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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDN 4. F. L. TYPO UNION FAKERS DON’T CARE ABOUT UNEMPLOYED Chousands of Printers Walk Streets Idle in| 2 Chicage; Misleaders Do Nothing Howard and Other Bosses’ Tools Set Aside 5-Day Week for 3 Year Period (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Ill.—Eight weeks ago I came to Chi¢ago and al- though a skilled worker, find it next to impossible to get a job. I have walked the streets day after day, visited shop after shop, but always got the answer, “No help wanted.” I am a printer, but like several thousands of others in the printing industry who are out of work, find printers being laid off instead of hired. The Typographical Union here is doing nothing for its unemployed members. It seems not to be disturbed or interested in our conditions. At regular union meetings for months this question was not even taken up. week for the last job scale agreement, Howard and other betrayers of the workers’ interests, in collaboration with the bosses, agreed to set it aside for 3 years. the idle printers walking the streets today in Chicago, There is something basically rotten in a system when able-bodied men ave forced to be idle, unable to even find a bess to exploit them. Workers, unemployed and employed, we must get together and go to battle against a capitalist system that is so mismanaged and in the process of decay. Organize, demonsirate and fight under the slogan of “Work or Wages.” raed —A PRINTER. Arteraft Strikers Militant, Watch U.T.W.! (By @ Worker Correspondent.) Kensington in the vicinity of the PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—The most | Arteraft mills. vecent strike in the Kensington sec-| Tet arrests were made today, two : “°° | of the arrested being a couple who tion, that of the Arteraft Hosiery |..o.9 standing on the porch of their nills is marked by the same mili- home and are not connected with the ‘ancy of the strikers and theit sym- | strike. pathizers as in the strikes at the! farge crowds and numerous police H. S. Aberle Mills and the Rodgers vere attracted by the arrests of four fosiery mills. men who t“*sed to “obey” police This, in spite of the fact that the | orders, and by the arrests of others. J.T.W, is negotiating a “settlement”! The police have been brutal, yet of the Aberle strike along the usual Joseph Kugelman, chief boss of the lass collaborationist lines, a vote |Arteraft mills, charges police were having been taken, the union leaders not protecting his scabs. Kugelwfan claiming a victory for going back to jalso claims, only a few of the hosiery wo) : knitters were out. So while the Aberle hosiery work- | Working at the Artcraft are scabs, > returning, pending the final |80me of whom were even brought in ‘agreement” after an “investigation” |from out of town. The Arteraft now being made by the “mediators” | Workers should listen to the N.T.W. who are thoroughly satisfactory to | speakers. he bosses, struggles continue in ~PHILADELPHIA WORKER. Showed Him the Way to Become a Red (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK CITY.—Being unemployed for over three months | tried the telephone company and went to the employment office at W. | 41st St. I filled out an application. Finally 1 was interviewed by a telephone employee. I was given something to read. She said it was good. I rejoiced. When the union had a wonderful opportunity to win the 5-day | The 5-day week would have absorbed most of | The workers now | Chief Cossack! But He Still Keeps Shop! tee over: WHALEN (TE | Whalen has ordered New York cabbie You'd to wear uniforms, think it’s his esthetic sense; but it ain't. The chief cossack was gen- | eral manager of Wanamaker’s, you remember. question of selling clothes. an auxiliary to the capitali But it’s not only a Whalen aims to uniform the taximen as t police department. |98 from Mines Hold s| West Pa. Conference (Continued | (Continued from Page One) 1916. Thus on a 3,000-ton ship 10 this district at present and 45 dele- | men were kicked off the jobs and gates volunteered to act as members ‘others were made to work h of Committees of Action, thus be- and faster. As a result of this ra- s voluntary organizers for the tionalization on the high seas 86 | per cent more freight carried | | these days with 18 per cent more men. This rationalization is Speed Up Grows en the Ships from Page One) te { union. Resist Wage Cuts. The program of action put for-| ward is: | a tremendous rate. ( pase Lia) Sane SSatnet wage outs, being scrapped and new ones, real |°H@tges, discrimination and w torture chambers for the sailors, are |"& Of conditions. being built. | “The larger part of American ; ne vessels engaged in ‘foreign trade,” | writes Ludwell Denny in his book, ‘America Conquerors Great Britain,” | “in the view of the (U.S. Shipping) | board, will soon have to be replaced | Iwith faster and more modern ships if | ithe American merchant marine is to constitute either an effective instra-| ment of national defense *(war) or] Demand miners? safety com a potent agency for the develop-| nitteos in all mines, 3 ment and protection of foreign trade | | interests.” 7. Fight against discrimination—- During 1928 only 34 per cent of |@@ainst Negro miners, young mi- |the vessels built were burners. | 2ers, fight victimization of militant |The rest were oil users, requiring workers, less men. More than one-half un- der construction in 1929 were Diesel | |engine ships. On Diesel engine ships jthe black gang, or the engine crew} jis cut 40 to 50 per cent. Then there is “iron mike.” “Iron mike” takes the place of the old weather-beaten seaman standing at | the wheel who used to decorate to- go d ng on at dis. | n committees at all| tion. Elect mine No arbit Fight for cl elected by loaders 4, Fight the docking system and penalties, weighmen to be 5. ‘The mine committee shall w out and the local adopt a scale for payment of dead work. 8. Demand free doctor and hos- pital treatment for all miners and their families. 9. Fight unemployment and the speed-up; demand the 6-hour day, 5-day week. | Demand Release of N. Y. Comm. Resolutions were adopted by the jconference demanding the immediat» release of William Z. Foster, na- | bacco cans. “Mike” does the work jof the state apparatu ESDAY, APRIL 2, 1939 Soviet nee W € arns Polish Bosses Not to Play With Fire in) ~'PRAVDA EXPOSES THE Union War Threats (By Inprecorr Pre y's “Pravda” write: geois Poland, the classical coun- of national and religious perse- cution, the country of the bloody Ukrainian and Jewish progroms, the country where the dominant catholic church with the ass! iOSCOW figh {rivals with fierce ruthlessness—this country is in the front rank of the crusade against the Soviet under the slogan of relig dom! Referring to the interpellation gned by all parties in the Poli | m (naturally not the Communis and national-revolutionary deputies but with the signatures of the Pol- jish “socialists”) the “Pravda” de- clares that this represents the turn- ing point in the campaign from Union, MOSCOW (By Inprecorr Press Service)—One of the heaviest bur dens bequeathed to the young social ist state by czarism was illiteracy and the lack of any effective edu- cational apparatus with which to combat it, A draft law for the in- troduction of compulsor for children in the R.S.F now heen adopted by the Council of People’s Commissars. Schooling wili be declared compuls all children who have completed its alleged Root Out Wliteracy in Soviet Union , propaganda and agitation to direct | action against the Soviet Union through the official institutions of |the Polish state. | The “Pravda” then refers to the provocative lies issued widespread | by the Polish press concerning the | tuation in the Soviet Union, the | flight of the peasants, | the alleged collapse of the five-year | and declares plan, ete., that the poison gas campaign is being organ- ed by the war ministry and its or s the “Polska Zbroina” and ‘Gazeta Polska.” In conclusion t avda” wi the Polish polit not to p with the fire of an attack on the Sovict Union, and points out that the shot fired by Kaver three years ago went off in a similar sit~ luation. Ss their 8th year and who live in the, urban centers, workers colonies, on Soviet farms and in those provinces | where the collectivization has bee’ completely carried into operation. In all other districts in the R.S F.S.R. schooling will become compul- | sory in 1931- The provisional length of the schooling has been put sat 4 years, As with the industrial- ation, so here also the aim is to catch up and pass the most devel- this year for |oped capitalist States, such as Ger-) yggcow DISTRICT PLENUM i many. ILOW PROMISES EXPOSE FAKERS: RIGHT 10 FIRE Workers in Chicago Cloak Shop Outraged CHICAGO, Ti, April 1.—David le treasurer of the International Ladies’ Garment Work- ers the company union), has prom- ised Morris Michel, largest cloak i shop in Chicago’ the right to abolish all union conditions and fire work- ers at will. But the workers in this hop, defying the Van Buren gang, BUILD LIBERATOR Workers Should Support Drive |All “Throw him out, throw him out,” yelled the fakers when Cecil Hope, representing the American Negre | Labor Congress, tried to sneak at 2 church unemployment conference. held under the auspices of the So-| cialist Brotherhood of Sleeping Car| Porters. | The nature of the fake conference | 30,000 JOBLESS FIGHT POLICE AT Work Slip—But No Work SHINGTON : me Hh ~~ |Jobless Secretary in Call for 10,000 ie Sie ae 46 Sta Gespice Neatnat valative HOBOKEN, Mody | nesta | (Continued from Page One) ramon —— REPORT WITH CLOTHES | throughout the conference were tha cea READY TU WORK. [oft repeated cries. ‘We Want Work or Wages,’ ‘Fools Starve, Men Fight’ and the demand for unemployment insurance was one of: the central | points in the conference demands, | With great working class realism the lassembled delegates saw that only | by the building of a permanent, well- |organized, national unemployment Act The U.S. Shipping Board gave |movement, under the leader- this slip to a seaman, who had |\ship of the Trade Union Unity turned his last thirty-five cent | League, powerful unemployed ¢oun- flop ticket over to a seemingly less fortunate fellow sailor. The slip reads: “Report with clothes ready cils and a tightening of all forces for a militant struggle, could any re- sults be wrung from the employing to work.” When he reported, he | lass, Battle-scarred fighters, from was told there were no more jobs. \the memorable March 6 clashes with He had to walk the streets all \ihe capitalist government and their might. |police, emphasized the need for : > |more adequate preparations for fu- ip Bae \ture demonstrations and struggles, International particularly May Day. i s ecognized that the crisis in Wireless the U.S.A. is part of the world crisis, News and that with the lesson of March 6, when 1,250,000 employed and unem~- ployed workers struck and demon- strated, the question of political |mass strikes on May 1 definitely | presents itself. Immediate Tasks. “Like old warriors the delegates called for intensive preparations. Don’t leave the successes of May 1 to the spontaneity of the workers, they said. Every unemployed coun- cil must start now building up care- |fully, planning to gain the maximum number of employed and unem- ployed to the May Day demonstra- BERLIN TAILORS STRIKE. (Wireless by Inprecorr.) BERLIN, April 1—Fifteen hun- ired Berlin tailors struck yesterday against the introduction of new rates that worsen wages and working con- | ditions. Forty shops are involved. The union sanctions the strike. The opposition demands all around in- creases, abolition of overtime and pay for holidays. RE-AFFIRMS LINE. (Wireless By Inprecorr) jtions. Much criticism was expressed MOSCOW, April 1.—The Plenum |at the haphazard fashion in which of the Moscow District Committee |we prepared for March 6. With \careful, detailed and intensified fac~ viet Union has ended. It condemned |tory-gate work, we will positively tendencies of exaggerating Commu-| assure May Day demonstrations, far nist poli It likewise condemned | surpassing March 6 in numbers and elements who represent the Party | militancy. struggle against such exaggerations| “The cogference just held was only as a “retreat.” The general Party |a preliminary to the largest working line remains: industrializa |class convention this country will Soviet Union; collectivization ‘of|have yet seen. The delegates as- agriculture; abolition of the kulaks|sembled form a preliminary organ- ization, which will organize and as a class. build a tremendous National Unem- ? ; ployment Convention on July 4 and slp Nelo oe |5 in Chicago. The conference 0 oss Orp una) nimously adopted the slogan for Because of March 6 the National Convention of ‘10,000 es lead to Chicago on July 4 and 5. of the Communist Party of the So- Delegates or Bust.’ All roads must CHICAGO, = April 1.—S; _ “Lam sorry, but you better look for another job,” she told me @ \much better and eliminates many |which represents Dubinsky and jcan be inferred from the following | Build T.U.U.L. minute later. “I have been looking for one and I couldn't find any,” | tional secretary of the Trade Union |Smith, three-year-old daughter of a) : jobs, “Iron mile” is an automatic |ty.4 rade Union | president Schlesinger in Chicago, |facts: ‘The conference opened with |Smith, three-year-old Be Ee ac cate eaeUaniSee CRA eURH TE: Ireplied. I demanded to know the-reason why she refused to take me. | Steering gear and gyroscope com. |S t® beasue and all workers jailed pave protested so much that Schles- | prayer and ended wigh the singing |Tebel worker, must spend Beenie |e fee Tie an Gade alee | She retorted that she was the judge. si lace thnk ereeoe the chin better the in unemployed demonstrations; fOr ee hinvele had’ too {come toloh doxology: q |childhood in a capitalist orphanage | e T.U.U.L. ia Getting éffimny stat) sha Unily Worker fal oublof diy top: She [ate seaman waa ever able to and |e rece of fhe. thres Woodlawn «ct esienten matter out,” | This clea jhome because her father took part cussed. Like one man the confer- , 7 ut of my book. She iS ever | g : 5 ; clearly shows that the Negro in the March 6 mass-unemployment |ence pledged itself to go back home Out of the 200 members in the jmasses must be organized under the | demonstration in Chicago. |with the determination of building ; ; ning Michel shop a handful came to militant banner of the Trade Union| “yi. was the decision of the judge | the T.U.U.L. into a real mass revo- jof the journey, and “iron mike”| May 1 strike of Interational Labor; |*blesingcr’s meeting and heard him| Unity League and the American Ne-!o¢ tho Juvenile Court, who rushed |lutionary trade union center, to ‘holds the ship true to the compass. | urging intensification of the ea sey? ‘You are too good union men, | gro Labor Congress. On the other | ihe canertol tial) despite the pro- | which the workers look for fighting They were first installed on the big paign to raise funds for financing jyou are taking advantage of Mr.j/hand these masses must realize the heel oe dhe ainie. father, eoat leaderahip. liners, and, as one seaman put it, | mine delegates to the Fifth World Michel,” and “if Dubinsky said the treacherous role of the Urban). “Forward to a May Day demon- defendants now serving five years under the Pennsylvania sedition la’ urging miners té participate in the took it into her hand, read the headline and said: “So, you are a Red. “Get out or I'll have you thrown out.’ I called her a wage-slave. 1 told her to read the paper, it would do her a lot of good. I left. They only showed me the way to become a Red. Up with the Communist Party, the only Party of the workers, and the Daily Worker, the voice of the struggling masses. eliminates the man at the wheel. The course is set at the beginning | “ , ; 4 | : es = < ith, and his lawyer. ‘you find him now On the scabbiest | ¢, f ‘ |boss had a right to fire anybody | League, the N.A.A.C.P., and the : a i ag hi F 5 ea | Congress of the Red International of | A ", &| Many workers had declared their | stration that will shake the very UNEMPLOYED WORKER. oil tankers.” Automatic sprayers do/Tahor Unions, and to support the |he wanted to, he had a right to say Garvey Movement. They must NOt | illingness to adopt Sylvia and give | foundation of the capitalist system! the painting, and automatic ham- | Tnternational Mining Congress to be | it» and I will stand by him.’ be misled by the A. F. of L. and{ i i er e. a italist | Forws s-unemployed con- mers chip the rust on the ships. {her a good home. But the capitalist | Forward to a mass ploy “No Help Wanted”—Building Trades Workers Find (By « Worker Correspondent) nothing doing, no chance, etc. This I would like to describe in a few | applies to all building trades. Every words the situation in the building | building, pretty near, has a sign, trades of New York City. I am one/|“No help wanted, no bricklayers, no of the army of unemployed. Here’s | plumbers, no heipers,” etc. On the the way I try to get a job. First I)sidewalk stand men from 75 to as go to the contractor’s offices. There |many as 500, depending on the size I find at least from four to as much |of building, trying to sell their la- as 100 men a day trying to get a|bor. And there is no market for it. job in pretty near every contractors’|The A.F.L. does nothing for us. We office. Then I go to the buildings | must look to the T.U.U.L. ander construction. All foremen say —BUILDING WORKER. It’s All Part of “Prosperity” (By a Worker Correspondent) BROOKLYN, N. ¥.—I will give a summary of what happened to me and several other workers who are out of a job. It is typical of what most unemployed workers experience. I and several other workers went to the Free State Employment Bureau on Jay and John Sts., Brooklyn, where several hundred unem- ployed workers gather daily in an earnest hope to find work. Many } days pass with only a few jobs coming in a day. The other day we were sent out on a job. When we arrived at the * place, the firm of E. Powell Co., at the foot of Van Brunt at Erie Basin, the foreman, after having had the four of us hang around over an hour, gave two of us one hour work—for 50 cents rolling barrels of flax seed. This is part of the high American standards for the workers. A CLASS CONSCIOUS WORKER. Japanese Fisherman Tells How Jap Bosses In- vade Soviet Fisheries (By a Worker Correspondent) TOKYO.—In recent years the Sov- iet fishing industry in the Okhotsk Sea developed so tremendously that the Japanese capitalists which had been reaping |astounding profits euploiting these fishing aréas be- fonging to USSR found it impos-| sible to compete with it any more. So these capitalists got together, had a talk and ‘decided to establish a five million dollar fishing concern which will be able to compete with the Soviet State fishing industry. The Japanese capitalists, like those of the rest of the world, are begin- ning to feel the effects of the So- cialist Construction in Union of So- cialist Soviet Republics, By the way, the Japanese battle- hips are used during the summer fishing season for the “protection” of Japanese fishing boats which are invading the Soviet fishing territory, breaking an agreement, However the time is coming when Japanese cap- italists cannot rob the workers and peasants of the Soviet Union. —A JAPANESE FISHERMAN. Organizing Norris City Miners (By a Worker Correspondent) NORRIS CITY, Il.—In Norris City the sixty miners employed have not gotten paid for six weeks. Some of them get a couple of dollars every now and then. The operators claim they have no money. Eldo- rado comrades sent a committee of three (Groves, Tierney and Hodge) and the comrades report they will organize a National Miners Union Tocal there. All the miners there are native Americans, —“oal Miners. Marine labor has now become un- skilled labor. “There is less difference between an A, B, and an ordinary seaman than ever. Ordinary seamen today instances, on the coast-wise ships, they stand eight-hour lookout watch- es. Nobody ever stood more than two hours on lookoyt before, and then they used only A, B.’s. These long hours are forced on the men irrespective of geographical location of the ship. They stand up for eight hours in the freezing weather of the North Sea or the blazing heat of the tropics.” The speed-up system on the ships means danger and death for the sailors. “More American oil tank- ers blow up than any other tankers,” one sailor said who had long years of experience on oil tankers. “The Standard Oil Company sees to it that the U. S. commissioners are its men, (U. S. Commissioners are supposed to take up and ‘settle disputes filed by the sailors against the ship owners.) When a seaman has got a complaint he has to take it to a Standard Oil Commissioner— he might as well take it right down to the Standard Oil office and get himself fired, as this is what hap- pens if he complains. He gets canned and blackballed.” *These figures are obtained ‘from an excellent pamphlet on the marine industry, written by N. Sparks, and soon to be publishe: gol ie oh Balad cin Sea are used to stand watches. In some | ‘held in the Fall. ‘Ohio Workers Face | Five to Ten Years on | Sedition Charge, CADIZ, April 1—Facing a \five to ten-year term behind the bars |when they were found guilty of |“criminal syndicalism” here yester- |day by a steel company jury, Betty Gannett and Zorki Y were re- jleased on $1,000 bail, furnished by | |the International Labor Def | | They were arrest | jous crime of passing out against imperialist war. The International Labor Defense is fighting the case to the supreme jcourt. Chicago Rebel Bazaar) \Opens on Fri., April 4 CHICAGO, April 1—Workers of all nationalities will’ meet at the international revolutionary bazaar on the Friday evening opening of the Communist Party Bazaar and |on Saturday and Sunday following, | April 4, 5, and 6, at the Ukranian | Auditorium, 2457 West Chicago Ave. | There will be a concert on Friday evening at the opening, participated in by international singing societies, | orchestras and dramatic perform- ances, They Demanded Work eee, 3 or Wages—Got 40 Days |the Chicago cloak makers must pay | Liberator continues the fight. Schlesinger said the LLL.G.W. was |the socialist party. They must war very weak, could not make any im-|0ff the stupor of the churches. provements in conditions, and that! But this ean be done only if the | The | at least a $5 assessment to cover ex-| Liberator must go on, but it must) penses for the New York fake have funds to proceed. _ ; strike and Boston fight to break the| Send or bring your nickels, dimes strike led by the Needle Trades /or dollars to the Liberator office, Workers Industrial Union. |799 Broadway. Even if you must The Industrial Union has pointed | ss & meal, remember the Liberator out time and again to the Chicago | cloak makers the conditions in their | trade, the treachery of the company union, and the necessity for them | to severe all connections from the | company union, which is openly rving the bosses, and to join the ranks of the militant Industrial | Union. of the Negro masses. Woll, Company Union Head, Co-operate For Blow at Jobless Toiler WASHINGTON, D. C., April 1— Matthew Woll’s International Labor News Service has sent broadcast a column of quotation from a speech by Rep. Chas. Aubrey Eaton of New Jersey, denouncing the Communists for stirring up unemployed demon- i | strations, and declaring that Amer- BUFFALO, April 1.—Several hun- ea dred workers, including many young le workers, listened to speakers from the Young Communist League and | Young Pioneers expose the cam-| paign being carried on by the Ameri- can Legion in Hhereshels oe eae gencies of a private and social na- and Erie county re er a mght-\ ture working to conserve and up- Seanepenan al yr: Reis sata ral the mueslaes fabric of our - | American civilization.” dents who write the best essay on But who is Eaton? His own! Americanism a trip to Washington | piographical sketch in the Congres- to see Hoover. The American Le-| sional directory shows that he was | gion in their descriptive leaflet | John D. Rockefeller’s pastor, first openly admits that this campaign is | in Cleveland and then in New a method to attack the result of the | York; that he is now “head of in-| successful March the 6th demon-/ qustrial relations of National Lamp | Buffalo Young Toilers Combat Legion Dope Campaign in Schools. m of poverty. He said that “Com- munism has no morals.” As for American Eaton declared: capitalism, “We have an al- | most infinite number and variety of must remain the militant organizer in capitalism is solving the prob- § When these workers took part in a demonstration against wnein- ployment in front of the Oakland City Hall on last December 27, they were arrested and sentenced to $150 fine or 40 days in jail, stration. W7RITE about your conditions for the Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. Today in History of the Workers | April 2.—1525—General_upris- ing of peasants in southern Ger- many. 1919—General strike called in Spain. 1920—Coal miners in several districts struck against settlements accepted by United Mine Workers’ officials. 1924— 40,000 coal miners struck in Mis- souri, Kansas, Arkansas and Okla- Top row: Mike Mughiti, Julia Wilde, Sam Berman, Arvid Owens. Bottom row: Sonia Baltrun, Anna Robbins, Bessie Herman. homa to force signing of agree- ment. | Paterson Weavers Out es though he is serving his | | third term in Congress at $10,000 a/ /year from the public treasury. He also draws $35,000 a year from the |General, Electric to “keep 100,000 workers in a happy state of mind” in their company union. | | on Strike for Increase: Join National Textile | PATERSON, N.. J., April 1— | Eighteen weavers in the Freeman! broad silk mill here walked out to- | |day, demanding a half-cent raise in| their five cents a yard piece rate. The boss offered to raise a quarter} of a cent, but the weavers have all | joined the National Textile Work- ers Union and are sticking for the full amount. domeonant court ruled the custody of the girl|vention in Chicago July 4 and 5! be given a capitalist orphanage| Build the Trade Union Unity home. League.” Southern Cotton Mills and Labor By Myra Page 96 pp. 25 Cents. EARLY REVIEWS Page is well qualified to write of Southern textile work 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.” —GRACE HUTCHINS, 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 misery of the masses. This is no ‘study’ by a social welfare worker. Sympathy and un- derstanding are there, but primarily it is an incision, sharp and merciless, by a scalpel with a Leninist edge.” WILLIAM F, DUNNE, Order from WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street New York City Discounts offered on orders in quantity lots THE “YOUNG WORKER” 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’? Subscribe, Spread, Read the ‘Young Worker”. Regular Price: $1.50 a year; 75ce for 6 months, A YEARLY SUB TO THE “DAILY WORKER” AND R SUB TO THE “YOUNG WORKER” FOR * L THE INCL BLANK AND RUSH 6 UNION SQ., N,¥,C. SPECIAL OFFER DURING MARCH, APRIL, MAY 1 am enclosing $........ +.+.to pay for the special offer of one sub to the “Daily” and one sub to the “Weekly”. NAME...... See eeemneceeeeneeneees