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9 Page DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1934 F.D.R. CONTINUES SIDESTEPPING POLICY ON ELECTION EVE NEW DEAL LEADERS _ 30,00 Sik Dyers FEAR TO DISCUSS | Sik POLITICAL Republicans and Democrats Press Policy ISSUES of Coasting; Deadly Calm Pervades Whole Capital as Voting By Margueri Day Draws Near ite Young (Daily Worker Washington Bureau) WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 26.—With the elections | less than two weeks off, President Roosevelt is giving attention to the campaign almost every day. His chief | business is to receive Democratic candidates and party of-| ficials. These peanut politicians come to the White House the publi 1 ana prediction uttered a Pol n lobby there. T it is Jo- seph F. Guffey, Democratic candi- date for U. S. Senator, lunching with the President and emerging an announcement that soon Presi t's Natural Resources will help Pennsylvania p e decline in the use of coal. To- morrow it may be Tammany Jim Farley, patronage-haloed Postmaser General, calling to report to Roose- | velt, and especially to the White House reporters, bright Democratic prospects. And yet the atmosphere of the national capital seldom has been so deadly calm as it is today on the eve of national elections. Tactic of Coasting The reason is apparent. The} Roosevelt Administration and the Democratic Party have settled upon one election tactic—coasting. The Republicans have nothing to say, much less do, about it. It is not that either lacks popular issues, but rather that there are so many vital questions before the people in this sixth autumn of crisis that a poli- tician can hardly open his mouth without striking something vital. And with both Republicans and | nocrats concernéd exclusively th convincing Big Business that they are the more capable of gear- government to industrial profit- naking, anything they say about a ssue is against them. e the issue of cash payment e veterans’ service certificates, | one of the chief planks of the Com- munist Party platform. President Roosevelt avoided it to the point at which, speaking before a veterans’ hospital, sidestepping became a declaration of opposition. Here was an excellent opening for the Re- | pyplicans. They have a national | y machine here to take ad- tage of just such situations. But not one statement»of comment was issued—they had nothing better to offer than the President's mis- statement that veterans are “bet- ter off” than other groups of citi- zens. Instead, Republican Senator Steiwet of Oregon, safe from the voters for four more years, went to the American Legion convention to try to put over a resolution for | rly’—-but not immediate!—bonus | payments. Aware of Jobless Issue Even capitalist politicians are | acutely aware that the main issue | in this campaign is genuinely un- employment insurance, for which the Communist Party has been pressing a specific, extensive meas- | ure for three years. But you can shag around the headquarters of both Republicans and Democrats, | WHAT’S ON Philadelphia, Pa. ELECTION Rally, Saturday, Oct. 27 at Kensington and Lehigh Ave., § p.m. with an Open Air Meéting. Then parade to Kensington Labor Lyceum, 2nd & Cambria Sts. where Jack Stachel will speak on the Textile Strike. WELCOME Banquet and Concert greet six released Anti-Fascists, Friday, Oct. 26 at 8 p.m. at 1208 Tasker St. Aus- pices, I.L.D.. Adm. 20c. Detroit, Mich. “MOTHER,” Soviet Film Movie, show- ing on Friday, Oct. 26 at 5200 Woodward, 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. LECTURE on “What I Saw in Pascist Germany” by Rev. John H. Bollens, Work- ers Open Forum, Sunday, Oct. 28, 3:30 p.m., Finnish Workers Hall, 5969 14th St. Pittsburgh, Pa. ELECTION Campaign Dance, 32nd Con- gressional District, Priday, October 26 at Pythian Temple, 2011 Centre Ave. Admis- sion in advance 20¢, at door 2c. Tickets at Workers Book Store, 1638 Fifth Ave. Worcester, Mass. BANQUET to greet the delegates from Anti-War Congress at 20 Andicott St., Sunday, Oct. 28. Given by American League Against War and Fascism. Newark, SECOND Annual Dance and Hallowe'en Ball given by Jewish Workers Olub, Sat., Oct. 27, 8 pm. at LW.O. Center, 516 Clinton Ave. Popular talent. Adm. 38¢. Proceeds to Children's Séhool. AFFAIRS FOR THE DAILY WORKER Boston ‘James Casey, managing editor of the Daily Worker, speaks at Dudley St. ais House, 113 Dudley St., Oct. 27, 8P. M. Los Ange! es, Cal. Banq' and Concert, Saturday, Oct. 27. Supper at 8 p.m. Russian Prog. Social Hall, 287 Erving Ave., Lawrence, ‘Mass. Excellent Concert, Orchestra Music. Ann Burlak will speak on Tex- tile Strike. Subs. 25c. Annual Workers’ Press Concert, Sun- day, Nov. 4 at Mason Theatre, 127 & Broadway. Concert Program. Promi- nent speakers. Philadelphia, Pa. Social and Entertainment, Saturday, Ott. 27, at 305 S. 11th St., 8:30 p.m. =) Music, Dancing, Recitations, Refresh- ments. Auspices: Office Workers Union. to Admission 15c. Buffalo, N. Y. Dance given by the Buffalo City Comm. L.W.O. and Russian National Mutual Aid, Saturday, Nov. 8 at & p.m. The | White House. | but saying nothing. The only word | same “one” Rooseelt mentioned. T | favors contributory old-age pen- | provision for administrative ma- | Which reminded me that the no- | torious Gaston Means once favored | swindling a rich woman. Dr. Witte | couldn’t say the Commitee was—or e campaign, and wait in vain for any word about it. President Roosevelt sought to handle the bothersome business by establishing a so-called Committee on Economic Security to study it, and report by Dec. 1, well after the election is over. To keep up the illusion that this Committee is working toward something substan- tial, the members regularly visit the Just today they filed in again—Secretary of Labor Per- kins and Federal Relief Administra- torHopkins accompanied by Indus- trial Emergency Committee Di- rector Richberg—looking knowingly available as to the outlook for the Committee’s recommendations came from the President, and it was sig- nificant, Pressed with queries about the Committee’s deliberations, he said they are considering several plans. Then he volunteered that one of these plans would provide that the federal government pay the overhead expenses of admin- istering social insurance — which would be no federal insurance at alll—and this was as far as the President went. Within a day or so, however, Secretary of Commerce Roper, who also has a special Com- mittee on Unemployment Insurance, composed of avowed Big Business representatives, announced that this group was in complete agree- | ment with the President's Com- mittee. Now it is reported that the | Roper Committee's plan is—lo! the dropped in to see Dr. Edwin E. Witte, the chief expert of the President’s Committee. He said he | couldn't talk. Not for Pensions Dr. Witte did authorize me to say two things which he expressed with all the emphasis his professional didacticism could command: con: trary to reports, he has not said he sions (under which the worker con- tributes to himself) and he con- siders the Workers Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill “no bill at all—just a speech, without any chinery or for an appropriation.” me with the “confidence” that he was “innocent” of a charge of that it wasn’t—for any of the fun- damental principles expressed in the Workers’ Bill. Nobody in Washington can talk, these days, about anything of any importance. The regular press con- ferences of leading officials are duds. Clay Williams, tobacco mil- lionaire head of the new National Industrial Recovery Board, has an- nounced that the “gold fish bowl” Policy is done for. It looks very much as though orders have gone forth to lie low until the election is over, Barrages Melt Down Far be it from the Republicans to complain, Their paper barrages are all minnie balls that melt down to charges of “corruption” in the administration of what little relief is given. Their fundamental slogans are “Balance the Budget,” and “Protect the Constitution”’—with a vagueness which opens the way for Democratic spokesmen to coun- ter with their meaningful theme, “Save the New Deal.” Notably, no} Republican is fighting for the Con- stitutional rights of free speech and assembly. Some New Deal demogogues have taken advantage of this: Secretary of Interior Ickes recently declared that “rugged in- dividualists who rush to the defense of the American Constitution” are “silent as the grave when the rights and liberties of the great mass of the people are really in jepardy.” Iekes, however, failed to point out that it is the Roosevelt Democratic Administration, which Ickes serves as one of the Liberal fronts, which has restricted these rights even more than did the rugged individ- ualists of the Hoover era, Months ago, some of the rare realistic Liberal observers here shuddered at a rumor that the Ad- ministration has decided to veer more openly to the right on the theory that, “Labor has nowhere else to go in the election and there- fore will have to vote Democratic; what we have to worry about now is business support.” That is ob- viously the guiding philosophy which the Democrats are following. What they blink is the full and con- crete program of tie Communist Party, to which labor can go. But for this, Glifford Pinchot would have been hone#i when he endorsed the candidacy of David A. Reed, Pennsylvania’s leading reactionary, upon the following thesis: “Reed is Mellon’s man openly and above board. Fuffey is Mellon's man se- cretly and below board. Reed is under obligation to Mellon and makes no effort to hide it. Guffey Teck Theatre Building (3rd floor), 760 Main St. Tickets in adv. 20c, at door 25c. ! is under obligation to Mellon and ' Roosevelt's compulsory e in 3 States (Continued from Page 1) a chance to continue their moves| to break the union. he dyers associations, in their | official statement, made it plain that | they are attacking the union and} refusing its demands, on the basis of Roosevelt’s six months “truce” | proposal and on the basis of Fran- | cis Gorman’s statements praising | arbitration. | The dye employers gave as their platfrom “willingness to extend the present agreement for six months in accord with President Roosevelt's wishes; readiness to submit the current dispute to the National Textile Labor Relations | Board, which was praised as late | as this morning by Francis J. | Gorman, leader of the United | Textile Workers.” | ‘The employers and the Roosevelt government representatives are now | trying to prevent the workers from | winning their demands through the | proposal of “arbitration” in Wash- | ington, | Another strikebreaking board is already being set up by Mayor Hinchcliffe of Paterson, who is mobilizing the fascist elements} around him for an effort to break the strike. Hinchcliffe, who works closely with the anti-union Pater- son Daily News against every Pat- erson strike, announced a meeting | Friday morning of “representative | business, professional and fraternal men,” at the Alexander Hamilton Hotel. He proposes that this anti- labor gathering shall “effect a} strike truce of at least two years.” Hinchcliffe proposes to organize a “Municipal Industrial Relations Board” aimed at enforcing com- pulsory arbitration and outlaw strikes. Dyers for Struggle All of these moves, however, were ignored by the dye workers. They poured out of the mills one hun- dred per cent, A last minute con- ference of the union leaders with Chappell and the employers yester- day afternoon lasted only 4 minutes and then broke up. The employers merely repeated their first proposal to renew the old agreement, and ignored all of the demands of the dye workers. “The strike is on at midnight,” George Baldanzi, president of the Dyers Federation, announced after the conference. “We accept the challenge of the operators and the strike goes on at midnight. Workers, stand united behind your action, | man the picket lines tomorrow} morning, and we cannot fail.” The strike was officially called for mid- night last night but the first test test came this morning, when at 7 o'clock, the time for the shift to go on, no one passed the picket lines and no one worked. Last night after the breaking off of negotiations, several hundred shop chairmen and delegates from the shops met, heard the report of the leaders of the dye union, and launched the strike. Riot Guns and Tear Gas ‘The entire police force of several hundred men was guarding the mills this morning. They had riot guns and tear gas bombs in their equipment. Many motorcycle police were in evidence. The employers have already brought in gangsters and spies. The Strike Bulletin No. 2, of local 1733 of the dyers federa- tion,. stated, “The union established definitely yesterday that the tele- phones at local 1733 and the Fed- eration Offices are both being tapped by agents working for the bosses, Also with the help of the notorious Tim Manning (racketeer) the bosses have stool pigeons spying in our meetings. Despite hired thugs and every known kind of | Communist Party Lists 8 Demands in Election) Following are the eight demands on which the National Congres- sional Election platform of the Communist Party is based: 1.—Against Roosevelt’s “New Deal” attacks on the living stand- ards of the toilers, against rising living costs resulting from monopoly and inflation, for higher wages, shorter hours, a shorter work-week, and improved living standards. 2.—Against capitalist terror and the growing trend toward fas- cism; against deportations and oppression of the foreign-born; against compulsory arbitration and company unions; against the use of troops in strikes; for the workers’ right to join unions of their own choice, to strike, to picket, to demonstrate without restrictions; for the maintenance of all the civil and political rights of the masses. 3.—For unemployment and social insurance at the expense of the employers and the state; for the Workers Unemployment Insur- ance Bill (H. R. 7598). 4.—For the repeal of the Agricultural Adjustment Act; for emer- gency relief to the impoverished and drought-stricken farmers with- out restriction by the government or banks; exemption of impov- erished farmers from taxation; cancellation of the debts of poor farmers; for the Farmers’ Emergency Relief Bill. 5.—Against Jim-Crowism and lynching; for equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination for the Black Belt; for the Negro Bill of Rights. 6.—For the immediate payment of the veterans’ (bonus). back wages 7.—Against the sales tax; no taxes on persons, or their property, earning less than $3,000 per year; steeply graduated and greatly increased taxation on the rich, 8.—Against Roosevelt’s war preparedness program; against im- perialist war; for the defense of the Soviet Union and Soviet China. intimidation, ranks remain firm.” It was also revealed that a mem- ber of the strike committee was such a spy and he was run out yes- terday, The strike committee or- dered the spy to leave town at once. This stool pigeon had been an or- ganizer of the federation previously and was trapped by the federation leaders. Silk Workers Meet Tomorrow In the silk branch of the indus- try, a membership meeting will be held Saturday to discuss the prob- lems of the industry. Friday night, Thomas MacMahon, reactionary president of the United Textile Workers Union, meets with the American Federation of Silk Work- ers (U.T.W.) executive board. Mac- Mahon was called into Paterson by Eli Keller, expelled renegade from the Communist Party who is man- ager of the federation, and Presi- dent William Smith, MacMahon is conferring with Keller and the other U.T.W. leaders of the federa- tion, among other problems, regard- ing an attempt to quell the growing demand of the rank and file for more democracy in the union. The rank and file in the Silk Federa- tion are calling for election of a new Executive Board by the union members. The silk workers now face the problem of the attempts of the silk manufacturers to permanently scrap the agreement, which expires this year, to cut wages and fire active union members. Already one thousand Paterson silk workers are striking against these’ grievances, according to the union officials. Rank and File Warning A telegram was sent by Baldanzi to H. M. Squires, of the National Textile Relations Board in Wash- ington, declaring, “Regret your re- quest from Chappell to defer strike action came too late. We stand ready to appear before your board at any time upon your request.” Rank and file workers warn that this board has as its only purpose the selling-out of the strike, and our that it and the other agencies of the Roosevelt government will work for the employers to rob the strik- ers of their demands. The Communist Party of Pater- son, in a leaflet to the strikers to- day, pledged the fullest support to the strikers and called for (1) the election of broad strike committees in every mill to have full charge of all strike activities in the mill; (2) enlarging of the General Strike Committee with workers from each shop; (3) election of relief commit- tees, defense committees and pick- eting committees; (4) to call for a conference of all labor and wotk- ing class organizations in support of the strike, especially the silk federation. ‘U.S. Board Acts Against Dye Strike (Continued from Page 1) in turn resulted in the current re- strike action, Gorman yesterday handed to the White House a lengthy report complaining that the mill owners have “resisted” the Winant Textile Board and President Roosevelt’s orders. Gorman’s report, while including stark statements by rank and file workers on the ter- rible conditions they now face, again implied that all these would be abolished if only President Roose- velt’s and the Textile Board’s de- sires were carried out. Among the exhibits attached to Gorman’s report was a reprint of a page of the Daily Worker of Sep- tember 24—an issue which cited the | sell-out, especially the differences between what the general textile strikers demanded and what they got under the Winant “ettlement. Gorman said that this “/ommunist publication” had been “reprinted by the mill managements and circu- lated throughout the South among the workers.” There Is Only One Road to the Socialist Society (Continued from Page pened? When the capitalists feared ity of the workers were ready to fight for the ac- tual achievement of Socialism, they let loose their They organized their Fascist hordes armed bands. to preserve capitalism. Therefore, to talk about the “gradual” transfor- mation of capitalism into Socialism by the simple expedient of buying off the capitalists and “voting” in the Socialist leaders, is not aimed at developing a struggle for the realization of Socialism, but is designed to put the workers to sleep to pave the way for the Fascist dictatorship, to dis- arm the workers, and to prevent them from mobiliz- ing their forces for a revolutionary struggle—the only way to achieve Socialism. If we examine Thomas’ speech we will see that the Socialist Party does not want Socialism, and does not want the ganize their forces for a struggle to achieve it. “When we socialize industry we do not intend to run it under a political bureau- cracy. ... We intend to have a general board of strategy, a national economic planning council to map out strategy in the war against poverty. for this sort of thing that I should work.” Sounds nice, but let us see the fatal, anti-working Before industry can be socialized at all, the workers must win political’ This can be done only by smashing the capitalist state power, and setting up a workers’ government, a proletarian dictatorship, which alone can give the workers power to socialize industry and Without this there can be no talk of economic planning. Only in one country in the world is there econ- omic planning and a national council of economy, and that is in the Soviet Union. But before that could be achieved, the workers had to overthrow Thomas said: class kernel contained in it. power. to defeat all who oppose it. the capitalist state, to destroy th of the exploiters, to set up Soviets the workers ruled, to prevent the trying to intervene, and then to reap the fruits of their revolutionary struggles through the inaugura- makes every effort to hide it” tion of Socialism. An Editorial 59) that the major- by pipe dreams, nition. Is this a little further, workers to or- It is a revolutionary e armed forces through which capitalists from ‘What is the Socialist Party doing now towards resisting the rapid steps towards Fascism, against the hunger program of the Roosevelt regime, against the war preparations of the New Deal? First, the Jeaders of the Socialist Party have refused again and again to form a united front with the Com- munist Party against hunger, war and fascism. In- stead, they formed a united front with the A. F. of L. top bureaucracy like Green, Woll, Ryan, whose main function it is to impede or break the workers’ strikes for better living conditions and union recog- a struggle for Socialism? Or is | it a good service in the interest of preserving capi- talism at the expense of worsening the conditions ot the American toilers? The Communist Party in its election campaign puts forward the day to day struggle against all of the New Deal measures designed to lower the work- ers’ living standards, prove the conditions of the workers and to broaden this struggle towards the overthrow of capitalism. In a recent manifesto to the American workers, “For the Revolutionary Solution of the Crisis,” the Communist Party declared: “There is no way out except by the creation of It calls for struggle to. im- democracy of the toilers, which is at the same time a stern dictatorship against the capitalists and their agents. There is no way out except by seizing from the capitalists the industries, the banks and all of the economic institutions, and transforming them into common property of all un- der the direction of the revolutionary government. There is no way out, in short, except by the aboli- tion of the capitalist system and the establish- ment of a Socialist society.” The program offered by the Socialist leaders will not bring Socialism, but will prolong capitalism, will aid the organization of the forces of Fascism. The prgram offered by the Communist Party in the elections, its revolutionary program of strug- gle, is the only way of ending capitalist rule and slavery and actually realizing a Socialist society, the Tule of the workers, Soviet Power! P ‘Vote Communist! j unstable and i\Cler | To Pressure; Oppose Nazis BERLIN, Oct. 25.—Within forty- eight hours of one another the Protestant and Catholic Churches, yielding to the pressure of German workers and peasents, have repu- diated all control of the Hitler Gov- ernment over any of their actions or pronouncements, the Protestant Church dividing itself by a formal and absolute split from the fascist State Church and the Catholics issuing a proclamation of inde- pendence backed up by an im- minent interdict forbidding any Catholic baptisms, confirmations, marriages, extreme w burials throughout Bavari: Hitler, who was to have “clarified” the church conflict which has left him withut a clergy and a laity, is reported to have developed a con- venient “toothache.” Meanwhile Hit- ler’s aides are in great consterna- tion that the peasants,many of whom had been deceived into expecting from Hitler some solution to their problems, are concerned in battling against the State Church less about religious scruples than about deal- ing fascism some heavy kicks for having increased their economic misery, High officials of the church op- Position such as Dr. Karl Barth, have openly expressed their minds in saying that the Protestant and Catholic churches are unwilling: to risk their influence over the masses by affiliating themselves with an collapsing regimk. How far the opposition leaders have been influenced by international clerical organizations, as well as by the Papal authority, which fear the damage to international religion of any association with Hitler Ger- many, can only be conjectured. In thousands of overcrowded churches all over the Reich workers and peasants flocked to approve the repudiation of the fascist State Church. From their pulpits the Pastors read: “We call on the Christian pat- gy Yield | to accept no instructions from the | former Reich church government or | \its administrative offices and to withdraw from further cooperation | with those who continue to ob | this church regime.” | Would Restrict Fight tion ministry is ict the struggle} religious istration That the oppos: as anxious to re: only to the question of liberty as the Hitler adr clearly as stated in the proc- i Capitalist reaction and n are not condemned, but merely exhorted “to recognize that |in church matters the church alone S ent and |is justified to p jreach decisi and di: jon s not prejudice the State’s super- visory authority.” According to impa: | rtial observers | here the present church conflict | be the lever which the| 's and peasants will over-| throw fascism in Germany. | Negro’s Home Raided, | 5 Held for Possessing Communist Literature | BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Oct. 25.— Following a raid upon the house of | Dave London, Negro worker, five| workers were arrested and charged with possessing and _publishing| “Communistic” literature. A print-| ing machine was seized after one| worker was threatened with death by an officer present. Literature confiscated included a copy of a} leaflet criticizing the fascist prac-| tices of J. T. Moser, detective, who led the raid. Moser had invaded a peaceful gathering a week ago, brandished a gun, but when confronted by the earnest faces of workers present, none of whom showed any @vidence of fear or confusion, he ran from the scene. The leaflet described this incident. Moser, irate, has deter- mined to double his activities in capturing and prosecuting “Reds.” Those arrested besides London, were Pete Turney, Will Sullen, John Dailey, Wheeler Thomas. Moser also brought charges of criminal libel against the group. All of these workers are out on bond. Their case has been continued until Noy. 2. ishes, their pastors and their elders, | Sicel Worker ji Is Framed Up As a Lunatie PITTSBURGH, Pa. Oct. 25.— How Jones and Laughlin, bitterest anti-union steel company railroads union men to insane asylums, was revealed yesterday with the release of George Issoski from the state hospital for insane at Torrance, ac- cording to a Federated Press dis- patch by Harvey O’Connor. Issoski, an Aliquippa steel workér, was fi- nally released by. order of Gover- nor Pinchot, after sensational charges of térrorism in Aliquippa placed before the Steel Labor Board, created a stir among the steel workers in this region. Governor Pinchot, who hopes to utilize this case as a means to dis- playing his role as a “friend of la- bor” placed state investigators on the job and has promised an in- vestigation of the Jones and Laugh- lin lunacy frameup system and punishment for the guilty. According to the Federated Press dispatch, the following was the re- sult after clues were tracked down: “Several days’ search for clues for ‘George’ revealed George Issoski, a union member of Aliquippa, in the Torrance asylum. Issoski was ar- rested September 11 in Aliquippa and sent to Beaver County jail. Sheriff O’Laughlin appointed a lu- nacy commission composed of At- torney James Knox Stone, who was active as a deputy in the Ambridge strike, Dr. Margaret Cornelius, county poor rélief doctor, and Dr. M. M. Mackal, jail physician. The commissions sent Issoski to the in- sane asylum. “Dr. Bond, University of Pennsyl- vania alienist, examined Issoski at the request of the State Labor De- partment and found him perfectly sane. The state hospital confirmed this. “The investigation is proceeding on other union men of Aliquippa committed to the insane asylum. Vote Red Against the Menace of Fascism! 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