£Aila Hiworker the American V Party

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£Aila Hiworker the American V Party Page Six DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMRER 15, 192 S THE CAT TRIES T ' COVER IT UP By Fred Ellis Misleaders in £aila HiWorker the American v Party . Central Organ of the Workers (Communist) Labor Unions Publishing Published by National Daily Worker SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By WILLIAMZ. FOSTER Ass’n., Inc., Daily, Except Sunday, at 26-28 By Mail (in New York only): Fred (“French”) Mader, formerly $ Union Square, New York, N. Y. Telephone, $8 a year $4.50 six mos. $2.50 three mos. business agent of the Fixture Hang- ers’ Union, was ' Stuyvesant 1696-7-8. Cable Address “Daitvork” a crony of Tim By Mail (outside of New York): Murphy’s in many of his deals. Mad- $6 a year $3.50 six mos. $2.00 three mos. er’s shady activities were multitu- ROBERT MINOR. Editor d:ii(.us. Address and mail all checks to The Daily Worker, He had a hand in the “easy WM. F. DUNNE Assistant Editor 26-28 Union Square, New York, N. Y. money” in the building trades and was connected from time to time with the saloon business, gambling joints, bootlegging outfits, and other Breeder of War | of American imperialism in Latin-America unde> - '» erld enterprises. He had a |pP The j j that it is meeting with ever-increasing re- long police record as a crook and a thug. r Coolidge ! Sandino, the heroic defender of his In 1921 Mader did a “stretch” Talcing’ its cue from a speech by sistance. in Joliet penitentiary | who for year and for extorting before the aviation congress that opened in people in Nicaragua, a a money from employers. Upon his re- Washington on Wednesday, the Scripps- half has kept up a stubborn fight against the lease he, in company with Tim Mur- Howard chain of papers, of which the Tele- invaders, is known and revered in every part phy and other gunmen, seized the representative, of the southern continent. He has been presidency of the Building Trade; gram is the New York Council, which he held waging a fight for all Latin-America and lor a short preaches a sermon on the blessings bestowed time. He wa. an active adv.-cate upon the world by the airplane which brings thousands upon thousands of workers and of the Landis Award. Finally con- the nations closer together. The Telegram peasants are coming to realize that the only demned by his international union, fight slavery he was fined $5,000 and writer goes much farther than Coolidge and way to against or extermina- suspended drive from membership for five years. a new theory of the causes of war tion is to follow Sandino’s example and Mader complained evolves the imperialists and their agents. of the hardness as follows: out of his lot and the ungratefulness of The aggressive advance of American im- the labor movement, saying (Chi- its localized interests and cago “Isolation, with perialism common fate for all Tribune, May 30, 1923): prejudices is and always has been the worst decrees a only “If 1 had devoted my time to breeder of strife. Isolation not only permits Latin-America. This decree can be set the enmities real estate business and not be- people to hate without cause, develop aside by common action against the invader come a labor I conflict without leader would be without reason and think of of the masses of those countries. In such a worth $500,000 today and to outside not the realizing its cost but closes the door support of the 5100,000 I’ve accumulated. No opinion. Bolivia and Paraguay struggle they will have the more an unboased labor stuff for me. From now on today if left to them- vanguard of the working class in the United would not be at war it is me for the real estate busi- selves.” States who are also waging a fight for life ness.” against the same tyrants. Without going into the question of the I j Tom Kearney, business agent of combination of imperialists the Plumbers’ necessity of rewriting the whole history of j Against the Union, was a protege will and servile hirelings at the heads of the of “Skinny” Madden. He also work- the world if this theory holds water we closely j puppet governments of Latin-America must ed with ‘Si” O’Donnell and merely apply it to the present conflict be- put over many of the latter’s big be hurled the invincible mass power of the tween Bolivia and Paraguay and related prob- j deals. (Report of Illinois Building lems of imperialism in Latin-America. | workers and farmers of the United States in Investigation Committee, pp. 50-58 i. alliance with the workers and peasants of j Kearney became president of the precisely because of the fact that . It is j Latin America! Building Trades Council upon the Bolivia is not isolated from the United States . .uV...- i compulsory resignation of O’Donnell. war is being prepared. Bolivia's isola- i He accepted the Landis Award, but penetration by resigned in 1922 when the fight tion ceased with it' the grew What Is Relief? against Workers International was it hot. He indicted Yankee imperialism, which finally paved in 1921 as an extortionist Defy the Fake Move of Green, Woll By WOLFE. tending to develop solidarity and and was for the American banking house BERTRAM D. I also involved in the Walsh the way TWO outstanding needs of the! internationalism. It puts out films, and En- & take charge * yight murder cases. In ICC 1 Kear- of Dillon, Read Company to and Schlesinger American working class are the publishes working class literature, “Is Living Realization of Old Working Class ney was worth $200,000, including a of the finances of the government and as- development greater solidarity be- illustrated papers such as the “Illus- 29th, the day when the left wing of store and apartment house valued at political policies. The December elements, crafts, . trierte Arbeiter Zeitung,” “Nos sume direction of its tween the diverse Motto: ‘Allfor One and One for All’. Re- $170,000 (incumbrances $92,000), cloak and dress makers and the fur garment gards,” and now is beginning to pub- cause of the present outbreak is to be ex- races, etc., that compose it, and the 272 shares of Balaban and Katz mo- open international Toiling, Suffering lish a similar illustrated paper in plained by the fact that a year and a half and pelt workers intend to the sessions j development of greater Shield of Masses” tion picture theatre stock, 350 shares of two conventions in New York City which ! solidarity. English. In many sections of the of the Kearncy-Dailey Glass Co., and ago the Carib oil syndicate discovered oil in developing working The Workers' International Relief world it is class 095 shares of the Ajax Rubber Co. the insolent will be merged before they are over into one j forgotten. come out Strike, the disputed territory. That (W. I. R.) is a splendid instrument cnees are They t for the British General and theatre associations, “Proletfoto” stock. He died in 1924. weaker neigh- amalgamated needle trades union, rapidly two more clearly than ever under such ] the long miners’ struggle that fol- movements, radio groups, etc, It attitude of Bolivia toward its for the developing of these Peter of circumstances. Here again the lowed, that helped the victims of the Shaughnessy, president bor, Paraguay, was deliberately fomented by approaches. forms of solidarity. i has established children’s homes for the powerful Chicago Bricklayers’ re- Workers’ International Relief stands Irish famine in 1925. Out of these children of strikers, sum- government To the reactionary union bureaucracy in Tl:e WIR is an international the and Union, is also head of the Wash- the agents of the United States i out as the champion (f solidarity and other important international mer camps. Its cultural activities spectre lief organization cn a class basis, of! ington Construction Co., a firm do- is clear from an examination of the actions the Jewish labor movement, the of a oppressed masses. Just as the aetiexs, the WIR grew into th: or- go letting with a section in the U. S. When the the far toward the workers ing man-hole contract building. For yankee despotism, fast approaching Dec. 29 meant the need for Red Cross and the government agen- ganization that it is today. Organ- one of the representative of j strikers of New Bedford or of the of country know how the work- many years Shaughnessy, who is step many Charles Evans Hughes, at the Havana con- mighty efforts in gathering their union- Pennsylvania Ohio coal fields enter cies in on behalf of the master- ized at first in countries in ers of other countries live and suf- one of the dominant temporary forces in his Pan-American union last | wrecking forces to stem the tide of en- j : into a struggle, they find lined up class, so the WIR steps in on be- the form of relief bodies fer and struggle. It carries pictures International Union, has used the ference of the balf of the workers and toiling poor. for a particular catastrophe or struggles, picket lines, put among workers in the against them the entire power of of of of dis- power of his union, industrially and winter. At that time Hughes through a thusiasm growing the Every revolutionary strug- struggle, the conviction soon grew | the highly centralized capitalist great asters, etc., throughout the world. politically, to direct business into the countries in Latin-Ameri- industry.
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