, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1930 Page Three Just Like Whalen Fascist Legion Pays to Slug Jobless LONDON MEET DEBACLE WORKERS CORRESPONDENCE-FROM THE SHOPS COMMITTEE OF SHOWS HEADLONG RACE 110,000 WIRES TO INTO NEW WORLD WAR NO MORE STARVING, BUT FIGHT, WRITE WASHINGTON Whole Fabric of Fake Peace Meet Falls; Stim- (son Scolded by MacDonald for Trick on Japan NEGRO WORKERS The Jobless Refuse to Starve; WillFight AllImperialist Powers Rush War Preparations; Victimized by Bosses, Landlords, “Charity”, J inc. (Continued from Page One ) Secret “Talks” for Attack on Soviet They Find Out Meaning of Class Struggle Chambers6(MeSts-NewYorkCity v : i we suggest Friday, March 21. Please wire answer.” LONDON, March 19.—There is no as part of the general war prepara- attempts of British imperialism. The They See Their Children Starve, and Realize In elaboration of the delegation’s Five-Power conference. All tions yesterday of the imperialist bandit powers to estimates approved provide for an They Must Organize action Wm. Z. Foster, come to “agreements” for increased expenditure of $89,250,000 for war Kr. Wllli&a B. O’Neill, stated: 466 Islington Avenue, war was smashed on the naval craft alone. While MacDonald “This Senate Committee now in armaments (By a Worker Correspondent.) house in a chair. the charity New Tork Citj spouts peace, does hesitate Still session is making a pretense at in- rock of growing imperialist rivalries. he not to man said that he could go to work, Boon 409 by giving CLEVELAND, Ohio.—Am an un- vestigating unemployment. Nobody MacDonald and Stimson are hang- act for war the imperial- they don’t care how sick we are, ing on to attempt money build ma- employed Negro worker. I went to in America can speak more authori- in order to fool ists to their war they want us to go to work. Stic n&n la sent toy us. chinery. charity for help sev- tatively name 7,000,000 the masses as to the real nature of the and went But where will we go to work, in the of you. unemployed workers than the repre- the race-for-armamcnts meet when In the United States, work is eral times, when my husband was every place they said, no help need- Thank it sentatives of the mass demonstra- first convened. rapidly proceeding on the ten 10,000 sick in the hospital for three months ed, no help needed, what are we (Miss) Edith Wray Devlin, tions of March 6. Ifwe to this Yesterday in the House of Com- ton cruisers, several of which will and home sick for three more going to do? charity is only Employment manager get Chiappe is the chief police The hearing we to mqns, Commander J. M. Kenworthy, be launched soon. French imper- of months, listen, go on a bunk, just i will undertake present Paris, and just like Whalen, he I would the wait and see what they one of MacDonald’s collaborators, is rapidly carrying out its of streets and pick up that which did, I had go there j the demands of the unemployed for ialism attacked the workers on was to again, because blurted out “The conference is a naval war building program, nor arc French work or wages, to expose the wage March when they came thrown away and a friend that lives the visiting nurse comes around and The above is a photographic reproduction of one of the many terrible failure. It would be better Japanese capitalists 6, out to | cuts and speed-up and part-time the Italian and demonstrate against unemploy- down stairs in the same tenement, makes us go there. Then what hap- letters given by the American Legion in New York to its members, to close up the conference now.” in this respect. her and my ; schemes being put over on the work- backward ment. Even the troops girl girl we would send pens, I take my baby with me be- which entitled them to $5 for appearing at the Union Square mass The conference closed down long were called Saturday | ers to force them to bear the burden While the conference is closed, out. But also like Whalen and his them every to the Central cause he is the one that needed unemployment demonstration on March 0 to help Whalen’s cossacks. before Kenworthy discovered the Market to get the they help, he needed good milk, well, Many i of the economic crisis of capitalism. maneuvers go on privately. That war bosses, Chiappe got a scare. stale meat of the unemployed Legionnaires who were given $.5 to help slug i failure” business. Un- want. go charity I jobless Legion | And w-e will expose also the fakery maneuvers against the employment is rapidly growing in don’t when I to the doctor demonstrators told the to go to hell; that they rvcrc All imperialist powers are rapidly pay 10 of the capitalists and their social 1 form the chief subject of conversa- France along with the crisis, and The landlord said at that time I have to the doctor cents for unemployed themselves and would not do the bosses’ dirty work. yushing their naval war building went a visit, cents Legion ! fascist flunkeys in the A. F. of L. tion at these secret and private in- the %vorkers are in no mood to i had to move, so I back to the and then 10 for a bottle A worker member of the turned the above letter over to programs—in fact, this was never charity again, the charity man said of milk, I would like to know where the Daily Worker with an exposure the tactics the j and the ‘socialist’ party in lying formal meetings of the imperialist stand more speed-up, wage cuts of of American interrupted by the quarreling and for that they pay one and charity part in. All they Legion Presumably ; about the conditions and protecting bandits is beyond question. This and repression. Moreover, the would month the comes on behalf of the bosses. the Mr. O’Neill mentioned quibblings at the Five-Power meet. no more. He said I and my want to do all the time is to rob in the letter was in charge the charged with the bosses from the demands of the fact that the boss press tries French troops are nd so "reliable” that of crew carrying out Today the House of Commons to boy could take care of the rent and the poor workers, and us Negroes this fascist mission. I working class.” and show a tendency to fraternize * * * passed an increase air-force burget, keep as quiet as possible. other expenses, when my boy was more because they think we are with the workers instead of shoot Organize. them. sick himself, but they tried to make dumb, but they are mistaken, we Providence Jobless “Socialists” Smell of Oil him go out and work, he was just are going to fight these bosses. PROVIDENCE, R. 1., Mar. 19. able to sit up in bed and around the —NEGRO WORKER, NO JOB. TOILERS PROTEST ENGINEER UNION i A meeting of the Unemployed Coun- (Inprecorr Press Service) The Soviet share of the German oil cils was held at Providence, and a MOSCOW.—Referring to the ne- imports in 1924 was 1.8 per cent, State Executive Board was elected, JUDGE ADMITS How A* F. L. “Solves” Unemployment— also delegates to the National Con- gotiations between the German gov- but in 1929 it had risen to 10.3 per Tt MISS JOBLESS AGENT ACCUSED ! ernment and the Shell and Standard cent and was still rising rapidly Blames the Women Workers | ference at New York on March 29. Oil concerns concerning the estab- to the discomfort of the international A decision was made that a state of an oil monopoly in Ger- oil magnates. demonstration be held in the near lishment IS CLASS CASE (By a Worker Correspondent) struggles and strikes but they give Demand the Release of Got Mysterious $36,100 many in the hands of these con- The oil barons, Deterding and i future, the State Executive to begin CLEVELAND, Ohio.—While the them answers to their questions of 1 cerns, “Pravda” writes Teagle, had now found reliable N. Y. Delegation During Lobby Stunt preparations at once; that in the the that the allies Communist Party and the Trade unemployment and the problems that i efforts of international capitalism in their struggle against Soviet oil of Jufy ! next few weeks meetings and demon- Question Trial Union Unity League are leading the are confronting them. (Continued to an ring against —the German democracy. The from Page On#) WASHINGTON, I). C„ March 18. strations be held in Central Falls, form economic social unemployed workers em- F. of a company union j the Soviet Union becoming social democratic minister Hilferd- Is Political Matter and the The A. L. is against the revengeful capitalist —Claudius Huston, G.O.P. national Woonsocket, Pawtucket Valley and are ployed workers in fighting for re- and cannot be expected to tell the clearer and clearer. ing arranged the Swedish match class justice that now seeks to let I! chairman and lobbyist against pub- other cities, and that a half-day (Continued Page One) lief, the representatives of the Am- the truth, they are Having succeeded in squeezing the monopoly, and the German govern- from workers when loose its terror upon the leaders of lic operation of the government pow- strike be called for the next demon- breaks all over the world. The case Federation of Labor have representatives of Mar- ” cheap Soviet matches off the Ger- ment under the social democrat erican the bosses. the fight for ‘Work or Wages.’ er plant at Muscle Shoals, brought stration. has serious aspects. I think (speak- been speaking recently on the public ried women in Cleveland are work- * * * man market, they were now at- Mueller would undoubtedly do its the name of the Brotherhood of The State Executive to ing to Unger) that you are playing square; informing the people that ing because the husband was either Workers Demand decided tempting to do the same for oil. The best to arrange the oil monopoly. Locomotive Engineers into his de- call a State Conference on Sunday, into the hands of these people. women are the cause of the present out of work that he did not make great successes of the Soviet oil As with matches, so also oil, or Release. fensive testimony before the Senate 23, preparation with They want to say that they did not unemployment situation. They say enough wages to keep the family in I March in for the industry represented a thorn in the the moifppoly would result a con- MINNEAPOLIS, Mar. 19.—Over lobby probe committee, March 14. have a fair trial. The case must be the married women are taking the food clothing. I National Conference of March 29, of capitalism. of and Married women 300 workers met here at Humbolt Huston was entrusted by B. of side international siderable increase prices. jobs away the | end to protest the arrests and other handled with extreme care. You from the men, and there- would not go into the factories for Hall on March 15th and passed a L. E., following their convention in only attacks on the unemployed move- must prove that there is no vin- fore the men are thrown out of $lO or sl2 a week because they resolution demanding the release of 1927, with the post of financial ad- dictiveness. This consideration in work. wanted stockings or ment throughout the country. Another of Lovestone’s Pals “Arrives” “pin” the delegates representing the 110,- viser in selling some of their pro- my mind has a tendency to influence It is very typical of the A. of money. Women workers, the F. Join 000 workers at the New York un- perties. ng;e. (By Inpreeorr Press Communist have now joined are Our own the Donrueofn nec, VIENNA Party me to grant the application (for a L. to take such a stand. They Communist Party and the T.U.U.L. employed demonstration. The reso- These properties were part of the !«* d ist Itmuisheri by thl«—fhnt It •ervice). —The social democratic the Austrian social democratic party jury trial). I am sure the news- misleading the workers not only in —Cleveland Woman Worker. linn MimplifUu drifts iintngonlHmn. r lution said: $30,000,000 swindle put over in the More rind more, noclety i.« ienna “Arbeiter Zeitung” reports in a body. Ziegler has already ob- papers say I will have a lot to about “We workers here assembled name of labor banks, insurance com- up Into fwo (Trent hostile camps. that the group of members headed tained a good position in the Metal it.” pledge Into two great and directly contra- our support to the jailed and panies, and real estate ventures, by posed by Ziegler expelled from Starve Fight This Negro Working classes: bourgeoisie and pro- Alfred the Workers Union. Then Unger Spills Beans. or for persecuted March 6th fighters for the chiefs of the B. of L. E. They letariat.— liars. Unger nearly collapsed and be- the unemployed. We demand failed Family—They’ll Fight their with a loud crash over a year account, instead of putting it in a came more than usually careless in immediate ago, Sentence Powers to 100 Hurt at Hindu liberation. We demand and the locomotive engineers bank to the credit of the what he gave away. (By a Worker Correspondent) a job, they merely look at me and Foster, Minor, Tennessee Gang freedom for Amter, have been paying $lO assessments to Improvement Association—the 3 Months Chain Court Demonstration “I disagree, your honor,” he said, CLEVELAND, 0., Ohio.—The say don’t want any one, and now Raymond and Lesten, the members save some River of their leaders from go- name of the lobby organization in “We can’t keep the newspapers from my husband happen to get a job of jail. now (Continued Page One) RANGOON, Burma, March 19. times are terrible in Cleveland. I the New York Unemployed ing to It appears that which he and Col. J. W. Worthington from saying things about this, entirely, and only make three dollars and Workers delegation. We see in this the personnel hired More than 100 persons were injured hear of and see so many people suf- by the B. of L. E. were partners. He was then asked ¦workers into uproarious laughter unfortunately. These people want twenty cents a day and we are not j capitalist class vengeance against officials are mixed up in some other today at a mass demonstration out- fering. My husband has been out of whether he had talked recently with when he answered a question wheth- publicity, but they get more pub- in much better shape than we was the March 6th fighters for un- side of the court-room where J. N. the rackets. the "Jnion Carbide people. er he believed in god, by stating: licityj from a jury trial than from work more times than he has been before he started to work. My hus- l employed the growing of Sengupta, petty-bourgeois mayor of ; attack the Lobbied For Madden Bill. At first Huston declared he had “I don’t believe in the kind of gods the trial before three judges, which in work. I have six children, three band make such little money he boss class to outlaw the class strug- Calcutta, is being tried for sedition. Senators Black and Blaine had not seen them since receiving the they have around Winston-Salem, is quick, effective, and our conten- go to school and the others have to can’t hardly feed us and pay back gle organizations of the working Sengupta, a follower of Gandhi, is a questioned Huston as to his getting money, in the spring of 1929. Then capitalist gods like R. J. Reynolds tion is that this case should be stay at home. My children don’t bills. Will you please tell me how class. “wealthy exploiter of of I $36,100 from the Union Carbide Co., he corrected himself, saying that he and P. H. Hanes. I believe in science. hundreds treated as any other misdemeanor eat any breakfast, never because I to pay back bills and support my “We pledge ourselves join Hindu His fake opposi- to in which was to have in the had lately with Mr. Squier, of (The Reynolds company is the man- workers.” case, a case suitable for trial in can't afford to give them breakfast, children out of $3.20 a day? the defense of the shared talked tion to has mis- 113 workers now profit from handing Muscle Shoals Cleveland, who is associated with the ufacturer of Camel cigarettes—ad- British imperialism special sessions with a jury, quickly dinner and supper. I only give my Only thing I see is organize. Am facing 1105 years in prison led many of the Hindu workers and | under over to the American Cyanamid Co., Union Carbide interests. He mits $32,000,000 profit last year). disposed of. children when my husband is work- a Negro and my husband found A. the ‘criminal syndicalist’ and ‘sedi- | ex- peasants. through enactment of the Madden \ plained that Squier is a member of ing. Our meals are as cheap as I F. L. won’t take him in. Commu- tion’ laws. While these laws are Tells of Soviet Union. “Let me remind Your Honor of bill. He admitted having deposited a law firm representing the Brother- | can make them. nists does, he says. So Negro work- now being used to attack the Com- i Gerson then went on the stand the case of Mae West, which is get- this money in his private brokerage hood of Engineers. I have to walk the streets from ers ought to join it fight. munist Party, the ! Locomotive I,id remained there almost an hour. Miners Elect Jobless ting a jury trial, and results in and most conscious place to place asking the bosses for —NEGRO WOMAN. and militant section the He was questioned on the N.T.W.U., very much publicity.” of working Delegate; Frankfeld class, it is under cover of these on the Union of Socialist Soviet Re- “There is much in what you say,” at- tacks the develops publics, on alleged persecution of in Scranton said Ford, and then ordered Unger that boss class its Arrested Illinois Farmers, in Starvation Grip, Grow attack against all demands of labor. religion in U.S.S.R., on conditions | to submit a memorandum on the “We to in the Soviet Union. He used the SCRANTON, Pa., March 19.—At case, at 4 p. m. tomorrow, after Militant demand an end race dis- Southern \ crimination in every form. Cotton Mills and Labor opportunity to explain the conditions a meeting of the Mutual he promises to quickly decide We Russian t which (By a Worker Correspondent) organizing the I.L.D. here. pledge ourselves By Myra Page in the Soviet Union, particularly question of a jury trial. to fight against 96 pp. 25 Cents. Benefit Society, held Sunday, March t the NOKOMIS, 111.—Most of the mi- The farmers here say “We have the growing wave lynching _.ow the seven dour day prevails, and of of 16, Com. Frankfeld, organizer of the Class Against Class. ners that took an active part in the tried both republican and democrats, both white and Negro workers.” unemployment is banished, with con- Party, ! last December now we see that they ditions growing better every day for Communist spoke on the un- The attitude and the remarks of strike are blacklisted and both rob EARLY REVIEWS | judge and prosecutor after being thrown out of work. us, wringing money out of us in the workers, and he told how, in- employment problem, and called for indicated “Myra Page is well qualified to write of Southern textile clearly enough the basis of the de- Many miners are unemployed and high taxes. It is high time to do Convention June 14 stead of religious persecution, the the election of delegates to a Con- i workers. As a southern woman herself, she has cision to be The mere fact, the farmers are suffering great something.” to lived and workers and peasants of the Soviet ference that will be held on Wednes- ¦ made. Form Metal Union worked in mill villages and the at first ably presented by defense attorneys, misery, too. I am doing my best to get the knows situation hand. Union are daily in masses abandon- day, March 26, in Scranton. “SOUTHERN COTTON AND LABOR” before Judge Ford posed the real Lately about 14 banks closed down farmers, good number of them to- MILLS should be ing the church, and demanding that This is part of (Continued from Page One) read by every conference the question, that the prosecution is in this section, proving there is a gether and call a big mass meeting worker in order to understand what is back the buildings be used for useful pur- whole series of conferences planned Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, of the great struggles in the southern textile making a trivial case of “parading real “prosperity.” The farmers arc with militant speakers. field.” poses. and organized by the T.U.U.L. and Youngstown, and Pittsburgh. In ad- —GH ACl*: HUTCHINS, author ot without a permit” into a serious talking to do something. We are —NOKOMIS MINER. j “Labor nod SUk.” The judge asked Gerson the usual, Communist Party delegates to the dition, the League has recently in- “. . case of “unlawful assembly,” . The author performed a surgical operation “Why don’t you live in Russia?” and National T.U.U.L. Conference that the vaded the Birmingham district where upon a factj that the curious New York law favor of granting a jury trial. portion of the body of American an Gerson pointed out to him that will be held in on More Letters to Boss the. workers are beginning to respond imperialism, operation provides a heavier penalty an But nobody talked much which discloses in detail the misery America was his native country, and March 29, will be elected at the local i for about to its program. A Southern organ- of the masses. This is attempt to parade than it does for technicalities, and the conversation Favor Jobless no ‘study’ by a social he had a right to stay here and tell conferences. Press izer has recently been appointed as welfare worker. Sympathy and un- confined to the derstanding are there, the workers to organize, besides an actual parade; the fact that the was practically well as a national youth organizer. but primarily it is an incision, sharp The society accepted the proposal judge prosecutor, (Continued from Page One) and merciless, by a out to them what the work- statutes provide that when a case and the once the More organizers will be in the field scalpel with a Leninist edge.” npinting unanimously, and elected delegates. involves a difficult point of law, or real problem (from a master class —WILLIAM i(-s of the Soviet Union had done. ment on Friday. Opposed as lam shortly, the board announces. F. DUNNE. While the meeting was still on, Com. a set of facts which are disputed point of view) was flung into the 7 Judge Watson also asked Gerson j to , I must say that the All Workers’ Support Needed. Order from Frankfeld began selling the Coal ' and require many witnesses to clar- open by Ford. It is clearly up to whether he thought there could be Digger. point, police wisecracking Jimmy The League is calling upon all steel At this the ify, or a case that sets a precedent the workers to so conduct them- Walker at last WORKERS LIBRARY a world without capitalists, and the and metal workers in un- PUBLISHERS broke into the meeting hall, began (all of which conditions prevail in selves that the biased court that found his match. Messrs. Foster territories 39 East 125th Street N ew by pointing out the touched to immediately get in touch York City worker answered to question the workers present, and case) go to jury will see it and Minor made those two gay boys, example of the U.S.S.R., and telling this it should a tries this advisable to with the national office to build new Discounts offered on orders in quantity lots then arrested Frankfeld. trial—all of this is practically dis- the five trial. Jimmy and Grover, look like 30 the interested audience of workers release on local leagues and start the campaign No specific charge was placed regarded hy the bosses’ court. cents. in could The Even if a jury trial is granted, for the convention. the court room just how it against him. He was detained for real question decide from their to only the pressure of the work- Along the same line, Frank Owens, The League further calls upon all be so. several hours in the station, and point of view is simply: do mass Workers Hear Facts. the ers can be relied upon to win the wrote to the New York Telegram, sympatheticc organizations, unions, then permitted to leave. workers learn more of the The solicitor finally realized that rotten- release of their elected delegates. saying; fraternal and language clubs, and The miners present to the meeting ness of boss government, its judi- hundreds of workers were finding “Your editorial piaising the sympathetic individuals to help fi- greatly resented the intrusion of the cial hypocrisy and the nature of the Police Commissioner Whalen ap- out the true program and its prac- mayor for his method of handling nance the organization work before ! THE BIG MIGHT! police, and the courts, if a jury trial is granted, or peared Tuesday at the dinner of the ticability of the Communist Party, arrest of the Com- at j the convention. All Funds should be ! munist Party organizer. if three staunch Tammany judges Men's Club of the Central Congrega- the Communists the Board of the N.T.W.U. and the T.U.U.L. The meeting betrays your rushed immediately to the National 1 “quickly and expediently” railroad tional Church, and boasted of police Estimate inno- line of the questioning quicklv really place. Headquarters of the League, 611 the delegates of the unemployed to heating up pickets of the Indepen- cence of what took Saturday, March then, and techni- Penn Ave., Room 517, Pittsburgh. 22 changed went into Hyman Speaks at term dent Shoe Workers Union. Previ- “I saw the whole show, and a in prison? while . The task of organizing five cal matters. ously he had stated that he inter- I am out of sympathy with Com- million Powers was questioned only a Needle Mass Meet By Play. i workers in this basic industry, which vened in the shoe strike at the re- munists ... I am sorry to say time, the prosecution trying to Unger jis also an important war industry, short in C h ic a g o resorted to a bit of flat- quest of the U. S. Department of that they behaved better than Hiz- HARLEM REVELS prove that he was paid by the So- tery in calling the attention of the requires the support of all workers Labor, Commissioner Wood of the zoner. , Solidarity Union instead of the Comrau- judge to a case involving an alleged and workers’ organizations. Danrentiration I'iet CHICAGO, 111., Mar. 19.—The department of labor ordered the bos- “At $40,000 a year I could Party of the U.S.A. immoral play (Ford is death on bring I Saturday Ev’n’g, fyst Chicago Joint Council of the Needle ses to break their contract with the back a hundred dead ones put March as (/ The solicitor practically refused to what he chooses to call immoral to up iNflpßfrk Trades Workers Industrial Union union because it had Communists in a better show.” Rockland Palace, 2SC W. 155 juestion Totherow, fearing the young has called a mass meeting of all plays) in which Ford himself re- it. Wood also a day or so ago praised Southern mill worker’s testimony fused a plea to change from spe- Not only do the regular capitalist Danger In Painful, Weak f needle trades workers for March 24, Whalen for his nttack on the Union on cial dope sheets attack the of would have too great an effect with Louis Hyman as speaker. Hy- sessions to general sessions, Square demonstration. leaders Negro and white workers pres- and praised by the unemployed workers, but even LIBERATOR LABOR the man is at present in Chicago, and was for his decision hope jail andl the N. Y. Law “I soon to put Foster in the outright capitalist gambling Bladder »nt. will wait over for the meeting. Journal. Unger for good,” said Whalen. press takes a hand in Powers bond is set at S3OO and didn’t think of this himself; work- this trickery. r>!llr t r;o ’' * ° - ll,v >!„*,«.« Atlanta in point **' was able to to a case, the gamblers on the New (a isOO 5 T ‘h " < m,e York Press throughout the world. For early ; United O-iperaHve *»•* St. demonstration and charged with latter is punishable by a purely legal of which SAN , l nlty offense aspects were FRANCISCO, Cal. The racing sheet) agree perfectly with relief get your Z7IMI llronv PnrkKnst The Liberator Lali.ir ft* druggist ! * throwing “tear gas bombs.” More of SI,OOO and 12 months on from the FiunNli Co.»p *t. fine the the same as the case of Foster, Women’s Educational Club has the big guys they live 7IMi Hroaihtnr , try to ape in original. Ift W. 12fttb Koom ° ol serious charges have been made chain gang or six months iif jail. Amter, Minor, Reynolds Lesten, its St. 3.1 S -HISthnloii and shown solidarity with the strug- Wall Hni'kpe u . ~ , . Square Street when it comes to at- Foml r I,oo^S *,0 them as to the In- IO I» Xeedle against reported The International Labor Defense in the present gles ''lkt s# * *i Trade* which district attor- of the miners by contributing tacking \V 11 Square 13| \\. Defense, “dis-, i the leaders of the unem- lon **}Sth St. ternational Labor attorney is appealing the ease r>-njni short n judge, decided in S3O for miners’ relief. ployedi Nantal Midy j workers. SPECIAL REDUCTION TO I’MKM PLOYED—2S CENTS them tlirouuli your union I