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Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JAN FIGHTS ATTACK ON Santa Moniea 8. P. Branch Hears Talk ;,Ten Hoboken Workers RS OF 'Victimized Through SHOE WORKE MOONEY DEFENSE on Workers’ Defense MASS, IN MOTION Police Terror Drive SANTA MONICA, Calif—On the BOSS COURTCOMES| Less Than $2,000 Received TO MINETHUGS AID in ‘Daily’ Campaign in First o Be 30, 19: ARY BOATS JIM-CROW, VILE CONDITIONS HOBOKEN, N. J.—Furniture, needle} naar 2 and young workers have been hit by/ Nine Murderers Get ‘ boss-police terror drive here in the} 7 “je effort to extend their wage-cutting | New T ial campaign. | Tells Experiences On Board Ships NEW YORK.—The food on the Merchants and Marine Transporta- 5 <t y S itiative of bers in the Socialist Wits Ini ade te Ls. D. Sends Protest | initistive of members in the socialist Militant Union Leads to Prison Head | Actions in Key Shops z | Defense in Los Angeles and Helmer | ee | attorney for the International Labor NEW YORK.—Machinery was set| Bergman, representing the National ee Le Be otan be the tutereational | Oummittee for the Defense of Polit- | HOPTON, Maser With ‘Two Weeks; Speed Up Drive! The drive must be speeded up! All; turns. The “Daily” is needed to fight | districts ave falling down badly in| the land sharks and banks, to expose | their collections. Only $197.23 came| the fake farm relief bills and organize | The total for the 14 days| the struggle for real relief and against UNIONTOWN, Pa City “mine riot case” of June successful | Four furniture workers who took) bow Defence through its direct and | ical Prisoners, were invited to address | actions already taken in a number of I a meeting held under the S. P. aus- affiliated membership of 160,000, key shops around the partial demands nart in the recent Hoboken strike, are now facing long terms in jail for re- which an aged storekeeper and sym- pathizer of striking miners was is $1 . Ab this time the success. forced sales. Farmers, show thet you tion Company (coastwise) ships are worse than most of us would be- ful 1931 campaign about $6,000 had been received. paper that fights for you! | District 2 (New York) has contrib-| istrict 13 (California). California uted approximately two-thirds of this| has thus far been asleep to the real- — - | ization that the Daily Worker is in the | Pices. are determined not to do without the Despite threatening letters from lieve possible. The food served in the Salon is not fit for pigs to eat. The officers do not say a word, about it though. Frequently, however they will admit that it isn’t so hot. | of the workers, the Shoe and Leather Los Angeles legionairres, including | Workers Industrial Union with of- the Los Angeles School Board, the | fices at 995 Washington Street, Bos- 150 workers assembled decided to go} ton, and 35 Monroe Street, Lynn, is through with the meeting, No in-| rouse mass protest throughout country against the threat of War- den es B. Holohan of San Quen- | tin Prison, to hold incommunicado Tom Mooney, who has served sixteen killed by deputies and armed com- pany thugs, is just about to close with the usual whitewashing of the murderers by the boss courts. The nine murderers, who on June fusing. to starve, The danger they are faced with is indicated by the! conviction of two young workers who| have been picked up on a trumped-up | | charge of “disorderly conduct,” to 30 years of a life sentence on charges which the Wickersham Committee, in its recently published report, ad- terference was attempted and the speakers were heard as scheduled. Gallagher spoke on White Terror and making further preparations to rally the shoe workers in struggle for im- porved conditions NOW, days in jail. young workers were in jail each, for no 23, fired point blank into a group of miners assembled at the victim's store, and who shot Philipovich, the storekeeper, through the heart as he Licking His Chops | danger. Tom Mooney, Imperial Vai-| |ley, the fight against the criminal | syndicalism laws. Need we say more? And what about District 17 (Ala- The other day I was passing the Firemen’s and Wipers’ mess and happened to look in. They had an electric plate on the table, booked up mits are without the slightest basis. 5 eae At the same time, the TLD an-| Besmen on the International Red) shop groups, meeting regularly,| other “erimes” but distribution of | stood at the doorway in his stocking | |bama), where so many great strug-| to @ light socket, and were cooking nounced that this threat would be have been established in seven shops. | leaflets. feet, were originally convicted on gles are taking place (Scottsboro, the | food bought ashore, made the basis of a nationwide cam- | Peres of workers throughout the | The workers here call for the sup-| Manslaughter charges. The sentences share-croppers)—struggles that need| The forecastles are crowded up in paign to foree prison authorities | State have already responded to mass| ,o15 of all working class organiga-| are already a mere subterfuge for the Daily Worker! Not a cent from| the bows, wit ha large anchor wind- throughout the country to recognize Rasen 2 in Boton, Chiaeeeetaosho | tions. in the fight to defeat the boss| Punishment, But they are eoming up this district. Nor from District, 19| lass that takes up plenty of room. the right of political prisoners to spe~ meet! ing in Boton, Chelsea, Lyn, | terror and establish strong, militant | before Judge Henderson on motion , (Denyer), In the sailors foscle there is a toilet cial concessions. | IN | Haverhill and Brooklyn. | unions that would defend the inter-| for a new trial. Ones | and washroom built into one corner. Warden Holohan’s threat, it was} | Fight Obstruction ! ests of the workers. Describes Case Tetal received Friday $197.23) Ib is the most unsanitary thing I pointed out in a statement by Wil-| pea ES | Sabbagina i tun eltoseivors ihe | ‘Telling of the entire case as it has Previously received 1718.39) have ever seen. Yet: these aro sup- ig i al secretary | e 5 | dup to the present time, a Jioisss| Posed to be new, tes hips, + atthe 1B cones inmedasey acer] Jobless Delegates Free sean to fen jor imnedate | Nenert US.Sm. Achievements |iiner errepondent wits 5. ke a ee rom Lagat eapeats ae | : ef | , ca i ig | aznerd ©, P. Unit 3 are route inoves made by Mis aetense couneel! by Mags Pressure Shoe Workers ‘Aaoclation and the | ausieGGn HEIGHTS, Mien, | "Eight deputies and the supein- Pet Ss work on throng: tit fate ob Rien one remaining indictment against; |. aes! =, Re Maine acannon ee mene | the Lenin Memorial and anti-war tendent were placed in jail after the | ¥ Perle 3,00| Whrs Club 10.08 At sea they stand watch and watch him, and immediately after the issu-| KANSAS CITY, Mo. Jan. 27.—A| OX. i amalgamation, are Prov | meeting at the Ukranian Hall here, | shooting. They were given the wo- | ° J Ress {66 | % D Koumn 40) (12 hour day) oo ei Pan the Tom) delegation of six unemployed work~ posing to “wait” until the laundry is | 4, meeting was under. the joint men’s-quarters of the Fayette Coun-| The Soviet Union is a tempting | See, 1, Umit 9 19,00/ Seetion Sustain- eo ance by Mooney, through the tos | ers were arrested here today for lead-| 100 per cent organized before be-| suchices of the Communist units of |ty Jail at Uniontown until the trial| morsel for Japanese imperialism, | persle 5.09 They carry white quartermasters ao ere ec prec ‘Tom | 28 @ demonstration for coal and gro-| £!nning any action. | Muskegon and Muskegon Helehts | came up. | as well as for the other imperial- | Brat” worners > on these ships and Negro crews on Cron Cal ce to be held at Oni. |Ceties for the unemployed in front! ‘The Shoe Workers Industrial Union | and the Unemployed Councils. The| “They were fed by the Fayette) fst countries. Only the united so- Hal aan aricat nek tei See cago, April 30 to May 2 | of the Provident Association. ___| Which is an organization of the rank-| main speaker was William Novell of | Drug Co,, one of the largest drug | tion of the working masses of the us in general? It means that they are Tne tellowine wire was sent last |The Workers were dismissed after| and-file workers, s answering these | Detroit who has recently returned | stores in the state, and the financing | world ean smash the war paid tisk tne ooew euninet The 6seoae i & oWarden Holohan, and a|they exposed the Provident Associa-| treacherous tactics by developing im- | from the Soviet Union and gave 2/of their meals was underwritten by || epalniet "tees Wee ees ees eae their own benefit. copy to Governor James B, Rolph| tion in a court room crowded with | mediate struggles, and broadening | graphic report on the achievements|the Pittsburgh Coal Co., @ Mellon | Werker organizes the American nH : i é of California, by Mr. Patterson: | workers, The workers in the court! these into an effective fight for|in socialist construction. The Ukrar | organization. So the eight uniformed | tolleys for the defense of the So- | alt is what happened on a 21-day “One hundred sixty thousand | 0m applauded the speeches of the| higher wages and improved condi- | nian Chorus rendered several reyo~ | thugs and their superintendent who | viet Union and Soviet China, Save relief trip. I Ate i a of the Mer- American workers members and af- | 2!Tested workers so enthusiastically | tions. Jutionary numbers. figured out the shooting before it| the Daily Worker. chants and Miners ships as a quar- fillated International Labor Defense | ‘hat the judge was forced to free took place, lounged in the women’s = termaster: : demand you withdraw threat to | them. | quarters several days, stuffing them- | sum, a For the first few days I took hold Mooney incommunicade, de- |, Thee fourths of the workers in| selves like pigs with five to nine| District 7 (Detroit), More action! things easy, watching the crew and mand you lift all restrictions frem | the court room escorted the freed) ASKS MILITIA TO HELP course meals, some of them gaining | Thousands of auto workers in your *s listening to the things they com- him and all political prisoners, and delegation out of the building after | 18 to 50 pounds. | district are now on strike, The ‘Daily’ plained about, which were plenty give them coycessions proper for |the trial ended, Many workers 7 Released on Bond lis actively pushing these struggles, aboard this Jim-Crow packet. Then. . political pad at We denounce | Joined the Unemployed Council as ROB PENN F A RMERS “After the trial they were put out | aiding in the uniting of forces to I passed out the Marine Worker your threat as attempt to damage | ‘He result of the struggle against and ed ° on bond ot $50.900 each, furnished | smash wage cuts, organizing, leading | Voice and the Daily Worker to the Mooney defense on eve hearing new |€%Posure of the Provident Associa by the Mellon outfit, although during | and guiding, Save the “Dally” tole u J Bevedisnick crew and started to talk to theni iaial“atid Bave ‘Tem Moenay Cea~ | 0D READING, Pa.—Sheriff Gwinner legal precedent for the interference | the trial it was plainly shown by wit-| help you win the strikes, Hehaye specaaad along the lines of organization. I gress and Lawyer Achey, who were forced | of the state milita in the future | nesses that the shooting was planned | istrict 8 (Chicago) has actually| 7, Chowics W sacehters spent my eyenings in the focsles dis- WILLIAM L. PATTERSON, |IS K. C. THE BRIGHTEST | te knock down the farm of John / stoppages of forced sales which the| the day previous to the killing. | doubled its totals, but since it has} s | cussing. things ib the crew (quar- "National Secretary a SPOT IN THE U. S. A.? Hanzel of Erwinna, Pa. for the| Pennsylvania Farmers’ Protective| ‘Now comes the disposal of the | previously contributed only $431, it © Spanchuk termasters on tl ese Jim Crow ships ie faving te aad fe a i + 8. Ass | ridiculous sum of $1.18 because of the | Association will surly carry through. | case by the corporation's tool. Judge | qidn't take much to double this figr Levee aer suposed to be “suerior” to the new trial will ‘be held hatate Su meine Lamaaasesl militant demonstration of more than} Gwinner has filed charges of | D- W. Henderson, who asked these | yye—only $4.50. This district, with crew. Court Judge Louis ‘B Ward. ie ‘San | KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Hello, com- | 300 farmers of Bucks and surrounding | «quress, coercion, intimidation and | POOF little innocents to pay $9 @| the second largest quota, is still very s| They told me how they had been Beeariaco, Re Ny ii. A rnotion hag | 22des, everywhere, This is from the | counties, are trying to establish a! threats of bodily harm” made on him | Month and stay on a three year pa-| dead and is one of those chiefly rev fooled by the International Seamen's tees tse ind maaea tas oA Te md | brightest spot in the U.S. A. So say | during the sale. A Philadelphia paper | Tole, such a terrible sentence. | sponsible for holding the drive back. a Union, (reactionary trade union) and Eee bites os he hemcing | Oe, Dibeares. cm the “edenet railway ‘carries the following report of the|, “The papers carried screaming | pistriet 11 (North and South Caro: | P Baw by the English National Union of Mooney himself at the hearing. cars here. L WwW. W. Misleader sale; headlines saying ‘Mine Riot De‘end- | jing), Large territory, but small re-|% Tanenbure Seamen. But they realized that strong aie horns af pal pont yo aherang othe Went As| Exposed in Duluth); sandred men sewed | Popa ea ite friar ou Wil = Bae Si eerizaion ‘woul rt i ber 2 : ties lies depending on the Provident As- UL | if you read a little further you will atscatee3 ‘ox| Conditions. One of them joined up in prison throughout the United] scciation, on an average of 4 to the xposed in UUM the call and decided that all bid- | it you rend a Mille Sutin Nentiary | CLOSE THREE KANSAS BANKS | Mandatt Te the kk roc, wetens Tete aa States.” Paterson said. “who are| family, and believe me it is slim} pyLUTH, Minn—To fight the! ding would be left in the hands of | centence, J, B. Yader, the man who! KANSAS CITY, Jan, 26—The 32- | Godt -05| the rest promised to join up as soon treated at best like criminals, and) depending, as they feed us hog jowls, | growing Unemployed Councils in Du- pyar: at age When AcheY | took deliberate aim at the poor old | year old Pioneer Trust Company, of | fiakemten ‘8 as they get paid. These ships only more usually with even greater bru | split beans, and dried skin wrapped | luth, the LW.W. leadership is making tr at see ie irate Raped storekeeper's heart. The papers also} Kansas City, and two outlying sub-| Wentxy ‘10| pay once a month. tality. The threat to hold Tom Moo-/ around a bone. This was supposed every effort to divide the unemployed ppt ie aHentEE aad Party, | forgot to mention that two other | sidiaries closed doors yesterday when 23) ~ Negro and white seamen should or- hey incommunicado because defense | to be ham hocks. And they send us | workers, | took command of the sale, and | men were shot in that affray. One of | the affairs of the Pioneer ‘Trust were ganize into the Marine Workers In- organizations are fighting for his re-| the same old thing every week. They RS Vaeeotacee sheriff to dispose of | these has been crippled for life and|placed in the hands of the State | 4o| dustrial Union and struggle together lease is one phase of this persecution, | imagine they are feeding a bunch of | They called an open forum on the ie in Sata - Le bidding com- | ¢.6 other is in the insane asylum|Banking Department, The three | ‘os! against these conditions. The admission of high officials of| horses or some other kind of stock, | Subsect: “United we eat, divided we| mittee. Horses and cows sold for | ang wil never come out through |henks carried deposits ranging over es California, and especially the cam~-|] suppose. don’t!” In the speech, F. W. Thomp-| @ nickel each, all of the property | 11566 doors alive.” | $2,500,000. M Bt paign against Mooney in some of the| ‘The hog jowls they send out, cost | 80M, talked @ lot about a “world moye- | bringing $1.18, pibhseed press, to the effect that Tom Mooney! them from 6 to 7 cents per pound, | Ment” but made no proposals for the; “The sheriff was paid, a receipt | Sumer e is held in prison not because of his| and when the big shots of the Provi- | Workers of Duluth, In an under-| demanded, and immediately the ¢ “ Cedker Gets 10 Subs m 2 ‘erie’ which he obviously did not dence check the price out of the banis, |handed way he advocated the raid-| goods returned to Hanzel under a | 66° To Win Our B attl es W e Must D Fishman } : commit, but because it js ‘safer’ for they charge from 11 to 12 cents per |ing of food stores for the immediate] 99 year lease for a consideration ’ Iman Hea eh Hours m Cit of the ruling class to hold him in-prison,| pound. And the same thing applies} needs of the unemployed. | of §L. | ‘ z 999 e e PY g Zayon ot, Unit 36, y point direetly to his status as a pure-| to other groceries as well. When a representative of the Un-| The matter will shortly come up Ss D l Ph I D ig revi <a0) Cc . ly political, and not a criminal, Lia | Signing off for this time. employed Council asked for the floor | before Judge Keller who has already ave at ¥y ave l a. istrict | tis ae rosby, M inn. oner.” —A Worker. | to propose that if Thompson really ae his class weanings by Jehusing os wo 4 eu meant what he said “United we eat, m. Harris, one o! ie organizers 0! PHILADELPHIA, Pa—The Phila-;the unemployed for unemployment 10 divided we don’t” he should rally| the Pennsylvania association and na- | delphia District of the Communist | insurance. 3 Smitn i ne subesriptions to the Dally Work- me | the workers for a united relief march | onal secretary of the Farmers Re-| Party has issued a stirring plea for} “The Daily Worker in all these | Teshin " er in Crosby, Minn., the only city in Mishay raka Hunger March Delegate Jon the city and state, Thompson at| Hef Conference which took place in | action in the campaign to raise $35,- | struggles came forward uncompro- | te #fttfag ‘in| the U. S. where a Communist is BEDE BY CLS co |first tried to refuse him the floor, Washington last month, the right to/ 990 to save the Daily Worker misingly, defending the interests of | 4 Pepper 40) mayor, is am easy proposition, He 5 | but when he finally secured it and| sue for the farmers, Harris stated | suspension. The quota for the P' the workers, exposing the frame-ups |B Marganstern , points out that with concentrated ef- Blocks Plot to Stifle Struggle sees spre! ioc wits, tomnn| in: Arnaz Deere 2th, ina | delohie ici 25ty ano, e [end manera of te tame, | x | oer aeke con bo coer Bono ; replied that, he wouldn't prevent any- | "ational Labor Defense of Philadel» | it has raised less than 4 per cent of | “At present the boss press gives wide | A” .cheartasppet 10) letter follows: |one Joining it but that he would not! ae poet Soles iin Welds oy mn ms The appeal reads: Teel publicity to the fake Commissary uA rF 43] . “I saw in the Daily Worker in the Workere S | support nor participate in such a “In the past year our district has | lief System, proposed by the it | Hyman a M a rs Spurn Boss Leader and Turn to | ting. bet yest herepgr itd gray ie a witnessed many struggles of great | numer Mr. Pinchot, wiles isd 30 La sisi cal dette eg id N 7 a “| importance. cuts relief to six cents per day for | Mander 10} Salby 15] subs bee: I ew ly Formed Unemployed Council FISHERMEN ORGANIZE: strated at the Hanzel sale. “Wwe remember May 1, when in| the unemployed. 1 Manteo ie Pets Amen 10 fie Ate ee eras tone — By PAUL STEELE Councils in Seattle, and explained WIN THEIR DEMANDS | non a” Hanae Dag teetiogien a |e vaemapiae tne olin -atiacked Sag |" Dally” Fuente Fake! Balahe A Lerner 30| AN ‘10| understand the Dally Worker. We MISHAWAKA, Ind.—An attempt} that he wished to start one in Mish- 3 - jovernor Pinchot, the | workers who attempied to demon ‘The Daily Worker and the Com- | Trvsteaberg 105 | Sanderson -10| know that the Daily Worker uses dif- to start a bosses’ “Self Help” Coun. | awaka. As to who was back of it, it) PoRT ANG : |arch enemy of the workers who has | strate, clubbing and blackjacking the | munist Party stand opposed to this | Runtsky 10) Coll, by Unit 8 ferent words than the capitalist press, ere, based i vasn't hard to fi t.. Townsh! ' ELES, _Wash.—Tha| used his milita to murder striking | women and children. |fake relief system and demand the | fo” eh Anil That's what we call Bolshevism, nere, based on the one in Seattle,| wasn't hard to find out. Township | Devil (octopus) fishermen of this| miners, to send as many state troop-| mber the Orphan- | enact ystem and demand the | tao Tech 05 . lied by John King, only | Trustee Eberhart, in charge of poor | place, who catch and sell these fish|ors into the county a” p=} “Do you remember the Oxphan-| enactment of an unemployment in- | M Dismona J0| There have to be new words because Hunger March delegate from South | relief, sat in the very front row. 1b the Japanese fish iuyers in Beattie ceoerie, ere te eee eee eee an ae peltimare and ONT | suranoe ‘Bill by the <ateae) wok Wil |r megs “85 capitalism and bolshevism are two Bend-Mishawaka. King took about| The speaker admitted that they |haye been in the same fix as the Bhs pc Repisieiony, 948 aaa owe rue Brown case in Philadei-) ho presented to the legislature on | N Wener ‘os| different things. the new Unemployed Council here. | would have the becking of large con- | workers and poor farmers. The prices P rach | March 1 by the State Hunger March | 4 shakin 05) | “Tt is not hard to get new subs if The chairman then hastily adjourned | erns as the ones in South Bend, had.|kept going down right along until| ,, More 2nd more the struggles on Attacks on Hunger March. now being organized by the Unem- | & Prokn ‘ 05) the Party members educated them- the meetins, which broke up with | They would, he sald, have free milk |they were receiving less than two| ‘tbe Countryside are proving to the] “There is still a vivid recollection | ployed Councils. yabipe. oe | See “43| Selves and knew how to approach the *- the workers saying that they would | and groceries in their self-help com-|cents a pound with a limit by one| ‘mers that the common enemies of | in your minds of the events that took| In order to be victorious in. these getter 05) Anonymous ins] Workers and to explain what the join the fighting council when it was |missaries, free gasoline for their|ccmpany to 100 Ibs. a week to each | the workers and farmers are the big} place recently in Wilmington and | struggles, we must save the Daily | 1 Coren :20| Colt. by Nnit 8, Daily Worker is. It is not only @ oraanised, | trucks, e'te., free dental and medical |man, which would not buy food, let bankers and their servants, the courts | Washington in connection with the | Worker, as an indispensable weapon gre 3 we = gj DeWsPaper—but is to educate the There has been quite an agitation | and medical work, etc. He boasted jalone replace their gear when it wore | ®4 the armed forces of the cap-| National Hunger March. | against the attacks of the ruling class | "Eston “n0| 3 cag} Womens. the neighboring city of South | that this would all be paid for by out for this kind of fishing. Strange | !#list state. “Police clubs and jail sentences| of this district, as well as of the|m G “16 | Sympathiver 4 T gave a worker 2 copy about a basket plan” which | large concerns who were sympathetic | as it may seem to those workers that oe are the answer to the demands of’ whole country.” B Ellotiz Peg aelerd 95) month ago and when he saw me ried to force over, | with their ideals, say the workers won't stick together, Chicago Workers Join| ea an ae cteele Garbo “jy, next time, said he saw more educa- fat ot caecsing Bisting Coninitiees | those aaa got together, sent| > . i 0 eee ‘in| Mure Piekiora 09 fon Ja the tow pages a the Daily grocer hi eut i | Wol 0 the fis, vers re= | ail . » 7 16) WH Fore 203 er nm he saw in e eal a buge ext in| pier Knudson of the South Bend |sfter their reels bCcagvel tate woul py fal f Jim Crow ‘Frisco Workers Fight F'¢ht Ban on i a $3 miazlne | thisty vears in the capitalist press opel aes ~ iced tha | RA. spoke and gave the rules, | be five cents a pound, the buy | | et A in ole . . en he gave me a dollar and said fight to hal put this fighe | Beweing committees (which he tried |pay the BNtE Geateaes oe ee ee Drive! Attacks on Jobless; Inter-Recial Dance gre eed ais he wanted to subperibe for the’ I abotaged by the | 12,81088 over) no free speech, no po-| stead of deducting it out of the! CHIC. Th, Wi victi P | i Whe Ch 3.00) 78 weekly issue. ite aa Bat Soa by the | tical eal no “plots agent ae iahermen’s chetke, ‘Of oousee it took| eee ahiee "ahtenied Bie Win Ev ition Case | in Baltimore, Md. Bete ae Comm, 2.75) Total —_10ha8 mane a ten subs, it took me tw6.'” si ta nea government,” no women officers (but | a little time to get results, byt when | meetin; t 526 W. Divisi " 5 , hi + Ol ut to date $ig2624| NOUNS Of active work, If every Party T e to ¢ te i. | iB al vision Street ., Jan. 2.—| B r, ‘ a # printed on their expensively printed | pid | A Mea ish) Labor Defense and the League of r ete vie- {dance was to be hel ar , Us Gantt. ONE o te you for the "basket | ,7Hen Sweeny of the APL. lauded jal thelr association prices. Struggle for Negro Rights to protest | tere forcine Taternational Labor De |Dighe, was condemned "by the ey | =| Howes to get 98,000 mubeeriptiona.” plan? Come to our meeting!” This | the plan. ‘Then he introduced an offi- | Now this goes to show that {f eight| the jim-crow terror directed against | fense. All the remaining cases were |@uilioritics as “unsafe” a few hours Tora si ies Teh ee Ge tk Yppeal naturally brought the most | Ci! of the International Hodearriers jor ten fishermen can force their de-| the solidarity of Negro and white | dismissed. lbefore white and Negro workers RAG Ae basen i 3.8) A WORKERS & FARMERS . a eae ap oe them to trig | Union from Chicago who gave a! mands, that there is no good reason | workers, In the 42nd ward. Feingold was the only one who had| began gathering at the hall. The!» simpr : so| GOVT. WILL DO THE TRICK ioe Stay. wise holdin ihe lavas | demagogic tills that ‘we kites ors |why the halibut fishermen and the| Detective squads an@ police are at-| been tried and the I. L. D, is now| “condemnation was: not extended to rer ie 503 | * : nat cabensive ball in’ Miche | ganize ., , for better condit! ons . . + | salmon fishermen on this coast) tempting to terrorize these workers, | appealing the 100 days sentence | the garage in the cellar of the Dyild> | Casemer Arwal 5@/ DETROIT, Mich.— Nowhere {s the i os cae Pe Oe ee ia tal tat ee eae one nat seen walking together on the street, | handed to him by Judge Fritz. Hi - to an avartment above the beoay page an being told or published. ier meeting ope x the | Wi: , tee Ras ae a Ee eS, cree nea »| stopping them for questioning gnq| Jack Robinson is the defendant in | hell. Large forces of police were on t 0.85 | 3 ¥ : chairman showing an article in Col- | constantly, interrupted | by angri'|as they did at times tn the last sea. | sbusing them with vile languages "| the Charities trial, is going to appear | 9tt6 to Keep the workers from enter |" “*“yeemsen # oe Town at he: toot ot West Cirand Hers dealing with the “Self Help”) gould be a begging outtit. | Salmon fishermen maf see this letter on eperey Ks wily, Neen Some Wee a nudes Seite aapertnente | a tne nie of the condemna- Wan” Gemigon nee is 's Mogver Gente: Next to 1€ 7 bite he had tnisned the speech, [and take & lesson from what» tev fowed By discussion TUE pnt tag | AIL Workers ave requested to fil the jtlom 8 to prevent white and Negto| — worat etal peah Tos gustage ts north te Workers endar ’ 4 ¥ euehers told ot the betta j| courtroom and emphasize the de- | Workers trom fraternizing together, is Total to date $103.85 | Digs, for it is in the worst kind of ’ e ‘I am the only official delegate frem | bosses 100 per cent solidarity and get USAT GY. Aa vkers of | @dmitted in DISTRIO’ § pee for in the worst Kind 9} RIE oe Mishawaka te the National Hunger {something for their product instead| Suse heaped upon them by the| mand of the unemployed workers of | {1 sei adres tyn phat gt Kawin Lingbers 1.00 | decayed condition. Yet when I went oe ian teandees March to Washington,” he began, | of having to stand off some oil com- | Police. Gent Francisco agpinst further rail> | oe yay aa, ‘ore SUN | Jes, Kipan ‘s0|down there last week I found them ANNUAL BAZAAR of Ttemational Lovor| “and T have here & certificate cer- | Pany for enough gas to go home on Two pects ara were than ; Toading of their fellow MOREA gearing of mixed-color dances in ae at Defense, Deb. 26-21 ai 1228 Pulmore 8\. E-| citing this fact, which gives me the | "hen the season is over. Panos Seta eg nt to the | sepERIOR OPEN FORUMS BEGIN |Daltimore are facing lean days. They | Tete te dete Organizations asked to feserve this date. | tight to organize unemployed work-| This county has always been back-| Ora) Pores als, gation select a hail for an affair, municipal | geo, manatee eT ee eee lers in my yleinity, T want the floor | Ward in organizing in any way (ex- x workers was elected to see| SUPERIOR, Wis—The Open For-) officials condemn the premises as un- ‘tanita tate ILLINOIS for $0 aunties, oan ¢ eave e 7" cept. the bosses, they are well or-| Alderman Crovedeman and to de-| um is now to be held regularly every | safo, and the police see that the con- DISTRICT 12 sexta und SUS? ciccimigiat‘éhe| ‘The ehairman began, “You must |s@nized). But in the last month or) mand that the terror be discon- | Sunday, 2 p,m. at the Workers Cen- | demnation order is obeyed.” batt 2 eee eet eect ral ask the Board of Officers in advance (22, tere has been an Unemployed | tinyed. ‘ ter, 1803 North 5th St. The firsiCom-| ‘The I. L. D. announced it would See tericience ie Ist gt 1196 N. Western St. Mirror Hell. | if you wish to speak.” At this, work~ Council organized. But we will leave a munist mayor, Nygard of Crosby,} fivrt the condemnation order in the | Geo, Brink 5.00 DANCH given by Unit 44 on Wednesday, | 0 50) Oar ne eetet hin |i to the Council to tell the Daily) The Daily Worker is your fighting | Minn., and Harold Olmstead are some| courts and through mobilizing the |, Teal to date seas |7e8l meat. It would be more humane Feb. ist at Imperial Hall, 2409 N, Halsted] ers all over began pve | Worker what they have accomplished. | Paper. Contribute and collect to) of the speakers scheduled for the| white and Negro toilers for a tromen- | * ¥, to let the men eat the dogs. St. Tickets in udvance 15 cents; at door speak. A Friend of the D. W. | keep it alive, fivim. a 3g) en. Breneh 1029 I asked why they did not go to SPORTS CENTER being opened by tahor| _ THen John: King arose and walked ; ’ Shalaih acne gua Total to date su2.4] Fisher Lodge. They said a man has Sports Union at Peoples Auditorium, over to the platform, took off his fire are two years first, then he W. Ohicago Ave. Jelp establish this Center| Coat, and began, “We are forming an has to get a taxpayer who has his by coming to Workers Basketball League| unemployed Council. All of you who taxes all paid to swear to his two Ried 'p, oe Admhnon So eenten” "| Believe in fighting instead ‘of bes~ SEY P EPARE FOR ACTION ee ase al chee Be Pie era ng . ing trorn: oath Stes ey snvited : diy ~ * lone who has his taxes all paid, So oro attend!” By J. LANKY kulak attacks and organized the New | the program of the Farmers’ National) The N. J. F, P. A. is now e1 it is garbage or starve. The week be= HwOrURe by Eat Helier, Secretary ot) Teh he stepped off and the chair-| Some months ago the smgl) and| Jersey Farmers Protective Associa-| Relief Conference and. was repre-| in a camaign to rote the nto eae hig dl There frot ta pati) Got to Aghting;over some » Communist Party, Saturday, 4s 22n who was by now panic stricken, | middle farmers living near the vil-| tion, with demands for no gas tax,| sented at the conference by three| growers against the canneries, surplus, They ought to give the to- “et morsels” that had just ar- ut Public Mail, South | “B,” hastily adjourned the meeting, with | lage of Norma, N. J., decided that the | no sheriff sales, and a moratorium on | delegates, main demand is for collective con- | matoes in sterage to the hungry un- rived in & garbage wagomswhen one ol no motion made, seconded, or voted | time had come fo ra new form of | farm debts “until the end of the} An attempt to organize the Italian tracts. At the first meeting of the | employed. bell’s has made more Tne fell 6 Shh Pee for adjourning. Although he had | farm organization. The prices of veg> depression,” farmers in the nearby villages of | campaign, over 100 farmers attended, | tha nenough profit.” Tam not a Communist and never vey urged them to sign up, no one did. | etables, eggs and fruit did not even! A resolution was passed that no| Rosenbyn faler because of the mis-| and 8 new members signed yp at $1| “The Russian workers and farmers did ‘7 think: people sre basa «Oi hsheaehhgaklgget Many workers said they would at- | cover the cost of production, because ene coujd held office in the organic | take by the organizing committee in| a year dues. The total membership | showed ys what you can do by or- bid ace LB gp pad DCRR INTE eee ae nia of | (M4 the Unemployed Council meet-| of the robbery of the commission | zation who did not veoeive his entire | dealing with the village “leaders,” is ow 62 ng. ey. bul nd) SP ene to Peer (eae elpija will run @ rummage sale at| 48, and the meeting breke up with | merchants. income from the tarm. This wag| who turned out to be rich farmers,| Figures were presented showing ig forward, while we go Ru —A Sym '. 1185 Poplar St., beginning Jan. 21th. All the workers jeering and laughing at| At the first meeting, a struggle | fought by the kulaks, but neverthe- | and who took advantages of the lan- | that the average cost of jucing a last came a gloming. (ele. “should ‘be iaken to nearest! the Way John King had made a mon, | arose between the kulak element less w ent thru, with class lines | guage difficulty to sabotage the| ton of tomatoes is $24, but the aver- | “conservative” Anglo Saxon farmer, “The stroggle against militeriom hil workers ivited to attend tht yale, | Key Of the “Mutual Aid Council,” | (rich farmers), who were accustomed | sharply drawn. Meeting. ‘The farmers of the N. J.| age price received is $17. who, though still full of tilustorts, in-| mast net be postponed until the WELCOME BANQUBT to recently released | thelr backew’s, and their carefully laid | to run every farm organization in the| A small farmer, a former railroad|F. P. A. plan to go back to Rosen- No Real Surplus stinetively turns te the Soviet Union ent when war bresks out. these war prisouers, Gaturday, Feb. “oh at) plans, Sq bewildered was the chair- | past, and the small and middle ‘arm- | shopman, who had been biackilteed and make another attempt, with| Among the expressions used at the | for # way out. Thee it ‘will be too late. The Hee eee eee ete A'S] man, tht he even forgot to take up | ers, who were disgusted with the class | by the Pennsylvania Railroad, was| Italian workers from Vineland as| meeting wore: “Campbell's sey they \ "These are gome indications that| struggle against war must be car fil be jnin cpenker, Concert progeaiy and| the edflection which was previously | collaborating, vaciliating vld leader-| cletecc president of the association.| their main link with the Italian | got their warehouses full of canned | the Seuthern New Jersey are| ried on now, daily, hol uriental dinners, Admission 36 cents. annoypicee ship. These later fought off the| The N. J. ¥. P, A, voted support of | farmers sell, ‘They call it] preparing to swing into ian cae , a tomatoes they - \ )