Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
~ a A SEE REE SEE Support Patterson in Struggle for Workers’ Rights, Unemployment. - __ Relief at B udget Meeting Tonight, Carnegie Hall; Rally in In the Day’s | News ARMY MAN HEADS NEW YORK RELIEF NEW YORK, /Oct, 24—Commander of the New York National Guard in New York Major General Haskeil has been appointed chairman of the Mayor's Committee for the relief of the Unemployed, ‘Whether the relief is to include the use of the Guards against unem- ployed is not stated by Mayor McKee, . IMPERIALISTS TALK “DISARM- | AMENT” | LONDON, Oct. 24—Norman Davis} of the United States and Premier | MacDonald, Sir John Simon andj Stanley Baldwin spent an hour and a half discussing “disarament” pro- posals today. Behind the talk is the attempt of both countries to ‘weaken each other in the imperialist vace for markets. ete “FORCE CANADA PRISONERS | : TO STAY IN CELLS H OTTAWA, Ont., Oct. 24.—Accord- ing toareport made by Minister of Justice Guthrie to the Commons one prisoner was shot and damage of about $4,000 done in the prison fight last week. The prisoners are being kept in their cells and the officials have been granted leave. * GENERALS WAR CONTINUES The Generals War in Szechwan Province is spreading. The forces op- posi Governor Liu, the Szechwan war lord, have captured the import- ant strategic city of Shunkiang, and advance ten miles from the western bank of the Kialing River. Liu is attempting a desperate counter-of- tensive. In Shantung Province, the war be- tween the Shantung war lord Gen- eral HanFu-shu and Liu Chen-nien, Chenfoo war lord is still raging, de- spite attempts by Nanking to divert the forces of the two war-lords to the offensive against the Chinese So- viet Republic and the victorious Chi- nese Red Armies. < oye SOVIETS SECURE RELEASE OF JAPANESE IN MANCHURIA The Soviet Government has com- pleted negotiations with the Man- churian insurgents for the evacuation of some 300 Japanese in the Man- chuli region from which the Japanese invaders were driven several weeks ago. The insurgents agreed to release; the Japanese following Soviet inter- cession. Soviet consulates in the dis- trist are reported to have furnished relief for the. prisoners, even loan- ing money for the purpose. The So- viet intercession was undertaken at the request of the Japanese Govern- ment. * * SAITO CALLS FOR SUPPORT OF JAPAN’S ROBBER AIMS Japan's role of gendarme of the Far East against the Chinese Revo- Jution and the revolutionary strug- gles of the colonial masses of the Orient was openly stated yesterday by Viscout Makato Saito, Japanese Prime Minister, in a plea for con- tinued support by the Leagut of Na- tions for Japan’s robber aims in China. * wena S TEN HOUR BATTLE IN NORTH MANCHURIA A bitter ten-hour battle was fought at Fulaerchi, North Manchuria, yes- terday in the national revolutionary war aainst the Japanese invaders. ‘The Japanese claim to have repulsed a force of 1,000 insurgents led by General Chang Tien-Chu. Foreign military experts in Peip- ing predict that the strength of the national revolutionary movement will force the Japanese to abandon their attempts to re-conquer the vast Bar- ga region and the wooded mountain- ous area northward from Harbin. JOBLESS SEAMEN AT WHITE HOUSE Put Demand on Hoover \ For $1 A Day Relief WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 24— ‘The delegation of ten seamen, elected at mass meetings of unemployed sea- men in east coast ports, and led by George Mink, national chairman of the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union, placed demands at the White House today. They walked right up to tite President's official residence. Hoover refused to see them. They saw his tary, Theodore Joslin, and VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: (, Unemployment and Social Msurance at the expense of the state and em- ployers. : % Against Hoover’s wage-cutting policy. Emergency relief for the poor farm- ers without restrictions by the govern. ment and banks; exemption of poor farmers from taxes, and no forced Dail Central Ong collection of rent or debts - Vol. IX, No. 255 >* ‘(Section of the Communist International) Entered as see New York, Nv lass matter at Post Offiee at ) under the Act of March 3, 1879. Relief Cutting land eyer saw. It will reach its will be stormed with the un- employed workers’ protest | against the cutting off of relief and with their militant demand for more adequate aid. More than a hundred thousand workers are expected to greet the ar- rival of the Hunger March in London. A huge demonstration will take place at the time a petition with one mil- lion signatures will be presented to the House of Commons. It demands the repeal of the Means Test a law for throwing off the dole all unem- ployed who can not prove they are absolutely destitute A contingent of 230 participants in the March was offered food and shel- ter by the Labor Club of the Oxford University which mobilized many undergraduates to support the Hun- ger March. Doctors treated the marchers wounded by the police at Stratford-on-Avon, where 300 dem- onstrated against poor food in the ‘work house and nearly tore the build- ing down, ‘ Militant Manifesto Issued. A militant manifesto vibrating with the British jobless’s will to carry on a determined struggle for additional relief during the fourth winter of the economic crisis, was issued by the National Unemployed Workers Move- ment here. The manifesto is ad- dressed to the workers participating in the March and states: “You are taking part in the biggest National March this country has yet seen. It is not a panic. It is an important part of the fight of the whole working class against starva~ tion. By your presence you are show- ing that you realize the need for struggle in order to win better con- ditions. Many of you are ex-service- men who have marched in other days and other lands in the interests of the employers. “We Will Not Starve”! “Today, you are marching against the capitalist class and in the inter- est of the working class. The entire working class is watching you. You are the advance guard marching to London to throw down the gauntlet to the National Government and say that you will not starve.” ‘The manifesto calls upon the work- ers to observe the utmost discipline during the March. “Be on guard, it reads, “Absolute discipline must prevail. The army of the working class has self-discipline and everyone of you who are our standard bearers will realize how im- | portant it is that the march to Lon- don stand out for all time as a splen- did example of the heroic, grim de- termination of the workers to carry forward the struggle in a disciplined military manner.” An intensive police mobilization is taking place in London on instruc- tions of the ‘MacDonald-Baldwin hunger government ostensibly “to maintain peace” but actually to try and break up the workers’ demon- stration on the arrival of the Hunger March. The Morning Post is calling for a “strong hand” in dealing the Hunger secret sMoved the demands into his hands. Mink stated to Hoover's secretary: “If something isn’t done pretty quick im response to this, we'll come back hhere in thousands. There are 80,000 unemployed seamen in the United States and 20,000 of them are in New York.” Joslin promised the President would answer, “as soon as possible.” ‘The seamen’s committee and the mass meetings electing it have called on all marine workers, seamen and March it describes as “thoroughly Communist and financed by Moscow.” German Workers Present Scottsboro Protest to U. s. BERLIN, Oct., 24—A delegation sent by a mass meeting of three thousand workers to the American Embassy to protest against the Scotts- when the House of Commons*---~ Jongshoremen to support the Na-|horo lynch veridct found the embassy tional Hunger March Dec. 5 on Wash-| pujiding heavily guarded by police. ington, and to elect a strong delega-|-The delegation was at first refused tion of marchers from the water-| admission to present ene protest. i Finally, however, as a result of the ‘The demands of the seamen’s dele-| gathering of hundreds of workers in gation today include: $1 a day job-| the streets, two of its members were less relief, all jobless seamen to be| permitted to enter in the presetice of admitted to marine hospitals for detectives. They vehemently protest- medical care; full manning, three-|eq against the presence of the de- watch system, no workaways or forced | tectives and secured their withdrawal. labor on ships; no blacklist, deferred] ‘They then presented the protest re- list or logging systems; elected com-| solution of the meeting to the Sec- mittees of seamen in charge ofcen-jretary of the Embassy. The secret- tral shipping bureaus; Iaid-up ships|ary promised to forward it to the BRITISH HUNGER MARCH 100,000 T0 MEET If Million Signatures on Demands for Repeal of “Means Test” Communists in Front Ranks of Marching} Workers in Britain and U. S. (Hunger March in U. S.—See Page 3.). LONDON, England, Oct. 24.—Defying an incessant rain and a systematic police persecution, eighteen contingents com- prising thousands of elected delegates of the millions of jobless, are participating in the greatest National Hunger March Eng- high point in London Thursday ROUND UP TURIN, ITALY WORKERS Mussolini Calls for An Imperialist War ROME, Oct. 24—Fearing a workers” anti-fascist. demonstration, the fascist government, of Italy ordered a round- up of Communists in Turin where Mussolini arrived yesterday with an army of detectives. During the past two days all militant workers sus- pected as Communists were arrested and thrown into jail in Turin as well as in other cities along Mussolini's route. trans formed airplanes pa- held in readi- of forty thous- and soldiers was mobilized to protect Mus- solini from the wrath of Turin work- ers who have a heroic anti-fascist and revolutionary tradition. Yesterday Mussolini delivered a speech in Turin, which in general reflected the part played by Italian capitalism in the preparation for im- perialisit war against the Soviet Union. He sounded a plea for the cancellation of war debts as one of essential things to do in overcoming all obstacles which stand in the way of armed aggression against the Soviet Union, masach, MUSSOLINI Turin was into a forti- fied city with trolling alt ap- proaches to it. Tanks were ness. An army ~NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1932 ALL OUT! “GREET” GOV. ROOSEVELT! Denounce Program, at Hotel Astor, Thurs. NEW YORK.—Governor Roosevelt, Democratic nominee, will arrive in New York City Thursday at 8 p. m., and will be greeted at the Hotel As- tor, 45th St. and Broadway. The unemployed workers of this city and the veterans have particular reason for giving the proper reception to this starvation candidate who is traveling through the country mak- ing promises to the workers as to what he will do if he is elected president. In the State of New York ,there are two and a half million unemployed and all that the state government under Roosevelt has done has been to appropriate $8 per unemployed worker over an indefinite time, Roosevelt’s plan of solving unemploy- ment is by colonizing the workers on vacant land and furnishing them with seed and instruments and letting them croak, This, he does in face of the fact that tehs of thosands of New York farmers are bankrupt and are being driven. off the farms~by their: in- ability to pay taxes ang interest on the mortgages. Hoover appeals for charity relief for the 16 million unemployed and Owen D. Young, supporter of Roosevelt, makes a similar appeal over the radio. Roosevelt has come out openly against the bonus and by remaining quiet about the murder of the veterans and babies in Washington on Bloody Thursday, gives his approval to that. The workers of New York have every reason to hate this millionaire of Wall Street, this Tammany bluffer who promises them prosperity. Four years of Roosevelt have taught the workers what prosperity is. All out Thursday at 8 p. m. to tae Hotel Astor and give Roosevelt the greeting that he deserves at the hands of the workers of New York! 3 Dead, Many Wounded in German Fights (Cable by Inprecorr) BERLIN, Oct. 24—Weekend col-| lisions between workers and fascists throughout Germany claimed three | dead and several wounded, The dead are all fascists. Early yesterdhy morning one hun-) dred uniformed fascists invaded the famous Koesliner Strasse which was the central arena of the wedding battle on May Day three years ago, in order to conduct “election prop- aganda.” The fascists were accompanied by) forty policemen armed with carbi They were subjected to a terrific bom- bardment of pots and bottles from hundreds of windows. The _police- man ordered that the windows be closed and when the workers dis- obeyed they began firing into the windows. The fascists fled into doorways where they met the workers’ fists. The policemen charged with their) batons covering the ignominous fas- cists’ rout. Three fascists were se- riously injured. | A pitched battle occurred yesterday | between sixty workers and as many | fascists at Castrop Rauxel. One fas-)| ‘cist was killed and many were woun- | ded. A similar fight took place at) Bochum between fascists and socialist | Reichsbannermen. Another fascist | was killed. Many fascists were in- jured. At Cavern, in East Prussia, | a third fascist was killed by a Na- tionalist Steel Helmets. Further collisions between workers and fascists took place in Berlin and Leipzig, with many wounded as a result. | At Krefeld fascist threw tear bombs | into two department stores on Satur- | day, causing a customers’ run into) the streets. Saturday fascists tear- | gassed a theatre producing Oscar | Wilde's “Salome,” with a Philippine | singer, Miss Fuentes, playing the} leading part. They believed Fuentes) was a Negro. The performance was) delayed four. hours while the fire- brigade degassed the auditorium. | | CONSPIRACY OF SILENCE ON FACTS IN “GEORGIA NIGGER” Capitalist Press Suppresses Revelations of Chain Gang Terror Against Negroes; Socialist Party, A. F. Aid Ban sively. : “Georgia Nigger’, which was reviewed in yesterday’s Daily Worker, is the sensational book which has thrown a bombshell into the camp of the southern white tuling class by its exposure of the whole ghastly system of chain gang terror and Negro peonage on which ruling class “civilization” rests. Though written in fiction form, the book is so completely based on fact and contains such unanswerable proof of its charges in the form of official documents, photos of tortures and prisoners’ letters, that it has aroused the hostility of the entire exploiters’ press, including those which ordinarily parade in “liberal” dress, S. P. on Job for Bosses. The investigation made by the Daily Worker shows that the Social- ist Party press, as well as most of the bourgeois Negro papers, have Joined in this conspiracy of silence cl “Georgia” : Nigger.” The following facts have been un- covered by the Daily Worker and Labor Research Association: 1, When “Georgia Nigger” was pub- lished, a news story was sent out by its publishers to every daily in the South and every large newspaper in the rest of the country. This carried used for lodging unemployed sea-| proper quarters. During the course ™men; passage of Workers’ Unemploy-| of the morning additional delegations ™ment Insurance Bill; recognition and| arrived from other workers meetings the information that the book con- tained sensational pictures and docu- ments proving incontrovertibly that Negroes a ured = in Communist Party Election Program Calis for Fight Against Condi- | tions Disclosed in Book by John L. Spivak A deliberate campaign of suppression against the book, “Georgia Nigger”, by John L. Spivak is being conducted by the capitalist press of the entire country. Facts: gathered by the Daily Worker, in co-operation with Labor Research Association, prove this conclu- | e ‘Georgia. It Usted the tortures and ithe names, dates and places where Negroes met “peculiar” deaths, as well as quoted from some of the pathetic prisoners’ letters included in ; the book. | “Not Fit to Print”. |The New York Times, the Wail | Street organ which supports Roose- | velt whose winter home is in Georgia, buried this story away in a single paragraph, stating that the charges were merely “alleged”. Another New , York daily, which backs the Hoover program for oppressing the Negroes, Jet it be known that it would not print the story because it was “too controversial.” Only four newspapers in the entire country printed the startling facts | sent out by the publishers of “Georgia Nigger”. Only one southern news- paper printed them, and not one of the New York newspapers, including the fake liberal World-Telegram, published these facts, 2. The same story was sent to all the Negro newspapers in the United States. Most of the bourgeois Negro press, true to their betrayal role, sup- pressed it. 3. A COPY OF “GEORGIA NIG- GER” WAS SENT BY THE PUB- LISHERS TO NORMAN THOMAS, SOCIALIST CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT, AND TO THE NEW LEADER, OFFICIAL ORGAN OF 4. The North American Newspaper , Alliance asked Julian Harris, sup-, posedly a “liberal” who edits the At- Janta “Constitution”. if he would run pictures and documents from“Georgia Nigger” showing tortures of Negroes’ in Georgia, Harris did not even an- | swer. 5. Several hundred copies of | “Georgia Nigger” were sent for re- view to newspapers throughout the country. So far only about 20 hav: reviewed it—none in the south excey @ paper in Birmingham, Ala, 6. REVIEW COPIES WERE SEN TO THE LARGEST AMERICA FEDERATION OF LABOR PAPER THEY HAVE COMPLETELY 1G NORED IT. Few Print Interview. 7. The International News Service | by | school children.” ; Patterson against the arch betrayer, William L. Patterson, Communist candidate for Mayor of New York| City, will appear at a meeting of| citizens and taxpayers to be held by| the Citizens Budget Commission in Carnegie Hall, 57th Street and 7th Avenue tonight. Patterson will ap-| pear at the meeting in defiance of | the Citizens Budget Commission! which failed to invite him to speak at the meeting though it invited the mayoralty candidates of the boss- | parties to give their economy views on the budget. Patterson made his declaration | that he would appear at the meet- ing after an_ interview Monday morning with Harold Riegelman, at- torney for the Citizens Budget Com- | mission, in which Riegelman failed to} state definitely whether the Commu- nist candidate would be allowed to speak at the meeting. | Riegelman, a Tammany man and former president of the Borough of Brooklyn, denied that the Commis- sion had failed to invite Patterson because he was a Negro. The Com-| mission, he stated, wished to hear the| economy programs only of those can-| didates who ha® a chance to be} elected. “Whether or not I have a chance/} to be elected,” Patterson retorted,| “I should be allowed to speak to show that the economy programs proposed the Republican, Socialist and Democratic candidates is economy at the expense of the workers. The workers who will be at the meeting are entitled to hear how the Com- munist Party proposes economy by taxing the rich and by reducing the salaries of city officials to no more than $2,500 per pear. The money saved by such reductions should go for providing unemployment relief and free clothing ang hot lunches for Riegelman also stated that the Commission feared the meeting would be disorderly if the Communist may- oralty candidate were invited. He asked Patterson to guarantee that the meeting would ba orderly if he were | given permission to speak No such guarantee was asked of the Republican, Socialist or Democratic candidates. Patterson spurned Rie- gelman’s request. “Why ask me to be responsible for a meeting organized by the Citizens Budget Commission,” he demanded. { When the attorney for the Citi- zens Budget Commission would not} state definitely if the Communist candidate for Mayor would be in- vited to speak at the Tuesday night mecting. Patterson said, “I shall be there all the time, if not by invita- tion, I shall be there by demonstra- | tion to demand the right to present the position of my Party, the Com- munist Party, on the budget.” Workets, Rally in masses in Car- negie Hall tonight! Suppport William L. Patterson in his demand that he be given a chance to speak before the Citizens and Taxpayers on the Com- munist program for economizing on the city budget at the expense of the rich and for providing adequate re- lief for the 1,115,000 unemployed workers in New York City. Support Hillquit, as the Tammany and Re- publican boss tools, O'Brien and Pounds, who will speak at the meeting. } Shoe Workers Meeting: Thurs., Plan Suvvort for New Strike Wave, NEW YORK.—A mass meeting ot | all shoe worke’s, at Irving Plaza | Hall, Thursday night is called by the Shoe and Leather Workers Industria! | Union. The meeting will hear re- vorts on the new wave of strikes in tert York and Brooklyn. 1 ~vill work out methods to defeat | ‘ack on the Diana Shoe Strik- { the Shoe Manuafcturers Board le which is now trying to bribe | “ual strikers to break the $0-| sessful 100 per cent strike at na. Premier Shoe Shop bosses, al- nbers of the Board of Trade, rying to stop union organization Masses VOTE COMMUNIST FOR: « Equal rights for the Negroes and self- determination for the Black Belt, Against capitalist terror; against all forms of suppression of the poliitcal Tights of workers. 6, Against imperialist war; for the de- fense of the Chinese people and of the Soviet Union, CITY EDITION Price 3 Cents Red Candidate for City Mayor Denied SUPREME COURT DELAYS REACHES LONDON THURS, Floor, But Will Oppose Wage Cuts SCOTTSBORO DECISION Masses of Workers Urged to Back Up Demands by Attending Citi- zens Budget Commission Meeting UNTIL AFTER ELECTIONS Demand Cut in Top Salaries; Tax the Rich; Unemployment Relief; Court Adjourns Until November 7; Plays Boss No Economy at Workers’ Expense Politics With Lives of Innocent Children Workers Must Answer With New Thunder of Protest; Patterson Calls forUnited Front Fight WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 24.—The United States Su- preme Court adjourned this morning without announcing its decision on the appeal argued before it on October 10 by In- ternational Labor Defense attorneys against the hideous Scotts- boro lynch verdicts, sentencing 7 innocent lads to burn in the jelectric chair. The court will convene again on November 7, when it is expected it will finally announce its decision This means that the Supreme Court is playing politics with the lives of the seven innocent Negro boys now sitting in the death cells in Kilby Prison, Montgomery, Alabama. It means that the Supreme Court justices are afraid to make their decision known before the election, that they are afraid of the wrath of the Negro and white workers against an unfavor- able decision, It means further that the Supreme Court is deliberately dragging out the case in the hope thereby of disarming the vigilance of the masses, of quieting the angry protesis rising from millions of workers and intellectuals in all parts of the world against the frightful attempt to legally lynch these innocent Negro children. The mass fight for the freedom of the Scottsboro boys must go for- ward on a greater scale than ever before. oe te INTENSIFY MASS FIGHT FOR BOYS William L. Patterson, General Secretary of the International Labor Defense issued a statement yesterday calling upon all districts of the or- MOTHER MOONEY AND NEW I. L. D. GENERAL SECRETARY. Mrs. Mary Mooney, 84-year old mother of Tom Mooney, and William L. Patterson, well-known Negro laber leader and newly-elected general secretary of the International Labor Defense, photographed together at Washington when they attended the U, S. Supreme Court hearing on the Scottsboro case, October 10. ganization, and all groups opposed to the lynch verdicts, to intensify the mass fight for the Scottsboro boys. He declared: “This postponement of the U. S. Supreme Court decision indicates this body of capitalist tools is determined to continue the campaign of persecution and lynch-law set in motion by the Southern bosses in teeir attempt to terrorize the Negro masses through the legal lynching of the Scottsboro boys. It means that the Supreme Court is afraid to render its decision, for fear it will affect the election returns. Only mass pres- sure can save the Scottsboro boys. The refusal of the Supreme Court to announce its decision before the election is in itself a decision—a decision against the oppressed Negro masses and the whole working class as well as against the Scottsboro victims. “It means for the working class that the struggle for the liberation of the Scottsboro boys must be intensified, multiplied a hundred-fold, if they are to be saved from legal lynching. What has been done so far, great as it has been, is as nothing compared to what must be done. Don't let the Scottsboro boys burn! “Demand their immediate, unconditional release!” Directives were at once sent out to all I. L. D. districts and affiliatea organizations to intensify the mass fight. Every meeting of workers thru- out the country will be attended by an I. L. D. speaker who will expose the frame-up of the Scottsboro boys and ask the adoption of a resolution de- manding the unconditional release of the seven condemned boys and the two others awaiting new trials, and the release of Tom Mooney. These will be sent to the United States Supreme Court, and to Governor James Rolph dr., of California, House to house canvasses will be carried on as a basis for building del- } egations to call on the white and Negro press to demand publicity for the | Scottsboro-Mooney defense activities. SEND PROTEST RESOLUTIONS Delegations from the I. L. D. and from the branches of the League ot Struggle for Negro Rights will visit all working class organizations, Negro and white, and the locals of the A. F. of L. urging them to pass resolutions addressed to the Supreme Court demanding the release of the Scottsboro boys. All organizations are urged to secure literature on the case as well as post-card resolutions addressed to the Supreme Court. On with the mass fight for the release of the Scottsboro boys. Answer the manouvers of the U d States Supreme Court with a rising thunder of protest against the lynch verdicts, against the whole hieous system of imperialist oppression and persecution of the Negto masses. OLD INJUNCTION RAILROADS FOUR Cafeteria Strikers Need Support NEW YORK.—An injunction that the pickets were beaten up by police was issued the United Restaurant | and falsely charged with various Owners Association against the Am- |CTmes. there by firing the most militant workers. | The meeting Thurday will also jhear of the new struggles starting to all of the hundreds of newspapers jin Boston, Ly~». Binghamton, and affiliated to the I. N. 8. Only about |the fight in Maine. @ dozen printed the interviews in the} The union invited representatives led by the Food Workers Industrial Ba ate a are Daily biota all political parties to speak to | Union. si y pul an exclusive |them at this meeting on election is-| -,, 7 interview with Spivak, which exposed |stes. Amter candidate for governor |g fue strike at the Dine has been the conditions he saw in the South. |of New York on the Communist SOIR On for several weeks, agains This was the most complete interview |ticket, has accepted and will be there. Mtelerable conditions. “long | hours, that has yet appeared in any paper.) | esas tt speed up and wage cuts. The work- 8. On October 20 Spivak lectured |NINE CONVICTED IN ST. LOUIS “TS *PPealed to the F.W.L.U. for sup- before a large gathering at the Me-| ST. LOUIS, Oct, 24.—-Nine workers |POt, and got it Millan Theatre, Columbia University, | were fined today for “disturbing the| More than 30 have been atrested in New York, Hundreds of students] peace.” The arrests grew out of ajfor yiolation of Section 600 of the |algamated Food Workers in 1929 has been used to railroad four pickets at the Linel Cafeteria, 830 Broadway. ‘The strikers there do not belong to the Amalgamated, and the strike is sent a staff member to interview John L, Spivak, author of the book. Aj| column news story was telegraphed THE SOCIALIST PARTY. BOTH HAVE IGNORED IT, i Mew. on Fe | meeting Saturday night at which|penal law which provides-a penalty (Continued on Fame pratve) John St. Clair, A Negro worker spoke. for violating an injunction, Many a | ot cafeteria. The cases of four picxets: Andrew Purgas, Joseph Maceda, Joseph Ho- ren and Edwin Tenenbaum were con- vieted in the court of special ses- sions, where there is no trial by jury, and Tammany judges Nolan, Solo- mon and Murphy will sentence them October 26. They convicted them in defiance of all evidence. There must be mass organization and a fight against this attempt to revive the wholesale use of the injunction, which has been | partially? stopped in New York by enormous mass demonstrations in recent years. ‘The strike goes on at the Linch = get