Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
a Page 2 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 238, 1934 =x ooo . Greek Labor ‘ Fascist Regime in Spain|Lake Seamen | Appeal Made to Women |©.°. Kurniture 3 2 ll gia me | Workers Greet T AL / | ° United in Fight . = | Press Relief to Rall orkers Gree ont q| ; Workers bv America f o 1 O O i | ‘Canada Parle On Fascism/'aus t errorize rrers OY) Aid Demands , ‘Canada Parley i aalileda | es In Scottsboro Fight mis j ° a... ere Henn ree |Stratford Co i Formal Paet Joins Vir- ruta ily ter rme Pristng Peer: Cire 3] tratfor myention tuaHy AH of Toiling | Py Mass Rallies Planned | yyothers Can Appreciate Most Deeply the Savage Represents 2,000 Masses in Greece : ig i in All Ports Nature of Lynch Frame-Up Members ‘ges See | (Continued from Page 1) | for the outcome of the revolutionary; until the last ditch, waiting : nN ae battles. The treachery and coun-|for revolutionary reinforcements} QLEVELAND, Ohio, Nov. 22—At- . i NEW YORK.—The National Pure ATHENS, Greece, Nov. 322A the situation? What are the per-| ter revolutionary deeds of the anar-| throughout Spain. ‘They called on tempts of the coming special con- py See VERON: “ yoogar! > Macey ance. | Riture Workers’ Industrial Union, Dessdier snd tore. complete WAIL | spectives tn myate? | chist leaders was the greatest single |the workers, peasants and soldiers | rerence of Seamen's Relief Directors Acting National Secretary, Interna | Dy the TL. D. And they call e8P¢- | seruisteq with the ‘Trade Union front against war and fascism wis | Im this series of articles we pro-| factor bringing victory to fascism.|of all of Spain to follow their ex- /of the Great Lakes to introduce tional Labor Defense | tera anizekionin tie scrugéla to Unity League, in behalf of its mem- in any other country has been car- ke iscuss the| Third, there was the Communist | ample. But the failures, the | forced labor for seamen, as was in-| 1, appealing to the women of the | fre thet children bers sent fraternal greetings to the ried through in Greece. _ , | pose to examine and discuss the Party, rapidly gaining ascendancy, | treachery of the Anarchists in | dicated to the workers of Cleveland| |, J" Etasec Gescctalty tanhot | spe! Se oa eee ¢ Hay-|fitst convention of the Canadien The “Joint Appeal of the United factors leading to the armed strug-| but still exercising leadership over | Barcelona sealed their fate. by the local relief director, are be | re Tenet eT Labor Defers: | worn pee, cmerution of HAY- | wurniture and Wood Workers’ In- Front in Greece” was signed as fol-| cies in Spain, the course of these| only a large minority of the work- Vaciliation in Catalonia ing answered with special activity) '5. that it is speaking to a group | Woo" ‘a terpon, ang wc lavence No: dustrial Union opening today at eps ‘ truggies, and the situation con-| ing class. While daily fighting was going on jof the unemployed marine Workers) ich can understand, perhaps bet-| and a breathing space. It gives us | Stratford, Canada, The Canadian For the Communist Party, M. nish workers toda On the eve of the revolutionary |in Madrid, while the anarchists | of this area. — in| ter than any other, the tragic ap-| = sitth fime to gather our | Uion, with 2,000 members, is under Tatasopoulos fer the prearranged | battles, the Communist Party of| Were betraying, and the Workers | These officials are meeting in| 1" oP'the Scottsboro mothers for | forces tor the batten one ty | militant leadership and is affiliated the Samper cabinet,| Spain flung all of its forces into |Alliance in Catalonia was vacillat- eg ee to bring the unem- | the lives of their innocent children. | the Scottsboro case. It gives us a| With the Workers’ Unity League of for the inauguration of | forging the united front for the|ing, waiting for the national bour- | out p cocked to. foreal 2 S h itt th to eotlact th $6,000 | Canada. i Tl arava z ip | geoisie under the leadership of Com- | Ployed marine workers into for You women, you mothers, can | little more time to lect the $6,000 | . t regime, a general| armed battles, for the dictatorship | geoisie under t aye lia , i % + email The letter of greetings sent by So. t i " ake the initiative, the! labor schemes on the grounds that/| feel with these mothers, can under- | absolutely essential to completing ‘ - oo strike was called throughout Spain | of the proletariat, for Soviet power, | Panys to take the initiative, the) lakes Gill th clad and tHe : th ls before the U. 8, Su. |J0¢ Kiss, National Secretary-Treas- For the Workers’ Social-Demo- |). in. workers Alliance. for inspiring of the victory of the |Asturias proletariat issued as their | the lakes wi stand their anguish, their dread and | the appeals before the U. 8S. lurer of the union in the United G aaopoulos: |" ee, Wee pecalatl a first proclamation the following |™men have no right to 2xpect con-| their readiness to do anything and|preme Court and broadening the ‘a 3. oul | On September 13, the Communist | revolution. ede Jovi tinuance of relief. veupiti that will: heln-the fiatit make’ defense campaign to. the | States, reads, in part, as follows: A ia the paraeecid Sears Ono | party had entered the Workers Al- the bre fu s Party’s cape a ies ahes The Waterfront Unemployment ts nek ‘ieie Bye. rite ied A ie gigantic STOpOLIGRS seein teh | “We take this occasion to greet a Sli eae Mba popeiaer gy |liance, transfor t into the in-/|1 won out, there victory was| “Workers! Our glo 3 i oe ‘ F ; A you, ially in view of the fact For the General Confederation of | Boemant of (he GRA fal The | gained. But since its program had| ment is spreading over the whole SoS Epa ner ee eee years ago the first news the Scotts- | achieve final victory in the fight Ree oar eels indenue obdeuiass I. Kalomiris; general strike was followed quickly | not swept all of Spain, the treach-| of Spain. In numerous places in for action, the high points of which boro mothers had of their children | and | restore these boys to their ition tate only: ond besidan bur own For the Independent Trade Union, | hy the armed struggle against fas-| ery of the anarchists, the previous} Spain the movement has consoli- are given Shaye who had left home to look for work, | mothers. : lin North América which functions G. Laskaris | cism. though it was weighed down | vacillation of the Socialist leaders,| dated with the victory of the Teens Call On: All ‘Beata was a curt notice in the newspapers | Women of America, you who can jon the basis and principles of in- The appeal is addressed to “The| with the wrong and fateful vacilla-| their failure to draw in the peasants | toiling masses, the workers, peas- A call is being circulated on all that their boys had been sentenced | appreciate most deeply the outrage- dustrial unionism, and is organizing () working class, to the peasants, t0/ tions and tactics of the Socialist | for the seizure of the land, isolated| ants and soldiers. boats for seamen to report to the to death in Scottsboro, Alabama. At |ous savage nature of this legal | the mass of unorganised workers the professionals, to the poor /teaders, and outright sabotage and| the Asturias proletariat, giving the “As soon as our inner connec- | waterfront Unemployment Council| first they were stunned. All they | lynch frame-up. Rally to the MUD" | satya powerful industrial union business men, to all working people | treachery of the anarchists. Long | advantage to the forces of fascism.| tions have been established and | nearest to their lay-up port for or-| Could do “was weep and moan.”| port of the Scottsboro mothers. | which is capable of putting up an and all democratic citizens!” | before the armed struggle, the Com-| From Strike to Armed Struggle | secured, you will be kept informed ganizational aid in building up new} They had no one to turn to. No/| Rally to the support of the Interna- effective fight against the wage cut “The ruling classes, the bankers,|munist Party of Spain had placed| The general strike of Oct. 5 went | 28 to events in our republic and | counoils in other ports. Bach large} money for lawyers. And the only | tional Labor Defense. Help us raise attacks of ths bosses, in contrast to the financiers, the landlords and/the question of preparation for the| Over into the armed struggle} all over Spain. When our broad- port is distributing a special leaflet|ones that came to their aid and | the strongest wave of mass protest the reformist; trade- union organiza- their parties, which are struggling | revolution and the tactics of in-| against fascism, with the greatest | casting stations are working, with | to longshoremen and other marine| have stood by them ever since was | this country has ever seen. Help us tigos | crganined) by tbe Amerioan among themselves, due to the deep | suring its success clearly before the | unevenness and with the greatest | ordinary and short waves, you | workers, with the same call, to or-|an organization they had never |raise the funds urgently needed to ‘Saderatind. of ballon herein the contradictions unwound by the in-/ workers and peasant masses. |lack of centralized leadership and | will be kept informed, ganize into the council and enforce heard of before—the International | carry on the work. Rush whatever | fot sts 0. as well as in Canada, tense economic crisis, and due to “The forces of revolution and | ‘le4t-cut objective. Only the an- “Indubitably we have reached | seamen’s relief for all marine work-| Labor Defense. you can, as much as you can, raise “The pressure of our organiza- the growth of the revolutionary) counter-revolution stand facing | ‘Chist leaders held back. They/ the last effort for the consoli- | erg, 5 The Scottsboro mothers realize |in factories, among your neighbors | 1.4) campaigns and numerous movement among the exploited, can| each other, front te front,” de- |°O"'"CUed organizations totalling | dation of the victory of the rev- | Petitions are being circulated in| what it was that has saved the lives | and friends, immediately to the | major strikes, which are still going find no other way out than the! cipred the Resolution of the Cen- °V¢r 1,000,000 membership. This | olution, The Fascist enemy is | the large ports with the demands! o¢ their boys during these long | Scottsboro-Herndon Defense und, | on in this Santee: hve [peavenialt establishment of a fascist regime. tral Committee many months be- | @5 fatal. One month later, early | about to surrender, as also the |of the Lake marine workers for a years. They understand that it was | National Office of the I.L.D., Room our organisation y eso sending “a “The examples of the countries| fore, “and decisive battles witl |! November, the anarchist leader- paid soldiery with their apparatus | minimum adequate relief standard. | the mass pressure and mass defense | 610, 80 East 11th St., New York City. fratebnal delegate to Mavens where fascism has been set up, and| take place shortly. This is the |Ship in Saragossa called a general | guns, munitions, and other arms |These petitions authorize the Chi- egg Pgeseel -idealerae cde more expressly, the example of| situation in Spain. ;Strike in protest against the ex-| which we cannot mame, as the |C ago Waterfront Unemployment oe: oe LA Be not pre- Hitler Germany, Austria and Bul- “Mn this situation the funda- |°cUtion of two revolutionists. Then | way material must not become | Council to speak in the name of the Scheduled Market Street, Sunday at 7:30 p.m, ee shane HA i sou ‘ns ri ypical it was too late. Had they called h fallen into our |Signers, the marine workers of the/5 Showings Schedule refore, in ame of the garia are sufficiently typical as to| mental problem of securing the arate ie tehe known, have fallen Takes tn additions “the wading Monday, Sweyersville, Catfish Hall,! ational General Executive Board where fascism leads the working] victory of the revolution is the , the strike simultaneously with the| hands, rein! na eee For Film in Anthracite |t 7:30’ pm. Wednesday, Dupont, Sar : " aaa Workers Alliance, those being ex- “ of the | Signers authorize the calling of spe-/ For Film In ninrac a of the National Furniture Workers’ class. Hunger, misery, war, the de-| organization and bringing together * . ‘The forces of the army G Struck’s Hall, Lincoln and Grant ecuted would have been Gil Robles 14th | cial meetings in all ports to elect) Industrial Union, of the United privation of all civil rights, which| of the forces of revolution | defeated republic of April Streets. Thursday, Ashley, at Boy- : = htt jand Lerroux, butchers of the ‘ rds | delegates to the National Congress} wytKHS-BARRE, Pa., Nov. 22— bs States, we send our heartiest,; most have been won with sacrifices and} under a firm leadership which is * 3 are in retreat, and our vanguards f Unemployment Insurance in ‘3 lan’s Hall, at 7:30 p.m. del: tit to your first struggle, are the results of fascism!! conscious of its aims,” Spanish workers. are being joined by the soldiers |+0% _Unemploym: Five showings of the Soviet film, comradely greetings, to your firs . " 4 Fighting broke out all over Spain. i ves ii lorious | Washington, D. C., on Jan. 5, 6,!«gniner” will be held here and in historic convention and hope this ‘The following political and Nothing could be clearer. Later “ ranging themselves in our glo: ip trade union organizations of | events were to underline and em-|The proletariat went into action.| Snovement. 7, Where the Lake workers will Pro- | neighboring communities during the ae a pene convention will mark the beginning pede : ; ry.|Though there was no centralized | ‘\n . | Pose & special sub-session on marine | \oming week. DETROIT, Nov. 22.—A. B. Magil,| of a solid and powerful Furniture Greece, representing the whole of |phasize the correctness of this for: | J > ate ‘Forward workers, women, peas relief problems nationally. ‘Wood Workers’ Industrial the working class of the country, | cast, and already beforehand to| leadership, no overpowering objec-| ants soldiers, and revolutionary Te Demonstrate tA Pooks The schedule is as follows: Detroit correspondent of the Daily | and orkers’ independently of their program- | touch on the reasons for the failure | tive, the whole world was electrified | miitia! Long ltve the social | 41°, ;emon ba 8 a .| Miners Mills, Saturday at 7:30|Worker, will speak on “Picket Lines| Union of Canada that will increas- matic and theoretical differences, |to achieve the victory within the|by tho stubbornness and the hero| jeyolation! strations ill be held at the reier|Pm., in the Old School House at| Across the U. 8. A.” Sunday, 2:30| ingly ctyatalize and lead the strug- are creating the United Front of |gtasp of the toiling masses. ism of the Spanish workers. They “THE REVOLUTIONARY | stations, presenting the Lakewide | Beatty and Grand Streets. Wilkes-|p.m., at the Workers’ Open Forum, | gles of the rank and file workers to ; ‘; : had learned from Germany. They Tete ruts ‘ Workers Center, 325 East |5969 14th Avé., near McGraw, vietory over the class enemies.” Action against the threatening The Three Forces hal. Weapenen ote (ahi beauties COMMITTEE.” {demands and the special local de-| Barre, Workers Center, . oy oe ae and ie To understand the course of the| fighting. The Russian Revolution | This manifesto was signed by the; mands, backing the Chicago delega- this address themselves to the i thei ‘ Revolutionary Committee of Oviedo. | tion. ts . ies cline, warnitie them 0, | 0-7 Dees 1s meneety | ee Se eeeae ait marteriy | Behind them were 20,000 armed| Letters requesting joint action on Please mention the DarLy WorKER when p atronizing advertisers the impending danger now threat- | here to point out that three forces 1 ICY 0 Red Guards, and 100,000 striking | the demands are being sent to the ening them. were at the head of the proletariat. Ty Tanicis the proletariat in | Workers. locals of the International Seamen’s “We call upon the entire working | First, there was the Socialist Party this Neithern. industrial center of Asturias blazed the way for the} Union and the International Long- Class, the small business men and they had the largest section of the|Spein, had learned thoroughly | future of the Spanish revolution. |shoremen’s Association. Men on the the professionals to group them- ‘ ; 4 ae hedisit Asturias was the handwriting on|docks in Buffalo and Cleveland # a organized proletariat behind them. |every lesson of the revolutionary "I ish | have already indicated their will-+ selves within the united front and| second, the anarcho - syndicalist | struggles of the proletariat of the |the wall of the fortress of Spanish a i to struggle with all their might lk ‘ lly hy ‘ Paris Commune and of the Rus-|fascism. No wonder Asturias, its ingness to join with the seamen in the danger of fascist dic- | ders, strategically holding lead- |F , aga i levements, its revolu-|the Waterfront Councils as have against s' ership in the storm center of Cata- |Sian Revolution. They seized power | glorious achievements, I i 5 i tary ss ‘ | : ‘ he lips of the | Jongshoremen in Toledo. tatorship, of any military move-|ionia” where the crux of the revo-|and held it. ‘They organized their | tionary daring, is on the lip Attendance at the Waterfront Lf ent. lutionary fighti bound Red Army, set up a workers and| whole Spanish working class! No r “Workers of tow: d try! | Uuonary. Dehting. was und up * " § is th tual night-| Unemployment Councils meetings in nets Band couné*y, |With the national question and the |peasants republic. They organized | wonder it is the perpetual night-| — 7) ports has increased since the Forward from now on with | proletarian revolution. The anarcho-|the civil war, food distribution, | mare of the hoary horde of the op-| fe' Hons as increased sinee. the general actions all over the coun- | <yndicalist leaders were entrenched | their apparatus of power, action, pressors—the rich landlords, the winter, made at the Cleveland Con- try, among all strata of the work- | in that portion of Spain where over \communication and distribution of myrmidons of the church, the fas- ference of the Marina Workers. In- ing people, to forestall these dan- | one-third of the whole proletariat | the means of life. cist scum, and the whole rotten dustrial Union have been made gers! At the first sign of a fascist /is concentrated, and where the| They communicated with the| class of capitalist landlords and known to the men. Movement, come out on general | question of national independence ,Communist Party of Spain in Mad-| agents of the foreign conces- Marine workers in unorganized strike, in general marches of the | is paramount. This was decisive|rid. They promised to hold out ! sionaires! ports are urged to write to the rsa ime es ‘i at : oa Cleveland Waterfront Unemploy- “Strength and victory lie with| ° ° tee clause only. At no time has|ing before the County Welfare|ment Councils for information on Us, the millions of toilers who wil | Guild Strikers the Guild eioabed that it was|Commission and Ballenger prom-|the Dec. 4 action at 1282 E. Ninth e@ | 4 { hand in hand fight against the) unwilling to consider modification | ised to arrange it within the next|St., Cleveland, Ohio. forces of reaction. For this reason} \of this provision.” cs | two weeks. The Waterfront Unemployment we are expressing our unshakable! Issue Pa er The Ledger has now been sus-| The Committee ofTwenty-five is | Councils of these four cities are de- conviction that having with us the| Pp pended for two days, but today | preparing another conference of all} manding 75c a day food allowance absolute majority of the people of} Russell announced that he will put | delegates to the original conference | for single men (demands are for all | Greece, we are justified in voicing J n N e ar k | out an issue tomorrow for free dis- |for some time between December | marine workers, regardless of race, re atest a wes @ powerful ‘No!’ to those who are| Ww | tribution. 9 and 16. The committee is also} creed or color, political or economic e striving to bring to our country the} : elec the strikers, heartened | Making plans for a big Michigan | belief), $2 a week room rent, no Same conditions that prevail in} as, \by the effectiveness of "the strike, |delegation to the National Con- projects unless the government Germany. | NEWARK, N. J., Nov. 22—With dr the din pation th: ’ | gress for Unemployment and Social | agrees to leave control in the hands “And this ‘No,’ the expression of| the third issue of the “Reporter,” | 4n@ bie r3 pains wads tas Pe id Insurance in Washington in Jan-| of elected committees of men, dress # + _ {newspaper published by the strik- | Teceiving from many unions, Gui are. winter clothing, necessary toilet ar- the will of the masses of our coun. pi I y id student: tinue pick: ¥ try, will transform itself into a gen-| ing editorial workers of the sus- aut and students, continue pic! | Hag of standard ease, gel a eral mobilization in case of any at-| PeMded Newark Ledger to appear | °“8- ‘ | Relief Workers Win Strike week for married couples (this has tet on the qorking ‘nak ’ | tomorrow, Lucius T. Russel, pub- ‘ae ee a nranit a (Special to the Daily Worker) been won by Chicago seamen) and 19384 7: “Down with fascist dictatorship! |lisher of the Ledger, in his latest | Ske headquarters from Guild or peTRory, Mich, Nov. 22—The|$3 for each child, with children’s will be the biggest year in “Long live the civil rights of the /S@sture again proposes arbitration, | Samzations in, other cities. The | 1+ strike against ‘the latest relief | clothing, full allotment to husband c 1 Gobting claw!’ | Thth time, in fw statement, he dé- reed auld set the example PY | cut handed Detroit's unemployed |Of necescities given single men, rawford’s history. We believe a lass! * 2 sending ‘ e@ Daily Worker | i for | equal value of necessities to wife; ong live the United Front of the“Guestion off the. discharge of| BOOFFECY Teported in an eanler| ie rockers, ‘Ons: hundwed’ nine |Tecognition. of Waterfront “Unem: this sensational record proves struggle! the eight editorial workers before | Story that this sum had come from | workers on a relief project at|Ployment Council committees at all that men expect more for their ——— |the Cleveland Plain Dealer unit. | Qparieyoi: d Col Streets, |Stations where marine relief is an arbitration committee consist- | : Tlevoix an nner 5 bees di Cc Oo USSR O ff ing of Willam Green, President of |25€ Plain Dealer has no Guild! struck yesterday, demanding res- |Siven; endorsement of the Workers money today. Tawford’s pres- CFS the a. F. of L; Matthew ‘Wo, | Unit toration of @ cut of three hours a| Unemployment Insurance Bill by ent offerings are THE BEST vice-president of the A. F, of L.; week and a 20 per cent increase. | the relief directors. 3 : Plan to End Adolph Ochs, publisher of the New D t it J bl Nearly half the workers were Ne- Philaddphi VALUES IN CRAWFORD’S York Times; Willi | groes. i i Hearst, Roy Essuaudtor epicnen e r Ol 0 SS A committee of five, elected by jadeiphia Will Train HISTORY! When you buy at ° |Howard newspapers and Bishop “2 the strikers, presented their de-] Speakers for Congress Crawford you get beiter clothes AL 11. CACO |waien or the dincese ot Newsee an for Action m2 2s moming to wayne jaa i poner The Newspaper Guild, conducting | Sean etter Erapee copies PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Nov, 22— for $18.75 than this price could the strike promptly replied that it A iy ceed The local sponsoring committee for " GENEVA, Nov. 22.—Definite pro-|“fails to understand Russel’s fran- (Continued from Page 1) pene fumed Lat eotavi’ We the National Congress for Unem- possibly buy in the ordinary ri Posals for terminating the savage|tic appeals for arbitration when | Sas aaG e cut. Wien the men went back | piovment and Social Insurance, way. Come in and see what it | i ‘ for the present fiscal year and/on the job, the timekeeper handed ich i * { PONCE CIE et Pacey were | He nas not yet made an effort to| showed him that whereas only $4,-|them work-slips providing for the| Hch is to be held in Washington to b the maker] between Bolivia and Paraguay were/ arrive at an understanding by con-| 409916 was ‘allotted for weltare| addition nite lowe on Jan. 5-1, has: arranged to have means to buy from the maker } hammered out today in the As-| ference.” iprecz 3, weekly conferences to train work- i Raith o purposes, $13,559,501 was appropri-| Relief workers at Belle Isle, the sembly of the League of Nations| In reply to Russel’s charges that | sted for interest’ to bankers Kroon Municipal Park, are reported to be | ¢TS to Speak at organizations to en- MEN APPRECIATE by Maxim Litvinov, Commissar for| the Guild by its demand for @ | proposed that the money for the | preparing to strike tomorrow. The | list support for the National Con- Foreign Affairs of the Soviet Union. | Grievance Committee demands | hankers be turned over for relief. | Relief Workers Protective Associa- | TESS. CRAWFORD VALUE! Declaring that “the decisions that|control of the newspaper, the | Proposed Court Action tion is taking steps to organize ac-| The first of these speakers’ con- ‘ we will take may have very impor-| Guild stated: “The Guild has never| $allenger, after hemming and/| tion among all relief workers|ferences will be held Sunday eve- tant repercussions in more serious | adopted a take it or leave it at- hawing, said it might be necessary | against the new drastic cuts which|ning at 8 o'clock at 154 No. 15th 7 5 conflicts, and this must be borne in|titude in regard to the proposed |to go to the Supreme Court on/eliminate rent, clothing, gas and} Street. The Unemployment Councils $ mind by all of us,” Litvinov em-|contract. Mr. Russel is quoted as! such a proposal. light from the budgets of 17,000| here have urged each local to send N phasized that “the Soviet delegation | opposed to the grievance commit-| The Committee of Twenty-five is heads of families. two delegates to these conferences, lo Charge for } } for its part will insist that the de- Alterations i } cisions of this Assembly in this par- | i ¥ s N H as Fit 4 ticular case should be strict and e ‘ou’re ot Har r.) i firm and that the Assembly should W t C ll C t th B | |” Serfirm in seeing that its decisions| VY €l T° Ve erans Ua onvention on e bonus Cees ae } et Gavtied out,” rawford carries every 3 } | To this end the Soviet Commissar aharare ° > Besse every style. A correct fit for 4 (| } made two proposals: _ Paeg: Ex-Servicemen’s League pose the real nature of that admin-)was shelved by the New Deal gov-|To Plan Fight Against EVERY man. | First, concerning the indirect time Will Hold Parl = istration as an open agency of Wall|ernment, in line with its general ra CRI, | limit a cage 12 hae the ae 0} arley 11 | Street exploitation of the masses of| policy of putting the entire burden) New Deal ‘Economies | report fixes for acceptance or rejec- * the country, that the Republicans|of the capitalist crisis upon the ‘ . a | tion by the belligerents, Litvinov Chicago, Dec. 7 would be defeated in the 1932 elec- | backs of the exploited masses, Which Hit Relief | demanded that the time limit be emer i tions, was conclusively proven by| But the rank and file veterans | directly established and be short} NEW YORK.—The national office| the results of that election. have been exerting pressure during| the I. A. C. at the Cleveland Con- | enough to prevent either belligerent |of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s New Deal Maneuvers this period, with the result that 25| vention, has been in Hitler's tor- | from “developing its movements |reague yesterday issued a call for, The convention, however, realiz-|per cent of the “Economy Act” cuts) ture camps for over a year, just as and making further seizure of ter- ing that the Democratic Party|in allowances and pensions have|'Thaelmann and a host of other es its second national convention, to | ritory.” be held in Chic: Dec, 7, 8, Would attempt to take advantage| been returned to the veterans, and) courageous working class leaders Secondly, Litvinov called for the|ang 9 1934 The ail teat is the| Of the mass resentment against|the question of the “bonus” is in| are today suffering. The National U | extension of the arms embargo, a0 | convention call follows: | Hoover's party, by making dema-/|the air again. Headquarters of the Workers Ex- embargo hypocritically passed by Seer Cea a ¥: i | Sogic promises to the veterans and| At that time, therefore, with the! Servicemen’s League calls on all the United States and British gov-|_,,1¥° years have elapsed since the/the masses in general, warned| veterans’ movement in need of a| members of the organization to in- First National Convention of the! agai S New Deal elec-| guide for action in all its struggles, | tensify their work in raising funds ermments in such a manner as to “ against these crafty, New Deal e) gs truggles, | tensify their work in raising fun favor their reapective subject forces Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League,| tion maneuyers. the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s| for the I. A. C. through the sale of } in Bolivia and Paraguay. Hitting at | 2°! in Cleveland, Sept., 1932. These) ‘The actions of the Roosevelt ad-| League issued the call for the sec-| the special I. A. C. stamps that this deliberately framed weakness |22V° been two years of vital im-| ministration to this very day haveljond Workers Ex-Servicemen’s| were issued to all Posts. P his deliberately eal portance for the veterans of this/ fully confirmed the analyses of the|League National Convention, to be We invite your mail order inquiry. Write to 100 Fifth Ave. f the embargo, he demanded a | Eully contirmed: tite pe B ' In addition to the Posts of the } ¢ EO, country. The Cleveland Convention, | Cleveland Workers Ex-Servicemen’s| held in Chicago, Dec. 7, 8 9, 1934. : all. ot oe "NEW YORK*S ore | strict check-up of the transit of/neld in the wake of the Bonus|tTeague Convention. Upon taking|This Convention will take up the|W: E. S. L., all other veteran or- NEW.) om He sa | arms, since no arms can reach the|March of July, 1932, was able tol office, Roosevelt's first order of| vital problems affecting the veterans | S@Mizations and abn pe Lh tee NEW YORK BROOKLYN | Parties without crossing Argentina, | analyze this historic event’from the] business was the passage of the in-|in general, as well as. those prob- oie! EA eaten delegates to the 826 BROADWAY... 11.02. Cor.12th St. 467 FULTON Si... Cor. Lawrence St. 10 £. FORDHAM RD. jecr Jerome Ave, | Chile, Peru or Brazil. Political, economic and social point! famous Economy Act, which, in or-|lems affecting the Workers Ex-Ser- | Chicago Convention. 841 BROADWAY . Cor, 13th St. 93 FLATBUSH AVE. Near LRA. Ste, 240 £, FORDHAM RD. Opp, Kingsbridge Ra. | 7 Sgr eye laly ASE of view. | der to guarantee payments to bank=|vicemen’s League organizationally,| For further information, get in Hest Saat tires «alee Rote daege TD EMRE Be WalsAve nc | In Rock Springs, Wyo, the unit) The conclusions of this conven-|ets, and to build up the war ma-|both as a national body, and as a/ touch with the W. E. S. L. Conven- 462 7th AVE... vt ves = Con 1622 PITKIN AVE, JERSEY CI | raised $6.15. “We are still working to | tion, that the act of the Hoover| chine, slashed millions from dis-|section of the International des|tion Arrangements Committee, 39 joes 20.MANHATTAN ~---« NesrVaretSt. 317 centRaL AVENUE... Cor, Griffith St. raise our quota here,” writes |regime is using armed forces to|abled and aged veterans’ compen-|Anciens Combattants (1.A.C.), the| West Adams Street, Room 82, Chi- istener eee JAMAICA 4 JOURNAL’ SQUARE George Margolis. Only one week Is| drive the veterans out of the capi | sations and pensions, and resulted|international organization of war! cago, Ill, or the Workers Ex-Ser- M5 WEST 125th ST. 168-05 JAMAICA AVE.» . . . . Cor. 168th St. phat at left to carry out the decisicn of the | tol, without payment of their back|in throwing many thousands of| veterans. vicemen’s League National Head- 1391 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. Atthe End of the “L”, Jor bh 94 MARKET ST... .. . . Cor. Washington St. Central Com" > that ail quotas | wages and without provision for re-| helpless sick veterans out of hos-| The W. E, S. L, regrets to report| quarters, 799 Broadway, Room 523, 30 “Factory Branches” to Serve You ‘be filled by Dec. L, habilitation or relief, would so ex-jpitals, The question of the “bonus”|that Hugo Graeff, who represented New York City,