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ett int et i “wen, one of the insurgent comman- | International Notes By PETER HENRY. The Wind Blows Left BERLIN (By Mail).— Municipal elections took place Sunday, Oct. 16, in the city of Selb, Bavaria. The vote confirmed the general trend to- wards the left exhibited during the last few weeks, with the fascists and social democrats losing considerably, compared to the last Reichstag vote in July, 1932. The Communists pol- | led 32 per cent of the vote, compared | with 28 per cent in July, the fascists dropped from 45 per cent to 41 per cent, and the social democrats fell from 23 per cent to 21 per cent. The yote was much lighter than in the Reichstag election, but this Commu- nist gain in the relatively non-in- dustrial regions of Bavaria is proof | that the non-proletarian lower class- | es are also losing faith in the Hitler | miracle and are rallying to the Ham- | mer and Sickle. | WHERE ALL RENEGADES LAND PRAGUE (By Mail).—Muna, Hais, | Berger and Stura, former Commu- nists turned liquidators, held a con- ference of their little group of sup- porters, at which it was decided to amalgamate with the Social Demo-| cratic Party. The same story in every country, no matter where you turn—Hoeglund | in Sweden, Frossard in France, Paul Levi and Rosenberg in Germany, | they all land sooner or later where) they feel really at home—in the arms} of the socialists. * ¢@ EXCERPT FROM BIOGRAPHY OF PRIME MINISTER GOEMBOES OF HUNGRAY In 1920 Julius Goemboes was a lieutenant; he has now become Prime Minister of Hungary and enjoys the | confidence of Bloody Horthy. There | is a secret report of the Szekszard secret police, numbered B 1396-1920, on Goemboes doings there; it is a} special report drawn up for Horthy and describes the massacre of un- | armed political prisoners by Goem- boes. in Szekszard in 1920 after the} overthrow cf the Hungarian Soviet Republic: Goemboes led a troov of soldiers | to the Szekszard prison and demanded | thet the prisoners be handed over to} him. The prison warden refused, so | Goemboes ordered his men to’ take the prisoners by force. They hauled ow 120 political prisoners into the priscn yard, and Goemboes person- ally picked out twelve of them—11 men and one women. ‘These twelve w2re taken by Goem- boss and his men to an open space | near the railroad track. Goemboes then told them that the men would be hanged while ths woman would be shot. He gave them an hour to} jive, during which he summoned the town’s population to witness the ex- ecutions. The prisoners were not al- lowed io see their relatives. Goembces then had the men hang- ed, one by one, to telegraph poles. The hangings lasted more than an hour and a half. Then the woman, wife of one of the men hanged, was shot dead before the eyes of her two children, aged four and six. These are the simple facts nar- rated in the report. They are but one incident out of hundreds during the White Terror in Hungary. Yet, when Goemboes was appointed Prime Minister, Regent Horthy announced: “I consider Goemboes to be the man | most suited to lead the government of the country in this serious crisis. I have full confidence in him.” The Premier-murderer is worthy of his} bloody chief. | Insurgents Beat | Invading . Japanese Resistance Spreads Eastward Coincident with the renewed ad- vance of the Chinese Red Armies in} Central China, Chinese insurgents in | Manchuria on Sunday and Monday | inflicted two serious defeats on the | Japanese invaders and successfully | advanced a wedge from north and| west aimed at the strategic city of | Tsitsihar, the principal remaining Japenese stronghold in North Man- churia. Most of the insurgent troops in- volved were from the Manchuli region | from which the insurgents drove out the Japanese a month ago. They were joined by thousands of Man- chouko troops, who deserted their | allegiance to the Japanese puppet | state of Manchoukuo. Gen. Su Ping- | ders, is reported extending the insur- gent control in a southeastward di- rection along the Chinese Eastern Railway. His troops are continually hi the Japanese garrison at Fulaerchi, the farthest northern point of Japanese control. | The insurgent activities show that the national revolutionary struggle against Japanese imperialism has spread eastward. | Many Korean peasants who fled | from Korea to escape Japanese op- pression have joined the insurgents, arousing the vilest hatred of the Japanese imperialists who are wreak- ing vengeance on the Korean pop- ulation in South Manchuria, mas- sacring hundreds of Koreans, in- cluding women and children. Worker Reports on Hoover in Marion MARION, Chio.—Hoover's special train arrived in the afternoon of Cet. 22. There were about 3,000 peo- ple there. Congressman Mauser in- troduced Hoover, who came slowly forward with a piec2 of paper in his !qnd. He started to reaq from’ the paper, lauded Harding (famous for the Teapot Dome oll scandal—Ed.), end said he followed in Harding's footsteps. He read further that this was his fourth visit to Marion. Then he thanked for the reception. When the train began to move out, I heard somebody call: “How about the bonus?” while a few high school thildren cheered. And then the Breat show was over. T. H. See that Election Watchers tre Anpaintad! DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1932 “ WORKERS WRITE EXPOSURES OF THE BOSS CANDIDATES Call for Huge Communist Vote! How: Hillquit Tricked Labor Paper Out of $200 Plays Game Like A Lawyer NEWARK, N. J.—Because the wrangle for the mayoralty office of the ny Other Capitalist city of New York is nearing an end, I think it very appropriate to recom- mend for that job the most suitable candidate among those in the field, namely the Socialist Party leader Morris Hiliquit. With this gentleman we {before he'd be able to bring suit \through with list Party outfit. had the following experiences: Way back in 1914-17 the eastern® district of the Slovak federation So- cialist Party published a weekly and later a monthly paper, ‘The Voice of Liberty,” in New York City. Once | there was an article in that paper exposing some very unpriestly intim- | acies of certain Slovak Catholic priest of Newark, N. J., who in turn} threatened with the law suit against | the paper. The comrades unexper- ienced as they were, got scared, and after hurried consultation decided to put the matter “Comrade” Hillquit. Next morning after telling all the details of the case to Hillquit, the committee got another, a still bigger shock when Hillquit told them “Well comrades, you are in a very grave situation, this is a libel, and the priest may sue you for $50,000 dam- ages. But you bring me as soon as possible $200 and I will try to get you cut of it.” Two hundred dollars even in those times of “prosperity” looked to us} as aemillion, but we managed to HILLQUIT scrape it up in about five days and took it right to Hillquit’s office. When arriving there, the first question was: “Well, comrades, did you bring the money?” The committee handed him $200 which he carefully counted and pocketed, and then without hes- itation proczeded: “Don’t worry boys, against you in the courts of New York, that guy would have to de- posit $50,000 in the court, because he is a resident of another state, New Jersey, and I am sure he will not do it. If you hear from him, let me know. Good day, comrades!” We really never heard a word from | that priest again, but we also were “Comrade” Hillquit, | and after a very few years we also were through with the whole Social- | Hillquit knew from | the very first, that the priest could | not even sue us, therefore he never even moved his finger for our protec- tion, it was not needed, but he had} enough guts to take $200 from des- titute workers and party paper for nothing. Today he is running for | mayor of the city of New York and I think he would fill the boots of Jimmy Walker in every respect. —M. Korvin. Cox Runs Starvation Laboratory for Boss | Charity Racketeers | PITTSBURG, Pa.—This so-called Man of God, Father Cox, a candi-| date for President, who is now spreading his gospel of patriotism to save the county from Communism, responsible for the cutting down of the relief of the unemployed by the City and County Commissioners. Why? When the County Commis- sioners were giving $4, $5 and $10 a week, he was giving a miserable basket. The county officers, seeing that the workers did not protest, | also cut down to the same level that | Cox was giving his men. At the| same time the county officials were | Stealing thousands of dollars in, graft. j The corrupt political machine got | |flour from the federal government | for relief, It utilized it just to build | up @ strong machine. If you did not! vote in line with the machine you got no flour, and, if you did, you got very little. And such graft and control fellow workers, will continue as long as we of the working class fail to unite into mass action and organize into a workers’ political party. It is the Communist Party that leads the workers in the fight against the mis- erable conditions already forced upon us by the Democratic, Republican and the Socialist Parties. A. J. MARSH, Candidate for General Assembly, 8th Legislative District, North Side, Pittsburgh. Wage Cutting Robbins Dry Dock Wants Votes for Boss Candidates BROOKLYN, N. Y.—A letter on the bulletin board of the Robbins Dry Dock ang Repair Co. comes out to remind the workers where they get their wages and who gives them a living. It also calls atetntion to their obligations to the community, and they should know for whom to vote, namely, the bosses’ candidate. Fellow-workers, we as workers know that the Robbins Dry Dock bosses. iust as all the other basses. in the hands of) |not learn to “slop pigs’ from his 'LL.D. Forms Legal is! Ave.; Section 6 (Williamsburgh), 61 Chats with Our Worcorrs Every worker correspondent can learn from the letter of Susanna Tarley in this section today. In a few words she exposes the brutal exploitation of domestic workers slaving for the useless wives of the capitalists. She gives a vivid picture of how a small group of parasites waste more in one night than work- ers in actual want need for two weeks. The whole story breathes a condemnation .of the capitalist sys- tem with its own parasite life at the expense of the exploited working men and women. ree But she does not stop at merely exposing the system. She was look- ing for a way out and she found it in strengthening the Communist Party, the leader of the working class, to organize and fight for the final overthrow of such 4 brutal sys- tem and establish a classless society. ‘This is expressed so simply in the last sentence of the letter: “We have gained some votes for Foster and | Ford. We got three for sure, and there might be more, but three for sure.” The repetition of the words | “three for sure” expresses how happy she was when she was able to re- port to her paper, the Daily Worker, of such good results in a small lo- cality. Nebraskans Chuckle at ‘Farmer’. Roosevelt OMAHA, Neb.—When Franklin D. Roosevelt used the phrase,.“Us farm- ers,” in addressing a Nebraska audi- ence, he clearly demonstrated that he is fully awgre of the fact that the workers and farmers are sus- picious of his class interests. By using that statement, Governor Roosevelt still has the middle west laughing at him and there is much comment on when this great farmer put in those alleged 40 years of his life at “farming.” Certainly he did French and German governesses. Nor did he learn to plow with a ten- nis racket or polo outfit. Neither did he learn to pitch bundles or husk corn in the snob private schools of Germany and France. Every. capitalist candidate realizes the mass power of the working class and that is why nearly every capital- ist candidate for office tries to make the workers believe he is one of them, E. B. Staff for Protection | of Election Watchers | NEW YORK.—The legal staff of the International Labor Defense an- nounced today that it has formed a special group of volunteer lawyers for | the purpose of giving legal protection | to comrades, friends and sympa- thizers who will act as_ election watchers on election day, Nov. 8. Volunteers for the work of dis- tributing literature near the polls and for acting as watchers in the polls should apply at once to the follow- ing section headquarters: Section 1 (downtown), 96 Ave. C; Section 2 (midtown), 56 W. 25th St.; Section 4 (Harlem), 200 W. 135th St.; Section 5 (ower Bronx), 569 Prospect Graham Ave.; Section 7 (South Brooklyn) also (Coney Island), 1109 45th St.; Section 8 (Brownsville), 1813 Pitkin Ave.; Section 15 (Up. Bronx), 1200 Intervale Ave. Volunteers can apply also to N. Y. State United Front Election Committee, Room 506, 50 E. 13th St. G.O.P. Ex-Governor Can’t Fool Butte Workers Anymore BUTTE, Montana.—In speaking to the Republicans of Butte in the high | schol auditorium recently, Joseph M. | Dixon, Assistant Secretary of the In- | terior, and fromer Montana Governor | claimed that no one was hurt in Washington this summer during the bonus march. He knows himself that two vets were killed and a few chil- dren, He does not care for the vet- erans or the rest of the workrrs. We will expose Dixon here and you must help by exposing him in the Daily Worker. Dix_n says that if Roosevelt and Garner are elected, business will freeze up for the next 15 months, He can’t fool the workers any more, and the Republicans and Socialists can't either. We veterans and the rest of the workers will vote for Foster and Ford. Vote Comrinist The only Party that fights for the working-class. —0. C., A Vet. “The struggle against militarism must not be postponed until the moment when war breaks out. Then it will be too late. The struggle against war must be car- ried on now, daily, hourly.” WORKERS B00 GOP OUT OF THEIR OWN NEWBRITAINMEET| Workers Pin Speakers Down; Candidates Flee NEW BRITAIN, Conn.—How would you like to be competing with the wages they pay in Japan?” asked a Republican speaker, Col. Seymour, at their rally of Polish workers on Oct. 30. He was speaking on what would happen to this country if the work- ers accepted the Democratic pro- gram. “How about in this country, we don’t get nothing?” shouted out one of the workers. There were also present Ex-Gov- ernor Trumbull ang “Hunger” Mayor Quigley. The workers all booed and jeered every speaker and finally broke up the meeting. “Hunger” Quigley and the other speakers were forced to “sneak” out the back way, so great was the fellings of the work- ers. I A. WOMEN WORKER ON HOW RICH LIVE Answers by Getting Foster-Ford Votes CENTURY, W. Va.—I am a married woman and have one child. We can hardly make a living. I was working out for some rich people and I had to | get up at 4 in the morning and work until midnight, and I had to do everything, even wash the car, scrub the garage, mix drinks for them in the evening when thy would have a party. They would waste more in one night than we could afford to buy in two weeks. It would just make me sick to see how they would make pigs of themselves while my poor kid was maybe sick and hungry and hun- dreds more people, while they had so much they didn’t know what to do. The women would go upstairs and slide down the banister ang fall on cushions, and the men thought it was so funny, and I had to stand around and watch them till I’d almost burn with shame and hates. At first they paid me $5 a week, then cut me to $4.50 and doubled my work, and I wasn’t alloweq to say anything for if I did I’d get fired. One day I had to house clean, and T'm just a small weak woman. I had to lift a davenport and take the rug out. I asked the lady to help me, but her husband said it was too heavy for her. So I hag to lift it myself, and I sprained my back and had to go to bed for a day. When she paid me she even was so rotten that she didn't pay me for the full week but half, so I went home and quit. We have gained some votes for Fos- ter and Ford. We got 3 for sure and they might be more, but three for sure and this is just a small village. —SUSANNA TARLEY. Sees “O. K. America!” Sign; Gets Sore; Will, Vote Communist NEW YORK CITY. — Last week while walking down Fifth Avenue, I noticed a crowd of people gathered in front of a window. I stopped and saw a well-filled show case of books all bearing the title: Starving.” I stumble on in disgust and anger, as my stomach grumbled for food, when lo and behold, there appears before my very eyes, emblazoned across the front of a motion picture houses in bold letters the following: “O, K. America!” I dug deep into my jeans and pull out a last jit, which I dropped into a subway slot and start uptown. Scanning the ads I see the following: “Days of misery are over—just a few more months of Hoover. How long are we workers going to} fall for this rot? We know that any | country that permits miilions to starve in the midst of plenty, is far from being O. K. We know that it is not a question of Roosevelt, Hoover, or Thomas, but a question of working class versus | capitalist class. Do we need four more years of starvation under Roosevelt to convince us? On Nov. 8 we must give our answer by voting Communist! State Shifts Murder Blame on Desperate Mother, Now in Cell CHARLESTON, Ill—Driven to desperation by hunger and the re- fusal on the part of the state to aid her three children, Inez Carrell is now confined in a cell of the Coles County jail awaiting a charge of murdering her three children. A move is on foot to obtain her release from jail, following a state- ment by the city physician, Dr. Craig, which reads, in part: “She is in bad shape, and needs treatment both in body and mind is she is to return to normal. Her tragic experi- ences, combined with the lingering effect of the drug and the shock of her sudden confinement in this place, may at any time affect her men- tality.” ‘The answer of the capitalist state to the desperate plight of this fam- ily has been to place a half-crazed woman into a jail cell—and to lose no time in charging her with the murder for which the state itself is directly responsible. give us wage‘cuts and starvation, and the workers tehrefore should vote Communist, which is @ vote against bosses’ wage-cuts and for im- mediate relief and Social Insurance. 8. Send In Immediate Reports to the Daily Worker on Vote In Every Precinct! 16 Years in Prison Tom Mooney, innocent, the frame .Up against him totally smashed, but held in San Quentin Prison. Free him! \DRIESER VISITS | TOWARDS 15th ANNIVERSARY OF RUSSIAN REVOLUTION! Soviet Chemists Urge Fight on Use of Chemistry for Slaughter Convention Issues Appeal to Chemists of Entire World to Block Pro- stitution of Science for Imperialist War By N. BUCHWALD. MOSCOW, Nov. 3 (By Cable.) |The Convention of 3,000 lead- jing chemists of the U.S. S. R., | held in this period of a develop- ‘ing war situation, yesterday | adopted an appeal to the chem- jists of the whole world to pre- vent the use of chemistry as an agency of destruction for imperialist war. The appeal reads in part: “If war breaks out, it is the duty of the chemists of the entire world not to permit the conversion of chemistry, this powerful weapon of Progress, into a weapon of bar- barous destruction of lives, and the Soviet Masses Show Greatest Enthusiasm in Speeding Socialist Con- struction on Eve of 15th Anniversary Celebrations ® ‘PREPARING NATIONAL HUNGER MARCH LOCAL MARCHES (UNEMPLOYED IN : (CAN PREPARE THE) CHARLOTTE GET | NATIONAL MARCH\READY FOR MARCH | Demands Must Be Real Sharp Struggles in Cal- | Burning Issues and Must BeWell Known ifornia Lay Base for Good Delegation MOONEY SAT. Rushing to California | to Speak Sunday labor and cultural achievements of the human race. War against war! Chemists of the entire world! Join the united front of science and labor for the active struggle against Hunger marches in cities and| NEW YORK. — Information be- counties, and how to make them win | gins to come to the National Com- |demands for the jobless locally and|mittee of the unemployed councils |at the same time prepare for the | showing preparations for the National | National Hunger March which will|/ Hunger March proceeding at many “Nobody | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Moulders Defense Committee, in whose hands jointly Mooney places his case. The Civic Auditorium meet- ing arangements were endorsed and prepared by a united front confer- ence of 58 union and workers’ frater- nal and political organizations in San Francisco, Oct. 16. The Commu- nist Party participated in this con- ference, and makes the drive to free Mooney part of its election campaign, Dreiser has endorsed the Communist candidates, Callicotte Will Testify. Right in the center of the Civic Au- ditorium meeting will be Paul Calli- cotte, who suddenly revealed, Sept. 26 that it was he, and not Mooney and Billings, who placed the suitcase con- taining the bomb, on Preparedness Day, 1916. Callicotte was hired to do Mooney and Billings, swears that it was neither of them. Callicotte was hired to do this by two men, and af- ter seeing Mooney and Billings, that it was neither of them. cotte did not know of the bomb in the suitcase, which later exploded and killed ten persons, for which United Railroad spies, police and county of- ficials framed Mooney and Billings to life terms in prison. The prosecu- tion’s case depends on testimony of witnesses, since discredited, that Mooney and Billings in person placed the suitcase. This gives point to Dreiser's state- ment in New York on the eve of his departure for California: “I consider Callicotte’s evidence the most important recent event in the struggle to free Mooney. Com- ing as it does at the same time as the publication here of the sup- pressed portion of the Wickersham report, it re-opens the whole Moo- ney case.” ‘The frame-up has already collapsed the masses of workers know Mooney jis innocent, but the Callicotte state- lment is positive proof and with {enough mass support should compel re-opening of the case. Every attempt has been made to |suppress Callicotte’s story. The San Francisco grand jury would promise to see him only in secret. But this Mooney, the Defense and Callicotte j oppose. Open Hearing. Instead, the great civic auditorium |meeting will become {a preliminary mass open hearing of the Mooney case, with Attorney Goodman of the LL.D. questioning Callicotte in pub- lic, and with grand jurors invited to cross examine, at the meeting, if they wish. Proceedings will be broadcast aver radio station KFWI from 2:30 |p, m. to 4:30 p. m. Pacific Time. Chairman of the meeting will be the well-known LL.D. attorney Gal- legher. Among the speakers will be Steffins, Ornitz, and Sam Darcy, the Communist Party district organizer. See that Every Worker Casts |His Vote on Tuesday! Visit Worker at His Home — Bring ‘Him to Polling Place! Build a workers correspondence the approaching war, for the de- fense of the first country in the world which is victoriously building Socialism!” Foreign workers and specialists sary of the proletarian Revolution, pledged themselves to gupport the Union, In keeping with Stalin’s famous six conditions, the Kaganovich Indus- trial Academy will graduate for the 15th anniversary 122 of the highest “Red capitains of industry,” includ- ing 15 Bolsheviks of pre-revolution- ary standing, 57 who joined the Com- |munist Party between 1917 and 1920, and only seven Party members whose |membership is less than six years. |The graduates have _ established themselves as theoreticians, and trial construction. Characterizing the general situa- tion in the triumphant advance of Socialist construction, Rabochava Moskva, uses the apt phrase “the work today is easier; work tomor- row will be easier and better than | today.” The Soviet Far East will celebrate a double anniversary of the fifteenth |year of the proletarian dictatorship |and ten years of liberation for the Far East from the imperialist inter- |ventionists. The program of celebra- tions at Khabarovsk includes the awarding of orders and common tes- timonial papers to the veterans who participated in the sturggle of eman- cipation in the Far East. The feature of the anniversary jcelebrations at Tashkent, capital of the Soviet Uzbekistan, will be the opening of five schools for teachers, | four model kindergartens and a com- |munal kitchen which will serve 6,000 meals a day. in a festive mass mecting in Mos-| cow on the eve of the 15th Anniver- | building of socialism in the Soviet | | practical directors of Socialist indus- | this’ by two men, and after seeing | | reach Washington Dec. 4, is the topic lof the latest instructions from the | National Committee of the Unem- | ployed Councils. The committee says: “Practically everywhere hunger marches are being organized. Cer- |tain things must be remembered in es. jthat many hunger marches are ar- ranged without sufficiently popular- izing the demands. “The workers who come to our hunger march are not aware before- hand what demands are put for- | ward, why these demands are raised jand what concrete measures we pro- pose to the city or county govern- ment in order to carry through these | demands. | Won’t March for Fun of It |and will not mobilize for the sake of marching only. A march is a |mass action and a mass action can | be successful if the masses of unem- ployed and employed workers realize that the demands of this action are | correct demands, and above all they |must be acquainted with these de- {mands beforehand. Therefore steps \shall be taken immediately to pre- sent these demands beforehand at |mass meetings, public hearings, open jair meetings, etc., to vote on these demands and to get the approval of |Masses of workers. These demands }approved by the workers must be widely popularized and must become the property of large masses of work- ers. Only on this basis will we be able to explain to the masses of workers the necessity of struggle for these demands and the mass action will be a logical step in order to ob- tain these demands. Steps to Be Taken connection with these hunger march- | From past experience we know “The masses cannot be mobilized | A few examples of the enthusiasm | | of the workers on the eve of the an- | | niversary celebrations are to be seen | |in the telephone plant “Krassnaya | |Zarya” (Red Dawn) at Leningrad) | where the 9,000 workers fulfilled the monthly program three days in ad-| ,, as vance Bs Reape tenner? gift to the | 4 '2.—Popularize these demands be- | mi orehand through all forms of ac- country, Eighty-nine shock workers | tivities mass meetings, open air have applied for membership in the v cs, OM , . meetings, factory gate meetings, Deg Dea Saath <a see tan | eickers, ‘painting of streets, etc. late TOG WouRORVEL RBA‘ 08 cars |, 2-amiain through a wide agita- | 88 | tion | above their quota, while 150 of their | roug | . | put forward can be obtained throug! | shock workers joined the Party. Sim-| 417 concrete proposals, how to tax jilar examples have occurred by the | tne rich and where to get the money | thousands. bis ote f ised fe ose es ite th colete) factories |® give more relief to the unemploy and trade unions are preparing aj” gigantic reception to the workers’) “4.—Carry on a constant exposure delegation from other countries, who|0f the demagogues and demand a | ‘will be welcomed as guests of the in-|stand on the demands worked out ternational proletariat. The series of | BY the workers. events in ech bia the visit of Send Information! | the delegation will include an inspec-| +41) hunger marches which are be- ena _ a paged |ing prepared on a neighborhood, city | ge ie te mich” the Soviet | county scale must be real mass achievements by whic! tration to | 2¢tions and this can be carried thru | ret Medes hs dover, (only if we involve the masses in the the lessons from these achievements |be won Check up on your menace, : von. which are occurring precisely dur-| tions “Let us know where hunger ing the three years of the deepest| marches are being prepared. Send crisis of the, capitalist world, when |in detaticd Seoeeune sores thousands of plants pera ah eit |down, millions of workers left des- ee fs te in British Workers Not | Hungry, According to “Remember the fo\owing points in connection with the development of ® hunger march: “1.—Work out the demands with the workers. Listen to the workers, consult with them. campaign that these demands | | different points. | Unemployed branches of the un- |employed councils are being built in |Charlotte, N. C., through which Column 5 of the National Hunger March will pass on its way to Wash- jington. This column starts in Tam- |pa, Fla., Nov. 26. | From Minneapolis comes the report jthat the delegation from that city will be 75. ‘The organizer who has gone out to |help form column 2 will be in the | following cities, on the following |dates: Kansas City, Nov. 3 and 4;¢ | Denver, Nov. 6, 7 and 8. In California militant struggles for |relief have taken place during the |past weeks. | In San Diego mass protest forced | the release of two who were arrested jin the struggle for the demands of the unemployed. In Sacremento a hunger march caused a furore in the business district. In Stockton and |Alameda the County unemployed |council is organizing struggle, 2s pre- paration for the National Hunger |March. All these raise a mass ba- |sis for the National Hunger March land indicate that delegates elected | will come from the most militant sec- tion of the California unemployed. Detroit announces the line of march | through that district, as follows: “The main route of the National Hunger |March will arrive in Kalamazoo on DETAIL ROUTE OF ton RE, BE “The meronenae pede itt CONCORD SARWE Her RE woythent ~ Goma Gaguibunce | November 26, and will leave on the |morning of the 26th. It will pass through Battle Creek, Jackson, Ann Arbor, and will arrive in Detroit on the evening of the 26th. Here all the state marchers will converge in the city demonstrations. The march will leave Detroit on the morning of the 2ith, pass through Monroe on the way to Toledo.” ‘New Britain Jobless | Fight for Relief NEW BRITAIN, Conn., Novy, 3.— group tn your factory, shop OF | has puilt nearly 800 new factories, neighborhood. Send regular letters (and increased the material and cul- to the Daiiy Worker. tural welfare of the masses. Opening cf Dnieper-Power Works a Wg lir gg i; a Photo shows one of the streets in the new socialist city Dnieprostroy in the Soviet Union on the day of the celebration when the power station “Lenin” was opened. Workers and delegates are shown return- ing from the celebration’ meeting, Ronald Loomis, who was Communist Party candidate for mayor in the Spring elections, and Isaac Abraham, both leaders of the local Unemployed Council of 53 Church St., were ar- rested at the demonstration of the \due to hunger but to the fact that| unemployed in front of the City Hall {relief was taken away from the un- | today. employed by the Maans: Test. The arrests were made at the order |titute in the capitalist countries, | while the Soviet Union, under the Lord Now in America NEW YORK.—The liberal Mar- |leadership of the Communist Party |quis of Reading, now in New York, recently tried to explain thet the Hunger March in England was not The | Marquis pointed out that no one suf-|of Mayor Quigley, who a week be- fers “actual hunger” in his country | fore had also prohibited the show- snice the pittance of a dole just| ing of a Soviet movie, “The Road to manages to keep a worker from ab- | Life.” ‘This picture was to be shown solute starvation. |for the purpose of raising funds for The Means Test, put into opera- | the unemployed. tion last year, denies government re-| Mayor Quigley promised that the lief to those who have the slightest | city would supply relief to the fam- bit of aid from other sources. Mac- |ijies that would have benefited from | Donald, the British Norman Thomas, | the proceeds of the picture. The put this law over. Through it hun- Jeaflets announcing the demonstra- dreds of thousands are actually | tion exposed the failure of the mayor |forced into living a life bordering on | to keep his promises ,and demanded starvation. immediate relief for the unemployed. The Marquis’ statement is similar | to the ones issued by Hoover about; Paterson Jobless to no one going hungry in the United Place Demands Sat. States, | PATTERSON, N. J., Nov. 3.—The Unemployed Council of Paterson, lo- cated at 3 Governor St., officially notified the mayor of the city that lated! |a delegation of the unemployed will | present beriragt for rage The be Y 1 egation will appear at the mayor’ hi ardiahep ewan office in the City Hall on Saturday, Against Imperialist War; for the \Noy. Sth, at 11 a. m. Large masses defense of the Chinese people and | of workers are expected at the city of the Soviet Union, hall to support the delegation, Don’t Rely on Capitalist | Election Officials--See That, ithe Communist Vote Is Tabu-