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Page Four Pine SLAVERY GETTING WORSE IN LOWER ANTHRACITE PITS Lewis Officials Draw Salaries (By.a Worker MINERSVILLE, Pa., (By Mail). ~The conditions of the mir New Tammany Just the lower anthracite are getting| The contractor | by worse day by da zystem is employed th barons in order to squeeze profits out of the miners. “game of winner and lo miners are always the lo: cause the coal companies pa coal | Photo above shows Grover V of fic is a him for this office. Top Colliery Forces Mine Police Head Plays Cowboy boy in the police department, training for his new job. Whalen’s | many years of experience as a Tammany yes-man have served to fit Beside him is his daughter. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1928 vs to __ JOHNSON MOTOR BRIBES SPIES. WITH “HIGH PAY Pick Out Stranger Who} - Is Broke | (By « Worker Correspondent) | WAUKEGAN, IIL, (By Mail) -— The Johnson Outboard Motor Com- pany makes a policy of hiring stool- pigeons to spy on the workers, and} report their actions to the super-| | visor of labor, W. D. Garsline, When a worker comes to the employment | office and makes out an application for work, Garsline tries to find out the history and financial condition Vhalen, Tammany Hall’s new chief much coal as is produced by the of the applicant. When he finds that the applicant is a stranger in Wau- Who is appearing in “A Most Im- moral Lady,” a new comedy by Townsend Martin, now at the Cort) revolution he attached himself to 8) anq Devil” will be followed at ap- ALICE BRADY , | | chemist and has recently appeared Work as Mule; Driver, and Do Own Work Beside ‘A New Russian His Bow on American Screen © |THE background of the new school| | 4 of Russian directors differ radi-) {cally from one another. Eisenstein | was a professor of mathematics be- |fore he was attracted to stage al |rection and subsequently to the) |sereen. Pudowkin, director of “The) End of St. Petersburgh,” was a) ‘in films and gives evidence of a Te-| markable screen talent. The third) member of this group, — intro-| |duced to the American public thru) |his film ‘The Yellow Pass,” a Sov-| | kino production, which opened,at the| | Cameo Theatre last week, is a jour- nalist by profession. Soon after the LEGION GETTING. ARMS TO SHOOT ~ WORKERS DOWN Director Makes’ YIDDISH ART THEATRE TO DO JACOB GORDIN’S “GOD, MAN AND DEVIL” The next production to be done by Maurice Schwartz and the Yid- dish Art Players will have its pre- miere on Friday evening, and will be his revival of Jacob Gordin’s| “God, Man ‘and Devil.” The settings| a ee ES te Tonieenl Geciik, Not satisfied with its drum corps whose work has been seen in the|and le. corps to make its mili- productions of “Processional” and|tarist show, the local post of the LAA Ca ie etna ia himself) American Legion recently received will play the leading role. " Dea a Mn Schwartz is also able to an. consignment of 1 mess! nounce the main lines of the activi-| Springfield army rifles from the ties of the Yiddish Art Theatre for|U. S. army arsenal at Rock Island, the rest of the season. “God, Man Jjlinois. These guns are being’ of- fered for sale at $3.75 each to mem- lu. S. Army Supplying Rifles Cheap (By a Worker Correspondent) SANTA ROSA, Cal., (By Mail). ers, and in case the coal com the miners work hard: and get erable wages. The result is t the miner is working hard and has to rush the laborer who works un- der him under the contractor sys. ‘MAKING WORKERS PAY FOR MIKADO CEREMONY kegan, has no friends, and is broke, he figures that here is just the fel- low to do the dirty work, and sends him home with the premise that if we need you for work we will call tem in order to make some wa at your rooming place with an auto- Now the coal operators have de- cided that they can still cut down the expense on the production of coal. In every gangway of the Phila- deIphia and Reading Co. mines the company used to have a mule and @ driver to shift and take out the loaded cars. Beginning last week they took out the mules and fired the drivers out of the Pine Knot Colliery located near this town. The result is that the miners will have (By a Japanese House Cleaner in “vast and boundless benevolence” California.) of the emperor, The enthronement of the new The “benevolence” of the Mikado arrested more than one thousand Mikado, held in the city of Kyoto last month, was one of the means to oppress the working-class and the before in pris ber fo peror.” We believe this is only one por- tion of the “sacrifices” by the “ben- evolence” of the Mikado and the re- | the ceremony and kept them n all the month of Decem- the “protection of the em- poor peasants, to dull their class- s and to make the exist- ence and dictatorship of the capital- ists landlords mysterious by consciousn and militant workers and poor peasants | mobile.” A few days later Garsline calls at the applicant’s home. Know- ing that this unemployed worker is roke and has no friends, Garsline ‘sure that the fellow will do any- thing for any kind of a job, At the psychological moment Garsline slings the news, “I will give you a job and pay you a higher starting wage than we ordinarily pay. You will be safe, and you will only have to do a little special ‘investigation Theatre BOSS ISOLATES DRESS WORKERS Prevents Solidarity o Slaves P. M., where I am employed, is considered one of the largest dress jcbbing houses in the world. This firm produces and sells millions ‘of | group of film enthusiasts in Mos-| proximately five week intervals by cow who went under the name of/a mew Yiddish version of Shake- Film-Collective Russ. This group,| speare’s “Othello,” directed by) |which was destined to make history| Boris Glagolin, the Russian stage! |in the Russian cinema, also included] girector; “The Golem,” by H. Levic, Eisenstein and Pudowkin. i bers of the American Legion thru- out the country for “parade and hunting purposes.” In this manner the standing army is being increased, Otzep came to the cinema well grounded in the field of dramatic! literature and bis first task was passing on the suitability of scen- ario manuscripts both from the theoretical and practical standpoint.) | His talent for writing original scen-| jarios soon developed and Otzep’s| pen is responsible for many a nota-| ble film. for the first time in Yiddish; “Ma-| probably for _strikebreaking and jor Noah,” a play of colonial life in ¢oynter-revoluticnary purposes. Le- America, by Harry Seckler; and a) gion members of Petaluma are said new comedy based on one of Sholom! t) have used their machine gun Aleichem’s stories. |when they attempted to lynch an RE SIE ET | aged recluse who refused to be taken WHITE RACE TO TURN BROWN | gia and shut himself up im his CHICAGO (By Mail.)—The white | cabin and tried to hold the legion- race will eventually turn brown,| naires off with his rifle. The man prodicts Dr. Morris Fishbein, presi-| was not match for the legionaa. dent of the American Medical As- sociation. | director of “The Yellow Pass” is | machine gun. —A. E. T. | It is not generally known that the} | HOW LABORERS LIVE | | SYDNEY, Australia (By Mail).— | As many as 97 Italian laborers are | |forced by slave wages to share 9 | garments a year. The stock is made| also the author of the scenario} by contractors. We make the! “Polikushka,” a film that ranks samples and duplicates. The work- | #mongst the foremost masterpieces ers are divided into departments and | Of modern cinema. When he was offered an oppor- to do the work of the mule, driver | ™¢a"s of ‘the ancient ceremony, — and the miner combined. There is) The ruling class exploited for this no organization here at present to| Purpose the workers and poor pea- lead the miners to fight against |Sants by more than sixteen yen, to work’ and nobody will knw about it exeept you and I.” If the man says yes, Garsline starts explaining the type of “special work” that is actionary -government against the workers and poor peasants. We are told the Tanaka government planned to arrest and persecute seven thou- Produce “Barth” in Cleveland a ] aan TEI the increase of the exploitation. The be raised by tax burdens (provincial |sand workers before the ceremony. to be done. paneberii such ag wie. dese’ del nity. to: directa filth, he eagerly (cote ee anaes | sEmiga, Bemba nendumnoe cieon of i exp! i M : : i ott 4 A + a cow in| Dartment; the children’s dress de- be 2 | Five rooms house 22 laborers. inclair’s “Singing Jailbirds,” which | Lewis gang of District 9 held a and village). And, furthermore, the Demand Open Trial. Garsline himself is only a eog in poxtment; the finishing department; | accepted and it is astonishing to ob- Sinclair's “Singing Jailbirds, i ‘_gonyention here about six weeks ago|teactionary Tanaka government! ‘The rank and file in Japan is de-|the wheel of the Johnson Motor | ti. shipping department: nd the Serve that his first film, “The Yel- a |is now running at the Provineetown | when they re-elected the same “good Spent two million yen for the special tnanding the open trial of our com- | Comreny, which is one of the worse | (rri.. stare. Wack: GE theae: departs low Pass,” is such an artistic RAILWAYS MERGE | Playhouse, is having his play j beys” as officials. Not a word was telephone system of the police and rades. ‘The peasants have just en-| open shops in the country. He gets| 315 is conducted by a department | achievement as to place Otzep in the) SAN ANTONIO (By Mail)—The | “Earth” produced by the Gilpin tioned’ about the worsening of We are told that ten million yen, in- tered the period of struggle against | 2 salary of about $45.00 a week, but |) 03g who exploits ae Baeaeiey |foremost ranks of film directors/Texes Pacific Railroad interests | Players of Cleveland. oe | fre conditions and the inc in! cluding two million yen mentioned | the landlords and are demanding the | he is trying to please the big boss |“), analevere ‘are thus distribu.) Who are subtly imaginative in their|have acquired the Texas-New Mex-| “Earth” was produced in New § the speed-up of the miners above, was spent for the so-called | reduction of_the land tax. The mili- | by crushing any sentiment for oF | ted into barons “Fors: with are | technique. lieco Railway by purchase of $500,000 | Vork for the first time by the New | cegion. The activities of the Lewis | “protection of the emperor.” tant Workers-Farmers Party is be-| Sanization and trade unionism in partitioned off by nfetal walls, so|. Influenced to a certain degree by| of comnion stocl Playwrights Theatre in, 1927. \ cfficials consist of drav-ing pay and| The workers» were thrown out of | ing organized again through a bitter | *he plant; and as a resulet get a pro-| 11 3+ Cne proup of workers is isolated | Eiseftstein and Pudowkin, at the| — = sega To ERE ERE Se expense money regularly out of the | Work for three days during the cere-| struggle by which the unity of the | "tion for himself. from the other. The result of such|ame time Otzep indicates that he| pypqeeeyy, P eweat of the miners. Brother miners,|mony and forced to celebrate the| workers and farmers against the| However, the workers at the John- | qivision ig disastrous to the inter-| has individual qualities to contribute ||| | Well let us join our brothers in the bi-|enthronement though they were /ruling class is being solidified. The | 800 Motor Co. are militant and are} ..+-' o¢ the workers, but it is very | to the art of film making.“ He util-| ow tuminous fields who are fighting | {acing starvation, According to the|:vorkers and poor farmers realize | Teady to fight for a trade union, de-| py able to the: interests of the | izes both the instruments of realism) [0 under the leadership of the National | Proletar'an News, the expenditures |the real nature of the Chinese Rev- | SPite the yellow-dog contract that employers. Instead of solidarity, and also dramatic elements for his —— aren Miners’ Union against the increase |for the affair were bigger than the | olution and support it and defend | they, must sign before they can get | trot exists constant discord and|effects and in that sense he has Potvina ice in the exploitation of the miners. | wages of one million workers for|the Union of Socialist Soviet Ke-| the job. —J.P. | distrust to each other; in place of Utilized some of the fundamental AME —S.G. |one week in Japan, If we consider | publics against the imperialist war ¢lass-consciousness, departmental @ualities of the established studios. Best Film Show 2nd ee er cnet Realy Bein adc ious period, what si; STOOL PIGEONS eset and loyalty to the em- | Tdicipc tl Babpubyae st pean In Town 42nd Street and Broadway Big Week! ¥ s y ’ t this serious period, what sig- % i ed. vi v1 me million and’ a ball peasaute \nifiéariee hawithe “stats, canimong” im pails SAIELE Sod ti cdacinn (is now belie Gctap on ate atage should work over forty days for/xhout the emperor? We can. re- is the main evil that is prevalent in|this country by Alexander’ Moissi/# T) A PING. / SENSATIONAL! nothing to carry out this ceremony. |alize how the “vast and boundless | this place. They do not consider Under the name of “Redemption.”| : : In a word, it is a class character- | benevolence” was applied to our Ko- th 1 % work | One of the astonishing points about * . : 1 ? Ur emselves as “common” workers, | On stonis s IN 6 ALIFORNI A istic to make the ruling class mys- rean comrades and brothers by the | Farticulatly the shipping clerks and] this undertaking is that the part of Another Remarkable Sovkino Production 4 terious and to avert class-conscious- | Jgpanese ruling class, which mur- ——= cffice worlers are averse to any roger will be played by Pudowkin, | ‘ : | et Job or Go to Jail,”) owing to the so-called “vast and" however, could not be forced to cele- ing Booze teen and twenty-eight dollars \a| ——__— | ae ks Sdas cp oeA Gop er ERTensNiEGe ; : Says Judge boundless benevolence” of the Mi-| trate this enthronement even by se- week, for six days’ work. In the “Rdge of World” } { nee kado, the ennoblement confering of vere oppression and brutality. There| (By a Worker Correspondent) | busy season which lasts for about] st = Piss Rivalry saagRe | | By a Worker Correspondent) |*#8K and the act of amnesty were came out a big and powerful move-| LOS ANGELES, Calif., (By Mail). | six months or longer, they work Plays in Detroit )~ ,Teatre GUY Proauetions—7) ETH AVENUE PLAYHOUSE | i LOS ANGELES, (By Mail).—“If ordered by the reactionary govern-| ent during the ceremony demand-|—-Charges against, Antonio Garcia | (6 FIFTH AVENUE — ALG, 7661. + you have a job by December 24, I _ will turn you free.” So spoke Municipal Judge William G. Baird to Hyram Christensen, The testimony showed the prisoner cash- ed a $25 bogus check in order to ment. ing: It goes, of course, without saying| Full wages for three days with- that only capitalists, landlords and | out work! their agents who depend upon the| One hundred per cent inerease of labor of the exploited and find one | wages for: the transportation work- means of legalizing their rule inthe | ers during the ceremony! |and Frank Ranzo for alleged viola- tion of the Wright act were dis- missed yesterday by Municipal Judge Ballard. The judge criticized the police for their methods of dis- |guising stool-pigeons as enlisted until 10 or 12 o’clock at night with. out extra pay. In return for this} DETROIT, Mich, Dec. 17. — loyalty, they are promised ‘a chance| Something new in the way of love| for promotion if they wili work hard | stories is now playing at the Little| enough and will be conscientious|Theatre. It is the new UFA pro- enough. They receive their “salary” | duction, “At the Edge of the| on Friday when all big chiefs re-| World,” which the Detroit Motion Continuous Performances—Two to Midnight— Popular Prices. WingsOver EUROPE MARTIN BECK THEA. 45th St., West of 8th Ave. | Professor IVAN PAVLOV’S “Mechanics of the Brain’ week on orders of Mayor Nichols charity than pay the workers living | H i d for his starving wife Ceremony, were deeply impressed ainst the enforced ‘contribu-| sailors in the United States Navy| ceive theirs, whereas we “common Picture Guild has secured for an ex-| ; Even inge: eh tof SENSOR Mate fe euchriseealordeia, |to induce persons to violate said| workers” get our wages on Tuesday. | clusive Detroit showing. Instead of] fosckcniab len diel (Cage Noda vo Midnight { 5 But to find a job in this city of; Our five hundred and fifty com- ase all class prisoners! anti-booze law. These, however, are not the only | dealing with, love as it is today, this| . | PLAYHOUSE | Popular Prices { i“abundance” is almost as difficult |teces of the Japanese Communist with oppression by the | The testimony showed that police | departments where the workers lack | remarkable new film presents an in- Major Barbara “UNEASY MONEY— | | as to locate a necdle in a straw pile. Party are being persecuted and con- | government during the ceremony! | “operatives” had donned sailors’ | class-consciousnes. In the children’s| terpretation of romance as it may 3 |THE AMAZING ADVENTURE OF t {Even the monthly Southwest Re- | Victed ,in_ secret trials of a class) Jrmmediate relief for unemployed! | uniforms and deliberately accosted | dress dep’t we work two hours long-|be many years from now. The} GUILD is. ee | ‘\ BANKNOTE” | Ff ciew, official organ of the Chamber court. The famous “vast and! Jn Tokio, Osaka and vieinity, {the defendants, urging them to sell|er, and receive between f: > and| story, its location and its characters Thursday ‘pa Saturday, 2.30 Produced by KARL FREUND | #: of Commerce, admits that jobs are| boundless benevolence” of the Mi- Tukuoka and other industrial dis-|them some liquor because they| twelve dollars per week less than| are fictional and are not connected | poten © down and stocks up. kado does not reach to the wet and |tricts, the workers fought bitterly “didn’t get ashore very often.” those in the dress dep’t. Yet the} with any particular country or 5 In | d | ERLANGER THEA., W. 44th ST. Therefore this “Christmas -gift”|dark prison in which hundreds of | ang obtained part of the demands.| “Such tactics are unethical, un-) workers scem quite contented. The time. The beauty of the picture is trange ter Wade || —————— —_ Fvenings 8.80 = © preposition is nearly as uncertain of our comrades are persecuted. On| Of course, this bitter and powerful | American and show base disrespect few of us who protest against con-| that the events it relates might hap- John GOLDEN ‘Thea. 68th igus Ua and Sat, at 2:30 realization as the “prosperity” prom-|the other hand, the famous robber | sty on even after the for the official insignia of the navy,” | ditions, and do not bow to the whims! pen anywhere—making its message , of Bway with POLLY" WALKER. ised the workers by Wall Street’s|congressmea and others in the | cerc ithe court declared as the defendants |of the designer or pattern maker, ! timely and interesting. RY BNINGS (ONLY CAD we in Mr. Cohan's Newest Musical efficient starvation expert, Herbert| prison are moved “to tears” ky the| yal of the so- | Were released. : are branded and _ discriminated) “At the Edge of the World” was s Comedy _ Hoover. —L. P. RINDAL. act of amnesty coming from the crats in the past, the so-| That the police used to urge | against. Only intensive propaganda | produced in the UFA studios of Ber- fivic REPERTORY 145! “ ” i ats a Sa \cialists are nothing but one part of | Workers to commit crimes in order could change the ideology of these | lin, and directed by Karl Grune, who a B I L L I E > B d |\the machinery of the capitalist class |? crush the labor movement is also | workers. 4 made “Two Brothers” and “Jeal.| 0c: $1.00: $1.60. Mats, Wed.&Sat.,2.30 st XS. vOWN S 0 y against them. Even at the time of | fact—proven time and again. —A.L. | ousy.” . mene Eee es By A. B. MAGIL. the ceremony, they realized the re- —L. P. RINDAL. Se Wed, Mat, “The Cherry Orchard.” fase od ‘ jactionary nature of the social dem- Si 4 (By a Ubligh of We her NEW RAILWAY MERGER | Wot. Eve. “qe: ‘Would-Be’ Gentle- veeeiee 7 cerats as, for example Suzuki (fa- ‘orrespondence class in the New | SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 17.—The i eons pode pou naa mous Japanese Gompers), Abe and BOSTON WORKERS York Workers School.) | Sacramento Northern R, R. and the |“HONESTY” OF BUSINESS MEN Five miles from the sp jothers who frostrated themselves | Sr ee San Francisco-Sacramento R. R.| WAUPACA, Wis. (By Mail).—J. 4 Where she was drowned. |before the enthronement. | have combined. ‘The former is a/ 5 Puller, head of the Fuller Mf, . POE " 3 ‘ | AN & cpr | Rae > g.| She wasn’t angry any more, The Japanese workers and pea- | 4 +1) MILLION BRITISH subsidiary of the Western Pacific. ARTHUR HOPKINS presents 4 She lay very still jsants realize that it is only the | ~ m= vee —- | Co. here, has been bound over to the “A 9 > » satiate aan basen of -ainein: sweed nucleus who can fight the capital- _ |, Out ‘of the “kindness of their! circuit court under a $2,000 bond, OLIDAY Floating in with tin cans, pieces of woods, weeds 0 hearts” and’ the bounty of their i ae trailing ist and the landlord to the end. that — WORKERS ST ARVE sara pln cd ade Ss Mary |charged with obtaining money un-| ® new comedy by Pallip Barry ? is, ca ablish 1! ic! rship of 7 7 | ‘hea.,W.45thSt.Eves.8.30 ~ =... Andsa thin rain wailing. Ge ae eel apres: Will Defy Barring of end the Duchess of York sent cloth-| (e false pretenses, |PLYMOUTH “sats. Thurs. & Sat. 5 a Le iar: econ 5 cf the Communist Party. Gold’s Play ius jing and gifts to the mining areas A wind was blowing when Mrs. Brown went under W.LR Fights Bosses! yesterday. In the same way the t rs led about her feet, the horizon tosse | od. De ,poys of the rich, many of them sons 7 The es | | (By a Worker:Correspondent) Charity Fund of coal operators, have riven up one {| WORKERS LIBRARY PAMPHLETS A ae es ee | | ORTON ee aie eee i MA of their breakfasts in the aristo-|f\* ‘ A bire s aga e y- | der wi ‘] = SSS crati S rt Pa . .. 3 * Ears, nose, mouth, were swathed with thunder. [duction of “Fiesta,” the drama of| LONDON, Dec. 17—More than badigrpeniatnin fall ead i Bitar baie il with the First American Trade ‘ eae ‘ah iY ‘i 4 ,000,000 people, comprising unem-|+ ks dis MOI LIPO R ALIA 00.5... thecssscasecebion eae vec Now she wasn’t angry any more. | | the Mexican revolution by Michael | 1,000,001 peop i ne is much’ cheaper vo pay @ eent in| (po rie PRA Bios , x rf ‘ Gold which was suppressed here last|Ployed miners and their families, | 928: The Presidential Elections and the American are in extreme distress and employed | Workers—Jay Lovestone resented w a te Oa Ome a tae PHILADELPHIA, (By Mail)—), The story of this suppression ising fo their aid by contributing t0/ nag sent out letters, in an inspired | Bertrain Di WOO itesisnscanunmninelt Charity Society. She Sa NA Ee Mab) just another one of the long line of |the special Christmas fund. | electi fon cote Why Every Miner Should Be a C ist— ~\ He was crying very hard, poor thing. Over 2,000 migratory child workers arbitrary acts which are making! ‘The Workers International Reties | lection peerage: 1b Lindl "obi Pepper every a ai iy And Edna looked just too sweet - In her new white dress, with her hair washed and combed out neat. | vania and the bordering part of New its annual production this year.| acting the vicious propaganda of the pesca at pine rte fant 3 au American Negro Problems—John Pepper +) Charlie sat on a chair, looking stiff and brave. | Sivatysis Boetlea, the, abilinen over | htee performances were given in|tory government, the royal family Sha eSLIA ROT hataelll Heiouiics America Prepares for War—Jay Lovestone... While little Mr. Brown just slunk around the house, Bey: DEY 2 |Cambridge, and another was slated | and charitable organizations. Wrecking the Labor Banks—William Z. Foster. r Trying his best to feel at home. Everybody was so sympathetic. And rich Aunt Lizzie came down From her country home and cried very m And took Charlie and Edna and Freddie Brown Back to the country with her. slave in the harvesting, packing!and |canning of fruits and vegetables in |the southeastern part of Pennsyl- /8,000 mothers of children have beep employed in the fields this summer and autumn, and are still at work |in canning. Altho the laws of New | Jerse yand of Pennsylvania are sup- | posed to make 14 years of age the {minimum age at which a child may work, the power of the large can- ning companies has influenced the Boston the “great American trage- dy.” The play “Fiesta” was chosen by the Harvard Dramatic Club for |for a hall in Boston, | On the last night in Cambridge, | three policemen appeared with note- \books, and kept their ears cocked | for sedition, sex and anti-clerical- ism. They found all three present, and reported this to the Boston au- thorities, Mayor Nichols, after the police | report, decided to suppress the play. |He said it was immoral. Maybe \ Pee Mee stata: latlalatareaitovepravide thatl tinetisia which, ofa) panes printed | bosses government ' remains in) ign to raise fund’ for the starving of above enumerated up-to-date pamphlets for $2.50. oy They had never seen so many trees and flowers an “agricultural pursuits” shall be ex;| about Mike Gold’s having been ar- POS 0 miners from their class brothers |) re things, cluded from the law. More than 80) restad on the Sacco-Vanzetti picket| patronesses of the Harvard Dra-|and expose the charity schemes of Oiler f 4 ty So much greenness and color shooting up thru the per cent of the children working inline last year had a lot to do with/matie Club, but she resigned as the government and the coal op- scl Sd ' 5 the fruit and vegetable harvecting | his decision. soon as she learned that the club) crators. | ground. |and canning industries in this sec-| ‘The wife of President Lowell of} was to do this play by Gold. ‘AL the same time the operators {| WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS Tt was all so lovely here Fifty-five miles from the spot Where Mrs. Brown’s body was found. . . / wtb tion were under 10 years of age.| Harvard, who helped murder Sacco The child workers have been able to| and Vanzetti, probably started the obtain little or no schooling. whole facas. She fis ona of the is lending every assistance possible by sending» clothes, supplies and | money and at the same time counter- It is very evident now that Bald- win’s‘attempt to mollify the unem- | ployed workers and induce them to accept continued —urfemployment while he is busy reorganizing the industry for the coal operators, his | meager doles and subsistence wage are entirely inadequate and are only a curtain to hide the fact that un- employment will exist as long as a The members of the club stuck to their guns, however, and went ahead with the slew, ’ to raise qspecial Christmas funds for the miners. Baldwin will make another move in tomorrow that the government will make a grant of money out of its treasury for the miners. All these funds, finding their source in the explciters of the min- ers, are only investments by the bosses, and very cheap ones, to keep the werkers down and prevent them from taking what is theirs, | On the other hand, the W. I. R.! is engaged in a nation-wide cam- of the South Wales mines are about to cut wages again and reduce the dole and subsistence wage. The Communist Nucleus—M. Jenk: Why Cooperation—George Halonen . 25 Total price........$1.45 Full set at a special price of only $1.00 SAL AE ‘If you have some of these pamphlets already, give them away and order a full set at this special price. One year’s subscription to Tux Communist ($2.00) and full set 35 EAST 125TH STREET — NEW YORK CITY