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| —= DAILY WORKER, N Y 14, 1930 Page Three GHANDI! SURRENDERS TO Allied Powers NEWARK U. S. METALBOQSTON JOBLESS ™ EW YORK, TUESDAY, J AR BRITISH, RENOUNCING Row Over Loot WORKERS WOULD JOIN INDIAN INDEPEN DENCE on Reparations BROTHERS IN CARTERET Writes in Indian Paper That “Atmosphere” Not French “Compromise” Men Have to Wear Gas Masks; Slave Seven Fitting; Fears Masses More Than British on Sanctions Reports of the Hague Conference Treachery to Even His Own Congress Demand on reparations indicate that again Comes Following British Hint of Arrest Indian dispatches show that Mahatma Ghandi, the “holy” faker of the Indian bourgeoisie which per- formed at the recent Lahore Indian National Congress the gesture of demanding independence “gradu- ally,” has taken back even the little show of militancy made at Lahore in double quick time before the dust had searcely cleared away from the congress disturbance, With the British “labor” im- perialists both coaxing and threat- ening Ghandi, who is as much in fear as they are of the Indian proletariat and what may happen with the demonstrations through- out India dated for January 26, Ghandi has in effect announced that the independence demand is given up. No Fasts for Murdered Workers. “I must confess I do not see an atmosphere for it today,’ writes Ghandi in the newspaper “Young India.” Yet it was less than two weeks ago that Ghandi saw plenty of “atmosphere” at the Lahore Con- gress. Only a few days ago, of course, the London “labor” govern- ment announced it was considering Ghandi’s arrest. Since this announcement of wiped out independence as a slogan of the} Indian bourgeoisie, and so painfully soon after its frothy gesture at La- hore, Ghandi adds a note of bank- ruptey by saying that “I want to diseover a formula”—to take the place of independence, And with demagogic mysticism says, “I am concentrating all my powers on dis- covering a workable formula.” While the formula seems to be mysteriously long and painful in coming to birth, Ghandi forecasts that it will be—just what the Brit- ish imperialists want, by stating that the resolution for independence passed at Lahore “does not rule out altogether the idea: of a con- ference with the British.” \ This attempt to deceive the Indian | masses who are pressing forward to a great upheaval against imperial- jism, is put forward under the pre- tense of a necessity of avoiding an- other “Chowri Chowra,’ the town where in 1922, twenty-four police- men were killed by real inde- pendence fighters. This so pained the old faker Ghandi that he fasted for five days—so it is claimed. Quick Change of Vision. But Ghandi has not fasted five minutes for the Indian poor who die daily from starvation and misery imposed upon them by the British rule, nor does he make any |such demonstration of “pain” at the {Bombay workers shot down on jstrike by British troops. His \“holy” feelings are touched only when Indians kill some of their op- pressors. | Therefore, it is not any feeling {against violence generally, which jhas led him to want to avoid an- jother Chowri Chowra, but a fear |that the Indian masses, led by the proletariat, may make a successful ivevolution against imperialism, and thrust the Indian bourgeoisie also into the garbage can. Nor is this unlikely. Lahore dis- patches late Friday told of a trial where two Indians, Bhagat Singh and a man named Dutt, were ap- pealing against conviction for scar- ing the Indian Assembly a year ago with a noisy but harmless bomb. When the two left the courtroom, a number of Indians began shouting “Long live the revolution!” Reports state that twelve were arrested after “an exciting scene,” which would indicate that they resisted arrest. The Indian masses are astir, and the working class, not Ghandi nor any of the Indian bourgeoisie, are at the head of the movement. Mexican Financial Crisis Upsets Things Mexican dispatches reveal the agony of the Mexican bourgeoisie who, having sold out to Yankee im- perialism are finding that it is grievously unprofitable, At the mo- | ment the pain is over the drop in the price of the Mexican silver dol- lar, which keeps going down. Now these gentlemen who thought it nice to be friends with Uncle Sam and do what Mr. Morrow, U. S. am- it don’t pay to mine silver any more. And this, in addition to the oil wells | that have long been stopped up for the most part, since there is too | much oil in the world market, and as American capitalists bought the | oil wells for their own benefit, not | for Mexico's, and can tell the Mexi- jean government to forget it if it |complains that Mexico is not being | “developed” as promised. | Altogether, Ortiz Rubio, who bassador desired in suppressing the’) changed his mind about visiting Communist Party, find that they are compelled to pay U. S, dollars for merchandise and sell for declining Merican dollars, and they are very excited about it. The mines are closing down, since California when he was informed that the Communists there were go- | ing to give him as hostile a recep- |tion as he got in Detroit, will have some difficulties when he takes office. Samoan Situation Shows Fight Ahead Reports from New Zealand, the mandate power which is a little im- perialism in itself with British im- perialism, holding British Samoa, is for a “firm policy” in Samoa, where the natives recently rioted when at- tacked by the police who tried to arrest a white sympathizer. A policeman was killed and twenty natives were ordered arrested. But the native organization, the Mau, or League of Samoans, refuse to surrender those of their number, and though no police have been ar- chiefs, Tamasese, Sir Joseph Ward, New Zealand prime minister, in an- nouncing a “firm policy” is sending a cruiser with airplanes to Samoa to foree the natives to surrender by Saturday. The situation promises a fight, as the native Maori people are brave fighters when aroused, though very hospitable to all whom they regard jas friends. The “firm policy,” cruiser, planes, bombs and all, cer- tainly has been approved by the British “labor” government. Spain’s Money Collapses; Fascists Mystified Madrid dispatches tell that the Spanish peseta is dropping on the money market, selling at 5.15 to the dollar, 55 per cent below par. It has caused an enormous sensation, and the fascist government of Primo de Rivera admits it cannot explain why the money is losing value, The best De Rivera could do was to say that it is the result of speculation, “a banking maneuver,” but he can- not name just who is to blame. Some banks are refusing to change money at all, others are reaping a land high as 7.98 pesetas. Prices of All goods are rising and there is prom- ise of trouble ahead when workers strike to gain back their standards, Jow as they are. Workers Mobilizing For Shifrin-Mineola _ Defense Conference Many working-class organiza- tions are now electing delegates for the big Shifrin-Mineola Defense Conference on Sunday, January 19, at 11 a. m., that will mark the ex- tension over a wider front of the campaign to save the ten militant workers involved in the Shifrin arfd Mineola cases. The conference has been called by the New York Di trict of the International Labor De- fense and will be held in Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irving Place. William Shifrin, after having de- fended his life from a murderous as- sault by six knife-wielding right wing thugs of the Hebrew Butchers Union, is now facing a possible life term on a charge of second degree murder. His trial opens February 17. The nine Mineola defendants, two of whom are already in jail, were framed up on charges of felon- ious assault during the 1926 fur strike. ‘The fight to save these ten mili- tants is being conducted on a tional scale as part of the I. L. D.’s general fight against the capitalist terror drive. All workers’ organi- aations are urged to elect deiegates for the January 19 conference at once and send in their credentials to the I. L. D. district office, 799 Broad- way, Room 422, ’ The mobilization of the broad masses in the Shifrin-Mineola de- fense campaign will be given further impetus at a mass meeting to be held in Irving Plaza on Friday eve- ning, January 24, at 8 o'clock. On | Saturday and Sunday, January 25- | 26, tag days will be held throughout the New York district to raise urg- ently needed funds to cover the tre- mendous expenses involved in de- fending these two cases, SING SING GUARDS TALK “STRIKE.” Because Governor Roosevelt pro- poses to remove them from the civil service division, 50 guards in Sing Sing penitentiary threatened to go on strike. Even these lackeys of capitalist oppression who take joy at shooting down imprisoned workers, rebel when their wages or conditions are tampered with. NO PROFIT IN TEXTILES ROXBOROUGH, Pa, (By Mail). —The personal estate of William Spink, late of 418 Lyceum Ave,, tex- title manufacturer, is apprai! $547,095, according to the inventory filed when Spink died last year. rested for killing one of the native | office business selling dollars for as | the irrepressible conflicts between, firstly, the looters and the looted, |and, secondly, between the looters over the loot, are to be glossed over in new “settlements” which settle nothing and leave the way open for | bigger quarrels later on. With the French and other of the Allies pounding on the question, Germany had to pledge she would |not pay reparations to the United States if she stopped paying the other Allied Bandits through the Young Plan scheme. And since it was regarded in diplomatic circles as a dirty trick for Germany to have made a separate agreement with the United States without consulting | the other bandits, these other Allies | who watch each other jealously, are “agreed” that each one will “men- tion” in the present Young Plan agreement, Germany’s agreement | with the United States in order to | recognize its invalidity, so to speak. After continual haggling by the Germans and French, with Tardieu finally telling the Germans they ar- gued too much to be good “nego- |tiators’—meaning that they jected to being held up’ the Germans got “insulted” and Tardieu calmed them by asserting that they were fine “negotiators” and he admired them for it, which shows the ability of diplomats to lie with great ease. The French, who have changed their policy on “sanctions,” given up last summer, now offer a “com- promise” to this effect: If Germany keeps up payments, France has no rights (of occupation) under the Versailles Treaty. But if Germany “wilfully” defaults, then the Young Plan is off, and the Versailles sanc- tions, occupation of German soil and so on, is allowed. Only the World Court is to decide if the default is “wilful.” All of which leaves the whole question where it began. On Bulgarian reparations, there is even to promise to pay the sums demanded. |Bons, Government, Seal 2 Men in Burning Mine (Continued from Page One) took place a few days ago, against the decision of the U.M.W. The fire in the Carl Melton mine started from gasoline spilled from a defective gasoline motor used to pull mine cars. Government Approves. Volunteer rescue crews came on horse and mule back for miles to rescue the two trapped below. The imprisoned miners rang the alarm bell, showing they were still alive, just before the mine company of- ficials, with the consent and ap- proval of G. P. Powell, Evansville | Federal Mine Inspector, started blocking the shaft. Both men leave widows and young children. ore cy’ Determined to Win. TAYLORVILLE, Il, Jan. 13.— The determination of the miners to fight and to win the fight is un- limited; the militancy of the Tay- lorville district pickets ia known far and wide. The recent arrests made by “new” dicks, which the Peabody Coal Co. has imported from the “machine gun” city, as Chicago is referred to by the miners here, have more than doubly strengthened that militancy, that determination to fight on and on, until the Na- trol of the mining industry and fate stand the corrupt machine of the old U. M. W. A. which has completely merged with the coal operators. Several meetings were held here for the preparation of the opening of the W.LR. selief station and miners from as far as Auburn, Kin- caid, Tavey and many other mining | towns came in to stand by and protect the W. I. R. relief station from any attack by the sheriff and his thugs. Defense corps have been formed consisting of young miners who have volunteered to guard the place all night. * * Young Miners Meet. The Workers International Relief call for contributions of food, cloth- ing and money to be sent to its office at 23 South Lincoln St., Chi- cago, or the W.I.R. national office, |175 Fifth Ave., New York City. Yesterday, at Liberty Hall in Zeigler, Ill, and at the W. I. R. headquarters in Eldorado, sectional conferences of young miners were held, under the auspices of the un- ion, and developed plans for sub- district organization for the youth section of the National Miners Union. These conferences, and others to be held by young miners in Belleville, January 26, 10 a. m. at Odd Fellows Hall; in Staunton, January 26, 10 a. m.,, in Kalars Hall; and in Taylorville February 2, will prepare for a state wide young miners’ conference February ¥, in Belleville, DISCOVER TEACHERS AS “LABOR” CLASS BUTTE, Mont. (By Mail).—A school teacher who sued for wages under the state law relative to work- ers’ wages won her case, The Dis- trict Judge William E. Carroll ruled that “the term ‘labor’ should not be narrowed down to only those who toil with physical effort.” a deadlock, with Bulgaria refusing | tional Miners Union has full con-} of the miners who can no longer) | Average Days a Week -ay Between $22-$24 Per Week; A Examined in Own Time (By a Worker Correspondent) NEWARK, N. J. (By Mail).—In |The Daily Worker of December 13, | 1929, you have letters from worker: about the conditions of the worker {in the U. S. Metals Co. plant at/and a physical examination every | In the artiele you | two weeks, which has to be taken on j |do not even mention the Balback | his own time, not during working | |Carteret, N. J. | plant on Doremus Ave., in Newark, In. J., which is also a U. S. Metals | Co. The conditions which the worker \speaks of in the Carteret plant are jeven worse in the Balback plant. Men work eight and ten hours a day over furnaces where they wear gas masks all during the time and , work seven days a week, no Sun- days or holidays off. The average pay of a man for a full week (seven | days) is between $22 and $24 a week, and he has to have blood tests hours. .It would be a good plan to get The Daily Worker to these workers. These workers would be only too glad to join their fellow workers in Carteret in a fighting organization to get better working conditions, i —METAL WORKER. (By a Worker Correspondent) ist Russia the | fought against the system |tem of fining for some supposed same system is used in this hell hole of capitalism. Two Bethlehem Steel (By a Worker Correspondent) SAN FRANCISCO, Calf—T wo workers were killed in an accident on a ship of the Bethlehem Steel Corporativn in San Francisco Bay, due to faulty equipment. This is the second fatal accident reported Ford Plant Worker Describes Tyranny |. Right here in Ford’s you can find DETROIT (By Mail).— In czar-| yourself always under the whip of |f thousands of unemplo workers always | some petty straw boss or service | Workers in the campaign. of}man. You can be sent home for |the auto workers the building trades’ \fining. In China, India and other | breaking any of ten thousand rules | Workers are the hardest hit by un- ob- | colonial countries we find this sys-|laid down by the company, whether |¢mployment. it is spitting on the floor or throw- jare expected to feel like slaves. FORD WORKER. Corp. Workers Killed | wit! oae month, as in December |two workers were also killed on one of the Bethlehem ships. The Beth- lehem Steel Corporation has just recently bought out the Columbia |Steel Corporation of, Pittsburgh, | Calif. Wage “Increase (By a Worker Correspondent) DETROIT (By Mail).—Prior to |the increase in pay, Dept. No. 6510 of River Rouge Plant employed ap- proximately 210 men on each shift | who turned out an average of 40,000 | value bushings per shift. | Since the increase each shift em- ploys between 130 and 140 men and ”” Spells Speedup the increase in production is from | 40,000 to between 46 and 48 thous- and per shift. | Men from this department report that this is easily done through me- chanical system lately introduced. Also from two to four men have been put off each shift of inspec- tors in this same department. i FORD SLAVE. CRISIS SHAKES U, §. CAPITALISM ‘Steel Industry Still on Decline (Continued from Page One) average of production in Decem- ber. That is contrary to the usual experience for the time of year, production this month would have involved starting the month with increased pig-iron supplies.” | This is a startling admission, that Pe the strategic period, when pro- | duction should show most marked |gains, the reverse is true and that the crisis is sharpening at the most favorable period for capitalism! The Federal Reserve Bank for Boston (January 10) reports: | “In November, there was a | substantial decline in activity in | practically all lines of industry, not only in New England but in the entire country. “Carloadings of merchandise | and miscellaneous freight during November in New England fell off considerably, not only from the October volume, but also from the corresponding month a year ago. .. New England carloadings figures for November were below the average for the three-year period of 1923-25 for the first time in five years.” There is the bombshell report of hundreds of bank failures which the capitalist press tries to hush up in line with the Hoover policy of “prosperity propaganda.” R, G, Dun & Co., financial statisticians, reveal the fact that in 1929 there were 437 bank failures—an increase of 65 over 1928. More outstanding still is the fact that the amount in- volved in the bank failures jumped 69 per cent. In 1928 the total in- volved was $129,649,605. In 1929 it jumped nearly $100,000,000, or a total of $218,796,582! These facts are’ the handwriting on the wall. There is nothing “spot- ty” about the present crisis of U. S. imperialism. It is deep-rooted, black, all-embracing and rapidly growing to the severest in the entire his- tory of U. S. capitalism. Organize “Flying” Clubs To Become Bombing Clubs. LONDON, (By Mail)—More than 5,000 aviators are in British flying clubs, and 1,000 of them have pilots’ licenses. The Prince of Wales has helped to poularize the cut of “air- consciousness” in preparation for the coming imperialist war. plane manufactureres report the de- mand for planes exceeds the supply. Negro Children Die in Fire. PARIS, Ky., (By Mail)—Three Negro children, the oldest four years, were burned to death as they slept when fire destroyed their house in the Ruckerville distret. |“Disbanded” Fascists in N. Y. Try Frame- Up of Italian Worker Members of Fascio Benito Mus- solini, a fascist organization which had advertised itself as “disbanded” WORKERS MARCH, IN RELIEF FIGHT Organize Unemployed Council (Continued from Page One) ployed and unemployed, and a fight for the demands of social insurance outlined by the Trade Union Unity League, the members elected three delegates to the unemployment con- erence to be held Friday, January |17, at 3782 Woodward St. The committee told of the role of the A. F. of L. of als in co-ope ing with the to lower bosses the workers conditions by sanct wage cuts. | Already five locals of the A. F. of L. in Detroit have chosen dele- y’s conference, Paint- 342; Carpenters gates to Frid: ers Locals 37 and local Engi Local 5 and | Plaste Local 16. | | The T.U.U.L. and the Auto Work- ers Union are leading the campaign | |to organize the unemployed for a |fight for militant demands. Steps \are being taken to enlist the tens auto t to A mass meeting for the building breaking of rules or poor work-|ing paper or any thing. This Ford | Workers has been cs led for Wednes- manship. And we find that this system is a means by which they |day, January 15, 7:30 p. m., s oe WVood- | Su Trade Union 3782 | Center, ward St. | Steps will be taken at this mee jing to organize a powerful Building | | Trades Workers Industrial Union as part of the T. U. U. L. here, All |building workers, regardless of craft, | Will be taken into this union. | | Buffalo Officials Threaten Jobless | BUFFALO, N. Y., Jan. The | Buffalo city officials have resorted to threats in order to try to halt | \the rapidly rising militancy of the scores of thousands of unemployed workers here. | The officials have made an offi- |cial statement that all unemployed | workers having anything to do with |the Unemployed Council organized by the Trade Union Unity League| will get no-relief from the city. In an attempt to allay the rising mili- taney of the workers, the city has made a gesture of providing a very ismall dole to the unemployed. The so-called relief amounts to $5 a week for a family with 5 or 6 children. This will be cut off if jthe worker joins the Unemployed Council, the city officials threaten. | This action has made the mem- bers of the council more determined than ever to organize all the un- employed for the demands of the/ | T.U.ULL. | On Monday, January 20, at 8 several weeks ago, held a secret|P- ™., a mass meeting of the un-| meeting January 13 at their head-| employed will be held at Engineer's quarters which wound up in a brawl | Hall, 36 West Huron St., under the resulting in six injured fascists,| auspices of the Trade Union Unity and preparation for greater steel | Air- | who are now trying to frame up {Ernest Lavino, an Italian worker, ;on charges of felonious assault. Lavino, president of the Biellese Workers’ Progressive Club, an Ital- ian anti-fascist organization, arrested while in the company of several friends in a store at the corner of 56th St. and 8th Ave., last Saturday night. A notorious fascist and a policeman entered the store, and the former pointed the |worker cut. ‘Lavino is greatly hated by the’ fascists for his activi- ties in the Salvatore Accorsi, and the Mario Gilletti cases. After a hearing at Fifty-fourth St. police station, La- vino was placed under $2,500 bond. This was supplied by the Interna- tional Labor Defense which is fight- ing the case. | The fascists accused Lavino of being one of a group that allegedly jattacked them after a meeting. Six |fascists claimed to have been beat- len up. | It is an open fact that the fas- jcists’ activity is being directed | through the Italian consulate, which lin turn receives orders |from Benito Mussolini. Lavino is president of the work- ers’ club which sent a delegate to the ILD convention and which was the West dom of Accorsi. Relief Conference For Striking Miners A preliminary conference of all | sympathetic organizations has been be held Sunday, January 12, at 2 p. m, at 93 Mercer St., Newark, N. J. “This conference will take |up plans for a relief drive for the striking miners of Illinois, and the phuilding of relief machinery in prep- | aration for the coming strike of silk and dye workers of Paterson. 8 oe DETROIT W. I. R. CONFERENCE. DETROIT, Jan, 12.—A call has been sent out by the Detroit section of the W. I. R. for a conference to | organize all working class forces in | Detroit and vicinity for support of |the striking Illinois miners, ‘The conference will be held Friday, Jan- juary 24, at 7 p. m,, at the Trade | Union Center, 8782 Woodward Ave. The following relief stations have been opened in Detroit: 1343 E. Ferry “St., 9148 Oakland, 3014 Ye- mans, Hamtramck; 5169 W. 14th St., and 3782 Woodward Ave. Supplies and funds raised should be sent to the W. I, R., 8782 Woodward Ave. ‘ was | directly | most active in fighting for the free- | called by the New Jersey section of | the Workers International Relief, to | | League. | ey, Ge Unemployed Graw In Pontiac. PONTIAC, Mich., Jan. 13.—The majority of the workers of Pon- tiae, a center of the auto industry, are unemployed. Wage cuts are | the lot of those still employed, and these work but a few days a week. | Over 300 attended the last un- | employed meeting. A large number |of Mexican and Negro Workers were among the 400 to 500 at the January 8 meeting called by the |T. U. U. L. for the unemployed workers, The Communist Party here ex- pects to exceed its quota before the Party Recruiting Drive is over. A mass meeting against the white terror in Mexico has been called by the Party here, for Frid: |17, at 4% North Sagina {and Spanish workers will speak. | | Otto Huiswood, head of the Negro} Department of the Party, will speak. | The Lenin Memorial meeting will be held by the Pontiac local of the Party on Friday, January 24, at Wolverine Hall, 31% West Pike. Jack Stachel, district organizer of the Communist Party, will be the| ia speaker, | inglish | | P | Should Join | | conscious worker, Pre: Five Cents Rush Your Orders WORKERS LIBRA 39 EAST 125TH STREET {who had prote January | t “Only by becoming a member of the Communist Party can you give your greatest services to the cause of the working class. Only as a Party mem- || ber can you really fight effectively against the enemies of the working class” —EARL BROWDER Why Every Worker Communist Party 32 pages of mental dynamite for every class- and in the language of the workers of the shops, mills and factor ences stents, Join the Race for Revolutionary Competition! nese Boe acount sTaNE WN PITTSBURGH 5,000 Out Over Wage Cut; TUUL Active | (Continued from Page One) stead of seven; ten-hour day instead of 12; company to pay repair: stead of drivers; 40 per cent com- mission on each dollar instead of three dollars on the first nine dol- Jer the old scale. T.U.U.L. Comes To Aid. The Trade Union Unity League is preparing to issue a leaflet to of wage cuts and growing speed- | mobilize all workers to the aid of up in the Detroit . They the strikers, and calling on the are organizing to fi lowering | strikers not to allow misleaders te of conditions, and ar ing the | swindle them. ee ae asics The capitalist press is violently Photo shows auto slaves belt. at Ford rikers, It is print “violence” and try: Il repressive forces he Muste outfit is @ itself into the opposed to the | ing storie ing to mobiliz nst them to i Show Harmony of U.S. nus Authorities With adership of the strike, with the *, . : > idea of selling it out, as it sold out Fascism in Poland | the wiizabethton and Marion textile strikes. The close harmony of Ar ae federal authorities WALL S$" H IN CUBA WASHINGTON, Jan. 12.—Furtlier lence of Wall Street control of a, outside of the fact that the art of the island is owned by U. nperialists, is the fact that thr ourths of the money sup- ply in Cuba, estimated at $138,000,- 000, was American. IORIAL MEET CHICAGO. The Lenin Memorial meeting in Chicago will be held on Tuesday, January 21, 8 p.m., at the Ashlan¢ Auditorium, Ashland and Van Buren Comrades Bedacht and Thompson of the National Miners Union will be the main speakers. r of Los been sentenced to his sister's home een raided by Pil- mes last week. Grosberg and five other los An- geles workers were held for depor- head- Party by raid on the IN Communist distribution t Li nkee tation after a quarters of following the Young Commun lets against Y Nicaragua last y tary of M LENIN the The I. L. D., however, is appealing the writ. \ an active member of Grosberg the Communist Party, stands sec- ond throughout the country on the drive for 50,000 new readers of the E Labor Defender, monthly organ of the International Labor Defense. He has been in this country for fo) 16 years. The other workers facing deportation with him are F. Fire- stone, Nick Dovranos, W. T. Zi 4 Frank Spector, and R. Aronberg, | all of Los Angeles. \ in the Chief Detective Hynes, of the in- famous Red Squad in Los Angeles, .. , promised to drop all charges if Baily S@iz Worker Grosberg would leave the city and : give up his activities in the class struggle. The latter’s refusal NATION-WIDE followed by the writ of deportation. persecution and Subscription Drive wik again be listed in to- morrow’s paper. Communist’s Reply to Anarchist. Convinees | Every Party member 200 At Harlem Meet} Every “Daily” reader : aie | Every sympathetic worker | Yesterday at a meeting called by) fyery Party District the Spanish Workers’ Club, at Har-| 7°" Vat lem ¢ +200 workers heard| Every YCL District the spo of the anarchists} Every workers’ organization 1 the form of the | t the terror in| co which workers adopted at their big Mella ma:s meeting Fri- CAN NOW During the Period of This Drive SECURE FREE nehez, a mem- A library of books that should ist Party. At} find fp every workers of the audience} home, in every workers head js anarch swered to the de ence by Fernandes § ber of the Commu least 95 per cent Perez, was an-| ht of the audi- | ace in voted in favor of the Communist} 7"? Party after hearing both sides in| rters. the debate. | the Mella mass meeting the] =» F BOOKS on workers were so incensed at the an- arc atte te ack the So-| MARXISM t Union wanted to ow them out all. | LENINISM OVIET DRIV AID fot WASHINGTON, D. C. (By Mail). See or al unem-| LABOR HISTORY ployment was given as a major | cause of dependency by more than, REVOLUTIONARY half of the fa s covered by a; FICTION tudy of 1,000 families applying for | air to three Boston relief agencies. | : The figures are given by the United} Wéll be sent you free States Bureau of Labor Statistics. j des of Kabor Statistics. | upon following basis: | One yearly subscription to the Daily Worker at $6 will entitle you to any $1.50 book FREE. (There | are some $2 books in this category.) |Two yearly subscriptions to the |Daily Worker at $6 each will en- title you to $3 worth of books FREE, i s of the Communist Party, | Clubs, and Headquarters, jany workers’ organization, by en- |gaging its membership in a drive for subscriptions can secure FREE | a library valued at 850 for 50 | yearly subscriptions | a library valued at $100 for 100 ‘ee yearly subscriptions a library valued at $150 for 150 | @ early subscriptions, ete. | ORGANIZE YOUR _ FORCES AT ONCE Enter this Campaign to Build Mass Circulation! the sented in simple style Copy ; Write us for any further | information you may need, | Baily TAS Worker |26 UNION SQUARE | New York City With Cash to the RY PUBLISHERS NEW YORK CITY y