The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 10, 1929, Page 3

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19 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK. Philippine Independence Talk in Congress Is Merely a Fake But the Masses’ Demand Is Real; It Forces Native Capitalist Politicians to Pretend to Lead the Movement; But They Will Betray It, Because if the Masses Gain Inde- pendence These Capitalists Lose Trade and Profits WASHINGTON, Dec. 9.—Fake|dependence, every act of the im- independence propaganda is being| perialist government has been to injected into the tariff debates in|rivet the Philippines closer to Congress under the leadership of | United States imperialism. Representative Strong, of Kansas.| The present fake independence The representatives of the rich| move will have on effect and is not farmers in Congress are pressing | seriously intended. The so-called the Philippines question in order to| “insurgents” are playing embarrass Hoover and to force |Philippine independence to wn con- tariff concessions for the wealthy | cessions from Hoover. REVOLUTION!” tention of relinquishing control of its valuable Philippine colonies, Un- Negro Labor Congress Scores Marine Rule doubtedly independence talk is very disconcerting to the Filipino petty- (Continued from Page One) boureois politicians who glibly talk independence but do not want to break away from their Wall Street masters, An independence mission headed by the Filipino Senator Quezon is |’ on its way to Washington. This commission will do whatever Hooves | with | recommends, which will be to mis- lead the Filipino masses and to di- vrt the real sentiment among the Milipino workers and peasants for independence. While the Jones law passed by Congress in 1915 declares that the Pilipin ould be given their in- Mine Strike Starts in Illinois; Aid Rushed (Continued from Page One) into the district office of the Na- tional Union here today, and will be given out as soon as they ean be checked over and verified. This strike was authorized by a Tri-District conference December 1, of delegates from Tllinois, Kentucky and Indiana, summoned to meet by the N. M. U. The miners are form- ing their local strike committees, their relief and defense corps, They will march from the struck mines on all those which did not come out on the first day, and spread the struggle from section to section, The United Mine Workers of Amer- ica, both factions, is trying to secure in the coal towns threatening armed attack. T. U. L. L. Sends Johnstone. d ant Seeretary Schmies of the Trade Union Unity League an- nounced yesterday the Executive Bureau of the League has assigned National Organizer Jack Johnstone to the Illinois district to co-operate with the National Miners Union in leading the strike. All T.U.U.L. district secretaries in the coal regions have been in- structed to mobilize all their mem- ip and all sympathizers for sistance to the striking miners. A letter is being sent out to all the ions affiliated with the T.U.U,L. calling upon them to inform their membership, and ask complete soli. darity with the miners’ strike, which is not an isolated event, but is an integral part of the struggle of the whole working class in this period against employers’ oppression, the interests of the miners being the in- terests of every worker. Meet With W. I. R. and I. L. D. At the initiative of the T.U.U.L a conference was held yesterday in the national office of the League, between the T.U.U.L. and the rep- resentatives of the national offices of the International Labor Defense and the Workers International Re- lief, at which arrangements were worked out for complete co-opera- tion and intensive activity of all three organizations in the miners’ strike. Special detailed programs for activity are being worked out by each national office. Defense Prepared. The International Labor Defense, 80 E. 11th St., will at once mobilize all branches and districts for miners’ defense. It pledges the support of all its members and its whole or- ganization, The miners’ struggle will be taken up as a main order of business in all ILL.D. regional conferences preceding the national convention of the I.L.D., to be held in Pittsburgh, a big mining center, Dec. 29-31, at which it will also be a main topic. A Pittsburgh region- al conference of the I.L.D. will also be held in Pittsburgh, Dee. 15. The Workers International Relief is assigning special organizers to the Illinois strike to start actively collecting relief for the strikers, and is mobilizing all of its secretaries for support of the miners. W. I, R. Statement. The Workers International Relief yesterday issued a statement point- ing out that the miners are striking at the right time of the year to win, and calling attention to their de- mands, and the united front against them of the Lewis and Fishwick machines in the U.M.W.A., and of the coal operators, the state and fed- eral governments. It ‘shows how, through the treachery of the U.M. W.A., wages have been cut, half of the miners thrown out of work, and widows and orphans left destitute when miners are killed, The W.1L.R, says: dl “The workers of America must act as one to help the miners in their valiant fight. A victory for the miners means a victory for the entire working class. It means or- kanization of the unorganized, It are peasants against the imperiglist ex- ploitation of the white ruling class of this country, is our fight! It is the fight against the impendent as- sumption of racial superiority by the white ruling class and its corol- lary that Negro populations exist for the sole purpose of affording spheres of exploitation for the white ruling class of this and other im- perialist countries. It is the fight against white terrorism in the South! It is the fight against jim-crowism and all forms of racial discrimination born of the imperial- ist ideology of race superiority! The Haitian revolt is one of many gratifying signs of the readiness of the Negro masses to struggle against oppression and to take their place side by side with the revolu- tionary colonial masses, and with the revolutionary workers of the im- perialist countries in the world- wide fight against imperialism. Revolutionary White Workers! You have shown your solidarity with the Negro masses in a hundred battles against the common oppres- sor—the white ruling class! You have bravely faced persecution, jail, the electric chair, in Gastonia and other prts-of the South in stand-- ing by your progrm for the organ- ization of the white and Negro work- in the same loca!s and for full polit- ical social and racial equality for the Negro. In Gastonia, in South Africa, in every country throughout the world where you have been called upon to meet the test of class solidarity with the workers of the darker races, you have met that test like real revolutionaries, In Amer- ica, you have sternly set yourselves jagainst the mighty influence of white ruling class-race prejudice and have not flinched before the vicious attacks of the bosses and their newspapers. You have refused to surrender your principles or to give in one iota when persecuted and ostracized as “Nigger lovers!” In South Africa you have not hesi- workers, in the demand for a free native South Africa. Revolutionary white workers! With full confidence in your revolutionary integrity we call upon you to support the revolt of the Haitian workers and peas- ants! We call upon you to join in the fight against American imperialism, against Wall Street subjugation and exploitation of the Haitian masses! And we call upon you not only to show your own solidarity, Negro masses of Haiti and the United States, but to intensify your activities in the fulfillment of your historic task of winning the white masses for the demands of the op- pressed Negro workers and peas- ants. Support the struggle for Haitian independence! Negro Workers of America! The Negro masses of this country cannot remain inactive in the face of the bloody attacks by the Ameri- can imperialists upon the rights of the workers and peasants of Haiti to revolt against oppression, and to determine their own form of gov- ernment, Negro workers of America! We must give emphatic proof of our burning protest against the murder of Haitian workers and peasants! We must demonstrate in no uncer- tain manner our solidarity with the Haitian masses in revolt against the brutal oppression of United States imperialism! The American Negro Labor Congress will lead the struggle against the murder of the Haitian masses, against American imperialism, and calls upon you to attend the protest mass meetings we are calling throughout the country to mobilize support for the heroic Haitian workers and peasants in their struggle to free their country means the smashing of company unions. “The Workers International Relief is helping the workers in their struggles, and appeals for solidarity to all workers on behalf of the striking miners. “We urge the workers and their friends to send contributions in food or money to the National Office of the Workers International Relief, 949 Broadway. room 512, New York City, from where it willbe forward- ers side by side in the same unions, | tated to take Your stand with the | most oppressed group, the native} as revolutionary workers, with the) ed to Southern Illinois and Indiana, “Socialists” Praise | Imperialist Policy of Ramsay MacDonald} An approval of the imperialist] |pier,” Ramsay MacDonald, appears | jin the latest issue of the “New| | (mis)-Leader,” official organ of the} jthird capitalist party which still calls itself “socialist” party. | “MacDonald has earned the gen-| erous good-will of the public,” writes Edmund S So- cial-fascist contributor to the organ | jj jot Hillquit’s aggregation of sky- | pilots, exploiters of labor and A, F, of L, fakers; “he has enshrined him- jself in the hearts of Americans of jall classes.” Seidel forgets to stress |the fact, “particularly the heart of \the exploiting class.” All of Ramsay MacDonald’s ser- re8 in the interest of British im- |perialism is glorified and pointed |out as an example to the American “socialist” party. For instance, following MacDon- | ald’s policy of drowning the Indian | worker’s revolt in blood, the Ameri- can “socialists” would vi despatch marines to Ha gua and other Wall Street colonies. Of course, Hillquit and Thomas mildly berate Hoover for these acts, {but MacDonald was loud-mouthed in his phrases of friendship toward Hindoo workers—before he came in- jto power as the chief imperialist. | Once in power MacDonald could not |go to too great lengths in suppress- |ing any uprising of the workers and |peasants in any spot on the British empire. So far has the “socialist” party degenerated that they regard Mac- Donald’s appearance in the United States as the best advertisement that this third capitalist party could get to ingratiate itself in the hearts lof the ruling class. Seidel says MacDonald’s visit to the U. S. “has done even more for |the good of ‘socialism’ than all our jefforts. His visit will have done |that if we learn the significant les- |son contained in his actions and the \reception rendered him.” | MacDonald’s fawning before the |most ruthless exploiters of labor in |the world, his rubbing elbows with \the murderers and the jailers of |Sacco and Venzetti, his absolute |servility to the American bankers lis taken as a recommendation of the American “socialist” party. BUILD FIVE GIANT TRACTOR FACTORIES, MOSCOW (By Mail).—By the| end of the five-year constructive period the Soviet Union will have five giant factories for the produc- tion of tractors with g total annual capacity of 210,000 tractors. As- suming that the life of a tractor is from five to six years, at the end of the second five-year period the Soviet Union will have no less than 1,250,000 tractors at work with a total of 30,000,000, in other words, these five factories will supp’ horse power exceeding the total | natural horse power of the Soviet | Union, which possesses about 24,- |000,000 draught horses. In addition large numbers of threshing ma- \chines and other agricultural ma- jchinery wil! be in operation. A tractor will be used approximately for 600 acres of Jand, in other words, 725,000,000 acres of land will be tilled mechanically. Our own age. the vourgeots a) im distinguished by this—that has stmuplifive class antagontsm: | More and more. society ts splitting ap into two great hostile campr, into two great and directly contra- posed classes: bourgeoisie and pro- letarint—Marx. and their class from the oppression | jof Wall Street imperialism. The first two of these meetings have al- ready been called, one by our Brownsville Branch, for Thursday evening, December 12, 1929, at Tiv- oli Hall, 20 Myrtle Ave., Williams- burg, Brooklyn, the other by our Harlem Branch, for Friday evening, December 13, at St. Luke’s Hall, 125 West 130th St., Manhattan. Similar meetings as well as mass street demonstrations will be held in all parts of the country. Negro workers! White workers! Show your solidarity with the he- roic Haitian masses! Demand the immediate withdrawal of American marines and complete independence for Haiti! Demand the return of the land to the peasants! Demand abrogation of the unequal treaties imposed upon the Haitian people by American imperialism! Down with American imperialism! Long live the heroic workers and |policy of “his majesty’s labor pre-| |% \found out who shot Downey, Salvatore Accorsi. | | Accorsi went on trial yesterday on one of the most deliberate frame-| ups in U. S. labor history. When Pennsylvania workers resisted the unprovoked attacks of the Mellon coal and iron police, who ruthlessly , rode into w crowd of workers, and| killed Trooper Downey, one of the attacker Accorsi was at home four miles away from the scene Eighteen months later—when Mel- time to manuf idence, Accor ed for his working class cc- tivities. Workers, demand. the lease of Accorsi! In a previous issue we printed another picture for that of Accorsi by mistake. | re- Accorsi Jury Selected; | State Using Prejudice (Continued from Page One) fitt and Jacob Kealson are trying to railroad the miner defendant to! death, | The International Labor Defense has secured Atto’ Maurice Schneirov, John Hen and Jacob Margolis to defend Accor: | Spectators were barred today,| only the press being admitted, and the court room will not be open to the general public until the pros- ecution opens tomorrow morning. Arrested Two years Later. Accorsi, in court, showed the palor of months of confinem in the Al- legheny County Jail. He was rested at his home on Staten Is in April, 1929, two years after the shooting of the trooper. At the extradition hearings, it was brought | out that Accorsi lived and worked near Cheswick, Pa., for eighteen months after the trooper was shot, and then moved to w York, driven out by the unemployment and operators’ blacklist of militant | miners in the coal fields. Ie Tried to Kill Worker. Trooper Downey was killed just after participating in a raid of 100 state police on the August 22 meet- ing of several thousand miners at a farm near Cheswick, Pa. That was on Aug. 22, 1927, and the miners were protesting against the murder of Saceo and Vanzetti then’ being conducted in Massachusetts. The troopers charged the meeting, at or- ders from their chief, and trampled men, women and children under the feet of their horses, beating and maiming them. They used tear gas and fired on the workers. was riding down a lane near the end of this brutal attack, trying to slug two men with his club. One fell and Downey leaned over to break his head, when a shot was fired by some one, acting clearly to save the miner from being murdered by the policeman, and Downey was killed. Many were arrested, and had to be released, or held on lesser charges than murd: It had never been! Who- ever it was, it was not Accorsi, for he was ei; miles away at the time in another town. The prosecution, representing the mine owners, is deliberately trying to frame him up and burn him in the chair because they recognize him as a class enemy. | VASCONSELOS PLAYS WITH “ARMED” REVOLT. SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Dec. 9.— Jose Vasconcelos, defeated petty- bourgeois Mexican presidential con- didate who paraded under liberal disguises, has issued a manifesto calling upon his supporters to arm themselves for an uprising against the Wall Street president, Rubio Ortiz, | Vasconcelos will not undertake a| serious fight against Ortiz as they | are agreed on fundamental prin-| ciples, except that Casconcelos leans | a little more towards British imper- ialism and Ortiz goes the whole hog with Wall Street. As far as 1 am concerned, Lt claim te have discovered istence of classes in modern society strife agai one another. el historl long ago peasants of Haiti! (Signed) AMERICAN NEGRO LABOR CONGRESS, Per Cyril Briggs, Secretary. National Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! Act Quickly! All Three WORKERS 30 UNION SQUARE FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY Special Offer to Daily Worker Readers ON A LIMITED QUANTITY OF THE FOLLOWING BOOKS: MAY DAYS—Anthology of Revolutionary Poetry CITY OF BREAD by Alexander Neveroff ($2.50) reduced to 1.65 1 SAW IT MYSELF by Henri Barbusse., (82.50) reduted to 1.65 a described the evolution of the cla struggles, and political showed the economle of materia) production: 2) | e class struggle sarily to the di proletariat: 3) that thi lasses and to the ation of a society of free and equ: —Marx. ($3.00) reduced to $2.00 for $5.00 BOOKSHOP NEW YORK CITY Downey | | disinherited.” | {about the situation being “obscure,” | cent, SH TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, Rubber Plants Lay. Off Men by the Thousand in Akron 29 Page Three OPS eB (By a Worker Correspondent) zi coal oat er ae (ie ano ae i seen, oor Me Toledo Auto Plants Lay a | Existing on Water; No Meney for Bread Rubber mills are being laid off in Akron, the world center of the rub- ber industry. Off Thousands of Workers A very low estimate of the pondent) un- (By a Worker Corres employment in Akron would be 10-| (By @ Worker Correspondent) atine He ye-| JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (By Mail).— 000 unemployed. With more than | TOL (By Mail).-Not for each: Abeeeit n. Miners in Central Pennsylvania go 50,000 Workers and their Zam ian: oe nat morning treets around| to work with water only in their destitute, the situation for the win-| ich a serious unemployment sit enleneavers ned with work-|buckets. As I was working for a ter is very bad, and their is no pros- neve lool Be The couple of weeks in Lockrie Mine, I | tion as there exists now. pect for its improvement ent 40,000 men, women and were so that the was talking with a man who had The large rubber mills alone have | ng workers out of work, and (cars could not pass. The re only water, in his bucket. I asked laid off more than 8,000 w y more are expected to swell |that the employment office him why he didn’t bring more. He Goodrich i about s of the unemployed soon. even opened, the workers were said he couldn’t bring more as he Goodyear and Firestone have ea ants’ Manufacturing As- vould be nothing until| made only $2 to $3 a day, and laid off 3,000 workers. With th 1 reported last spring that When the next|what he made he had to leave at other plants of Akron dependent on there were 48,000 workers em- » the men were again|home for his wife and eight chil- the rubber mills for their continu-|pioyed in the 51 largest firms of |bitterly disappointed when they |dren. It was he enough for ing production, there is no chance Toledo, A few weeks ago the num-|were told that there would be no bread. for the rubber workers whe were |her was 23,000. Since then they |v until New Years. Workers, wake up! Join the laid off geeting jobs in other fac- have quit reporting, and it is esti-| This same trickery was practiced | National Miners’ Union, which is a tories. The slight building that is ed that the number of those em- | at the Chevrolet plait on the same | militant organization which fights going on in Akron is fully supplied | ployed in these 51 plants are very |day as at the Overland plant. There for the working class and not for with men at 30 to 35 cents an hour. joy, are ow only 700 workers at Chev- | the bosses. Many of the unemp! din Akron! The Willys-Overland auto plant | rolet, whe ,000 work there nor- We must fight against the labor are very militant, while others are |pere former employed 34,000 The Autolite company also|fakers. Workers, you must realize still influenced by the Hooverian woxkeys, Recently it has been shut |employs now 700 workers, although |the conditions we have today! Mil- “prosperity” bunk. However, there | gown eompletely—in fact it has | the full force there 5,000. Other |lions of people are jobless. People is a strong feeling for the formation |hoon shut for many months. On the | comy e work- e working are half-starving. of unemployment councils, 1 16 and 17 of November Willys- | er x totally or large sections. 1ust demand our rights and not within a short time there will be such an organization fighting for | the demands of the unemploy AKRON WORK HAITI REVOLT Ove ad in the news-! TOLEDO WORKER. fill up the bosses’ pockets. | E ng is up to the workers. OW ‘ort? Te Ww Navy. They have the power in their hands. | World Court” Is A War Strength of Navy We want all workers to join in with Move Towards War Grows Despite Fak e jus. We are not against nationality ie " or color. Workers we must support (Continued from Page One) London Naval Confab The Daily Worker, as it is the only a lever against the ge paper that fights for the working rland printed and use it as League of Nations, which is domi-|, WASHINGTON, Dec. 8—To per- class, As you know the capitalist ‘ Seite fect the war machine of U. Im-| papers on ind us. Yours for eg cai Py Greaeeiate: perialism work on the first five |? workers —N. C. BENC) | the World Court is nob a court|rrujsera authorized by Congress will ——— at all, but a tribunal of the big im-/ proceed rapidly said Secretary of | ae perialist powers in which they at-'the Navy Adams, in his annual ve-| TOKIO WORKERS STRIKE. Ata: n ‘ 5 Suppression Sl here Is |2 eo. teow dale « art Tokio, Dec. 9—All the municipal Increased ities under the guise of ae err na autobus drivers and the majority of —— If any power does not like is actually under way in private |the street car workers went on (Continued from Page One) withdraws. Hoover favors the spending strike when the bosses announced of outrageous falsehood. Since De- ary of State Stimson likens 1,600,090,000 for a more effi- that there would be a cut in wages. cember, 1922, Borno (which is to the World Court to the Kellogg |¢ avy. oe say United St Bee Not only the bourgeoisie forged the weapons that bring death to itself; it has also called into existence the men who are to wield those weapons—the modern working class—the proletarians.— Karl Marx (Communist Manifesta), imperialism) es-| pact. Stimson’s use of the Kellogg tablished a “pre ” h pen- pact as a shield behind which he alized as a er ny injury, out- enlisted the imperialist powers in rage of defamation” by the press a proposed armed attack on the against any covernment official of Soviet Union is a good example of any “diplomatic representative ac-| how Wall Street will use the World credited to Haiti” by other countries Court. ased naval armaments pro- ceed in spite of the so-called Lon- ,don N: Conference, set for Janu- ary 21. The building of the 15 new cruis- ers follows the plan of American militarists in increasing the war ne & —which last barred any criticism! Precisely at the time Stimson and |strength of the American navy de-|Condition and obsolescence, the fol- of the despotic authority assumed Hoover send 1,000 marines, an air » any agreements that may be | lowing old cruisers will be sold: Al- by the American brigadie general plane ca aded with bombing ade in London, bany, New Orleans, Salem, Birmingt who rules Haiti as “high commis-| planes, and a to attack the cretary Adams reveals in his |%2™, York, Des Moines, Chattanoo- sioner.” Moreover, any Haitian | Haitie ass : cal ibaa a 2 lea, Char 5 i ing- y ian Haitian masse: ’'veport that the United States in- | 8% Charleston, St. Louis, Hunting. abroad, who writes in the foreign on, subject to the same penal- barred from using as artic] i ready printed in So bad have e of the hypocr ‘ton, Pueblo, Huron and Frederick.” The air strength of the navy is being rapidly increased in order to make the na more efficient for war and intervention in the Latin | American colonies. Says the naval tends to create the illusion of naval reduction by scrapping out-of-date it proceeds with in- creasing the strength of th€ navy by building faster and more deadly crui Adams si United States has ie part in promoti + tlement of international dispute become | the very fact that the imperial- conditions ee eve De eer pre wee ist executive committee in Wash- | report: : uch restrictions, have revealed a; a aig f r 3 ington stre mmediate entry in- on, : : 5 little of the growing misery of the |'°® y Not only did we have more to the World Court, in the face of severe opposition on the part of the so-called “insurgent” senate ind: tes the rapidly developing meneu- planes and pilots in operation, but in-|the average pilot flew about 216 ned in| hours, or about 19 per cent more |than in the previous year and three of their material'times as much as seven years ago.” masses, taxed to death and robbed on all sides for the benefit of Ameri- can investors. The “La Press,” a daily of Port-au-Prince, for exam-/ 1... and alignments for the next ple, on September 21, states: Ae ie eae z | . “At the present hour in the homes 9 ef the Haitian people there is not only a lack of comfort but hideous ‘and Stimso dy high, will neces: se as they are to be retai account evasion of the plain issue with talk about the situation | being “complicated,” and so on. The formed minister to France, Workers ! Labor Organizations! INTO ACTION! HELP US PRODUCE THE BEST AND BIGGEST ANNIVERSARY EDITION hs of the DAILY WORKER WE HAVE EVER HAD! Dantes Bellegarde in an open=let-| The alleged “opposition” to oc- ter to Hoover recentiy, which ‘de- cupation in Congress playing its clared that American occupation was /yole of making a fuss over the the cause of the m people are hung ry states The Hoover request for a commission, ” and cited the Huddleston of Alabama taking the robbery of the people by Americans. with the stunt Monday, and A private letter from a Haiti: anaging very well in attracting woman plaintively complains: attention to the commission and “There is plenty to eat in the stores, keeping it off the war being made but none has the money to buy it.” on the Haitian people at this very Workers Organize. Aside from the mo am: the peasant the a oe ees also. The} French Press castic. “La Presse” of Port-au-Pr in| PARIS, Dec The French September told of the formation of | Press is taking up the Haitian issue union “despite the psuedo capital- and suggesting it be referred to the s of the place,” a union it terms ions, sincesthe United as “a step in advance accomplished h started the Kellogg by the proletariat, this class of our Pact, is the one making war on a i 's populace. moment, \ ss of misery | see ne wage Si 9. Commission to Hide War. The fuss going on in Congress ebout the commission requested by Hoover is meant to have and is hav- ing the effect desired, namely, to attract attention from the fact that marines have been in Haiti for 14 years, they have murdered thou- sands, they are still there, and now Evidently,” says one paper, “we are looking at a renewal of the comedy of Cuba, Mexico and 2 \ragua, with open warfare, then con- tinued occupation of the country.” The paper laments and accuses, cit- |ing the fact that the United States {now has 62 per cent of Haitian |trade in American hands, as com- that they have murdered some more, |pared with 12 per cent before United instead of withdrawing the marines, |States Marine rule began, while | more are sent. And this goes along |France, which controlled 48 per cent | with Hoover's hypocritical palaver | before the war, now has only 8 per | 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! WE MUST HAVE a Mass Distribution of this pamphlet as an organic part of the Party Recruiting and Daily Worker Building Drive, eit| Greet workers of Soviet Union | | | | | Upon Success of Five-Year Plan! A special printing in the Russian language f of the Sixth Anniversary Edition of the ies Daily Worker will be sent to Soviet Union i} for distribution in the shops and factories, ") fe All Units, Sections, Districts of the Communist Party of United States; All Sympathetic Organ- izations; All Party Members and Sympathizers Are Requested to Insert Greetings in This Special if ANNIVERSARY EDITION EVERY WORKER SHOULD JOIN THE COMMUNIST PARTY WHY 29 pages of mental! dynamite for every class- conscious worker. Presented in simple style and in the language of the workers of the shops, mills and” factories. Five Cents Per Copy Unusual discounts for orders in quantity lots. Rush Your Order with CASH to WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY How many thousand copies will you order for distribution ix mines, mills and shops? Place Your Order Without Delay!

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