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| DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MARCH 25, 1930 - VES... wage Three WORKERS: CC poo WHOLESALE ARRESTS OF CAL. UNEMPLOYED; LUMBER MILLS DOWN! a — ops , Crisis, Unemployment Sharpen in Germany ‘REVOLUTION ARY TR ADE F; ighting | Farm Shingle Mills of Grays Harbor, Washington, Are Either Closed or Down to Third Capacity ! Sacramento and San Francisco Police Arrest Nearly 1000 Unemployed; Force Many to Leave| (By a Worker Correspondent) ABERDEEN, Wash.—The shingle mills on Gray’s Harbor, which op- erated at full capacity till recently, are now shut down to about a third capacity, At the same time the shingle weavers are expecting the coming wage cuts, as it is charac- teristic of us to fight. The shingle weaver is the most speeded up worker in the lumber industry. At }least half the shingle weavers have had hands or fingers amputated by the saws. All shingle weavers are subject to shingle weavers’ asthma, bosses to try to slash wages by at least a third. They are receiving an average of $7.00 for the sawyers and $6.00 for packers. I am satisfied that the shingle weavers will resist the forth- Workers, Don’t Fall for This Fast One (By « Worker Correspondent) SAN PEDRO, Cal.—Fellow work- ers, Southern California justice says it is unlawful for a Filipino to marry a white. On the other hand, Southern California justice hires mostly Filipino workers. Fellow workers, it is very easy Refuse to Support Le (By a Worker Correspondent.) owing to inhaling cedar dust, which contains oil of cedar, a deadly poi- json. They will fight under the leadership of the National Lumber Workers’ Union, LUMBER WORKER. A demonstration of German workers against capitalism. cently the revolutionary trade unions in Berlin and other industrial cities won substantial victories in the workers councils over the social- democrats. Re- jerimination of races and nationali- | ties, they are keeping the workers| apart from organizing together. As workers we must stick to- |gether; we are slaves whether we |are white, black or yellow. » A SEAMAN. To Be Held in St. Louis June 7, 8,9 eres by) (Continued from Page One) wis, Fishwick '1)4 ‘'@ |be sent to the “Liberator,” 799 Broadway, New York City. Soe oe Jare coming into the rank and file TAYLORVILLE, Il—Local No,|N. M. U., and many miners are 817, U. M. W. A. has refused to pay dues to Lewis, and also is going to stop paying to Fishwick. Many locals in Illinois are doing this. There are thousands of miners that joining the N. M. U., which is the only union for the nners and all the workers, who must stick to- gether and overthrow the rotten capitalist system, PEABODY MINER, Starvation Is Lot of Field Workers of Calif. (By @ Worker Correspondent) COLTON,-Calif., We had a strike here of the melon workers of Impe- Valley forseveral months, under the direction of the T.U.U.L. The workers of this region work for the miserable wage of 33 cents per hour, for 8 hours daily during three days per week, for which it is impossible to earn- more than $8 weekly. The- most-skilled- do not earn more than $15 per week. The children of the workers are sub- jected to begging. The children must Lay Off 100 Los Angeles Grocery Clerks LOS ANGELES, Cal. — Ralphs Grocery Co., with about: a dozen stores in this city, laid off 100 work- | ers, These 100 victims of a twisted so- cial system help swell the local army of unemployed of at least 150,- go to a “charity” institution to get clothing in order to be able to go Fight Discrimination Against Negroes. CLEVELAND, Ohio. — Because jChapins Restaurant on Superioz Ave. near Third St. discriminates against Negroes a picketing demon- |stration was held before it on Mon- ‘day by young workers of the Younz |Communist League and the Ameri- can Negro Labor Congress. The picketers were hauled to jail, but later released. to school. This is only an example| On Tuesday another group of of the life the workers who work militant young Negro and white on the Pacific Fruit Express Co. workers went into this restaurant have to endure. I will write another to eat, they were attacked by thugs letter about the the conditions ex- hired by the restaurant owner. When isting among these workers. ite capitalist police arrived they ar- We are the workers who produce | rested seven of the young workers. all the good things of life, but the |leaving the thugs go free. Later capitalists enjoy it and prevent us |the International Labor Defense se- from having what we need. Proletarians of all countries unite! by putting up $500 for each. F. D. P. eS a Oe Biggest Inter-Racial Dance. Over 1,500 Negro and white work- ‘ jers attended..the Liberator-Lahor 000 starving, ragged and homeless Unity dance, held at Rockland Pa- workers. jlace, Saturday, it was the most suc- Food workers! Join the food work- | cessful inter-racial dance ver held \ers group organized under thejin New York City. |leadership of the Trade Union Unity| The affair was a splendid expres- League. Room 206, 656 South Los |sion of racial solidarity. William 7. Angeles Street! R. (Poster, general secretary of the cured the release of these workers | Capitalist Greed Maims Cuba (By a Worker Correspondent) DETROIT, Mich.—After being in- jured at Fisher Body Co. I was con- fined to the hospital and saw many workers, who were crippled for life, | thru faulty adjustment and failure of the bosses to provide proper safe- guards on dangerous machinery. One case was of especial interest. It was a workman employed by the Briggs Body Co, who lost both hands from the failure of the bosses to pro- vide safeguards on a punch press, I have never seen a single puch press that had any sort of safeguard de- vice. It would be an easy matter to have never seen a single punch press prevent workmen losing their arms and hands as this man did, The capitalist system of greed will jnever care about our safety. We must organize and fight for safety protec- |tion as well as decent wages and hours’ and against lay-offs. Let’s |hear from other workers who have |been maimed by capitalism. ward TUUL. —Worker who lost foot at Fisher Body. (By « Worker Correspondent) TAYLORVILLE, Ill. — The night shift men in Peabody Mine 58 work under very bad conditions and they are forced to wear gas masks to be able to put in their shift. The men at local 2513 elected a pit committee. Supt. Bill Hardy refused to recognize its representative be- cause the man was a N.M,U. sym-)| pathizer. The subdistrict board _member Haywood (UMWA) and President Glassglow were ing guns and “Pope For Boss Rn oung Illinois Miners Fighting Lewis, Fishwick | were deputized during our strike. That is a sample of what the once powerful UMWA has sunk to led by those lahor fakers Lewis, Fishwick and Farrington, You can expect on- ly treachery from such men. The young miners like myself are fighting against these rotten condi- tions and these labor fakers who against the miners. They are looking towards the N. M. U. to lead them. —TAYLORVILLE MINER. state of the overthrown imperial For- | help the bosses in their dirty work \ is held in order by force while the} |Trade Union Unity League, and one lof the delegates elected by 110,000 New York workers at the March 6 demonstration, spoke. | “The bosses, by attempting to stir up race hatred,” said Foster, are at- tempting to disunite the workers. We must smash this attempt to jbreak the solidarity of both black! jand white workers—a policy that is backed by the A. F. of L. with its Jim Crow unions.” Ch ean Inter-Racial Dance in Washington. WASHINGTON, D. C., Mar. 24.— |More than a thousand Negro ai (white workers attended the inter- racial dance here.6 Unemployed Leaders in New Bedford Given Jail Terms and Fines NEW BEDFORD, Mass., Mar. 24. —Jail sentences and fines were meted out to the leaders of the un- employed demonstrations on March 6 here at the trial which just con- cluded. Eulalie Mendes and Pcter Hagelias | were fined $5 and $10; Martin Rus- sack was sentenced to 30 days in jail plus a $5 fine. An unemployed worker was given 30 days in jail, and a Young Pioneer was placed on two months‘ probation. All the | Delegates Ready to | Start for Conference (Continued trom Page One) rapidly worse, in spite of the cam- paign of artificial optimism being conducted by President Hoover and all of his aids, as well as by big | business heads themselves, The bread lines in New York grow longer day by day; retail trade is collaps- ling, showing that the jobless can not buy necessities of life any more; such incidents as that of 2,000 job- | less men and women applying for 1280 available jobs as census enume- jvators in Luzerne County, Pa, |abound. In Rochester, N. Y., mar- ried printing trades workers went {on the four day week, and single compositors take a three day week, 'to divide the work. And ptinting, which takes advantage of the large amount of bankruptcy notices, sales leaflets, etc. during hard times, is one of the least affected of indus- tries. i “Not Work Enough.” After the orgy of head-cracking | with which the capitalist police met the demands of the starving work. ers on March 6, Gov. Young of Cali- fornia (where some of the most brutal attacks took place) came out with a statement: “Unemployment? I think it’s ex- agerated. Anyway, we’ll always have | it. The solution? Well, perhaps there isn’t any. California has not enough work to go around for all the people who come here.” The unemployed themselves and the militant workers feel that mass pressure for work or wages will, however, foree the fat parasites who run the country to loosen up with a little of their profits, and feel, too, that the workers are beginning to jrealize that a social system which produces such misery will have to BO. Southern, Northern Workers Join Protest (Continued fr ‘om Page One) elease of the elected committee of ‘the March 6 Unemployment demon- stration in New York, and pledged to continue the struggle for the or- ganization of jobless and employed workers, to win work or wages, the seven hour day and five day week, ete. Speakers were Bill Dunne, editor of Labor Unity; Andrew Overgaard, secretary of the Metal Workers’ In- dustrial League of the Trade Union Unity League; Charles Guynn, se¢- retary treasurer of the National Miners’ Union, and Pat Devine, dis- |trict organizer of the Communist Party. “ * * Shoe Shop Meeting. A shop meeting of the workers at jthe Florel Shoe Co., Brooklyn, Thursday, passed a resolution de- nouncing the arrest and attempted railroading to prison of Foster, Am- jter, Minor, Raymond and Lesten. “These representatives of the un- employed championed the fight of the employed and unemployed work- | UNIONS WIN IN WORKER 7 oilers’ League |Get Six Members to Two of Social-Democra in Chemical Factory | (Inprecorr Press Service) | BERLIN — the workers council | aves at the important chemical |factory ,Schering and Kahlbaum, | resulted in a fine victory for the list of the revolutionary trade union! opposition which was put forward \for the first time. The revolution- ary list received 349 votes, whilst |the social democrats received only |181 votes. In the previous worker: |council the social democrats had an Make Big Advances in Other Industries in Heilbronn and Pirna In a leather factory in Heilbronn the revolutionary list received 110 votes and the reformists 38 votes, so that the new council will be com- posed of five revolutionaries and one reformist. The total result of the workers council election in the Hoesch cel- luloid factory in Pirna has just een announced. The revolutionary ist received a total of 466 votes, undisputed majority, this time, how-|the reformists 306 votes and, the jever, the council will consist of six | fascist list 167 votes. The revolu- members of the revolutionary trade tionaries will now have six seats, union opposition and two social dem-|the reformists three seats and the | ocrats. ‘fascists two seats, “Work or Bread, or Jobless Will Seize Food” Mexico City papers, including the )may go in considerable masses to “Universal Grafico” gives account |take the food that they see in th of a demand made on March 6 by commercial establishments. : The “Universal Grafico” states the National Unemployed Confeder- |that the delegation declared that ation, for relief from hunger— hy i ib had actuall, |‘Awork or bread,” voiced through ale Beco tier mempere, ied actually. i . bear (died of starvation, falling dead in jlarge delegation that visited the |ine streets of Tacuba, near Mexico | newspaper demanding that it Bive | City, for lack of nutrition after {publicity to their demand. | days and days of hunting work | Further, the delegation gave the | fruitlessly. following warning, taken from the| The delegation rejected the pro- “Universal Grafico” in its quotation | posal previously made by the chief of what the delegation had said: of the Traffic Department of the “There are many of the Confed- |city, that the unemployed serve as eration, who, facing the horrible sit- | voluntary watchers of automobiles i | uation of starvation, are disposed to | (extreme measures, such as violence. There are groups which are ready to | break into stores and warehouses of | food, driven by hunger. And if yet! they have not done so, it is because we have, with great difficulty, dis- | suaded them from such action. But | we fear that things are going be- | yond the limit and any day they | which are parked on the streets and live from tips that might be given by the owners. By such a “service” that is no better than plain beg- ging, they state, none could make more than some 20 centavos a day. and this is not enough for one per son, let alone a family. They demanded that the authori- ties take action. | Saxon Government Falls By C. P. Attack BERLIN (By Inprecorr, Press ; Service).—Despite the maneuvers of | the national fascists who pretended | to oppose the reactionary Bunger government in Saxony, but who in | reality would gladly have kept it ir power, a lack of confidence vote was adopted in the Saxon Diet with 6 against 24 votes and 9 abstentions. The government was overthrown at the initiative of the Communi The present government will carry on formally until the constitution of a new government. In order to prevent the formation of a govern” ment of the Great Coalition the Communist fraction has filed a mo- tion for the dissolution of the Diet. The “Rote Fahne” declares that the voting on this motion will show how far the national fascists and social democrats are serious in their op- position to the Bunger cabinet. ‘Postal Workers _ | Need Unity League (Continued from Page One) against raising wages are used the facts that the postal administration is bearing a deficit and that if wages be raised it will be detri- mental to the government. The Trade Union Bureaucrats. The postal workers are rather well organized, but the union bureau- crats are betraying them by colla-~ borating with the employers in the different organizations for “improv- ing the lives of the workers,” and others. In 1926 the employers or- ganized a “Council for ‘Improving’ the Lives of Postal Workers.” The secretary of the national organiza- tion in his report of 1927, praised and supported this council which has governmental officials on it. The Negro Postal Workers. There are 25,396 Negro workers employed in the postal department. The majority of them are employed as letter-carriers in the South, | White workers do not take this work, and for this reason this field of work is left entirely to the Ne- |groes, The Negroes practically do | not do any inside office work; how- lever, since the war, particularly in | the northern cities, the number of | Negro office workers and letter-car- |riers is growing. There are also, | many Negro workers in the South among the railway postal employes, and besides some of them hold the jobs of the chief office employes. The Negroes comprise the biggest percentage among the unskilled workers, The number of white work- ers in this branch is rather small. ers against their oppressors,” says Although the trade unions officially | workers state grows .. . there is | no such conflict in the workers state War on U.S.S.R.” (Continued from Page One) catholic church in Ireland as ex- plained by a catholic and revolu- | tionary in catholic Ireland. “Kind regards, “A Friend (Dublin, Treland).” Exposing the Crusade. The open letter of Peador O’Don- Y nell to Cardinal MaeRory declares in part: “I do not believe .... that ¥ there is religious persecution in Soviet Russia . .. I do believe that priests are jailed for political of- fenses; but then, a professor in May- nooth College was jailed by the catholic puppet government of which Mr. Cosgrave is chairman and no one called for a holy war against British imperialism ,. .” “In Russia there has been a rev- olution. An imperialist, capitalist state has been overthrown; a work- ers state has been set up. The pre- vious state by the use of arms,! kept the workers in order as, in the} state your emminence backs today, Dublin unemployed are kept in or- | as to make unemployment essential to the system.” “The Crisis Is Solved.” The Daily Worker received the following letter addressed to the) Secretary of Labor: “Attention Secretary of Labor Davis: “Further evidence of the correct- jness of Hoover’s prognostication— ja firm in New York state increased its personnel 100 per cent during the week, “This firm consisted of one wage | worker and this week as a result | of receiving an order lost by a rival |sweat shop hired an additional worker. Of course the rival firm | which lost the job let one of their 26 slaves go, still, even Communists can’t dispute the fact that,whereas, employment dropped in the latter case four per cent it increased in the former case 100 per cent, A Davis statistical gain of 96 per cent | in employment. “Truly yours, Statistician.” Write About Your Conditions Ger and the Gaclteacht terrorized. In the workers state the wreckage for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. cases have been appealed. Young Pioneers of Trenton, N. J., Resist TRENTON, N. J., March 21.— After repeated distribution of bul- letins in Trenton School Junior No. 4, several Young Pioneers are be- ing persecuted by the capitalist school authorities. When a Pioneer leader was dis- tributing leaflets outside that school calling the children and their parents to a protest meeting against this attack on the Pioneers, he was attacked by a few patrol boys and boy scouts who were incited by the eachers against the Young Pioneers. Het was arrested and sentenced to ten days. ARREST CHINESE COMMUNISTS IN MALAYSIA Batavia, Java, dispatches state that five Chinese Communists were artested Friday at Palembang, and sixteen in the Riau Archipelago of Malaysia. They are charged with being members of a Chinese Com- munist organization with headquar- ters at Singapore, Attacks of Bosses! |the resolution. “The police, under |their chief, Commissioner Whalen, brutally attacked the workers, in- cluding women and children, and jdenied the rights of the workers to tee of the unemployed under heavy bail to railroad them to the peni- tentiary, We pledge our fullest solidarity with the arrested dele- gation, which we consider our dele- gation, and are ready to continue the fight against boss oppression until the fascist rule of the bosse: shall be overthrown.” + #1 + Demonstration Today. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., March 24. A protest demonstration, called by the Communist Party here, will take place tomorrow at 1208 Tasker Street to denounce the police bru- tality against the March 6 demon- strators against unemployment, and the arrests that took place at that, time. The assembled workers will | demand in no uncertain terms the release of Foster, Minor, Amter, | Raymond and Lesten, the represent- atives of the New York March 6 demonstrators. E. Gardos, district | organizer of the C. P., will be the | main speaker, i the streets, and placed the commit- | | do not refuse to accept colored! workers (with the exception of the railway postal workers’ organiza- tion), yet, in the South, we do not meet Negroes to any large extent among the memberships of the trade unions. They often pay dues to the sick benefit funds and other mutual aid organizations, but at the , |same time take no part whatever in trade union life. The majority | of the Negro workers in the South belongs to the Postal Alliance, which is of a trade union and in part also of a political character, composed wholly of Negroes, Only in the North do Negro work- ers actively participate in the work of the trade unions, particularly in Chicago and New York. Out of 2000 Negro postal workers in Chicago, more than one-half are organized in the trade unions, however, they are very little interested in the trade union movement. Some of them do take active part in the life of the trade ‘unions, but the white trade union bureaucrat do their utmost not to permit them to oc- ‘cupy any responsible positions. The Postal Workers of America must wage an active struggle not only against the postal employers, but also against the trade union bureaucrats who are collaborating with them. It is essential to organ- ize Red Oppositions for a decisive struggle against capitalist rational- ization, against the worsening and for the improvement of labor and living conditions, for wage increases, against race antagonisms, which are being kindled by the bourgeoisie and its lackeys, The slogan of the Amer- ican postal, telegraph and telephone workers should be; the organization \of Red Opposition on the basis of the militant class struggle. ANSWER THE BLACK CRUSADERS! ing, Cardinal Haye: ing a “Holy” War } in Metropolitan Kishop Mi Are he Rabbis, Matthew Woll and Co. ing Agninst the Soviet Union pera House Tuesday, Protest! Rally to the Defense of the Workers? Fatherland! Come to the MASS PROTEST MEETING TONIGHT! TONIGHT! CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE 67th Street, Near Third Avenue Speakers: Count Michael Karolyi, Waldo Frank, Novelist | and Critic, Michael 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 WILLIAM GROPP! M. PASS, 1. Auspices: JOHN REED CLUB, In Cooperation with FRIENDS ‘Tickets: 25 ce advance, Club, 14 14th Sty Fri New Masses, 112 E, 101 St, dw of the Sovie: R. HUGO GELLERT, KLEIN, JACOB BURCK Revolutionary Writers and Artists, OF THE SOVIET UNION. 35 cents at door. On sale: John Reed | t Union, 175 Fifth Ave.; | Agricultural Work- " al League has opened headquarters at 904 J Street, in Brawley, Cal. the largest shipping point in the Imperial Valley. The League is out in the open with its militant program of organization, ite the police terror which has reigned here since the first of the year when the masses of unorgan- ized workers revolted. The thousands of field workers, who are forced to toil long hours under conditions far worse than slavery, are organizing under the leadership of the Trade Union Unity League and the Agricultural Work- ers Industrial League with the de- finite purpose of striking for better conditions in the spring months. Extensive plans are being made for a broad organizational campaign Inde des throughout the entire Valley. Sched- || ules of weekly mass meetings in the strets of every town in the Valley are being drawn up. Meetings are being held daily with the workers on the fields, Field committees are being set up in every district, and numbers of active delegates are be- ing sent into the fields for organ- izational work, Buy Communist Paper. “Vida Obrera,” the official organ of the Communist Party in the Spanish language, is being sold in the streets at the rate of fifty copies daily. The Mexican workers, who are in the majority in the Valley, numbering approximately 6,000, show by their enthusiastic response | that they are ready to fight against the intolerable working conditions. Wages for field labor run from 30 to 45 cents per hour for exhaust- ing physical labor in heat that reaches 120 degrees. The working day often reaches 16 hours in the height of the season, never less than 12. Contract work is preval- ent. The only shelter provided for the workers in most cases is a roof of leaves and grass on four poles; no walls, The workers must fur- nish their own cots and blankets or sleep on the ground. No lights, no/| running water. The workers are forced to drink the water from the igation ditches, No sanitary nor vided. The workers themselves must do their own cooking over an open fire, no stoves being provided, Stimulate Race Issue. The employers constantly strive to keep the workers of the Valley divided on racial issues and attempt to pit the Mexican workers against the Filipinos, ete. In this they are failing; the workers are organizing on a class besis in the Agricultural Workers Industrial League. Mexi- can, Filipino, Negro and American workers attend the meetings to- gether and declare their adherence to the fundamental working class principle of solidarity. The date for an Imperial Valley conference of all agricultural work- ers has been set for April 20 at El Centro, to be preceded by a mass meeting Saturday night, April 19. Ten thousand conference calls will be distributed throughout the Val- ley. The conference will not only work out detailed plans for imme- diate action, but will lay the basis nathing facilities whatever are pro- | JUDGES THREATEN TO REFUSE HEAR WITNESSES Defense Demand Right to Show Movies (Continued from Page One) International Labor Defense, devel- oped his argument for a postpone- rient of the case until the middle of May, pointing out that during the ‘17 ‘days since the delegates of the unemployed workers were arrested, the conspiracy to keep them in jail without bail and the continued at- tempts to deprive them of even such a trial as the laws of this capitalist state provide, had forced him into court no less than 11 days. He de- manded time to subjoena the moving pictures taken of the Union Square meeting, showing the ‘police ruth i clubbing down the jobless and themselves precipitat- ing the violence. “You can’t have until the middle of May,” snapped Judge Voorhees. Assistant District Attorney Unger was up at once, protesting any delav whatever, on the ground that this was “an unusual case, one in hich, though the defendants are charged with unlawful assembly, the offense is really that they were’ concerned in starting a riot.” Unger exulted over the decision of Justice Ford of the supreme court, depriving the defendants of a jury trial, as evidence that “the case is a very simple one, to be quickly dis- posed of.” Bothered About Pictures, The judges had been worrking among themselves over the question cf those moving pictures. “What do you want to show them for?” they demanded of Brodsky, “We don’t know whether they can be projected in this court room.” Brodsky explained that they showed innumerable cases of assault by the police on the workers in the crowd, and added later, that the case jof the defense would take about | three days or longer, with 40 or 50 witnesses. “We won’t hear them,” declared the judges, roundly. “What do you want so many witnesses for? This isn’t an assault case.” Brodsky blandly quoted Unger’s statement that the case was “un- usual” and that the charge was really rioting. | “Mr. Unger,” said the presiding judge, “what date would be agr ‘able to you?” This sweetly reason- able request of the dapper Unger was in marked contrast to the sav- age contemptuous and abrupt man- ner with which the judges cut short |Brodsky’s attempt at argument for [a longer continuance. And between them the judges and Unger fixed on | April 11—which is exactly the date ‘set for the five representatives of the unemployed to appear in the |Fourth Magistrate District Court, for hearing on the felony charge of assaulting police officer Albert Tal- bot, who, it is said by the polee, was hit on the head with a stone thrown \by an unemployed worker in retalia- tion to the attack of the police. for an industrial union of agricul- tural workers to be organized on a national scale. Southern Cotton Mills and Labor By Myra Page 96 pp. 25 Cents, EARLY REVIEWS “Myra Page is well qualified to write of Southern textile workers. | “SOUTHERN COTTON read by every worker in ord of the great struggles in the —GRACE BUTCHI As a southern woman herself, she has lived and worked in mill villages and knows the situation at first hand. MILLS AND LABOR” should. be ler to understand what is back southern textile field.” NS, author of “Labor and Silk.” - . The author performed a surgical operation upon a | portion of the body of American imperialism, an operation which discloses in detail the no ‘study’ by a social welfare worker, misery of the masses, This is Sympathy and un- derstanding are there, but primarily it is an incision, sharp and merciless, by a scalpel with a Leninist edge.” Orde’ —WILLIAM F, DUNNE. + from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street Discounts offered on THE “YOUNG WORKER" New York City orders in quantity lots will appear as a WEEKLY on May 1, 1930 Are you a Young Worker? Are there Young Workers in your - House? Are there Young Workers in Your Shop? If so, are they ceading the Only Working Class Youth Paper in the United States — The “Young Worker’? ‘Young Worker”. 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