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Page Six hed by the Comprodaily Publishing Co., Inc., da ept Sunday, at 50 1sth St,, New York Cit; ¥. Telephone ALgonquin Cable “DAIWORK.” Address and mail chacks to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St., New York, N What | the n, hope Japan Preparing to Seize Soviet Line in China, Says ‘Pravda’ Moscow Communist Daily in Sharp Warning to Japan As Real Master of Manchukug in Plot to Steal Railway (Special to the Daily Worker.) MOSCOW, Sept. 25 (By Cable) evidently decided that the time has come to achieve the failure of the Tokio .—“Japanese government circles have | “WE ACCUSE!” SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Mail everywh Canada: One year, $9; 6 Burck | One year, $6; six months, $3.5 excepting Borough of Manhattan and Bronx, New York City. 3 months, $2; 1 month, 750, Foreign and months, $5; 3 months, $8. Inhuman Speed-Up at Ford’s Forces 80 Vets to Quit Jobs SEPTEMBER 26, 1933 Four-Day Week Means 20 Per Cent Wage Cut; Piling Up Stock Will Bring Lay-Offs Soon DETROIT, Mich.—Eighty ex-soldiers who were hired by Ford, quit their up system last Thursday. | work in the foundry after a few hours work under the terrific Ford speed- These men replaced a large number of workers who were fired in the A blue Uto) g he means to lay!” | | esotiations, and to seize the Chinese Eastern Railway,” says, an editorial | foundry to make room for them, Ford hoped to get “safe” men. The ex- eat big beau-| in “Pravda,” organ of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. ere ~ soldiers on quitting said they almost “The statements made by Sokolnikov to the Japanese Ambassador in i) iction of Ramil as pate os ee Pe cae acid opefull masses | Moscow, and by Yurenev to the i600 es apne ee V i y psi ig. ea Sy anese Minister of Foreign Affairs in Tokio clearly prove it.” (A London dispatch yesterday announced that two Soviet offi- cials of the Chinese Eastern Rail- events in Manchuria. The Japanese government, the actual master of Manchuria, bears the full responsibil- ity for the violation of the rights of Causes Son’s Death. The Ford plant started to work on a 4-day week. This was brought about by a reduction in orders and a tremendous increase in speed-up, ay . | the U.S.S.R. to the Chinese Eastern | MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.— Ater or- Large numbers of men have been ‘ But the sie sa anne Worker) Railway, which belongs to the latter. ders by the doctors that Orville Berg,| laid off. aoe yeecn in the num- smay “The double-faced. policy of the| “Let Tokio properly value the warn- 15, must not be moved as he was pene ee ing ‘ lays mens a 20 ee Blue Japanese government circles, their| ing of the Soviet government, which in bed with a broken back, relief of- oat shane? in weekly wages for crowd! hypocritical taik about peace and| continually pursues a policy of peace. ficials discarded the order and evicted ose working. ing, the poor . bs are the food bring; roduce eggs for freedom -bird race? the From the Millionaire Slums NEW YORK tab reports that in suing for divorce, Mrs. John P. Magner charged her millionaire hus- with various attempts to pho- ph her in the nude. He also stunt was to drain a big loving cup filled with champagne, then with rye and then with gin In turn, the Nira millionaire says d wife was too extravagant. She ed him with a gun, and him railroaded to an in- om abroad, with several i fine cigarettes in his bag- 1 a young blonde lady friend. you heard of Harry Thaw? millionaire playboy who rom there, with the aid of his y. Then h e was arrested again * trying to take boys to his hotel K. Thaw has just re-| | simultaneous careful preparations for the seizure of the Chinese Eastern | ager of the Chinese Eastern Railway | deprived of the rights specially pro- vided in the Peking-Mukden treaties. | | From the beginning of the Tokio ne- gotiations the military-fascist circles | strove to break them. But ‘influen- tial military circles’ had first to win | a firm position within the govern- | ment itself. This has evidently hap- pened now, and they arg hastening to use their position. “Tt is a known fact that the initi- a fish, she said. His fa-| ative for the negotiations belongs to| | the Soviet Government. It agreed | to sell the Chinese Eastern Railway, | wishing to eliminate a source of trouble and conflicts between the U. |S.S.R. and Japan. It is generally known that the Japanese authorities | made every effort to turn the Chinese | Eastern Railway, which to the U.S. similar conflicts and the exaggera- | tion of them is one of the main oc- | cupations of Japanese military cir- | cles, which are the masters of Man- | churia. | Seek to Steal Railway “The continuous destruction and | gravated since the negotiations be- | gan in Tokio. | “By these methods the Japanese ; imperialists hoped to attain their | Let those who lightly tamper with) | Soviet-Japanese relations in the ®ar/| that is the sense of the warning of the U.S.S.R.” House of Machado | Cabinet Member Is ‘Taken by Cuban ILD /Ashes of Mella Due to | Reach Havana On | Sept. 27 HAVANA, Ouba.—National head-} quarters for the Defensa Obrera In- | ternacional (I.L.D.) have been set up under Machado. Two floors of the | building are occupied by the D.O. and the third by the Unemploye | Councils. The magazine “Mella,” organ of | the D.O.L, is being published legally from Machadistas who have fled the | country are being taken over as| Workers’ Centers and D.O.I. section} headquarters, | That's the Jatest discovery of Too Much Wheat Causes|Dayton Relief Head Hunger, Wallace Finds Immediate Destruction of 40,000,000 Wheat ' Acres Asked By Roosevelt’s Secretary of Agriculture Roosevelt's Secretary of Agriculture, Wallace, who in a speech here last night declared that it is the “piling up oi | League Sessions Of War, Fascism. mouths.” And to remedy this oversupply of | of their best wheat lands. | to the insane, capitalist logic of Wal- wheat surpluses that makes hungry | consequently, less hunger, according | Charges Jobless “Held Her Captive” DAYTON, Ohio.—With the hysteria | which smells of southern mob lynch- ing, the Dayton newspapers scroam- ed in their headlines that “12 Dep- and children had cornered the relief worker in an old school on North- ridge and demanded that she sign vouchers for food, shoes and cloth-| | ing for them. Many were members of the Harrison Township Unemploy- | note to a passing wagon driver to call | the police. A small army, consisting | of 12 deputy sheriffs and constables was sent to “rescue the woman.” hi family. The boy cohtracted pneumonia as he was taken outdoors judge to stay the eviction, but their | request went unheeded. | What this city is really doing for} the unemployed was witnessed in an-| other Qeath recently. Lucille Plot-| nikov, 28 years old, died from a; tumor of the brain caused by beating | at a jobless demonstration two years ago. Mrs. Plotnikov leaves three little children, the oldest four years, and the baby three-months-old. She was active in the Unemployed Councils until the day of her death. Single men are given no aid, ex- cept what they get in the flop houses. At the Salvation Army, 64 East Hen- nepin Avenue, 200 single men went} on strike demanding better meals. All of them participated in the picket line, which was attacked by the po- cil. A charge of contempt of court was placed against them by Judge E. A. Montgomery. Later this was changed to disorderly conduct, and all were released on bail for trial September 26. By Red-Baiting Judge PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Judge The increased production has al- ready brought considerable piling d my, was| Railway during the negotiations for| East think of it. The USSR. is a| and died. George Payne, the boy’s| UP te shoei econ he veteran | its sale, are thus clearly defined. | sufficien! ly powerful country, as not} stepfather was unemployed and the} Workers, np ‘At Premoee rad Japan Tries to Break Negotiations | only our friends, but also our enemies | family was dependent on city relief.| lay-off and-shut down of the plant. one tried) “The Japanese authorities, who are| are aware. The USSR. will defend| When the city refused to pay the Seer eee thing. actual masters of Manchur( have| its rights and ‘¢ierests with dignity. | rent, a group of neighbors asked the, 800 at Election Meet and banged up| Jong striven to have the Soviet man-| Tokio must not on any account forget | in Dearborn Support United Front Ticket DEARBORN, Mich.—More than 800 workers jammed the Salina School and cheered the candidates of the United Front Working People’s Tick- et who have set themselves the task of ousting the Ford-controlled city administration in the primaries Oc- tober 9. A great ovation was given to David Jones, vice-president of the Auto Workers Union and United Front candidate for mayor, who gave con- crete figures exposing the huge sums that were grafted in the city power and water departments. Other United Front candidates also spoke. Max Salzman, section organizer of the Communist Party, who is campaign 7 K. Th: S.R. was a commercial enterprise, TER ties Ri Girl Relief Worker Held lice. Five were arrested. They are: a ee pibisat s aie aia Harry K. Thaw Prete go | hi 1 Itad Streets, » 5 5 | uties Rescue Girl Relief Worker Held! a} Kittock, Joe Liss, Howard John- ie workers’< a saat see | into a source of conflicts. It is a well- here at Malecon and Lealta Stres 4 WASHINGTON, Sept. 25.—Too much food. That's the real cause of Captive by Alleged Communist Mob,”| <o, 1 ‘d Harold Olson.| paign in Dearborn, kingdom of Henry d-hot item from the) known fact that the fabrication of |i" the house formerly occupied by} the starvation, whose bony fingers grip the throats of millions of American | * | son. Ed) Muscal and Haro! ed the slums is the report) | Averhoff, Secretary of the Treasury} families, 3 | while actually about 75 men, women| jj ‘active in the Unemployed Coun-| Ford, has assum of a mass movement. Forty organiza- tions have thus far joined. Assign Ford’s Police For Election Campaign us architect a few dec- : . | for the first time, beginning with the food that causes so much hunger, | &d Council. we the “honor” of a pop-| Tes ce Sear bet acing | September number. It is an eight-| Ona , | Roosevelt's appointed farm leader, | During the heat of the argument,| 1 47 f Militant | oe eon ee Be sean it |e, Bante, Ral that page taeaae sere” | BEGIN HA SMACOW |pctect "an tac'S™ ots | eentne aie" velar ume Release for oy ae ee , sa to} » * 7 | hij 7 . a mas : ’ 7 j called int e ctr ented to| Sear, and eof Soo et "A over he an Ror ned [sree ena, a sere | coats enters ort 2aneet| Jobless Leader. Denied not to report in the factory until after election. They were told to report to Mayor Clyde Ford, cousin to Henry Ford, who is running for room. And a lot more of this kind i io” GENEVA, Sept: 25.—With the tace, 7 prrin . : as iter, | Te-election. Only on pay day, the re- of ‘filuh | cherished wish to take possession of) sain’ Chiba sayoRenere reader, |Shadow of war-and Fascism hanging | "4 Wallace's capitalist insanity | Arey Ape Ge Gar dened Harry MeDevitt, vicious-red-baiter, | port at the plant for thelr wages. He is a member of the Pittsburgh | the railway which doesn’t belong to| win arrive here on Sept. 2, it was an-|Cyes the capitalist. world, the League | .. Tot restricted to words, He nex| was granted, Only-a few women and| tuned down a mass delegation | fe Br ek Thaws, his milifons come from ee eer hee emmplete and! nounced, for interment under a mon-|Pogaye o> Opened lis sessions here | si-eady carried out the destruction | children werévon the school ground.|™énding the release of Ted Rich-| 79 PARTICIPATE IN THE the coal mines and steel mills of| Sole masters of other peoples’ Prop-| ument which is being erected. It is| 09% saw jcfone-third of the cotton crop. | Officials are whipping up an hys-/@7ds, 19-year old evicted fighter ELECTIONS that cit erty. | planned to erect the monument in Me was the subject of the openin? | His agents have already drowned | teria agaikst the alleged capturing} Who is now serving a sentence of BELLNGHAM, Wash.—The Com- : pie i Tie Jenner: serement perfect | the center of a cemetery which will ee Supra persin several hundred thousand choice pigs | of the welfare head and threaten|two years immer iy ae eae | munist Party will participate in the Monte Carlo {yy ers Ss ide for th i - ad in the waters of the Mississippi, so} w1 : 7 ready son, | j vh Richards defendes ie i i i i OGUE is 2 glossy 35-cent maga-| Chinese Eastern Railway to be an| inp clan Viotios cr the white ork: |Couneil. Forced to admit that war | (hat thee eae been Soe ir Malt ta le capaho nenrapied es SIR Sag ep local elections here. Primaries will act of provocation whose consequen- ing-class victims of the white terror. | was an urgent menace, he added that Spencer, Welsh and Cope were named} home of an unemployed family take place November 4th’ and elec- zine which reports the new styles | Their ashes will be brought here | ¢y, And now he is busy 4 “her i The! i rieti " ; = Four-! 1 is busy umping| by Ashcraft as “her captor | faced with eviction. December 9th. and the spiritual life of American | ces they themselves are hardly eap-| from all over the island, ‘oaks Howersmipew; Wich. Wasien oT whadb abtodd tai: order to | threats ere aimed against the leading| & i ; one ee tb eal millionai: Here isa recent report | able of foreseeing. But adventuristic| Grau San Martin's police a few|*' empt of Great Britain, France, | “ise bread argos Here \ eciiana Ge ee ce, toyed Coun.| McDevitt, who is a candidate for) A committee was set up to raise from their dizzy correspondent in| Toups are striving to create a situa-| days ago seized a can supposed to panera Rect A comne fe |, Peoteredh Winky yh is! 26 nd len Ree eee |re-clection, had been stringing the funds to conduct the campaign. Monte Carlo tion under which the seizure of the| contain Mella’s ashes, but this proved|‘aid to peace” on” PR Pee te the iidigiy vocken le tees hte abl ge |workeré along for four months | “Dining on ace here is de-| Chinese Eastern Railway would lead’ to be a decoy, containing only a piece| “Unemployment is not on the agen-|Temarkably like a menace to 4 2 | ebhiauboe deciaion stan reopens Raa rive VN MW lightful—ai beautifully | to the speediest realization of their | of paper saying the ashes were in an-| da hecease thn Gio aed ee : Genera] Eléctric C0. | ards’ case and only after Wm. Vin-| lighted. Md, and the illuminated criminal plots against policy of the USSR. the peaceful other place. tribute to political dissensions,” Mo- humanity—a menace that will have | lo be removed. Fires 300; Swope, Its | | | j winckel said. = oe Defense attorney, compelled the ook like phantoms in| “All attempts to shift responsibilit; a 5 = 4. : = bey ke th ing through the au-|for preparing a violation of the| Huge Soviet Balloon |, cuankes by large Nazi bodveuard, UJ, §. To Dump Wheat) Head. on NRA Board state supreme Court to make the cent Mullen, International Labor New York judge file a decision did he-make of {b's famous Mediter-| Mghts of the USSR. in the Chinese) Damaged in Attempt |ister of Propaganda, appeared to rep-|To Reduce “Surplus” scuengorapy, N. ¥.,. Sept. 25./his position known that he would | R E D PRESS oag tae’ ane i amet eaione aa tse: | To Set New rd fre the Hitler government, To date over 300 wor *s have continue young Richards’ imprison- | cream of lettuce, cold lobster may-| less and ridiculous. The Japanese Z eC0 iB k C een ae WASHINGTON, Sept. 25—In an) been fired from’ the aa tale ment. | onnaise, galantine of chicken, | government and none other bears the| MOSCOW, Sept. 25—A miscaleula- | @N1 Officials Get effort to get rid ofthe -enormous| depertment alone | OF en ich tks| Immediately following this ac- | peaches, and—yes, a carafe of Vigne| full responsibility for violating the|tion in the weather forecast for this i ° | wheat “surplus,” ‘the Government will] “CCIE 20, DOIG). ficial of tion, the Philadelphia District of | Rose will do n | existing status of the railway, and| morning resulted in the failure of Depositors Money dump 30,000,000 bushels gf wheat in| {he es adurinietrat on SEE cen D: iausd: ay appeal to all! ne Con eta attention to the the obligations “undertaken by the) the attempt to establish’ a new] BOSTON, Sept. 25—A leading bank | foreign countries, Frank ‘Theis, chlet| °" Nfort while, ago’ this depart-| working class organizations to | re inte es iS rt nits ae Apes Cr ‘ce LAist | stratosphere record when the gigan- | official of the Federal National Bank |of the wheat section of the Agricul- | nt’ wes turning out 5,000 re-|carry the fight straight to Governor | FD) Rwts notte Sere oes ie Seon ference tic “Stratostat U.S.S.R.” had a large exchanged worthless. stock for $500,000; tural Adjustment Administration, ! tors a week. Now the com-|Pinchot’s door at Harrisburg, where | famous fountains of| has lately won'e namber of bellliont airomiePad in ts bag after several /of depositors money, it was charged announced today. pany is ‘stocked- up, and is operat-! delegates representing the Commu- @ Daily Worker eae s fe oy oes epi ie de ay eae to get the balloon off the | today in the investigation of the col-|’ The government. will stand a loss ing on the 1922 winter level. nist Party, the Unemployel Coun- AA ms “On the floor, there is a show com-| greatly improved and consolidated|~ Built’ some t Be Mas eoviee | re eae of about $8,000,000 ‘Theis admitted, “At the same ‘time, the General) wij. the Provisional Committee of @ Morning Freibeit posed of an All-American troupe im-| the international situation of the U.| Governme id ri ere of ig nics | Four bank officials are involved in | since the world price of wheat is far | Electrie Co.’ tells the unemployed Sthipale sitor “Negro “ightr ioand : ported by Fifi Ferry, who stages the| SSR. "| was considerably: larger than the ove | (24 zmisappropriation of depositors’ below the. domestic price which is| workers that they shouldn't worry, | others will demand of the Governor @ Young Worker Ady tien ot ik bork as Gt oe | Was considerably larger than the one | funds amounting to $2,000,000. i protected by the high tariffs: | because good, times are coming. Jomre.* 4 he were putting on a midnight Frolic. Everythi theatrical here. The very clothes we wear are theatrical, and the atmosphere of this resort is Ome of carnival and make-believe — |— peopled with make-believe sailors, fishermen, to’ mechanics, toughs and platinum-blonde stars. “The evening passes. We dine, dance, and watch the show. There ic an interlude of gambling in the open- air rooms, followed by a second, but more elaborate, cabaret show on one end of the terrace, which goes on from midnight till three (sort of Ziegfeld Follies with lots of glorified girls) “There is still a third show, made up of a bit of Harlem (straight from the Cotton Club) which passes away the hours from three to sunrise. “We sleep till eleven, take a dip in the sea, breakfast, swim again, lunch at two, sleep till five, go out to a bar or to shop ‘or both), and dress (or decide not to dress) for nine-thirty ipner... . ..” Where Bread Is Life eal enough of this sickening goo. Visions rise before me of steel towns like Gary, where the brown frame shacks of the workers stand in The brave women are amble a meal together their kids. An egg is valuable A loaf of bread is treasured among miners living in West Virginia tents. T remember the breadline I saw ony two nights ago in New York, Winding in a long trail of heartbreak. | Tt re ave some 15,000,000 Americans il out of work. And in Monte Car- lo and dozens of other places the idle rich are living in a world of make- believe, a theatrical world “peopled with make-believe sailors, fishermen, ‘offs, mechanics and platinum blondes.” At the court of Louis the Sun King they also pretended to be fauns and jhepherdesses, and when somebody old Marie Antoinette that the work- ‘rs had no bread, this queen an- sare with the wisecrack that cost | “The Japanese government won’t/in which Auguste Piccard ascended succeed in taking cover behind the|and established the present strato- | so-called ‘independence’ of Manchu- |sphere record which the Soviet fly- | kuo, which is helpless and incapable|ers had hoped might be broken to-| day. | A Smaller balloon, the “Oax-1,” fs also being prepared for a trial flight. | her a head: “Let them eat cake.” Lcdpesce pee anybody mou. if Harry K. jaw and all the “make- | ¢¢, believe” residents of Monte Carlo) 00 P.C. of Schools | scows and dumped forever? It ill | Not Fit for Use, Say | have to be done some day. And what | | is Nira really all about? It is a plan to continue the system that supports | py Pig ost otro taht had tered in the United States thousands of | dends. Yo t | rural schools that are uafic habita- Be create ce mceey Away. from it—| tone: fox > childvany? anperedeDr. | the wealth of America is owned by|N°"T, ‘Bupcthardt and De Georee | wastrels, scoundrels, morons and N° Staats both oe Tesenetn Ga vogue hes it Paeah ak: ee lege in Columbia University. |38 dike against the revotution that | Paki A yp ae re ve au eget eaerne Ginee illicni tice up-| clementary schools ought to be discarded and replaced by modern | pose Nira is that they are mighty ter’ | buildings. They are “dingy, poorly dumb, They have to be educated by ventilated, and poorly lighted,” wiser parasites. They can’t believe A that their system is cracking up. But | continued, the report. |even the Catholic Church adapts it-|,. The study by the two professors | self from time to time. The liberals| ‘8 # result of a ten year survey of | and Nira Socialists serve this func-| Public schools, elementary muni- tion in modern history—they are the | ©!Pal and rural shock <zoops of capitalisn, fhrow™ tn | {to stop the great collapse, | heer Sars Columbia Professors | NEW YORK, N. Y.—“There are TRENTON, N. J., Sept. 25.—In | line with the administration's po-| liey of extensive military educa-! tion, fourteen new camps in New Jersey have been authorized by the U. S. Forestry Department. "This raises the total of “Civilian” Con- ee Corps Camps in the state | to 22, Why Wallow in Muck? A Riser gskedt the other day why I print some of this tabloid | stuff anent the filthy rich. I believe it is necessary. The rev- olutionary propaganda is too often pedantic and abstract. It moves in a statistical void. It denounces preda- tory wealth in academic language | workers can’t easily understand. To work up a hatred of capital- ism, it is neecssary to be more spe- cific, and to give real and accurate photographs of the masters in their daily lives. The sight is so disgusting that any healthy mind and stomach Hamilton Article to Appear Tomorrow The fourth article of Robert Hamilton's series on the Reichstag fire —“Goering, Reichstag Fire- brand”—is omitted today, and will appear in the Daily Worker to-| morrow. will revolt. Especially the mind and stomach of bitter men without jobs, One doesn’ have to invent epithets to hurl at the hollow rich—to liter- ally suote “Vogue” is quite enough, 4 Union Workers Have Special Task in Struggle By JACK STACHEL Assistant Secretary, Trade Union Unity League The VU. S. Con-ress Against, War which’ will convene in the city of New York on September 29 must re- ceive the support of every trade union, of every trade unionist and especially- of militant trade unions and militant trade unionists. Why? Because at no time was the actual danger of another world imperialist War as great as today, This is so despite the efforts of the capitalists and the. pacifists to try to create the impression that the dan- ger of war is lessened. This is so de- spite the fact that fhe Soviet Union, through its genuine peace policy, has been able to forcea number of cap- italist governménts to acknowledge this peace poticy’ publicly by signing pacts with the Soviet Union. And more and more the U. S. Wall Street government is playing the central tole in the whole international de- velopment, The Situation Today What is the situation today? Jap- an, which has for some time actually carried on war against China, has not abandoned this war. Not only has Japan taken hold,of large sections of Chinese territory but it is at pres- ent enzazed onthe one hand in mobilizing iw forces againct the growing Chinese Soviets and on the other hand in more feverish prep- arations for war against the Soviet Union. ‘4 At the same time the race for armaments between the U. 8. and Japan is growing more rapi¢ly every 4 day. And simultaneously there grows the danger of war between the U.S, and Japan. At the same time the developments of the crisis, the strug- gle for markets and spheres of in- fluence the word over and especialiy in the new world, Latin America, ete., is creating the real dancer of war between Great Britain In Europe the prepa: have becn hastened by the advent of Hitter to power in Covm In Ger many and France, Po'an: Great Britain and the Ba? everywhere there is going on a ish arming for a new world s’auch- ter. The faivure of the econom’e ference, the fai'ure of the d ment conference;only emntiasize the sharpening of the situation, U. S. War Prenarat‘ons The crisis in the United States ic growing despite the NRA ballyhco. This ® already recornized even in government circ’es. T* Un!'ed States is preparing a new dr've for inter- national maviets. At the seme time the approrr’at! for new battte- ships, for motoriziny the army, for air forces, the creat’on of new ‘re- serves through the reforestation camps, is part .of the feverish prep- aration for war. As the crisis grows, s0 does the danger of a new world slaughter. Alrecdy the United States is making. war on Cube. : 7. crisis of the whole esvecially increases the danger an attack on the So- viet Union. Tie nen-agaression pects signed by some countries with the Soviet Union is no guarantee against such an attack. This gesture on the part of France and other imperialist countries, while representing a man- euver against Hitler and above all forced by the peace policy of the So- viet Union and the growing sym- pathy of the masses in the capitalist d Anti-War Congress S| fatherland. > release Richards unconditionally. | |Urions to Be Backbone of U.S. Anti-War ? Congress countries for the U.S.S.R.. does not imply and cannot imply that French for.an acmed atteck on the workers’ | Recegnition Does Not Guarantee Peace | The recognition ta ic in some circles of. fmvvean eapita’ism doos ‘not eran treb the canitalists. of the} United States have given up their 2m to Cestroy the Sov'et Union. Only | the toiling meses of the U.S.S.R., the | growing strentth of the Red Army ard the active solidarity of the masses in. the capitalist countries is a guarantce of norte and defense for the USSR. Fase!lst Germeny and Tialy, fescist Polond, as well a3,cem- osratic France, Great. Britain’ and the U.S. A. ate edually the enemies of | the Soviet Union. The sponsors of the Congress in- | clude among otliers many leadin* | Socialists and pacifists who profess to | 2 be against war. In view of this it is! so much more necessary that all) mililant trade un‘onists shall be rep- resented at the U. 8. Congress Against War where the program is to be adopted to carry on the struggie in the United States. One of the main immediate tasks of the Con- | gvess will be to orvan’ze the fight ; aca'nst intervention in Cuba by the U._S. government. It is urgent that all T.U.ULL. unions, all independent unions, all locals of the A. F. of L., shall elect their delegates to this Congress, It is urgent for all militant elements in the A. F. of L. to expose the war pol- ‘myperiatism hay given un its plans) of | rangements Official Figures Show Wages Cut By N.R.A. in State of New Jersey TRENTON, N. J., Sept. 21.— Average wages of New Jersey workers dropped in July from $20.91 to $20.75, said Col. Char‘es R. Blunt, state commissioner of labor today. ses shooting up, wages srs under the NRA are definite'y going down. At the same time, the state labor eommiss‘oner s2#‘d that 10,596 more workers were taken on in thet, mon‘h. In the month of August, how- ever, for which figures are not is- sued, pvoduction in all leading fae- tories in New Jersey a number of vorkers were fired. Housing Needed for Anti-War | Delegates NEW YORK.—Althouzh but a few azys remain until the United States Congress Against War convenes, to date, accommodations for only 90 delegates have been turned in by or- ganizations and individuals, the ar- committee announced yesterday. Two thousand men and women are expected. Needless to say, immediate action is required. All or- ganizations must leave no stone un- turned in getting their membership to | provide housing for the de'ezates on the nights of September 28, 29, 39, and October 1. The only organizations which have so far responded to any appr:c.able ex‘ent are the Women's Councils and the Friends of the Soviet Union. All workers and sympathizers who can put up delegates should send in their name anda ddress together with the following information: Number of persons you can accommodate, man, icies of the Greens and Wolls and elect dplecstes te the Conoross dec'ined, and: Friday, Saturday, Sunday OCT. 6, 7, 8 Ma‘ison Square Garden MAIN HALL © ADMISSION © Friday and Sunday... .35¢ Saturday .......0....,40€ Lit, Fund .. +... 10 Total for Sat. 500 With Advance Ticket Obtainable A, Evcry Organization, 10 Cents Less At The Door. Combination Ticket for All 3 Days + > - 60 CENTS DANCING ‘EVERY NIGHT To the Tune of VERNON. ANDRADE’S’ ORCHESTRA NATIONAL PRESS. BAZAAR COMMITTEE 50 East 13th Street (6th” floor) New, York City Telephone: ALgonquin 4-9481 woman or couple, how many days, 1, 2, 3, 4, to 104 Fifth Ave., Room 1610.