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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY DECE MBER 9, 1 The Class War Front Extends from Algeria to Helsingfors, Finland Dockers, Miners, Metal Workers, Taxicab Drivers Strike; While the Soviet Triumphs Oyer Kulak Resistance BELGIAN TAXI DRIVERS STRIKE. (Wireless By Inprecorr) BRUSSELS, Belgium, Dee. 8.—|the “Madal” and the “Psyche,” left |dicated his opportunist line by in- The taxicab strike here is still pro- ceeding, the drivers demanding 25 | franes per day, plus 10 per cent of |the Revolutionary Transport Union. |perialism and for Indian independ- | The owners’ attempt to send | fares. out scab cars has failed, FINNISH WORKERS SOLID WITH SOVIET. (Wireless By Inprecorr) HELSINGFORS, Finnland, Dee. | The proposal of the reformist lade-union bureaucrats to break off e agreement of fraternal relations | tween the Finnish Wood Workers and the Soviet Workers’ unions, has been defeated by membership bal- lot, the vote showing 4,569 against breaking relations, and only 559 for such action. | FRENCH WORKERS ON STRIKE. | (Wireless by Inprecorr) | PARIS, Dec, 8,—The metal work- ers’ strike at Guise, and the miners’ strike at Champagnac, are proceed- | ing unweakened and with strong fighting spirit. ALGERIAN DOCKERS SHIPPING. (Wireless by Inprecorr) PHILIPPVILLE, Algeria, Dec, 8. —A dockers’ strike is on here. At- tempts to unload vessels at Bone TIE-UP | a Harbor have failed, when the dock- jers there refused to scab. Three |vessels, the “Gouverneur Lepine,” {harbor without unloading. The |dockers have formed a section of VCTORY OVER THE KULAKS. (Wireless by Inprecorr) MOSCOW, Dec. the grain purchasing campaign has been carried out according to the plan. oe oe EDITORIAL Note—The above success on the Soviet grain pur- chases is one of the great victories of Soviet production under the Five- Year Plan, since the entire harvest yield was purchased and collected into the hands of the Government Grain Organization by December 1 for the first time, as formerly the task was dragged on throughout the year. By an early mobilization of the harvest the grain collected furnishes a use of the value it represents as a basic economic support to the swifter industrialization of agricul- ture and other industries. The fulfilling of the purchases by December 1 is additionally a smash- ing triumph over the rich farmer ‘kulak” elements who tried by tricks and violence to prevent it. HAITIAN MASSES IN WIDE REVOLT Fight Against Wall St. | Imperialism (Continued from Page One) Haitian people and the massacres past, present and to come of Haitian workers and peasants. Borah states: “It does seem to me that if we are going to stay in| Haiti, the least we could do is to compel the government of Haiti to be just and mereiful to these un- fortunate people.” Borah by this, clearly endorses staying in Haiti, and cannot plead ignorance of the) fact that the so-called “government” of “President” Luis Borno would not last twenty-four hours if the U, 5. marines were to be removed, that the Haitian people never elected Bor- | In revolt and a group of peasants was marching on the city. A marine patrol of twenty, with an undis- closed force of the so-called “nation- al guard,” every officer of which above second lieutenant is a U, 8S. marine, was posted at the roadway entering the city. The Haitian peasant forees num- bered only 150, and demanded to enter the city and join the strike, They would not believe the strike was called off, reports state, and were allowed to send two of their number into town. When these re- turned with the word that the strike leaders had called off the strike (undoubtedly because they had been ‘facing death at the hands of the |marines), the information was greeted with curses and jeers. spite of the lack of other weapons than machetes, clubs and stones, the reports state that the peasants took the offensive and | penetrated into the marine positions, [heroically fighting until death. Peasants Impoverished, The peasantry, which has been 6.—The Soviet | ; Trade Commissariat announces that | this would have been a catostrophic [Comintern Executive | Expels Roy For His | | Support of Brandler| (Wireless by Inprecorr) MOSCOW, ‘Dec. 8.—The Presi- | dium of the Executive Committee of the Communist International has expelled N. M. Roy, formerly a} leader of the Communist Party of India, for activities in the Right | | Wing opportunist movement of |Brandler, of Germany, against the | |policy and program of the Commu- |nist International. Previous to his expulsion, Roy in- sisting that the workers and pe: s- | ants movement against British im- | Jence should not be independent of | the national bourgeois reformist | |movement, but allied to it. The fac of life itself have, since then, shown error, as the MacDonald “labor” im- perialist government has wheedlled and forced the Indian capitalists into accepting an empty promise of dominion status “sometime” in the vague future. The Indian bour- geoisie in its National Congress has given up independence and is more ready to join with British imperial- ism against the Indian masses than it is to join with the masses against imperialism, since it fears Indian in- dependence would mean an Indian Soviet and an end of their own posi- tion as exploiters. USSR Press Pillories | U. S.-Nanking Game (Continued from Page One) plete debacle of the Mukden mili- tarists, as a result of the punitive reprisal by the Far Eastern army. | “No, Mr. Stimson’s note appeared after the appeal to the United States by Nanking, whose evident purpose was to prepare the road for the dis- | avowal of any Soviet-Mukden agree- ment. Already a large part of the world press recognizes that Secre- tary Stimson is ‘playing Nanking’s game,’ and ‘none now belie that his action was dictated by friend- ship toward the Soviet Union.” The “Youth Pravda,” organ of the Young Communist League, calls at- tention to the fact that only the socialist press, led by the vilest of the lot, the German “Vorwaerts,” is venal enough to pretend that Stim- sons “note” was anything, but an attempt to sabotage the Manchurian negotiations and threaten war, It} says, for example: “Extracts from the world press show we are right in believing Sec- | retary Stimsons action at the very | moment Mukden was forced to ac- cept our original conditions, as | nothing but a test to see how strong | the anti-Soviet bloc was. Only the German Vorwaerts can continue to whine about the ‘creative’ character of Stimson’s move.” jat the first SOCIALIST. RUL | Tlinois Mine Strike the mines, and where miners are out on strike, th march in procession to the nearest BAR COMMUNISTS {mines that have not come out, and |spread the strike. It is a life and ei death struggle of the exploited miners of Il inst wage cuts, nployment, the robbery of the l check-off. Would Start Red Raids. The local press, in the mining cen- ters, friendly to the operators and the United Mine Wor of Amer- ois, ag Practically Unseats Elected Members (Wireless by Inprecorr) BERLIN, Dec. 8.—As a result of the stormy scenes in the Reichstag on Thursday, when the Communist ¢ deputies heckled the socialist iea, which is now only a company cist leader Severing, in opposition |Union, is much arous creams to the bill he had introduced for re- | With headlines that pressive measures against workers’ |Call of the N. M. U. has penet ganizations, the “socialist” presi- deep into the ranks of the m ed-up and une dent of the Reichs tag, Loebe, in- and thrown fear and desperation troduced intensified discipilinary into the bosses and their agents, the measures in the chamber rules. U, M. W. A. officialdom. Loebe’s measure Harry Fishwick, president of the permit the ex- pulsion of a Reichstag member who is guilty of “flagrant violation of order,” the expulsion being effective for 30 days of session immediately, Illinois d of the U. M. W. A., Who has alre tated that he wi “quite vigorously oppose the strike. {has added to this the proclamation: and a further 30 days if the mem. |“We have certain obligations in the bers should refuse to leave the |contract to both the public and the chamber, It must be understood | operato: We will see that these that 30-session days mean three |bligations are discharged.” Which months, which bars members from )means that the U. M. W. will offi: participation in the function’ of |cially furnish scabs to the coal operators if it can find them, and will try to smash the picket lines of the strikers. The United Mine Worker bureau- crats and the sheriffs are united in naar —ererermene | their opposition to the strike, kow and Canton are placed under 7 * martial law, and Canton is near to N. M. U. Appeals to Workers. fall before the onslaught of rebel| PITTSBURGH, Pa., Dec. 8.- offices to which they are elected for that time. Loebe ‘also plans to deprive such disciplined members from their pay during the expelled period, na troops, last reported as only 25) statement issued to the labor press miles from the city and fighting)the National Miners Union today firecely to enter, while within Can-| made an urgent appeal to all friends | ton itself the militarist commanders |to rush funds to ensure the victory have quarreled and the city may | of the L[llinois coal miners who go fall to the Kwangsi (British) troops | on general strike tomorrow. at any hour who areallied withthe| “The future of the National | Miners’ Union and the facts of the American coal miners hang in the commanders at} balance,” the appeal stated. Canton are sending planes over After pointing out that the fight rebel lines dropping leaflets offer-|in Illinois is pivotal, and that thou- ing bribes in the name of Chiang sands of miners, particularly in the Kai-shek (more American money), | unorganized watching for rewards of $25,000 for Chang | the struggle there with the most in- troops of Chang Fakwei, known as “The Ironsides.” Nanking army field are |Fa-kwei, dead or alive, promotion} tense interest, the appeal declares for officers and special bribes for | that thousands of dollars are neces- deserters who bring arms with them, |sary at once in order to rush all The 24th Division, which muti- organizers and other forces to Illi- nied at Pukow and moved north- ward to Pengpu, are expected to give battle to troops sent against | their Help defeat the them from Nanking, which may {operators and their agents, Lewis themselves go over /to the rebels/and Fishwick! Rush all funds at moment. The “dis-|once to the National Miners’ Union, missal” by Nanking of General) 119 Federal St., N. 8. Pittsburgh, Teng seng-chi, who led the Nanking ' Pa.” forees in Honan against the Kuo- minchun, has had as a main result, ois . the mutiny of 10,000 more soldiers, | while Nanking troops were defeated | at Changchow, only 100 miles from| FSU UNION, SAYS | Help the miners win Shanghai, by mutineers of the | Fourth Division whom they tried to | disarm. The mutineers slaughtered | how the strike | 1 Evening Register and he looks over 929 Mass Picketing Today | N H IN REICHSTAG TO . Agency Sharks in New Haven Gyping The Unemployed (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW HAVEN, Conn, (By Mail). -The coachroach employment of. fice, fellow workers, I know in every city in the United Stat We have always the sa story to tell about office. about the coachroach emp! However, I would lik New Haven p the New Haven to tell one here i A person picks the ements for employment. He will see one from the free em- ployment bureau—oh, what a sweet invitation to get employment! This is how it re | “Wanted; six machine operators. Apply, Free Employment Bureau, Room 204, 207 Orange St.” | The poor out-of-work hurries up jin the morning, but what a disap- pointment he gets when he arrives at the building and climbs the rickety stairs. He comes to Room 204, Yow the same atmosphere |prevails here as one will see in the coroner’s office There sits the knight of capitalism, with his }smooth-shaven face and his high collar. Oh, how immaculate he looks! There along side of him sits his lady attendant with the long- horned telephones so she she will be in touch with all the factories, “Well,” he will say in an icy kind jof manner, “What can I do for you this morning?” “Oh,” the applicant will say. “y jcame to inquire about them machine operators I seen in last night’s Reg- .” the grand knight will Now he sees right away that reply. you are up in ye; Then he sta to put you through the third de- ‘an you read a micrometer? “Yes, sir.” “Can you read a blue “Yes, sir.” If you say yes he will keep on put- ting other questions until he sticks you. He know: that is the smooth- est way to get rid of you. “We do |not want you grand knight of the employe ociation will say. “You are of it. | So the poor worker 3 mister, would it be an rm to let me know what factory wants these machine operators?” “Oh, replies the knight, that would not do.’ In the meantime the telephone rings. The well-drilled lady takes up the receiver. “Oh yes, two in- spectors for Snow and Pettrill : She will jot it down on a piece of print?” grand paper. Well, it leaked out on the street afterwards, and it was common The failure of Secretary Stimson |the “loyal” troops and tore up the no, but that he was foreed upon the | steadily impoverished during Yan- vepublie by armed compulsion of the | kee occupation, were recently sub- U, S. marines, Hence all Borah’s jected to additional taxes on tobacco crocodile tears about “these unfor-/ and alcohol, and were being foreed tunate people” is the dirtiest hypo-/by law to standardise the quality crisy possible, and is deliberately de-| of the coffee they market, by such ned to support the war being rigid rules that their income, al- ade at present on the Haitian | yeady miserably low, was cut down sople, \still further. This measure, by This unspeakable Borah is the which American coffee interests same who “protested” at marines be- | hcped to compete on the world mar- ing sent to Nicaragua, but after they were there not only ceased to “pro- test,” but has supported their mas- sacres on the Nicaraguan workers and peasants. Of a like type are the hypocritical “oppositionists” among the fake “progressives” such as Wheeler of Montana, Blaine ¢*-Wis- consin and all the tribe of {| 80° called “Farm Bloc.” Anothei r Senator King of Utah, who \ the last whitewashing “comm that “investigated” Haiti five y.ars ago, even “criticizes” American oc- cupation. But King and his kind have, for all that, allowed occupation to continue during those five years, and now King says, “I shall support the recommendations of the Presi- dent.” And the president sends more marines to commit more mur- ders of the Haitian workers and peasants! The Battle at Aux Cayes Only last January, the customary lying report of Brigadier General Russell, who rules Haiti with ma- yines under the typically imperialist title of “High Commissioner,” stated that “the ignorant peasant no longer ‘oks upon the intervention with dis- lust, but now rather regards it as friend.” This after the Haitian Gaim that the marines have killed some 8,500 ‘Haitian people! The state department, disappoint- ed in the effort, so far, of making war on the Soviet Union behind the fuss about “maintaining peace with the Kellogg Pact,” gave out a statement admitting that war was being made on workers and peasants of Haiti. The fact that the cruiser Gal- veston was ordered from Cuba to Jaemel, together with the report that arms were reported being smuggled at Jacmel, Haiti, indicates that American imperialism is trying to forestall arms being landed in hail) from the only neighboring island not already ruled by the U. S., British Jamaica, less than 100 miles away, though reports state that arms came from Guatemala. The battle at Aux Cayes, as re- ted, shows that while the puppet no’s officials naturally are aid> g the marines against the people, ‘and that bourgeois elements are wavering, the peasantry are seeth- ‘ing with revolt and ready to fight with supreme heroism out the Yankee oppressors, who have robbed and impoverished them for 14 years, The native magistrate at Au: Cayes, an underling of “President Borno, informed the marines there that the courtryside was in open | ket with British coffee interests in |Jamaica and Brazil, and Dutch im- |perialist coffee interests in Indo- nesia, was enforced with the author- ity of the hated Hatian “govern- }ment” of Borno. | While nothing but reports of “re- sumption of peace” came out of the martial law censorship, the fact that the bulk of the Haitian people are in revolt can be seen by the array of armed forces being sent against them by the Hoover admin- jistration. Wires have been cut throughout the country, which is the western end of the large island of which the Dominican republic, also \ruled by Yankee marines, is the eastern and larger part. The peo- ple of both are Negroes, and almost jall are peasants, ILGW “Strike” Is For | Control By Employers (Continued from Page One) the question of the left wing, and of Communism, They can’t leave them alone. Over and over they as- |sure the delegates that “Commu- nism is dead.” Abe Cahan, of the Forward, spoke with well simu- lated enthusiasm yesterday of the “way you have cut out the Commu- nist cancer.” But that was just it, The L L, G. W. is a union of the bosses, Schlesinger and his henchmen, with needle trades workers coerced by bosses or temporarily fricked into belonging to it, nominally, The fighting heart of the union, those who won the terrific strikes in New York and other cities are no longer in it. They are in the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, march- ing into a great organization cam- paign, a real struggle with the em- \ployers just at the time this fake convention meets. The reactionaries here console each other that the “lefts” are not at this convention. But they are but much worried, They have to remind each other frequently that “everything is all right; we are all alone now, just us and the boss”— and Governor Roosevelt, of course— Tammany Hall and strike breaker Lehman, the acting governor of New York, who sent his congratu- lations to this convention, The P Hb fs Rehinery, OMG. Th ment and inject its imperialist fin- ger into Manchuria, combined with his complete defeat in China, where the Wall Street owned Nanking “government” is being shattered in- to ruins—and where American trade has fallen off 35 per cent—is one | explanation of why the American | capitalist press is piling ridicule | and criticism on Stimson. American | imperialist demands a Secretary of State that wins more markets from Britain, and to do that one must | have some wits—hence, Stimson is being howled down as an incom- petent. ara ee Not Bandits, But China’s Bad Army. Hankow, China, Dee. 1 missionary, Ulrich Kreutzen, Tayeh in Hupeh province, arriving here after being ransomed from so- ealled “bandits,” reveals that his | captors were, members of a powerful Communist organization, which has connections throughout the Yangtze Valley, with headquarters here at Hankow. Leaders of the organization, he said, were well educated, many ef them having degrees from foreign universities, and speaking English and French fluently, while all were “imbued with Soviet doctrines.” nee * Nanking Government Topples. SHANGHAI, Dee. 8,—With revolt of two kinds flaming under his feet, Chiang Kai-shek’s Nanking govern- ment is toppling to its downfall, signifying a major set-back for American imperialism and a ripen- ing of the Chinese mass revolution of workers and peasants, While the militarists who have been paid to fight for Nanking are revolting everywhere, going over to its foes of the British-Japanese bloc, the revolt of the masses, yet largely among the peasants, is growing with leaps and bounds. The railways leading both to Nan- ‘king and to Hankow are cut by rebel soldiery, Shanghai, Nanking, Han- in the South, is helping the unemployed 949 BROADWAY, Room 512 to block the Soviet-Mukden agree-|railway between Shanghai and Nan- | MORE UR_ is sending relief to the Leakeville strikers. is taking care of blacklisted Gastonia workers. is making a survey of pellagra (starvation disease) for the purpose of establishing a clinic for the workers is helping to organize the unorganized. campaign to help the southern Illinois miners in their fight for better conditions and a militant union. RUSH FUNDS TO Workers International Relief (Continued from Page One) nations in that territory to seize for themselves the full.control over the natural resources, and to exploit its YEN THE “MODEL” BRIBE oppressed and struggling masses of TAKER IN IT ers and peasants, and obtain- SHANGHAI, Dec. 8.—If reports |ing at the same time greater politi of spreading mutiny in the Nanking cal and military power that follows armies all along the Yangtze are from such control. correct—and they seem to be—the| “It becomes mcre and more neces- power of the Nanking government, sary, due to the narrowing of the and hence of American imperi is shaken almost to complete over- throwal. Not only did the army only two miles away from Nanking, across the river at Pukow revolt, but 60 miles from Nanking at Wuhu, Nan- I's king troops mutinied. While in king. CHINESE MUTINIES; lism, | we petition for spheres of interest, that United States imperialism get for itself the best vantage point and the dominant position, and to crowd out the European powers from the Y Hastern and Chinese field, par- rly the British, its strong | Anhwei a mutinous brigade blew up. rival. bridges, and at Itu and Ichang, up ‘At the same time the imperial- the river from Hankow, other mu- wers see themselves tinies are occurring.. At Ichang a/With a mighty power, the battle took place and Japanese na-|Union, with its millions of free Itionals have been ordered to evacu- | Workers and peasants in control, to ate the city. which millions of oppressed and ex- It is also revealed that the ‘model’ ploited workers and peasants of all governor, Yen Hsi-shan, is taking a {nations look to as their fatherland, leading part in directing the revolt, the only hope to free them although American imperialists just |from the yoke of oppression and lately paid through the hands of exploitation, Chiang Kai-shek, a sum of $10,000,- Defend Your Socialist Fatherland, 900 to insure Yen's “loyalty.” It| “The Friends of the Soviet Union, looks very dark for Nanking at this U.S, A, Section, stands for the de- hour, though it claims a victory at fense and recognition of the Soviet Canton against the rebels there, |Union. It calls upon all workers and friends in the United State: FASCIST CRIMES. | explaining to them the significance less by Inprecorr) of this Chinese-Soviet situation, VIENNA, Dec, 8.—On the night |and exposing the aggre policy of October 19 the Heimwehr fascist |of the United States other AUSTR (Ww and Id market, and the ensuing com- ves | This was how he wanted the nine operators. There is a fac here known as the Geomet Co. The operators were get- ting 40 cents per hour. The com- y wanted to cut. the wages ,but talk, ey did not want any “trouble.” They send their troubles to the grand knight. When he has all the uits ready he sends them to the ace in question and the those who » to be the victims get the door. Th the way the coachroach employment office works. We've got to organize to stop that—J. L. powers who support the position of the United States, The Friends of the Soviet Union state that neither the Kellogg Peace Pact nor any other pseudo attempt towards peace by these capitalist powers will ever b about permanent peace. “The Friends of the Soviet Union state it is only the work and peasants of the Soviet Union who have by deed and word proved to the world (not least of which is its stand in the Chinese-Soviet situa- tion) that they are for peace, and that they have consistently followed a course which led toward non- aggression; that contrary to the the policy followed by all other for- eign countries who have long op- P' ed the hinese masses, the Soviet Union has not now nor at any previous time had a single war- Iship on Chinese waters; {gle soldier stationed on Chinese territory. | leader, Mayr, shot and killed a wood worker named Artner. After de- laying the case until now, the judge who tried it, a fascist member of the Heimwehr at Loeben himself, | has acquitted Mayr of the murder | of the worker, | Our own age, the vourgeals age, hed hy this—that tt antagoniamn, ciety is splitting is of this pamphlet as a tarint—Marx. WH conscious worker. | Five Cents miners and is preparing a Unusual lots. Rush 389 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY discounts for Your Order WE MUST HAVE a Mass Distribution nm organic part of the Party Recruiting and Daily Worker ; Building Drive, EVERY WORKER SHOULD JOIN THe COMMUNIST PARTY 32 pages of mental dynamite for every class- Presented in simple style and in the language of the workers of the shops, mills and factories, Per Copy orders in with quantity CASH to WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS NEW YORK CITY not a sin- | ~ Paige ‘Ties TE SHOPS ‘Big “Lay-Offs in Syracuse Plants Awakening Workers (By a Worker Correspondent) Women’s labor i | SYRACUSE, N. Y. (By Mail).— tuted for that ¢ The following few items of indus- | Axle Co. a trial conditions in this section will |Motors, with 500 workers, shut illustrate the general depression |down completely. The Brown Lyre and its effects on workers Chapin Co. making chiefly gears, as In steel industry the Haleomb al Motors, and Steel and Crucible Steel companies 2,000, shut down have shut dowr with compl about 1,000 men out Hal- Crouse-Heries, employing about comb steel intends to open after the | 800 wor laid off half, Syra- first of the New Year at lower |cuse Washington Corp., employing wages. The 60 cents per hour work- about 800, laid off over half that ers will be reduced to 55 cents per | number. 1 be reduced are no prospects of re-em- » 55 eents w hour; to 45 cents and the 45 cents will be until well into next year, cents per hour. The night and then with reduced forces, as t workers work from 1014 to 13| new machinery constantly being sid introduced. The Franklin Automobile Co., The workers are ready for the making the high-priced F Trade Union Unity League if the generally employs between | Trade Union Unity League will ex- )0-3,500 workers. The plant is|ert the effort to reach these work- working on a shift of a t 5,000. | ers.—D. D. RIAL DN jof the New England mill towns, WWE AE nill workers for many years. membership meetings of the Mas: 7 NTWU are being held in all mill Ad ule centers. New York City, Paterson, a Br Allentowr id Seranton mill work- ers held fine mass meetings over fal 1] Prenarations f , the week- speed Preparations TOV On musedayy December 100 Pate | Convention saie mill workers will meet under | eet the auspices of the NTWU at 25 (Continued from Page One) Dayton Ave. Friday December ; at 8 p.m., a huge general member- jlants, the knit goods workers of |8¢,8 Pm. a huge g ner Des New York City and Philadelphia, Ship meeting of the NTWU will as well ns workers from every sec, |b held in New Bedford, Martin Ben eee tia.) Uneres Russak, Ben Wells and John Nahor workers will send many delegates, Ki will spe Moetings of the ot 1 committees are |NIWU locals are being held in a eoteee in the dye corks dozen southern mill centers. i ag Speci. attention is being given g 1 e elect lelegates to + Fy e 5 yids a serene pied are the mobilization of the young tex- Gu dou Serio; Ulkalian organiser of |e workers by the NTWU. COD WU ie in Paterson for this | ig, the convention sessions the first the NTWU, is in Paterson for this | National Youth Conference of Tex- woe tile Workers will be held. Intensive New England workers are mobilizing for the contention. Ben Wells is working with the mill workers in the New England dis LONDON, (By Mail).—Registered trict; Jim Reid, president of the unemployed increased to 1,252,000— WU, in Rhode Island; Fred Beal| 17,612 more than at the last monthly is making a special convention tour returns. JOBLESS GROW UNDER “LABOR” RULE Comrades and All Friends bat GET READY! HELP US PRODUCE ii THE BEST AND BIGGEST ||| ANNIVERSARY EDITION of the Li| DAILY WORKER || WE HAVE EVER HAD! Into the industries of the United States with hundreds of thousands of copies! Help make the Daily Worker the leading mass organ of the American working class! al Greet workers of Soviet Union Upon Success of Five-Year Plan! be’ A special printing in the Russian language & of the Sixth Anniversary Edition of the ®: H Daily Worker will be sent to Soviet Union aH for distribution in the shops and factories. « All Units, Sections, Districts of the Communist Party of United aii] States; All Sympathetic Organ- ‘ izations; All Party Members and Sympathizers Are Requested to Insert Greetings in This Special ANNIVERSARY EDITION How many thousand copies will you order for distribution in mines, mills and shops? Place Your Order Without Delay! ee