The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 23, 1934, Page 1

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| See ane nearer ae re SMEAR RE TIE “DAILY” DRIVE CAMPAIGN. Total to Date .. Press Run Yest WITH ELECTION ASK VOTERS FOR FUNDS. Yesterday's Receipts ..... +8 1,965.94 erday—48,600 Daily -<QWorker CENTRAL ORGAN COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL) NATIONAL EDITION Vol. XI, No. 253 <> 6 New York, M. Y.. Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at under the Aet of March 8, 1879, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1934 (Six Pages) TWO SCOTTSBO RO Price 3 Cents BANKERS HAIL NEW DEAL POLICIES MOTHERS REACH N.Y f WASHINGTON, Oct. 22. — Tom Mooney, through his attorneys, to- day filed with the clerk of the U.S, Supreme Court a motion to be al- lowed to file a petition for an or- TO VOTE COMMUNIST IN THE CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS bankers as a body, despite the presence of a good num- vho want an open machine gun y rather than a machine gun are PARIS SESSION! 7. w O. in New York |NAZI- JAPAN | OF LEIBOWITZ AGAINST Responds! _| PACT ON WAR THEIR BOYS DEFENSE oe The I.W.0., in New York, turned over | 7 | | ° F | European Lawyers Plan $500, collected from its branches to the Daily |Both Agree To Supply ‘ B3 Conference To Help | Worker yesterday, to meet the appeal of | War Munitions to SEL = . Sonn Ben Dayis Also Returns—He and the Mothers to | P h a LA apes Roosevelt to Report to eee Thaelmann Defense Charles Krumbein for emergency contributions. One Another | : Tell Full Story of Leibowitz’s Maneuvers in The. : ” | Wall Street Men at ‘Daily’ — Conf M Rete DEMAND OPEN TRIAL This is only a small part of our quota, | AIMED ATT U “ ally — Conference aps cto! ght “j 79, oat y P stated Nathan Schaffer, secretary. “It is im- |‘ T THE USSR Tomorrow’s Session Ben J. Davis, Jr., arrived in New York yesterday after-/‘Free Thaelmann’ Signs, perative that our quota be completed before | Nazig Will Train Japan By Seymour Waldman noon from Alabama with two of the Scottsboro mothers, Painted on Ship by Election Day. Every branch meeting between | AAR Cores tbe WASHINGTON, D. C., Ors Mrs. Ada Wright and Mrs. Ida Norris. Two other mothers U.S Sean <s now and then should act immediately on the ze as | 22.—Fortified by President are on their way and will arrive within a day or two. se i f cated The Dail ? Work | Intervention | Roosevelt's Sept. 30 “fireside” Beginning tomorrow, the Daily Worker will carry a] A conference of outstanding Eu-| TUCSON OU raising Money. the Lally worker | : — ; radio talk in which, for the series of articles and statements by ae |ropean attorneys to consider the) 18 the L.W.0.’s greatest ally. We must not let |, LONDON. Oct. 23. — A secret | Strikers Being Evicted | first time in his presidential Davis and the Scottsboro mothers, stion of defense for the thou-| ¢. 8159 commercial” pact, between Japan | " i trick and coercion ae eines | it fail. jand Fascist Germany, providing} By Mill Owners, Gorman | °2%er. he openly acceded to the bigaiec dant See by Samuel | sands of anti-Fascist prisoners |for the supply of war materials.| ° “ P ultimatum of the dominant indus- cat ashent inte defense attor-| slated for “trial” before the Nazi ~ — - -| which was signed six weeks ago. has Forced to Admit trialists and bankers by stressing ney and his Negro lieutenants, execution court has been called to} ° ° | just been reyealed by the Daily —— feet a tne eee ml aided and abetted by the Sanne meet in Paris towards the end of e l Ll e B ureadu Ss tes heels tsriindi caste eae eee ee eeeeth tne 3,000-odd bankers assembled in the lynch eae ae aha taie ia October, the National Committee to \of the actual war alliance between| Federation of Silk and Rayon | Willard Hotel here for their sixtieth fie thistnetional Labor Defense, | Aid Victims of German Fascism an- O U, I ° |Japan and Germany, directed | Dyers, have gone to Washington Sie fest of the Ne Dy aie dee ‘i s saved d_ yesterday, tB d jagainst the Soviet Union, states | to see Dr. Benjamin Squires of the |* OV© Tesi of the New Deal's de= jE eine tO ea thls = BouTeed Vesey, nUnemptoymen OCLUES | ke Germany 1s to tures Japan | See ee cae d in |cisive Open turn to the right their lives during the past three Ernst -'Chaelmann, leader of the \ wi i oar President Roosevelt, in. his: somseh . le, 4 with chemicals in exchange for soya! an attempt to head off the strike sevelt. in his speec a half years. ‘i 4s Badia plete Magra eae teks Bs oe os beans. aE py achataiel Ae beak pes Wednesday night to the bankers at The Scottsboro mothers and Davis Saree | of the rirst to be tried by this Nazi » Edw: , is e | $ fs Constitution Hall, is ected to will also give a detailed exposure Haywood Tells of Plans extra-legal olga and his “trial” | By ppaigce’ “ty hotee iss sstearT aati taeanas Moy aaa Saipan lg aod reiterate his administratio: con- s # Si) - may eyen now proceeding se-j| . Sindee ie ‘i rie seb cern over profits and to repe2t ft aign at. the Scottshoro- | > } . 3 Este y F, engineers and avietors to stay in WASHLI N, t, 22.—Prancis : ecto geek Sitariae rally called To Rouse Struggle [oredys The New York administration spies on the city’s work-| Japan next year. The military na- | J. Gora ses seo than 2A rata paca gg An on “the “publig: Age for Friday evening at Rockland ‘ ; | “Line National Committee is cit-| ers “Special investi 3” jef |ture of this pact is very clearly six-month “no-strike” truce opened | feancig wtarine ee es Sete na CEA Against Executions: | | cuistns attorneys in the coats | pecial tigators” attached tp the: Homie “Reliet ee Bice h to aminé aoren ee ee piece emened || Francis Marion Law, president of Avenue By H ry H with an appeal to express their Bureau are paid salaries out of taxes paid hy workers to pry | with: poison gas, explosives, and thousands of textile strikers, has ne oe Sotoahe - porre | Plans for a giant Scottishoro- | y Harry Hayw' pirsiered witn the Paris Conference | into the organized efforts of these same workers to regain | ‘*#ined aviators to help the Jap- finally been. compelled to admit Rank of Houston, Texes peeves ! Hendon protest rally and mass (National Secretary of the League, attorneys and to voice their ob- | rt of their t; . if 4 anese- Army. -prepare for, war that -a restrike in the South mas’| +6 the ‘p last a , welaome to five of the Scottsboro, of Struggle for Negro Rights)” | Jections to tae Nazi “People’s Court” | PAFt of their taxes in the form of Unemployment Insurance. | against the Soviet Union.... In..te>..ccaun.vere soomyAsetine: mill owners | thar che DRE today | jochers were enthusiastically adopt-| Tt was a united front of Negro| M4 demand an open irial for alli Today, Daily Worker readers may¢———____-___._____ |turn, the Japanese’ aré to supply | are evicting and bfacklisting tens of sre’ osneiment “3 le Coe vd Sanday afternoon at the Emer-|and white workers, many of them|@8ti-Fascist prisoners, with the | follow the trail of one of these pub-/ kind of a case I would like to sub-|Germany with soya beans “for thousands, He admits that. cases Svcaomumoed that “the Roosevelt ee een ttsboro Defense Conter- | adherents of parties other than the | TiSht to have defense ‘attorneys of |lic servants by tracing a correspond- | Mit to Commissioner of Immigration | animal food.” involving 25,000 workers in 340 mills | je covonerative er cow ene ence, attended by 269 official dele- | Communist Party. which came to-| ‘eir own choice, safe conduct for) ence two of whose photostats are | Corsi og. a. pn |_1t-has Tong been runtored that.a have thus far come up before the | mon are enonuraced be the gates from various mass organiza- | gether Sunday at the Finnish Work-| @efense attorneys and witnesses Hi aes H “ “| military alliance had been estab- | Winant Board. suzances” in Roosevelt’s tions, unions, churches, lodges, etc.,|ers Hall, 15 West 126th Street, and and the right of committees of| Meet Mr. Charles A. Siegferth,) Eight days later Bighearted |lished between Japan and Ger- “I have just received five wires,” radio talk iis | ‘ani by more than seventy visitors. | pledged themselves to help with all| ttiends of the prisoners from other special investigator. Formerly he| Charlie rises to the occasion as per | many, but the publication of the| Gorman stated, “informing me ‘Fight Axainat Social Insebanes The conference, opened by Wil-/their energy, with all the forces of | Countries to attend the trials. had eked out a rather sordid liveli-| photostat: “commercial treaty” is the first defi-| that certain employers are not | “t think that one statement (Sep liam N. Jones of the staff of the|the organizations they revresented,| Proposals for communication |ROOd bY ested oa seers poner “John Droesser, Communist and | Hite news.of these maneuvers. only refusing to take back strik- | 39) the President made did more Afro-American, and chairman of | to mobilize the broadest masses for| with other attorneys and arrange-|this connection he is remembered |NOM-cit:zen, of 269 W. 25th St.,| News is rife in Japan, also, of a ers, but are preparing to evict | to reassure business then a the newly organized orovisional|the struggle to prevent the legal| ments for meetings of sympathetic | py fellow reporters as the author of | Manhattan, was held for the Grand | strengthening of the Anglo-Japa- them from company houses. The | ment he has made,” Law remarked. Emergency Scottsboro Defense Com- murder of the Scottsboro boys on| attorneys are contained in the Na-| a | Jury when arraigned before Magis-|nese alliance against the Soviet | Strike may be revived in the | He indicated that his annual re- ittee repudiated the disruptive December 7. | tional Committee’s lett |® monumental sob-story on the re-|+ 0.4, serris in. the West side | Union. South.” i? bn Be Cathe Bue ee Ana Se ot . | tional Committee's letter. |Mains of-a deceased horse. Tender | 03, 0) in the Nee Side . Howevéry: indiating: thatthe Laie bed a leliverei tomorrow Se ee Ponte analie 3 struggle for the Scottsboro | |Charlie became a copy reader for ie ie ee chsecieeot par- Saeed worketa ‘ofthe Saith-will: have to pecan Ly pee the banking ang ea erew oa that he had secured | Bertie the eo tone. WAY? |. BUFFALO, N.Y., Oct. 22—Bigns| the ‘same ‘sheet but the systeli of| [OPO IOR Sh @ mick... Droesser } strike despite Gorman’s efforts to|the Roosevelt, adminiowration’s: tor aster SOP REE pee eae oe ee poe vee rulers, yeading, ‘Down With Hiller,” “Free '@mmer and spelling he originated | | °* eae i abe Saat! conanby “wits the ‘Wave. ~he-adkded : Gai ts pone ese ae S0- retainers fr e boys bs ) 2 increase eir terror | fenet 14 3 wees does not seem to have gained a 2 iH “ mean ak apo tneto eaten On aie! | him as sole. defens attorney, and against both the Negro and white eas Se grmiciaaeh and “Vote Com- |r octhold. Despite his eternal boasts | Reds took part. He was removed Sica: erival would. of course, have| Other bankers made no secret of the Nezro misleaders supporting workers in recent months, are de-| WUmSh Were Painied on the sides) about political and underworld con-| tO Bellevue Hospital where he re- jto_have the committee's approval.” | the fact that Law and other big- Leibowitz. | termined to show that thee are is a oe ships here and several Pro-/ nections he found it expedient to mained about a week .. .” | _From reports of age textile re-| wigs, using the New Deal's dema- The Conference endorsed the two- | masters. They say. in effect, “Yes, ye eee Bald (98° Yi80r0US | hire himself out to the Home Relief; On the same week our Horse Paar a - eon & oe ahaa gogic gestures in the direction of fisted defense policy of the Inter- We suppress the Negro people and sak aelmann” campaign got Bureau's Gumshoes Detachment un- Pityer is assigned to get the low- is forced to. make vhe.above admis | the national interest, the sreatest st Wate ing meet | will 7 7 under way. ; ‘ ' sion. because of the growing senti- gooq for the ¢: ai erate ‘4 national Labor Defense, of securing cont inue to suppress them.” It jder Joseph A. Brady. down on “a building where alleged ment to disregard his truce and re- a r the greatest number an the attorney best fitted for each 18 @ difficult struggle because the, TWO hundred seamen attended a} some of his eariy reports to the Communists hold meetings.” He| strike : : fo On end 50 fOr, Sal ee Dhani Gt the. defetigg “fight, plur Roosevelt Government—the Demo-| Meeting in the Marine Workers|chief are brief and to the point. writes, “I did not visit the interior oy Saliafied with Ro It Board | Slogan, “Balance the budget.” along wnat pressure on the lynch courts,|Tatic Party. whose strength lies/ dustrial Hall, and unanimously |His record of a day's activities of the premises so as not to create Satisfied with Roosevelt Board | the lines of the anti-labor Enalish Tt set up a National Scottsbor mainly in Tae South—stands behind adopted a resciution to be sent to sometimes consists of a single sen-| any undue suspicion,” but, “not a SES) thathe sneaks in behelf Pe iy srg Tory Ramsay MacDonald National- Herndon Action Committee, and the Suppression of the Negroes. tt | the German Embassy in Washing-|tence: “Janus: 5th—Worked on person entered or left the build- PITTSBURGH, Pa. Oct: ie timized “tex Ne workers, Gorman eee Tn other ieee called on all friends of the. boys will not lift a finger against the| ton demanding the freedom of|Communistic .°ta and recorded ing during my vigil there—a period | ™@Ss meeting at Carnegie Music piper sffpetss sie edie this bar convention will mest to join in setting up local: action | DTutel policy of the Southern demo-| Theelmann and other ani-Fascist names of several prominent agita-|of more than 40 minutes.” Ee tere ce ec JOE itl tale codute tet an be the Winant hoard” na ee biaginreli committees throuzhout the country. |CT@ts unless forced to do so by| prisoners. The meeting was ad-|tors.” Or “January 1%th—Clipped) Hm. What on earth could they | Vill Steet the delegates to the Na- (oe wg workers involved in cial ensifyitig see Tt issued a call. for the holding of | MASS Pressure. dressed by Rosenblat, Howe, O'Brien |the newspapers for Communistic have been doing? ‘From a police Plein the Ammar as peateatin ot cases reviewed by the board, he ‘Galiti for genuine Tien vee protest demonsirations to prevent | Trickery of Reformists jand Rhienacker. pte Poeclote ies ene sergeant in the vicinity I learned | 1 shor oar eabindag HERE OCe he stated only one-third were re-in-| insurance and for adequate relief, the legal murder of the boys on| Further difficulties in this struggle | list. to eae Downieniae tile.” ‘on that the members of this group in- | 51 °8 grclock. 7" “| stated on jobs. Gorman stated that two of the most important planks December 7. the flooding of Presi-| flow from the fact that thi 1G Uni PL . ? | termittently addressed the Sea- . he is convinced that only a small ; a tac ah 2 : \ Gent Roosevelt and Governor B. M.|tionary forces, yes even th e _ ompany Union aMs the 20th of the same month he men's Institute and have made re- | The conference itself opens Sat- sininorlty of tas ectitneed “colll own in thi is eon platform cf the Com: ‘ path. » yes. even the lynch- * polishes up on his theoretical equip- urday morning at Slovak Hall, 518/ Relate ern mi’ own- | munist. Party. 3 ee of Bohlen mitts rae pt can always find willing tools Anti-Labor Vet Post! ment: “Spent most of the day read- Chatince (since Court Pl. At the mass meeting, fol- |@TS have a “deep-seated Sonshirs Today's headlines in the Wash- ‘ quis deuagation tec Weahtnaton toMMUa He Hare Gene noms San ing radical literature sent to us by (Contmsed som: Bone: 2) lowing the first day's sessions, Louis| "Ot to take back workers, but to| ington Post, owned and operated by A le ee a gears eras ie his Negro lieutenants, Davis of DETROIT, Oct. 22—The com- | Precinct supervisors, where it had i Weinstock, national secretary of the | °Vit and drive them out,” and that | Kugene Meyer. Wall Street banker eet aad the U.S. Congress for the| King ene en News: Rev. Lorenzo | pany union’ at the Hudson Motor |Peen distributed by various Unem-| Stachel Will Address | F. of L. Committee for Unem- |® Testrike is to bring this "minority" | and Hoover's Governor of the ed- Angelo Herndon, and for the en-|boro boys, which is not only the| ion, merican Legion Post and is r Tesults of the San Francisco! even company -union attempts in a ateal Eth j * ‘ his immediate superior. On March venti f the A. F. of L. and on| ©ve" pany urious conference rooms 0% e j forcement of the constitutional) question soliciting members in the plant. e ‘ convention 0! ie | | snes * - rights of the Negro people. It called | these miceatbecae ties fats Sg Le Dae ta Ueestly eine seh | a cherees aur. mindy iac| tke Dye Woks ors win tee [oe ene one fle. program puss eae id earns wie Pope nie for the collection of a million signa-|the same time the question of the|UP,,PY, the company as a fascist my Ss shstastat oe a citi strik ill be the subj t x the Other speakers at the Carnegie) — pyers Continue Preparations President's speech tures to back up these demands. | Wberation of the Negro people, Thie| XTIKE-breaking weapon in prepara- /inctuetions to four of his under.| macs meeting tomorrow might, at |MUSiC Hall mass meeting will in- paTERSON, N. J., Oct. 22 “New deal shift the Conference fully understood, 1/108 for the production season next ings, Siegferth among them: | the Italian Republican Hall, 96 | ‘lUGe three rank and file delegates | preparations for the s: | cheers financiers. a understood very well the tricks of| Zea", when the strike struggles are | wy) investigating the cards will| Butler St. The speakers will be | the San Francisco A. F. of L-| and silk dyers continues, as Gen-| Bankers and Roosevelt Agree Moone Files Leibowitz and the Negro reformist | °XP°cted- lyou try to locate one or two Com-| Jack Stachel, national secretary |COnvention, one delegate from 2) eral william N. Haskell, chairman| ‘The-Liberal Washington News. en- leaders around him. It underst i i yho are ief, of th i g, |Cleveland auto local, one from the | o¢ the silk code authority, ‘s trying thusiastic backer of the New Deal th ‘ ood Every Communist Vote Is the |munist agitators who are on relief, ef the Trade Union Unity League, New York Cleaners and Dyefs, and in ‘i : ye! e that people like Leibowitz and his z who are aliens and who have been, and Joc Magiicano in Italian, or- big arg }a last minute maneuver to ave and Cavifal organ of ree bps New Motion | : Vote of a Worker Prepared to arrested and convicted in connec-| ganizer of Shoe Workers Union | : : : | Bowie ane heastined: eS | (Continued on Pade 2) Fight For His Rights, ‘tion with disturbances? This is the) of New York. (Continued on Page 2) (Continued on Page 2) parla cae Gey SPN padiied + 5 2 : 2 sued by Law In US, Court dicting that this conven a) “constructive” in N ye ery.” Law made it ) iginal writ of habeas corpus. The motion is based on the use of per- jured testimony to convict him, as admitted by the original trial judge and the Wickersham Committee, etc. A similar motion was recently rejected by the Federal District Court in California, which ruled that the appeal should be taken to the local courts. These courts hed refused Mooney’s request for trial on one of ‘the untried original in- dictments against him, fearing that such a trial would result in a dra- matic exposure of the whole frame- up of this militant working class leader by California financial in- terests. A Vote for Communist Candi- date: Is a Vote against Company “Unions.” The National Executive Board of the Trade Union Unity League calls upon all work:rs, orsan- to exploit the Negro masses so that the employers may continue ized and unorganized, Negro and white, members of the A. F. of L., T.U.U.L. and independent unions to endorse the Communist platforms and candi- dates in the November Congressional, State and municipal elections. Of all political parties in the field, only the Communist Party in the present elections presents a platform which champions the interests, raises and fights for the vital needs which face the American working class. . The programs of the two old capitalist parties, the Democratic and Republican parties, are pro- grams of continued attack against the conditions and organizations of the workers. The “issues” raised by these capitalist parties purposely blur those problems and questions which are vital to the workers. Behind their demagogy and new Promises, their program is one of continued mss starvation for millions of workers and farmers anti increasing lynch teworism agedrst the oppressed 1934, hundreds by State troops, one of hunger, tion wages and ard ccmpulsery labor camps, of | San Francisco, | the general ctruggles. It is program is one of suppression of the workers’ civil and political rights, of terrorism and murder. Forty-six strikers murdered since January 1, Picket lines smashed, increasing violence and terror agencies is proof of this. The bosses’ program is and social insurance, of mass evictions, of starva- to organize, to strike, to picket or to join a union of the workers’ choosing. It is a program of forced tracts and a progrem of government strikebreaking, as was shewn in the struggles of the workers in textile strike workers and reap profits. This wounded, countless strikes and the courts and other government of denial of unempicyment relief slave codes, of company unionism arbitration, the denial of the right injunctions, of yellow dog con- Toledo, Minneapolis, Alabama, in and marive workers’ @ program of growing terror, fas- cism and preparations for a new imperialist slaugh- ter as a way out of the crisis for the bosses. system. | gram of the bosses are viciously ca Whatever difference may exist between the talict parties and Democratic Party of Roosevelt and the Republican | | grem of hunger, The Sccialist Party of Hoover, both parties are united in their capitalist program against the workers. The “reward your friends—defeat your enemies” policy of Green & Company and the A. F. of L. have shown in a the groups, though they pretend to fight for the m: interests of the workers, chaining the workers to the capitalist two-party “Neutralit; means support for the capi- carrying through the bosses’ pro- of fascism, of war. Party and the Farmer-Labor ction that they do not fight for The Socialist P; bureaucracy means support for the program of | has refused to join in the mass campaign for capitalist parties. This results in disarming the | the only genuine unemployment Sistrenee bill, workers and chaining them to the capitalist politi- | the Workers Uremployment Insurance Bill. It has ref growing a in every eu stands side by si which fights egail supports in effice, both thi Bridgeport) and cal parties, to prevent the workers from develop- ing and exercising class political action against the bosses. Through this policy, the policies and pro- | arTied through by Green and Company, Today the A. F. of L. State Federations and other ions not only endorse the candidates of the capitalist parties, but energetically work for the success of the bosses’ parties and progran The policy of “neutrality” means neutrality from class politioal action and sed to join (Cor ks of the capitalists. the capitalist parties. in the united front against the In every strike, mion strugzle, the Socialist Party 2 with the A. F. of L. bureaucr: inst the rank and file, and openly Where they are e Socialist Party (Milwauke> end the Farmer-Labor Party (Minne- mtinued on Page 2) perfectly willing to mouthe all the about “humanitarianism.” that “the President does in for the bankers rs for the President,” ¢ liberal business pol it go ‘together with “hu- ree ne with the social refi . Pre ne recent open admission ‘ols administration that oced to genuine unemploy= for the many mil- plored and by the na= to cut down relief pay- ing necd for declared. that, | New tected by th by the Roc: | Wor't Spcak on Insurance | ,Your correspondent asked “Law this morning to comment onthe Dresident’s recent announcemen? ! (Continued on Page 2)

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