The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 13, 1929, Page 3

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vp Page Three AILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBEK 13, 1929 MacDonald Helps Mine| W ORKERS’ CORR Volga Republic Germans HUGE BUILDING Bowes OP FAEES) writo'to the Daily Worker, 26 Union S New York, About Conditions in Your Shop s ° | at : | Write aily Worker, 26 Union Square, New York, About Conditions in ur op. harge Emigration Plot OF INDUSTRIES ie ee eine aie Wate This Is Your Paper! FOR SOCIALISM LONDON, Dee, 12.—Ramsay Mac- | |Donald has agreed to permit the | mine owners to cut the miners’ Workers in the metal plants of Carteret, Perth Amboy and vicinity! These articles have been written by your fellow- ‘Soviet’s Giant Blow at Capitalism Peasants of Collective Farms Declare Capitalists Abroad Planned Scheme—Plotted With Individual Rich Farmers —Peasant Masses Back Soviet—Seventy-Five Per Cent of Farms Collectivized babar) Uae pee workers in the U. S. Metals Refining Co. They tell of the slavery in that plant. Remember, workers, this is your paper, ished British miners has been agreed} 8nd we want you too to write us about the conditions in the plant you work in. Send your letters to Daily Worker, 26 to by the “labor” party leaders in| Union Square, New York City. It is the organ of the Communist Party. We will not print your name unless you so desire. a bill which has been presented to | The unorganized workers must be organized, thru the Trade Union Unity League. Write to it at the Workers Home, the Houseiot Conimtons by! Wilts 308 Elm St., Perth Amboy, N. J., for fyrther information. % (Wireless by Inprecorr) worked under central management. | MOSCOW, Dec, 12.—A represen- | tative congress of the collective agricultural undertaking in the Ger- man Soviet Republic on the Volga has issued a manifesto, declaring The “German Volga Republic” is one of the autonomous Soviet repub-| MOSCOW, Dec. 12—The budget lics within the Union of Socialist |for the coming year, the second of | Soviet Republics. It is populated al-|the second of the Five-Year Plan of | most wholly by people of German |Socialist Construction, totals $5,- blood whose ancestors migrated to |800,000,000, or 43% per cent over| Graham, president of the Board of | Trade. Not only has MacDonald deliber- ately helped the bosses by permit- ting them to slap a 74-hour day on the miners, when in his election |U. S. Metals Pretends| ‘It’s Worried About) U. S. Metals Refining Co. Sends the that the world bourgeoisie (capi- talist class) has been organizing the emigration from the republic of individual kulaks (rich farmers), | that part of Russia over a century |last year’s budget, of which $3,500,-| promises he solemnly declared to} ame | ago and maintained German cus- /}000,000 will go into building indus ithe miners that a seven-hour ¢¢| Health To Cut Wages toms arid languages in spite of the |try, both in the cities and in social-| would be instituted if he were “Russianizing” pressure of the/lizing agriculture, expanding rail-| elected, but he completely adopts the | (By a Worker Correspondent) CARTERET, N. J. (By Mail).— and pretending that these represent |czar. Since the revolution and un-|ways,-docks and other transporta-| mine bosses’ program in allowing} ; the whole German working peasan-/der the rule of the Workers and/tion, and great clectric power|them to make whatever wage cuts {Te U. S. Metals Co. invented a| (By a Wo Correspondent) time ves for his raise, But the;conflict in the U. 8. Refining Co. tpy of the republic. | Peasants, these German folk have | projects. Around $1,250,000,000 will |they want with the help of the “la- jnew system in reducing the wages! (©. poppet Nw + Mail). | Dsses have a whip and lash the un-|The company is the winner and (The manifesto states that in fact| complete self-rule in their own So-|be spent on schools, hospitals, social | bor government.” of the workers, It experimented in| CARTER SUN MAMIE Ae their organized workers the vic- Jf emigration movement finds no/ viet Republic, with their own Ger- insurance for sick persons, old-age | pee tees clic |the small department where only|In the past few weeks we have ex- | Refining Co. has | tims. Asponse in the Volga Republic,|man schools, literature and culture. | pensions and so on. a few people are employed. It! peri d unusually __ interesting | department and the Last summer, when it was hard where German workers and peas- | + 8 8 In the next year or rather the worked well for the bosses. Now | events in the U, S. Metals Refining ped to it before the |to find “good” workers (good ants stand unitedly behind the So-| Poor farmers in the United States, !current year since the Soviet finan- |the same system is in vogue in the | (,, pla The lay-offs, transfer to come into effects | means those willing to obey), the viet Government and for the prole-|learning from the example of those |cial year begins on October 1, the | smelting department, and in the | i ji of the workers is in 2 is transferred to the | bosses in the factory were slightly ae ne in the German in the Soviet Union, should join the | socialized part of agriculture will pte vat it will be spread to the 270 One tthe general one q\yard it means that the company if less, brutal. Now that Hoover's Volga Republic. Communist Party of the United|be raised to a total of 50,000,000 ARE ORGANIZING whole plant. ie a : area S| Thsoughiwith hits, Ncntanciv’ ju vide Cacti It states further than 75 per cent| States. If orgeniaars are not handy, iva or sant 20 per cent of all When a worker works steady for | be Par Se a aE Gna ot the am brutal, senile anal inatiy amenniploved a lined up of all German Volga farmers are | write in to 43 East 125th St., New |land tilled. | Ja certain length of time in a gas-| (i, a a Etched a he x a civilized foremen bosses the yard, |at the gates, the foremen have re- now collectivized, being collectively | York City. An enormous construction of fac- cous place he endangers his health. |o¢'7, takers, the strike-breaking ine. |and he drives the victims till they |sumed their old attitude toward the Andrew Mellon’s Frame Up Machine Oiled and Working to Try and Kill Militant Miner (Continued from Page One) ing class. State troopers on spirited horses trained to mow down picket lines. Coal and iron cops with mur- der in their eyes. . .. The courtroom is gloomy. Few | friends and comrades to cheer the j | worker on trial for his life, for spectators are barred from the courtroom, on this, the first of his | “days in court.” Salvatore Accorsi is led in, hand-| | cuffed to a sullen prison guard. He is slight of built, keen-eyed, in- | telligent. Whom does he remind | one of? Another Italian worker, | Nicola Sacco, a shoemaker. Clad y he sits in a chair behind jury with profound interest. He is | pale from the seven months’ ¢on-/ finement in prison; during that time he has loat nearly 15 pounds. Two tables, ends together, have | been placed in the courtroom fae+ } ing the judge’s bench. Here are seated the wyers for the prose cution and defense, and, at the far end, a dozen newspaper reporters. One of these is the tall, long-legged, red-haired Sinclair Lewis, satirist | of American provincial life and the “successful” business man. Lewis, | yoaming around the United States gathering material for a labor novel, has stopped in Pittsburgh long | enough to study, at first hand, the | operations of the American frame- up sysiem, | The prosecution is in the hands | of George F, Langfitt and Jacob E. Kalson, ssistant district attorneys. | fjeither have ever played stéllat sles, but getting a conviction of | lis apparently friendless Italian worker seems a comparatively sin ple job; and if Acéorsi is electro: | | cuted-—and these two gentlemen are | | determined that he will be--then | promotion awaits them both. Sitting | by their side is John J, Tomek, the state trooper who arrested Accorsi jn Staten Island last June, néarly two years, after the Cheswick demonstration which was broken up by the Pennsylvania cospacks. Accorsi, who had taken an active part in the miners’ strike of 1927, was evicted by the Pittsburgh Coal Go. two months after the Cheswick meeting, With his wife and three children he went to live at Harwick, Pa., where he remained until April, 1928. Then, failing to find work, he moved to Staten Island, where he worked as a laborer until he was arrested June 12 of this year. Republican Judge. tal The judge, J. A. McLaughrey, is a hard-boiled Republican politician from the adjoining county of Mér- cer, whete workers’ meetings are ‘erushed ruthlessly by city and county authorities. McLaughtey was at one time superintendent of schools of Mercer county, which is in the grip of the United States Steel ‘orp. and the Westinghouse Blec- pic Co. He is an old man, past 60, heav- iy constructed, with pouchy e covered by broad, shell-rimmed glasses and a dull, listless manner. Chief of defense counsel is Jacob Margolis, a Pittsburgh lawyer, who was disbarred about 10 years ago for his courageous legal battles in | behalf of the foreign-born victims of the 1919 Palmer raids in Pénnsyl- vania, Assisting Margolis, is Mau- | vice Schneirov and John M. Hénry, both of Pittsburgh. *. * *. “Naw,” the burly, officious at- tendant assured me, “it won't take no more’n a week to finish this case, and he's done for, too.” He couldn’t see why so many reporters were present and when I explained that thousands of workers on the outside were vitally interested in the outcome of the trial, he eyed me up and down suspiciously and spat out: | “Hell, he’s just a god gamn wop!” oy ee The International Labor Defense, which at the Charlotte trial was singled out for attack at the very outset, was once more the target of the bosses’ prosecution here. “Have you received in the mails or read any of the printed circulars or ‘propaganda dealing with this case?” Prosecutor Langfitt hurled at each prospective juror. Langfitt later indignantly told néwspaper men that information has mached him that “circulars were |tories for manufacture of agricul- |tural implements is planned, and | | part of the whole plan is now under |way. An idea of the vastness of | lhe work of socializing Soviet agri- \Build Textile Union |the doctors examine him and de-| . clare him unfit to go on with that | and National Confab york. ‘The thing was started at the | (Continued from Page One) lelectric furnace. | jweek, Tonight (Wednesday) All men receiving | he |More than 49 cents an hour were | found to be suffering from blood tatution. of Ametica, quit. Very few men endure one The U. S. Metals Refining Co.| Week. Most of the transferred work- has a theoretical policy of dealing |ers quit before they complete the with the workers and their wages. | first day’s task, The theories are that after a man| “In other departments a man m workers, They fire them whenever they refuse to break their necks. The other day a foreman told me this: “I fired the son of a b. I | chased him out of the office. You should have seen him run when I kee Z |culture may be seen in the fact that, distributed thruout Western Penn-| hile in the United States only sylvania over a month ago by a | 25,000 combined harvesters were | bor organization in which Accorsi| manufactured last year, the Soviet | jspoke in Manchester, and tomorrow | night in Dover. receive 49% cents an hour. eel of them are paid 52-54 cents an|Went after him. hour. When they are transferred) Thus he expressed his heroism is |is employed a certain time he {supposed to get a raise. y worker bases his hope on this shal- | depression. But those receiving 49 {cents an hour were found to be in Tuesday, December 17, he will| seta to the yard they are paid 45 cents. |and praised himself for a “brave was declared to be innocent of the crime with which he is charged.” He also announced to the reporters that he had in his possession photo. graphic copies of the I.L.D. liters | Government is now building two |factories, each one of which will | produce 25,000 combines a year. While the complete construction program may not be finished until | speak at Herman Hall, 629 Summer Then the man getting above 49 {cents an hour is transferred to a |45-cent an hour job, a new man is \hired and carries the work of a 54 He is new and St., Holyoke, Mass.; December 18, in Franco-Belgian Hall, 9 Mason St., Lawrence, Mass.; December 15, Sunday, at 3 p. m., n A. C. A. Hall, low promise and wears himself out so as to keep the job until the|That is where theory and practice | deed.” —MAXIM TRAMP. Women Cigar Workers | Misleader Nn |55-58 Hour Week |seribe the brutal attack on the Sac-| encounter between revolutionists and |tured, his arm paralyzed, bleeding | ture, a would not introduce the | j939 it will be sble in the coming material as evidence in the trial. year to produce with the factories A total of 128 veniremen is called) now operating, as many tractors before the jury of 11 men and two| and combines as the United States | women is finally chosen. Acco: produced:in 1922. life is thus at the tender mer The Five-Year Plan began 16) of a hundted per cent American, months ago, but with only this short | jury composed of a construction | time gone by, the actual amount to | foreman, mechanic, a salesman, in-|be invested in this year’s construc-; terior decorator, railroad engineer tion of industry is 50 per cent over (for 27 years), carpenter, house-|what the government thought it wife, plumbing heater, railroad could do when the plan was started. brakeman, farmer, car inspector, PS farmer, and real estate-insurance| Workers and poor farmers in the} broker. | United States! If you admire So- | By the use of the peremptory viet success, adopt the methods of | challenge, of which each side has| Bolsheviks yourselves! Join the | twenty, the prosecution barred from Communist Party here in America! | the jury all a digad Jews and for-) — eign-born workers generally. Fear-| s45 i fig the subtle conse of solidarity | Haiti Masses Stand | which unites all the oppressed, the; Furm Against Marines | prosecution thus tneeremonipusly | dismissed several Negro working (Continued from Page One) eas who were summoned for jury) ..vojutionists, the marine headquar- | | te rs report “all quiet on the front.”) . |. The masses of poorly-armed peas-) And when the prosecution has) d their fight! comelided its job, and has asked: that ee ae re ee mination. A Pane atin chats Sar ver aed rigid censorship here keeps news ce State Penetentiary, the defense will ahi SRBEAS oO u sy a. | printed. | bring forward workers who will de-|~ Just recently a report of a serious) ea’ co-Vanzetti protest meeting near) stimson’s “peace pact” marines was| Cheswick, Pa., Aug. 22, 1927. They) published showing that six Haitian) will tell how the state troopers, peasants were killed outright by} known far and wide for their fiend-| machine-gun fire and four died later) ish brutality, rode their horses into at Aux Cayes. Many houses of peas-| the crowd of working men, women) ants in Gabines Street were indis-| and childreh; how these uniformed criminately riddled by machine-gun} thugs mercilessly slugged defense-| fire. less workets and hurled tear gas| with hundreds of marines being bombs into the terror-stricken crowd. | chipped to Haiti and the eruiser And they will also tell, among) Wright stationed at Guantanamo, | other things, how Tony De Bernardi} 150 miles from Port au Prince, teady| was beaten until his skull was frac-| to rush in with its deadly bombing} planes, president Louis Borno, Wall) from his nose and ears, a cripple| Street puppet, now feels secure, | “We have little to fear for the) for life; ahd how he was thrown | uncofseious in a truck and later held| future,” said the murderer of the/ in $1,500 bail until the police finally | Haitian masses. “With a continued) let him loose, fearing, apparently, | close watch maintained by the Garde! that he might die on their hands—| National in the front line and with | @ven as did John Barkoski, also a|support of the United States marines coal miner, who was another victim there is little chance of progress by| the strikers.” | of “Pennsylvania's finest.” The strike and revolution have not a ry been crushed. The masses never will Will Evict Leaksville | ctimit to Wall Street's dictatorship ‘and Borno’s bloody rule supported on | hone Providence, Rhode Island; at 7 p. m, |Cents an hour man. of the same day, in Pulaski Hall, |Knows nothing about the rate. As 618 Mill St., Central Falls, R. 1; | soon, as he gets wise and as 8 for Monday, December 16, in Bouzier | Taise a notice comes supposingly Hall, High St., Woonsocket, R. 1, {ftom, the doctor, which says the} and’ Thursday, December 19, in|an has to be transferred to a 45- ‘ |cent an hour job, due to his blood | For Workers in Walk Qut in Bayuk| K | Plant on Wage Cut Strike, M eta l | Macaroni Plant cape | ; cast Co. Un z0n Head (By a Worker Correspondent) 1 Worker Correspondent) TOWN, Pa. (By Mail).— | ROCHESTER, N. Y. (By Mail). pp edelnnes ae : |As a tesult of an unanimous spon- 2 eee eee time here is \tencous Walkout of the whole shop| Gn eee te at | e present time there is] s walko 8 Ruse tees ss | iol i t lat ne pretent time cic tur |the Bayuk Cigar factory has been| (By a Worker Correspondent) | the HR aM hese ildenae iy 0 ee a H | caprr ‘ |in Rochester. The workers work sare who secefves. more than 49 (shut down. Upon receipt of an| CARTEI _ J. (by mail)—On | eee EM? 2 is © 00 00 eheaea tHOVioLG: | ue LUGRW edientiay: ta October thal eec eres muuee aout, SAN Uc en Jeents an hour, All men who used | order for 2,000,000 cigars the manu- | the third Wednesday in October get between $15 and $28 a week. U. S. Metals Refining Company to receive more were transferred to|| facturers tried to make a Christmas |coup for themselves by cutting the | selected the “shop committee” to re-|go9 for a 55 to 58-hour week. |pay for these cigars from 65 to 45| present the workers of the U.S.) "ny, : ik a |cents per 100. The women, most of |Metals Refining Company. This e bosses wrote in the paper [them married and forced to work|committee no more represents the |that nobody gets less than $15 a Fl : | week, which is the w vhich F . because their husbands do not earn|workers than it represented the | Wee% Which as age which a (a0,| Like at the electric furnace depar jenough to support their families, | strike they sold out. | young worker gets in this joint. ment all high-paid workers in smel- Au ave he This young worker works the won- ter will be transferred to the yard |bad been earning from $6 to $20 @| -|derful hours of 60 a week, but he is Young workers get between $15 and the yard. This success prompted the com- pany to extend the blood pressure | examinations to all smelter wor' (Continued from Page One) blandly pointed out Accorsi months after he swore he didr’t| The interesting thing is that ‘Ji know who fired the shet) in fae) avi a rs a da sponds tothe. question ye District | department at 45 cents, due to their har matet oe Gas on mie,’ the recent strike misleader, is | actually working more harder than Carney iteorue es Taney “isd | poet cece They maually: 8Y | et axpexiended “who had been|CGomen Cc nse SHoDy colimuviaes tie Presb Gt Us) betaieo in 50 nous . that the transfer is for three or four | ; . * Why the company selected him as|he has to do the w th: v' you see the man who fired the shots | working there for 10, 15 and 20 pany |he has to do the work that we at Downey? | eek sre When tie) ibd 2202 shia vers Teniongst Choke Lene ee ee ee ae on Weal A half dozen witnesses testified | a ns Ai is ‘ ly | 820 a week, The rest averaged 12 |*° ¥8 experie need wor kers it is plain. | won't go back to work until we win that Accorsi was not at the scene.| ‘te furnace job, but, of course, at) fo 11. sact workers and down to $6|Jimmie gave up hope during the} because without a union we will al- * re vages, because a new | strike and boldly 1 th ys be sl M iw They also: swore that ha had never the reduced wages, | 5s Aaac ob : ny strike and boldly announced e@) ways be slaves, acaroni work- hued a mustache. The prosecution, 78" 16 doing his job at reduced | 1% _ le See ones. yg | feompany will fire me.” Never! |ers! Join the Food Workers’ Union wages. e cut so enraged the workers |The U, S. Metals will never fire|and fight for better corditions. insisted that the man who shot Downey had a dark mustache. The \that they walked out spontaneously | Jimmie—he is too valuable a man. | inaistahee on the mustache by the |Metals must organize and organize ; {ter one of the waren who had) Another “Jimmie” is a member prosecution was reminiscent of the Wick because soon all of them wail ed there more than 10 years | of the famous shop committee. This | faeco Vanzetti frame-up when there |be affected by the blood depression, Hea aa oe sCvomed Ani cer use | Siruinisle last name is Howard or too the matter of a mustache fig.|and eventually all of will be work-|t take his proposal that they get! something like that. He goes among | ‘ued: ing at reduced wages. No depart-|0Ut the order of 2,000,000 cigars at) the foreign born workers and shouts | Because there are plenty men at Two bathers, C. E, Murphy and ent will be spared. Tt has been this price and his promise that after |«you boys that have any grievances | ° | Daily Workers the gates the workers of the U. S. Leonard Rocco testified that Accorsi | 2°¢¢Pted at the company as the gen- {this lot, in five or six weeks, they|come to me. No s.o.b. can buy Jim- Metals get transferred and laid off} HAVE BEEN DISTRIBUTED wore no mustache. Murphy said he | °"#! policy of reducing wages at the would be getting 80 and 90 cents!mie Howard. I'll fight your case dai If we won the strike or] h Ss —Young Worker employed by the Cioio Bros. Macaroni Factory. The workers of the United States , a Rade | We have bosses’ shop committe Most of the workers being mar-| But when nobody treats Jimmie and two days after the shooting, and jeiniess and worthless. It is a dis-|ried women tioing two jobs, at home | (een any sign of mustache. Rocco's tes- | 272¢e t? have such an organizati-s. and in the shop, too enslaved to find timony corroborated that of Murphy. | bee es | cota re oe ls Ao au ibe ted Seen ay thine Bsene Lesigncery| Peter Snee, 16, a neighbor of ‘Ac. | Metals Refining Co. That is why |the power of organization and the| corsi, told of watching Accorsi ana | the company orge ized these shop | growing unemployment throughout his father, Michael, making repairs | Committees to protect its interests |the city are under the illusion that | on their flivver, the day of the at.|Should the workers ever want t all they need to do is stay home H | and the boss will be forced to grant tack on the Cheswick. meeting of | Or@anize a protest against reduction | with moonshine he leaves the bootleg joint disgusted. Is he a stoolpigeon? We'll find that out later. shaved Accorsi three days before | Pant. palaneined FE Ue {till I win.” organized at that time the story | ‘ F : their demands ; littereht, ‘The workers of the murdéroas coal atid iron police. | 0! WeSe? ‘ : | would be different. The workers of P ly We must organize the Hi The T. U. U. L. is on the job and|Carteret learned the lesson this! 0 ee | Workers’ Industrial Union and block |is planning to distribute a leaflet|time. Next time they will select i Green in Role of , : Pt cate ns <e|In dozens of textile towns their true representative instead of company agents. —U. 5S. calling upon the women to organ- ize, when they return next Friday for their pay.—J. C. the vicious schemes of company’s |wage reduction. —METAL WORKER. Big Stock Smash Reflects Drop in Basic Industries among tens of thousands of southern textile workers. Stock-Broker Aids Wage Cut Drives) WASHINGTON, Dec. 12.—Will- iam Green, president of the A. F. of L. and co-partner with Hoover in the planned wage-cutting drive | of the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, Metals Worker. A remarkable accomplishment such as this leads us to demand that ‘TS EXCEEDIN (Continued from Page Two) workers and is being held on a trumped tip charge of “driving with- out a license.” His b;-ther, Elbert Totherow, in chargé of Youth Work of the Na- tional Textile Workers Union and Dewey Martin, organizer for the uhion, weré arrested at the same time for distributing literature. This attack followed directly on the heels of the warrant sworn out tor ©. D. Saylors, who is now being ar with murder of Chief of Police 0. D. Aderholt. The renewal of terrorism follows immediately ence of the Intérnational Labor De- fense in Charlotte, last Sunday, when delegates from North and South Carolina, Georgia and Vir- ginia attended, A collar to shoe frisking in the stare station and hostile question- ing of Elbert and Martin followed. They were afterward released. Toth- ar is bein, held for $100 cash ail, * Mill Owners Rage. The Southern bosses and their agénts the police and press are in real fit of rage over the popularity of the International Labor Defense and the Communist Party. In the smallest of police cases and in ed- itorials the question pops up. As the Charlotte News tells in the following story: “Hints of Com- munism and Atheism developed dur- ing the trial of Thomas Griffith, chairman of the Mecklenburg High- way Commission and one of Char- Jotte’s leading citizens, charged with interfering with a police officer and of his niece, Mrs. Robert G. Hayes, charged with traffic violation in city police court.” Textile Mill Strikers | after the greatly successful confer-| by the bayonets of thousands of | marines. ee | Mobilize Support for Haiti Revolt Mass demonstrations against Wall Street marine domination in_ Haiti and gor the support of the Haitian revolutionary workers and peasants are being held all over the country. In New York, the Communist Party is staging a demonstration in front of the Federal Building on Park Row} near Broadway, Saturday at 1:15 p.) m. In its call for this demonstra- tion, the Party says: “Show your solidarity with the courageous fighters against the | American imperialist ruling class | which is using the same measures for the subjection and exploitation of the Haitians which they use against the workers of the United States!” In Philadelphia, a mass meeting to rally support for the Haitian revolt and against Stimson’s war threat against the Soviet Union, will be held on December 13 at 8 p.m, at Garrick Hall, 507 East 8th Street. A similar mobilization is arranged in Detroit for Friday, December 13, at McCollister Hall, Forest and Cass streets. WORKERS’ CHILDREN STARV- ING IN PORTO RICO. SAN JUAN, P. R, Dec. 12.— Sixty per cent of the children in Porto Rico are undernourished, ad- mits Governor Roosevelt. Roose- velt is governor of the islands in the interest of Wall Street—to see how much less the children can live on so that the American corpora- tions in Porto Rico can pile up greater profits, “Tn many rural sehools,” mourns the imperialist governor, “I have spoke over the network of the Na- tiondl Broadcasting Co. on “In- vestments.” Green tried to soothe the thow- sands of workers whose wages have been clipped by the bii corporations for fake stocks that went to pieces in the stock market panic. Strike-breaker Green talked about “veliable” investments for the work- ers when he knows that the major- ity of the American workers does not get enough wages to live on. Because the labor fakers with their swollen salaries gamble in stocks and look around for investments which are most successful in squeez- ing profits out of the toilers, Green took the role of stock broker over In spite of Hoover, Green, Love- stone’s predictions of smooth-going for American imperialism, and de- spite the “prosperity” propaganda of the leading members of the “Grand Fascist Council,” the stock market again suffered a severe} crash as a reflection of the declining | production in the basic industries of the country. The fact that building has been} dropping by hundreds of millions of dollars; stee] production steadily dropping to as low as 30 to 50 per cent of capacity; with automobile production at a virtual standstill, the stock market gamblers again felt the future of their profits to be not so secure, and stocks again Interest Starts First of Deposits Made DECEMBER 4th™ ‘on or before fro Last Quarterly Dividend paid on all amounts from $5.00 | to $7,500.00, at the rate of Open Mondays tall day) until 7 P.M WE MUST HAVE the radio. This is part of Green's campaign to spread “prosperity” propaganda for Hoover’s “grand fascist council,” while the bosses perfect and carry out their wage- cut drives and union-smashing moves. dropped. Not the bourgeoisie it bring only the one clan Mars (Commu: 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 in the South. is helping to organize the unorganized. is helping the unemployed miners and is preparing a campaign to help the southern Illinois miners in their fight for better conditions and a militant union. RUSH FUNDS TO Workers International Relief seen children Mwith bodies stunted and minds dulled by lack of food.” | 949 BROADWAY, Room 512 NEW YORK CITY a Mass Distribution of this pamphlet as an organic part of the Party Recruiting and Daily Worker Building Drive. ug EVERY WORKER SHOULD JOIN THE COMMUNIST PARTY WHY 32 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 lots. Rush Your Order with WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY in quantity CASH to One Million Daily Workers (Sixth Anniversary Edition) Must be distributed among the workers in basic and other industries NORTH and SOUTH —A Communist task connected with the Party Recruiting and Daily Worker Building Drive. Steel Workers Coal Miners Transportation Workers Textile Workers | Workers in all industries must |join in the celebration of the | Sixth Anniversary of the Daily | Worker through this mass dis- | tribution. The special edition | will be issued January 11, 1930. lan Orders Must Reach the | Daily Worker by January 6th. | $8.00 per one thousand copies. | $1.00 per one hundred copies. Baily $s Worker | 26-28 UNION SQ., NEW YORK | ui SRA

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