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I rrp EVERY WORKER SHOULD Support the National Winter Relief a surance. Hunger March for nd Unemployed In- You Can Help By Taking Part in the Tag Days, Saturday, 19 and 20. Sunday, November Dail Central Org. (Section of the Communist Se ines «Worker Rfoumiet Party U.S.A. TAG ry Stations, WHAT CAN YOU DO ON DAYS? Turn Out Early’ to the Nearest Sta- tion Listed in Today’s Daily. Collect Funds from Door to Door, Sub- ways and in Organizations, Make Prompt Returns to the Tag Day, Vol. IX, No. 276 EBP2. New York, N.Y. ond-class matter at the under the Act of Entered as Post Office at March 3, 1879, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1932 CITY EDITION Price 3 Cents In the Day’s | 12, 538 Vote Communist in Arizona FORCE LA CROSSE CITY GOVERNMENT TO FEED NATIONAL MARCHERS; 250 ON STRIKE AGAINST FORCED LABOR New Wave of City and State Hunger Marches Begins to Win Local Demands; Back Nat’] Hunger March for $50 Winter Relief, Insurance News CZECH POLICE KILL TWO BRATISLAVIA, Czechoslovakia, Noy, 17.—Two were killed and many wounded when police fired into a crowd of peasants who protested op- | pressive taxes, SCAN RIVER ‘porto FOR FU VANDERGRIFT, Pa.—In painst ing search for fuel the unemployed | of this city scanned the bottom of a} river which fell to a low level dur-| ing a recent hot spell. A vein of | coal was discovered and is being} mined by the unemployed. UNEMPLOYED DRIVEN INTO ARMY VIENNA, Noy. 17.—Hunger and the terrors of the coming winter driving the unemployed to seek t fuge in the army. Although pay was recently reduced, and recruits must sign themselves away for twelve years—there were 1300 at the doors of the military depot at | 6 a.m. 20,000 YEAR OLD MURDER ANN ARBOR, Mic year old girl met violent death some 20,000 years ago, was described by D. A. F. Janks, rsity of Minnesota | anthropologist the National | Academy of Science. The girl's skel- eton, remarkably preserved, retains | the marks of a spear wound that| caused the girl's death. Great sci- | entific value is attached to the find which sheds light on the inhabitants | ef this continent of that time the | POVERTY FiGURES MOUNT NEH HAVEN. Conn, Nov. 1 Figures published by the New Haven | wide- | yet recorded in this; dispensary reveal the most spread poverty city. The number of those who ap- plied for free treatment increased by 28 per cent over last year. The num~ ber of treatments during the first half of. 1932 mounted to 91,457—the | highest figure on record. While one ous of every five residents in the city, me for free medical treatment, it was pointed out by Dr, Buck that relief fell far behind the require. ments. BOATS CRASH IN FOG NEWCASTLE, Del., Nov. 17—Two freighters were badly damaged.in a collision which was caused by a dense fog over the Delaware Bay today. ‘The worst’ damage was caused to the Alamar whose crew took to the boats. The bow of the Makalla, the other freighter, was badly smashed. i cai ANOTHER ROUND TABLE CONFERENCE LONDON, Noy. 17.Ramsay Mac- Donald opened a secret session of the Third Indian Round Table Confer- ence. for the further enslavement of Indian masses. the INVESTIGATE HOOVER VOTE PHILADELPHIA, Pa.,’ Nov. 17.— Elections in Pennsylvania, one of the few states carried by Hoover, will be investigated by Congressional Committee. The charges are that the presidential election was fraud- ulently conducted. Congressman Heartsill will head the committee. Ae le TROOPS TO AID MINE’ OWNERS SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Nov. 17—The Peabody Coal Company again calls for the National Guard to help break the miners strike at the Andrew mine. | ORLOFF, OPECK TRIAL IN 4 DAYS Protests Increased Against Frame-Up PITTSBURGH, Nov. 17—With the trial of Joseph Orloff and Sam Opeck in Morgantown only four days off, organizations of workers all over the country continue to pour resolu- tions of protest against their victim- ization by the coal companies and their capitalist courts, reports to the I. L. D. district office from Morgan- town, W. Va., where the trial will be held, indicate. The I. L. D., which is conducting the defense of these two militant miners, has through its investigation carrieq on in the month gained by postponement of the trial, obtained plenty of evidence to show the two miners were repeatedly threatened and finally attacked by the mine guard they are charged with having killed. Mass protest against the prosecu- tion of Orloff and Opeck has been aroused all over the, country, and especially in the East Ohio and West Virginia mining regions. Mass meet- ‘ings of miners have been held daily, at which resolutions demanding the immediate release of the two were passed and sent to Judge Baker and Prosecutor Albert Schuman at Mor- gantown. Resolutions forwarded to- day included those passed by Pitts- burgh, Peabody, Mass.; Boston, Mass., and Bay Port, Mich., branches of the Russian Mutual Aid Society ‘and from mass meetings in Worcester, Mass., and Bay Port, R. I. SOCIALIST THANKS BOSS SHEET. NEW YORK, Nov. 17. — The N. Y. Times spokesman for big bankers printed in its columns a letter from Louis Waldman, Socialist Party can- didate for Governor of N. ¥. in the last elections, in which Mr. Waldman thanks the Times for “fair treat- ment” accorded him and his party during the campaign. Here new plans will be laid j | LOCAL RED CANDIDATE Some Pr -ecinets Still Not Counted, Full Figures Soon ENORMOUS INCREASE Vote for Foster in 1928} Was 184 PHOENIX, Ariz., Nov. 17.— Frank Paterson, Communist |candidate for state tax missioner of A 538 votes, to be heard from. The Commu- that of the repub- ‘al thousand votes. A democrat was elected. Salt River Valley farmer. In 1928 the vote for W. Z. was 184 in the state. Florence | date for Justice of the Supreme Court of Arizona, got 3,112 votes. The vote | for other Communist candidates will be known, as well as the complete figures for Peterson and Julius, after | the official count on Nov. 2 The capitalist newspapers in Ari- zona are not publishing the figures on Communist candidates other than Peterson and Julius. he HUGE INCREASE IN UTAH SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Nov. 17. —Unofficial figures showing the vote is only two thirds of the precincts of |the state give Foster, Communist | candidate for president, 1,200 votes. In 1928 the vote for Foster in the whole state of Utah was 54, Von Papen Resigns; | Is Reappointed Junkers Plan to Dis- solve Reichstag Foster BULLETIN : BERLIN, Nov. 17—The Junkers executed an elaborate manouver today when Chancellor von Panen made the gesture of resigning with his entire Cabinet. President Hin- denburg accepted the resignation, but at once empowered von Papen to continue in power indefinitely. The manouver is believed to pres- age another forcible dissolution of the Reichstag and continuation of government by decree. The new Reichstag is scheduled to meet on December 6. The German Com- st Party m substantial in the recent elections for the Reichstag. oo BERLIN, Noy. 17.—Rumors are | current here that the Junkers intend | to sacrifice Chancellor von Papen in qi attempt to overcome the over- whelming popular resentment against the dictatorship which is a form of fascism, while at the same time con- tinuing this rule with some slight al- terations in personnel designed to de- ceive the German masses. The cab- inet adjourned its sessions this after- noon without officially denying or confirming these rumors. The dictatorship which at peereny has the support of only 10 per cent of the new Reichstag is offering var- ious concessions to both the Hitlerites and the Social Democracy in an at- tempt to achieve the appearance of parliamentary support. So great, however, is the mass hatred of von Papen as the symbol of the dictator- ship that neither these parties nor the Centrist and Bavarian parties dare to openly co-operate with Von Papen, though they render it every possible indirect support. Production Declines, Adds to Misery NEW YORK, Nov. 17—‘So far as news. were concerned,” comments a bourgeois financial writer, “the se- curities markets were fed with a bucketful of sawdust. Figures for production in major industries are on the downward trend. No prospect of improvement in the steel industry is in sight. according to the Iron Age, which ‘reports that new orders for steel. continue to decline. Carload- ings for the week ending Nov. 12 show a considerable decline and amount to about half of what they were at this time in 1929. Produc- tion of electricity for the same week also registered a decline, being about: six per cent lower as compared with the same week last year, and 11 per cent lower than in 1930, | | | | Held an Open Hearing on Hunger in your neighborhood; invite all jobless and part time workers and keep a record of their evidence against the starvation system. com- | rizona got 12,-| counted so far in in- | complete returns with some precincts | Peterson is a | Julius, Communist candi- | BIG VOTE FOR] Sick Negro Is Tortured | | ditions. was today’s instalment on Page 4.) ‘Hee taa Jy Hendoreon, Secty+, Prinon Comuisaion of Gee, Atlanta, On. Dear bies Tdaze “poPurfee fo. any cruel treatment twerde any of the convicte. “I HEARD NO COMPLAINT’—Inspector S. W. Thornton again does his duty to his masters, the white capitalists and planters of Georgia who maintain, through the democratic party of Roosevelt, the system of national oppression of the Negro people, of which the barbar- ous chain gangs and slave farms are a part. Above is a letter from a Negro prisoner on the McDuffee County chain gang to E, L. Rainey, chairman of the Georgia Prison Commission, describing the brutal con- Below is Thornton’s whitewash letter, saying he “heard no com- plaint of any cruel treatment.” These flunkies, who are paid to white- the southern ruling class torture system, are of the same type as those who are trying to whitewash the attempts to legally lynch the Scottsboro boys. The Scottsboro frame-up is part of the same system of national oppression responsible for the barbarous slave farms and chain gangs exposed in John L. Spivak’s book, “Georgia Nigger.” (Read “‘#Mledgevitie, Ga., 8/5/31. e \\I am returning herewith letter from the prison? in 1 wee at this camp on last Sunday and heard no complaint of There were one or tvo i that eaid they would like to be tranferred on account of their health and I told thom that thie was up to their doctor. I think thet thie letter ie from one of the convicts thnt mde ® bresk for liberty the week nefore anc was recaptured. The warden etatea that the clight rupture thst he hee cid not elow him in hie ¢ r j fora, | . Yours | Inepector. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., ‘Nov. 17.—A charge that the state of Florida has been paying railroad companies so much per head per day for unem- ployed migratory worke:s whom com- pany detectives have arrested and turned over to the state authorities was made here today to a repre- sentative of the Daily worker by a local worker. This worker cited his own experi- ence in 1925 when he was arrested R.R., which then paid 50 cents a day by the state for his prison labor. The worker, whose name is being omitted to protect him, declared that as far as he knew, this sort of trade is still being carrieq on and is not confined to the Seaboard Company or to the state of Florida alone. Confirms Spivak Exposure The story told by this worker am- ply substantiates the facts concern- ing the kidnapping of workers, espe- cially Negroes, and their torture on chain gangs, revealed in John L, Spi- vak's book, “Georgia Nigger,” which the Daily Worker is publishing se- rially, The worker's story is as fol- lows: “In the boom year of 1925 I was | arrested for tresspassing while riding freights in Florida. In Tallahassee we were tried and found guilty and sentenced to three months of hard labor in the Leon County jail. Later T found out that the Seaboard Lim- by detectives of the Seaboard Limited’| Railroads Paid. by States for Kidnapping Jobless W orkers Worker, Arrested in Florida. Exposes Racket; Tells of Sweatbox Torture ited R.R. paid its detectives $3 a head for the prisopers. These were then turned over to the state which paid the Seaboard 50 cents a day per man. We received five cents a day for bru- tal labor in quarries, clay pits, etc. I got a couple of dollars after serving ninety heart-breaking days. Prisoners Strike “Conditions were bad, the food was rotten. Finally the food became so terrible that the 1,400 prisoners de- cided to organize a protest strike. “The prison officials told us that the food would remain the same. ‘iRey threatened us and 1,000 weak- ened and went back to work, Four hundred of us struck. We were thrown into sweatboxes. As they had no room for all in the sweatboxes, many were tied to stakes in the open. After a while most of the men gave in, but fifteen of us stuck—even un- der the horrible sweatbox torture. One fellow who weighed 170 pounds was worn down to mere skin and bones, The others, including myself, suffered likewise. The doctor would come once in a while to see if we were still alive. I spent 28 days in the hospital as a result.” Serene cies Turn to page 4 of today’s paper and learn more of the horrible con- ditions in the slave farms and pris- Soh Cambs Of | the Souths, Spread Teer oere StaOng Four bnep- ‘of the delegates being Negro women. | | | | | 1,000 SCORE MURDER OF SCHOOLBOY Police Snatch Body of Ralph Gonzales and Spirit It Away MASS TRIAL TONIGHT 7-Year Old Girl Third Victim of Poison Food NEW YORK.—Over a thousand | workers came to attend the funeral of Ralph Gonzales, 9-year-old victim of poisonous food given out by the city in Public School 57. They found | the neighborhood flooded with police | and secret service men, obviously placed there by the city officials with orders to disorganize the funeral and to stifle the mass protest against the murder of the working class child. | Frighteneq and infuriated by the ex- | posure of the child’s poisoning in the | Daily Worker, and the mass response | at the funeral, to the call. of the| Young Pioneers of America and the | Unemployed Council, the police waded into crowds of workers and chased them, but the workers would | not disperse. | Cops Snatch Body. | The automobile in which the boy’ s| body was placed was snatched by | the police, and they drove off to an) unknown destination. But the tac-| ties calculated to hush up the child murder failed completely. About the | same time as the funeral demonstra- | tion was taking place, news came of | another victim of poisonous food at School No. 57. Maria Rosaria Hera- | dia, 7 years old, of 14 E. 114th St., who ate the same food that killed the Gonzales boy, was reported ill by her parents. She vomited and displayed the same symptoms as Gonzales before his death. This makes the third child victim of this poison food, Mass Trial Tonight. Tonight, an open Mass Trial will be conducteq at the Spanish Work- ers’ Center, 24 W. 115th St., where the District School Sup2rintendent and the Principal of District School No. 57 will be charged with respon- sibility for the death of Gonzales and the illness of the other two child victims of the rotten food handed | out to workers’ children. The doctor who stated that Ralph Gonzales did not die of poisonous food will also | be tried. All three have ben chal- | lenged to attenq the mass hearing to face these charges. Authroities Frightened. The lespread exposures of the rotten conditions and the Mass indignation of the workers | frightened the city officials into forcible attempts at suppression of | the facts connected with the death of Gonzales and the illness of the other two children. THESE TAC- | TICS MUST NOT SUCCEED! The city officials must be compelled to} | Provide decent food for workers’ chil- | dren and adequate relief to adult un- | | children |Picket Until Ave. C Tag Day Collections in St. Paul Defy Mayor’s Edict Against Them; March on Deleware State Capital; 3 Nat’l March Columns Proceed BULLETIN \ WASHINGTON, D. ©. Noy. 17 —Washington police, under the di- rect orders of the federal govern- | ment, are much upset by the pro- | posed delegation of hundreds of hungry children to place demands | for relief before | here on Thanks; ent dedi) tay Superinicanent vot’ | Police Brown says that police will | “not allow a demonstration of at the White House.” Hoover doesn’t want to face his victims, but they will find a way | to place their demands. | . | RENO, Nev., Nov, 17.—National Hunger Marchers of Col. 2, from Central California are coming thru Nevada, gathering mew recruits on the way. A delegate from Fernley, representing farm workers, has | just joined the column, The mayor of Reno refused food and lodging but the workers of Reno are prepar- ing these. Local struggles in many cities dene the route of the National Hunger | march are increasing. Workers are | | mobilizing to fight for immediate re- lief from the city, county and state | | governments, while they back up, at the game time, the demands of the | (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) | DEMAND STATE HELP MARCHERS Delegations Go to} Roosevelt Today NEW YORK.—Delegations of the starving unemployed of New York State, heading toward Albany from all parts of the state, will present the demand of the unemployed that the National Hunger March delegates be | given food and shelter on their way to Washington, and to tell Roosevelt | that, as governor of the state, he will |be held responsible for the safety of the delegates. ‘The delegations, which will call on Governor Roosevelt in a body today, |fepresent the Conference of Winter Relief and the Unemployed Councils. Th entire group will be headed by Sam Weissman, district organizer of the New York Unemployed Council. Restaurant Decides to Pay y Stolen Wages employed. Attend the mass trial|®"d Avenue A at 10: |Friday night. Mobilize for the Na-| Wednesday, to demor mediate relief, the | tional Hunger March to Washington | and join the national fight of the unemployed for immediate relief. |JOIN DORFMAN PICKETS TONAY, Turn Out at Shop in Mass Wednesday NEW YORK.—Workers, especially those in the needle trades are urged | to come every morning at 7:30 a. m.| on the picket line in front of the Meyer Dorfman shop, 218 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, where workers yes- terday tentered the sixth week of a strike against wage cuts and lay-offs and for a 44-hour week. Yésterday the bosses of the Meyer Dorfman plant climaxed six weeks of terror against the strikers by appearing at a hearing at the Su- preme Court to obtain a permanent injunction against the strikers. The hearing was continued today, after the bosses had testified falsely before the court that the workers were “reds”; that he had “laid them off”; and that the workers “were violent.” Several hundred demonstrated yes- terday morning in front of the plant, but, because of their militancy, the Police stood back after being sum- moned by the boss. A large and reg- warly employed crew of gangsters and thugs are serving the company against the strikers. More than 160 workers have been arrested in the six weeks of the strike A mass meeting was held after yes- terday’s demonstration. It was de- cided to picket the shop in mass at 7::30 a. m. ‘Wednesday, Nov. 23, to smash the injunction. DRESSMAKERS ELECT HUNGER MARCHERS | At a meeting of over 200 workers | called by the Dressmakers’ Unem- | ployed Committee held on November | 16, 1932, 10 delegates were elected for the Hunger March to Washington, 2 ‘1,000 ILE. MINERS employed Council urged The Council also is form et line in front of a dairy r at 8th St. and Av boss robbed a wi The wo: explained charged by th bos: t, because he | hours a day. A meeting of 500 heard the demands of the Council. | BLOCK SCABBING: Police. Tear Gas Fail to Break Ranks SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Nov. 17.—A mass picket line of over one thou- sand miners defeated the attempts | of the Peabody Coal Co. to open the Cora Mine. The miners withstood | charges of the police who attacked the pickets with tear gas bombs, and frustrated attempts by scabs to pass the picket line. The militant and successful stand made by the rank and fi'e miners at the Cora mine gave vivid demonstration of the de- termination with which the min are fighting the 18 per cent wase cut Officials of the Progressive Min Union have condoned the > R. R. Workers Make Officials Demand the) Re-Hiring of 110,000, NEW YORK.—An increasing tide | of resentment among the railroad | workers against the proposed 10 to 20) per cent wage-cuts has caused the meeting of 21 railroad brotherhood and railway union chiefs here to de- clare all further negotiations ended. They are not to resume until the| railroad companies promise to put back to work the 110,000 fired since the 10 per cent cut in February. Chicago Shows Up Democratic Hunger Program iT ISIDIOUSLY and daily the capit- alist press spreads propaganda to the effect that tle “new deal” that Roosevelt has promised will be ush- ered in with his inaugural March 4! |'The forty-eight million totally un- | employed and their dependents and | the millions of part-time workers are | told to wait patiently through this | | winter for the promised dawn of the Democratic Party administration's unemployment “relief.” But, the wages of workers in the | factories of Illinois were cut 66 per | cent last year as compared with the average of 1925-27. The working- | class income was cut two-thirds by the Illinois capitalists within a few years! Melvin A. Taylor, president of the | Chicago First National Bank, has led capitalist offensive against the work- ers’ living standards. It was Taylor | | who helped elect Roosevelt, who is | now mentioned for a post in Roose- | velt’s cabinet and who will guide | Roosevelt's unemployment policies! | It was under a Democratic admin- istration and a Democratic mayor, Cermak, that the city authorities of Louise sought to cut by one-half he pittance of relief given to utterly destitute unemployed families. Win Only By Fighting Can, then, the masses of unem- t pidyed and part-time workers to whom the question of immediate re- | | lief isa life and death question wait | upen the coming of the Democratic “new deal”? | No! The workers’ “new deal” in | the form of wrenching winter relief }and unemployment insurance from the capitalists and their government must come through organized, milit- ant mass struggle. The Chicago | workers showed the way when they “MASS SUPPORT _—TOWIN MARCH \Say Jobless - Leaders in New Call | WASHINGTON, D. C., Noy. 17. — | “Disregard all statements appearing |in the press aimed at intimidating and discouraging the National Hun- ger Marchers. These statements are inspired by the District of Columbia and Federal Government who hope | by that to defeat the demands for | $50 federal winter relief and for un- employment insurance which the | marchers will present here. The final action of the government authorities | will depend in the last analysis upon | the extent of mass support rallied behind the program of the unem- | ployed councils and the demands of | the National Hunger March.” This telegram was sent out to all | unemployed councils and supporting | organizations, and given to the press, today by the National Committee of the Unemployed Councils, from its new office here, 1311 G. St. N. W. The telegrams are signed by William Reynolds, chairman and Herbert | Benjamin, secretary, of the National | Committee. The telegram of instructions con- tinues: Protest to Congressmen. “Mass pressure expressed through demonstrations before the homes of congressmen, and by resolutions | adopted by mass meetings and mass | organizations, to Hoover, Garner, Roosevelt and the District of Colum- bia Commissioners should be held to demand the right of the delegates of the jobless to march, and to demand food and lodging be conceded to them. “Energetic self-sacrificing support of the campaign to collect food, clothing and funds will serve to pro- vide against any emergency.” Watch the Daily Worker. forced the demagogic Democratic mayor to rescind the 50 per cent re- lief cut! “The people of Washineton are showing their sympathy and solidar- A high form of such organized, | militant mass struggle will be the | National Hunger March that will de- | mand winter relief of $50 per family and federal unemployment insurance of Concress on December 6. It will center, in most dramatic ional form, the eyes of the asses for the need to fight NOW for winter relief and to smash the usin of “aid” promised for the | You can do hare to fight for vinter relief and unemployment in- nee this way? 1. Orsanize the workers in your block, elect block committees for food, shelter and clothing for the hunger marchers Elect delegates from your k, mass organization or labor to the National Hunger Anpresch new organizations delevates. “t the marchers in their to demand win‘er relicf of for the march, Nov. 19 b) make the mass egrest- ines to the marchers in the stop- cities real demonstrations of support; c) collect food packages of non-perishable food (coffee, su- gar, etc.) and pledges of perish- able food for the marchers; d) pre- | | pare now for the national day of | ment Agency to return $14 of a $15 demonstration in support of the | National Hunger March Dec 6. ity with the marchers by offers of assistance in collecting food and pro- viding lodging. They will give the hunger marchers an even more rous- ing welcome than last year. “Be guided only by the official statements of the National Commit- tee of the Unemployed Councils, which will appear in the friendly la- bor press, especially the Daily Worker.” “FIGHTING 6th” CALLS FOR AID Wins Acainst 2 More Job Sharks NEW YORK.—After winning two mor victories Wednesday against the Sixth Avenue job sharks, the Sixth Ave! Unemployed Council has re- quested all workers who can to come to their headquarters at 58 West 38th Street (upstairs) to obtain petitions to circulate against crooked employ=- ment agencies and will ask the City Commissioners why they give licenses to crooked agencies, A crowd of 500 workers, under the leadership of “The fighting sixth,” yesterday forced the Bryant Employ- fee, which the agency had tried to | steal from a working woman. ‘Prove That Boss Press Lies on Communist Votes, Nov. 8 Over 24,000 Officially Counted Red Votes in New York City Alone; Expose Steals Capitalist wire services, the As- socidted Press and United Press espe- cially,, aré deliberately lying about | Communist election returns in an ef- | fort to belittle the revolutionary movement before the workers and farmers. The Scripps-Howard ser- vice, the United Press, gave the Com- munist Party the ridiculous figure of 8,000, while the Associated Press said 15,000 votes. This, in spite of the fact that there were more than 24,000 votes, according to the Tammany election board figures, in New York City alone, Chicago showed more than 10,000, The vote in Minnesota, first an- nounced as 10,000 has now increased |to more than 12,000, with many pre- cincts still missing. In fact every- where there were marked increases. For New York, Chicago and Minne- ‘sota alone the number of votes so far is 46,000 for Foster and Ford, ote 8 Fix Voting Machines (By a Worker Correspondent) JOHNSTOWN, N. Y.—Reports from several election districts in this vicin- ity show that the voting machines were rigged so that it was not pos- sible to work the levers that regis- tered votes for the Communist Party, One worker, in the election booth, worked all other levers but could not work the Communist lever, We know @ considerable number of votes were lost here in Fulton County on ace county of this rigging of the ma- | chines. . * Open Hearing On Stealnig CHICAGO, Ill, Noy. 17.—At a meeting of section 3, at 3151 W, (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) .