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Silk, Dye Strike Looms; PATERSON LABOR 200 Veterans | Philade DEMANDS WALKOUT ‘AGAINST: PAY CUTS Rank and File Calls for Keiler’s Removal As He | Acis As Agent of Green-Gorman, Expelling Militants and Again Giving Gorman Conirol Score Jailing | Of Frankfeld Egan Calls for Great Ambridge Prisoners PITTSBURGH, Pa., Oct. 12. [phia and Denver Ve Battle for First Place, In ‘Daily’ $60,000 Drive Mass Defense of Tyomies Employees Complete Their Contribution Pledge—Gain for Entire Country Is Six Per Cent During Past Week DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1934 Keller Prepares New Betrayal Raid Council JN TEX AS eadquarters Literature Confiseated and Caretaker Is Taken to Jail | DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 12.—Police Page-3 iroitPolice [RELIEF WHITEWASH SEEKS TO DENOUNCE JOBLESS Need for Aid Rises; Record Peak Expected After End of Crop Season; Food Relief Averages Eleven Cenis Daily Keller did not even allow the Pa:- | erson silk workers to meet and vote | } Two hundred members of the Vet- — i aetna savannah etna ——$$_$______—__— a ares i a : East Side Unemployment Council. <i 2 Eoaieg \ By Carl Reeve ;the -dyers in the general strike.|¢T@ns’ Rank and File attended a PPHILADELPHIA or DENVER? aay ee Re ae ae DALLAS, Tex., Oct. 12—-A recent investigation by a Frankfeld-Ezan defense meeting Tuesday night in the Fifth Avenue fiscated all lite: the caretaker, ure and arrested Olding him for in- federal grand jury sought to whitewash relief officials for the bad relief conditions here w Which of these will fill its quota first in the Daily e movement has al- ly begun in the textile indus- | on whether they would go back to | Worker drive for $60,000? ile it termed the under-paid . In Paterson, N. J., seven‘y silk | |High School, passing resolutions E: "y \ Ss z vestigation. fs : oF 3 z milis are on strike.” Strikes. ee paiatees hay pada rey nee protelting ihe feamecap cfs Sarat Or will either of these win? Will a dark horse win? ‘The raid is part of an organized | and over-worked investigators “unsympathetic and lacking i i sylvani where | into the mills and “postpon vial fs mary” lice attempt to smash the Unem- | j i ae eopie 2h p see Ae spreading in Pennsylvania, where | to the Mbls and “portPaiccuss the |Frankfeld and the Ambridge pris- po! pt to smash the Unem- | in thoroughness in their work.” It denounced representae this week Pinchot’s state police at- | tacked mass picket lines in Lan- caster. The fight of the textile | workers continues in the Sxuti and in New England. The Pa‘erson dyers are on the verze of striking. The statement of the Communist Party that the textile workers would re-sirike, that the period of strikes in the ‘extile industry would continue, is being amply borne out. The conditions against which the textile workers walked out on gen- eral strike remain, | The re-strike movement puts for- | situation, Keller is now making free use of the police a’ union membership meetings and in union halls to quell the rank and file militancy. Keller’s Latest Maneuver Keller is now trying to vecover the ground he lost among the work- ers through this stinking treachery. He has wired asking “permission” of Wliliam Green to call a silk strike on Oct. 25. Keller knows very well ‘hat Green will not accede to such a request. This telegram has already been referred to Gor- oners. | Jim Egan, secretary of the Steel jand Metel Workers Industrial | Union, now under a sentence of one | Year for speaking at an unemployed | | demonstration in front of City Hall | last Inauguration Day, was the main speaker of the evening. He| called on the ex-soldiers to rally to the demand for the liberation of class-war prisoners who were their comrades-in-arms in the struggles of the working class. | Ike Hawkins spoke on the plat- | quota! cent! The battle among these two and | aid for the paper! whatever districts suddenly jump linto position beside them—if any | do—bids fair to be one of the hot- test of any Daily Worker drive. Denver was in first place until two weeks ago, when a $900 con- tribution from Philadelphia sent it down. In the past week, however, Denver gained only three per cent, while Philadelphia made almost 10 per cent. Country Gains Small Philadelphia has completed 71.6 per cent of its $8,500 | Denver has done 608 pers eee | have nct responded to the challenge. ployment Councils here which have — |been active in winning relief for responsibility of obtaining financial |the jobless workers and leading the |fight for increased wages on the Tyomies Mect Pledge | relief jobs. In Superior, Wis., the Tyomies; The International Labor Defense employees have already contributed | has protested the raid and is at- the full amount of their pledge.| tempting to obtain the release of With a check for $13.74, they have| the caretaker. ~ added the finishing touches to their challenge to the other language newspapers. These latter, however, Pittsburgh Anti-War Relief Workers Will Picket ® ‘Library Today ° i organizae 2 s” who were ,“‘stire up the unemployed.” unemployed receive an than 11 cents.a day and nothing for, rent, clothing, medicine, , end other necese tion most no work relief, miserable the e, employed some of the the drought caused suca Chief among the backward dis- tricts are Seattle and California, the | first with a quota of $1,000 and the | Delegates to Report |Demand Reinstatemeni at Mass Rally Monday _ of Fired Employees i crop that the best pick- unable to make a dollar a day of ward similar jevances a de- rs i © i pats 12 hours wor Never- Hae A hese aie une a the | men by Green. form of the Communist Party in For the entire country, though, | second, $2,000. | PITTSBURGH, Pe. — Delegates | OL A,.O). be Bae the! the relief officials dropped 1 ile i By the very act of sitting and | the coming elections, pointing out |the gain was 6 per cent! From| California is a chief home for |... “ aif Bates | many of the unemployed during the Seneral strike—against ihe ow | et ee ery ne Green-German (its program of struggle for day-to- |Sept. 27 to Oct. 4, $3,436 came in. | fascist vigilante terror, the home of | 70M Pittsburgh to the Second) | me picking. season e y rages being paid undesiine Ai Bes reply, elles 4 orm sy demands and the Tes alutecy (Laat week the resuits showed $3,506. |Upton ‘Sinclair Pic. Against Uniied States Congress Against | Determined to smash the cam- PITE SOP serciis in pousion codes; against discrimination | AD a is or heise «| overthrow of capitalism as the only| New York must take a tremen- | vigilante terror and against the Sin- Wer and Fascism held recently in| paign of discrimination against the gecjore that the relief rolls, which against union men; for the thirty-| to tuen a strike of 30,000 silk and | ot tor the working class, He |OUS step forward: Its quota is as|clair program stands no more res-| Chicago, will give reports on the| organizations of relief workers, the had 261,090 families in September hour week; for recognition and for cabs au ai peat the {Called on the workers to vote Com. |much as that of the other 25 dis-|olute and clear foe than the Daily [onsets at a mass meeting in the | Associated Office and Professional! will be’ increased during October higher minimum wages for skilled | y yed the | vunist Noy. 6, so as to allow Com.|tTicts. and it has completed only| Worker. It is the newspaper which | Fifth Ave. High School Monday | Emergency Employes will throv’ 2) and the winter months with=the and semi-skilled. Gencral Silk Strike Looms general strike. He is acknowledg- ing, on behalf of 30,000 workers, | munist Party officeholders an op- portunity of exposing the apparatus 25 per cent. The mass organiza- tions, the trade unions and other shows the revolutionary way out— | the utter futility of such plans as evening, Oct. 15. jmass picket line around the Ne The program of the American | York Public Library, Fifth Ave. and end of the general crop season. spear ve-strike | the Gorman leadership as his | i workers’ in New York must |the E.P.I.C. for the working class. ins| , ism | 42 y : m= oes f The spearifead of the re-strike | groups in ‘ork mu: J League Against War and Fascism ind St., today at 11:30 a.m. Mem mone te a pe Te Seng | leadership. While Keller tele- ee betore the | Tealize that the future of the im-| California and Seattle cannot lag.| willbe ouslined by ‘Tony Minerieh, | bers of the A. O. P. E. E. will rally Harlem Ralk diye industry. The dye workers’ con- gtephs Green the bosses cut na es 2 Mee |proved national edition and the|The workers in these districts must | Jessie Lloyd O'Connor and Ruth | for the picket line at their head- Vv trash exbines thie niga “here nee |: eee vet Gomer of the |eight-page New York Daily Worker |be convinced that to contribute to| powell. No admission will be | Quarters, 43 West 19th St., at 11 a.m oe bd over 20,090 dyers in Paterson, where | _, eller is trying to place the fate | Ing. depends upon them! The Commu-|the Daily Worker is to keep alive | charged, One hundred prominent liberals S li Aid the whoie dyeing, end of the textile | of the 30,000 silk and dye work- RET aE: nist Party units must realize that| their newspaper. Activity in many |have been invited to take part in upp 1es 1 industry oe pane ed. In the Pater-| ° of Paterson in Gorman’s e they, the most class-conscious work- sections has shown that workers Shi G El ° Rally | the picketing and representatives of acai mills the ‘employers tind hands at the very moment phe oO ess Picket ers in the district, bear the chief | will contribute, op- ate Election Ra 'Y \the American Civil Liberties Union | To Cro to put over low wages at the con- tae “ sear 4 inde Re | District table in $60,000 Drive, October 6-11: Held at White Motor Co. | Wi! be present as observers should ppez Ss clusion of the general srike, and aa: Boards;;) Mesnwave, ’ Be IR li t Distriet Past Week To Date Quota Pere.Quota the police make any assault upon Bae blacklisted many of the strikers.| 40¢s nothing to prepare the strike, | eiie ces 1Bosten # ae + oa500 +30 ats ji ‘RARE aon the workers and their sympathizers. | * ? The silk workers are demanding | Gorman, who defeated the gen- sPalleateaioc io “249.00 2504.92 3,500 76 Lepahesce "i press teen ae | The picket line is being mobilized Basic Problem of Négro general str eral textile strike, has accepted | « ° ° 4—Buffalo 75.08 135.67 750 s |More than 200 workers of the | at the library which houses a reiief| + ‘A generel strike in the sik and| ‘T° strike” truce. for a six inPhiladel hia 5—Pittsbergh 283.26 1,200 '¢ |White Motor Co. listened to Yetta| Project employing 300 white collar/ im South Discussed aves ineiatey ais oni more on the | *20nths’ period, at Roosevelt’s re- | ite beth bg “4 Land, Communist Candidate for) relief workers. Three of these, ac-| At N. Y. Meeti * order of the day. The silk and dye quest, Gorman has agreed in ad- porns $—Chleago 1405.83 6.500 ‘8 Attorney General, Bisiictie! at a tive members of the Associated Of-| . . eeting . workers rightly ask themselves now | Yamee not to fight against the Pl D 9—Minneapolis 260.25 300 5 shop-gate meeting e) pany es jfice and Professional Emergency | oe = —shall the Gozman-Green machine | Diacklist, the stretchont, for rec- an to Demonstrate Eye yee bard ed ., [factory at 11:30 am, during the| Employes, Helen Crowe, Rose| History took another leap ahead of ihe United ‘Textile Workers once | °8tition or shorter hours, for the S par hy aera oes Pe ‘4, lunch period. Schwedel and Walter Kraus, have| Thursday night in Harlem’ when more control the coming strikes? | next six months. And Keller, a aturday, October 20 13—California 117.58 2,000 Disregarding the presence of|been fired on trumped-up charges | thirty-five inteilectuals and -pto- Shall ‘he leadership which sent the | Y@luable agent of the Green-Gor- 14—Newark es z ws foremen, superintendents, _and/which show flagrant discrimination | fessionals met for the purpose of textile workers back into the mills| ™&n machine, tells the Paterson | at Reyburn Plaza prea idad eae Hs 382 | known stoolpigeons, the majority of |against the organization. All three | giving material assistence to aid the Haeibicw in aihots toaliot | textile workers they cannot act eee 7—Birmingham BB Tan |the workers even disregarded the|are recognized by their supervisors | organization of the Sharecroppers’ vithout Winning 2B one cot the | until they hear from Gorman. | | 18 —Milwaukee 204.00 1,000 28, whistle and waited until Land fin- | and associates on the job as being | Union. their demands, agein control the PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Oct. 12— 19=-Denver 240.34 490 60.08 lished her speech, One worker came | Mong the most valuable workers on| ‘This is th A dest’ny of the coring ctruggles? The attemp® of the Oct. 1 issue while unemployed and relief work-| 20—Houston 4.00 300 |e eee Te and. told'| their projects, tut have beén singled | initia‘ea’ ts ie Hire orp See “Paterson, where Eli. Keller,/0f the Workers’ Age to Whitewash ie in ie x! | 218t, Lonis 62.15 500 w4 [UP to her, | shook hands and tol cat dor uegantentianal wee s initia ed by Negro professional men toneit> manager of the silk | Keller will not go over with the | rs speed their plans for a mass 22—West Virginia ei ~ aa \her: “That's telling them.’ | ; sch to attack the Negro question at its on (U. T. W.), was the one who | Paterson textile workers. Keller's | City-wide demonstration at Rey- | mena 335 00 ve “Don't forget to vote Commu- | | ene other active A. O. P. E. E.| base; the millions of Negroes on i out all of Gorman’s instrus- |Tecord is too smelly to permit of |burn Plaza on Saturday, Oct. 20,| 25—Flerids 61.00 200 25 |nist November Sixth,” said Yetta eth petra youd he y the land in the South. : lions for the betrayal of the strike, |@ny defense. ‘The so-called Work- | at 2 p.m., despite a police ban on) "sett Pakote sat bend | Land to him. | Feed epeael Jetry Rosse, have bec | The meeting was doubly signifi- the renk and file are showing where )rs' Age claims that. during the | tie meeting, a flood of job prom-| 26 Distriets $16,690.37 869,000 aU “You bet I won't forget”—came | inder similar circumstances. pears] foes because among the speak> they stand. A membership meet- ing, with 600 present, lest week de- mancod Keller's removal. The rank end file opposition in Paterson has demanded that the silk union shall have an immediate shop chairman’s mecsting in order to make real strike preparations. Keller's Resent Record In this situation, when the Pat- erson workers are faced with the necessity of immediate strike, Kel- ler is once more attempting to put cn his left face. He wants to main- tain his slipping position in order to be able to betray the Pa‘erson textile workers once more. In words, | ke is for a st: Tt is well to review. Keller’s re- | ctions. (1) Keller is now) carrying through William Green's | red scare and expulsion policy, hav- ing secured the expulsion of such | militant workers as Valgo. This is in line with Keller's statement in the last national strike in 1933, general strike Keller was carrying cn “pressure” for the dyers to be | brought out. They claim that Keller wired Gorman opposing the calling off of the strike. But the fact remains, and cannot be disputed or denied by the Work- ers’ Age, that it was Keller who sent the strikers back to work. His “protests,” if any, were confined within the Gorman leadership, of which he is a part. He never varied from his loyaliy to the Gorman leadership in carrying out Gorman’s instructions. The telegram was sent at the demand of the mem- | bers. The Lovestoneites are ever loyal to the A. F. of L, officialdom, In ection their only discipline is the discipline of obedience io the dic- tates of ihy Green machine, Rather than disobey Gorman’s orders, Keller stabbed the Paterson work ers in the back, ordered them back to the mills, postponed their mem- | ises are being thrown to Philadel- | | Phia’s 400,000 unemployed -by re- | lief officials and politicians. | Newspaper headlines announced | that “1,200 to be given out Mon- day; 1,000 to be given every day.” On Monday, Oct. 8, large crowds of workers stood for hours before the relief work offices. They were turned away. On Tuesday the unemployed came back With banners demand- ing jobs, Relief officials then de- clared that the promise of jobs was a mistake, but that forty jobs would be given out on Thursday, Oct. 18. Picket lines have been thrown around the work relief office at 1450 Cherry Street by white collar work- | ers’ organization and the Unem- | | ployment Councils. | A committee of one hundred, | elected at a recent unemployment | conference here, will present relief | | demands to the City Council on | Thursday at 12:30 p.m. The com- Workers to Canvass for Communist Votes Throughout Cleveland CLEVELAND, Oct. 12.—The capi- talist parties have opened their election campaigns full blast and are utilizing every means at their disposal to mislead the ‘workers with false promises. ‘The Communist Party {s also mobilizing its forces to reach the widest strata of workers with its real working-class fighting election program to win them to support the Communist candidates. With this aim in view the Dis- trict Committee of the Party end) the language fractions are mobiliz- ing every Party member and sym- house-to-house can- E.P.1C, Club Official Tells Deputy to Remove C.P, Election Placard WILMA, Calif. Oct. 12. — It might be well to know just what to expect from Epic leaders if Sinclair were elected. In this small town near Pasadena we have our Com- munist Party election headquarters in the store next to the Epic Club. When our election sign was hung by the committee, the manager of the Epic Club brought down sheriff's deputy and asked him if the sign was permissible. Hed there been any disturbance by the Communists? Oh no, no disturbance, | the reply and with this he hurried back to work. |China’s Red “Army Holds S. E. Fukien CANTON, Oct. 12.—The South- east of Fukien Province is now in the hands of the Red Army. Even on the frontiers of the prov- ince small detachments of Red troops are fighting the forces of Chiang Kai-shek. Newspapers here state that an army of 20,000—ihe troops of the First and Second Corps of the Chi- nese Red Army—have occupied a |number of positions in West Fukien, a and have severely defeated in their | massed at the home of Hurwitz, an advance the third division of the governmental army. | Red divisions of 4,000 men have |occupied important points in North Fukien. In the Southern districts of the Province of Honan an army ‘is operating with 10,000 men, 300 ings and re-instatements are de-| manded for all six of these relief workers. In a letter to Mayor LaGuardia, | Alexander Taylor, executive secre- tary of the A. O. P. E. E, de- manded that the Mayor take im- mediate steps for an end to this discrimination and order the re- instatement of the discharged work- ers, for the evening were two represtn- tatives of Sou hern born workers and intellectuals. One speaker, a white sociologist, the other, a white worker active in organizing Negrtes and whites into unions in the South, told the history of the Sharecroppers’ Union. A substan’ ial collection was taken which will be sent South for the purpose of aiding in the organiza- tion of the Sharecroppers’ Union. | Plans were made to collect clothes Three Jailed as Jobless | end household utensils which will ee e | also be sent to the sharecroppers in Stop Eviction in Newark | the south. | NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 11.—Several | hundred Negro and white workers! CELEBRATE C. P. BIRTHDAY ROCKFORD, Ill., Oct. 12.—More than 250 ons attended the cele- praiion, held here in observance of the 15th anniversary of the Com- munist Party. A representative of the Chicago Workers School was the principal speaker. He outlined the ory and the achieveme: | unemployed work at 390 Morris | Ave. here Wednesday, and stopped | a scheduled eviction, Three w ers, Bloke: Diamond and M Shapiro, were arrested. Early in the morning the workers of the Farty and dealt with concrete bership meeting, expelled militants, | pathizer for where he said, “I will see the union | assembled at the house where the mittee will report to the assembled Then it couldn't be done legally, machine guns, and il before I will make a united | and kept the dyers at work. i | vassine on Sunday, from 10 A. M.)| 10 mountain |r 3 e €' plans for the building of the Pj tral M eth the National. ‘Textile | This, evidently, is wha’ is meant | Workers at the mass meeting on |to 2 P. M. lout the deputy and the Epic man | howitzers. pacer petiea aiake Place. About) in the Rockford section. Workers’ Union.” |by the Workers’ Age when it de-|®2vburn Plaza, Saturday, Oct. 20,/ To utilize the remaining four had quite a chat, just the two of | Certainty of these advances of the mand of the landlord, who threat- —__———_ 42) At the national convention | clares for a “realistic” policy ang|*! 2 Bas weeks for the best possible results, |them together. That night about | Red Army were expressed here on | Qnoq the unemployed with ineke Build Up a Daily Worker Carrier Sigs 11 o'clock, neighbors saw four per-| publication of Chiang Kai-shek’ ‘ b ; TB?! Route! of the United Textile Union, just when it charges the Daily Worker | "before the general strike, Keller did not, throughou: the whole conven- \ tion, make any concrete exposure PUR RERORS | another election Suntay will HARTFORD C. P. NOTICE held on Oct. 28. HARTFORD, Conn., Oct. 12.—The| All Party members and sympa- new mailing address of the Commu- | thizers are urged to take part in S| knife, the police seized the three workers, ~ \sons take down tine sign and carry announcement that the red force: lit away, jhad been defeated. | Within twenty-four hours we had | with “teeth gnashing.” This is the | identical policy that some “left” So | cialist Party leaders carried on—| AFFAIRS FOR THE A Red Builder on Every Busy | Free Thaelmann Rally of the Gorman-MacMahon ma- Sate Ge strike, a com-/| nist Party here is Pest Office B % | the election Sundays on Oct. 14 and a bigger and better ae up, a a Ween eer) chine. He did not make any con- | Plete.tie-up with the Gorman ma-| 1511. Th? section's headquarters | 28, \now we assign comrades to guard | Street Corner in the Country Means | » 9 : a > crete criticisms ef Gorman-McMa- | chine; no warning to the workers |rre loceted at 1029 Main St., Room | |the headquarters all hours of the a Tremendous Step Toward the m Cleveland on Tuesday DAILY WORKER hon of | of the coming betrayal; keep the | 10. tes Solicit Subs for the “Daily” \day and night. | Dictatorship of the Proletariat! — ‘ Keller ned editorial in | the Paterson unicn paper, declar- | + ho nad no differences with | o¢cMahon-Gorman leadership. | During ihe recent general ke Keller, trom day to day, car- i out, without question, every | instruction he received from Gor- man and the U. T. W. strike com- workers disarmed as much as pos- sible from learning the true char- acter. of the Gorman leadership. Thon, after the battle is over, in order to try to crawl back into the workers’ favor, io declare “I was against them all the time.” The 30,000 silk and dye workers of Paterson must smash Keller's | Writer Exposes Pro-Fascist Record of Citrine, British Fraternal Delegate to A.F.L. Convention Detroit, Mich. Affair given by Section 2 C.P. at 2118 Lycacte St., Oct, 13, 7:39 p.m. Chicago, Ill, tines wicske™ avranged fy ined Sec. 1 at 528 E. 1th €&., 8 pm. Tntere national Amusements. Adm. 15¢ Election and Daily Worker House’Patty by Unit 912 st 1257 N. Campbell Ave. | 3rd floer, Sz jay, Oct. 13. Pree food. CLEVELAND, Oct. 12. — Public Square will be the scene of a rally next Tuesday for the freedom of Ernst Thaelmann, imprisoned Ger- man Communist leader, and Karl Seitz, Austrian Socialist and former | Mayor of Vienna, jailed by the | Dollfuss government after the Feb- ruary uprising. The demonstration, | under the auspices cf the Americ: ittee. Keller refused to call out} treacherous moves now. The les- | Fine, Se a m son of the general strike is that — e— ° : pres : Lense Against War and Fasel: | = ns Forde 200 ot Prin 7 , ee beatae not be Favored Collaboration |port tascism, has tried every means —exactly as happened in San Fran- Aided ‘Right of Public ENE en en a ae M hat Ss On betrayal. This time the k and So paralyze any resistance to fas-|cisco general strike, betrayed the M e eting’ of En glish Public Square to: the Gtstakh Con Good food and entertainment. -~Adm. Cleveland, Ohio “KREPKIN” play on the Russian Revo- Jution, showing for the first time, by Brench 2068 Slov. tosether 5 EWO: e of SI file must prepare, and control, their own strike. The rank and file opposition has put forward the correct pro- gram for winning the demands of the silk workers—the immediate With Alfred Mond, British Fascist By Alfred Goldstein At the convention of the Amer- cism. ‘When Oswaid Mosley, the English imitator of Hitler, decided to send up a trial balloon and issued a call for a fascist rally in Hyde Pars |for Sept. 9, the Communist Party strike and maneuvered the workers’ demands into channels of arbitra- tion. “The strikers must refer the maiter at issue to the decision of some impartial (!) authority,” he Blackshirts fighis the united front on such measures as the Means Test, the terest enemy in Walter Citrine. He | | free. Given by Unit 314. sulate to register their prot |against the trial of Thaelmann by Philadelphia, Pa. Con 7 B . Cet. 19, 8 pms at ced and Christian abad from “Artef,” ons i Affair given by Unit 194 on Set., Octe fascist courts, The American League has urged all organizations sympathetic to the | struggle ezainct fascism to mobilize adwa. ets. the D: si e é : id. “Loeielatt a 5 | fair given a ? - A At. ares ie election of a rank and file strike |ican Federation of Lebor in San UB Soe nese eee ee decta wile ue tte or eat Seditions Bill, and the general| their members for this protest de paced ensign beer 2! Oc in act, 35¢ at’ door. committee; the removal of Keller | Frencisco sits the General Secretary | “ at a a every izati i. tigation committees of inquiry, | Menace of fascism and war. mees- | onstration. | Banquet, Saturday, Oct: 14, 8spantiat : and other similar traitors; the |of the British Trade Union Con-|4"¢ trade union organization in) oa ich like bodies, charged | Utes which only the united front) Beis |) Tauatae” Giraed Aes. Seeaiiraaee Chicago, Ill, control by the elected committees | gress as a fraternal delezete. she country. can defeat. | Mills, W. R. Powell, Ben Gardger, GALA Youth Dance, Saturday, Oct. 13, 8:30 p.m, at the Liberty Hall, 3420 W. It Road. Duke Croswell and his of the strikers of the strike and of all negotiations, If the rank and file does not act now, the Supposedly representing the Ene- lish werking class, he rose to the floor of the convention a few days Assurances of a powerful demon- stration poured in by the thousands. Trade union locals everywhere in with the duty of ascertaining the causes of industrial conflict as they arise in specific cases.” Green, An American Citrine William Green, as President of the A. F. of L., serves American A group of workers in a C. C. C. camp send $i—a sailor on a U, S. ‘battleship sends Si—a worker in Good program “of ene Come James Wilson. inment. Adm. 25¢. Auspicest t Party of West Philadelph! mun Spaghetti Party and Dinner, Saturday, Sica. maimkinenta: Sz: | strike will not be prepared, and | ago and tried to appear as an op- | Pusiand pledged their Beemer Hees eee eee industrialists and American im- Duluth sends a quarter! All cry Oct. 13, 8 p.m. at 52 W. Cottman St. fission 25e, Aucpices, ¥.C.L, West! Side) will ke beheaded by the Kellers ponont of fascism. a common war against the threat) Why prolong the strike? Citrine | perialism in excctly the same way | that the $69,000 campaign must Boston, Mass ver Bection. and the Gormans as the general | When Sir Alfred Mond. leading |°f fescism. argued, when “more and more | as Walter Citrine serves Britis. | ieceea! It will dif eve! House Party’ cf the Season gitiliihy Philadelphia, Pa strike was beheaded Enslish_ industrialist, openiy recog; | _ Forbade Rally Against Mosiey | trade unions are finding it neces | capitaticm and imserialism. | “ueceed! Mt will stcosed Af SOY) Aottean Workers lub, sunday, Ore Je Sonta | jee nized Fascism and ‘explicitly con-| Citrine, too. acted quickly and | Serv to submit their eascs to the | Green, too, is the “grext arbitrn- |Te2der does his part. Make collec- | one: 14, 6 pm. at Al Binch's Homey ANTI-WAR and Fascist Sport Night, | Philadelphia Councils | #25824. that is purpose in the in-| the National Labor Council came examination of such bodies. ter,” helding back and mislead- | tions, held affairs, discuss the Daily | 192 Seaver St., Roxbury. Adm.18¢- Dramatics, Wrestling, Acrobatics. of Sport Box: Report of delegate Against War and Fi tcher 12 nt 913 Arca St. Ausp. SOHN REED CLUB Writers’ Group prevent another of its famous Red Litera- ture Nights. Réedings, Criticism, Discus- Congress Win Relief for Negro PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Oct. 11.—A delegation from the Unemployment dustrial “peace” nezotiations with the Trade Union Congress was di- rected toward the same aim as fascism, it was Citrine who de- fended Mond’s right to be a fascist and who favored collaboration with forward with the statement that all groups, including the fascists, hed the “right to a public mest- ing,” that not only did he refuse to call for a counter demonstra- tien, but he forbade any. trade- Having done his bit in breaking the strike, Citrine then quietly sat by while parliament passed the La- bor Disputes Act. This Act not only declared the most powerful working class weapon, the general ing American workers with the notion thot Reoscvelt and fhe government wili work in their in- terests, rather than in the inter- ests of American industrialists and z fi floor, Refreshments. Sundey, monopolists. Selover a4, donn Reed club, i96 eouin | Councils forced the welfare depart-| fog, even if Mond were a fascist.| unionist to demonstrate AGAINST strike, illegal, but it forbade trade| Walter Citrine does not repre- St. ment to grant immediate relief to) yond had declared, “I admire | Mosley! unions from financially supporting| sent the British working-class. Lancaster, Pa. PAT CUSH, stecl worker candidate for Governor on the Communist ticket, speaks et the Cours House steps, Satur- Cct 13, 730 pm. on the Election Boston, Mass. lieve What You Read?” a} \ the family of Arthur Jones, Negro, former C.C.C. worker, who had been denied relief since his discharge from camp three months ago. Jones was the sole support of his widowed mother and her five other children. He lost his jo» two years ago. The family was supported by relatives until he was sent to a C.C.. fascism because it is successful in bringing about social pecce. I have been waiting for years towards the same peace in the industriel fleld in England. ... Fascism is tending towerts the realization of my po- liticc] ideals, nameiy to make ail clacses collaborate loyally.” (Daily Herald, May 12, 1928.) How the workers grected such a capitulation to fascism is well known. One hundred and fifty chousend massed at the historic as- -embly and completely routed Mos- ‘sy and his. gangsters. neartily Citrine’s name was booed. And this is the dclegete whom Green pretends the working class And how | any political party representing them, or vice versa. The U. S. Chamber of Commerce is now trying to pass through Con- gress a bill modeled exactly on the Labor Disputes Act. to help fascist developments in this countr>. Citrine Fizhts United Front The natural unity of working- He represents the labor bureau- cracy which, together with the government, works for the sreater deception end expicitation of the workers of Greet Britain. And he comes to America, not with a militant message fer workers here. but with words of encouragement to William Green, the strike- Worker! 1 PHILADELPHIA, Pa. as DAILY WORKER CONCERT FRIDAY, October 19th, 8 P. M. mab Breadway Arena, Broad and Christian Sts. M. J. OLGIN fitecd ent bouteeale ites C. camp about eight months ago./ Citrine, tool of British capitalism.| of Great Britain sent ta America! | class forces, which are now faced | breaker and misleader of Amer- | ees see Shei Sages : tare, Saturday, Oct. 12, 8 p.m. The entire family has since joined’ ever since certain English indus-| When the 1926 general strike was with the most, savage offensives of | ican workers, and to help Green | Ree eed i a et Violin Solds; od Obst, 12 Newbury $:. adm, ac, {the Unemployment Councils, ltrislists and bankers began to sup- lat its height, Citrine stepped in and | British imperialism, finds its bit-! hide his pro-fascist role. sea ae \A »p