The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 10, 1930, Page 3

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Bs oN : PATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, FEBRUARY YO, 1938 manent re ; Sar Page Three 30VIET SEES THREAT en OF WAR IN CAMPAIGN | 322 Pemore sem OF LEAGUE OF NATIONS CHIC AGO GRAFTERS REFUSE TO PAY | SNOW SHOVELLERS ‘Will Mail Pay When City Gets Money’ Starving Unemployed Workers Are Told |Organization Into TUUL Only Way to Halt | “Socialist Mayor Has Police Item {nternational Capitalism’s Basis on Kulak to Be Wiped Out By Collectivization Drive ‘Zone From Baltic to Black Sea To Be Speedily| Cleansed of Kulak By Socialist Advance MOSCOW (By Inprecorr Mail service),—The Soviet economic pub- lication, “Ekonomicheskaya Zhisn,” deals with the appeal issued by the secretary of the National Minority are regarded by capitalism as an im- portant support in its struggle against the Soviet Union. We must draw the consequences from this fact. Congress of the League of Nations, Evald Ammende, for a relief action under the leadership of the U.S.A. | on behalf of the Kulaks. “Ekonomicheskaya Zhisn” writes: {n the present situation when a bi ler class struggle is proceeding in the village, this appeal of Ammende can only work as an active support of the counter-revolution and an encouragement to the Kulaks to in- rane their attacks on the Soviet power. Ammende has disclosed one of the most important details of the stra- tegy of the capitalist world. His appeal shows that the Kulaks and in particular those of western origin, In order to consolidate our de-/} This, Says Worker Correspondent | fensive capacity the whole western zone of the Soviet Union from the Baltic to the Black Sea must be col- lectivised at high pressure, The whole frontier zone must be com- pletely collectivised in the shortest possible space of time. Tractors, combine machines and everything necessary for the collec- tivisation must be poured into this district. In the frontier districts |the Kulaks must be completely eli- | minated. That must be our answer to the attempts of international capitalism to find a basis inside the Soviet Union for an intervention jagainst us. French Government Hints At War on PARIS, Feb. 9,—While the fran- tic conduct of the White Guard Czarist Russians to let bourgeoisie and its government, and it hopes, vainly, of course, to stran- Socialist: “Hold tight boss, it’s beginning to shawe!” FOSTER 10 TELL HOW USSR BUILDS ‘Unemployment Drops | Where Workers Rule With 6,000,000 workers walking | the streets of capitalist America and the number constantly mounting, the message that William Z. Foster, na- ‘| tional secretary of the Trade Union Unity League will bring from the Bodies : | Soviet Union at a great mass meet- (By a Worker Correspondent.) dren and family? I suppose we can | CHICAGO.—We unemployed |get along without money. Well workers of Chicago shovel snow|™aybe Big Bill can, but there are Se ere ACG | hundreds of poor men that were out | e. After shoveling | shoveling snow and didn’t have cof- |snow for the city during a recent |fee and money even then. Organize snow storm we are told that the city | into Unemployed Councils, led by will mail our pay to us when they |the fighting Trade Union Unity! get the money. How about the chil- ' League! | |Phila. Police Out to Arrest All Knitting Mill) Hands (By « Worker Correspondent.) |Co., against whom 1,400 workers are | PHILADELPHIA.—The police of |striking. The four hosiery workers Philadelphia are running wild. Not|were brought before injunction content with arresting strikers, any | judge McDevitt on charges of con- |hosiery knitter is liable to be picked |tempt of court for violation of an jup and arrested, simply because | injunction against the Aberle strik- | they are hosiery workers. ‘ers. When it was found they were | This actually happened when four | not strikers but worked in a mill Picture of the march of he learned of the delegat Police began to slug the unemployed. Bek tion for the Feb. 26 international demonstration is going on more enthusi« 400° STRIKING: AT SPARTA MINE Young Miner Confab in Ohio Feb. 16 (Continued from Page One) The worker work Bost re 3 Oo much thou ing uly than door. Mobiliz ever in Boston it the back beaten. . Allen, when 1 from Page One) | WorkerShows JOBLESS RALLY = Up the Bosses Pei “Charity you would p I want the ,» TN CONNECTICUT Militant Action Makes Jail Doors Open “prove” that | gle this by suppressing the Commv- | * & B is venti I. J. 2 a pe ledged a. fic! Communists, or even sae particu- | nist Barty; Treeking’ of? relations | 2& Wednesday night in Central | workers searching for a boarding |near the Aberle they were charged eee eid aay faa t wor to |} es pledge a i UGE ae larly, the Soviet Ambassador, is re-| with the Soviet Union and making | 9P¢r@, House, 67th St. and Third | house were arrested by the notori-| with “breach of peace” and placed are acce] ca » the challenge of the|« - belie Aeros Soa a a earn sant ed sponsible for the “disappearance” | ready for war on the Workers’ and Ve» is of vital significance to all/ous detective, Mike Slavin, As ajunder $8,000 bond. They learned AS 5 ie “he ape falty dish- Salvation Army are. eet a aaa i bal te of the white guard general Koutie-| Peasants’ Republic in agreement | Workers both employed and unem-| Philadelphia policeman he is a|what capitalist justice is. ing the already low wages of the| Not ® long ago I was discharged | POY Ve arg eee poff, may be scorned, the fact that | with other imperialist powers. ployed. ‘ |watchdog for the Aberle Hosiery —PHILADELPHIA WORKER. | VF oe the N MU. cave that it will Lom hospital, crippled, |"°r @ pa the Prenal Se eeviiiae lille te take? Foster has just returned from a miners, the N.M.U. says that it Wall eeenanie belts Tete wel to: of rent. The resolu- go _ * #* | visit to the Workers’ Republic and continue to lead the struggles re-| +) neither mon b or anybody accepted unanimously by a ing up the absurd yarns is a menac- ing symptom of the intention of France to seek the first chance ex- cuse for a break with the Soviet Union as a prelude to war. Thus it is seen that the paper, e Belgium in Anti-Soviet Front. BRUSSELS, Feb. 9.—Paul Hy- mans, Belgian minister of foreign affairs, yesterday told the Chamber jof Deputies that the government is jhe returns full of enthusiasm for \the gigantic Five-Year Economic Plan of Socialist Construction of which he made a special strudy. On Wednesday night he will tell of the 5,000 Apply For a (By « Worker Correspondent.) | PHILADELPHIA.—I am enclos- ing a picture which shows clearly Few Jobs in Phila. jclosed by this worker-showed 5,000 | workers unemployed who applied for | a few jobs advertised by the Shubert | sisting the bosses’ attacks | Picket At Moundsville. The N.M.U. points to the militant fight now being waged by 700 miners in Moundsville, W. Va., who, to take care of me. I had a few cents in my pocket and with these take me to the Salva lief Departme i pai Whe 1s cheers * | Communist followed the announcement of the slogans of the Party against imperial- i for the Defense of the es Rime ™/“not disposed” to reopen negotia-| wonderful progress in the building/ the terrible unemployment situation| Theatre. The Trade Union U under its complete leadership, are t anuna ae The disruptive ac- Temps,” which speaks as a semi-|4i.,- for resumption of relations | of Socialism being made under the in Philadelphia. Why not mass meet-|League is organizing the Philadel- | stri aE eee AAR SDNY Seah Ut wae eiies SEER A pect She cope and sole eeu official organ of the government, editorially on Friday, indulged in a violent and vicious attack on the Soviet Government and its embassy. After a long diatribe against a straw man of its own making, em- bracing charges that the O.G.P.U. of the Soviet Union is active in Paris “corrupting our workers, per- jpetrating crime and then sheltering hintee the fiction of diplomatic im- munity,” the Temps says, signifi- cantly that it is “necessary to end such a state of affairs.” Evidently the “corruption” of French workers by their voluntary turning to the Communist Party of France is what galls the French with Moscow. Wa, ani |Red Army Journal Foresees War Led by U. S. Reports of the United Press on Friday from Moscow stated that the “Red Star,” organ of the War Com- missariat, points out that American imperialism “has assumed the lead- ing role in the effort to organize diplomatic intervention against the Soviet Union.” The report states that Soviet opinion is that U. S. is trying to settle the conflict between Poland and Germany as the main obstacle to a united armed attack on the Soviet Union. German Workers Defy Prohibition of Rights BERLIN (By Inprecorr Mail Ser- vice).—Under the leadership of the Young Communist League a protest demonstration against the police bloodbath in Hartmanhsdorf took place there yesterday. After the meeting the workers marchel in procession through the streets. the post and telegraph offices and brought armored cars onto the streets. In Koenigsberg demonstrations took place on the streets in three places. They were organized by the workers’ children and hundreds of boys and girls marched through Five-Year Plan, progress which has astounded and filled with new fear | and hate the entire capitalist world. All the proceedseof the Foster meeting will go to build strengthen Labor Unity, weekly or- gan of the Trade Union Unity | League, and the meeting will initiate |a campaign for 5,000 subscriptions | to Labor Unity. Tickets at 25 cents | are on sale at the TUUL, 26 Union /Sq.; Workers Bookshop, 26 Union | Sq.; Needle Trades Workers Indus- trial Union, 131 W. 28th St.; Hotel, | Restaurant and Cafeteria Workers | Union, 16 W. 21st St: | NOU. S, AID TO UNEMPLOYED (Continued from Page One) help the working class. Neither La Follette’s kindly crit- icism of his fellow parasite, Hoover, nor the boss collaboration of the A. and | ings for the unemployed in Phila- jdelphia, preparing them for the {great demonstration February 26% ae oie Editor’s Note—The picture en- (By a Worker Correspondent.) | ELDOADO, Ill.—There are seven | mines in three miles of the depot. |Only three of them are working. One is equipped with modern ma- |chinery which threw over 400 men \Church Spurns the Unemployed Workers (Continued from Page One) |them but chloroform to dope them and-make them helpless before the attacks of the bosses and their gov- ernment, The gravity of the present crisis of capitalism was also stressed and the workers were asked to join the Unemployed Council and fight for |phia unemployed workers into coun- |cils, and unemployed demonstrations are planned, leading up to the big {demonstration February 26. out of employment. These are simi- ilar to conditions in all Illinois mines. I find The Daily Worker the best |way to get to the workers, especial- ly the unemployed miners, of whom there are so many thousands. | —ILLINOIS MINER. 'Textile Strike Starts _ at Call of Union Board | (Continued from Page One) | women and yet the old Associated | Silk Workers and the dead A. F. of |L. union, the United Textile Work- ers, never did anything to organize the women. Only in the N.T.W.U. do the women workers find equality | and find that their demands receive | full attention. Equal pay for equal lof Paisley-owned mines, and for a eries of 19 demands. These work- ers are picketing daily in the face | of standing injunction and the mob- lilization of loeal police and state troopers against them. More effective methods for meet- ployment, twin-brothers in the oper- ators’ offensive against the coal | miners will be taken up and fight- |ing policies adopted to meet the sit- | uation. $1.50 a Day Wages. Delegations are expected from | Western Pennsylvania, the Anthra- jcite, Ohio, West Virginia, Indiana, \Illinois, Kentucky and other unor- ganized fields, where miners are now getting as low as $1.5 | order to ra ‘ |for transportation of delegates, lo- |cals of the N.M.U. are being urged |to arrange affairs at once. Dele- gates are also expected from the anthracite fields. For further in- formation, miners are urged to | write to the national office of the | National Miners Union, room 410, |119 Federal S$ ttsburgh, Pa. 2 note was even my de: then after t to ask more description, it was decided to igive me some form of relief, New Machinery Makes Over 400 Miners Jobless | ing wage cuts and increased unem-| I could {each and one at 20 cents The hotel, filthy and for unfit of the bed: min, building were with grim room windo in three After charity I was told by the salvation army enough for me and ¢ to take care though they had eral hundred de The n of all my statements, i s taken, and ertinence igree and cellent | present. m tory, Twer the s given meal’ coupons for in the very worst possible ant in the city. With them two s at‘ 15 cer every was a dark, glo vadly ventilated builc an habitation. Mo: were infested with v The floors and walls of the e time spittle. hi | Bank § a week of this christic considered tl had done the org sek. reason the t y xamines applicants for charity s quickly discipline meeting. workers were released at 10 p, m. A large group of workers waited for them outside of the jail and gave them an enthusiastic reception. The unemployed mas point in the mployed ha in Waterbury, Conn. , |tory-gate meetings have been held, and daily meetings are held at 774 ernoon end: force down tk The two A Council of Several The factories squelched by the ex- the workers .. Greet Released Leaders at Jail. -seven joined the Party at arrested meeting is truggle Un- ady been formed fac- The mass meeting yesterday aft- sed the demands and plans of action of the T.U.U.L., and the Unemployed Councils, and for ation of all workers, There are 15,000 unemployed in Brass City, Conn. running only three and four days a | The bosses are attempting to utilize the army of unemployed to are already intolerably Yesterday workers demonstra-| the streets. on of the A. | “Work or Wages.” work and abolition of night work ar ae “| sah hee tandards of the workers Many tions took place on the streets inj In Gumbinnen severe collisions|F. of L., and the “socialists” will! The fight for “Work or Wages” for women are among the specific Ohio Youth Conference. ane eg ithe ee * aoe es a a eae committed! aie ( Halle despite the police prohibition. | occurred between police and demon-| Prevent the mass mobilization of the | must be a real and stubborn fight | demands of women workers in Pat- SIPTSSUR GE Pa. | Mob. Oost ee ice ia ae, “ indred families received A number of| Unemployed under the leadership of | to compel capitalist industry to sup- | erson. hoe bg prevent any f going to revolu- The attempts of the police to dis- perse them only attracted new masses of workers. In face of the determined attitude of the workers the police did not dare to make any arrests. strating, workers. | workers were injured. | A street demonstration also took | place in Halberstadt. Over 3,000,000 Jobless. According to official figures there jthe Trade Union Unity League and it | mined fight for “work or wages,” | for unemployment insurance, and | this fight will be carried on to a 2 Communist Party for a deter-| {port jobless workers with unem- ployment insurance, and this must ‘be linked to and demand for emer- gency and immediate relief from | capitalist treasuries. While capital- Bart reported that 45 per cent of all silk and dye workers wére young workers. Speed-up of these young workers is especially intense and the dye houses are worse of all. jestablish a District Youth Section jin Ohio and to prepare the young miners for a struggle against the hing wage cuts and the al- unbearable conditions in the tionary worker: those social oute: nals” them over to the pol tection of the property-owning cla! to detect ed “crimi- and turn e for the pro- cond, pi under capit Rose City, n recent weeks. als are crowded with starving and sick unemployed. toss and Chaunt were the speakers at a mass meeting in Brass Conn. unemployed The Many hos- In Mischovitz in Upper Silesia | were 2,050,000 workers in receipt | finish, in spite of Senator Fess’ |ism cannot solve unemployment, it} Pay is only $7 a week for gitls | Fronat ae oe eaters mea and third, to prevent a lica ware Trenent: cLReie aan & collisions occurred between demon-| of unemployed pay on the 16th inst, | Statement that the Hoover adminis-|j. responsible for it, and must be | and boys who are expected to work | Wont) Miners Union is calling & cs” from trying to live of ¢ Meche dlséaudon” aod. Osea ration would not do anything “in , : trict young miners conference which they could be making wu lengthy ussion and mili strating workers and police who at- plus 200,000 receiving so-called | (held responsible by the working 12-16 hours a day and do the jobs |will take place Sund February | spirit for i ediate action. A reso- tempted to disperse them. A num-|crisis support which is paid out|the line of granting unemployed qjass, which must not allow itselfito | of men. The union fights for these | “+ 5 : ine Hall, Bel. | CL temselves in mill, mine or SEA GESR AM IREEAS 4 per of workers were arrested and| after the unemployed pay has been oles,” for the jobless millions. |e victimized and have the burden | demands for all young workers; | 2&2 &; D> at Bohemian Mall, Bev,| tory, helping to pile up profits for|lution form: Sey aan the ee many injured. A policeman was|exhausted. The “Rote Fahne”| Another capitalist politician who |\o¢ the crisis thrust upon it, but must | minimum wage of $20 a week: |e ts NEU im Ohin and to tee { ett Britain, Bri rt and other Une also injured. reckons that the number of unreg-| Suddenly happened on the unemploy- | jemand relief from the capitalists | higher wages for all workers; equal | pus OF ‘he N-MLU @ Ohio, Ane t9) Not will I ever give to | Britain, Bridgerost and othes Un: In Schneidemuehl over 2,000| istered unemployed is about a mil-|™ent question was Governor Roose-| ang their government. pay for equal work; 8-hour day, 5-|Sn MU incale are to send at least COP, the a auch | emp tent oe G aaae workers marched in procession thru|lion and the total therefore about| velt of New York, prop of the very | ‘The T.U.U.L. Secretary also |day week for all workers; 6-hour| te, voung mines delegates, Stafters, but many y T will | nanimor the streets. The police occupied | 3,250,000. Tammany machine that uses its po-| ,ointed out that capitalism was un-|day, 5-day week for all young| verve nea itne do cha vaines of ive to destroy them and help make jlice foree to attempt to smash the | atJe to solve unemployment, that| workers under 18 years; abolition] y,, °° conditions Jn the mines of |this a fit world for workers to live] 4p. : : ' . | demonstration of unemployed in New | the working class must carry on its | of child labor under 15 years fauelcuunety: (Ore uaveadily > BECAME tri. DG: | Fight the Right Danger. A Soviet to Build Combined Harvesters | York City, Gov. Roosevelt's bril- truggles, aiming at the overthrow The convention instructed ‘th eacmcneen canys stHeL CRs Wy Be: cHuy) Pea See Hundred Proletarians for |liant scheme for the relief of un-| Suse. A ention instructed the in-/ follow wage cuts, Conditions that} write About Your Conditions MOSCOW (By Inprecorr Mail Service).—he building of the most modern and complicated agricultural machines, the so-called combine ma- chines, will be carried on at “Kom- munar” works in Sapproshye and it the new factory in Saratov. The ‘Kommunar” works will produce U. S. Holds 7 in Detroit for Fight of Jobless (Continued from Pace One) missioner, to Washington recent- ly, unquestionably to arrange the present attack on Michigan work- ers, and their leader, the Commu- nist Party. Two other successful meetings were held the same evening at Mar- 800 such machines this year. production which is planned to bring 10,000 machines a year will com- mence next year. The new factory in Saratov will produce combine ma- chines according to the system of the Russian engineer, Borodin. “Murder”, W.LR. Says of Utah MineExplosion (Continued from Page ° . criminal consequences of this policy and has supported the militant Na- tional Miners’ Union which fights against the fiendish speed-up schemes of the bosses, demands proper safety precautions and com- pensation insurance when workers are injured. The struggles in the he | employment is headed by the pro- posal that “it would be better to re- duce employment for all worke: rather than to eliminate any jobs.” This so-called “dividing up the work” is precisely what nearly all the capitalists are doing now. Be- sides firing hundreds of thousands of workers those left on the job work from one to four days a week—with sharply reduced wages and ‘are but little better off than the unemploy- ed. This little trick is just one of the capitalist devices to forestall the ployment insurance—a demand that is burning itself into the minds of the American workers. 5 Those workers who are asked to accept part-time work should above all realize that the “part time pay” demand for the payment of unem-| of capitalism and the establishment of a Workers’ and Farmers’ Govern- |ment—a Soviet. Murry Melvin, member District Buro, Y. C. L., discussed the posi- | tion of the young workers in the ipresent crisis and urged the work- ers to join the Y-C.L. Twenty-five /young workers and 12 adults joined |the Unemployed Council, a majority |of whom joined the Communist Party and the Young Communist League. The Unemployed Council of Jamestown will hold another mass meeting before the February 26 demonstration. in Great Britain on January 27 totaled 1,491,500, compared with 1,473,400 on January 20—an increase coming district executive committee of the National Textile Workers’ preparation for a strike, the date of which will be set by the committee, | acting in consultation with the na- tional executive committee. Resolu- tions adopted instruct the incoming committees to intensify organiza- tion of mill, shop and building com- mittees. Called to action in readi- ness for strike struggle, silk and dye workers in the Paterson dis- trict of the N.T.W.U. are thus strengthening their forces. Many new members have lately joined the union and a new speeding up of or- ganization work was made certain by the convention. The convention, which started Saturday, was still continuing at Union to take all necessary steps in| | existed for many years are being |wiped out. Machines and mechani- jeal loaders are being everywhere, throwing out of the in- | dustry thousands of miners, and in- slaving those who remain. Adult miners are being disemployed, young miners are coming into the mining industry by ever-increasing numbers | because they are better fitted to |stand the pace of the machines. It is pecause of these conditions that day and the five-day week, to estab- |lished in the N.M.U. jthe Youth Section shall be to or- ganize youth sections in every lo- cal union, to interest the youn: miners in the affairs of the organ- ization, to help obtain the six-hour day and the fiveday week, to estab- jlish the N.M.U., to usher in the day tin and Yeman’s halls. Over two|>,. . Jct js esprit : of 18,100 in one week. a late hour this afternoon, but was taceaniinat “4 . Illinois and West Virginia coal) which goes with it is not-just a) J, js evident that the di f ett d thi hy *.|When no discrimination will be “thousand workers attended the three | +2140 now bein; g led by the National| temporary arrangement, as unem- saoiyaane Nha ubeee Noe an d expected to end this evening. This) practiced against miners because | meetings. One hundred and forty- ‘three joined the Communist Party. This is only the start of the work- ing class reply to repression, and through the organization of the Unemployed Council and the cam- ign to organize the unorganized, thw defense of the Party is to pene- more deeply into the masses. e Party is mobilizing against this attack and will organize fur- ther mass meetings and demonstra- tions for the struggle against the Criminal Syndicalist laws and to prepare for the International Dem- onstration on February 26 to de- mand work or wages. MORE JIM CROW. LOUISVILLE, Ky.—A bill is be- fore the legislature of this state that will introduce Jim-Crowism on the | Istreet trolleys of this town, and fur- Miners’ Union are therefore directly conhected with the Standardville disaster and with the struggles of workers in every industry. The Workers International Relief has established four relief stations in southern Illinois and is preparing to aid the striking Moundsville, W. Va., miners. Every coptribution to the W.LR., 949 Broadway, Room 512, New York City, is a contribu- tion towards the victory of the striking miners and towards the | wiping out of such conditions as made the Standardville disaster possible.” * MANHATTAN. SYMPHONY. The Manhattan Symphony Orches- tra will give their next concert on Sunday evening, at Mecca Audi- torium. Katharine Goodson, pianist, ployment is permanent, and “part time pay” is a permanent wage cut, @ capitalist attempt to permanently lower the living standard of the whole working class. No amount of lying by the capi- talist politicians on unemployment or the crisis hides the fundamental fact that capitalist economy in the United States, as well as throughout the entire world, is sinking deeper into depression, Even Capitalists Expect Two Years. Lord. Rothermere in an article in the London Sunday Dispatch, while echoing the “optimism” of the Wall Street spokesmen, reveals the inter- esting fact that even the exploiters in the United States expect the cri- sis to last at least two years. Rothermere, however, overlooked the fact that the erisis of capitalism is not restricted to America alone, in various parts of the country have shown the capitalists the militant mood of the growing army of un- employed. As usual, the first to rush in in order to foster the illu- sion that the workers should look to these capitalist politicians and their fake “tariff remedies” for a solu- tion of their miserable conditions, are those who parade under the labels of “liberal,” socialist and “la- bor.” The fake “opposition” of these elements to the Hoover machine against the workers, will only add to’ the determination and militancy of the Unemployed Councils: More than ever it is clear that the work- ers themselves through mass organ- ization and militant action will be able to force the capitalists to pay | thé jobless unemployment insurance. | Mebilization for the world-wide un- afternoon reports from other dis- tricts, especially New Bedford and the anthracite coal region (which is also a big ‘silk manufacturing re- gion) were being discussed, and a resolution for action was being taken up in detail. Gov. Roosevelt Speaks for Wall Street (Continued from Page One) day, he speaks in the name of the following American companies who own practically the entire economic life of Porta Rico: The National City Bank of N. Y. and others who floated bonds ... $30,000,000 South Porto Rican Su- gar Co., ete. ..... Int'l Tel. & Tel. Co. Utilities Companies 45,586,000 . 760,000 + 1,000,000 of age, color or nationality.” Pope for Holy War on the Soviet Union (Continued from Page While the letter drips against the Soviet Union, where the government of workers and peasants is abolishing unemployment as it builds socialized industry, and takes leare of what unemployed there are, the Pope, has no word of anriety or concern for the over 15,000,000 job- less and starving workers under capitalism, and the day that his let- ter was issued the Catholic church at Jamestown, N. Y:, was locked in the faces of the unemployed at the order of the Catholic priest who joined with the Chamber of Com- introduced } The task of | Power of the workers and peasants. | venom | | for The Daily Worker. Worker Correspondent. Become a gade! ‘Ay PLOYMENT’. Phebe Thm OUT OF A JOB! By EARL BROWDER invaluable analysis of the problem of UNEM- The author destroys, by means of facts and Marxist-Leninist deduction, all illusions cre- ated hy the hypocritic efforts of the Hoover-A.F, socialist combines to cure this evil, now facing millions of workers in this country. program of STRUGGLE! FIVE CENTS Not a REMEDY—but a Help toSpread It Among Your Shop Mates Order from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHE her the division of the underpaid "4 ‘i i ws * :. i Mion. s9 Negro and white workers of thie in-land Carl MeKinley, will conduct his |nleysrent aot eer gepenemet, demcnntesbons an Amerie baer Co... 10900800 mance te thus show American work.| 09 ast 125 Sect Hew York ily austrial center. “Masquerade.” eundas he ipziseced raneavaoyaa Udall epeedh A pen $740,000 tan falliecaeelenr is on the side of SPECIAL DISCOUNTS ON OngEes IN QUANTITY LOTS al Sent Wrest a Br al UREN R EERO PLAT IRE Taam SORE | Every Petty Bourgeois Rene- ae)

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