone off they can, and let our several this last month. At the same time they in- tensify the speed-up on those left on the job. They fire anyone they even hear complain, Credit Union Racket The boss recently called a meeting of all employers to organize what he called the Employes Credit Union. We were asked to buy shares in it at $5.00 a share, payable 25 cents weekly and in case of non-payment we were fined 2 cents weekly or 40 cents a share each month. There was to be @ member appointed to handle our money for us, who was to decide on the interest we were to get and where and how it was to be deposited and handled, The plan was to put it in a building and loan association where Worker Correspondence 15 Hour Day in Denver Correspondent conditions in Denver are worse than I ever can explain in words, but I wish to say we are working up to 15 hours at a wage of about 10 cents an hour. There are no windows, and very little other form of ventilation, in this kitchen, and the thermometer stands the year around at from 95 degrees in a steam e—- we may lose it any day, If we were fired we could not even borrow on our savings. At the Albany Hotel, from which I was fired several weeks ago because a vicious cop reported me as a Com- munist, the regular butcher, fry cook, two buss boys and two door men were laid off. The new butcher is working for less a month, and doing both fry cook and meat cutting. One glass and silver girl has been cut off, one dish washer is working half time. The rest left on the job are working 5 days a week, with wages cut from $45.00 a month to $30.00 or $31.00. JAPAN TO START NEW OFFENSIVE \Agains t Manchukuo Rebels Along Soviet Border Encouraged by the anti-Soviet, counter-revolutionary Lytton report which United States imperialism is uphelding with its diplomatic silence, Japan is preparing to exploit the mi- litant struggle of the Chinese insur- gents against the Manchukuo puppet government as an excuse for inten- sifying its provocatory activity along the Soviet border. A report from Mukden infroms that Japanese imperialism is about to launch an extensive offensive against the 30,000 Chinese insurgents who have challenged the authority of the puppet government in Manchuria. ‘TAG DAYS ONLY FOUR DAYS OFF To Help Stabilize the aay Worker” toy hdd 4 3 Only four days remain for final arations the National Datly Wi izations, w rs to go from house- wor gath- erings, for money to speed the Dally ‘Worker. ‘These Tag Days will mean new life to the Dally Worker—a prolonged existence, a But this be sign up for Tag Approacl ers in Useapiared. Councils, Worker needs the help of worker, if only for a few workers not connected with any organizations, but who wish to con- tribute their time towards raising money, a list of Tag Day stations in each vicinity will be announced in a day or two. Mass turnouts on the National Daily A Sac a Pa s will gave the ae F THURSDAY, SEPT, Titncanien fated ary John A. Perry From Editorial Board Appeal ‘Total Dis. 1 $12. 10) J. Badanyak 00 J. Klancicer Fram Editorial Board Appeal K. Marinao ‘TH to date $1,063.08 Dis. 2 New York Mat Hat Wkrs, Canarsie Shul i, Wee Or 1.00 4.50 ‘Total Dis. 3 925 ‘TH to date $263,13 | Dis 10 Mt 1.00 8 $9.15 Jos. Capriotti ‘Total Dis. 14, $1.00 Ttl to date $281.80 District 15, + necticut Total Dis. ¢ Nothing Dis 16, W Onree Nothing ‘tz, Tennes- Nothing TH to date $49.81 Dis. 18, Wisconsin lini ee im. Re H ——— Unit 305, West N. N. Pointz Moking Waierfeint Martin Deyech .10| Total Dis.” 9 $3.00 5.00) P! Patrick 8. J. Kubedew Wm. Hendrckvon 60 Unit 22 5 Joseph Paino .10| ‘Tet to date $83.07 Unit 162 Milwau- | A. Nulbede I, Cohen 110) ©, Garfinkel Sam Saporito Carmelo Angula .07| Dis, 10, Kansas City kee 1,00) W. Kubereski i. er 1.00 | Unit 506 Total Dis. 9 520 C. Saporito Rose Partuseio .02| Joe Strecker 1.00 Unit 201, Milwau- | Nick Zitko Sols by sBoints, — TH to E. Enkonoms Anthony Fallaro .05| J. W. Lankin 50 kee 3.85| Ostap Karpek 15 Unit Sam Parsky Din. 10’ Kansas ‘Chty Sec. 5, Us 19 4.50 Tom Ferrato 110] Wh. Ober} 30 1.00 Morfey Boilly 115 — Adolph W illen- From Editorial Sec. 7, Unit 8 5.00 J. Bertince 110| Henry Haberman .50 1.00| John Michovich 15 St. Louis Sec, berg Board Appeal Bronx’ Workers Paul Foti From Editorial — Milkman 3.00 | Jack Lew Kal Givant Club Carl Bartucclo Board Apepal Total Dis. 18 $11.26 — Joe Liewick a M. Krupidziey John Felicijan Henry Bilterman 1.00 Tt to date $281. Sloyak Work. See. Johan Kybis Total Dis. 10 $,50 Albert Arcuri Joseph Brown 1.00 Dis, 19, C No, 65, Cleero | 1,00) John J. Toads TH to date $78.20 ‘Angelo —— Jas. Carpent Col, by Jos. Kurtis | Leo Loifler District 11, N. Michael Farone Total Dis, 10 $5.00 From Editorial aa Harry Eisenberg Dakota " Nothing P. Atuhorn Sam Wiaconi Tt to $83.20 Board Appeal Unit 708 8.96! Norman Nechton Dis. 12 Wash. AL Rafkin Frank Luire Dis. 11, N. Dakota John Olsborg —.30| Gi ‘35 Unit 711 20 | Beny Kogan Yasil Cyosheff 1.00 V. Nare Anthony Petro HN. Tredt 4 00 x. y é 1.00| P, Petras wo sae! 50 Dae Herman gins ae Carl Coletta From Editorial Thompson .50) Appati 2h 8, Helter 30 Brownstein ‘otal Dis. 12 $1.00 Fucizes ity Board Appeal onion | Vana 10 J, 8. Beeson 50 | Miltan Tt to date $90.42 | Arnold W Becker 1.00 Dis. 19 $3.00 Red Press Pic- 20h. by Dis. 13, Californ: — 5 Jos. 1,00 te 11,00 bu Nothing | ‘Total Dis. 11 $2.00 A. 3 1.00 is, Winchew. —_ . Kew Jersey TU to date $33. ALE. Kraner 19 club 20.00) H, Bush 1.00 ea Distrlet 12 Wash. E, Miller 25 — ‘Mrs, Hartynian 15 H Nothin} 90. Schwartz Cyril Pinta 1,00 Col, by M. Hartman r ski Harriet Yates 10 — M. K ‘20 M. Paticas 1,00 Prusow 50 Col. by Anna Slezav Col, by Unit 807°) Unit 711 \6 Olaf Wennborg — .50 Lipson Eureka Woman's John Ellis 10 Unit 70% A Total Dis, 11 5.50 Finnish Club ee Mike Maher Rose Goldin os a Tt to dais $280.80 Total Bis, 2 $80.35 From Editorial | U. C. 5.00 Kalr Ziptel Fred Kessleman 1,00) A, Dmitruk 1) Dis. 15, Conneetieut Tito datesonieis Board Apes! | Caly Hubbard 100 W Carl Ostrond Dina Ginsburg Max Mekeimence .03 New Haven See, | Dis. 3, Phi Wm. King From Editorial Walter Gai Emma Setrn ‘Turprin 0 Com, 10.00 Pokrok 5.00 Boa: Steve Matyas Bessia Reinman From Baitorial ‘Total NLN, Col, by Ginsburg Board Appeal ay TH —_ ©. J. Sullivan on 300 Unit 411 1.00 ni L, Unit 10% Total Dis. 1 Total Dis. 8 $25.00 ie 4.00 jockari 1.00 Unit 416 ato date S18230 tl to date $848.31 Chas. Hochscher .35/ Louis 1. Ferton 1.00 Unit 404 Dis. 16, N.C, Nothing District &y Bue Millinery = 1.00 — ay Dis. 17, Tenn, f Not Me. M3 Thorsian 1.00| Total Dis. 15 $24.50 Central Com. of | —_ Nothing 1.00 Tt to date $609.53 by Steve Matyas 8. W. 8. 5.00) Lettish Work, Dis. 18, Wisconsin Jos. Schanerer ’ Unit 800 1.00 Society 5.00 From Editorial i. . Jou, Cerny 25 Section & 6.00 From Editorial Staffa 95) Anna Tolich 2d — Board Appeal LSNR Conference Votes to Join ILD and Spread Scottsboro - -Mooney . Fight DELEGATES FROM i 6 STATES MEET Communist Party, ILD Greet Conference I. L. D. national convention meeting in this city, as full-fledged delegates. He pledged his committee to a sharp fight against any tendencies that may crop up to make of the L.S.N.R. an organization consisting only of Negroes. He declared that the I.L.D. would continue its policy of organ-| izing Negro and white workers to- gether in its branches and of draw- ing Negro workers forward into the | leadership of the I.L.D. He stressed the role of the ILD. as the leader the By CYRIL ‘BRIGGS CLEVELAND, Ohio, Oct. 10.—The National Conference of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, meetin: yesterday at 3804 Scoville Av thusiastically endorsed the mil defense policies of the International Labor Defense in the cases of the nine Scottsboro boys and other Negro victims of class justice and voted in fight against lynch terror, jim wism and other manifesta- tions of the national oppression of the Negro masses. C. P. Greets Conference. Greeting from the Central Commit- tee of the Communist Party to the conference was made by B.E. Ami member of the Central Committee of | the Party and leader of the Commun- unanimously to affiliate the L.S.N.R as a body of the I. L. D. ist Party in the Cleveland district. As The conference also voted-to District Organizer in Cleveland,| pose to the branches of the L.S.N.R also welcomed the conference | that they affiliate with the city com- veland in the name of the) revolutionary white and Negro work- ers of this city. | The conference was attended by 39 delegates from the L. S. N. R. branches and city committees from eight states. It opened with the election of Grace Gray, of the Buf-| mittee of the LL.D. Affiliation was proposed as a step toward the fur- ther development of the uniteti fight- ing front of Negro and white work- ers against the boss offensive on the| working class, directed with especial ferocity against the Negro and for- eign-born worker falo L. S. N. R., as chairman. The Hayward Gi Report. | delegates all took the floor following Comrade Hayward, representing the | Comrade Hayward’s report to stress national committee of the L.S.N.R.,| the need, in this period of increas- made the main report, laying before | ingly savage attacks on the working the conference the joint proposals of | class, of building ever firmer the the national committees of the L. S.| growing unity of Negro and white N. R. and the I. L. D. for the affilia- | workers under the leadership of the tion of the LS.NR. to the LL.D. He|revolutionary organizations. They stressed the sharpening national op- | lall agreed that affiliation with the | pression and raging lynch terror with|I. L. D. would serve to further this which the white ruling class is trying | aim to crush the rising struggles of the| Backs Scottsboro-Mooney Drive. Negro masses. The Negro masses are| The conference hailed the world- more and more resisting terror, he | wide Scottsboro Mooney campaign as pointed out, and because of this re- | symbol of this growing unity. It sistance the Negro reformists are | accepted by acclamation a resolution | frantically increasing their activities|to send telegrams of greetings to| among the masses in an attempt to|Tom Mooney and the nine Scottsboro divert them from the revolutionary | boys. All delegates reported inten- way out of their oppression and the | sive Scottsboro. defense activities by starvdtion conditions of the crisis.| their branches and city committees. He declared that the L.S.N.R. wou The conference elected five new with the .L.D., that, moreover, the|of the L. S. N. R., Grace Gray of LS.N.R. branches would themselves | Buffalo, Joe Billups of Detroit, Lucia decide on the question of affiliating |Levitiva of Chicago, and William with the local organizations of the| Martin of Chicago. It named Chi- ILD. cago, Harlem and the South as con- | William Patterson, member of the centration points for its work in. the National Executive Committee of the | pres2nt period. I. L. D., gave a supplementary report | Delegaies'. were present. for that body. He invited the dele- \cities, including St. Louis, gates to the conference to attend the Little Rock, Ark. from Mo., and Unemployed Cine Grows CLEVELAND, Ohio.—The Communist Election Campaign Committee of Ohio, 1245 Prospect Avenue, Cleveland, points to the following letter of a militant worker in Coshocton, Ohio, where no unit of the Communist Party exists, as an example of the results of the election tour of John Marshall, for Attorney-General: “Comrade John Marshall was here ahead of his schedule. We had a very small hall, but filled it to over- flow, around 75, mostly all unem- ployed. “Comrade Tesitel made a good talk mittees. “We elected a committee of five good unemployed workers, with one Negro on the committee. pletely eliminated the self-appointed leader of the Unemployed Council, on how to build unemployed com-|Charles Shaw. Please take this | = ———— |man’s name, for he is not to be | There is no doubt that the Chin-|trusted. He has ignored every in- ese toilers in Manchuria are in ever increasing numbers revolting against the Manchuuo government. A dispatch states that the Chinese flag is being hoisted by the Chinese insurgents over half the area of Man- churia, and that Barga has seceded from Manchukuo, Barga is a region bordering on Mongolia and the So- viet Union. It is revealed that during the month struction of committees, LL.D. Seeks Writ to Halt Deportation of Jos. Scovio to Italy ROCHESTER, N. Y., Oct., 10.—The | International Labor Defense lawyer, " Picciotti is applying for a writ of m of Bepveniber Jepanses imperialism as corpus to stop the deportation | carried out a. murderous campaign against the insurgents killing 3,640 of |Of the worker, Joseph Scovio, to fas- them and wounding at least twice as | “ist Italy. 4 : many. The number of Chinese slain} Scovio has just been released from and wounded does not include those | jail for participating in a struggle who were murdered as the result of | for relief last year. As soon as his the repression enforced by the Man- | term expired he was shifted to a new | chuuo government. jail to await deportation. The new offensive planned by Jap- The authorities are trying to keep anese imperialism involves the exten- | Scovio from seeing his wife and three sive use of airplanes, In Japanese | Children who live in Buffalo. circle it is admitted that this offen- |_ sive may involve also a chase of the| ‘s@imst fMoovers wage-cutting insurgents on the Soviet frontier. policy. Fisher 142 Frank Lash J. Davis © 10 Ridgeway But- Chas, eibreehter 1.00 Col. by J. ‘Schamerer | \. Simer 10 cher 1.00 8, Umbras 3 K “33 Tda Gerdwite 0 Steve Orbaich 1.50 K. Pamalakus Rose Rosen Middtecoft 1.00 Kavaliauskos 533, Dora Cohen Kima Tonert 1.00 A: Staruten Col, by Mrs. Sarnoff | M. P. Jack Wretase Unit 05 1.85! Friedman ‘Total Dis, 8 $118.04 W. shebut ©, Rosenbaum —-10| Frances ‘10 FU to date $1,744.88 110, Tda Moking ‘15 Dis. 9, Minnesota t JOBLESS OF MANY CITIES ASK NATIONAL HUNGER MARCH ON WASHINGTON Plans to Unite aniccds « of Local Struggles Against Relief Cuts Into Nation-Wide Campaign Meets In Atmosphere of Bitterne Over Mur- der of Sbosob; Huge Mass Meeting Tuesday 10.—Representatives of the Unemployed Councils ducted by city governments to for not lose its identity by affiliating|members to the National Committee | Out of Election Meeting Communist candidate for Governor of Ohio, and Joseph Tesitel, candidate | ‘We com. | tional Scottsboro Day for the r CHICAGO, Ul, Oct. and other organizations of the jobless, and members of the National Com- mittee of the Unemployed Councils, are arriving this morning from all parts of the country for the national committee's enlarged meeting, which starts here today at 903 South Western Ave., and continues tomorrow The committee will work out deta member murdered by Chicago Police for taking part in a demonstrs against the 50 per cent cut in re- lief. Carry Fight to Other Cities The national committee will out- | line action against similar relief cuts jin many other cities, and against the ruthless terror campaign con- ce the masses to submit to the Hoover- Wall Street hunger pro: stem, wage cuts @nd lay- Herbert Benjamin, natio: tary of the Unemployed Councils, has just arrived from a coast to coast tour and will make the main report on the conditions of unemployed workers and their organization thru- out the nation, also the prospects _|for the coming winter and the tac- |tics and organizational forms for the |fight of the jobless to live through ie winter, secre- ils of the program of struggle against arvation in the fourth consecutive +——— a winter of unemployment, and in a! Representatives from St. Louis, Chi- period when city after city is cago, New York, Cleveland, Detroit, ting down or ting off alto; and many other ies will report |for large gna f lessons n their recent little relief they got ir struggles for relief. winters, On the basis of all these reports, In Midst of the decisions will be made for fur- The sessions of the com- | ther action mittee take plac ghere| A. W. Mills, who tive in or- charged with bitter resentmer e | ganizing the natio er mareh 750,000 jobless in Cook County and|on Washington last December, will the millions of jobless throughout the | report with his proposals for carry- country against the cutting in half | ing through such actions as are de- jof relief here, and the murder of | cided upon this winter. |Joseph Sbosob, unemployed council Propose National Hunger March, Jobless organizati have sent in resolution national committee to organize a | countr ide march to Washington to |place demands for immediate relief and unemployment insurance before congress. when it opens this Decem- ber | Huge Mass Meeting Tuesday. The plans and decisions of the na- tional committee will be formally ane nounced at a huge meeting Tu y evening at Clybourne Ave., at which Benjamin will be a main speaker. This meeting will be an integral part of the terrific struggle now go- ing on in Chicago against the ree |lief cut, and will mobilize workers and jobless workers for the mass funeral and demonstration against the cut, which will start Wednesday, at 2 p.m. at Van Buren and Halsted Streets. mass 15: : Unite Thruout World | in Scotts Hundreds of Negroes J Heavy police Cordon bassy Against Ange (Cable by BERLIN, Oct. 10,—A meeting koelln (suburb of Berlin) Saturday releaseo of the Scottsboro boys. arrived it was at first refused admi two members were permitted to ent protests secured the removal of the bassy who promised to forward it delegations elected at other protest * Reports coming in from all part throughout the world on the day tha | United States Supreme Court tell of In Washington, the s tempted to create a “red scare” throwing out strong police guards by Amter Calls for Fight’ on Lynching. BUFFALO, N. Y., October 10.— | spite of threats, hundreds of Noahs and white workers took part in the | |the Buffalo demonstration for the |release of the Scottsboro boys and | jother working class prisoners. Over 2,000 workers heard Israel Amter, | | Communist Candidate for, Governor jof New York, call for a determined |fight against lynching and oppres- |sion, A 16-year old son of Joseph Sgovi who is facing deportation to fascist to | | Italy, urged the temonstrators | fight for the release of his father | Paris Workers Join Protest. PARIS, Oct, 10. — Heavy police guards reminiscent of the days be- fore the execution of Sacco and Van- zetti were thrown around the Amer- jean embassy in Paris to against the anger of French wor! ers who demanded the freedom the Scottsboro boys. guar of | Huge Crowd in Havana. | HAVANA, Cuba, Oct. 10. — A huge |crowd of Cuban workers demonstrat- ed in front of the American-owned Havana Evening News on Interna- med in Alabama. ‘of the nine boys Throughout Canada. TORONTO, Canada, Oct. 10.—Fur- ther reports from various cities tell of very large Scottsboro protests in | Vancouver, Calgary, Winnipeg, Saska- and Timmins. boro Freedom | GRADZ, Austria, Oct., 9.—Despite who have twice before prevented | Scottsboro protest meetings from be- ins held here; 4,000 workers gathered in Industrial Hall to demand Yreedom from the U. S. Supreme | Court for the Scottsboro victims and |to greet Ada Wright, mother of two 9 | Of the boys, who was principal speak- er at the meeting. x GRADZ, Austria. Oct., 10-—Demon- strating before the Palace of Justice 18 ta ie ate $2 00 Dis. 19, Colorado 70.42 toon, Montreal, Toronto, Port’ Arthur | Austrian Workers Call For Scotts- | the interference of the local police | the | Nothing | boro Protest oin in Demonstration in Buffalo; Big Meeting in Cuba Guards American Em- r of French Workers Inprecorr.) of three thousand workers at New adopted a resolution demanding the A deputation was elected to visit the American embassy to present the demand.’ Today when the deputation ission but following vigorous protests er together with detectives. Further police. The workers placed their resolution before the secretary of the em- to the American government. More meetings are trying to get in now. * = 's of the United States and countrie. t the Scottsboro case comes before the huge, enthusiastic demonstrations for the release of the nine young Negroes in the Alabama death cells. at of. the ee Court, the nibhoe hearths at- SCOTTSBORO MEET HELD IN CHICAGO iCombined With Funeral of I. L. D. ’ Worker CHICAGO, Ill, Oct. 10.—The main Scottsboro demonstration, for the re- | lease of the Negro boys condemned to |death in a frame up at Scottsboro, Ala., will take place today while the case is being argued on appeal in jthe Supreme Court. The demonstration to save the lives of the Negro children will be combined with the mass funeral | here of Jack Tilford, member of the district executive committee of the International Labor Defense. The ILD, and Tilford, have been the leaders in the struggle here to free the Scottsboro boys. Tilford was-a Negro worker and leader of the Ne- sro workers of the South Side. The Tilford funeral and Scottshore demonstration will be in Washington ark Forum, this afternoon. Yesterd: some hundreds of Chi- cago workers demonstrated for the ; release of the Scottsboro boys, as | part of the world wide day of pro- test. Foster's “Toward Soviet America” is given free with a yearly subscription to the | Daily Worker. Build a workers correspondence group in yorr factory, shup o: neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. here, two thousand workers under the leadership of the International Red Aid, Communists, Social De- mocrats, Young Fronts and non- party workers demanded the release | of the Scottboro children and of their own prisoners, » - te