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DAILY WORKbR, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1930 FILIPINO PROLETARIAN LABOR CONGRESS GIVES IMPERIALISTS A SCARE U.S. Police Hounds Seek to Bar It from Mails _ as First Step to Suppression of Unions American Workers Must Prepare to Defend the Fitipino Unions by Any and All Means Manfls reports indicate a fear on purt of the United States im- perialists at the growth and power lation to rebellion.” To this compliment unconsciously paid to the leaders of the Proleta- of the Proletarian Labor Congress, |rian Labor Congress, the outstand- affiliated with the Pan-Pacific Trade Unon Secretariat. Although there | is no organized Communist Party in the Philippines, the United States imperialists charge everything to the “Communists.” C, E. Nathorst, the American boss- ing the police force, has reported to the governor-general, Dwight Davis, that “Communist activities‘in the Islands are very extensive.” He | says that there isa movement to | boycott American goods, that “Com- munist doctrines are being dissemi- nated among ignorant (!) masses,” and that “Communists were actively participating in the recent students’ strike.” “Recent activities of these lead- ers show clearly,” say Nahorst’s worried report to the high-cock- doodle governor-general, “that they are alert at all mements to take advantage of whatever governmental commotion, to the end of causing a change that would permit the fore- | ing of the adoption of a Communist system of government in the Philip- | pine Islands. All the propaganda | disseminated by the Proletarian La- bor Congress is of a nature that in- | cites the ignorant mass of the popu- ing one, of which is Crisanto Evan- gelista, a printer, is added the re- port of Colonel Clarence Bowers, chief of the secret “intelligence” service of the police, that “practic- ally all the pamphlets and communi- cations sent out by the Proletarian Labor Congress are of radical char- Under the excuse, Nathorst is “asking the governor-general” to | bar the mails to the Proletarian La- bor Congress. While such an out- rageous violation of the boasted “American democracy” inflicted up- on the Filipino workers’ only trade- union center standing for class struggle and immediate and com- plete Philippine independence, might cripple the activity temporarily, the trade union militants of the Proleta- rian Labor Congress never have had any illustion about the “democratic liberties” of American imperialism, and will prepare to carry on the struggle of the Philippine workers and peasants in spite of the ban. And any attempt to victimze their leaders will doubtless be answered by fierce strikes and other things costly to the imperialists and native lackeys. Soviet Press on French Provocation (CInprecorr Press Service) MOSCOW.—Referring to the anti- Soviet campaign of the French press buildings and with the acquittal of criminals for no other reason than that their crimes were directed the “Isvestia” writes: We can no} longer tolerate the reckless anti-! against the Soviet Union. The “Pravda” declares that the Soviet campaign of the French bour-| French bourgeoisie has taken over | geois press which threatens to lead the lead in the international anti- to serious excesses, | Soviet campaign, and that there is “Tsvestia” then reports that the now an anti-Soviet united front in Soviet ambassador in Paris, Dovga-| France from Marian to the “social- | 8 has made representations to/| ists” Faure and Blum. i Berthelot concerning the seriousness| It explains this campaign by the | of the situation created by the white | great successes of the Soviet Union dist elements, and declared that |in the task of transforming an Soviet government must hold} agricultural into a highly industrial-| | Five Weeks from Now—Prepare! By Fred Ellis | | | show that unemployment is grow Page ‘Inree “IAILING WIL WORKERS: CORRESPONDENCE - FROM THE SHOPS NOT STOP WORK “NNO CHARITY, BUT FIGHT FOR RELIEF” SAYS WOMAN WORKER Out of Work, Negro Workers’ Family Lived on $3.00 Groceries OR WAGE FICAT” Bosses Offer Fake Bldg. Programs (Continued from Page One) issue. Our lawyers could hardly get | to the court-room. Our attorney wa: | simply told to shut up and sit down t this will not solve unem- ployment, nor will it stop the grow- ing milita le of the work |for ‘Work or Wages.’ All report despite the lies of Hoover, Davis Lamont and Klein. y of ‘reds’ against the 1, |250,000 wo: who demonstrated jon March 6 is just t the Communist leader gigantic mass demonstrations which ATTEND COURT Whole Case Filled With Outrageous Conspiracy (Continued from Page One) of the unemployed and other work- ers’ organizations. . A. F. L, Local Elects Delegates. Painters Union A, F, L.) at Hunts Point Palace ,Friday, elected two delegates to the Unemployment Con- ference, called by the Trade Union | Unemployed, March 27. Unemployment is a serious prob- lem to the painters, and working conditions grow from bad to worse. This action of an A. F. L, local shows the growth of resentment against the horrible conditions capi- talism prepares for the workers, and the willingness of the rank and file in such unions to follow a pro- gram of struggle. 2 Labor Jury. The trial today will be attended by a labor jury of 12 men and LABOR JURY TO The meeting of Local 905 of the | | Unity League and the Council of the , '750,000 Moscow Work- ers Combat War Cry (Continued trom Page One) speech on the Defense of the Soviet Union. C. Forson, District Organizer of the International Labor Defense, then spoke and introduced resolu- tions on the New York arrests and |the Mexican terror. The resolution was passed unanimously, San aie San Francisco Workers Rally to Soviet Defense. SAN FRANCISCO.—Hundreds of workers crowded into the Workers Center to hear Edgar Owens brand the lies of the pope and his im- perialist backers against the Soviet Union. Dr. Ralph Reynolds who ‘recently returned from the Soviet |Union spoke of the progress of the | Five-Year Plan, “Whether or not jone is a Communist,” said Dr. Rey- rolds, “he must, after viewing the| | workers in the Soviet Union, and observing the great building pro- |gram, admit that Communism in Ipractice is a great success.” | ‘The local conference of the Friends of the Soviet Union held on enthusi- astic meeting, laying plans for ex- tensive activity throughout Calif- ornia to combat the capitalist prop- jaganda of the sky-pilots. the Frencp government -responsible for all consequences which may re- | kulak as a class in particular pained | white workers, elected at the mass | sult from an omission to take the necessary preventive measures. “Isvestia” then declares that the ized country. The abolition of the ‘the petty-bourgeois soul of the | French reactionaries. | In addition the fury of the French women, including both Negro and o:. og ay ae protest meeting of :',000 eaeeee| ea epaaa Sie Workers: March 19 from nominations made|, KANSAS CITY.—A mass meeting at the meetings which elected dele-|held here on March 16 passed a present impossible situation makes | capitalists against the Sovict Union| ates to the March 27 conference. |Tesolution to mobilize the workers it necessary to raise the question,|was strengthened by the intensi-|They will attend every session of the |i this city for the defense of the who controls and determines French foreign policy? Tardieu and Briand er the former Czarist General Mul- ler and Kerensky? “Tsvestia” declares that normal diplomatic relations between the | return to the policy of intervention, /Tammany judges, in the court of Soviet Union and France are impos-|and was a warning to the workers |Special sessions, and without a jury. | sible to reconcile with the anti-Soviet |of the Soviet Union and of the whole | The committee of the unemployed demonstrations of white guardist | world to be on guard and prepared | is held on $2,500 bail on two charges \eaders in the French parliamentary |fication of the class struggle in France, the rising wave of strikes ‘ete. The extent and recklessnes of |the campaign was a sign that the | French bourgeoisie was inclined to |for all eventualities. Imperialist Rivals See China Differently SHANGHAI (By Inprecorr Pre: Service).—The strict censorship maintained by the Chinese author- ities makes it difficult to obtain re- liable information concerning the situation in China. It is reported that the Kuominchun army under the group of generals hostile to Nanking is preparing a drive on Hankow. The Shensi group is also said to be making preparations for action. In many places the rival armies are already drawn up and await only the word to commence hostilities. It is characteristic of the situa- that foreign les are main- ing a cool attitude towards the Nanking government and consider | that the attempt to forge Chinese junity with the sword has definitely | failed, | British circles “are of the opinion |that Chinese unity is impossible” and think that Nanking should seek la way out of jagreeing to the formation of pre- |vincial governments with a consid- able degree of independence, | America on the other hand is still | | behind the Nanking government and has not abandoned hope of a deci- sive Nanking victory. It is gener- ly feared that the re-opening of \hositilities in the spring will see a widespread development of the Com- munist peasant movement. Socialist Zionists “Slightly Mistaken” VIENNA (By Inprecorr Press Service}.—Reterring to the slander Zionists which was acial democratic Zeitung,” accord- ing to which the veteran of the Narodnaya Volya, Vera Figner, is suffering persecution at the hands of the Soviet Government and has beca banished to Yerm, the So- lety of former i'siitical Prisoners Baniahed hax issued a state- nt indignantly tcfuting the slan- derous «tiegation and declaring that Vera Figner enjoys the greatest re- fpect and consideration in the Soviet Union, that she is in receipt of a state pension and that she is being cared for by the authorities in every way, that her works are being is- sued in a special edition by the State Publishing House, and that she is a constant correspondent of the press and that her articles are regu- Vienna “Arbeiter larly reprinted. The society condemns the slan- derous allegation as a part of the : general campaign against the Soviet | Union, and declares that the heroes of the Narodnaya Volya movement |ave warmly remembered in the Sovi- ‘et Union that on the 50th anniver- sary of the Narodnaya Volya action against the Czar a monument will be erected to Shelyabov, that schools jo the prominent leaders of the | Narodnaya Volya. | In reply to a letter from Yaro- slavski, Vera Figner, herself, writes concerning the allegation that she has been subjected to persecution |and banishment to Perm: “Of course |the story is a lie. Last summer I went for a steamer trip on the Volga and the Kama as far as Perm. I suppose this is the basis of the story.” Skoda Munitions Workers Demonstrate PRAGUE, Czecho-Slovakia (By Taprecorr Press Service), — This morning a great demonstration took place before the Skoda works here against the dismissal of workers. The Communist Deputy Dvorzhak spoke to the masses. After he had addressed them for about 20 minutes the police arrived and attempted to arrest him, but were prevented from doing so by the workers. Only after considerable forces of police had ar- vived was it possible to secure Com- rade Dvorzhak. His arrest devel- oped into a magnificant demonstra- tion because the workers followed the police in masses and Comrade Dvorzhak continued to address the workers all the way to the station. A second demonstration took place at the railway station, where the Communist Deputy Novotny ad- dressed about 2,000 workers After a quarter of an hour the meeting was broken up by the police with their batons. A member of the workers’ council of the Skoda fac- tory spoke to the workers from the railway bridge, but he was dragged down and arrested by the police, A number of other works were also arrested. The Deputy Comrade Dvorzak was released soon after, but the others were held. the difficulties by | and socialist factories bear the name | \trial in a body, and will render | Soviet Union, The resolution, which their verdict on the brand of capi- | was unanimously adopted, points out ltalist class “justice” that is served|the imperialist backing given the out to the defendants. | religious war mongers and declares: The trial today is before three| “We pledge ourselves to expose |the war maneuvers of the imperial- jists of the United States, and their religious agents. “We endorse and will support the jof misdemeanor: “unlawful assem- | Friends of the Soviet Union in bly” and “creating a disturbance,” campaign to mobilize the working {both of which charges refer to the | Class of the United States for re demand of the committee that the |Mition and defense of the So | workers and unemployed workers be | Union.” ‘allowed to march down from Union | {Square to the city hall and require | ir i es of the Tammany city government Amoskeag Employees immediaté relief for the unemployed, Vote Four to One Not | unemployment insurance, “work or wages,” the seven hour and five day | t0 Accept Wage Cuts week, no discrimination, etc.. On each of the charges, the mem- | bers of the committee may get three The Amoskeag Manufacturing © year sentences, On April 11, they Officials here are trying to digest lare all to come before the Fourth the result of their proposal to 1,000 Magistrate District Court for hear- | '¢xtile employees in four mills, to “ing on charges of a felony, “assault- jtake a wage reduction ‘in the inte ing a policeman,” whom none of | of more work.” A ballot was | them ever saw even, and who is not ‘@ken of the employees, 636 hurt, but is held in the hospital by |and they voted four to one aga | the prosecution, and alleged to have eee da iS eee elms Ra th | been hit on the head hy some one /'" P e allowed with a brick. The man actually charged by the .; police with hitting this policeman is| Jugeslay Terrorists ‘held on $2,000 bail, also for trial | 5 ee ” April 11. ‘The five committeemen| - Decry “Terror -are held on this case, for $10,000) each (a total on all charges of $12,-, ZAGREB, Jugoslavia (By Inpre- corr Press Service)—The govern- ment inspired press, joins joyfully in MANCHESTER, N. H., Mar. | | 500 each). | Bosses’ Conspiracy at Work. | The entire case has been replete 5 | with the most outrageous capitalist anti-sovi 4 \class denials of even those rights ity of aim. A flood of leading ar- ‘prescribed under their own law, |ticles appealed for a crusade te | After being arrested March 6, the | ‘save the soul of Russia,” and the five were held for arraignment, | “Novosti” the chief organ of the without bail, on the misdemeanor | Military dictorship in Croatia wrote: charge. When brought up on Mar. | “Resistance to bolshevism must 7 before Chief Magistrate McAdoo, develop in Russia itself, but should they were denied bail. When, the the Russian people not prove strong next day, they got a habeas corpus | enough to throw off the dictatorship writ, and were admitted to $2,500 | of an armed clique (Russia not bail, they were released on payment Yugoslavia!! Ed. Inprecorr.) then of bail, but immediately re-arrested | Europe will suffer a severe trial and on the trumped-up felony charge. in the end will have to defend civili- They were allowed $10,000 bail on zation against the bolshevist wolves this charge, except for Foster, who with armed force.” was held without bail. They ap-| peared before Judge Flood of the meeting, and presented the deman's magistrate’s court, March 10, where | of the jobless to the mayor, anyway. bail on the misdemeanor charge was | On March 18, they demanded to raised to $5,000, and. a trivial be heard by the U. S. senate com- amount of time given to prepare mittee. the case—48 hours. The same day, On March 19, they reported all another appearance before Judge | this to the mass protest meeting in Townley, supreme court, got the| Bronx Coliseum, and the labor jury misdemeanor bail again reduced to} was elected. On the same day, they $2,500, and Foster admitted to bail| had come before Judge Ford, su- the same as the rest, $12,500 bail) preme court, with a demand for a each on all charges. jury trial. The judge rejected this On appearance before special ses- | demand two days later. On the sions Judges Nolan, Dirango, and| 20th, they appeared before Magis- Walling on March 14 proved that | trate McKinery on the felony these judges had decided on convic- | charge, and got a continuance to tion, would railroad the case, and April 11. On the 21st, Foster, Min- granted no leeway whatever to the| or and Lesten went to Washington, defendants. Trial was continued to| representing the unemployment March 24 merely because the calen-| movement led by the T.U.U.L,, and dar was full on previous dates. |were refused an audience by the Saw Mayor Anyway, ‘senators who had just been hob- That afternoon the committee | nobbing with “millionaire Hoboes,” broke into the board of estimates| and other fakers. the anti-soviet campaign, and its | et tirades did not lack clar- | MANY MEETINGS — _ SEND PROTESTS A. F. L. Local Demands | Release of Five | (Continued from Page One) the New York delegation of the unemployed, pledged themselves 19 |fight against the Flynn sedition act in Pennsylvania, and against the railroading to jail of Holmes, Petty, Lawrence, Turner, and others. They demanded release of Beal and the other Gastonia defendants, a fight for the protection of foreign born jworkers, for solidarity with the thousands facing white terror in Mexico, Japan, and many other coun- Lh ee 500 Protest in Buffalo. BUFFALO, N. Y¥., March 23.- Five hundred workers met in F) jwood Music hall last Sunday and [demanded that the employers and the city supply immediate relief, and work or wages to the unemployed. |The meeting adopted a resolution condemning the police brutalities {ment demonstrations, the railroad ing to jail of A. S. Harvey, T.U.U.L. organizer and organizer of the un- employed, and demanding the uncon- ditional release of the committee of |the unemployed in New York. The resolution demands release also for all workers sentenced on the criminal syndicalism law in Buffalo district, and denounces the deportation of foreign born workers. j nue ane “Everything In Our Power.” MUSKEGON, Mich., March 23.— The Muskegon Council of the Un- employed, at a recent meeting. passed a resolution demanding the release of the New York mittee, “elected to demand that the mayor, who has a salary of $40,000 a ye: do something for the starving job- ess, The council says: “We know that capitalist clas justice was never more open, brutal, or more vengeful than it is now showing itself to be. “The organized workers of Mus- kegon resolve to do everything in our power to acquaint our fellow workers with the cowardly attack on our leaders and to stop at noth- ing until they are restored to us in more order to continue their task of or- ganizing the unorganized in their + against the speed-up and slashing campaign of the Ri cemieaee Protest From Sioux City. SIOUX CITY, March 2: Unit 10-7 of the Communist Party here adopted at its last meeting a reso- lution condemning the attack on the March 6 demonstrations, and “espe- cially the actions of that hired f: cist coward, Whalen, and his capi-! talist cop gunmen in New York.” The resolution says: “We demand the immediate release of the March 6 committee and others arrested for the demonstration.” Tn ae | “Intensifying the Fight.” “We want to declare, as we have | done before by words as well as re- sited on the March 6 unemploy- | Jexpressed the demands of the un- ‘employed workers who have been betrayed by the Ame era- ion of Labor, and the social-fascist scialists,” ieee Offer ke Programs, March no solution for unemployment and are capitalist means of trying to avoid the demand of the work: for “Work or W s,” have been con- cocted here recently by various capi- |talists and their representatives. | idenee given to the Senate com- |merce commission showed that un- employment rapidly growing yorse. Francis Perkins, New York State Commissioner of Labor de- clared before the senate committee that unemployment now is worse than at any time since 1914. De- partment of Labor figur showed an increase in the jobless army for Februa What is the answer of the bosses and their supporters to this unde- niable fact of growing unem ment? Senator Wagner proposes a jplan somewhat in the form of the more ambitious but exploded Hoover $3,000,000,000 project which he so proudly put forth in 1928. The main trouble with it was that it totally disappeared at the st. onslaught of the present crisis. Wagner’s plan will be just as effective in the pres- ent situation—namely, it won't help |the unemployed workers at all. The Wagner plan, if it ever sees the light of day, will put a lot of money into the pockets of grafting building contractors and will feed a lot of Hoover official parasites, but lit will not reduce the length of the readlines. Similar in scope is the plan of Millionaire Andrew Mellon, secre- [tary of the treas He announced |that there is a building project under | way by his department amounting to | $92,000,000. This is old stuff and has not helped to reduce the 43 per cent un ent among the build- ing tra : D. C., to say nothing of the 7,000,000 in other parts of the country. Mel- lon forgets that Hoover demanded 2 restri all building projects. All of the pax emes for un- employment evolved by the bosses serest fakery and are an avoid the main issue put he unemployed work —“Work or Wag. work or unemployment in Hoover and Mellon can r $160,000,000 to hand over the bosses whose profits during 1929 were the greatest in the history of American hem and haw demand unem- forward on Mareh capitalism, but they the when work he League for eracy in New York the Hoove eeds, o th the heroic conduct of our leaders in the demonstration who carried out the instructions given them as a delegation repre- senting 110,000 workers, employed and unemployed, at the Union demonstration most solemnly pledge that we will do our best to fight for their release. We will continue to | support our leaders, by intensifying our fight in the class war, by per- |forming our class duties with in- | creasing fervor and determination,” ay: esolution adopted March 10, | by Unit 3, Section 7, New York, of ‘the Communist Party. ANSWER THE BI Hishop Manning, © Are Calling a Hay jetropolitan LAGK CRUSADERS! «. the Rabbis, Meeting Again Opera House Tuesday, thew Woll and Co. the Soviet Union Protest! Rally to the Defense of the Workers ? Fatherland! Come to the MASS PROTEST MEETING TOMORROW, AT 8 P. M. OPERA HOUSE Near Third Avenue Karolyi, Waldo Frank, Novelist ichael Gold, Harold Hickerson, M. J. Olgin, Robert W. Dunn, Louis Lozowick, Harvey O’Connor, Melvin P. Levy, and others. Roger Baldwin, Chairman. Cartoons Drawn on Stage by W Tickets: 25 cents in advance, Club, 10 E, 14th St.; Priend: New Masses, 112 KH, 19th St, AM GROPPER LEIN, JACOB BUR HUGO GELLUERT, 25 cents at door, n a CENTRAL 67th Street, Speakers: Count Michael and Critic, Mi M. PASS. LK CK Auspices: JOHN REED CLUM, Revolutionary Writers and Artists. In Cooperation with FRIENDS OF ‘THE SOVIET UNION. | i Fighting for Relief Under T. U. U. L. Only Way, She Says (By a Worker Correspondent.) CLEVELAND, Ohic No “char- y” won't help us but only fight for clief, by joining the Trade Union Unity League. Am unemployed Negro girl. Our family went to ni men, 2 just think they g 3 worth of groceries for the of us to last a week, when this would hardly be enough for a day with such a big fam We all had to starve all the t and are still starving, with such low wages and the landlord being on our k, and the grocery r he won't us no more to eat, what we going to do. These bosses, | want to pay our bills. > rich men they think we don’t | Yes, we do want to pay our bills, but out of what, no work, no money and six children, hungry and naked. Here is another thing these bosses are doing, these young girls if they do get a job the boss pays her for a while then he quits and only gives her carfare and though he kept telling her that he would pay her so she got tired of that stuff and quit that job and demanded her money he said if she come back he would pay her if not he would not pay her. Do you think that its right to treat a poor Negro girl like that? We oughtn’t stand for it. —Cleveland Working Girl LW.W. Tries to Split Loggers; Latter Turn to T.U.U.L. (By « Worker ABERDEE tional Shingle Weavers Union dependent of the F. of L independent of everything else as that is concerned. Each local tries to be independent of the others and of its own International also, such as voting to withold per capita from the International Office. This was done at the instigation of a member of the I.W.W. Also C, E. Pain, Industrial Worker reporter for Grays Harbor has been sitting in at most of the Shingle Weavers’ meetings. Thru the agency of Pain the members were worked up to wit-| o such an extent that out of a mem- bership of 400 on Gray’s Harbor there are only about 150 paid up in the union. But recently thru the efforts of the members of the T.U. U.L. the shingle weavers are becom- ing more and more convinced that only thru the T.U.U.L. program of militant industrial unionism can the shingle weavers resist wage cuts, eed up, lengthening of hours and unemployment. The I.W.W. opposi- tion has been smashed as the major- ity of supporters of that group have been convinced of our program. At the last meeting of the Grays Har- bor local at Hoquiam the shingle ., Weste: 2 “complete | On sale: John Reed | is of the Soviet Union, 175 Witth Ave.;) hold support from the Shingle) Weavers voted $15 to the Illinois Weavers and Lumber Workers paper.|™iners relief and $50 to the Lumber We have overwhelming evidence that| Worker, official organ of the Na- this dissension in the union has been tional Lumber Workers Union of the instigated by the-I.W.W. | T.U.U.L, The L.S.W.U. has been demoralized | Out of A Job—What to Do (By a Worker Corr President Hoover alw luck, every time he goes fishing he always come back with lots of fish. I am too a fisherman, but I am fishing for work. —Logger. }man even wouldn’t let me in. An- other young man wanted to go in and they wouldn't let him in. I talk to him and he said five weeks ago they hired him and he was ex- amined by doctor and told to have his tonsils cut out, then they’d hire very hard, I walked to Stanley and| him. He did so and now they refuse Patterson, Spring Street and I ask) him work. I want answer from the boss for work, but he looked at|the Daily Worker what a working me and he said, I don’t hire a man|man should do with such a system, like you. I ask, why. He said, you/|@s it’s now. do not dress well enough. | I like the Daily Worker and am I walk down to Hudson Street, ready to fight for it. Electric Co. —JOBLESS WORKER. spondent) has good Thursday morning it was raining for the ent unempl it situa- rapidly dropping. During February tion. The sky-pilots and petty-bour-;there was a drop of 50 per cent geois who compose the L.D. de-| below February of 1929. The Hoo- liberately overlook the fact that the|ver and social-fascist building pro- entire Hoover imperialist regime |grams will not feed the 7,000,000 un- which has been howling about in-|employed workers. Most of the creased “public building programs,” |“program” is propaganda in order after four months of pressure finds|to hold off militant action by the that building construction work is | workers. Southern Cotton Mills and Labor By Myra Page 96 pp. 25 Cents, EARLY REVIEWS “Myra Page is well qualified to write of Southern textile As a southern woman herself, she has lived and worked in mill villages and knows the situation at first hand. “SOUTHERN COTTON MILLS AND LABOR” should be read by every worker in order to understand what is back of the great struggles in the southern textile field.” —-GRACH HUTCHINS, author of “Labor and Silk.” workers. . The author performed a surgical operation upon a portion of the body of American imperialism, an operation which discloses in detail the misery of the masses. This is no ‘study’ by a social welfare worker. Sympathy and un- anding are there, but primarily it is an incision, sharp and merciless, by a scalpel with a Leninist edge.” WILLIAM F, DU Order from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street New York City Discounts offcred on orders in quantity lots THE “YOUNG WORKER” will appear as a WEEKLY on May 1, 1930 Ave you a Young Worker? Are there Young Workers in your House? Are there Young Workers in Your Shop? If so, are they reading the Only Working Class Youth Paper in the United States — The eung Worker’? Subscribe, Spread, Read the ‘Young Worke: Regular Pr .50 a year; 75c for 6 months, DAILY WORKER” AND OUNG WORKER” FOR BLANK AND RUSH SPECIAL OFFER DURING MARCH, APRIL, MAY Tam enclosing $... one sub to the “Daily sie ere to pay for the special offer of and one sub to the “Weekly”. | NAME cr Achaia nee sins Unaaearinec eeees