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government in Nicaragua and the ‘secretary of the Kelief Com-|Dispite the soldier's pleading, dis-| prayer on his thick ugly lips: Money | } China. These marines have béen|Mittee in Boston. He pointed out|pite his desperate appeals to his|yata bene, w 2 Page Four ‘ ine Gite \ Gee” SRE ea erage eek = THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1928, Batty Ga HAwa0uTS who still believe that big business Stands by and lets the democrats and Examine Dogs for RANK AND FILE IN NEW BEDFORD vatives Antarctic Expedition ‘A GREAT SYSTEM QOME time this fall the history of is now being published under offi- ng Amuses Itself as Textile Workers Starve, Says Worker Correspondent ee eee IN THE PLUMBER IN “COQUETTE” OREGON: “U" HAS Actors’ Equity History to me FLECTIONS HELD | Tell Story of Organization republicans elect a president with- RR Tc Sal ea cg oa HE PERS’ UNION Meh K Hint: or two should Sake a (be available in book form. The book ) i Zlance at statistics. Even conser- i pi admit the lowest price on a cial auspices. Alfred Harding, as- Wels is aidullax, (ICtaker dé to Olan: ‘4 : Nee |sistant editor of the union monthly ’ i resident million votes to win a presidential Lill Committees Really Merchants. in Eugene | rant Me et as Helfand, P i election. Where is that mounfain of Mussolini’s Pals Lead Strike money coming from? comes it demands an understanding! And when it volume is going to be a very com- prehensive story of the rise of the Urges Militancy (By 0 Weeebnbarnieniae) (Bu a Worker Correspondent) | 8ctors’ union and its early strug- (By a, Worker Correspondent) You dwont need a slate to figure) While T was on a trip through the EUGENE, Ore. (By Mail)—|sles. Just to show hmow improved A meeting of the American Asso- this one out. |New England States 1 decided to] Business men and city officials (pro- |i8 the status of the actor since the ciation of Plumbers Helpers was visit the strike area, to sec with A few weeks ago Governor Mc-| my own eyes how this strike is con- Mullen of Nebraska was a brand ducted and how the workers are| that threatened to set the whole G.| fighting their struggle against the O. P. playhouse on fire. He wouldn’t| employers, and also against the cor- have Hoover for a nominee and rupt leaders of the Textile Workers threatened a crusade of 100,000 rich Union of America. farmers on Kansas City. He said he Incidentally 1 stepped into the| would stick like a mortgage to the local of the corrupt clique cf’ the| farm issue. The other day Hoover| Textile Workers Union of America, talked with Mc-Mullen. He told him|1796:Cushmet St., in New Bedford are being selected now. veterinary, is shown in the picture for the American imperialist vent: Huskies for the Richard E. Byrd naval expedition to the Antaretic Dr. David E: Buckingham, Washington led, of course, you are able to dis- tinguish between the two) of this up-to-date little university town won the trophy offered some time alted goblin and ruler of the Amal- gamated Order of Exploiters, for the individual or organizaticn dis- covering the newest and best means lof exploiting children, it became |known today. The trophy was spon- examing one of the 100 candidates ure in the southern polar ice. a few secrets relative to the penalty|The minute I came in the secretary for fighting the G. O. P. and the re-| of that local came over to me, ask- ward for sticking close. Now Me- ing the following questions: “Are Mullen says:” I will say that Mr.|you from New York?” I said yes. Hoover has quite a comprehensive | “Are you a socialist?” I said yes. understanding of this issue.” Poor|“How is the present situation in Me Mullen is little more than aj this strike?” I asked him. The sec- DEATH: SLA SEA AND HELL SHIPS |sored by Mussolini, who is also di- vector of Italy, at a recent world conclave of the order when reports from the American branch of the amalgamated order disclosed that there was a certain strata of Amer- VERY: THE ago by Benito Mussolini, grand ex- | organization came into being, the | book will go back and tell how ac- |following the Civil War. Companies were disbanded hun- |dreds of miles from home without their wates and no funds to return. And their pay. when they got it, was very small indeed. Five weeks }notice of discharge—the present |fired at the manager's whim. Therg is on record the case of an actor who, in one season, rehearsed twenty- three weeks and received, in all égur days pay. He appeared in |plays, two of which ran féf one night and one for two nighté |tors were treated in the old days! rule—was unheard of: the actor was |. held on July 26 at Labor Temple, E. 14th Street and Second Ave. ‘ Max Helfand presided. Brother Helfand spoke on the present situa- tion in the trade and in the union. He concluded by saying, “We must make sacrifices for our union.” Our official organ, “The Ameri- the can Plumbers’ Helner” will be pub- lished soon. It will voice the strug- gles which the plumbers’ helpers Recs ecitaged ig andithale Gout éencerning the class struggle as a whole. Tn the very near future they will hold a mass meeting. Helen légdfing role in “Coquette”, now 4 Hayes, who plays &§ tenth month at the Maxine. jott Theatre. ican children which hae thus far) Ty tiet association aff actors iP 59 aorsed the ‘coming Working Youth cinder now. retary was a very tall fellow, and escaped the iron heel of oppression. |... ¢ormed in 1894, and Was called Conference, This conference will be Fie oe not so skinny, either. He made a) (Continued from Yesterday) tives, was soon laying down and| This section of American children the Actors’ Socicty of Awferica. The * {held September 25 and 26 at the Herbie Hoover returned from a funny face, and said: “I will be| On another occassion, a sailor, a| Washing ebout in the “lee scuppers,” | represent the sons and daughters of —_ Labor Temple. The purpose of the fishing trip with a 7000 word poli-| earnest with you, seeing that yo2 very much scared of his life! Had tical speech. Voters who will have are a socialist. I will tell you that smart sailor (a 100 per cent Ameri- can) dropped a block from aloft just it not been for some “foreign” sail- the middle class business men (what ere left of them) and trade to listen to it should be glad he!wera it not for these radica's our didn’t go on a hunting trip. * * * J. B. Hume, St. Bartholomew’s hospital, London recently described| same workers, working in the same | called the ‘lead treatment’ for cancer in the following word . it) converted even the strongest patients into physical wreck: Members of the strike would be won already.” “What do you mean by that?” I asked shim. “Aren’t you all tha factory? I am sure that you are fighting for the same demands.” He lost himself and said: “J don’t mean that. I meant to say that I missing the lousy bald head with the Mussolini cap by an inch or so. The bible puncher got scared at last. He to the congregation (his henchmen, fascisti) and they held a council. They weighed the block— it weighed 12% lbs., measured the distance (about 60 feet to high for medical trust will take all the money|only don’t like. their leaders, like |#n accurate hit) and threatened the a worker has to treat a disease | Weisbord and Rubinstein and the | Sailor with a terrible punishment when, actually, they know no more about it than a plumber’s assistant. * * * Wallops Negroes re others.” Then he came over and asked me in a very humorous way: | “Please tell me your name.” “My xroup of about ten people?” he in- vited. | I got mad, and I said: “How can you, in a situation like this, when the employers intend to open the gates tomorrow, sit down. to Play cards? Why don’t you call a meeting to discuss the situation in crder to mobilize your strength for | tomorrow?” “We don’t need to call such meetings to prepate for such | dirty work. This we will leave for | f@t Priest the*radicals,” he said, smilingly. Another man sitting there and lis- tening to our conversation called me over and said to me: “I am a true socialist, my father was a so- cialist, too. I will tell you that the | less you talk to these fellows the better off you will be, because the | secretary himself is a republican and | the others are all democrats, and | for attempted murder upon high seas (emphasizing the high seas). The smart sailor was also a good , name is Jack,” T said. “Would you! liar and, consequently, a lawyer, and |like to play in cards with us, a he said: “The foot rope he was standing on was too slippery, the block too heavy for him to handle, and being half starved and weak, “he slipped, was about to fall from aloft | (remember the sixty feet) and to save himself, he let go the block, since they can make new blocks, but cannot make new ment” “You dirty bastard’ roared the e old ian, “don’t you know the sailors slogan when aloft? One hand for the owners, one for yourself,” and he violently struck the sailor with’ brass knuckles, knocking him down. After that incident the old pig-head never showed oft main deck. And when on the poop, he was always fearfully looking skyward, like some religious fanatic (as he pretended to be at ors, he too would have gone to|union members who are fortunate | | Davey Jones’ locker, but they merci- enough to reach high school The fully picked him up and taking him to his bunk nursed him while he | was sick and hipless. Gone was all his bravado, gone was all his patrio- mania, he became mild, meak and weak. Even so weak that the young future officers of the middle class (that constitute fascismo and 100 per cent tismo nowadays) soon took advantage in making a clown out of the soldier to amuse themselves. The poor fellow had no peace, even the captain’s “missus” a sloppy, fat and pasty-faced woman of the so- called “Mayflower stock” swore at him “Damn you, you bloody soldier!” Soon the poor man began to see daylight. England had lost its “for- mer fairness and sweetness.” The once proudly floating Union Jack was no longer the much_ praised “blood: and guts’—but only the bloody sweat of the exploited, so that men like Jank and the rest of | his dirty gang could live and fatten! He stopped talking of England go- | ing to war and licking Germany; he stopped dispising the Russian Bear; there were no more “Dagoes” or “Dutch” to him now—only we and! the “Big Bugs.” And whn the lofty peaks of the Andes showed above the horizon the | Where than in Bugene also does not | Rene , once hard boiled sargeant-major was’) inability of national business inter- ests to reach these children and ex- |wloit them to the fullest extent has long been a source of much concern to the American chambers of com- merce and other business organiza- tions. The Eugene system, it is 8 will afford complete and im- mediate relief in this situation. Eugene high school ore required: if they intend to en- ter the business world upon leaving school, to serve an apprenticeship which consists of working fren of charge four or five hours daily in the office of a local business con- cern during each high school term. | At the beginning of each school va- ‘cation the more promising students |pre selected for the summet’s work for which they are paid a nominal wage. When the fall term begins the students are again placed upon the “charity” basis, and in many cases wherd the summer services have not been entirely satisfactory defaulting ones are replaced by new students eager to get ahead. Those refusing to serve this ap- prenticeshiv are immediately placed upon the “black list” and ave un- able to obtain employment in Fu- jgene. Education -acquired else- count, it being a prereauisite that graduates | }eroup hed] together for’ some time, |but were not strong enough to im- |prove their working conditions. a meeting was held at which the disbandment of the so- ciety was discussed A group of six In 1912 |continued, and these formed the Milton Sills, Grant Stewart and one | other. Women members were not admit- ted at first. After a year this policy was changed. When the organiza- tion was in running order a separate branch for the chorus was organized. | The past month a new branch, |for colored members of the profes- sion, was being discussed. and is now on its way to realization. The |history, when, issued, should prove interesting reading. RESO OIL IN DUTCH INDIES AMSTERDAM. Ayg. 2 (UP).— In connection with the exploitation of oil fields in the Dutch East In- dies, the government has effe.ted an agreement with the American lega-| |tion by which the United States recognizes Holland as a reciproca- {ting country under th: minerals- |leasing act of 1920. for a number of.ye: not be awarded, as the originator is “ ig conference is “to help in the organi- Threatened for His zation of the unerganized young Activity in Porter Case ‘workers in Néw York City, to lay The membership unanimously en- -|not care a An unsigned letter from Butte, in care of the Daily Worker, warns | |nucleus of the group which founded|the young Communist that he had | held. é ithe Actors’ Equity Association. The better “watch his step” on account ated: Max Helfand, vresident; Alex- six men were Albert Brunning,| of his interest in the fight for John |@7der (“Murphy”) Spreiregen, vice- Charles D. Coburn, Frank Gilmore, | Porter’s release. | The threatening letter, as written | |and punctuated, reads: “Montana “Paul Crouch: | “I note where you DEMAND the |Telease of John Porter if the Bosses | |dont seem to wish to care for your |DEMANDS what are you going to do about it.... You I suggest watch your step or you will go where John Porter I hope will go. | You can demand till your head falls off and the Cutler Club of Butte will Commenting on the letter, Crouch | said: “If the writers of the threat were not too cowardly to sign their names | and address, with all the powers of the capitalist government behind them, I would write the ‘Cutler Club’ | that what we will do when the| bosses do not ‘care’ to grant our | demands, as they certainly do not,| is to bring the case to the attention | of the workers until the protest be-| |eomes so great that the authorities | |nounced later, the basis for drawing the young workers in this city into the ranks men held the organization should be| Montana, addressed to Paul Crouch, jof the general labor movement.” Nominations for officials were The following were nomin- president; Murray Singer, recording secretary: Mortimer Jacobs and Martin Chaplar, secretary-treasur- ers. Samuel Rothberg. Francis Doherty, Ernest Polgar, Ben Intra- tor, Ryant Wallace Blavey and I. Spreiregen were nominated for the Executive Board. A delegation will be sent to, the convention of the United Association of Plumbers, Steamfitters and Gas- fitters which will be held at Atlan- tic City, N. J. The time will be an- Max Helfand. Sin- ger, C. E. Miller and S. Rothberg were elected as delegates. The membership was warned not to have any illusions about the convention. Our problems will not be solved at any ¢énventions. By jhaving the jobs organized, bv endorsing the first steps being taken in this direc- tion, the Working Youth Conference in New York City, can we ever achieve anything. Brother Spreiregen read a trans- lation of an article. about the trade which appeared in the Jewish Daily Forward, on June 26 of this year. i ies rs am il |The author of this article, S. 3 they are all ae awaiting on the second com- ; the same education he obtained lo- | Said to have been unavailable at the | release Porter or are sorry that they | z ; Z “Ma, ix thin the thug you spoke oft” |, ig Wh ageots of the employ: oe M or . 80 overjoyed at the sight of land, Ny t b inert) ae meta job. |time. He is reported to have been! aig not do* ¥ wuld y f jee Schwartz, misrepresents certain «No. t's Herbert Hoover, G.0.P. | TS. en you will go over to the | ing of Messiah! that he burst forth in the famous | °*/ly to be worth a $15 a week job. | EB bank cashier and | eee BO Ould inform te | facts about our organization. The barnes, radicals tell them that I am the| “England thou land of my birth, When a “foreign” high school gradu- | former Eugene bank cashier and «Cutier Club’ that the power of the “Nobody would vote for a face like that would het” “Sure the Firestone Rubber y thinks he's a fine fellow.” Why?” ¢ got a little lot for them in the Negro Republic of Liberia to plant “rubber trees on.” “Hog big?” #One million acres.” “How did he do it.” “He fixed it so. the U. Com- S. runs man with the white hair. Say that | they are doing very good work. I} cannot speak against the other fel-| lows now, because they will be! against me, and they might take away my job from me when the strike will be finished. If they will not know me, as I pointed out to you before, then tell them that my Thou fairest land upon the earth.” reverently sang a fierce looking man with a military mustache as we were coming aboard our hell ship in Necastle, N. S. W. He was walk- ing straight, soldier-like, we all looked up in amazement, thinking who could he be? A patriot of course, and judging from the fierce workers song: “The Red Flag!” He had found himself, he had become ax-man! - WO Ste We made our port after a boister- ous passage of 72 days and an- chored at Squique, Chile. There we lay anchored at the time about 80 deep sailing vessels discharging | ate attempts to obtain employment in Eugene, his certificate awarded |him in Medicine Hat or Kalamazoo will not get him to first base. He | must enter a Eugene school and get js real education and_ incidentally |serve the apprenticeship. | The scheme, it is said, is of a | threefold benefit. Not only |church leader, who a couple of years }ago absconded with much of the |bank’s cash and a/ pretty choir |singer whose husband\yis a sexton |in the same church. yvever, both | surrendered a few day ago and | their attorneys declare they, are pre- |paring to wage a determined fight jto prove their innocence of any | workers was sufficiently great to |force the government to force the Phd ys os to reduce my sentence | from 40 years to years. membership’ instructed the Execu- tive Board fo send a reply to the Forward. At was decided that copies shoe sent to other newspapers. A Plumbers’ Helper. | | F are | i Liberia by gtvii loan, The U. 8./name is —-———— i ‘ 7 jcoal and nitrate for Europe that : | wrongdoing. - ~ HES a ahah Makes évec all ‘the mosey in tho will: surely know ae by this they look in his eye, a general most already was then prepared for “the | business men able to reduce over-| Consequentiy the name of the R ; fenton Hives Back whats com- "ere is the local of the corrupt ely! Presently we see him turn| big slaughter” which was to come | head and exploit this heretofore un-| wiginator was left off of the vase, BOOTH usar ir wea Ty ass LUNA Tpetie ef Cuatene Tale } 4 ag | ‘ | i i | i A ° ery MEsupposing the U. §. kept out ® clique. Whey: were laying Take. about, stand erect, and proudly | four years later. touched section, but it affords a) and credit bestowen upon local busi-} Mats. Tuesday and ‘Thurs ifew dimes.” “Adolph please take the ent off the in aper.”” eer —M..C. H. and when I reached the headquar- fers of the Textile Mill Committee I was astonished that nearly ten looking towards the loosely hanging and tattered blood and guts (Union Jack) solemnly proclaimed! “Stand back! “Where this flag flies every 228: Tropics. Not a cloud im the sky. Not a breath of wind in the air. most excellent method of selecting “leaders” among the rising genera- tion to carry the whip. The trophy, which is a large thousand “people were waiting for z os the opening of the meeting. While ™8” is free. passing by among the masses, I, Giving us one look of superiority heard from the lips of the women|he proudly felt conscious of being PIONEERS ISSUE Scorching run rays are heating} br down the hatch’and lashing stripped |, to the waist sailors bodies red and |°¥, William, former eniperor of Ger- |many, whi also an expert ex- raw, as they bend shoveling coal | ee Ven ae hive ‘onze affair, hand-painted design, | ness men as a whole. E. M. RAMEY. Save this copy of the Daily for . one of the 40,000 traction workers. » 2:30 GRAND ST. FOLEIES May Wirth, Phil & Family in BIG FREE CIRCUS Luna’s Great Swimming Pool 50 Acres of Real Fun PAR CHANIN’S, W. of Broadway 46th St. Evenings at 8:25 Mata. Wed. & Sat. HWAB and MANDEL'S MUSICAL SMASH The LADDER SEATS NOW ON sais SALE . 8 WEEKS IN ADVANOR, ri e loiter in his day, was sent to Eu- CORT THEATRE, Ww. f: ‘ [end children that tomorrow we will/and | Englishman. Somebody] into the baskets. ... Dirty, coal-|Pouey in his day, was sent to Eu: Eves. 889, Mats Wed & San OOD NEW show them that we are not playing | chuckled, a few smiled,—what a ae eee a : Money Réfunded if Not Satisfied a P ts playing , rs it_| Diack sweaty faces. On deck the|Ttalian dictator. In a covering let- With Play. with GEO. OLSEN and HIS MUSIC = with them. clown, we all thought. Rule Brit- officers are watching down the | ter the premier commended the in- | | It was a tremendous warm day | tania, Brittania rules the waves,”| hatch, and yelling and swearing at | genuity of Eugene business men and | ae ; that Sunday, but when Brother Kel- | and, consequently, old pig head ruled| the sweaty, grim faces and coal Preticted a new, eed at sindarstani Evacuation ALBEE Be ee ee nah ae ( Urge Children to Fight |" called the meeting to order | his ship with an iron hand. Nation-| he seen through the clouds of coal diay tabwesn the tre uatlone be & banish Cc AM @) ‘Broadway ¢ - 7.3 everybody was ready to listen. He | ality, “Blood, and Guts,’ or his holy | black bodies that at times can hardly | result of the exploitation afforded ee KEITH- American Imperialism ordered that everybody must have bible meant nothing. to him when it a test.tomorrow. Then came tre- | came to cheating sailors out of their applause which lasted over | pay and taking profits for himself tes. The next speaker was | and the owners. The patriotic im- Weisbord. He received an applause | becile turned out to be a regular for fifteen minutes. He spoke sat-|“jand-lubber,” soldier, a “hard eastically of the role of the em-|boiled” sergeant major. He was so |ployers and urged them to show| their solidarity to the end. * 2 mendous The Young Pioneers, in prepara- ten minu tion for their activities for Anti- War Day, August 4, have issued a leaflet to all the children of New York from their office at 26-28 ‘Union Square. The leaflet reads in tough and so proud of his patriotic The service in the army (patriomania) | “ p? The German Film es solea part, as follows: third speaker was a Portuguese by |that he even lied in signing himself | -O8 the poop below a heavy awn-| ‘CALIGARI comamate: with JANNINGS “FORTUNE'S . . “Fourteen years ago, on August |the name of Antony Kalentine. 1| jing all is so. nice, so clean, and so | i “Main skysail 4th, the great World War began.| must say thet I heard good speak. |°* Prime seaman on a “Main sky; Millions of workers were killed and ers, but not like this one. Héspoke, Y@tder”” like the Westgate was. wounded. Many millions of work- | so enthusiastically that 1 haven't the | ©” the first day at sea the fierce ers’ children were left in the streets words to express it. He: discussed ooking soldier looked fierce no more to die of hunger. Many more mil-|the entire situation and compared | 4nd his military mustache was soon lions of children all over the world |this strike to the beginning of the | turned down in defeat and surren- were forced to work in the factories | French Revolution. At the end he| ‘er. And it came to pass that the and mills to take the places of their | said that everybody must be on the | ld hypocrite from Scotland gave fathers and brothers. field just as the French Revolu-| that patriotic English soldier a real “Today there are thousands of | tionists were on the barricades. to goodness Irish promotion (his marines sent by the United States, There were other speakers, like|pay was cut that of a deck boy). sent there to rob the workers and|how the New England press is| patriotism, the 20 years service in their children of their freedom. | keeping the people in ignorance by | India, many frontier skirmishes, his These marines have been sent there | 2°t giving them the real news about | “gallantry.” in shooting down de- to murder the workers and their ‘he strike, and appealed to the audi-|fenseless natives, just for the love children because they want to be|¢nce that it is necessary for the|of “blood and guts,” all in vain! free from the American bosses and| Working people to read their news-|“Bloody guts” meant nothing to have a government like the workers | P4per, the Daily Worker. Jack from. bonny Dundee. . . . in Russia, a workers’ and farmers’ | Biles bed! Seed tae 4 I et “Get to hell ‘f'orrad’ you bloody government. the left one of the pee none PY | soldier,” he would roar making a * the left wit ft the il ill | ;, “The Young Pioneers of America, Committee, ae te ile pede tid for a belaying pin. When it an organization of workers’ chil- dust rolling up from below! Swelter- | by the idea. ing heat! Hurry up, you slaves.| Individual credit for ' the idea, Coal must come out. Nitrate must which has been in Practice in’ Eu- be loaded, explosives must be made, | men must fight, go to war, be killed, | | stink and rot on battlefields, so that | empires can be saved for pluto- | eracy! cool. The “almighty” master is lazily laying back in his deck chair. A much worn bible resting in his | lap, clean, white flannel trousers. | | “The almighty” had just finished | a chapter and is thinking of the| profits for the next voyage, has! he not 5,000 pounds sterling in the | ship? Smiling happily as if sur- rounded by angels the old bible pun- | cher is dozing off and there is a The soldier did not go to war. That one voyage was more than enough for him to see that England, or any other country, was not worth fight- ing for. Old pig-head was torpedoed on his ship and taken to Germany a prisoner of war, where the writer also a prisoner of war (wounded and taken before Amiens, France, 1918) met him shortly after the armistice. But what a change in the old hog. BIG BUSINESS CAN'T LOSE IN Toward An Ever-Growing and Better | COMMUNIST | THE AUGUST ISSUE CONTAINS: 1998, .cwees. -By B, Gitlow NOW COOL AND COMFORTABLE FILM ARTS GUILD presents Adolphe Menjou in‘A Woman of Paris’ DIRECTED BY CHARLES CHAPLIN AND _ —— COMING AUGUST 11th —— DAILY WORKER International Costume Carnival SUNDAY, AUGUST 19-PLEASANT BAY PARK GAMES — OPEN AI i |came to power and profits there Bias atte oiivou to. help, injthe conelusion that each worker must were only two: claunea, tha Wdaabar and the sailor! In vain the soldier was trying to tell of his “faithful service” under a general known for his patgiotism in the slaughter of defenseless natives at Egypt and elsewhere, The “hard boiled” sar- gent-major had met a hard boiled | master, and was not hard boiled any longer. Gone was his military bear- ling, his gallant look, his upright | stride, and during the first storm he was not even upright! The man that had recently boasted of his ‘marksmanship in killing poor na- fight—Aganist the send of marines to Nicaragua and China; gaainst the. training of workers’ ‘children to fight against the workers; against any attacks on the Soviet Union; against wars run by the govern- ments of the bosses; against the Boy Scouts and other militarist or- ganizations.” The DAILY WORKER is more than a newspaper—it is a weapon In the struggle against all your memicss |stand on the side of the textile _workers to help them win this | strike, amd also to help them build up a real union by the workers, for | the workers, and not a union which should fight against the interests lot its members, like the present so- |called Textile Workers Union of | America. J. B. | | Every new reader of The DAILY WORKER is a potential soldier in the coming battles of the workers, No one can keep a pot belly on one meal of kartoffel soup a day! True, he was broken physically, but not financially, Not yet.’ Not as long as “blood and guts” will dangle from the pole. But how long? Events are marching fast. ... The end of the pig-head money-mas- ter grafters is coming to an end. Coming fast; ending fast. R. J. PETERSEN. | You're in the fight when you | | write for The DAILY WORKER. GIANT POWER IN 1928 -By B, Miller THREE STRATEGIES IN THE NEW BEDFORD STRIKE.... .: By A, Weisbord By Janet Cork MEXICO'S NEXT PRESIDENT YOUTH AND INDUSTRY.. -By N. Kaplan UNEMPLOYMENT IN FRANCE. ssss..By C, White DEFEAT OF THE HOME GOVERNMENT IN IMPERIALIST . By V. 1. Lenin ..By J. Freeman BOOK REVIEWS WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th St. NEW YORK CITY NOTES ON AMERICAN LITPRATURE. SELF-STUDY CORNER | Tickets Now For Si Dancing--Sports ATHLETIC EXHIBITIONS ADMISSION, 35c at Daily Worker Office, 26-28 Union Sq. f