The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 21, 1933, Page 6

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SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Mail everywhere: One year, $6, six months, $3.50; 3 months, $2; 1 month, 7a “excepting Borough of Manhattan and Bronx, New York City. Foreign and Canada: One year, $9; 6 months, $5; 3. months, $3. PadWeliel By Be Comprodally Publishing Co., tne., daitr except Sanday, ot MB 2th Bt, New York City, N. ¥. Telephone Algonquin 4-795, Cable “DAIWORK.” A@dress and mefl chacks to the Dally Worker, 50 E. 13th St, New York, N. Page Six SEPTEMBER 21, 1933 Dail Hull Th W hat aa ‘World aa ——By Michael Gold—— Militant Strikes Spreading Thruout Interior of Cuba reatens War on Cuba; — “THE BAR OF NAZI JUSTICE” Demand “Hands Off Cub a” Elect Delegates to Anti-War Congress i a a r | Milwaukee Plans Mass Meet; Unions Urged 3 i 5 iad . aby Sr ER : ns ‘ eee ce , Listening to the Radio. | San Martin Government Decrees ; ou Day; to Send Delegates to Anti-War Congress Yes, it’s sometimes tough to be a Fe : j 7 of | S - “es Red, especially on a rainy blue after- Workers Continue Seizure ARES | As the U. 8. Cor Against War, to be held in New York. on Sept. 29, stb s im ae Pee ‘i | approaches, rj e of additional elections of delegates. Trade uni Biiay ratio rte Smeaton in-| WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—Evidence that plans are belo Inia for tm- “qed det poles i base) siege toe Done rise vention was intended to comfort,| niinent landing of U. S. marines on Cuban soil ts indicated by an announce- | selection of accredited representatives to the congress. ; soothe, and heal the ruffled Amer- | ment released by the U. S. State Department, Bringing forth the usual ex- | ntatives to the ican soul. But outside of an occa- | cuse that “Americans are fearing for their lives,” and that disease is spread~ | 2 Delegates from Hartford. | at the United States Congress Against sional fine symphony program, Or] ing thronghout the island, the department said that they were “fleeing to | HARTFORD, Conn,, Sept. 20.—The | War whose three day session will some glorious singer of Ttalian oper, | tne y. s. warships for protection.” @—— . ——| Association of Lithuanian Workers, |open on Friday.Sept. 20, at Mecca like Nino Martini, (that ee At the same time Secretary of | routh Branch No, 243, has just | Temple and in St, Nicholas Arena, who started in life as a Russian Jew.) state Hull made veiled threats 7 M a three delegates to: the Anti- fessor Goldshmidt taught eco- and woke up pne morning to find) not only to land U. S. marines and Demonstrations mn Consress, to be held in New| nomics at the:Untversity. of Leipsig himself a radid ftalian)—and except | sailors on Cuban soil, but to use the Demand the im- York scon. e| | and lectured on“the same ‘subject in for Judge Rutherford’s watchtower! in Cuban waters against the Cuban | V sity . * * universities in. Cordova, Spain, Mexieo sermons against the Devil who is) masses, N, y, Satur ay Wil) Haverhill Elects City and Buenos Aires. ruling in eee ies ie oh Seg ne” | HAVERHILL, release addres ene Sarees Nal churches, I find little to amus e y ie i @ supplement @ re] whic! in the radio. | Ure ere ee Back Cuba Struggle: a the com-|a special coniimission will deliver to In fact, the radio generally makes! U. S. workers! < me sore. Sometimes I will turn it| on at breakfast while the toast is/ burning and the coffee pot is spilling over and everything is all wrong. qT want to hear romantic music. I want to know that the world has hidden | beauties. I want to forget burned toast and NIRA. But what comes! mediate withdrawal of the warships and marines of American imperialism from Havana! Demand hands off Cuba! Hold meetings and demonstra- tions and send protest telegrams and resolutions to the U. S. State De- partment and to President Roosevelt | |Chicago Workers Plan Solidarity Meet Sept. 27 NEW YORK.—Mobilizing the New and has to the U. vhich cony2n2s the Congress 0n Fascism in Europe, Other Speakers With Professor Goldshmidt will ap- pear Henri Barbusse, noted French author and world. war veteran who | will arrive here.on the 8.8. Beren- ‘a on Sept, 29, marking his first. to the United States; Harriet eg rea 29, will be held/ stanton Blatch, leading femininist over the ether? The sloppy, gooey! HAVANA, Sept. 20.—With a wave | York workers in support of the Cu- , Sept. 22.| and outspoken. pacifist; Earl Brow- voice of Princess Kropotkin, the} of strikes spreading throughout the | an masses and for immediate with- led by the der, General Secretary of °the Com- white guard. Her father was a great| interior of Guba the Grau San |drawal of all U. S, warships from Committee for the anarchist, and she lives in America, and the Czar and his court and all their titles are long since buried with the rest of the garbage of history, but she, this lady who writes every Martin government—seeking to mol- lify the workers — has decreed the eight-hour day, effective thirty days hence. Cuba, the Anti-Imperialist League, together with the Communist Party, the Young Communist League and other working class organizations will carry through a series of mass rallies Against War and will onservatory Hall, 756 No. e St. Fifteen organizations 2 the city committee. the meeting will in- Milwaui comp munist Party, U. S. A.; A. J, Muste, of the Conference for Progressive Labor Action; Devere Allen, Socialist leader and editof of the Wotld To- mfrow, and others. ‘sat pete week for McFadden’s smut-sheet, The latest strike to break out is at| this Saturday night throughout the k E. Beaker, president of Housing "Need Liberty, why, friends, she’s still a|the Bethlehem Iron Mines, near | city 2 State Normal School; Housing fortis . 2,000”. delegates Princess. And I have to listen to| Santiago, where 2,000 workers have These rallies will be preceded by stor of the People’s ¥ Ba this phoney Princess on the radio, prattling on so knowingly about the new dress, and how to fry onions so they will look and taste like caviar, and the like. The hell with radio! Sat ae A Rainy Afternoon. Or take today. ‘Ibs been rainy, gloomy, and a tropical hurricane is on the war-path. My room is cold. Despite Dr. Luttingers advice, which I read and follow faithfully, I have a belly-ache. I have many other splendid aches I could disclose to that wonderful Doctor who kids his pa~- tients and makes them like it, but today it has merely been the stomach. | Anyway, cold, sick, affected by ‘the damp weather, oppressed by the fact that a tooth needs filling, wondering where I can borrow the rent—all the small and large sorrows of the hu- man race heavy upon me—in short feeling just like a buterfily lost in the rain (I believe that is the first line of a popular jazz song) I turned! on my radio. | Again I wanted healing, and what came thrqugh? The whining fiddles and twanging voices of a bunch of phony hill-billy singers. ‘They are supposed to be some kind of southern} walked out. The strikers, according to Teports received here, have sur- rounded the extensive properties and are carrying on energetic , picketing activities, Using the demagogic argument that strike “violence” would precipi- tate the landing of U. S. marines, the Cuban government has ordered troops to “deal firmly” with strikers throughout the interior. Yesterday, rural guards and soldiers at Manza- nillo, seeking to disperse wounded several girls. Drive Against Rebels Ineffective. Meanwhile the government's cam- paign against the rebel bands, led by Captain Blas Hernandez, of General Carlos Mendieta, who represents some of the most openly reactionary elements in Cuba, re- mained unsuccessful. There is wide- spread feeling that U. S. Ambassador Welles is giving encouragement to the rebels as a form of “internal in- tervention” aimed at the present regime. In the Oriente Province at least 15 sugar mills, some of them Amer- ican-owned, are said to be in the hands of the workers. Thus far no serious attempt has been made by the government to oust the workers, but strikers, } supporter , scores of open-air meetings which at |@ given time will march to the cen- tral point in their neighborhood. All other workers’ organizations are asked to arrange similar open air | meetings for this Saturday night. The following should be done im- mediately by all those planning to hold such meetings: 1. Inform at once the office of the Anti-Imperialist League, 90 E. 10th St. on what corner meetings will be held 2. Issue a leaflet in preparation for this meeting. Prepare some pla- cards for the meeting. Do not for- get to have a supply of torch lights, 3. Get a supply of literature, in- cluding the Daily Worker, the only English daily paper supporting the struggle of the Cuban masses. A pamphlet on Cuba which is just off the press should be widely distributed. “Upsurge,” official organ of the Anti- Imperialist League, a special Cuban issue, can be secured at the New York office of the Anti-Imperialist League. Chicago Protest on 27th. CHICAGO, Sept. 20—Workers in Chicago will demonstrate their soli- darity with the Cuban workers at a mass rally on Wednesday, Sept. 27, Brownsville Women Pledge to Fight Against High Costs. Planned* for Other Localities in City NEW YORK.—‘We will fight against exorbitant prices on food and clothing,” declared the resolu- tion adopted by. 116 delegates at the Conference -Against the High Cost of Living: initiated by the Brownsville United*Women’s Coun- cil Sunday at the Hoffman’s Manor, This conferenée is the answer to the rapidly rising bread and food prices and the wholesale destruc- Open Moscow Subway on Anniversary of Russian Revolution MOSCOW, U.S.S.R.—Progress on the New Moscow subway system has | been so rapid that the first section will be opened for use on November 7, the 17th anniversary of the Bolshe- vik. revolution. | Twenty-five thousand workers are engaged in the work at present and 23 shafts have been sunk so far. By next March it is estimated that the number of workers will be increased to 65,000. Completed, the subway will extend over 60 miles. The Komsomols (Young Commu- nist League members) have taken an active part in the construction of this subway, Soviet Balloon to Try Stratosphere Flight. First Signal Girne! Told to ‘Stand By’) for Action in Cuba! Letter to the “Daily” | Tells of Orders Just Issued By a Worker Correspondent NEW YORK.—The First Signal Corps, stationed at Fort Monrfouth, has been ordered to stand by for a “voyage, between Sept. 15 and April 15,” according to company orders posted last Thursday. The men were issued full field equipment, including helmets, gas masks, and telephone and wire-laying equipment. This outfit will be required for troop operations in Cuba, as the Marine Corps has no outtit for main- {Iections and donations at the meet- | States as one of the main speakers Lutie Stearns, ident of the Wonien's International League for Peace and | and Morris Childs, district er of the Communist Party 18. ‘kers’ organizations are asked to be prepared to turn in their col- ing in order to defray the exvenses of the delegates to’the congress, ~At least 15 delegates will come to the Cong-c3s from Baltimore, accord- ing to a wire received by the Con- gress Arrangements Committee yes- ter The Bakers Union A. FP, of L. elected 2 delegates, an equal num- ber was elected by the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America of that city. The Marine Workers Indus- j trial Union, Unemployed Councils, Unemployed Leagues. and other workers’ organizations in Baltimore are also’ sending delegations. NEW YORK.—Exiled from Ger- many by the Nazis, Alfons Gold- shmidt, one of Germany's foremosi University professors, will make his first mass appearance in the United STRUGGLE AGAINST coming to the Congress from all sec- tions of the country is badly needed, | Donald Henderson, Secretary of the Congress, issued an ‘t- appeal yesterday to all who can offer lodg-' ing-hospitality to delegates to report so at once to the U. SS Against War, Room 110, 10 Fifth Ave., New York City, Tel. nh 4- 7514, Registration Monday Starting this Monday, Sept. 25, all delegates already in New York and those that are coming are asked to register personally at Room 1610, 104 Fifth Ave. SEVENTH ANNUAL ® Daily Worker @ Morning Freibeit @ Young Worker BAZAAR Madison Square Garden mountaineers, and there are regi-| 7) t 7:30 Tr tion of wheat, hogs and cotton by USSR. taining land communications. 2: *y & - igh government officials declare |4t 7:30 p. m. at Temple Hall, Van . 9 MOSCOW, U.S.S.R.—The balloon ments of them everywhere. You can't] that the army would soon be ordered | Buren and Marshfield Streets. the government. Fifty organizs-| «yggR” will attempt a flight into the Seen ea PROVOCATION Friday, Saturday, Sunday tune in anymore without getting] out to force the return of the prop-| All working class organizations are | tions and 52 house and block com-| stratosphere this morning, if the By a Worker Correspondent ef them in your hair and ears. Who, I! erties, called upon to mobilize for this dem- | mittes were present, representing| meterological reports are favorable,, NEW YORK.— Tropical uniforms ’ * October 6, 7; 8 Wonder is Teft to do the singing in Mots Biptay: Toon: onstration and send protest. reeolu-|2,896 workers [iE Was Teported today, ‘The Soviet | have been issued to the First Division Workers’ Enemies iB @ southern mountains if al ‘ions to sident Roosevelt ani le~ ie main report iter | Of the U. S. Army, und last week a ; In addition to the strike of th Pp was presen flight will attempt to exceed the re hill-billies have come north and gone| 99 mine workers at Daquirl, near |STMs of greetings to the Cuban work-| by Organizer Lift, from the Cen-| record sent by Auguste Piccard whe | regiments had a general field inspec- Exposed RED PRESS BAZAAR radio? Then I remember, my old pall Santiago, there is an effective walk. | AR tral Committee of the Council who| ascended 10 miles 117 yards above| tion faa Sed a strength of] SIDNEY GREENE, of Philadelphia, fos’ the tence oh tink hale eee lazy Lolstarb, who used to sing i out at the Preston Sugar Mill, owned Pian Delegation to Cuba. brought forward the successes| the earth on August 18. the "hind Core Anne nna. mostly In| Pa.; whose photograph appears here- (ll ientteg Senate rene weiner onl Vaudeville is now with a hill-billy| by the American United Fruit Com- now making mperialist | League i8| achieved in the Coney Island bread| ‘The “USSR” which is 118 feet in| tei. Maryland andthe District, of pri, Fas been exposed and expelled day, etoher 6, Fe8, at the’ MAIN ples [shes Med ieee pany. Strikes are also expected rk dolagstich poy Hecuent Pog strike last winter and proposed a diameter and has a capacity of 25,- Columbia. It includes the 16th. 2 ees Communist League of | SF pistes ee er G0 T switched the dials and got alpeint ef the Doct ie a eeune | Guba to investigute Yorkers’ sends | demonstration to be held in front] 000 cubic metets was attended yes-| tein agth and gah Tatantey font pf pera ng ae penens Peliaay sane = winny box cccabes,, Tl owned by tie Deed ele Gor | dons there andl expos anearnbmeen | cf the Sheltiddaama snornenr adie Bem te aalee Ge ae a Pecks oe le varia arte PCN vast part of July, sidney || Three Great Days ~ me js ‘ if 5 a H ¢ could just see the fat round foolish} the Communist Party and the a at aud es caleeaion ay plants. i : __ | built secretly in Moscow. ot te Tee Geecatcnt Pepin eat Be et y Greene, together with his brother of, rare entertainment and bar- face wide-open like a letter box, the} Young Communist League of Cuba, Sica eateries ee ries oe In the discussion following this] The chief pilot of the ascent will signal outfit. é Albert, robbed two families of various cecest tralacinespeibettae ‘in the buttons on his vest palpitating, the| meanwhile are continuing active agi- cranasstiog tes pnd a Gelega. | 7¢POTt» @ worker from Powell St.,| be George Prokokiev who will be as-| ‘This is evidently a preparation for | S0045-4nd ran away in an automobile history of the Red Press. fatuous eyes lifted to the ceiling like] tation, boldly calling for an energetic | tne ‘Anti-Tmperialist Leagis. a Liebedus, showed the staggering| sisted by Ernest Birnbaum and a military occupation of Cuba. : f | oe i vas ( 5 ; S \a i I s © l okkant ‘ . | Worker by rising prices. Breath] stay for ours although the ‘ j Editor, Daily Worker and , was gurgling baby-talk. This Broad. |munist influence, $s discernable in| Tots about’ the confercues aind. tne} With indignation he shooted for| Sut? is equlpped for a 40 hour night, (Denied Compensation, I] Moissaye 4. Qlein, Wety Dessis: thie aeaaty. Ghamate, {iron tHe intaricn delegation will be announced in the| action. Mabel Brown, a Negro ay eee Onesteataty will watch| Vet Commits Suicide Editor, Morning Prehelt, rit: greet fais ebb: of vaudeville ‘dung, this press in a few days. We urge all or-| member of the Jamaica Women’s| “© ugh a huge telescope. sii ‘ the opening of the Bazaar, Friday H 8 ‘ ee od fee ganizations and individuals who are | Council pointed out, “we don’t CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — An unem- evening, October 6th. ee ee crowning ae | eae ean h T hear | interested in sending such a delega-| want to just sit and wait and wait | rene ree HANGS HIMSELF | employed veteran, Francis A. Blaire, efter e Meio hict Gree cop com to. |rom Brocgiyn, Mee cae tak | Hon to Cubs. to get in docmatimmes| Wan, co due Stone. walt) and wa AFTER RELIEF CUT OFF — | 36, committed suicide by jumping off |} An International ‘ > Saal bn Thad paid twelve hard-| the depression. Not” at all. ‘Tumn| {Stel with the Anti-Tmperialist The. : Tact meee pen hci Sr Ps Pepa Be |]} Chorus of:1000 dio for which I had paid twelve hard-| shanties 4 . mm} League, 90 E. 10th St. Program adotped by the] ARNOLD, Pa—After warning his| the Cambridge side of the Charles earned dollars. The hell with this;the dial, Another jazz band in conference included a fight for th 3 voices under the direction of the owas inbulling me! Bo Z| Washington; DG), ty As: alan “olay-l-runeRcui é fiscs a fight for the| wife that he would commit suicide| River. well - known proletarian. composer, person ee bla are e. ine, Lame Bones # Gil Geers 2 aE, eERraaae DEATHS FROM | following demands: increased re-| if they were not put back on the re-| When informed of her son’s death J. Schaeffer, will perform the first twisted the dials again! Ie te, eee ane ee wea TREAE ae pa oN ak lief and wages, rent payments on| lief, Bruno Bank, 47, hung himself in| the mother stated that Francis had! | Pine et tas ae Walsh “Lazy Sanne? again, played again . time by the Home Reief Bureau,|@ garage. For five weeks Bank with | been refused compensation as he | Pies * - Father Walsh. by’a dull, vapid; -watzanemative plod-|, AUSTIN, Tex—Diseases result-|no evictions, Unemployment Insur-| is wife and 4-year-old adopted| could not establish injuries whil? ‘fA Fascinating ss But what followed was something! ding routineer outfit of weary|ité from malnutrition and star-| ance at the expense of the state and child; aad been cut off trom reliet. | serving. with, the 2zind Infantry, in I] Children’s Spectacle = ip ‘worse, 9 we rates eamtnd | whoopee-makers and jazz-morons| Vation according to a hospital re-| bosses, no sales tax, no interest loyed the sr est eee fan 0 bse | abide ire Papacy As Walsh, the Jesu - sf somewhere in Newark, N. J. To hell| Port, include pellagra, tuberculo- | payments to bankers, and an action | Oye St if din SIDNEY GREENE piyctaatonsl: 0: exge Order had been invited by the National|Scnennere in Newark, N. J. sis, and rickets in addition to eon-| committee of nine for the -con-| he walked 14 miles every day seater, | 8 Crees mtyace sean baal arden America, wil be held’ Bungay a 4 . * ‘ 2 miles e' = erica, will be hel ’ Grease: to talk against the Soviet What Is the Answer? tagious diseases such as typhoid. | tinuance of the conference. ng deuivienly. for works Reatenc | 3 DaRan bundle order) neionging to the Communist Party.|f] (iscon ociaber bine ee ete, Union, this being his specialty, the Bo Hi goes © Wil need a el ing for work. im 5. a job God put him on earth for. The National Grange is supposed to be a farmers’ union, but it is really con- apple to anybody who can tell the difference between two jazz-bands for Saturday! During his membership in the 'Y. C. L. Sidney Greene was active in the Labor Sports Union, where it has been found that he had carried on A Grand Dance Spectacle GIVEN BY ALb THE WORKERS’ “ . . . oye . DANCE Gi IN NEW YORK. trolled by a gang of usurers and) Ver the radio after half an hour of D h S R R t I ’ l l t anti-workingclass activities. neg : eaeke' , who live on the poor| ‘ial twisting. I will award a pair anis eamen eject (4 ormis n U la tons Description: Age, 23 years; height, And a Siar an apostle uman By HAYS JONES ; >, Y pounds; hair, 4 brotherhood, a friend of the lowly |20 minutes. 23-of 29 Delegates Vi nity With ‘A ‘ _|teeth, which in the front are slightly |] Costume Ball- . and oppressed, but he is just as|. I hereby offer a second-hand truss{ Electing 23 of the 29 delegates to gates ote U: wy Inter: hagen. The'l.T.F. leaders of the Lat, phony as the leaders of the Grange —he is really a professional liar and the Cope! en local, and put him/ should be sold to any Negroes for a ee te bay n is unskilled, he isn’ as fancy a liar dered a referendum vote on the ques-| ers in their places. and two strikes still continue), the| in charge of nt. Therefore the ranged by the Unemployed ON THE LAST EVENING OF | as Isaac Don Levine, for instance, tt bi oe eat helo tion of withdrawing from the LTF.} The victory was the result of sys-| tactics of the I.8.H,. have been old. Ciaccintation A against revolution- fa aa He has ved himself aig WIL te A or Will Durant. ars do their dirty work, let him call | °P¢,*@llating with the International] tematic daily work on the economic| brought into the foreground and the| ary workers in shipping out is ended.| irresponsible in financial matters’ in ber ey Personally I am sok of him and} at this office and I will gladly give | %,S¢amen and Harborworkers. field. Every ‘ship entering port was| international solidarity of the IS.H.| One of the chief weapons of the I.| that he has misused the funds of the Wit,” 0. Steep, NO,OFFER all these professional -Sovieteers, sive | ‘This victory was the culmination 8.H. group in their struggle for the; Unemployed Council. sie Ce ae, When one of them ever lifts a little|ivy kept for such pecasaeeie of a long striggle against the re-| struggle found the LS.H. members| F. officials, who forbade soliderity! Danish Firemen’s Union was their ~ —_— Adm ~ . be 38 cents on Pri- for humanity, or says a word} So what? What can it all mean? | {0r™mst leaders who have betrayed) leading the fight of the rank and| strikes by longshoremen in almost paper, the “Red Course,” of which aes plus literature fimd for the American unemployed, I will] The radio is the most powerful wea- | ‘He Workers on all front. The re-| file, for better wages, for enforoe-| every port where the ITF. unions| 5.000 were cireuiated among the Dan. Y. Conta, Oh Batten ne listen to him, maybe. Bute when|pon of capitalist propaganda yet de- sult of the congress means that a| ment of the wage scales and work-| conirol the Jongshoremen, ish marine workers monthly. The BUFFALO, N. Y. Ucket ndmaisston’ will bei at they get sobby and humanitarian | vised. It is supposed to be the best reformist union which for 35 years| ing conditions, in Support of crews} The I.S.H. program of international about Soviet Russia, and want the poor, dear Czar restored, I just can’t bear it. cold, venomous voice, telling such barefaced lies. What cunning, what low malice. Who could believe such | CaPitalism going to pieces before our | Country that has for years been in-|'The rotary system of shipping, in| Jolantha. In that action the LTF. unions. The L'TF. realizes its im- RNS. 0 ae, le exist? Oh hell, but why| Very eyes? Is this the breakup of its| fluenced by reformist and social de-| Danish ships, made-work the| leaders cooperated with the police to! porta: M For IntormAttin Bee or Witte to: must I listen to him? 'T paid ‘sis culture? Whatever it is, anybody whe| moeratie traditions, ‘The 77. con- ag rit Are RS cig cl ty ncert and vance for this radio, and here I’m listening to Father Walsh. Turn the dials! The Rain Is Falling. —~ Now the wind is howling, and the vraia falling outside in the swamp. to anyone who can laugh at the jokes of radio comedians. I will give the goatskin vest I once found to any- body who will swear he actually likes Lowell Thomas and similar bright boy news-rattlers. I will present a Woolworth wrist-watch and an old monocle I once wore to anybody who enjoys Amos and Andy. As for the person who likes to lis- him a cherished bouquet of poison- advertising medium for selling beer, underwear, furniture, ham, eggs, fer- tilizer and war against Soviet Russia, Yet it bores almost everybody to tears. What does it all mean? Is will pay $10 can have my radio. It’s in good condition, an Emerson port- able, bought only a month ago. Ten the Danish Marine Firemen’s Union Congress, the Red Trade Union op- Position group affiliated with the In- ternational of Seamen and Harbor- workers deposed the LT.F (reformist international of transport workers) leadership in the Danish Marine un- ion, and put revolutionary workers in their place. The congress also or- has been in the hands of the special democrats, has been won to the pro- gram of revolutionary action. Its importance is all the greater when we recall that it is won in a sidered the fight a crucial point in its career and bent every effort to prevent the R.T.U. opposition from dollars—or make me an offer. Will consider a good bicycle in exchange, or even a second-hand Ford. national of Seamen and Harborworkers; Oust Yellow Leadership Danish Firemen, who were repre- sented at the Hamburg World Unity Congress last year, carried out the program of the LS.H. and ousted the traitors, electing revolutionary work- visited by the IS.H. group. Every of foreign ships striking in Danish ports, and against shipménts of mu- Nitions. oak The work was carried on among the employed and the unemployed. unemployed invaluable for the worker ashore now would-be on a ship in a few months, and carried the L.8.H. agitation with him,~ gaining control. It even imported Edo Fimmen, head of the LTF., to prevent the change. However, The result was that the 1.8.H, pro- gram was men shipped. In all questions of un- dermanning, or handling ships man- ned by scabs (the seamen of Sweden, Finland and Latvia have been’ on strike during the last nine months, the scab tactics of the LT. solidarity to prevent war shipments was also brought to the foreground. Early this year the I.S.H. members in led a struggle against shipment of munitions in the 8.S, ship war materials to Japan. ‘The 18.H. also played an, active role in vian union only entered the strike after two weeks of rank and file ac- tion. Then they entered the strike to betray. it, but have not succeeded because the Latvian seamen followed the LS.H. program. Besides witining, all posts in the Danish Firemen’s Union, the LS.H. group elected their candidate head of paper was supported entirety by col- lections made for that purpose among the marine 5 This victory. of the I.S.H. has sharpened the struggle against the reformist leadership in the I.T.F. among the transport unions. A cam- paign of terror among the seamen urging foreign seamen to strike in Danish ports when strikes were called in their home country, ‘The Latvian spread over in| strike was started and “plan- the] all foreign ai where bgt Seat rs in 0 ned in I.S.H. ‘headquarters in Copen- of Sweden, conducted by the reform- ist leadership, has been largely coun- teracted by the refusal of the work- ers themselves to support it, Will Sweden be next?= separated from each other. Wi Rees WILLIAM A. KAIRY, of Pitcairn, Pa., has been expelled from the Com- munist Party as a white chauvinist and swindler. . He is a Lithuanian, and was active in the Unemployed Council. He showed crass white-chauvinism when he proposed that no tickets Celebrate the 14th Anniversary of the Communist Party Sunday, September 24 CROATIAN HALL . Corner Vulean and Condon Streets FROM 8 P. M. UNTIL ? ? Dancing Every Night to the tunelef.Vernon Andrade’s famous Ne} aa. Band. of 28 ex- cellent ager a A Modern Cafeteria Will Provide Food at Lowest. Price. less at the door; combination tleket for all three gays. 60 cents. este 8) National-Press Razaar

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