The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 16, 1932, Page 4

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ASME AOA MAR MUS: Hem AaB ESR IRA MENT ly \ Sear cage four DAILY WORKER, N Published by the Comprodaily Publishing Co., Inc., daily except Sunday, at 5 &. fs } 43th St, New York City, N. ¥. Telephone ALgonquin 4-7956. ‘DAIWORK. Pr ‘Address and mail checks to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St,, New York, N. ¥. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. 53.50; 3 months, $2; 1 month, TKe New York City. Foreign and mths, $2 cverywhere exeepting Borough of Manhattan and Bronx, Canads: 0 39; 6 months, & War Debts and WAR HE present violent discussions on the war debts question shows how U. S. imperialism is using the refusal of France and Belgium to meet their payments and the man- ouvers of the British government to force revision of the [The Story of| **"" Frame-Ups of ~~~ By ORTIZ Continued from yesterday This strike was in protest against the arrest of our comrades and not against the prohibition of the read- ers in the factories, which was the impression the captialist press tried to give. After the strike fol- lowed the declaration of a lock-out by the cigar manuiacturers, This lasted more than two we: When the factories were re-opened whole- sale victimization of militant uW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1 unemployed shortly before aa ‘Lady Nancy Astor sang son® songs to cheer up the iach car yal she sailed for home, —By Burck | meee IY ERED R, MILLER SONG? |\{ A STORY OF AN UNEMPLOYED WORKER FP 2 EES Sea NMR EE Ueno Rene ME SRS | WHAT (Copyright by Reyolutionary Writers’ Federation) INSTALLMENT IU. “i THE STORY SO FAR—The first instalment of “What Was That Son; published yesierday described the conversation between an unemployed worker and his wife who were about to be evicted. ‘The worker has told her that the judge has given them five days to move; he then described his fruitless visit to the charities, Now debts to whip up a frenzy of nationalism as part of its war | ers was practiced. | read on: i i i preparations. At the same time the tone of official W ‘ashington and of | WORKERS GET | rschele caeay aeie ees Tie ade guid Tike aR tia tie the capitalist press against Japan is becoming ever sharper. The picture | yy3ooUS SENTENCES volent and philan- the government would conjure up is tha In January 19th, fifteen ot the come in, see, there was a bunch of Reds outside of the building. They there tells me I have to go to the 13th Precinct. | | pic Uncle Sam who is being scorned by those he aided in their hour | | 2 * ma ; was holding an outdoor meeting. | “That got me good and sore. } peeeet . pea ile tal ht aietoe L | I didn’t stop to watch them, but “What kiek of 4 cenatouak Un of need. the vicious hireling of the tobacco pene ee emcee iS ese ives “| : manufacturers, Judge Petteway, on | whe as going past I s rey yon call this, anyways? I says to { What is the reat pi 1 is a cunning, mur- hare f “aseaule: eoltty intentste had all kinds of signs about un- | them. ‘I just come from there, . ri ey ES 2 npertalist. | COBtSe® Or Pere ee ° employment relief and all that. So | ‘They told me the place ¥ live derous beast of pre murder in the first degree, unlaw every once in a while they would 4 5 escine Ghaitiabeel poner On 6 ments on debts have | ful assemblage and rioting” under very once in ; : i at your Precinct.’ We had Shoei eeapaie ge tte s Pn anci 5 sare aoe bust out hollering, giving the char- | jt 'y hot and heavy there for HI ag yi 2 ion of world capitalist | a statute of the Florida law datin: ity punks the Bronx cheer, I gu po Peg ees wi pe ‘ : 5 » | back to 1856, which “provides that : guess. | a minute, So after a while 3 economy, Am perialism kn: hese debts never can be il mons. onsthe.scene of 2: xiot You could hear them all the way of these smart chairwarming ‘ said. But the Wall Street governr Washington sternly refuses | 9) PRION: of4 the ippkien ‘Gre’ gully up on the seventh floor. The old | pulls calls up headquarters to ae Gee geal Cae CS nts, ame: Useful as. | Ge enatever Waauine tc a Lele. | dame up there might of been part | settle the argument, and they tell © consider their forn al be latior ause th s pa sefu all ile ever happens to I | aoe Lad ee oe hear teed him I belong in the ith Pre- 4 weapons in the frenzied plunge toward a new world v jncle | | lering, all right. She stops writing | cinct, What'a fine bunch of fa 7 s them to try to bring other nations into the orbit of Ameri | The trial itself was Capers | on the papers and looks at me heads,” jalist policy, to to get concessions, to try to grab colonies, | by the most brazen denial of the | over her glasses and wrinkles her | « 2 5 ie aah alist. poli 1 © most elementary rights of defend- | nose up. She says, ‘How can a | ‘Nothing to do but beat, it o . to force reductions of ns 0} t of its potential enemies, | ts, such as denying the right | erson do any work with that mob | '© the lth Precinct. It was rain whil : RETTES ary power. Ikea Dao he ass | Leta ale on Seba capil oes ne | ing eats and dogs by then, too. while strengtheni own predator, Q of speech in court to the defen of loafers hollering down there? Believe me, if them. coppers in this The deb um, Italy, Poland | nts. etc. The name of Comrade : he debtor um, Italy, Pol 4t impels American im- they sought to get some sort of Wall Street. But so sharp are the —are quite aware of the greed ar perialism. At the Lausanne confere! unity on the question of debts owing Conflicts between other questions that they were unable to obtain a united policy, so that each debtor nation now strives to meet the problem in its own way, in the hope of securing more favorable ad- vantage for its own predatory designs. As Comrade Manuilsky, speaking on the end of capitalist stabilization at the Twelfth Plenum of the Ex tive Committee of the Communist International, id: mselves on “The capitalist world represents a sinking ‘Titanic, where every- | McDonald was only mentioned in the trial once, when a policeman testified that he was not present at the riot. The names of four others were mentioned by only one witness, a stool pigeon, who said he saw them in the riot. Some of the names of those convicted were | not even mentioned during the trial. | But nevertheless, Judge Petteway | handed down the following sen- tences: Condemned to ten years in pr Roosevelt’s Special Session for the Wall Street Bankers | By H. M. WICKS | ALL the. combined agencies of \ capitalism are trying to disin- tegrate the mass movement against j mention this mass starvation in his message to the legislature, but he gives the signal for a further intensification of the capitalist at- cricy of his campaign promises, the entire capitalist press is dil! gently trying to explain that he has so many problems that he Work? That was good. eisga oa “Well anyways, she says to me, ‘You fhould of come here sooner so’s to give us time. Soon’s you got that paper served on you. Be- sides, we don’t give out no money or food of nothing like that. You got to register at your police sta- tion if you want to get food checks. All we do is commit children that their parents can’t support them,’ “ ‘Well,’ I says, ‘how about taking the kid, then, jus till we get up | last place had of sent me out to the 10th Precinct or somewhere Td of blowed up right there in the sta- tion house. I was just itching for them to pull something like that.” Ellen says, “But what'd they id they'll ‘send a patrolman er in the morning to investigate and we'll get a four dollar food check the next day, or maybe even. tomorrow night.” Ellen started to laugh. “I think we're getting a WPA EEE | ; o TW. - tack against the standard of liv- | cannot solve all of them at once, : Ade aight steer this ti ” 5 | + th ll Street. oa 4 straight steer this time, hon,’ economic basis of the wave of nationalism, the growth of which has | Sebastes (Uruguayan), E, Bonilla | will do something for them when the state. It is a harbinger of | ly wait and starve until the busy | and after .tomorrow it won't get “Can you last that long?” been pointed out in the thesis of the XII plenum..., This isome | (Cuban), C. Alvarez’ (Cuban), F. | he takes the oath of office as pres- Reeves fe ha of his ad- | president-elect gets around to do- | frins even. It's pot a bad cad | “Listen, Harry,” she says, “what's of the manifestations of the end of capitalist stabilization which Marrero (Cuban). | ident of the United States on ashington. Sie Somerning we them. sae New | in the head ‘right now from ‘them | the record for fasting? Forty days, raises the general crisis of capitalism to a new stage.” | Condemned to one year were: | March 4. To blast this idea le; | UNEMPLOYED COUNCILS [pen tey oes lene. Repu uCaE Or 1° ced todas } Bitvt it? | Well, tere: Ain’s 90 ree: is . : | ey us consider what Roosevelt, as | DELEGATION DEMANDS Ban that pilloried Roosevelt dur- ae we , | ord ‘going that the Irish can’t = is b | M. Cabrera, Carolina Vazques, | US } ing the campaign as a weakling, ‘Why, ain’t you got no heat?” | proap” Francis Romero, Jose Hevia, Mario | S0Vvernor of the state of New York | Roosevelt has been frequently | Harden 4 vs the | She says. pad ‘ / MERICAN imperialism resorts to every conceivable form of chauvin- Lopes, F Rodriguez, Ysmal Cruz, | is doing at the special session of | reminded of the suffering of the | NOW changes its tune and says the iF ; LAS, | _ I says, “You're a great sport, EL i istic propaganda, from the most subtle to the most blatant and crude. | Jose Campos, : * | the state legislature. In his mes- | unemployed in New York State. | Te@s0n he cannot do much in the ‘I said once we ain't. I mean it, What you been through The New York Times, repeating Roosevelt's campaign utterances, speaks In addition, the immigration of- | Sage he put forth a three-point It was just ten days after his legislative session is because he is | “But is that the only child you and everything. How about you?” | OF i . | too busy thinking about what he |’ got, just this one 16 months old I says to the old lady. “Can you eiitorially about “reviewing” the debt question in the light or compen- | ficers conducted trials of all the | OfOSTam. | bi St be Meet wees | will do when he becomes pres- | baby? Because we don’t encourage | stick it out for another day or sating advantages in trade and commerce, while the gutter sheets of Wil- | foreign born workers and decided | program” thrown into his teeth by a delega- | ident. Says Walter Lippmann in | parents with only one child to give | 0?” liam Randolph Hearst, who also supper Roosevelt, loud) A aes dye ; on ans deportation to their native First, he wants changes in the | tion of the Unemployed Councils | the December 9 issue of the | it up. It leaves the mother without | “Why, yes, Harry. Of course, forcing the debtor nations to pay to the last penny. Equa! y as rabid as | countries. state laws fixing salaries of public | of New York in his offices at Al. | Tribune: no responsibility. Gear, You know I hardly ever eat Bee Tee ie GAGE nd Cotes eee Pe etre oy Sone REIGN OF WEREOR service workers so they can be re- | bany. The delegation asked Roose- “Barely three months remain ‘Well, that sure steamed me | anything.” I felt sorry for her. and the small town and ot cage rk e bie and meer | UNLEASHED duced in order that the cities may | velt, as president-elect and leader before he (Roosevelt) must as- up. I says to her, ‘For Chr'st All skin and bones, Unless ‘Wall Street is able to enforce its debt policies. “This question is | After the trial @ relg of terror | PAY dividends to the holders of | of the Democratic Party to inter | sume the administrative burdens | sake. How the nels the mother |“ retty soon len and the old utilized to aid the capitalist government in its attempt to put over the sales tax and other taxes. The entire capitalist press is mobilized behind this campaign for evoking extreme nationalism that can be turned in any direction at a convenient time. Simultaneously with the division of labor in fomenting war-like na- tionalism on the war debts question there proceeds a campaign of calumny and provocation against the Soviet; Union that has never been equalled since the Polish armed.attack on the Soviet Union in 1920. Walter Duranty, writing in the New York Times, paints an exaggerated picture of food shortages and magnifies the difficulties attendent upon the growth of socialist construction. . ‘HE motive is clear; to try te dampen the enthusiasm of the toiling mass- es for defense of the Soviet Union and to try to restore faith in capi- talism by making it appear that there is not such a wide gulf between the Soviet world and the capitalist world. That these difficulties of which Duranty and others write are difficulties of growth that are being over- come is finely expressed in a letter from a working woman in a Soviet factory to a comrade in this country. due to the fact that there has been a tremendous increase in the number of people to be supplied with food and articles of widespread consumption, ‘The collective peasants however, feel that they, too, are representatives | of our social system and are no longer satisfied with the straw shoes and meatless meals that they put up with formerly. of growth, of increased standards of life with millions of people demand- ing—and receiving—food and comforts of life that they never before dreamed of. The Soviet workers and peasants know thty are overcoming “The difficulties,” said she, “are | Surely this is a picture | was unleashed in Tampa. Raids list with more than 5,000 names longing to the union were “confis- cated” by the police. An Inter- national Labor Defense meeting in Ruskin (near Tampa) was raided, and fifty workers arrested, many of them held for deportation. Al- ready eight workers have been de- ported and in Ellis Island is Man- uel Fernandez, a militant worker, who is to be deported to Spain. He was taken off the deportation ship by @ writ of habeus corpus ob- tained by the ILD. This week, | another worker, Abrantes, is to be deported to Cuba, to Butcher Ma- chado's land of terror, leaving a wife and a family of small children behind. LOGGINGS and other methods were conducted on the Labor | Temple and wnion headquarters, | which netted to the polite the rec- | ords of the union, a membership | (which has been fully used to ter- | rorize the workers) and money be- | city bonds. Secondly, he urges immediate study of plans for structural changes in the government of New York City, with a view to “effect- ing permanent and far-reaching | economics and securing greater efficiency.” That means diately to slash the number of em- ployees, consolidate departments, effect changes that will make the administration of capitalist gov- ernment cheaper for the capital- ists, and slap on a ten cent sub- way, elevated and surface car fare for the workers. | Thirdly, he recommends that the legislature should authorize the appointment of state financial agents to assume control of the expenditures of local governmental units in cases of default. This means that the state shall add to its bureaucratic machine a host of financial agents who will have power to dictate expenditures to city and other governmental bodies so that the holders of city bonds imme- vene at Washington in behalf of the hunger marchers to enter without police intetferenve. Other demands in connection with the march were made upon Roosevelt. As head of the Democratic. Party he was asked to urge democratic congressmen to vote for $50 winter | relief for the unemployed, plus $10 for each dependent and for unem- ployment insurance. As governor of New York he was asked to pro- hibit forced labor on “relief” jobs in the state. All these demands were turned down by Roosevelt. His deeds con- tradict his words. As candidate for president and now as presid- ent-elect it is his job to help the Hoover administration carry out the Wall Street hunger drive a- gainst the toiling masses by try- ing to create the illusion that he is unable to do anything for them now, but if they only wait until he gets into the White House, everything will be all right. But, as governor of New York, that is country. ot the presidency. In these three months he has an opportunity for sttdy, reflection and consid- eréd planning such as he will never haye again.” ‘We are asked to take such drivel Seriously; asked to believe that | prosperity depends upon the deep | study and mature reflection of the president. At the highest level of production in the days of relative stabilization of capitalism we had Coolidge. Surely no one would at- tribute to “Silent Cal” the ability to plumb any subject to a very | great depth. At the same time Al | Smith was democrat governor of | New York, Huey (Kingfish) Long governor of Louisiana, Alvin T. | Fuller was governor of Massachu- setts, Len Small governor of Illin- ois. A host of others of similar intellectual attainments occupied the high political places of the IT is one of the jobs of the cap- italist press to perpetuate the il- going lo have any responsibility if you let the kid croak from starvation?” * * * “She got all huffed up. ‘Here, here-—where do you think you're | at, in a speakeasy?’ she says, like that. Mister. of here, first thing you know. idea.’ “*T seen it was no use talking to a female punk like her. So I The | got up. Before I went out, I says | «to her, ‘I forgot. I forgot I was just a lousy bum looking for a handout.’ “When I was haliway to the door, I heard her saying, ‘Loafer. He ought to be down there with the rest of them good for nothing Bolsheviks. That's where he be- longs.’ And God damn it, maybe she wasn’t wrong, either.” Se ae T= old lady was watching me from her corner. I seen that ‘Don’t let me hear any more | | of that kind of talk out of you, | T'll have you throwed out lady went to bed. The wife got up first and says, “Well, I think T'll get some sleep. Coming, Mom?” The old lady says, “Yes, dear; I think. . . . Yes, I better.” She stood up, but she was kind Of shaky on her pins, so she had to grab a hold of the cupboard while she was waiting for Ellen to go out. I says to them, “What's idea? It's early yet.” “I know.” Ellen stopped at the middle room door and’ turned around. “Feel played out, some- how. Anyways, nothing to do here. Sit around every night like a mummy.” She thought of some- thing and started to laugh. “We might as well get in all the sleep we can this week. Next week this time we won't have a roof over us —be pounding our ear out in Cen- tral Park, maybe. Ain’t that right, Mom?” ee te FYER they went to bed I sat there thinking. The kitchen was their difficulties. They face the future with confidence that tomorrow have been used against militant | shall be assured dividends. In | as executive head of one of the | lusion that prosperity depends | Seared ain ene Bader MES tay i ea saan ane et ees will be better than today. Compare this to the lot of the masses in cap- | workers who have courageously | other words, an official receiver- | units of the eapitalist’ govern- | upon good or bad, competent or Sra aca aa rab ren petri bs diane a lest “? or 10" italist countries where unemploymen; and its accompanying misery, dis- | tried to keep on the work in Tam- | Ship shall be established with | mental machine jor ‘suppression of | incompetent office holders: that a is beh a aided Uae valaiahe ee re igre bE ease and death afflicts ever larg numbers with every passing day, the cupboard and took out a new ; Saat r 7 A 7 the working class, seve! 1 pApitalist gov. ent, a | | to the cupboard, taking the candle | ba. Some time ago, Franky Guido, | aul thority to lash wages of city, si ing class, Roosevelt must | cbange of capitali gavernme nt, @ |, one: She lit it on the stump of the | with me. I looked all through the * and organizer of the Young Pio- town and county employees; to | now carry out the direct assault new president and cabinet and a | = ol | % Supplementing the dirty deception of such people as Duranty are the aete ane parte: Bis vorker | impose taxes, to boost car fare | upon the workers, | democrat majority. instead of.a re-_ | old one, blowed that out and put it | cupboard. All I could find, outside hosts of “popular” publications, hordes of preachers, lecturers, and others | bach Op 0 Rican worker : apes ts u on the shelf, and after that she who carry on the most poisonous campaign against the Soviet Union, even to the extent of digging up the old discredited yarn about “nationalization of women,”—a tale that was printed under scare leadlines in the Cin- cinnati Times-Star of Friday, December 9. There come to the Daily Worker editorial rooms scores of such reports; all containing the most debased lies. Hence, it is seen the same forces that whip up nationalist sentiment on the war debt question, try to turn this against the Soviet Union. This is a fact that mus; never be lost sight of in the midst of all the sharp notes, war-like threats, and juggling with debts in the sharpening conflict between the imperialist powers. All these powers strive more and more to solve their conflicts at the expense of the Soviet Union, hence ever deepening of the antagonisms between them brings nearer the danger of war and intervention against the Soviet Union, The signing of the non-aggression pacts between the Soviet Union and various capitalist powers does not fundamentally lessen this danger of war and intervention. They do, however, represent a growing aggregate of class forces in favor of the Soviet Union, i. e., revolutionary situation in China, increasing elements of a revolutionary situation in Poland and in Germany, the rise of the class struggle under the leadership of the Com- munist Parties in Czecho-Slovakia, etc., the growing instability of British rule in India, coupled with the tremendous achievements of socialist con- struction in the Soviet Union. (In a forthcoming issue we will deal fur- ther with these non-aggression pacts.) IE capitalist world is a powder magazine; the slightest, spark may set were arrested by the police at an anti-war meeting in the Labor Temple, and handed over by the Secret Committee, KK.K’s and American Legionaires, who took them for a ride and brutally beat them up, with the warning that they should leave the State. Recently Hy Gordon and Fred Crawford (the latter was the only defendant who was acquitted dur- ing the January trial) were arrest- ed by the police and handed over to the fascist reactionaries, who took them for a ride, beat them badly, tarred and feathered them, and poured large doses of castor oil | down their throats. Pages could be filled with the details of all the persecutions, intimidations, ete., carried on by the police, immigra~ tion authorities and fascist gangs, | WORKERS DRIVEN INSANE Marrero, one of the prisoners in Raiford Penitentiary went insane same months ago. Carlos Lezama, another prisoner, has also gone in- rates and do all the other things demanded of bankers. | WHAT OF PRE-ELECTION PROMISES? Franklin D. Roosevelt, as candl- date for president, used the term “forgotten man” to catch the votes of the unemployed workers and impoverished farmers. He wanted to make the hungry masses believe that although they had been for- gotten by the Hoover administra- tion he would not forget them. It was indeed an effective play upon words that, while promising noth- ing, inspired in many the hope of a “new deal.” It was with such cheap, shabby and contemptible catch-words that the man who was placed in the governor's chair in the state of New York by Tam- many Hall played with the misery and tragic suffering of the toiling masses to reach the White House at Washington. A the Wall Street | hiaerer the beginning to the end ol (HEN faced with representatives of the unemployed, this man, who for twenty years has been a public figure, pleaded that he was only 2 “private citizen,” who can- not tell the president to do any- thing. POOSEVELT’S FAKE RELIEF FIGURES When the delegation demanded of Roosevelt, as governor, the sum of $10,000,000 emergency relief for the starving unemployed and their families, he replied with derisive politeness, telling these represent- atives of hungry, starving work- ers: “I think that what you gen- tlemen can report is very simple. We have $15,000,000 that became available November 3 for this state. There is another $15,000,000 au- thorized by the vote of the people. No legislative action is necessary to use the first $15,000,000. Obvi- ously that will be entirely suffi- cient to last if properly admin- istered until the legislature meets publican majority will turn the tide. Communists insist, as Lenin said, that all fundamental quest- ions of capitalist policy are never decided by parliamentary institu- tions, but by the banks and the stock exchange. Lenin also said, in’ July, 1917: “The history of the bourgeois- parliamentary and _bourgeois- constitutional countries | shows that a change of ministers means very little, for the real work of administration is lodged in the hands of a colossal army of bu- reaucrats, and this army is per- meated with the anti-democratic spirit.” ‘ It is this bureaucratic machine, which does the real work of ad- ministration, that functions to car- Ty out one uninterrupted imperial- ist policy no matter how often the elected office holders change. It is this machine which consists of the bureaucracy, the judiciary, the armed forces of the state, the stuck the new candle on top of the can of cleanser, putting a couple of drops of the hot wax on it first to make it stick, Then she set the can back on the stove and took her Seat. She asked me, kind of disap- pointed like, “Is that all?” “Let me tell you,” I says. “We'll eat yet. Unless the cops screw us up like the Emergency Unemploy- ment did. So from the Public Wel- fare I walked over to the 13th Pre- cinct Station to.sign up for the food checks, Well, the Welfare Of- ficer there says, ‘No, you belong to the 12th Precinct’ Then I had to hoof it all the way back to the Bowery, damn near, and what the.. of the kid's farina, was a half of a little onion, an empty Quaker Oats box, some sugar, a little bit of cocoa and the salt and pepper shakers. I put them on the stove and sat down. I ate the onion first, taking little bites so’s to make it last longer. ‘Then I got a saucer and made a kind of paste in it, putting in two tablespons full of cocoa on top of eight spoons full of sugar and wet- ting the whole business with a couple of drops of water from the spigot and mixing it all up good. It went down like a porterhouse Steak. I could of swallowed a lot more, but I saved some of the cocoa for Ellen and the old iady. it off with a detonation that will shake every part of the earth sane from the persecution, beal- Shi campaign, this. stp Ae) | in, taaitery. ers an Well Eee sey et Tn this ‘situation it is imperative that no time be lost in unmasking | ings and torture, in the jail, and | Voled his national radio broad- | Let, us see how far this $15,000,- this Seite organised thachifery ‘et before the broadest, masses the imperialist war conspiracies, in combating | tried to commit suicide. Both these | casts to promises to help the un- | 00 will go between now and come. capitalist’ * vieWbnee ? danish Whe ' chauvinism, in mobilizing. all available forces St imperialist war. In | comrades have been sent to the | °mployed workers and impoverish- | time in January if the entire Fone class, i the campaign against hunger, in the struggle against wage cuts, in the | State Insane Asylum at Chatta. | ed farmers. When he made his area Scottsboro campaign, in the fight for the soldiers’ bonus, in the fight to wipe out all international debts, in every working class action there must, be browght forward the imperative necessity of a determined fight If these against American imperjalism’s role in the maturing world war, for the | Town, led a 24 hour strike of the | he promised: workers have an average of two | lentless struggle. Gefense of the Chinese people, for liberation of the colonial and semi- | prisoners in protest against the “Just as long as Tam governor | dependents (a very low figure) it The fight against the Roosevelt ‘ colonial masses, for the defense of the Soviet Union, punishment of four prisoners, and | of this State I decline to do any- | means there are at least 6,000,000 | program in New York State is of (SS SES eae a have been punished by the guards, | thing less than to see to it that | human beings in the state of New | great political significance, inas- :F by frequent confinement in the no man, woman or child shall York facing starvation or the | much as it shows the workers and Anti-Wa Co ittee t the Congress, “sweat box.” Cabrera has now been. starve in this State.”—-New York threat of starvation. That means | farmers exactly what they can ex- Anti- rCommittee to) the “American Committee for the| transferred to Raiford, where the | Times report, Tuesday, Novem- | that at the time Roosevelt was | pect from his administration of f Publish Pamphlet On Struggle Against War (104 Fifth Ave.,| tortures are continued and inten- | ber 8, 1932. Speaking there was available the | the federal government after next Dinetard CG | Room 1811) will soon have a similar] sified, ay the time he panei 4 “obviously sufficient” sum of $2.50 poo SA hosed deception Amsterdam pamphlet on the press. Since the words men, women and ¢! en | per person for the following two | is put fort! fool the workers of Le are OSTORS | Fret Dublin snsctinig wh Webeint ‘an Goibe ip the ron ea ne et | were dying for lack ‘of food, | months oF $128'm month each for | the coupizy tno waiting for, the ‘Since the Amsterdam Congress, the | 0% September 11, where the first re- ability and will be argued in the throughout the state of New York. | the starving men, women and | new administration, to cripple the national committees in the various | POT of ‘elegates was given, similar) Supreme Court of Florida by an | J2,the New York City hospitals, | children of the state. mass struggle against hunger. If u® | meetings have been held in Chicago, attorney of the ILD, The hearini exclusive of Belleville, according to | THE BRAIN POWER this can be accomplished there will countries have made efforts to build | Detroit, Philadelphia and in other! of the appeal must be made the oe the report of Dr. Caroline R. Mar- | OF PRESIDENTS, ETC. be unleashed the most ferocious > Up 2 mighty anti-war front. ‘The | cities. Delegates have « spoken: to: casion ‘for'a wide moblization of bey Pingg cand cal Liggett el Roosevelt refused to call a spe- | offensive against our standards of Anti-War Committee in France has | many trade union locals, and to| the working class and oppressed tad Bs ere a rants Hid cial session to deal with unem- | life ever known. To avert this i probably Gone the best work in this | ie kers’ benefit earring Many of| tojlers of the United States in be- e mee of ier ma eee eatiringgh but irked moment the ith vicious attack the ae uae respect, carrying through @ vast pro-| the orgarfizations visited have elected | halt of our comrades in the Flor. | (Something so close to starvation | bankers demanded legislative ac- | farmers and ex-soldiers must close gram of meetings every week, where | anti-war committees in the® various | ida, dungeons. that medical men cannot tell the | tion against. the workers he was | their ranks, build powerful local | erful fighting front against the | this way, only through struggle, reports on Amsterdain were given by | cities. 8a > difference) and malnutrition cases | on the job to ensure them an un- organizations, intensify the local whole hunger, wage cutting and | can the working class realize any delegates representing different poll-| “All organizations interested in the] The delay in developing a wide | exceeded those of the year 1931. | interrupted flow of dividends from | struggles for relief, organize coum- | war program of Wall Street, that gains, Only in this way can we teal viewpoints, In France, there is| struggle against war are urged to pen rect in this Atal case— | ‘There were 438 such cases in these | the city bonds they hold.' He does | ty hunger marches, stage great | Roosevelt's inauguration will take | march further on the road toward big movement among the rank andj communicate with the American| Sircady one year old—shows serl~ | city hospitals. .No one knows or | not cere about the awful ¢ragedy | demonstrations and -mbrohes at | place inthe mildst’ of class oon- winning the majority of the work= te Soclalists in favor of united Committee for the Struggle Against oe eee raped erate can know how many thousands of | that afflicts he masses; he is only | the opening of the regular ses- flicts of such a character that the | ing class for a revolutionary ne hag Th deere oe an Great mae ied a peder. isd tue oe pas volved -witioh its be pa ticularly deaths in Pornenie ene ee soacreed about defending the oe ede various state legislat~ peavoniiee el ee 7 es ie By feat ot or pe: pieces ee re a e nti-War Comm ee has issuet Struggle. ‘ite ao rr le; are conceal in \e mor! Ly be ¥S january. ‘al is ‘ pamphlet on Amsterdam, contain- | Johnson, Secretary, 104 Fifth Avenue,| Stressed, records, , although \ To stop further attacks against relief and to grant wm- | lish the dictatorship of the geos “s the Manifesto and a report of Reom 181). =e (CONCLUDED TOMORROW) Nok only dose Roosevelt nok ' ections have revealed the nyno= ' uo there must be built euch » pow- | employment insurance, Only in | ietarin, agai ‘ . We \ , * oo | hoochie. Comrades Ismael Cruz | and Angel Cabrera, who were in the chain gang camp of Indian final plea to the voters of the country at Poughkeepsie, New York, on the eve of the election, amount were handed directly to the unemployed. ‘There are not less than 2,000,000 unemployed workers in this state. As against tne deceit and .the violence of capitalist democracy, the toiling masses must wage re- f | & i 4

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