The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 15, 1930, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

\ D WHAT CAUSES THE FURY Prevsring for God and OF WORLD CAPITALISM : AGAINST THE SOVIETS 9a ee German Peasants in Soviet Union Socializing, % Agriculture; Kulak Emigration A Boomerang {' Found Out Poor Peasants Glad to See ’em Go! Technical Experts Strong for Soviet MOSCOW (By Inpr —The r Service into the collective under-| and get th> upper hand here. oh Seen movement collectivi- zation of agriculture is 5 . eee os s id wireaanee “Technical Week” in Leningrad. p "7 amozgst the Gern Technical Week in Leningrad | and landw with a great demonstration The Workers gf the Sovict In the Ja the Ll i palace yesterday.) Union, having no illusions about colonists ers, t th ‘peaceful’ intentions of the than students, members of nperialist powe are truining brigad professors of the) themselves for defense from poi- the “igh schools ard colleges, son gas attacks, which will un- aniz and co-operators of the! doubtedly be one of the favorite then y of Science took part in the! (though “forbidden” by law) The German Ku ion under banners bear-| snethods of the capitalist worid ii doned their e¢ ion agitation, ong oth the sloga attacking the Soviet Union; in- first of all, because the reception ;“The Five-Year Plan in Four Yea deed, the campaign of the clerical given m abroad was ver Down W Political Ind wing of capitalism, headed by th the i/Is Impossible! Those who are not| gas. upon rather wi ‘action than h us are against uc! Engineers “= concern by the poor and middle | join the at ranks of the Struggle peasants. The kulaks have altered |for Soc !” The demonstration t | HAILS {] $ A their tactics and «re now ér to |was tremendously enthusiast ann oe EVD How Different for Workers Is Poland Than Is the Land of Soviets! WARSAW, Poland (By Inprecorr of the iner Service).—The note of No-Confi- accompanied by dence put forward by the Commu- sion at home. nist fraction in the Polish Seym He dealt with thé intensifying against the Bartel government was jcrisis of Polish industry and with rejected. The Communist fraction the terror regime with which the and a section o! Ukrainian depu- government answers the revolt of | ties voted in favor of it. the workers: mass arrests, shooting Comrade Rossiak spoke in favor down demonstrators, beating up the of the motion and exposed the fas- unemployed, mishandliag prisoners, cist system in Poland. He declared ayresting and maltreating Commu- that the appointment of the former minister of the Petlura government, Jusefski, as Minister of the Interior | Pres in the Bartel government, was a sign | izatio: MEMBER, DRIVE dane ot Points Out Need For Shop Nuclei (Continued m Page One) Party membershi 1, The Recruitin; maining weeks mus and linked up more closely with all the Party campaigns, particularly the unemployment campaign arid the campaign for the repeal of the crimi- nal syndicalist la Any tendency to let up or diminish the Recruiting Drive activity must be sharply com- batted. In the remaining two weeks, the Party Committee must conscious- ly direct the recruiting efforts of the Party to the large’ shops and ¢ |basic,industries: The success of the Drive-in the re- be intensified nist members of parliament, sup- sion of legal trade union organ- ete. French “Socialists” Keen for War on Soviets PARIS (By Inprecorr Service).— | capitalist fathex‘and. : i the French socialist The discussi-n on the question 0: 7 i Bee : was immediately | participation in the government was | drive will not be evaluated alone followed by a er maneuver of | interesting in view of the argument |” the basis of new members, but the right wingers under Renaudel| put forward by the Mayor of Lille | the basis of the completion of and Boncour, who desnanded that the | th= te party should enter the gov-| the quotas in all spheres of the congress should first of all rt because it would then be |drive—new shop nuclei, new factory ne its attituc towards the ques- able to conduct a more effective new members and Daily tions of bolshevism and national de- struggle against bolshevist terror, subscriptions. The Party and exert diplomatic pressure on the st be mobilized to full capacity Sate ieebeseiae . from now to February 28, when the SS o} el erm AY, FEBRUARY 15, 1930 » AILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURD. Shoe Strike Exposes Justice of Capitalist Courts, Press: Shows Department of Labor Is Strikebreaker; Every Agent of Bosses Lies Recklessly J. Louis Engdahl Ss. By D. GOLDBERG. La Va Shoe Co., against the In- In the latt t of last summer, |@ependent Shoe Workers Union, the “conciliator” of the U. §..de.|which contains in the cross-exami- partment of labor, Charles Wood, at | ®ation of Wood by the union attor- the request of the New York and Dey, the, evidence that the letter he Brooklyn shoe manufacturing, ‘sent |Sent- out to the manufacturers and | out a letter to all shoe manufactur- all his steps were in full agreement ers who had agreements with the and knowledgement of his superiors Independent : ShoeWorkers «Union, : in the U. S. Department: of Labor at. urging them to break their contracts | Washington.: It .was> also ‘brought with the union, ‘bevause of its Com- | Out, that no officials of. the depart- munist leadership, ment of labor ever made the state- letter: was*teceived by ithe ments: printed ‘in the N.Y. World? : ‘ -s when the seasoi was in full and Times: denying knowledge of his} Secretary, International Labor swing, but the shoe”‘manufacturers actiony:..Ther role: of ‘the: capitalist | Defense. The 1. Le D. is mobil did not-dare to*break the agreoiméir press, is-plain.e + p ing the workers against the gro then. ‘They. merely -showed:at..fa: > Not only the open capitalist. press | 7479 -siippression of the per aeee er some of~thesaworkers--whom they (nd the: capitalist government, but| class inthe face of the crisis-and | the struggles of the mass of un- semployed workers for a wages. The L L. D. is particula ly fighting against’ the renewed though loyal to them or whom they | the ‘yellow: sociatist-“Forward” has thought could be instrumental in! taken up the case of the -bosses~anid, their maneuvers. But the bosses | the seabs,against the,shoe workers soon found that the letter had no| byoptintug statements of the scabs effect tu'ths worttenl s, (attacking the \ Independent Shoe | use. .of, the Crimiyal Syndicalist on the contia Workers” UnidA°and ‘its Ieadership: ; Laws.against striking and wnem- Wand on ces strug In this ‘the'U. S. soeialist parti fos’; ployed warke gle for union conditions in the shops lows*its'German-and other European t+ % under the honest leadership ‘of brothers?» «Where!the 'sodialists “oon-? Independent Shoe Workers Unidn,’*'trol the “governments..they © shoot [7 down workers-in-thé. streets. . they detitand work: or bread. The labor department.then called. ++ | +. upon the New York. police.to regis- ter all the shoe workers who. are;, working in union shops cor.trolled by or I The workers, wéred that the; Registration. (Continued from Page One) energetic ampaign-<to — organize heny iinto., a fighting . industria ys Justice J.P} Dairy, of ‘the Brook lyn Supreme ‘Court, who: béfore“he jobs cor-trolled DY was revelected: premised 40 Haid any ‘ gael a Independent. The orkers Were) 5 tie stozal who’ deserv tj f “Thee Moundsville strike“ is espe- questioned as _to; ‘the ames, ad- y cially significant,” the statement dresses, birth place, re! n, poll so-called” “téitipordry;” pointed’ outs “not only becatise it oc- cal affiliations “and children belong ‘to any of the Com- munist organizations, ete. As’ as this s reported to the v instruetions weve immediately to the members not to answer the questions A protest was raised if the press against the union breaking’ whether» their “Was! cledrby curs” in West Virginia’ where the demonstrated™in many ¢ases?-Es yonerators have for yeaRs beén try- {pecially in the case of the Shwartz.i0e ‘to crush unionism with gtin- COLIZ4E Nol’ St, ¢Tuley but* because the strike ‘is an- Brooklyn, N. ¥.,“wheve"thé workers | otheh’’symptom of * the increasing of. that company Were locked’ oug rzevolts *"against “ wage-cuts- and _ by Shwartz, president of ‘the*Metro- politan ‘Shde Manufacturers bosses” ask Thi Takogin:| 908) fields’ of the Ur S”” activities of the-U. S. department of clatiol: °Shwatt) usted die avd ders4 LG SERINE. . Eee ee i a pe ene, Sa to. sigh a ‘yellow’ dog> contract. and’ __ Thompson Missing’ - 4 Chetan tha Pete ay eae! | break. With the “Independent: Stioey-+/PILTSBURGH, Pa. Feb. 14. — reporters ‘whether ‘the federal gov. ernment ‘had ai knowledge of Wood’s letter. Tt denied having any- thing to do with. the letter. The Y. World and Times at that time printed articles in the name of the labor department denying the charges made against it. This was before the election when the workers are usually lulled by sweet prom-/ ses of the politicians and ‘their agents as being “fair to labor,” etc. Wage reductions are given the shoe workers also in the socialist party. city of Redding, Pa. What the Press Is for. I have before me the court rec- ors of the injunction case of the | Workets: Union. “When the war Freéhtat Thompson, acting pr refused to betray the union he‘ dént-of the National Miners Union, locked “them ‘out. Thé same métn.tand Lil Andrews, one of the youne ‘Sng hé told some worke®s whom*he” Workers convicted of criminal syndi- thought were loyal ‘io hint: that 'hé-/C@lisni in’ Ohio, otit on bonds, and had ‘alréady secured an: injinetion, | active in the present strike of 600 and ‘this’Was proven. The- lockout / Workers at Powhatan, are missing. took plaéé Thursday noon. ‘On Fri- They were on their way by auto day morning the workers answered ftom Bellaire to Powhatan to lead with a strike and began chees Early Monday morning, before any ‘where 200 more joined the st ri court, or government office is open, today." It is feared by Nation: | Shwartz produced an injunction and Miners Union officia served it upon the workers. The they SEE been oe question is how in the world can | held incommunicado one secure injunctions within such a | Bellaire Youth Conference _ space of time? “Something must A broad conference of all active s ke + of the party, Faure, willingly a. 1¢ right wingers that the party would continue its merciléss struggle against bolshe- vism, and that in the question of national defense it stood where it always had, i.e., fully in favor of | the principle of t afense of the ; Japanese Police Journa! Too Communistic! TOKIO.—Because an article en- titled “What Is Communism,” in the “Keisatsu Schicho,” an official po- lice journal, presented the subject in a light which the higher police au- thoritics consid: Jas too favorable, the magazine has been censored, All pol‘ce stations have been ord- |Lebas, agreeing in principle to par- Renaudel’s propasal for immediate | rive will be officially closed. participation i: the government was} 2 The tendency prevailing in cted by 2,066 against 1,507 votes yaoi districts to substitute the re- in favor of a motion of Faure,and | Porting of application cards instead jof accepted and assigned members |must, be eliminated. Efery worker ‘signing an application dird must be raccepted-through the Party nucleus and passed upon finally by the Mem- | bership Committee of the Section. | 8. While still considering the |foremost task the recruiting of new |members, we must already now jbring to the forefront the équally |important*task of absorbing these {new members and actually involving |them into Party activity. This will be the real test for every district, and failure in this task would mean ation, but declaring the present ¢ inopportune. m ered to cut + article out before members of the police force may be allowed to d it. The author of the article w official of the local. Peace Pr-serv-'!on Burezz. No jstatemest has been made of the pa: ular point considered so dan- gerous to the Japanese police. } GOVT LIES TO that our “recruiting drive would thus not only prove yalueless but 99 would also compromise the Party in| the eyes of the working masses.” (Comintern cable.) The mere checking: up on_ this t Anti-Soviet Drive Led By “Socialists (Continued: from Pace-One) sary «preparatory press-barrage of pr be rotten in Denmark.” The injunctions were served, some Committees must eliminate “civeu- of them three months ago. The lar” leadership as far as possible ; honorable Justice J. P. Dunn does and give detailed personal attention Tt care to give out a decision, be- to every lower organization. {cause the charges are ‘mere bunk and { | by; holding’ back His decision Justice The bureaucratic red tape of hold- ing up applications for membership for weeks must be overcome, and |?! the work of accepting applicants | through the nuclei speeded up This in no way means overlooking | Dunn makes “the,- so-called “tem- jorary injunctions” permanent. Dunn thus tepays his election campaign manager, who is the at- torney for the Metropolitan Shoe careful examination of each appli. Manufacturers Association, Eisen- 4 berg. cant. 3 ‘ - When it. comes. to election the must be | fi ‘ |workers must votc consciously for |those who fight for the ititerests of the working class. 4, Particular attention given to the new shop nuclei organ- ized. Already there are 53 of such new shop nuclei, the overwhelming | ‘ majority of which are in basic in-| The answer of the shoe workers dustr To the extent that we|to the United Stafes department of we proportionately increase manifold 2nd all their agents must be to join the effectiveness of our agitational the Independent Shoe Workers In- and‘ organization capacity. This |4ustrial Union, build a powerful na- necessitates very detailed and care- tional shot and leather workers in- miners is being arranged for this Sunday nforning, Feb. 16, in Bohe- mian hall, Bellaire Ohio, where iplans will be laid to spread the strike to all mines in the Panhan-| dle section of West Virginia and in | Easterh Ohio. $ 3 Charles Guynn, acting secretary- , treasurer of the N. M. U. will speak ‘at two mass meetings of strikers |this Sunday, Feb. 16. In the after- ‘noon he will speak in Powhatan, and lin the evening in Moundsv: 400 Strike at Sparta BELLEVILLE, Ill., Feb. 14. | The Sparta mine of the Noffat Coal Co. is on strike; its 400 men are helf of them Negro miners. ‘The ,company has another mine at Nof- fatsville, Ala. The strikers hene |base our Party on shop nuclei will |labor and the shoe manufacturers | are meeting Monday with National Miners Union speakers. The com- |pany and the United Mine Work- | sts of America want to put the men ack to: work, with 300 eliminated, Glendale Miners March en On More Paisely Mines javorséréd Conditions’ throughout tHe ” vicketing. the picket line at the Stewart mine / a] |at the N.E.C. meeting of the I.L.D.; here that @ nation-wide campaign in behalf of | Cleveland, one in San Francisco and ed and are [all the by the police, /¢riminal Ss) ‘\present, sedition and criminal syndi- ‘ATTACKS ON WORKERS BY BOSSES GROW IN SHARPENING CRISIS International Labor Defense Mobilizes to Fight Increased Suppression ‘Capitalists Revive Old Criminal Syndicalism | Laws Against Unemployed In this period of the great crisi: ; “These increasing attacks on the of capitalism, with mass unemploy pworkiae ene no Se ee, sean | ment everywhere, the International teens i fait Weak ie aise: |Labor Defense is fighting the great | struggle organizations of the work- | danger to the progress of the Ameri-| ers, the main attack being against can working-class movement in the | th, form of the swarm of proposed and e Communist Party,” the national | executive committee of the I.L.D. to- day declared. “This attack is also directed against the new industrial junions, against the International Labor Defense, in fact against, all ithe organizstions of labor based on the class struggle.” It was pointed out that the sedi- \tion law in Michigan, is the same law that. was used in 1922 in the attack against the Communist ‘Party. :convention at Bridgeman, as a re- n Pon- }sult of which C. E. Ruthenberg was calist laws sweeping the country. The growing radicalization of the j} working masses has caused; the boss s to take the sharpest of mea: The “emergency” war law foremost of which are the crimina sedition, have been This is clearly seen in the arrests the criminal syndicalist law ichigan, of 12 work held under $95,000 bail, fol- sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment. the arr of six more} The following table indicates the in Detroit at a protest ,extent to which the bosses have gone | demonstration against the Pon larrests. c |under the criminal syndicalist and | sedition laws. Place Terms Bail Ppntiac, Mich. «+ 10 years minimum + $95,000 Los Angeles .... Six months to 10 yrs... 25,000 Woodlawn, Pa. Q ing 5 years Chicago 6 Face-10 years ... 60,000. (Warrants out for 23 more workers) St. Clairsville, 0. 3 Sentenced to 5 years ... 15,000. 4 Bethlehem, Pa. 5 Sentenced to 5 years .. 6,000 Chester, Pa. . 2 Face 10 years + 2,000 Philadelphia .. 4 Face 10 years. Total . $203,000 Propose Criminal “Syn ’ nticalist Laws those in Pontiac, Mich. this cam- For South paign is to raise substantial sums Almost every day the Charlotte |o¢ money to defend the workers; Observer, the Gastonia Gazette and|that the campaign include mass |other Southern bosses’ papers are | meetings and demonstrations thru- calling for riminal syndicalist laws, | out the country; city mobilizization “as in California, Michigan and conferences to culminate in section otter states,” to try paralyze the | conferences on March 23, through- militant labor movement. ‘out the land, and a conference of Conerete Plans to Fight Syndi-|the four heavy .industry states, calist Law: |Michigan, Illinois, Ohio and Pennsyl- The following plan was adopted | vania on April 20. Three National |simultaneous conferences, one in orkers arrested under the |one in New York will also be held ndicalist laws, especially |on March 22. MILK DELIVERED BY UNION DRIVERS TO ALL WORKERS Workers, when you drink milk, do you take into consideration— Is it the best milk— Is it fresh— Is it the most nourishing— Is it delivered by union drivers MORRISANIA is the only milk firm which employs strictly union drivers. Morrisania Stock Farms, Inc. 883 TINTON AVE., BRONX Tel. Melrose 3863 Drink More Mille on the - FOOL WORKERS . ; ‘oblem—through a comparison of | sy} ‘ ; ; J * dustrial union and fight for the 40- ‘Ludi st of the Negroes. | 5 Soviet propaganda was put in | ul attention to each shop nucleus. : a including most 0’ e Negroes, By a eg ta eae? lies = yes. |ZePorted members with dues and|Under no circumstances must we | hour, _ Week, five-day ~ week; shop |-~The officials of eleven locals of | in yeore RED SQUARE * seers Sandaee andthe tees geote of this initiation stamps bought, and thru! send instructions telling the shop committee system, against ph éjthé U, M. W. in Fran lin county U CAN But Starving Millions barrage: activity—is easy, and already. there | nuclei to-do such and such a thing”, WoTk, against specd-up,“équal “pay (have’ @éme out for Lewis: against ROUGH 1T— e _ noun¢e that employment will be nor-| employed Councils to force the cap- Organize to Fight i Press reports from “Moscow show (Continued trom Page One) that the Soviet workers evaluate ex- dustrial establishments were curtail- actly the anti-Soviet “religious” | ed and employment reduced. .. .” crusade as an attack against the | But for each of these statements drive for socialism in the Soviet. | he has a remarkable excuse, name-| The “Pravda,” organ of the Com- | ly, “weather conditions are bad.” munist Party of the Soviet Union, | Certainly the weather will not help. is quoted in part as follows: a the fact that building permits and| “So far, all the evil yelping | contracts for building during Janu- against the Soviet has lacked only ary, 1930, dropped 21 per cent below |the Holy Father’s sweet voice. This | 1928. | representative of God on earth hith- | erto has preferred to hold his | The chief liar of the department He thought that the weakening o' of labor was forced, much against | the Greek Orthodox Church would his will, to admit that production in |¢lear the way for Rome. automobile industry is down pretty,| “Only now, when he has become | steeply, that radio plants are prac- | convinced that the working class of tically closed, and that many work- | the U.S.S.R. intends to end all su-_ ers in all industries are working | persti ions without distinction of | on part time basis. creed, has his holiness decided to In order to get around the figures |take up the defense of persecuted from the state of New York, which | religion. | is a key-industrial state, and from) . “This head of the Catholic whose figures the national figures! church, certainly is less interested on unemployment never vary more | in problems of the Orthodox than a fraction, Davis rushes to the} church, Judaism and even Catho- | weather for a saving straw, and) licism, than in the worldly goods | claims the decline is due to seasonal} they may involye. This means in- | operations, But he still admits that: difference to the progress of our “Part time employment obtained in industrialization and to the col- several industries (7 out of 1) and, lectivization of our agriculture, a number of plants and factories which spoil the beauty sleep of the rated with reduced forces.” | Western birds of prey. And at the bottom of his state-| “Like evéry other financier and ment he casually mentions the fact ‘exploiter of. labor, the pope is an that unemployment increased among | enemy of the working class. ‘That all classes of workers, skilled and) js why he appeals to all countries to unskilled, and that the slight furry make religious fregiom a condition in production: in steel and autntno: (at yecognizing the Soviet.” biles have not materially affected the inemployed army of ‘over 7-|¢hiect. The growing army of un- 90V. * ‘employed are showing their militan- eli Remember This, Mr. Davis! |cy. They are joining in the fight “Fools step in where angels fear, for work or wages, and it is to fore- _ to tread,” and Davis rushes in to an-/ stall the rapid mobilization of Un- All Right—“But”— mal within’ 60 to 90 days. \italist government to pay unemploy- _ Even the most optimistic capital+; ment insurance that Davis issues] ist economist in his drunkest mo- his honeyed words to attempt to ment, never claimed that employ-|cover the growing bitterness and ment under any condition could! misery of the unemployed. the early figures cf 1929 or| More than ever it is necessary to average figures of 1928, mobilize for the international dem- a Why Davis Lies onstrations for work or wages on di . The Central will check up closely on the capacity jof every district to keep the new | ¢: membevs, and evaluate the work of | each district at the coming Plenum of the Central Committee, | Our two tasks in keeping the new members ‘are: (a) The establishment immediate- ly of discussion meetings or: classes | at which all new members must par- ticipate, in every city. The reports | of the already ‘established classes | for the new members show that only a percentage of the new members are attending. This must be rem- edied immediately. (b) The ‘sharp changing and. im- provement of the organizational and political life of our shop and street nuclei. This means that every unit must discuss in full the polit- ical campaigns and issues before |‘ the Party, and how to carry these through in the everyday activity of the nucleus. Every nucleus must outline for itself, undér the leader- ship of the District and Section Com- mittees, concrete activity to-carry through in the factories the political and organizational tasks of ‘the | Party. Linked up with this is the} |improvement of the functioning of } the nucleus, which must meet regu- | larly, on time, and with the nucleus | executive giving leddership at. all | times. In activizing the’ nucleus, | every member and particularly the | new recruits must be involved in activity. The districts and Section TONIGHT SPORT CARNIVAL AND DANCE - given BRONX WORKERS ATHLETIC CLUB at LORRAINE PALACE, 449 E. 169th St. A good athletic program has been arranged "fhe Davis statement has a definite \Interaational Unemployment Day. ADMISSION 50c Dacing Until 2 A. M. a discrepancy in nearly every without accompanying such ‘instruc for equal work ‘and, unem: Committee’ tions with detailed’ ‘advice how ‘to élief, carry out the proposed activity or ampaign. . 5.:The tendency displayed in re- cent weeks of, lessening our activity in recruiting the Negro workers must be examined. by. every district buro! and the. necessary. steps taken», to check and correct this. 6. W fold growth of the: revolutionary unions and the TUUL. Not only inust ‘every new Barty,\premheri enrolled = inte thee eee unions, but through’ thes’ contacts | |bership many times -over"5,000; The | ivecruiting drive must also be_util-! jized, to extend “and: {intaatten, ~our | |Party base within the revolutionary unions, **! * e Sioa oy The entite Party and particular! the District and Section leaderships are called upon to energetically ¢: ry through these directives of Corgintern. The renegade Love stonites have been categorically de- feated von allots 4 PRT ON economie Sab Dace Gone | quences’ smashed*to smitherines, fér | even the most backward worker, the right-wing Lovestone theory of | exceptionalism and the “Victorian | age” of American imperialism. The Party’s success in the recruiting drive, with 5,000 new proletarians added to our ranks—is’the best an- | swer of the workers to the renegade Lovestonites and Canhoni : 1 je TONIGHT by the ith the strengthening of the Hosa Party must-go e-simultaneous-inanie | “revolutionary ' we must inerease the.T.U.U.L. mem=!2 ployment | Fishwick, in the «struggle betwe 4 paid for by™the bosses. * | these two gangs of reactionaries. ANCE |. DANCE i wigan pagug td be hdid-s: ; TONIGHT AT 8 O'CLOCK. i « vst Sata Kore fy An DA Borie amsh cational Alliance’. .,,J6 Throop.Avenue,. Brooklyn | "> AroyT caocAuspicep: a Union : Women’s Dept, Ind, Shoe Workers’ Ppa TOW Stef Stole. fotaix ake, BMT. Pradven bine ota Oe a Lorimer Street, Brooklyn *.) OMASS-ENSTALDATION CONCERT ara a | WORKMEN'S CIRCLE BRANCHES . Tomorrow-.at 2 P. M._ 3 SEAR:CASINO =... bi «407TH. STREEY-AND PARK “PROGRAM: *S CHORUS ofthe Non-Partisan Schools Directed by JACOB SHAFFER ere fh mite ON atime 4g "Directed by EDITH SIGEL CEMETERY DEPARTMENT (one act play) Played, by ‘A. PACKER and EKSTADT c Speaker: M. OLGIN: L. HYMAN Freiheit W. WEINER Jewish Section Comparty, A Re EPSTEIN: Warkmen’s Circle S. ALMASOFF City Committee. Independent National Committee Left andj. SALTZMAN Progressive Workmen’s Circle | Chairman ‘Thdustrial Needle Workers Union| } EIGHT FULL DAYS IN THE SOVIET UNION ‘NEW YORK to MOSCOW and RETURN (Includes Return Railroad Fare to Europenn Port) $280 THIS Low RATE APPLIES td or ton TOURISTS 175 FIFTH AVENUR, NEW YORK Second Anniversary of “Der Arbeiter” German Official Weekly of the C.P.A. ee Sailing APRIL 12TH SS. BREMEN Tel, Algonquin 6656-8797 ... TONIGHT i New York Labor Temple 243 East 84th Street, New York City German Singing Societies—Labor Sport f , The Prolet-Buehne will produce a satyrical sketch “STRASSE FREI! ES WIRD GESCHOSSEN!” / : DANCING ; Admission 50c—in advance at the door 75¢ Unemployment, Wage Cuté, Speedup, Masn Misery in U, 8. A. 7-Hour Day, 5-Day Week and Upbullding of Socialiam t# U. 8. 8. Ri GET THE FACTS! Learn What the Five-Year-Plan. of Socialist Construction Means PAMPHLET No. 1: Continuous Working Week in the Soviet Union. RAMPHLE No. 2: i Socialist Competition in the Soviet Union, Just Issued—10e Each—Order from u FRIENDS OF SOVIET UNION . 175 FIFTH AVENUE (Room 511) NEW YORK

Other pages from this issue: