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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1933 Page Three STEEL MILLS LAY OFF 1,000 THIS WEEK; OTHERS PUT ON PART TIME Forced Labor; Jobless Strike Against |Boston Forced To | | Stop Recruiting of Scabs for Detroit BOSTON, Mass., Nov. 7.—As a Workers-Farmers’ Meeting To Greet Farm Conference DOCKERS G0 CHICAGO, Ill. — A big farmer- | worker solidarity mass meeting has | their massed strength. It is this growing movement that the workers of Chicago are called upon to hail at | result of the delegation of the Un- Demand Unemployment Insurance | | || empioyed Council and of Ba | ind | | |been arranged for Nov. 17th to greet trial unions affiliated to the the Coliseum solidarity meeting on| | ‘méustrial unic ved f ce ae | eine ro 0) L the hundreds of farmer delegates to| Noy i7th, | .L., which went to the City t hil | ¢ Str ik Dem an d : the Farmers Second National Con- | N°¥- || Municipal Employment Bureau | | JELLO re | h t D Cl I d GC ers . ference to convene hee on NOV. 16 ,Rigiana!” 4kiOy” pspester ar [sume two wooks ago to pote N, Shut Down in Cleveland, Gary Represented at this Farmers Con-| Secretary of the United Farmers | Struck for Wages and) Delegation To Put Own! Demands at Code Hearings | NEW YORK.—About 75 seamen and @ockers from the North Atlantic ports, comprising a delegation led by the Marine Workers Industrial Union, will proceed to Washington today to pre- ‘sent the code of the union at the N.R.A. hearings. R. B. Hudson, sec- retary of the union, will accompany the delegation. The code hearings on the marine ference will be the leadership and hundreds of representatives of the left wing farmers’ movement in Amer- ica. In the last year this farmers movement has grown tremendously. From isolated units of militant farm- ers, it has now become a broad fight- ing force embracing 34 farmers’ or- ganizations in as many states and with a total membership of over 70,- 000 farmers. Strike struggles on Picket lines, where farmers have en- countered tear gas, National Guards and State Troopers, beatings and ar- rests have featured this year of League, Lem Harris, Secretary of the Farmers National Committee for Ac- tion, I, Amter, National Secretary Unemployed Councils, Clarence’ A. Hathaway, Central Committee Com- munist Party, Mother Bloor, veteran farm and worker organizer, Harry | Lux, State organizer of the Nebraska | Holiday Association with a member- ship of 40,000 farmers, John Mar- shall, President of the Ohio Farm- | ers League, and Joe Weber, District | Secretary of the Trade Union Unity League. | All workers and workers’ organiza- | to go to Detroit to scab on the strikers, the Boston City Council was forced to issue an order for- bidding the hiring ‘of any strike- breakers for Detroit. Leather Strikers Halt Injunction Militancy Forces Court : | advertising for tool and die makers | _ Starving, Forced To Leave School | Welfare Refuses Shoes, | Clothes, Rent; Say | Worker Is Crazy one child too sick from starvation to | go to school because he has no shoes, and Bethlehem; More Coming |United States Steel Corporation Speeds Up | Those Still Working CLEVELAND, Ohio, Nov. 7.—One thousand steel workers have been laid off in the steel mills of Clevela DETROIT, Mich. Nov. 7—With/ past week, adding to the thousand already laid off in South Chicago, G The mills in these important steel centers are cu | go to school and another unable to| the number of days worked a week and hours worked a day. and el: here. show that the N.R.A, im of de- nd, Ohio, and eBthiehem, Pa., in the ing down The facts 60 Cents an Hour And Free Carfare Demand Full Rights for Negroes; Increase In Relief SEATTLE, Wa 7.—Hun- workers throughout. King County in which this city is lo- i | @ Detroit worker, who told a repre-| tren ; ceMGre lea) i eisalacorate = 4 industry are to take place Nov. 9th, | struggle and growth. Thousands of| tions are asked to attend and sup- | Deny rit to a Detroit worker, whe creased unem) put for- | ated are striking against. forced la- ; i oe 2 : | J W } sentative of the Daily Worker his ‘ fr More bar on eae a oo after @ series of secret negotiations | y; “ sales” hay en|port this ma: tration of ie) 2 } Sental - ward to hide ffs. More 00 t t t por on relief work, and many hun betwen the ship owners and the FOU Penny, Wp head eee a | Story, is experiencing the results of} ;1 ka seve 0 dreds m have stated their inten- the farmers renewed confidence in worker-farmer solidarity. 700 i off in the Otis e ar : ; HDA’ GMIIAIE “Tho original code the Bosses the New Deal as administered by the | ! Be tages tion of seetking af thie sob wheel ete ine it see Detroit Welfare Department L * anni: sonal ‘ of the marine industry was present- etroit Welfare Department. Steel the men are 0 report for work a week hence. De- ed Sept. 25, and a revised code Oct. | GLOVERSVILLE, N. Y., Nov The worker, an electrician by trade 3 3 spite increased food costs, there has mer’s statements. He first said he | ly two and three day Ss . 14 yhose 2 be given because ' ¥ 3 d been no change in the relief rates 25th. Li { R < h t saw Taneff repeatedly and then de-| The militancy of the leather st whose name cannot be given | STABLE. in tha Amman x¢ . been no zi Bi oats gis 40 Y g pei en de- ; | of the possibility of victimization, has Sap hag Ne D} ince last September when the present Sener ina, ie reamen ead Ives Of heicnsta Clared he doesn’t know Taneff. Bee obese cute SOLA Seen onthe wiellet colle for three| Were: C0. thers has been 8 UGE WAL FLOST AM | see west September when instituted. Teakalauevdoon apn for ae low ae ° Fear stetier, consumed: she, tect) en) injunstion (66 /ANS eAnasry emo | yegrs,1'He saecslves $700. ix food | 7°. 1 Production andr eo Under the leadership of the Unem- r i) am | that Taneff does not understand | plo; who are d rat their | checks every two week lus 30) °° o Wi. gy loyed Citizens’ League of Seattl S 1 longshoremen, T | D fi d tf Pp , who are desperate in their| checks every two wet plus 3 Me j ] loyes tizens’ League ol attle Without Sinema: es eee ratien ria e en an S German. The witness maintained | faijure to break the strike involving! Quarts of milk for himself, his wife| Auto and metal plants are Demand Billion Dollar which is calling the strike, the un- 5 Rea aeecis. ihe vavised cote, ticluded| he saw Taneff with the Communist 9 599" workers jand two children, As a result of shutting do due tolackofdies}) War Fund for employed workers are fighting the ‘ two! new strikebreaking clauses. They In Great Danger Kratzer, but Kratzer, on examination, | this starvation fare, his oldest son, from Detroit, here there is a tool sent starvation rates of relief, q < « ! provided for setting up arbitration said he does not remember. Picket lines continue strong, al-| aged 16, lost. 12 pounds in seven| and die s\ 5 Steel and Metal Jobless Insurance! Single men in King County are boards, and machinery for strangling | beg Kratzer confirmed the fact that| though tear gas and terror has been | Weeks and was compelled to leave Workers Indust — iow getting about $1.20 per week for strikes and militant action. | (Continued from Page 1) | the Central Committee of the Com-| freely used against the strikers, | S°R0ol. The doctor advised the Wel-|Ave., is conduct WASHINGTON, Nov. 6—Continu-| which they are forced to work two revised code strikebreaking | | munist Party decisively opposed ter- Many % zs a | fare Department to increase the boy’s paign to organize ng his record program of war prep-| days per month, and married men included after a series | especially on the Mun- | e Workers | | ia, recently, dock- | the International | to Longshoremen’s Association voted to} ers belonging f the Marine Work- | al Union. They elected | to join a-union of their Bs ght to strike. Crew of Mundixie Wins Pay Demands Against Bad Food NEW ORLEANS, La., Nov. 6.—The erew of the S. 8S. Mundixie, of the Munson Line, after a short strike here won their demands for payoff. The Munson Line had been with- holding wages of all seamen, some of the men not having been paid for four months. s demand the right of | rant and first assumed they were Bulgarians. He advanced the absurd and obvious He that he saw van der Lubbe repeatedly at the same table. “An inner feeling” told him immedi- ately they were Bolshevists. Hellmer was entangled in catas- trophic contradictions until the prosecution desperately let him drop into the wrong channel. The pubhe prosecutor then de- manded excitedly what Teichert meant. A clash took place between | Werner and Teichert. Teichert de- | clared nobody believes the improbable tale of van der Lubbe in the Bay- ernhof with the Bulgarians and that Hellmer was certainly mistaken. The prosecutor then asked what the connection was between the al- Jeged innocent Bulgarians who will be defended with Germany's prestige. Teichert said: “The indictment of the Bulgarians damages German jus- tice abroad.” The prosecutor replied: | “We owe no account of our justice to foreign countries.” Popoff then reminded Hellmer had frequently confused him formerly with Taneff. The detective was forced to con- ror. Despite the defendant’s proved declaration that he was in Russia or Bulgaria, new witnesses assert they saw him in Berlin. Jung, one of the Nazi witnesses, stated he saw Popoff thirty or forty times with the Communist leader, and July. Russian Jew.” He was informed that Popoff was neither Russian nor a Jew. Ahrendt insisted that Popoff “looks unpleasantly Jewish.” Another storm trooper asserted he saw Popoff about thirty times in Berlin. The witness Vogel, who lives opposite Kaempfer, saw a man “re- sembling Popoff.” The witness Mrs. Quappe saw a man “resembling Popoff” through a window 50 metres away, telephoning in Kaempfer's fiat in June, 1932. There was a slight scene with the witness Bahnert, who tried to involve Popoff seriously. The witness was reminded he was expelled from the Communist Party for embezzlement of Party funds. He also served two sentences for fraud. The witness became excited but was firm the great contradictions in Hell- unable to deny the facts, Ahrendt said: “Popoff and another | | picketing demonstration of women and children was held before the home of the president of the Levore Co., Rothschild, on Monday, when the strikers learned that he had im- ported detectives to break the strike. The National Labor Board yester- day invited the strikers to send a delegation to Washington to discuss Four pickets were arrested on Saturday, at the Bamburger Depart- jment Stores in Newark where the jcompany has a studio, Four more York. All photo workers are urged to support this struggle by strengthen- ‘Red Youth League Expels Stryner, Scab } NEW YORK.—George Stryner of | Pawtucket, who is scabbing on the | silk workers on strike in the Black- | stone Valley, a member of the Young | Communist eLague up to the latter | part of 1932, has been expelled. The Communist Party unit of Proy- idence, .R. I., denounced Stryner for committing an inexcusable crime aginst the workers, with the workers’ movement of this section. {were jailed at the studios in New | ing the picket line today at 4:30 p.m. | relief at least.10 per cent, but the Welfare refused. The worker showed the Dail Worker a pair of shoes he had re- ceived from the Welfare Department about two months ago for his younger son, nine years old. The soles of the shoes were made of cardboard 200 and were completely worn through. Do You Live or Swear ‘by the Daily Worker? A. A. Heller, of C ites: “A comrade ‘I live by the Daily Worker’ En- closed find $10 for the $40,000 Drive. wear by the Daily Worker,’ I replied, | steel workers into the union, to fight for relief and to organize for a fight to increase 200 Fired in Gary GARY, Ind., Nov. 7—On Monday, v were laid off in the v a a week. The ingot mould pouring de- partment is working only one week a month. The drop forge department is working only two or three days a week, Speed-up accomvanies the cutting down of hours and days worked. The foreman notified the men that unless every man turns out the necessary production he will be stricken from the list of those available for future work, and fired, Thousands are being laid off. Other thousands are on part time work, Stesl workers, join the Steel Workers Industrial Union. Fight for the passage of the Workers Un- employment Insurance Bill, De- mand adequate unemployment re- | lief, ations, Roosevelt signified today that Congress would receive a new huge naval building program when it convenes again soon. This new program will inyolve the expenditure of another $125,000,000 in addition to the 61,000,000,000 pro- gram already in the process of con- struction Denditures, Roosevelt has refused to| give one cent for unemployment in- surance for the 17,000,000 jobless | workers, on the ground that the gov- | | ernment has no money. The Ameritan workers can stop! these huge war expenditures by de-| manding that they be turned over for the immediate relief of the 17,000,000 jobless and for unemploy- ment insurance. | Worker Evicted by Reading Mayor for Lack of $15 Rent \Fomily Ts Broken Up; need of funds, are getting a smaller average for zach dependent. Obviously this is only an opening wedge on the part of the Relief Commission for more niense forced labor. The demands of the strikers are: 1. A minimum of sixty cents per hour for all work on relief jobs; 2. A six- hour day and a minimum of three Prepare March CHICAGO, Ill, Nov. 7—The treac- ment of single men getting relief at the Clearing House for Men at 30% South Green St. is becoming worse and worse. On Saturday, when the clothes orders were given out, par- ticularly those receiving overcoats found them to be in a second-hand, dirty and torn condition. Some of the overcoats handed out were 50 badly worn that they are ready for the rag pile. much less to wear dur- ing the winter. Four of the men got together and went tothe Unemployed Council Hall at Halsted and Adams Sts. They will form a committee Monday and pros test to the heads of the Illinois Emer- gency ef at 10 S. LaSalle St, They will also demand winter ‘coal instead of being forced into the flop houses, zo to Washington to| the matter. Hellmer stated he saw Pi a ea a oeslarea see terms for settlement. ‘The strikers| He said the Welfare had refused to Steel works of pcan are on igxest. War Program s’ work per week; 3, No racial ‘ Officials of the| van der Lubbe at the Bayernhof not. di pel th ‘a0 ess a ©! are determined to stand on their | give his boy another pair of shoes Oct sei the. sank Otte gi 7 te The new program is intended to nination in the distribution. of t | only in October, 1992, but in May. | disappeared the or September.| demands for the right to organize This worker is also threatened with | Oct enastnent, dronted dneortts | provide, within the space of one|relief; 4. Free transportation for all — * The judge pointed out the infor-| The aineppesercs of Kaempfer, the | ana for more pay. eviction, as the Welfare Department | jie?" Gepazapent Gropped down to | year, several new aircraft cruisers. It| unemployed; 5. Unemployment and ' adovi'ag the code, mation of the Dutch police satd that | 5v¢ Person able to confute the mass) “Ts sasendent union oiganized | N88 refused to pay his rent. Be- |W? ened been working four'days | 15 9180 intended to speed the con-|social insurance at the expense of | * to have men adopt a code of-|van der Lubbe was serving a term | f false statements against Popoff, by. ‘the’ orkeew ts segoHaute indi- | Cause he has repeatedly come to the Diane a. wok 5 Hird Sager struction of the eighteen 8-inch gun | the state and the employers. $ fered by the A. F. of L. officials, but | of imprisonment in Scheveningen in Eta ht Sa are and Buettner| Vidual settlements, as a result of | Welfare station and demanded ac-| Uiccay down for 39 hours end three | cruisers provided by the London Na- | aa $$$ : i asuzes were defeated by | May. intatried thi = Povoff visiting| Which 300 workers returned to work | {10n, the welfare worker has been! engines were pulled off for good, | Va! Treaty. ° Hellmer declared he saw three Bul- | M#intained they saw Povot Ing | last week, tying to frame him up and put him/some were told to stay home five | 1% addition to the $238,000,000 re-| HON HAGG alt ont! : gutiens on iue ath of Peiraaey ia ne in Berlin in the summer ; jin the hospital for observation, de-| Gays 4 e 3 ceived from the Public Works Fund, | © a &, ’ ateins the following: For) the Bayernhof. Dimitroff proved an g . ea | claring he was mentally unbalanced.| - the navy is now petitioning for an € return to the 1929 shipping] aiipi, Helmer insisted that’ both | ,,Telenert stated that the editor of| Arrest Eight Pickets im Thrown reading the Dally Worker | Sea additional $77,000,000 Kor Torn Coats and ; 2.50 for able-| statements were false, thus utterly the “Rote Fahne,” official organ "Whe 1 St di S + |this worker learned about the Un- Speed-up in Bethichem | _ The total Roosevelt naval building | ‘- s t confusing the prosecutor,as the sole| tH Communist Party, resembling | ean udio Strike employed Council and is now looking oe ie is far surpasses anything that any : f witness against Dimitroff was proved | PoP0!, frequently visited Kaempfer. | toward mass action to get more re-|_,SETHLEHEM, Pa., Nov. 7.—Hours | peace-time President has ever Flo z House Doles he Merit ari The witness, Mueller, asserted he| NEW YORK.—At the end of the| lief for himself and amily and of Bethlehem Steel Co./ launched. It is evidence of the fact A ; eichert pointed out Hetimer's| 24% Povo in Berlin 3 tn 1992, The Second week of the strike at Wheel-| to prevent his eviction and win un- | Plant cut from eight to | that Roosevelt expects to hurl Amer- —— : | = ness, Nazi storm troo} rendt, | an’s studios, 370 7th Ave., ° - | en i * a Ske ying a wage increase | ica j anot! atiat on oa é felse deposition, and Stated it was | asserted he saw Popott. vistting| eraphle workers on stk? ter Bigner| Denke are in simian cee s {| from 35 to 38 cents an hour. The| ~~ ee Spies ‘enrages Chicago Unemployed 5 disastrous for Germany that Hell-| Kaemofer repeatedly in May, June|PAay are holding their picket lines in-| ae toa wO in most of the devartments) puri se enormot - ci : din the. seamen’s | er had diverted the prosecution i te Pa pact. Lanaibereenpe now working two to three days Sane. these ARGEMOUs . WBN ee Go to Council, and : | 7 o | ; Most of the officers joined the men | 0 be Ri Wee cela ah A a | Two Arrested for | with th ‘ ‘ | im the demand and walked off the | 38 Teme 7" sores ode. : itl ie increasing number of , | ship. The ship's committee charged | YY ee | Resisting Sheriff cases coming in every day asking | | that conditions on the ship were ° es 7 , 7 ? — | for relief, no additional help is put | ; oes ae eae wl Le € Nising Struggies oj the carmer areas if utive nights,” they said. “The cof-| Pat t / ’ e ng filed his application f + | fee wes warmed over from the of- peli ® pases : , told the “case worker” f ficers’ mess, and the bread stale and By H. PURO | NY ¢ : = = 2d been waiting for him all . soggy. Pe ‘. 2 ; * 3 nee 5 a « c op iV 2 wants to know when = ; ie strike was oreniod and ted | ,.WiVE the agrarian evn, in‘en- Noy. bd Chicago Conference Gives the Party Great Opportunity To r will investigate, as 2. i cs is 7 pag eee s * . | is in despe! eed. i Wau SE ee OR of American capitalism, is again rganize Ruined Farmers For Struggle Against Capital worker ‘kak pig ana ree ' : tremendously deepening, causing the ats 3 ir home for the non-payment of | to a folder full of applications and 8 |collapse of the Roosevelt farm pro- CL i aS ee for one month rent. | said: “It will be around 30 days bee 1 | | Elect Your Delegates in Time |f/ cram and making additional strata | insufficient attention, come all those weaknesses and mis-| the gove:mmenf shall “extend the € » owned by a member of | tore t will be able to take ag Ge es 4 for This Banquet! of the toiling farmers ready for mili-| And consequently the Party as a|takes that were pointed out in the|N. RA. to agriculture.” By tHese | } 2s and family, had been barri- | case” Protests as to the een bei HS tanya tant struggles, it is well to examine | whole has not drawn full lessons Agrarian Resolution of the ° | reh-betrayer of far to our ere uscless, for the next repl: naa | Ae one ons Must Be jf) to what extent our Party has over.| from the resolution. The conse-| ordinary Conference. making the fa There are a lot of cases ahead of ae epresented! come those weaknesses and short-| quences of negiecting the adequate There are st: nany political weavon—the : sorry.” He then cut * comings that were brought out] discussion of the resolution is shown| weaknesses. For instance, we have | ainst them, trying to bri plea “by calling it thi ' ‘ sharply in the Open Letter and injin the practical work itself in the| not vet made sufficiently clear dis- |the was cutting slavery act into 1 Farmezs C ; e next waiting victim. Daily Wor ker Pe otc eetal Agrarian | Resolution | way that very few District Commit-| tinctions between the various eate- | agriculture, whereby finance capital | cellent. possibitit Riis MEAS | he atnla stein nie ite ae Gk aks whilgien: i Adopted at be Exiraordinary Party | tees and lon Committees are) gories of the farmers, and upon |and its agents will be cnabled to|'The United Fa gue and|dren, Minicocy was told to send his ie ‘4 DELEGATED ihe face tint aie Bats fan oes bey icin SR er seats | [that bee setting our task in the |further enslave the tolling farmers.|other left wing farmers’ organiza-| wife to the Salvation Army home for a= ' . », there has over agra: Our task of winning over the | tions can grow only if they base their | women, his cl 1 By RU the tear opt begin to ful-|been insuficient preparations for the| workers, secondly the poor and |ruined farm population would ‘be| Work upon iniiating the. bros | COTE. Nee eee iOUT OF TOW ee B A N Q U E T namely to strengthen its Beenie tional Confer- | small farmers, And while the Party | much simpler, of course, if we were| united front struggles for the im- |to the Hope Rescue Mission. In the | q q the pei: pete re ence. It has been left too much to| has led a number of big agricul- |in the field alone. But this is not| mediate demands of ruined and im-| crowd that gathered before Minicozy’s F t Grice Metin Tes ee aoa our agrarian cadres only, bein workers’ strikes, especially in | the case. That makes our task so|poverished farming population, |home, two unemployed workers, D. A A IR S a Y E engaged at the teed ) Party Grows Among Farmers ‘alifornia, we have not yet given |much more complicated and there- The very fact that the f its | orlinger and Hoyer, members of the e DA VENING aoike laitek of tho eae ny Bis However, thanks to the fact that| Sufficient attention and leadership | fore we must be much more alert, with Piekillal sd, ‘i sale: uni'Y | Unemployed Council, were sent to jail FOR THE t th miners, textile and other ere’ the mass movement of the impoy-| 0 this, the most important section |The greatest degree of alertness and widely accented nee rly «gaia $0 | pecause they did not move quickly 4 : workers, | erished farmers has brought forward| °% the population in the country- | preparedness is required from. the 7: ‘ ea | enough when the police ordered t 5 : ed bisa ess the readiness | many new elements and has in the| side. |Party now, when the tremendous eh Raced aae ot iene oe off the block. faees es ng the tolling farm |rapid space surprisingly increased| While we have made considerable strike wave of the industrial workers | 284 t2xcs within a few months has Porty USA Biggest Program [er gts Patpevalioeg sco) ere be- | our agrarian cadres, the Party work | invoads into the stroncholds of ‘the | eoineides and is followed by the deep : . . i Weab Sed acgli Hi ack ae fcsamasiont Bien = under the | among the farmers has been carried ; Social-fascist leaders (Iowa, Wiscon-/ynrest, struggles and impendinz Providence Worker 7 ed y te Program. Here we ean see | torward and the Party has unques- | Sin, New York), where until lately | struggles of the agrarian*masses all aU Port Chester, N. Y. i CLARENCE’ HATHAWAY raed ame i Rabe les fing laid) tionally achieved some measure of farmers were entirely under the in-| over the countryside “(15,000 cotton pe preg iene A 4 November 9th: cE main speaker nhadehie: the Ps aior task’ of ‘the | mprovements. We have, upon the| fluence of strike-breaking leaders of | pipors’ strike in California, practi- | pleted ccihg 0 1 Panouet—Chinese Restaurant, Dane | >T| ied uaannce mi of the] basis of serious self-criticism, clari-| the’ type of Milo Reno, Sincleir,! cal revolt of the northwestern farm. | put forward ry ; ing at affairs arranged by Russian ie pec Party 2s the strengthening of its) eq our political line and succeeded | Woodhead, there is still a right-wing |ors against A. A, A. mowine unvest ees La Mutual Ald at North Main. Street, BT) sto paren eee aA condis|in making clearer the aim of our| underestimation of the radicalization | among Negro shateoroppe's now e- these circumstances, the| BOSTON, Nov. 7—Another m ai! Daily Worker Chorus tee eedienimet P Work among the farmers, We have|0f these farm messes and conse-|tonding also to the southern fruit Second Ni working class leader faces deporta Cleveland Bay’ Songs of the Proletarinn Revolution pete tha tate es hde pie ane made a serious beginning in build-| auertly a lagging behind the farm-| and tobacco workers and small farm- tion for his activities on behalf of || November 11th: 4 Negro Songs of Work & Struggle |! nine them into i a ighting alliance | 28 the Party among the poor farm-|¢rs strike movements. Our 17th | eys, and strike threats of dairy farm- 0) | the Providence, R. I., workers. Sam Biz Daily Worker Rally and Banquet With the Harlem Liberator Groups against capital. ce lers (Nebraska, Iowa, Pennsylvania, Central Committee meeting strongly | ers against the disparity prices and | masses with the real fighting program | Paul, freed after serving six months | with entertainment at Carpenter . Yes mea: Cheb Th preparing itself for the impend-|4,the South), In this way the seophastaeg the necessity of fighting | against outrageous robbery of the| against the outrazeous robbery of | for contempt of court, was immedi. | Restle ee eee eee fe fraction work and the direct Party| against the right danger, which powerful milk trust), : | Wall Strect bankers, trusts and| ately re-arrested by immigration au- oh ie zB arr nated Hy. Wien: Meee Fylde ld tne fs pla a leadership within the militant farm-| causes our lagging behind the mass|” 7. i. wear now that the deepening | mopolies, and against the Reose- | thorities, but was released on $1,000! 7 is. Wi t Theatre of Action pe aly fF rnatntonmnee nt eig (ers. movement has been greatly|moveménts, ‘This also holds true in| ,-76 Cleat Dawoshat the deepening |i ee tof wulnation of the | ball furnished be We te West Allis, Wis. hm 7: p in mind the maintenance of the our agrarian work. iB Pp | Fas e “The Newabor asiotea: from ¥. J, prole| hegemony, s Jn . tion of Party™ resolution in coming Labor Defense. Paul ts threatened | November 12th: Right Danger in Farm Work | cadres eaten en aig Demagognes Break Strikes true, namely, further growth of the) While fully participating in the | with denortation to Greece. |] Goncert and Dance given by tne f 8 Workers’ Dance League es wh caries ponliicaliy gt Ge same! Of course, it is not to be supposed | farmers’ masg”.actions and their| formulation of such a fithting pro- | The fight to got Paul out of jail, Bauentionat Glee ase the Gea eer Program, New Revolutionary Dances [| Mseetigge ae ere are certain | time nae pe tere: Our farm | that we could already control the/| transition to more decisive forms of| gram and giving every support for | led by the I. L. D.. in which thous- Party at Lebor Hall, 63817 W, Na- ef generat’ Atraaction peat te e Paap direction, | schoo! e al ee saa its ine} majority of the toiling population of Tt 4s absolutely necessary] the struvsles for the everyday de- | ands of workers in New England were tional Avenue, a! Fok THIS EVENT dhe Oban pes ge mien understand ee Mood a + =! any hd the countryside. The more the crisis | to understand this perspective, other-| mands of the toiling farmers, it is | involved, is the direct cause for this : ° jeg a le aati Peon Hatta be fatal ore wend Feat rae hg deepens, the more active will be-| wise the Party'will not be prepated| the task of Communism to point | partial victory against the deporta- Canton, Ohio Fy Fall Program of Chamber Music ind aren te on the We rt tig ei ay extra ia Come the demagogie agents of the} and will continue to lag behind the| out the impcssibility of solving the | tion officials, who attempted new il- || November 15th: ‘ ‘An All Russian Program by the basic Jiangsu e at oy work Nias mans e one ante bourgeoisie. They are doing their| coming big struggles. crisis under capitalism. We must | against Paul, An im- Workers Press Dance being arranged & me te can ignored. t cand thet » cary | best to hold under their leadership| It is also necessary to understand| make clear the great contradiction | ctor admitted receiv- | by organizations in Canton at Inter- ke GUILD STRING QUARTET ° Ife Fda teed Ae ind Pci aaiet rei nf rhb {n the /the masses of farmors who are being| that, while social fascist agents, lke | that exists between the position of | ing 75 protests in one week. |] Rational Workers Order, 1732 #th Bt. fg | ce Fes githtian ayant these | of the United fol pty eee ag disillusioned about the Roosevelt New| Milo Reno and,others, are still hav-| the American farmers under the | The order for his release on the oh ns e dvi danaiea biphipclifcire hited el cyte the Sharecreppers’ Union is’ va Deal, in order to hold them back/ing a great influence among the capitalist rule, and the farmers of | contempt of court charge came di- Califernia is Irving Pl Main Hall Wn Snemnsel ven. "Y/from the real struggles and to pre-| farmers and are able to pull out| ihe Soviet Union under the rule of — rectly from the Department of Labor ft ig + taza Ma For instante, there has been prac- | noticeable, vent them from hecoming revolu-| strikes and other actions, we are not| the workers and farmers govern- | at Washington, and is also a result of The ereed Bovige filmi: 1006: Seen Irving Place and 15th St. {fj tly no fuldance given by the lend- Must Win Farm Workers Honized under the leadership of the) barred from taking part in these| ment—the catastrophic ruination the campaign.of mass protest against || [roti in GoTRES famous move) fF the yest pe Liye ; Iscussing} Nevertheless, we must not start | Communist Party. movements. The Party must actively| and pauperization of the American | the ruthless policies of Frances Pe! lowing cities on the dates listed be- o- grarian Resolution of the Ex-| boasting about our achlevements.| This is being concretely demon- participate in these struggles and| farmer, on the one hand, and the | kins, Secretary of Labor against the dow for the “benatit | of 0 een? tae ADMISSION 7% CENTS. EROteny Canrersaci Discussion | They are very small compared to/| strated now, when at the collapse of | learn how to-apply the correct tac-| great achievements of the farmers | foreign born. | palin ceeasae ze. Royoe is |. en an ted to our/the opportunities and the require-| Roosevelt's ‘Agricultural Adjustment | ties of the united front from below.| in the Soviet Union, under the col | "The Boston district of the I. L. D.| ‘ : Blect Your Delegates Today! || *erarian cadres only. The recent/| ments. Act, Milo Reno and his Holiday| And here our already considerabl vized agricul the othi hea Sa rite eat ct lith Central Committee meeting} We can point to them only tn the | lieutenant: a Bide tatnmra iq thal Gack Guatte phoetne tise navotes | nennik celier: aatibis agataiy tire Nov, 1i—San Pedro, Dasoed by the agrarian question with | sense that le Party is able to over-|{nrm site An order’ Yo demand that| Holiday Associtien, Paemore nice] nants, thereby showing the revolu- | deportation terror, and is urgently in | Noy, 12—Sante Barbarm - emai at | Holiday Association, Farmers Union| tionary way out of the crisis, ts