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PAGE TWO DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TH D. MAY 18, 1933 BARRI THE STORY THUS FAR: The Wedding, in tacked by the police IN BERLIN BY KLAUS MEMKRANTZ WWLUSTRATED BY WALTER QUIRT CADES Printed by Special Permis- sion of INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS, 381 Fourth New York City. Avenue, Al Workers ere urged te read this book and spread Ht among thelr friends. workers of the proletarian district, Berlin, demonstrate May Day, 1929, despite the ban issued by the Socialist Police Chief, Zoergiebel. The workers’ demonstration is at- Defense preparations are made in the workers’ quarter. . . . Thousands of workers came to the in large numbers. The workers were such as these. In such quarters the successful in the Gange-Viertal,” thé IS STILL RISING: To Go Up More, Says Journal of Commerce CLEVELAND, May 17. Im the | midst of the prosperity talk, from} all over the country news continues to comé in indicating that the cost of living is steadily rising. A survey just completed by the Cleveland “Press” shows that the price of bread has risen 1 cent per loaf. Meat has risen from 1 to 5 cents a pound, whilé flour has been advanced several cents pér sack. The following list is given by the Press Eggs, 9%4-11c Ib.; Flour, 49-69¢ eighth; | ee | COST OF LIVING Take Leading Part in Scottsboro Mass Fight/| gee facing electrocution on frame-up charges, and Ruby Bates (right), chief MARTIAL LAW 10 The “Daily” Must Weld ENFORCE JIMCROW Zone Laid Out by Gov. | Murray of Oklahoma | OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., May rat Smouldering resentment among e | 18 . large Nesto population of Oklahoma | Increased Circulation City has developed following the ul- \, | timatum by Gov. William H, (Alfalfa) | | Murray's declaring martial law over a three-block strip extending from Eastern Avenue to Walnut St. Governor Murray’s action was di- | | rected at enforcing the strict jim-| |crow rule against Negroes in Okla- | homa City, who ordered them “to confine their activities and opera- | This is the first of a series of articles written by leading com- rades thruout the country on the present drive of the Daily Worker for 20,000 new readers, Requests will appear as soon as these com- | who called on him following the an- | rades respond. Fighting Spirit of the Miners in Pennsylvania in the Coal Fields Is Necessary to Combat New Roosevelt- Pinchot Terror Offensive must be pushed with all energies in the Pittsburgh district. A substantial circulation of the Daily Worker among the miners is the main method of reaching thousands of miners, It is a stimulant to strug- ahaa es: : comparing prices of May 6 with| “ for such articles, t the @iley in the afternoon from all parts defénse would find the support of March 3, 1 bowing sharp ecaaices, all | tions to definite, separate and segre-| drive with local stan fe eich gle, it is an organizer of struggle. of the town ‘The police did not dare| the entire population. The best proof | siong the line | gated areas.” | district, have been sent to some /It combats the lies and programs of queers” ee eeal ma they sae bi et “1923 en Sere 2 sp Prices March 3—Butter, 19-25c lb.; | i _ The governor told a commnittee of | 20 different comrades. The others | the capitalist press. It reflects the : eg wah ure in 1923, which had been most 15-25¢ doz; Beéf, 15-29¢ Ib.; | Mrs. Janie Patterson (left), mother of Haywood Patterson, Negro | Negro business and professional men | fighting state of mind of the miners. It shows them that they are not in control of the areas far beyond | slum district. S “ | the actual barricade both in Neu- PRN HR: Sugar, 47¢ 10 Its; Oranges, 15-29¢ defense witness in Patterson's trial. Photo taken at recent Rockland a gerd ar oi, ae aa | The next article will be by Bill alone, | That getline: at Woe 5 are Kolin ¢ Wedding. see yourself, (er- . | | As 8: hicago district organizer. em in the . one and Seesalig Ge capaho edi Gut to him, *takt’ you!) Prices akey (Gute, aneaog Ibe Palace apap whe 4,500 Negro and white workers heard reports | crow section was prompted by @ de-| re see ts gal thelr conditions of straggle, the ter fie hurried. throaehs the maces “A | could only havé held out, because all) Eggs, 15-20c doz.; Beef, 20-35¢ Ib; | _% Scottsboro marchers, jae to pen ae tte ai | ae ie Te ror used against them, are the same SORGLSTiicGesrcter cit : o” |the dwellings of the alley were at Pork, 15-19c lb.; Flour, 79-89¢ eighth; mt fe Zone out as the residential | throughout the country. the Méttelbeckplatz without pausing. | your disposal, ‘AS soon as the popus | Sugar, 58¢ 10 tbs; Oranges, 29-306 and business district for Oklahoma | By JACK JOHNSTONE. ‘The special Saturday edition will ‘There was no sign of the police. He went through the alley and saw the mann lookéd across several times to lation sympathizes with the workers and not with the police, the former doz Shoe Prices Going Up To Cite 20 Grounds for City Negroes is an area which begins) May Day in the Pittsburgh terri- at the Fair grounds, one-half block | tory was not only a day of workers’ | June 1, the sale of loose milk will be make subs easier for the impover- ished miners, who can club together innumerable marks of shots on the |). a A ny eR | -| demonstrations but the beginning of 4 ‘ i se have a certain définite amount of| The prices of clothes and shoes | north of East Seventh Street and ex- | demo for a subscription. The Daily Worker houses. On the stairs he mét Anna. | over, while the latter are on enemy {are also moving upward. ‘The In- . tends to Eastern Avenue, inereased government terror, planned | can ‘also be utilized in Site for- | “A good. thing that you have come, |€"0und with every step they take.” ternational Shoe Company, one of New Patterson Trial * wore: poser ii wien as mrmeet dae | “They're all at your place!” Pek Kurth rata secede * | to $1 in its prices. : | Seiadaaits band tao pane Wesker | Day. that arrests took place in the Mine Worker, and srnnéeee ta ate | He went up the stairs. The kit- | Which Kurt had slammed behind him|") proctor and sas | | : e chen wag full of men and women, | Men he escaped from the polite YeS-| company has amined the fouth|1» Le D. Attorneys to Tell of Prejudice, Jury | itn! Actas thost Yms-orom. | Meadguatiers were raided the homes | eee ee “Hallo, Hermann, thank goodness!” | erday. estas | . A | Bersen! : ‘ | ] Mis eed hats wo to he A,r oud wh on MERE A et yg| Tampering, in Arguments on June 22 | ow ‘acon mromow cnrner |x aon rae ur, a |Boston Doubles Own! | ‘Red Room’ at once!” child. She and Kurt had seen one 5 | Sous SanernenaDPanaaTtap eae? {coum | ot i i Hermann asked how his wife and| another only for a few minutes at oobi. ee ee eg yaar NEW YORK.—When lawyers for the International Labor Defense ap- | lief stopped. : || Quota in Sub TIVE) t children wére and then withdrew ay rare intervals. From time to time markets, | pear before Judge Horton in Decatur on June 22 to argue for a new trial | It was no mere coincidence that), New yoORK—The following | | once with the comrades into the |she had appeared at his side, siléntly, |" Predict Still Higher Prices for Haywood Patterson, Scottsboro boy, they will support their motion with ‘URGE SCOT | SBORO Communist Party office W5| | telegram was received yesterday | “Red Room.” Without mentioning personal matters,’ The price of loose milk has just| a veritable mountain of evidence showing the prejudical character of the jralded and that workers were picked || 900. Cooper, Boston: Daily | While Kurt was telling him in a until he was again called away some- peen raised again in New York City,| Decatur trial. M ARCHIN BS’ on ee gk A ard 28. worker fareementaliese | | vhat ha | oth A | s | lemonstration that had a cit; ba bo Teva . | i few words what had happened, Her- | and retail dealers report that after| at Jeast 20 grounds will be cited by the defense counsel why the lynch | G CLU fale ¥ Per-| | “Please send out 500 subscrip- esta | — | Paul who was sitting silently on a chair. Kurt did not mention his virtual replacement of Paul, but Her- mann knew from Paul's expression. He heard how calmly and pointedly Kurt was speaking. He scarcely rec- ognizéd the cement-heaver, formerly The night had altogether cd finished his report. “Have you spoken to the people on the Wright when he made his now famous| dict. ‘Chis alone, the defense feels, brought to trial, or that in every case | | other districts? street?” Hermann asked. Kurt look- aw ‘MOR statement about “buying Alabama is sufficient to warrant the setting| ZY, committes of | the National’ ing Federal authorities were on hand ! { @d at him in astonishment. Damn | f ." justice with Jew money from New| aside of the verdict. day. : to immediately deport those who hap- | terature sales (especially of the . ho one had thought of that in the Hermann was annoyed. vas the most important thing the few copies of the Rote hich had reached the alléy ffici to inform the mass- it the real situation. Moreover the police had not allowed thé news- boy with the Rote Fahne to pass the control in the morning. But none of us can speak prop- erly.” Kurt attempted to excuse their néglect. Hermann could not help Iquehing as he saw Kurt’s depresesd He remembered what they had fone during the night. But, make a excitement Paice. | | Kurt had finished his report. where. Not once, since the early | morning of May Ist, had shé tried} to keep him back, | tioned the critical moment of yes- | ‘They had never so much as men- | verdict against Patterson should be ¢ | set aside and a new trial granted,| Out of the death verdict against Pat- lit was indicated by the national office | tetson, other issues will also be | of the I.L.D. today. These will in-| Strongly put forward. Among these | clude: exclusion of Negroes from the| Will be a charge which created a lgrand and petit juries prejudice and| Sensation in the courtroom when | terrorization of defense witness and| first made by Attorney Joseph R. defense counsel; prejudical errors! Brodsky—namely, that the jury re- made in the trial; incitement to viol- | ceived and made telephone calls while ence in the summation of Wade “deliberating” on the Patterson ver- forbidden forcing the masses to pay the increasing pricés of bottled milk. Leading capitalist papers, like the Journal of Commerce, predict retail price rises of from 15 to 25 per cent for the next two months. TRY TO FRAME UP York;” and in general that the ver-| dict was against the weight of evid- | 2 ence. In the argument before Judge Hor- Jackson, Mich. Will Present Affidavits |ton, the ILD. lawyers will review pth ich | In support of the motion for a new | the whole lynch atmosphere aes JACKSON, " .| trial, the I.L.D. will present affidavits | prevailed in Decatur during the trial ges of spent? Hi caeeeuees| of defense lawyers, newspapermen | and show that it was impossible to been placed against Ernest Moross | 0d observers at the trial, proving) expect a “fair trial” under these cir- and his wife Kate, militant workers | definitely the charges of prejudice) cumstances. active in Mosherville. and thréats to the we oe Wed boys, | ef the event cor ghee et i s their witnesses and their attorneys. | to grant a hew trial, the defense subtertuge cate moe ected thru a) “While the exclusion of Negroes| proceed with its plans to appeal the charging them with driving with im-| from jury service will be the key) verdict to the Supreme Court of proper license plates. |point in the demand for the throwing | Alabama. Moross and his wife were return- | ~ ing from a meeting in the Workers | Will Describe Terror Use Anti-Red Law in | NationalAction Comm. Gives Next Steps NEW YORK.—Organization of | “Scottsboro Marching Clubs” of those who partook in the recént Free the Scottsboro Boys March to Washing- ton, was recommended by the execu- The Clubs will take active part in pérforming the tasks outlined by the Committee in its fight to save the | nine innocent Scottsboro Negro boys, | and to win democratic rights for the Negro people, it was announced. “It is necessary that there bé or- ganized bodies to carry out these tasks,” the Committee said in its an- nouncement. “It is proper that those who partook in this historic march, | the first mass march to Washington | | on béhalf of the Scottsboro boys and | the Negro people, should be organized | together, and that they should fulfill | | this function.” |fake charge of demonstrating with a Nor was it a mere coincidence that 30 local leaders were arrested on the permit, and although the judge was shown the permit, all of them were sentenced to prison without even be- ing allowed to plead guilty or not guilty, or to defend themselves. It was no accident that those ar- rested on March 4 are suddenly pened not to be citizens. | No, this is the organized manner in | which the Rooseveit-Pinchot govern- ment, in order to put over the new attack upon the living standards of the workers, sees the need of ruth- lessly abrogating the rights that workers are supposed to enjoy under bourgeois democracy. More and more, because of the rising fighting temper of the workers, fascist meth- | ods against them and their fighting organizations are being used. Must Spread Literature. While the state of terror is so} great in Avella that no two persons tion-blank books immediately by | | special delivery. Must have them | | as soon as possible. Our quota | | raised from 500 Saturday subs y | to 1,000. Full roport Inter.” ' | This is the first district that | | has voluntarily set for itself the | task of exceeding the quota sug- gested for it by the National Office. What news from the numerous penny and _ two-cent pamphlets) will lay the foundation for broad organization of the miners, that will be able not only to resist the terror of Sheriff Seaman and his agents among the American Legion and United Mine Workers of America, but also to successfully conduct win- ning strike-struggles for increased wages, increased relief and unem- ployment insurance. It will help to break down the illusion, still strong | among the miners, that Roosevelt and Pinchot are trying to better their conditions. Every unit and all Party members speech? No—théy were too scared! terday, when she had in all proba-| | should the tothe [Bit ave the ite beanie to na O24 One Sond civing slog’ [Tnemployed Struggles Get |, conrsisation in sates and ciuee| st showed to soma on the steel Worker ine te aan or A lttle later the strains of the|She was satisfiéd that he was still | of the Bill of Civil Rights for the| i la |ganizations. There is a mistaken ional” were heard in the Hermann was standing on a wagon and addressing the evening of May 2nd approach- “Nobody knew what the coming pieht. what the next few hours might brin~. e press reports of the po- | alive. Nothing else seemed of any! | importance just now. Why, she did | |not know. Her whole attitude was | | still purely emotional, like that of | | many women in thé alley who had | only been brought to the side of the | | workers by their hatred of the brutal | Police. | Kurt smiled at her, good-humor- | close upon them in their cars and ordered them to halt when they} reached their garage. Refusing to Jeave their machine, the workers) locked’ ‘themselves in, securing the | Results for Workers doors, by. tglik ‘ropes ands Pabeer In the last two years there has been a tremendous number of demon- hose from one door handle to the | strations and struggles of the unemployed. Every attack of the bosses is met one on the opposite side of the car.| With energetic resistance by the workers. Many workers, however, ask: After the troopers twisted the What have we gained by the demonstrations? What are the results of our door handles off and siarted break- | struggles? | Negro peoplé, in the form of city-or- | dinances, and state laws embodying | | the same principles and demands of | rights, was also decided upon by the | committee. Immediate perspectives for action by the committee include the obtain- ing of a million signatures to the petition for the release of the Scotts- | boro boys, addressed to President | threaten and bulldoze the miners, other strikes develop, such as the one at the Isabella mine, while still other | | strikes are in preparation. The weak~ ness in the whole situation is the lack of organization, This, in turn, is due to the weak- the very poor distribution of litera- ture and the lack of a strong work- ness in our agitation and propaganda, | idea among some of the comrades that the Daily Worker is only a Party organ. It is much more. It is the work- ‘ers’ paper! Daily Worker agents and workers’ correspondence should be developed in all the mass organizations. It is only in this manner that the Daily | ~ idium hed = =| “ 5 Mer vresidi' been copied with. |edly. “Come, Anna, let’s go to thé|ing the windows, Moross seized a] Worker circulation will be increased Two hundred and five|ers’ press. The weakness of our | mut criticiem *- ‘“e éntire bourgeois ress. Al > had not been a witness of the « ents in the alley or in Neukolin was bound to conclude after reading thesé reports that Ber- lin was in the midst of a “revolu- tion” and that only the “victorious” advance of the police could stop it. | Thomas nearly choked with laugh- | | Square for a while—just to see what's tire pump and his wife hurled a The capitalist press ridicules these demonstrations. It creates the idea | Roosevelt. | happening there.” | two-quart glass jar, but it missed Kurt was anxious for the kid to | Connections and went crashing to stay at home, but Anna wanted to| the cement floor of the garage. give him a breath of fresh air. Evér| Following a struggle the cossacks | since yesterday morning he had been |succeeded in smashing the doors kept indoors with the other children. | open an” dragged the couple off. | that it's best not to fight against the hunger program of the bosses. | The Down Town Unemployed Councils in New York report that when | their delegates visited the Workers’ Committee on Unemployment a mem- | ber of that Central Committee asked: “What good are demonstrations?” | The DAILY WORKER is printing reports of past demonstrations held in many parts of the country and the gains made. There is no doubt that Tt was already dusk. Here and | Mrs. Moross resisted so vigorously,| workers would not have a means to live without having carried on these | thousand signatures were presented , to the president by the marchers. The campaign for the passagé of | these laws, as well as for the federal | bill presented to the president and congress by the marchers will be built around the slogan of “Mass Vio- lation of Jim Crow Laws” it was de- Party, the National Miners Union, and the narrow scope of the united front cannot be separated from our backwardness in spreading literature and in developing a broad circulation of the Mine Worker and the Daily Worker. Poor ideological prepara- tions and inadequate propaganda, are in our district. The comrades in the Pittsburgh district did very well in the Daily Worker financial driye, almost doub- ling their quota, with equal spirit, the same thing can be accomplished in the present circulation drive. Set | Tealizable quotas and organize a real drive in connection with the develop- ter when someone gave him a copy ‘ however, that they were forced 10 | struggies. cided. forerunners of weak organizational : of he Vorwarts in the “Red Night- | ir tiie nee Gisele ao | pick her off the floor and carry her ee ee | It will include canvassing of all | preparation. thent of local struggles, and there is ingale’ which wrote that the Com-| the police bullet had shattered a |W the police maching, July 12, 19%2—Demonsiration of July 2%, 199%—In Toledo, Ohio| TPresentatives and senators in Con-| ‘This state of affairs makes it im-| Gitnet will go over the tog wenn Mimists from their positions on the | cask of ofl and its contents had run| Workers of Jackson are indignant 3,909 leq by Unemployed Councils in| workers led by the Unemployed | t¢S: ® well 96 local and state leg-| possible for the workers to resist ter- | \ eB AR Se roots. etc. “had shot 14 carbines to ibits in the very hands of the police without even so much as ® scratch to a single policeman.” “By Jingo . that’s what you call a perféct aim! We're all of us prize sharp- shooters,” he called out laughingly. It seemed as if the police intended ‘to fortify their courage with thése jliés, they had to magnify, distort, misreyNesent everything. How else would anyone in Berlin have believéd that in two small, rigorously sur- rounded areas, in Neukolin and in the alley in Wedding, a mere hand- ful of workers armed with the most primitive weapons had been defend- ing their streets and houses for thirty-six hours against about 14,000 policemen with the most up-to-date equipment, Including heavy machine- guns, hand-grenades and armoured | cars? Hermann had énergetically contra- dicted Kurt's contention that they in the alley, isolated as they were, should never have taken up the fight in this way. Certainly thé alley was poorly situated from the strategic point of view, that Hermann had to admit. It was too easily cut off. But, he said, fights of this kind would al- ways develop first in localized slums Police Expose Compels lover the other foodstuffs, ruining | them. Even from the street, Kurt and Anna could hear the excited | argument as to who would pay dam- {ages. It was a heavy loss for small | shopkeepers living from hand to | mouth. | | The big stores in the Reinicken- | dorfer-strasse were néarly all closed | | or had their iron blinds down. Hun- | dreds of people, among whom Kurt | | recognized many Social Democratic | workers, were standing on the Net- | télbeckplatz. Two women were sit- | ting on a bench near the tram shop. | Kurt heard in passing that one of | them belonged to the S.P.D.; later he was informed that they were strik- ing workers from thé Manoli tobacco works. From the peaceful aspect of the square one might almost conclude | that no further dangers were threat- ening. But listening hére and there | to the conversation of the people Kurt realized that they were in a state of great fury and indignation which on the slightest provocation | would break out into an uncontrol- lable storm. | (Continaed Tomorrow) Canadian WorkersBack Court to Free Worker Fight for Tom Mooney LOB ANGELES.—Larty Colliers, a and Scottsboro Boys at the brutal frame-up against these militants and announce they will) fill the courtroom when their trial | is called on May 19. | MARX'S CLASSIC ON PARIS COM-| MUNE CONTINUES NEW | RXIAN SERIES With the Civil War in France, by| Karl Marx, just issued, International | Publishers continues the series of) Marxian classics which when com-| pleted will contain the principal works of Marx and Engels, in revised! and new translations, some of which| have not yet appeared in English. This work, which is one of the most brilliant historical essays ever written, | was read by Karl Marx before the! General Council of the International Workingmen’s Association (First In- ternational) just a few days after the bloody suppression of the Paris | Commune by the combined French and German armies. It has become an outstanding classic of Marxian lit- | erature. | Chicago. Result: Several thousand | Councils force county and city auth- sacks of flour held previously by the’ orities to appropriate $26,000 for re- Federal Farm Board were distributed. | —Daily Worker News. had been withdrawn.—Daily Worker July 29, 1932.—Some 800 marchers news, in Indiana placed demands before the) August 30, 1932—East Bronx Un- state legislature. The Indianapolis| employed Council forces City Relief Times reports, “motions which fol-| Bureau to give an unemployed worker lowed a proposal to appropriate funds | rent check after it had refused it to news. | news. Slanderous Attack by -|Commissioners Reject Renegades Condemned! Demands of Toilers by Yugoslav Club in Aberdeen, S. D. NEW YORK.—At the meeting of ABERDEEN, S. D.—The demands the Yugoslav Workers Club held on/| of the unemployed workers aud farm~- April 20th = resblution was adopted ers for increased relief were rejected by_the county commissioners. condemning the slander of the Love-| The united front committee of | stoneites against the club. An article) Unemployed Councils of Aberdeen ‘in the Lovestone sheet appeared on| 8nd the farmers of Brown County | April 15 under the heading “Gang-| demanded from the commission: Cash sterism in the Yugoslay Workers for all R. F. C. work at 30c an hour |Chub.” It was signed “a Yoguslay | minimum, beige! 30 hours a week | worker,” but it is clear that it was) (Or ® family of F and ineresses sc- | written by the renegade Gauchin,| CPding to size of family. They also asked that the Red Cross supply lief for unemployed after the relief! for the needy idle."—N. Y. Times) the worker previously.—Daily Worker ie | islators, and the exposure of all those | \ror. The workers see the same lies opposed to the Bill of Civil Rights. | published in all capitalist papers, | and unless we build our own workers’ | press where the workers’ side can be told, and the Datly Worker and the Mine Worker utilized as ‘Over 100 Victims in | Charlotte, N. C. Terror 'WaveAgainst Negroes By a Worker Correspondent | CHARLOTTE, N. C.—About a ‘month ago a street car motormen was killed in a hold-up, There were ; Ro Witnesses to the crime but the law claimed, that three Negroes did it. | Forty-five minutes after the first | killing another motorman shot and killed a young Negro worker Wint- \fred, who was on his way to work. | A week later another hold-up took | place in town and this time a Greek cafe owner was killed. Again there | was no witnesses and again “the law” fighting sentiment among miners in- | to militant, organized struggles. “Daily” Combats Lies. |conducted by the Daily Worker for | 5,000 new yearly subs and 10,000 new | subs for the special Saturday edition Party Life On Distribution of organizers, we will not be able to weld the strong | The circulation drive now being | campaign as it did in the last cne. | = The Daily Worker is arranging to | send a comrade on a western tour | of the country in connection with | the present circulation drive. For this purpose we are very urgently in need of a car. We request any comrade who would be willing to aid our circulation drive by con- tributing a car to immediately com- municate with the Business Office; | Daily Worker, 50 East 13th Street, | New York City. | |said that Negroes did it. Big dick Gumshoe Littlejohn, chief of the de- _ tectives, knows all about it, he says) jqthhh, Keep qulet, Tim closing in of |. Daity Worker from the Agit-Prop | the killer, | | department of the New York District In the meantime ever since the of the Comminist Patty, first killing gumshoe Littlejohn’s cops | Daily Workex, Literature in Parade The following leiier was sent to, This edition is a specially enlarged Half of the article is devoted to lying one. It contains the famous 1891 pre-| Statements. | should be no discrimination in relief a ph ¥ptus — ie vale ies big ee ENCtc is bein at; | distribution, sé] as become 3 Marxian classic. To| tempt o’ ese renegades to slander rs 7 this has been added still another) the leaders of the Communist Party | ab Re eee is classic—Lenin’s speech on The Les-/ and especially comrade C. Hathaway. | gaining relief incresses, payment of sons of the Comme in which he) It tells these enemies that: “we wish rent and unity of workers with the demonstrated the historic meaning of | to inform the Lovestoneites that our! farmers. the first working class government | Clyb did not have nor will have any tor the present movement and point-| other political leader but the Com-j| flour, clothing and shoes, And there Have you approached your tel- ‘are riding wild all over town picking | “up Negroes off the streets, taking Dear Comrade: them down to the police station, | jbeating the hell out of them, put- | ting them in the line-up and after holding them four or five days turn- ling them loose. I know a Negro worker who was In the May 16th edition of the! Daily Worker there appeared a let- ter signed S. R. on the Anti-Fascist | parade held last Wednesday. Thé | worker in this letter raised the ques- ‘tion that a shorizoming noiicable at AR in in he i Bo MEMORIES of LENIN By His Wife and Co-Worker for Thirty Years Cee eee eoet Te eroe the parade was tie absence of any N. K, KRUPSKAYA |up anybody for the killing of the | motorman. leafléts stating the C. P.’s rosition on | Fascism being distributed along the young worker arrested in the May | aa ed out the mistakes which the Com-) munis Party. low worker in your shop with \line of mare! | TORONTO, Can. (By Mail).—The | munards had made and which partly; poet pt) ny a “So far over1G0 Negroes have been | line o h. Day demonstration at Brooklyn and | demand for the release of Tom Moo. led to their defeat, Tt was by his| Sey ees the Dally?” Ut not, do s0 | icxed up like this and bea This is net so. ‘The New Yoris Dis- Cornwall Sts, was released when charges of Yagrancy against him were | i Colliers was exposing the police ney and the Scottsboro boys were key | issues at all May Day demonstrations | throughout Canada, and workérs | throughout the Dominion joined in the international protest against the | TODAY! grasp of the lessons of the Commune and the Marxist teachings on the’ state that the Bolsheviks were able Boy; Say He Bantered to avoid the repetition of similar mis- takes during the Russian Revolution. With Youn g White Girl Letters from up. |Some have been beaten up right on ‘the street, Only last Saturday night ,en Second and Brevard Sts. a Negro worker was benten and had his head /eracked and left lying in the gutter ‘triet of the Communist Party issucd end distributed at the parade 40,000 “leaflets stating the Party's position on Fascism and Anti-Semitic attacks egginst the Jéws in Germany. We desire you to announce this «2 VOLUMES) AND Daily, Worker for a whole year $ 7:00 frame- prt . |frame-up trial of | “The International edition of Civil’ —— [oe ‘ Pee teat. ts sition qaigts | "The “Toronto Mass Conference to | War also contains the two mani-| GREENVILLE, Ale, May 17. — by two rural cope + gavaction im the next issue of tne | BOTH for ‘WAS | Stop the Frame-up Against Tim | festoes on the Franco-Prussian War While denying reports that a young, | I ‘Daily Worker. Yoreed, in order to cut short his ex-| Buck” sent the following wire to the Of, 1870-71 which were written by Negro boy was Imnched near Georg- Our Readers New Trial Hearing for Comadely yours ‘posure, stop dismiss | “Free Ti Mc ae | Marx an ressed “To em-|iana last Sunday night, the sheriff's \ istrict iS TORONTO MARS COMEORENCE | DTS Of the Intemational Working-| office today adinitted that the lad ene HerndonSet forMay 27 District Agitprop Dept. | rear out this blank and mail the case. ‘The trials of the other eight work- ers arrested at the May Day demon- stration are to come before court on They are Lawrence Ross, Paul Stern, Max Shone, Joseph Toth, A. Cohen, Sol Fisher, Sam Davis and Daniel Seigel. men’s Association in Europe and in| had been viciously beaten for “insult-.| the United States, | ing a white girl”. TARIAN GREETINGS TO TOM|,, THis is the most complete edition) This is the story as told by one, MOONEY CONGRESS STOP WE|% this classle yet published in | of the sheriff's deputies: : PLEDGE SOLIDARITY AND AC-| aes ands tested 3h Par | rnere’s nothing to St: TIVE | phlet (25 cents) as well as in cloth-| A little | AGAINST “TERROR ‘PRAME-UE Pound, Martst Library editions ($1). white girl about 17 saw a Negro boy | The Communist Manifesto (10 cents) | Walking along with a Negro girl. TO STOP FRAME-UP ON TIM) BUCK SENDS WARMEST PROLE- | “Daily” Only Paper for Rank and File Dear Comrade: I have been reading the Daily | Worker for a period of two years. | bare ee ton the ee ATLANTA, Ga., May 17.—Hearing ‘hat 40,009 lea were prin’ for ‘on @ motion for a ares trial for An-| the occasion, the fact that a worker gelo Herndon has been set for May, writes in to say that he saw no dis- 27, it was announced today. The mo-| tribution of any leaflets shows that tion will be argued by Benjamin J./ there must have been some weakness Davis, Jr., and John H, Geer, Negro in the organization of thé distribu- attorneys for the International Lal | sion, DAILY WORKER ‘5@ Eas 18th Street, New tol Melons $7 for the DAILY WORKER: for » your and tha t umes, MEM~ Outs OF LENIN. Plecas vend ‘them tet tiv Scan aoonear Signed) NG | 8nd Wage-Labor and Capital (10) “She said, “Is that your girl?” And Comparing it with other radical pub-| Defense, assisted by Ansel Morrison, | Name For decade past the his- ‘r siMons, | fents) “have slready been published the Negro boy sald, ‘No, you're my! flentions, I find it to be the only’ young white attorney of Atlanta. | “THE LONGSHOREMEN” ra And commerce tk | Crectings to the Congress were also isned. soon indie The CriUgue ert aier the gil wld her father (Me, AME and file, and es a reeule| court dudge ‘Lee B. Wyatt, original | ISSUED ON DOCKS | ‘pnests ——————————— history ’ e Toronto triet of the mms | #f 1 bay er = udge. ia: parker modern productive forces against Canadian Labor Defense Leavie. Fenerkashs canna “Revolution and | 220ut Poe a ae dn abba out | Sided to Sakchis eae ce the feewd eran tote Plan ates NEW YORK.—‘“Longshoremen,”) °M¥ + RRR ONTTC ATS modern conditions of production, | which is conducting a fisht to free Counter-Revolution, The Origin. of /22% Whipped him. That's all there Commun I don't mean #01 phate . ‘fous-pared mimeographad — bulletin | — the (any diego that ae eight leaders of the Canadian! the Family, etc, Obicinable at all ee to it : be @ mer —but to be an ae-| Protests should be sent to him sro jas Misce ils appcazcnce cn the docks STATE . as Bie omnitions fo the existe nee ommunist Party now jailed, and the | workers’ bockshops or direct from) The deputy said be did not knew ‘ive worker of the Party, of Fulton County Court, Atlante, Ga..| bare. cn is issued by a Ma Ddentauntes dant foate, other vietims of boss terror in Can- | tntexne, al Publishers. 381 Fourth the names of the girl or of the Ne Comradely, (demanding the immediate, uncondi-! »voup of ta f fie members of w>¥rww we i Be at P hive ) Avenue, New York. } 8rO boy, W. Y. B, | tional release of Herndon. |the Longshorenien’s Association. ‘