The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 14, 1934, Page 2

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY DECEMBER 14, 1934 ~- Two Los Angeles Carmen Framed on Dynamite Charge FALSE CONFESSION] ratty Agains: Drio TO BE SPRINGBOAR FOR TERR OR DRIVE Trainmen’s Officials Postpone Strike Action De- spite Decision of Membership; Accept Offer | for Mediation by Government Board Special to the LOS ANGELES, Cal., Dec Daily Worker) c. 18.—Kenneth L. Mayes and Clarence Townsend, two street-car strikers, have been ar-| rested and charged with possession of dynamite. the two workers have confessed ‘to Police claim that a plot to blow up terminal sw Los Angeles Railway lines, > Mayes and Townsend e been under technical custody ce 5, and the strikers maintain if, as police claim, confessions been extracted from them, it was only as a result of third degree methods for which the Los Angeles police are famous. The case of these | two workers is considered as of ma- jor significance in the development | of the street car strike, and is un doubtedly the first step towards an increased terror to break the strike. lthough the rank and file in the| Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, | which includes the workers on the | Pacific Electric System, have previ- ously forced through a resolution setting the strike date for yester- day, D. A. MacKenzie, Vice-Presi- dent of the Brotherhood, Jocal officials have ignored this de- cision and again postponed strike action. They accepted the plea of the Federal Mediation Board to postpone action, The members of the union are getting restless be- cause of the continual postpone- ments, and the bureaucratic action of the officials, and the demand for immediate strike action in soli- darity with the street car men is gaining support. War Plan New Step Against Wages (Continued from Page 1) De that have “Tf and when war comes again to this country,” he said, “We must be in a position to act swiftly. We must not make the mistakes we made during the World War. Our plans must eliminate profiteering. They must provide that each man, thing and dollar bear a just part of the burden.” Revealing the objective at. which this alleged anti-profit move is aimed, Baruch declared that his proposal includes price - fixing “which includes everything that is sold, including labor.” The Roosevelt move is, therefore, aimed not only at war mobilization, | but at the wage scale of the work- ers in war industry, the plan being to militarize the factories, main- taining starvation wages in the face of the inevitably rising prices of all daily necessities. $1 a Day Wage Comparisons have already been made here between the $1 a day wage of the soldiers at the front and the alleged “high” wages of workers in the war industries, the | implication being that workers’ wages will have to approximate the | $1 a day levels in the army, Meanwhile, revelations of the huge profits made by big corpora- tions in the last war were made today. It was shown that every corporation engaged in war pro- duction coined tremendous profits out of the slaughter of the workers, It is especially revealing to note that the companies showing these huge profits had intimate connec- tions with the Wall Street clique connected with Bernard Baruch and General Hugh 1, Johnson, other members appointed by Roosevelt yesterday to “take the profits out of war.” War Profits The profits were listed as follows, with 362 per cent profit of a ship- building company leading: Bethlem Shipbuilding Co., 1918, 40 per cent; 1919, 63 per cent; New York Shipbuilding Co., 1918, 41 per cent; 1919, 49 per cent; 1920, 46 per cent; Newport News Shipbuild- ing Co., 1917, 86 per cent; 1918, 72 per cent; 1919, 10 per cent; 1920, 15 per cent; Bethlehem Loading Co., 1918, 362 per cent. The reports on net taxable in- comes included: American Brass Co., 1916, $20,128,312; Bethlehem Steel Corporation, 1917, $61,810,017; Jones and Laughlin Steel Co., 1917, $48,869,577; Midvale Steel and Ord- nance Co., 1917, $60,454,765. It was also shown today that the plan proposed yesterday by Roose- velt had been ready in the closing days of the Hoover administration, but had not been used. One of the investigators for the commission showed that the U. S. Steel Corporation’s profits leaped from 3 per cent on its investment as figured by the corporations ac- countants in 1914 to 29 per cent in 1918, nine months after America entered the war. ‘The percentages of income subject to taxation compared with the total capital of some of the munitions manufacturers was revealed as fol- lows: American Brass Co., 1916, 50 per cent; 1917, 23 per cent; Bethlehem Steel Corp., 1917, 43 per cent; Jones and Laughlin Steel Co., 1917, 47 per cent; Atlas Powder Co., 1917, 27 per cent; Colts Patent Firearms Co., 1916, 60 per cent; 1917, 64 per cent; 1918, 51 per cent; Midvale Steel and Ordnance Co., 1917, 43 per cent; Savage Arms Co., 1917, 65 per cent; 1918, 48 per cent; Winchester Re- peating Arms Co., 1918, 22 per cent, and the | itches in order to cripple the} Steel Unions Back | Insurance Parley: a] 2 3 By (Continued fr ents for the National Congress for nemployment Insurance, the 14th Ward League, the 8th Ward and the Women’s Auxiliary of the 14th Ward elected delegates to the local sponsoring committee. Ramuglia voted against the League participation in the National Congress for Unemployment Insur- ance at the last meeting of the County executive committee. The local sponsoring committee will meet at the Labor Temple to- | morrow at which time plans will| be made for calling a Lehigh County conference of all organizations in support of the National Congress. | Springfield Conference Called | SPRINGFIELD, Mass., Dec. 13— A city-wide conference to which all organizations have been asked to} | send two delegates will be held here | Monday night, Dec. 17, in prepara- | tion for the National Congress for Unemployment Insurance. The con- |~ ference will convene at 8 o'clock at the Central High School, State Street. Sponsors for the city conference | include: Henry Martens, Mayor of | | Springfield; Seymour Allen, chair- man of the legislative committee of | Federal Union 18385; Rev. Owen W. | Eames; Rabbi Samuel Price; Mat- | thew. Campbell, president of West- | inghouse Federal Union 18476; Rabbi |Isaac Klein; Paul Wicks, Commu-/| | nist Party; Joseph Massucci, presi- | dent of Connecticut Valley Federal | Labor Unions Allied Council; Valery Burati, president of the Springfield | Newspaper Guild; Pauline Idlis, of the Working Women’s Councils; | Isaac Bloom of the Jewish Cultural | League, and Rev. Roland Heacock, Negro minister. | es Newspaper Represented CAMDEN, N. J., Dec, 13,—Em- |ployes of the Citizen, a Camden | newspaper, have elected one dele- | gate to the National Congress for | Unemployment Insurance. The Campbell Soup Company Workers Union, an independent union, has | elected two delegates, and the Radio | Workers Union has likewise elected | two delegates, Mass Meeting Friday PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Dec. 13—A| | mass meeting to popularize the Na- tional Congress for Unemployment Insurance will be held there Friday evening at 1137 North 41st Street, under the joint auspices of the Women’s League, the Workers’ School, and the Communist Party. A whole series of neighborhood meetings haye been arranged by the Unemployment Councils. In addition to the wide repre- sentation already elected here from trade unions and other groups, the Republican Club of Richmond voted a donation of ten dollars to the Congress. A. F. of L. Unions Elect Delegates PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Dec, 13.— The Battery Workers Union here, a local of the A. F. of .L. with a membership of. 1,700, elected five delegates to the National Congress | for Unemployment Insurance at| their meeting last night at the Kensington Labor Lyceum. The Carpenters Local, meeting in the | same hall, elected two delegates, and the Custom Tailors Union elected two delegates. The Transient Bureau workers will meet tonight at 918 Locust St., for the purpose of electing dele- gates. Funds Urgently Needed An urgent call for funds was is- sued last night fy the National | Sponsoring Committee for the | Washington Congress for Unem- ployment and Social Insurance. Funds are coming in so slowly that many important actions are being delayed, the committee declared. National organizers in the field are finding it necessary to shortén trips. Printing of literature is being Held up. Sympathetic organizations and in- dividuals are asked to make their donations immediately so that this fundamental work can be’ carried on. Money collected on contribution lists and stamps should be sent in at once. The work of the Congress must not be held up by shortage of funds, A round trip rate by railroad to the National Congress for Unem- ployment Insurance has been ar- ranged between New York and Washington by the New York Spon- soring Committee, This will enable New York delegates to go to Wash- ington at a total expense of $10. Reservations should be made thru the New York committee at Room 641, 799 Broadway, New York. (Continued from Page 1) ! to assist the war-makers in the Roosevelt, govern- ment advance still faster with their The Chamber of Commerce proposes: Communist Party be declared illegal; (2) new gov- | ernment spy agencies be set up to industrial rats organized by the big trusts and other a terror drive against foreign- | born workers, an idea already under consideration (4) shutting up the mails -to revolutionary and militant labor litera- | (5): special agencies in the armed forces to work against revolutionary propaganda and to work up patriotic hysteria for war purposes. corporations; (3) by the Dickstein Committee; ture; Every worker should see in this clear drive, not only against the Communist Party, but on the civil rights of every American worker, no matter to what Party he belongs. move which, aimed first at the Communist Party, will not cease, if its initial attack is it has leveled the whole trade union movement to the ground and made serfs and utter slaves of the whole working class. This is the program of Hitler, of Mussolini, of every fascist dog throughout the now the open espousal of Hearst, the U, 8, Cham~- ber of Commerce, and leading government figures in the Roosevelt government. Only recently, General Smedley Butler exposed the fact that Wall Street bankers and brokers were supplying millions for the formation of fascist armies to carry out just such @ program now openly announced by the U. S, Chamber of Commerce, The moves of the Roosevelt government to war, and the fascist developments are intertwined in the closest manner, * 'HE struggle against these war and fascist moves must primarily be a struggle for the basic needs of the American workers and for their funda- By attacking the Communist Party and by speeding its war plans, the Roosevelt gov- ernment, agency of the richest bosses, hopes to in- crease its profits and be able to accelerate the drive on the American workers’ living standards. | The latest income tax reports already show how the Roosevelt government aided the millionaires at the expense of cutting the living standards of the mental rights. great mass of people. The issue of war preparations will come up in AN EDITORIAL insurance. One war plans? rallying united (1) The supplement the This can and regime, program a very dividual opposed set-up arid plans It is a fascist successful, until world, It has The moves of interlocked and action proposed the fight for its To Socialists war danger and Let us speed tion. e to Ban Civil Rights of Workers; D Speed United Front in Fight on War and Fascism Congress along with the issue of unemployment tremendous struggle for the greatest single need of the whole American working class, against the huge war budget and war plans of the Roosevelt To every group, every organization, every in- be met with more intensified anti-war activity, in the unions, in the shops, factories, in the schools, It is a challenge to speed the united front of Social- ists and Communists against war through anti-war demonstrations, by building the American League Against War and Fascism into a still more powerful factor in the struggle against that danger of war which looms so dreadful and large now. only one of the many fascist drives now on in this country, must be spiked and spiked quickly by the whole labor movement. In every trade union there should be action now against this super-scab program. Resolutions should be passed by every local union against the fascist laws proposed by the Chamber of Commerce. Since the main brunt of the attack is against the Communist Party, the defense of the Commu- nist Party, in the event of any realization of such the duty of the whole American labor movement in need for the united front against war and fascism grows daily. Let us not lose°a moment in every branch of the Socialist Party, in every state organ- ization, in the trade unions, in all mass organiza- tions of forming a solid, fighting united front against these threatening attacks. on every front, by every means, in every shop; mill, factory, union and other working class organiza- of the most effective means of front action against the Roose- must be a gathering center of a to imperialist war, Roosevelt’s war are a definite challenge that must the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, by the chief scab bosses, becomes civil and trade union rights. we make an especial appeal. The fascist moves are "quickening. The the fight against war and fascism Foster Urges Fight OnCommercePlans (Continued from Page 1) along the lines. They come at the very moment when President Roose- velt is holding his war councils, to prepare for the coming imperialist war. The Chamber of Commerce proposals to outlaw the Communists and all militant workers are’ an in- tegral part of these imperialist war preparations of the employers and the federal government.” Cites Need of Unity Foster emphasized the need for an immediate broad united. front to fight against the open-shop, wage- cutting drive of the employers and the government, of which the fas- cist Chamber of Commerce pro- posals are a part. “It will be noted that the Chamber of Commerce uses the Executive Council of the A. F. of L. as authority for its at- tack on the Communists and on all militant workers. This is but an- other evidence that William Green and company are linked hand in glove with the employers and the government in attempting to pre- vent strikes, and in actually helping to carry through the anti-union, wage-cut drive. Green, like the C, of C., attacks all fighting action of the militant workers and sides at all times with the employers and their compulsory arbitration boards. “Tf the open shop drive is to be defeated, if the workers are to pre- vent the employers and the govern- ment from cutting wages, from out- lawing strikes and establishing the company unions, these proposals of the C. of C. must be defeated by the broadest united front of all the workers and farmers. The Cham- ber of Commerce is determined to get out of the crisis at the expense of the workers. They are deter- mined to save their profits by ham- mering down the workers’ living standards. The workers and farm- ers must defend their civil rights against fascism.” Coughlin Trick Hides His Policy (Continued from Page 1) the country—but he calls upon workers to give their lives “in the event of a war for the defense of our nation.” Whose nation? “Our” nation. He has forgotten the “domination of the rich.” He is for “abolishing tax-exempt” bonds—but he is for issuing several billion dollars in new bonds to “na- tionalize” industry, which will give the Wall Street ndustrialists and banks new power and profits. The list could be extended to cover every issue on which Cough- lin has expressed himself. Let him but sound a “radical” note on any issue that faces the workers, and he will at once find the reaction- ary counter-part that nullifies the “radicalism” of his first idea, and actually put forward a complete political and. economic program in the interests of the employers and the banks, esti, RIS, pasnbsceees has a clever trick by which he defends the employers. First, he singles out “good” em- ployers and “bad” ones. Or else, he says that it is not the employer “who is to blame,” it is the Wall Street banks. If this doesn’t work, he claims that it is useless fer the workers to fight any single capi- talist employer, but that the work- ers should concentrate their fire “against the system.” Now what is the fraud in all-this kind of argument? The fraud is that the workers can only fight their misery, can only fight the whole yoke of capitalist oppression, by fighting all employers, by fight- ing that particular employer who is exploiting them. It is impossible to “fight the system” without fight- ing the employer who exploits you as an individual worker. It is precisely by fighting your employer for better conditions that you, at the same time, are abla to carry the fight to higher revolutionary level against the whole ‘system. And _ conversely, there is no known way of fighting the capitalist system without wag- stubborn, daily warfare against the employers for better wages, for shorter hours, for ade- quate relief and unemployment insurance. These daily fights are the skirmishes in the larger class battle that prepare the working class for the abolition of the whole system, “Good” Employers Utilizing this technique, Coughlin can defend Henry Ford, for ex- ample, as being a victim of the “wicked” Wall Street bankers. Ford, it is true, has some differences with the Wall Stgeet banks. But these differences are only a squabble on the division of the profits wrung from the workers, To the workers it doesn’t make the slightest difference who gets the plunder wrung from their la- bor, Ford or Wall Street. The:work- ers want to fight both Ford and Wall street. But Coughlin’s preach- ing “that you can’t blame Ford” actually has the effect of paralyzing all struggle against the workers’ immediate enemy, Henry Ford, by fixing their eyes on another enemy. The net result of Coughlin’s “rad- ical” declamations against the “sys- tem” are to bind the workers to the system, and chain them to their direct capitalist exploiter, Ford, Is it not clear that such preach- ings must be very valuable to Ford? Why should he worry if the workers transfer their hatred of their daily conditions to “the system” and give up struggle against him in his fac- tories? This‘ leaves him in secure control of his profits. Coughlin — A Trap Is it not clear that a worker who follows Coughlin is walking into a trap that will not give him a single cent of increased wages, a single cent of increased relief, a single minute of reduced working hours, or a single reduction in the killing speed-up on the belt? The Communist Party shows that it is only by fighting the employers right here and now, for better conditions and wages, that you can fight the capitalist system and overthrow it. The Communist Party shows the workers why it is impossible for the capitalists to solve the crisis, since the capitalist solution of the crisis only intensifies the poverty of the masses, afid intensifies all the con- tradictions of capitalist. production that cause crisis. The program of the Communist Party leads the workers in mass struggle for real benefits to come out of the profits of the employers and the banks. This makes it a a aap Program against capi- m., Coughlin’s program gives the workers only empty phrases, holds them back from fighting the em- ployers for higher wages, gives them no real benefits, and permits the employers to proceed with the capi- talist solution of the crisis over the peo of the workers. This makes is program a reactionary program in the interests of preserving capi- talism and exploitation, ree of Coughlin’s favorite | ideas is to carry to the mass hatred of Wall Street and the slogan will be a repetition of the ‘monopolists by calling for a “re- Baruch Got Rich in World War, (Continued from Page 1) ganizing the war machine for the capitalist class. Roosevelt's dema- gogic slogan of “taking the profits out of war” was coined by Baruch’s press-agent years ago. All the details of Roosevelt's present scheme to turn the nation into a gigantic Slave-macfiine were worked out years ago by Baruch and the War Department. At the hearings be- fore the War Policies Commission in the spring of 1931, Baruch was thanked for his services by the War Department for his “constant co- operation (which) has been of such tremendous value to the War De- partment in the development of Plans and proposals dealing with the economic and industrial prob- lems incident to an emergency,’ Compulsory: Labor At the inquiry Baruch said that in the next war the government’s former one that said, “work or fight,” but that this principle would be expanded so that “no one can shirk.” The meaning is clear — compulsory labor will be enforced, In the year before the bank crash, Baruch shipped millions in gold to the Bank of England for safety. This did not prevent’ Roosevelt from making him his closest advisor, so close indeed that the press calls Baruch the “unofficial president,” He was one of the driving forces behind the monopolistic and war plans of the N.R.A. and the AAA, Both follow closely the pattern set by the War Industries’ Board. As head of the N.R.A., Roosevelt chose General Hugh Johnson, Baruch’s man-Friday since their association on the War Industries’ Board. Now together with George Peek, Foreign Trade Advisor to the Administra- tion, and another Baruch man, Johnson will serve his boss in draw. ing up plans of mobilization for war, EES Cet CLEVELAND Y. ©. L. TO HOLD DANCE The second annual dance of the Young Communist League, Cleve- land, will be held Christmas night, Dec. 25, at Lithuanian Hall, 920 E. ‘79th St. (near St. Clair). All youth and youth organizations are urged to reserve this date, and help support the only political youth organization, and make this dance a success. Admission is only 25 cents. distribution of wealth.” He wants “propertyless workers to be given some ownership,” in order to “avoid revolution,” | The nation-wide protest launched velt government’s attacks on the workers’ living | standard, is to insure a mass attendance at the U. 8. Congress for Unemployment and Social Insurance in Washington, Jan. 5-7. | NRA, chief, won a decisive victory } ignored Richberg’s order to keep its | | hands off the case and reaffirmed | active membership Wins Victory, For Jennings! WASHINGTON, D, C., Dec, 13.— by the American Newspaper Guild against the reopening of the famous Jennings case by Donald Richberg, today. The Labor Relations Board its earlier ruling -that the- San Frantisco Call-Bulletin, a Hearst | publication, must reinstate. Dean| S. Jennings, head rewrite man, who was forced to resign on account of} in the News-| paper Guild. : On Dec, 3, the Labor Board de- cided that Jennings should be Placed back on the job. But Donald Richberg, acting in favor of the} publishers, forced the reopening of the case the very next day, The publishers of newspapers, uniting to defeat the Newspaper Guild in its | first major case-before the N.R.A., | contended that the Labor Board} in taking jurisdiction in the case is thereby “abrogating freedom of the press.” The skullduggery of Richberg in the Jennings case was brought sharply before the public eye on Dec. 5 at an N'R.A. code hearing on wages and conditions for edi- torial workers. On this occasion a delegation of Newspaper Guild members, headed by the president of the Guild, Heywood Broun, who came here to presént demands on wages and hours, walkel out of the hearing protesting against’ the de- cision. “ Following the walkout the Guild has conducted a wide campaign against the reopening of the case, including radio addresses to make} known the Guild’s stand. ‘At a meeting of New York Guild last Tuesda the membership, voted to back the action of the delegation. Elisha Hanson, attorney for the pubishers, said that he would fight the Labor Board ruling in the courts. Officers of the Guild an-} nounced today that they will use every means at their disposal to force the carrying out of the deci- sion, alld Prcasiee INEWTON’S HO M E IS RAIDED AGAIN IN EVICTION FIGHT Jane Newton and Girl Worker Fined $200-—Po- lice Raid, Smash Home Restored by. Workers in Struggle Against Segregation. Order CHICAGO, Dee. 13.—Herbert .Newton’s: wife and small baby, together with two youn, ig girls; were arrested Tuesday morning in a raid by the police Red Squad on-the apartment at.615 Oakwood Boulevard.from. which Newton’s, family and Harriet Williams, white worker with whom they. share the C.P. Asks To Spea On Auto Cod (Continued from Page 1) e as part of the President's so-calle: survey of the industry prelimina to the opening of hearings in Jan-| uary on tke renewal of the Auto Code. The Roosevelt Government, in accordance with the policy of General Motors and the other powerful open shop auto magnates, has been making demagogic talk about “stabilizing employment” as a-smoke screen for the wage cuts now being introduced, the elimina- tion of workers through increased speed-up and* the drive to strengthen ‘the compariy unions and smash legitimate labor organi- zations. ‘ * Preliminary announcements con- cerning the hearings havé indicated that efforts ‘will be made’ to’ rule out all testimony concerning Sec- tion 7-A of the N. R. As” * The trade unions that have thus far declared their intention to -par- ticipate in the hearings are the United Automobile Workers (A. F. of L.) the Mechanics Educational Society of America (Independent), the Associated Automobile Workers (Independent, but “headed by a company agent, Arthur Greer) and the Auto Workers Union (Trade Union Unity League). ®apartment, were evicted last Friday | morning. in. the snow. : Workers had returned their.fur- niture to the apartment. and, the police raid Tuesday was the next |step by Chicago authorities and |landlords to enforce racial ségrega- |tion and. block the ‘growing soli- |darity of white and Negro workers. Jane Newton, wife of*the Negro Communist leader, ani Frances |Carroll, one of the two ‘other girls arrested in the raid, were fined ‘$200 and costs by Judge ‘Thomas A, Green. ( In°an effort to crush the rent | strike of the white tenants in the | building, in fighting solidarity with jthe Negro masses, Judge Green also |issued eviction notices on the -re- | quest of the landlord, against two | leaders of the rent strike, | Negro and white.workers are con- tinuing the mass. picketing -of .Dr. Mitchell's home at. 648 Woodlawn Park, despite -daily.. police attacks |and. arrests. Hundreds. of..Chicago horganizations . are rallying .to the }fight -initiated. by. .the League. of Struggle for Negro Rights against segregation and jim-crowism,: for the right of. Negro workers to liye where. they, please, and: protests jagainst the attempt to evict Newton |are floodirig Judge Thomas a Green, Municipal Court, and the landlord. Efforts are also being 'madé to organize a rent strike in Dr. Mitchell's jim-crow house at 5715 Calumet Avenue, where Negroes; ale though barred by this’ same land- |lord from his lily-white houses, are offered the privilege of paying ex- orbitant rentals for inferior apart- ‘ments’ and unsanitary conditions. At CRAWFOR D you get $40 Value for | But this is also a typical Cough- lin fraud, How can you change capitalist distribution without changing capitalist. production? The system of distribution. is in- evitably determined by the system of production, The enormous con- centration of wealth in the hands of a few cannot be changed without abolishing private ownership of the means of production. stands re- vealed as one of his typical tricks to maintain the whole present set-up of private property, con- centration of wealth, and monopoly control of industry, Tomorrow we shall consider Coughlins demands for inflation, for new money, and for a public works program. ‘ ~~" (To be continued) Mail Order Inquirie: Write 100 Fifth Avenue for fash- ion book and fabric NEW YORK eee ee Cor. t2th St. Cor. 13th St. BROADWAY 841 BROADWAY. 100 5th AVE. . Cor. 15th St. 1282 BROADWA\ Vor. 33rd St. 462 7th AVE, Gor. 35th St. 963 Bth AVE. Neor 57th St. 208 WEST 7th Ave, ind $1 152 EAST 86th ST. TIS WEST 125th ST... B 1391 ST. NICHOLAS AVE. 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