Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1932 Page Three Thousands March on British International Notes By PETER HENRY By PETER HENRY. Conscripts Demonstrate for Com- munism PARIS (By Mail).—The second| contingent of the class of 1930 con- seripts has just completed its mil- itary service. Numerous revolution- ary demonstrations of the released soldiers took place in the Carpiagne, | | TOWARDS 15th ANNIVERSARY OF || RUSSIAN REVOLUTION! 5-Year Plan Finished Six Months Ago at Putilov Mailly, and Sissonne army camps, while ‘the soidies of the 46th in-| Revolutionary Workers of Leningrad Change Czar’s Munitions Plant | Jobless With Demands Into Peace-Time Factory and Enlarge It 3,400 Per Cent fantry Regiment at Metz turned their Telease into powerful propaganda against war and for the revolution. The walls of the barracks were in- scribed with slogans such as: “Long live the U.S.S.R.! Down with im-| perialist war!” On October 7th, a} Superb red flag, with hammer and sickle on it, floated over the barracks (Cable by Inprecorr) ot the third battalion in the ie MOSCOW, U.S.S.R., Nov. 2 aoe , USS.R., Pay Just Finishing Largest Electric Generator in the World, and No w Ready to Make Some Twice As Big; Have Factory Kitchen, School FIGHT COPS. | Jobless; Hold Demands Parliament; Protest Dole Cut Struggles Lead to National Hunger March MONTESANO, Wash., Nov. 2— Fred Walker, Communist candidate for governor of Washington, led a FIGHT HOURS | 25, at 10 a.m., when the commission- ers were meeting. There were 400 even at that early hour in the day. The commissioners squirmed, but \evaded making definite promises for | relief, It is plain that still more pres- | sure must be brought against them. | The jobless call for $3 a week for sin- | gle jobless; $5 a week for couples, and | $1 additional for each dependent. | On October 26 a united front meet- | | ing in Aberdeen, Wash., was held with | |30 taking part. | * Signed By Million STRUGGLE CONTINUES Jobless Here To March On Washington LONDON, England, Nov. 2.—Po- lice besieged 700 National Hunger STOP EVICTION PITTSBURGH, Pa. Nov. 2.—A | PREPARING NATIONAL HUNGER MARCH “RELIEF” GARBAGE KILLS “GIRL IN INDIANA; RALLY TO NAT'L HUNGER MARCH Fight on Discrimination Against Negroes ‘in Make Work Scheme in Ohio Rouses Workers | Column Through This Section Starts Nov. 21 in Sioux City Where Farmers, Jobless Unite Extensive preparations Noy. 21. re going forward along the route of Column |4 which will start on the National Hunger March from Sioux City, Towa, Workers Describe Bosses Plot to Dictate Votes In the train returning to Paris,| —Leningrad is the home of the | the first battalion began to sing the| Qetober Revolution. The fi | Internationale; the soldiers of the| All the cities along this line of march are being visited by Field | Organizer Krieger. Reports of preparations for United Front Conferences in East Ohio on November 5, ii November 5, in Dayton on Marchers in their main lodging Place today, and refused to let any out. Police announce plans to do the same at other lodgings, and to drive part of the marchers from the city. thousand workers came at the call of the Unemployed Council and stopped @ constables’ sale of an unemployed worker's furniture. The workers is J. Davini, 712 Carson St., South Side. ‘The constable and his armed deputies took one look at the crowd and wan- in Columbus on |November 4th and in Indianapolis + a on the 13th and in Terre Haute onjae Meet To Plan other battalions took up the refrain, | Shots of the proletarian rising a all the way from Epernay to| were fired at Leningrad. Th the train r2sounded to revolu- | ‘ agate s cheers and songs. In the| Leningrad workers are also the 12th have been received. Provi- | sional committees have already been |set up in all these places to launch * (6 Je de l'Est station in Paris the} fighting in the front ranks for y employees cheered the spec-| the socialist reconstruction of tacle of hundreds of young conscripts és x nging the song of the revolution— the workers’ and peasants’ father- tha Internationale. land. The Pravda publishes several #7) ee | letters by the directors of Leningrad Many of the enlisted soldiers in the | Plants presenting a vivid example of e young farmers and unem-| the long road which the working orkers who have chosen “an|C!@8s of the Soviet has travelled in life” not to “see the world”| the course of Socialist construction. to escape the starvation of not) ri ing a job. Workers should fra-|, Here is rmy b the Leningrad giant, hiner f ~|time supplied the Tzarist army with Se festalesrtn cin ae oe ees |munitions for the world slaughter. ie . . . | Now it is fully transferred to peace- PORT ARTHUR, Canada—K. Jaa-| ful construction. On the spot where Achievements of Leningrad Plants. | f 4 t “Krasni Putilovetz,” successor to the ‘e with them end tell them what | ., Ce Taye | ic’s all about. Then we too will see | former Putiloy Works, which in their Force Negro Help to Wear Hoover Buttons in Toledo Macy Store | Threat to Fire Those Who Won’t Promise to Vote for G. O. P. TOLEDO.—In the past 6 weeks, at the department store where I work there has been going on some very interesting things, which show how the boss class works against the working class. The Lasalle & Koch Co., which sid, a worker clubbed by the police | under the Tzars stood a gun shop, during a demonstration in Port Ar- | ‘here now stands a four-story build- thurs on Oct. 18th, is in a critical|1™& comprising tool shops _con- condition in a local hospital. Doctors | Structed in 1026 snd equipped ac- admit that it is likely that his neck | Coding to the las: word of technique. has been broken. jae works hoy) grown extensively The role of the police is the same and have been fully reconstructed. | all over the capitalist world—defend | House of Culture, a factory kitchen, matter how many heads.are broken |C°Mtaining the factory apprentice or ‘rioters’ (any worker demonstrat- school, in which about 1,800 young 1 | | private property and capitalism no|® large garden and a big building ing in masses are “rioters”) are bru- workérs are being trained. Twenty- two thousand workers are now en- at ane | aged here, of which no less than i }11 per cent constitute old Putilov LEIPZIG (By Mail).—One thou-| —- of Villeroy an och, in Torgau| ‘4 (Central Germany) are out on strike baitlaet Slates against capitalism. i ea ae At ey Se ity Bi oa eo was 29, ee anes . The Inder the leadership of the | (ge ag Trade Union Opposition, all the | balance ‘sheet of July 30, 1932, shows plant’s employees went out, irrespec- | tally killed. is one of the big cl on how they vote this election, tel- ling the workers that they must vote for Hoover. In many cases Mr. Koch, the pres- ident of the Company called special meetings of all the Department man- agers, and some of the workers that he knows are good Republicans and stated that they must vote for Hoo- ver, and get their employees to vote for Hoover. | During the 3%4 years of the crisis | the Company has cut the wages of | the workers more than 3 times, with | some of the workers are working on | starvation wages now, where a worker workers over-time this is never paid to the workers, and some of the work- |ers work as many 4s from 10 to 12 |hours a day for a dollar ang a few in stores of the Macy Co. of New York, Cleveland, etc, | have been telling the workers of the Lasalle & Koch that they must watch ey don’t wear these. It shows that the boss class also works much more against the Negro workers by threat- ening them and much harder work being their lot. The workers of the store should get wise to themselves and vote Com- munist this year! JOB SHARK TRIES TO FORCE VOTES Bars Votes to Workers WhoDisagree with Him LONDON, England, Nov. 2.—Thous- ands of London jobless, led by the 4,000 National Hunger Marchers, stormed down London streets toward the parliament buildings last night to support their committee which went ahead to present a petition with.a million names of unemployed work- ers. The petition urged abolition of the Means Test, a law cooked up by the Labor Party (brother of the So- cialist Party in the U. S.) cabinet. It is a law cutting off of the unemploy- ment insurance lists all jobless work- ers who can not prove that they are actually destitute. ‘The demonstration was the answer of the London jobless and the hunger marchers to the arrest of their leader, dered away again. | oe 8T, PAUL CONFERENCE ST, PAUL, Minn., Nov, 2—A very {successful United Front Conference was held here last Wednesday, with 42 delegates representing 24 organiza- tions including seven A. F, of L. local unions. ‘The main questions discussed were winter children’s relief, and the strug- gle against forced labor, Preparations for the National Hun- ger March were also taken up and a local hunger march will be held. A United Front Committee was elected with a delegate from each or- ganization represented. The public ‘ hunger hearing held last week was the Communist Wal Hannington, | well attended at the Woodmen’s Hail, earlier yesterday, The demonstration | anq helped to build the Unemployed began at 4 p.m. | Block Committees in the Payne Ave. Answers Socialist Treachery district. pA a called It was the answer to the so-callet * SOUTHWEST CHALLENGES “Left” Laborite declaration in the aoe house of commons the day before, that} KANSAS CITY. Mo. Noy. 2—The the Laborites “regret” the decision of | Kansas City Unemployed Council has the jobless to demonstrate for their| elected Owen W. Penney, as provi- demands, and accusations by the La-| sional Hunger March and junction jborite member of Parliament Mc-| depot organizer for columns two and | Govern, against Hannington, which | three, converging in Kansas City No- laid & basis for his arrest. | vember 24, Hunger March headquar- The petition was not presented.|ters have been established at 1812 | Instead of receiving it, the Macdonald | Harrison St., Kansas City, Mo. Please government sent 10,000 London police | send all communications there. }and an unknown number of “volun-| All points South and West of Kan- ‘ teer” police (Macdonald advertised for | sas City, on Routes Two and Three 12,000 volunteers) to club, charge into|should immediately communicate | on horses and armored cars, and drive | with this address. Column 2-3 must | | back with blows and violence these|be the best organized column in the | the drive for finances, food, clothing, etc, ‘The United Front Conference will serve to provide a broader base for the local struggles connecteq with the National Hunger March Cam- paign. Smash Jim-Crowism. In Columbus, Ohio, the Unem- ployed Council is preparing for a big demonstration to smash the Jim Crow practise of the “Made Work Relief Bureau,’ who separate colored and white workers on forced labor jobs, In Indianapolis the: whole working class has been stirred by an incident which reflects the quality of the so- called relief provided to the unem- ployed in that city. An entire family has been poisoned by the garbage issued as relief and one member of this family, 12-year olq Helen May Oliver has died as a result of eating it. The anger of the masses has been particularly aroused because this 12 year old child was neglected for two days by the city hospital doctor who was too busy taking care of paying Patients to give attention to this vic- tim of capitalist charity. The International Workers Order and the Unemployed Councils of In- dianapolis are arranging a public hearing where the mayor and the re- lief trustees will be placed on trial | for the murder of this child. In Terre Haute a miserly $5 month- | March In Buffalo | Elect Committee of | Action BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov. 2. — Fol- wing two more neighborhood pub- lic hearings and a neighborhood demonstration on Wednesday, ‘the first United Front Conference to in- | tensify local struggles for relief and | push the fight for unemployment i surance was held here Thursday night in the Workers Center, -476 William Street. In spite of a downpour of rain, 34 Negro and white delegates, repre- senting 22 organizations and .neigh- borhood unem d groups, were present. The main report to the con- ference by the organizer of the Un- employed Council raised sharply .the of organization in “the neighborhoods to intensify the strug- gles for more relief, against all relief cuts and discrimination against Ne- groes or foreign-born. Above all-it emphasized as the central issue the fight to force unemployment insur- nee, cash winter relief and the vet- erans’ bonus from congress this De- cember, | The conference unanimously en- dorsed the National Hunger March and the plans proposed by the Unem- bee Roa et el Soviet Explorer Mis Eeaore nan Oe Decne ook thad hungry men, women and children National Hunger March. This is the | {¥ food ticket is all the rellef provided | Pye bird ight = ing a uni rron' y am ie SST s ons 2 a a uate Tae ae —— ~ = under the Hoover administration he | ¥ hed BS CITY. big Lee Gay asking for the right to live. | challenge of the Unemployed Coun. employed Gounbll in Tete Bante ia [29 ashington ers and unorganized workers. The | Social Democratic papers in Berlin, | Leipzig, and Erfurt denounce the| | | | Communists for allowing the Nazi workers to strike with them, claim-| ing that this proves the essential ey of Communis #1 and Hitler- ism. | ‘This typifies the infamous Socialist | hetrayals ofthe fighting united front. | They are ready to sit down and ne-| gotiatg with Hindenburg and Von| Papen, and even with iHtler, but when misled workers who had join- ed the Nazis join a united front) Strike against wage cuts, they do all| they can to break the strike. VET BONUS MEET | cut the wages of the workers. But he stated that in order that we can | keep our jobs we must vote for Hoo- ver, Some of the Department Man- agers have went as far as giving hints to the workers that they know who | will not vote for Hoover, that they | will lose their jobs. But the main fact is that in this store there are about 30 Negro adult and young workers working, they have been working there under the |smallest wages and also long hours. The bosses have issued little Hoover |buttons and told the Negro workers |that they've got to wear these on | their working coats. In some cases | told them that they will get fired if 'Poll Tax Used to Bar Workers from Voting in the South ployment Office looking for a job. ‘The man in charge, before answering me, asked me if I vote in this city. Yessir, I answer. Then he told me you can vote for wine and beer. I told him that I do not vote for either dry or wet. Then you do not lin’ any more to bother me, he an- swered. Is it necessary to vote for wine and beer to get food and shelter? About the end of September a policeman came in to my apartment and asked if myself and my partner were work- ing, and he took our names. But if it was for some relief, I do not see none at my door yet. It is only a trick and hypocrisy of the bosses parasite and octopus government, lo- cal or federal, justs the same, ene evidently Acting-Mayor McKee's NOTE:—The police at the door was | #2! ‘The London jobless and the hunger | cils of the Southwest. marchers resisted heroically. ee | aes : iadeladay: Sareea Negro Editor Sneaks newspapers give the number taking | Pert ax 30000 which ts certalnlyian) at Newark Poll Meet) t | Nearly Into Parliament ate under the “Big Ben” clock tower |",). - ft the! of the parilament building, A fierce | ae parser RS saty es | De Tees ehied af Gus | be held here this evening. Jones is |chairman of the Foster-Ford Com-| Sint Pa marteok building was gar-|mittee for Equal Rights for the Ne- risoned like a fortress, with 1,000 po- | 80. "i Other speakers will be Charles lice right in front of it, and 600 more) writehell, candidate for Congress in 1 Scot) charges of mounted police | the 12th District, Rebecca Grecht, Gially forced the crowd of hungry | Communist Party’ District organizer | workers back, but they rallied again | 8nd A. Edwards, Negro candidate for | | State Senate. The meeting will be in Tratalgar Square, anda new battle | 74 at the Divamland Academy, Beacon St. between Springfield and; South Orange Ave. | k place. ‘The Scotland Yard mounteg police | preparing to involve the workers in bitter stubborn struggle for immedi- ate relief and expects to send a large delegation of unemployed miners to represent them in Washington when Congress opens on December 5th. Noy. 7 Heips Hunger March. The celebration of the 15th Anni- versary of the Russian Revolution will also serve as mobilization for lo- cal struggles and the Hunger March. In all these meetings resolutions should be submitted for support of the National Hunger March and these resolutions rushed into the National Office of the Unemployed Councils immediately, at 80 E. 11th St., Room 436, New York City. This should also be done at all other meetings that take place and especially at all final election rallies. Additional copi can be secured by w of the resolution riting to the Na- nal Unemployed and demand the passage rs Unemployment Insur- $50 cash winter relief for families, (in addition to local relief); $10 for each dependent, | and the full cash payment of the bo- adopted for a huge at the hunger di Hall on No’ withdrawal of all relief cuts, no dis- crimination against Negroes and for- eign-born in relief, the immediate ap- propriation of $10,000,000 for local té- endorsement of the Workers’ Un- ment Insurance Bill, and im- mediate cash payment of the bonus. A broad committee of action of 23 was elected to prepare the Hunger |March, divided into the following 3 sub-committees: (1) visiting and pub- (2) Transportation and sup- 1 IN ST : were d out and charged ¥hto this | tional Off f the Unemployed |r (3) fi +3 - . PAUL RERREEES Siig agent for taking a census of the un-| calle Soy pI LAE | tiona ce of the Unemploye 3) finance. A proposal was a | roe re loyed, poet method of bother- | Towa, trampling people underfoot, |» sous GENERAL BUS STRIKE | Councils. imously adopted to broaden the | BIPMINGHAM, Ala. — I say sure | &™P! ° | and losing a man themselves now and Bceslal Givehtion should and redofivene Gi Novo%6 ST. PAUL, Minn. Nov. 2—The St.| Pro! Otto Schmidt, head of the | 110+ 'the whole mass of workers must |49€ the unemployed and trying to) then when the crowd dragged him IN BERLIN pecia ention should ni and reconven ‘ Paul Rank and File Veterans Con-| All-Union Arctic Institute of Lenin- ference which will organize a local! grad, is chief of the expedition of delegation cf ex-servicemen and their | the Sibiriakov on a northeast pass- wives for the National Bonus March| age from Archangel on the White to Washington December 5 will open| Sea to Viadivosiek on the Pacific get in with all forces to vote for the Communist Party. We find that so llong as the southern bosses will be | able to keep the workers deceived, so | work up a “blacklist.” The entire out- {come of this census was simply to publish statistics—and very much Played-down statistics at that. This worker sent us no address, but we | from his horse and beat him up. As was the case Sunday, uncon- scious police and workers were piled around the base of Nelson's statue. When this crowd in Trafalgar BERLIN, Nov. 2.—Thousands of German workers cheered Commu- nist speakers and the call of the Communist Party for a general given to visiting ail of the un: other work organization: Woodmen, Ri etc. must ri parations for Nov. 21 ged to mo- long as he will keep us hungry, no strike against the fascist terror, at | Speakers must be sent to all for the elec- here tonight. —a 10,900 mile jaunt. Two ships in winter, and may be | Would like to ask him to send ‘US| Square was finally driven out, about " F s VMoas Mael i i orgs ons for thi mheeall” for the ‘conferetica hag | od that: trip Rave been, ennght” in isi bahar qather icc Mg thoked news again, 8 p.m, the fighting spread all over a huge Communist election rally | and their endorsement should be s of delegates to Washington, rais- Chats with Our gone out to all veteran organizations and it is expected that a large num- ber of delegates will be present at the opening session. Among the many important points to be discussed by the veterans to- night will be plans for the organiza- tion of finance, food and supplies and transportation committees. A per- “gnanent City Committee of Rank and ‘ile Veterans which will be in charge plans for the march will be elected it the conference. Plan Nov, 11 Demonstration The conference will also ‘prepare fox a big Armistice Day demonstra- tion and parade. On Armistice Day the yels will march to the City Hall and demand immediate relief for the starving veterans and unemployed wor'scrs and their families. This de- monstration will mobilize the veter- ans end workers against imperialist war. A Women’s Auxiliary, which in- cludes wives and mothers of war yet- erans, has just been formed here by the local post of the Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League. The member- the ice and held over winter. This trip is part of the Second Arctic Year, observed by many countries. Indications are the Sibiriakov will get through. a@ basic capital of 1,100 million roubles. The workers of Red Putilov well remember their old revolution- ary traditions. They have remained true to the revolutionary struggle. The First Five-Year Plan was ful- filled by the plant on the First of Mey. 1932, which is before scheduled e. Largest Generators In the World. Here we have the “Electrosila | Plant.” Fifteen years ago it was a small assembling shop with a thou- sand workers, and a yearly “capacity of a million rouble's worth. In 1932 the plant produced 100,000,000 roubles worth of goods. Over 12,000 workers are engaged by its scores of new shops. During the past three years over 100 types of new large machines were produced, The Electrosila is now completing. construction of a gigantic generator for the Dnieper ship of this new group is rapidly ‘words, workers | What the situation is, (2) What is/ jamin is secretary of the National 4 ° « . growing and all the women who have bites Station, Tt is called at the feat thay eiust alg hint or who! being done about this situation. (3) | Committee of the Unemployed Coun- Ty ee be ols Mik Dole ot ae EE JACKSON could never see a signed up in the auxiliary are active | Wr! ‘Big Dnieper.” Weighing knows whether they will still be|What do the workers or farmers in-|cils in America, . Fiber eoude withious ead snetnesien ‘tee! about 800 tons, the entire rolling bee aban port a Mekal stock of 60 platforms is required to for the National Bonus March. and demand real relief, clothes food, no evictions, and coal. ‘We know that in the sweet system that we are in, the Negro and white workers have not a chance to vote for who they want. Because the boss has taken all their laws themselves and now they say we have no right to vete. They say all workers must pay their poll tax. You work and have ‘no money for poll tax. If you cannot | vote for who you want, you must |fight for the right to vote. | "So you all see why we in fn the | South should put up a fight. —Nell. Wool Mill Boss Tries - to Fake on Tariff BRIDGEPORT, Pa—“A word to the wise is sufficient,” thinks the James Lees and Sons Co. here, man- ufacturers of woolen yarn. Their bul- letin board contains a statement by the president, Abram T. Eastwick, which amounts to instructions to the employees to vote for Hoover. Of course the statement does not say it “needed” by the company. ‘The company tries to fool the work- Worcorrs. ‘Many workers’ letters today record the fact that the bosses are trying to force the workers into voting ior Hoover (who is the first choice of the big capitalists though he does not differ from Roosevelt). The workers should not be fooled by this bosses’ threat to vote for Hoover or lose their jobs. You don’t have to tell your boss who you will vote for. On Nov. | 8th when you go into the polling Place vote for your own class party —Vote Communist for Foster and | Ford. The * 08 @ creased. But Worcors should try to develope More of the subject than merely describing it. Here is one suggestion on how to develope the story in your letter: (1) Tell, first, volved say about the siuation, What is their opinion, (4) What do you the correspondence from shops and! for solidariiy of American workers | |farms to tie Daily has recently in- | last night. The bus employes were | urged to vote overwhelmingly to | strike in rejection of the latest | wage cut. The 23,000 bus operators are voting today. that part of London. Stones flung at the police smashed windows along Charing Cross. Limousines of the | aristocracy were overturned and | wrecked along Victoria Embankment. Fighting lasted until nearly mid-} cured and they shi make contributions in support of the campaign and to elect their own del- egates in the National Hunger March &s well as in the local conferences. Id be urg: night, and toward the end the hun- gry demonstrators began to help themselves to food in shops whose fronts were crashed sin. Nearly a hundred are known in- jured, and some 60 were arrested. Hannington and the man arrested with him in the police raid on the} headquarters of the National Hunger | March Committee are charged with “inciting to mutiny.” London is in a state of siege today, with small struggles developing in mnay places. . (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) would be angry if Dee Jackson did not put his boy to work immedi- ately when there was such a big early crop, Dee’s monthly credit of twelve dollars included David's needs, and the boy was considered as much a Pearson “nigger” as his father. REUNION. - Henrietta, a spindly-iegged but * Benjamin's Statement NEW YORK.—A statement calling | with the struggle of the jobless in| England, and urging mass support for | the National Hunger March of 3,000 delegates of the American jobless on | °°Mely girl of fourteen, dropped her Washington, Dec. 5, was issueq yes- terday by Herbert Benjamin. Ben. “The Unemployed Councils are fol- lowing very closely, the development half-filled bag and rushed to greet him. His mother, her hands press- ing against the small of her back, form and carefully depositing his sack on the ground, smiled broad- SPIVAK BOOK EXPOSES “Yes, suh. Jes’ in time fo’ “Yeah. I reck’n Dee nee he'p. I'll tell Mr. Pearson y back.” Dee approached hastily. the sweat from his face sleeve. “Sho glad tuh hab'm back, said, “Fine picker, dat boy.’ “Yeah. Good nigger,” the over- seer agreed, squirting a mouthful of tobacco juice, With a careless nod he continued on to the next farm, his round shoulders drooping listlessly. wiping with a he upon a mule and the good Lord he funds, e or the march, VOTE COMMUNIST | Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination in the Black Belt. WEAR AN Anniversary Button / had based a lifelong hope, had a carry/ it. Hlactrogila will be con- we say about it, Don’t be bash-|of the British Hunger March,” the| 2¥- His mother hugged the boy, the ers by claiming that Hoover's tarrif | Worcorr say e , tears filling her eyes. ploughed singing to a vision of free- so ” \. Spreading the Daily foor thee pi ee Polley protects labor, LH. ful about giving plenty of suggestions. statement concludes, “and are draw-| "°C t. ‘here Son!” his father pro- | dom, and both had failed him. For | | wear A vaste poab Boe € stroy. These generators are already being designed by the plant. Their capacity wil Ibe double that of the Dnieper generator, which is the larg- est in the world, Rush Funds for National Hunger | March Expenses! Funds are needed for the Na- tional Hunger March organization expenses. Until the arragements are made for special banks accounts, all funds collected for the National Hunger March expenses should be in Election Drive BICKNELL, Ind.—In_ reading the Oct. 15th issue of the Daily Worker yhoeer the ee the Daily : used as aid struggle?” In speaking in the rural towns in this country we come in contact with workers and farmers who have heard about the “reds” only. through the Capitalist sheets. After hearing us Speak about the Communist program, they are ready to learn more about the Party. We hand them a copy of the Daily Worker or the Produc- ers’ News. ‘We sent for a bundle of the Pro. ducers’ News for three weeks, But Bs that we ere not of the inilli- sent immediately to the nearest! | Labor Defense, ” of the police. The Unemployed Coun-| which is to bring him to Hllis Is. * h . + -| The gangling form of Shay Pear- | THOUSANDS OF PRESENT-DAY £ ee, and on efford ee pee Workers International Relief of- While these 18 workers were being cils , will demonstrate today on | land, son’s ereteeiey Bi long legs draped | SLAVES—ONE OF SHAY PEAR- tha. nage mais sidan ‘or! fice, manriced ‘Vor National Hun- | | prosecuted eae en the So- pe coe gee oe ‘The National Office of the I. L. D. is} about a mule, came towards them. SON'S ‘‘NIGGERS’’? READ PSU PRE ook tel ol AR March.” te cialist. Party’ President wthe! rmination to|taking immediate stepr\ to defend) “See you're back, Dave,” the | ABOUT IT IN TOMORROW'S” te 5 z en ne -- - could be Tagraseanlge arate etc egg dex from deportation. white man smiled plersantly. “DAILY WORKER”. All Except 3 of 18 Jailed in May Day Fight in Phila. Freed PHIILADELPHIA, Pa—The 18 workers who were arrested and charged with “riot” and assault and battery on officers as results of the May day demonstration at 13th and Thompson Sts., have been freeq with exception of three who were found guilty. The International Labor De- fense has appealed case, This victory was made possible by the mass pressure policy of the International at the courtroom speakin gon Rey- burn Plaza “in defiance of police or- ders” so they said. Director of Pub- lc Safety Dodge passed the buck to cialist asked for a permit for Reyburn Plaza. The result was that Norman Thomas spoke undisturbed by the ice. The trial of the August 25th de- fendants has taken place with the acquittal of two of the workers while the third, John Parks, was found bah ai Misc ‘The workers of Philadelphia will not relinquish their rights to the streets in spite of the brutal attacks the Park Commission when the So- | ing lessons from the experiences of thelr ‘British fellow-workers in the! struggles in which we are now en- gaged, andefor the greater struggles | we are preparing in the National | Hunger March.” Grab Fernandez, Florida Worker, For Deportation TAMPA, Fla., Nov. 2. — Manuel Fernandez, known as Colino, former Tampa organizer of the International Labor Defense, has been ordered de- ported to Spain. On November 3, he is to be placed on a night train to Savannah and from there on boat tested affectionately, “You leab Louise alone!” “Git away, you fool nigger!” she chided, pressing the boy closer. “Son, I'm sho happy you is back!” “Blessin’s on de Lawd,” said Dee reverently. . 8 8 HEY plucked the fluffy cotton from the wide-open bolls, Hen- rietta following a furrow beside her brother, laughing or exclaiming sympathetically at his stories of the chain gang. Zebulon scampered about, indifferent to the burning soil under his bare feet. Field in- sects hummed their dry songs and the heat waves quivered over the baking rows. THE OVERSEER. years he d saved for that mule and a plofigh. With these and a lit- tle seed it was possible to rent a tract of ground and pay the owner one-fourth of the crop for the use of his land, and with a season or two of good crops and high prices, there would be money enough to make a down payment on a few acres. There were Negroes in Och- lockonee county who had gone from tenant farming to independence. (CONTINUED TOMORROW) Cee aga) WHY DIDN'T DEE JACKSON BECOME ONE OF THESE NEGROES? COULD NOT HIS MULE AND PLOW LEAD HIM TO FREEDOM? HOW DID HE BECOME ONE OF THE THE Oash, checks, money orders or C.0.D, $2.00 A HUNDRED: 10 Dollars a Thousand’ in Quantities of 1000 or More ORDER FROM Communist Party. U P. 0. Box 87, Station D NEW YORK, N. Y¥, | KIDNEY AGONY? Hare's quick relief from ing Diadder pai