The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 16, 1930, Page 3

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OAaLY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1930, A STA...) ING NEGRO WOMAN WORKER WHO IS READY TO FIGH. 3ame Slavery in Cleveland A Ag ¢Bhe Had in Hell! Hole Town in Mississippi Tells Jobless Women Workers Not to Starve But Join Unemployed Councils and Fight (By a Worker Correspondent) CLEVELAND, Ohio.—In this little town by the name of Louis- ville, Miss., they don’t want a Negro from the North to live. What kind of a world is this for the working people? The club and pistol were made for the working class. If we all were capitalists it would not be “club and pistol.” What they do is to give us poor colored people, some of us, $3.50 worth of groceries for five of us in the family to last a week. It’s just enough to keep us alive, and we are in rags. The community fund says you don’t have to go in rags, we will give you some and then what do they do? They give us a card to go and get some clothes and then they want us to pay for them, such clothes, patched up and stinky. all The community fund don’t know what they should do, well, I'l! tell them: they better get us some food so we don’t have to starve, anil do that to every hungry worker, and clothes too. They get millions of dollars every year out of us—people’s wages— and then, when they should give it back, they say they do not have any If they have those millions of dollars every year they get from us, ther they must have it and must give it to us and besides this unemployment situation must be changed; we want relief from this hunger, we wani clothes, why don’t the government take care of us while there isn’t any work, so that we don’t have to freeze and starve and walk all the time because we do not even have money for street care fare? Every working woman should join the Unemployed Council if she is not working. I certainly will be ready to fight because I am hungry and so are my children. GRO WOMAN WORKER. This Worker Is for Action (By a Worker Correspondent) DETROIT, Mich.—The ways, of|in my hands and an open the powers that be in this 100 per | all cops and their polit cent seab town, the auto city, are|How I wish, how I dream for thn strange to behold. The irony of it | day. would be comical to any man with | a sense of humor and a full meal under his belt. Can you picture, in your wildest dreams, a city of countless thou- sands out of work, hundreds and thousands walking the streets, beg- ging for work—then our honorable - or some one laid down the rrants must be cleared from the city into the work- aouse. I started my letter to relieve my feelings. To keep on stirring it up would be beyond human endurance. The last two weeks I have wished a thousand times I was marching n columns of fours with cold steel n the shape of a Springfield rifle i haps Tam ignorant in my eon-| tentions, but I do believe that is the | only way we will ever throw off the | yoke of slavery. I am not allied vith any organization, a green coun- try boy from the Red Hills of Geor- gia, but I claim to have common ense and know when I am getting the head off the stick. If your or- ganization has a hall here I rining right off. —DETROIT SLAVE. Peer a Ed. Note—Abdve worker and al! other Detroit workers who wish to join the Communist Party are advised that its Detroit headquar- ters are at 1967 Grand River Ave., Detroit. What TUUL Means to a Tennessee Worker (By « Worker Correspondent) CHATTANOOGA, Tenn.—As I have been reading the Daily Work- er, I have learned that it is the only w paper that has ever been in the South and us workers are learning that the Trade Union Unity League is the only union for us workers. We workers must fight for the Trade Union Unity League and the National Textile Workers Union till we win over the capitalist system. As the workers in our shops are speeded up and worked to death, through long hours and starvation wages, we must unite with Trade Union Unity League and struggle for better conditio the —CHATTANOOGA SLAVE. Cheat East Chicago Steel Slaves on Weight (By « Worker Correspondent) EAST CHICAGO, Ind—The Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co., like any other tin miil concern, gets from the worker the ton of 2,240 Ibs, but in selling tin plates they sell a ton of 2,000, Ibs. The 240 Ibs. day in and day out, every week, every year, is claimed by the company for the use of machinery. Fellow-workers, I ask you how many times the workers have been fired for broken tools or any other piece of machinery, for the machine paid for by the sweat of your brow? Why do not the Y. S. and Tube buy good, heavy, « A.C.W. Means Speed-up, Starvation (By a Worker BROOKLYN, N. Y.—Recently a pocket maker of the International Tailoring Co’ appeared before the board, claiming that he is not able to make a living on the very low price the firm is paying by piece- work. He, therefore, asked for the privilege of working an additional hour overtime. The said operator who cannot speed the work as fast as the rest of the pocket makers in the shop of the above-mentioned company has to do side work as an insurance agent in order to support his fam- ily. The workers who are giving their sweat in blood to the bosses in or- der to make them rich are not able *_ to manage to earn enough for bread. The facts of the present rotten conditions in the shops of the Amal- chilled rell, se we can make a turn? Instead, they buy cheap, soft roll. We know the reason: soft roll do not break easy; they xet dirty. But the management see that we clean it, for they do not care if we make a good day's wage or not. Now, fellow-workers, if we tease a mele, she will kick! Are we below the mule standard? Let us show we are not by join- ing the Metal Workers Industrial League, section of the Trade Union Unity League, the fighting union which prepares the workers | for future struggl “WORKER. Correspondent) gamated were sharply brought out at the last joint, executive meeting, | held a few weeks ago in Webster | Halt. Rationalization, speed-up, long | hours, piece-work, ete., are the con- sequences of the present misery of | the workers, who are getting dis- abled before their time. | In order to remedy the present slavery the tailors and the workers in general must fight for a five-day | and forty hours work week and not | overtime. | Under the present company unions the workers cannot achieve better conditions and an equal division of work unless they will join the T, U. U. L. industrial unions, in order to fight the bosses and the bpreau- cratic leaders, who are collaborating with the bosses against the work- | ers. —CLOTHING WORKER, Wool Strike Shuts 70% of British Mills (Continued from Page One) try, and in their efforts to preserve high profits, the bosses with the help of the “labor” government are attempting to drive the workers down to absolute starvation. The heads of the union and the MacDonald government cooperated in an attempt to make the workers take a wage cut, but the militants won the strike vote. N.T.W. Rallies Support. The executive board of the Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union of the United States has issued an ap- peal to all workers, calling upon them to support the striking Bri- tish wool workers. “The strike of the 100,000 textile workers in Great Britain under the leadership of the revolutionary trade union move- ment,” the appeal states, “is a big step forward for the whole British working class, We call upon all workers to send in contributions to help the striking textile workers in England.” The NTWU is_ taking steps to organize nation-wide mass support for their British fellow workers. the Soureete age. wuinhed by thin—t jand one wi ‘cret deportation to China, and death | |Pulo, Jackson Wales, Fan Ozer, Jo- _Page Three ‘LEGAL LYNCHING RIVALRIES OF U. Cap 3RITISH TAKE SHARP URN IN LATIN AMERICA NE POWERS, CAP STARTS MONDAY Wave’ of “Brotests for, N. Y. Committee (Continued from Page One) against these workers. They plan to electrocute them simply for or- ganizing Negro and white workers together in the Communist Party. The International Labor Defense, andling their case in court, warns ll workers that only the mass pro- est on a world scale of the work- ing class will save their lives. Philadelphia Demonstration. The campaign of protest contin- ues against the imprisonment of the New York delegation of the unem- ployed, in jail now waiting sentence Monday. On Friday the workers of Phila. telphia will meet in a mass protest emonstration at the City Hall for ‘lease of all leaders of unemployed. tay Peltz and Thomas Holmes, who vere convicted April 4 for distribut- ng Communist leaflets to the un- mployed, are held in jail, without bail, waiting sentence April 29. Cleveland Protest. Five hundred werkers at a mass eeting in Cleveland, Ohio, adopted | resolution condemning the rail- roading of the New York delegates | of the 110,000 and demanding the release of Guynn, Johnson, Gannett jand Yoki, convicted under the crim- inal syndicalism law. Gannett was released on $10,000 property bond | Saturday. The others are out onj | bail. Washington Resolution. A resolution demanding the re- lees of the unemployment commit- tee and of Harry Eisman, 15-year- jold Young Pioneer sentenced to six years’ imprisonment for taking part in the March 6 demonstration in New York, has been adopted by the International Labor Defense branch n Washington, D. C. The Metal Workers Industrial League, through Andrew Overgaard, its national secretary, has sent td Mayor Walker and the press a strong resolution demanding the re- lease of the New York committee f the unemployed and Harry Eis- man, It states: “Your bluecoats and your under- world characters vontrolling Tam- many Hall protect parades of royal sei ts and princes, but when | workers dare to demand their right to live Mr. Whalen and his cossai answer with clubs and jailing. er er | Jailed In Chicago. | | CHICAGO, Ill, April 15.—Six-| teen leaders of the workers’ =a ele in this city, organizers for the May 1 strike and ~ nonstration and for the July 4 nation! convention on unemployment, are held in jail under charges of conspiracy to over- throw the U. S. government, under $1,000. bail. They are to come up! \for first hearing today. All were ‘arrested during raids Saturday on} ithe Communist Party headquarters | and the offices of the Young Pio-| neers of America, Two Young Com- | munists are held. The Jewish Work- | ers Club was raided today, without | arrests. The case of the yellow socialist | Worward against S. Milgrom for writing an article in the Morning Freiheit, exposing the socialists, | has been dismissed in court. “The | charges of the socialists were so clumsy that even the capitalist court could not go through with the case, Workers arrested here for dis- tributing Communist literature were | tried yesterday. Twenty were dis- missed, eight were fined $1 each s fined $11. * £ © Jail 16 in Angeles. | LOS ANGELES, Cal., April 15.— The 17 March 6 demonstrators rail- | roaded through a prejudiced court here and convicted Saturday on’ a ty of charges came up for sen- tence yesterday. Twelve of them were given 6 months and $500 fine} leach; 2 got 60 days, 2 got 30 days, and one was let go. The case is| being appealed by the International Labor Defense and bail pending ap- | peal has been raised to $1,000 for! !12, and $500 each for the other ‘four, Edward Wing, a Chinese, is being | held here and is in danger of se-| | at the hands of the Chiang gov-| ernment for his activities in organ- izing workers in U. S, Ta eel Jailed For Protesting Frame-Up. BOSTON, Mass., April 15,—Trial date is set for April 15 for Steven seph Siguerdo, Col Weinstein, and Milton Carter, arrested April 5 for speaking , at a demonstration on Boston Common against the mur- der frame-up of Leonard Daugher- ty. After the meeting, Marie Page was arreste! for refusing to conceal the placards used in the meeting. Mildred Young and Joseph Baronia were arrested at the meeting and! charged with “attempting to rescue a prisoner.” They are charged with struggling with the policemen ar- | resting Weinstein, These three are| also to be tried April 15. re Jail Unemployed Leader. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., April 15. —tThe I,L,D. is attempting to secure} the release of Tony Lamort, a mem- ber of the council of the unem- ployed, arrested at the City Mission and sentenced to 90 days because the police found on him a Commu- uist leaflet calling a mass meeting. 4 ‘ticularly acute. ‘is controlled by | tensified. liven are. jfor the Pioneers. But, comrades, ‘hundreds of workers and workers | fights wainst the bosses that I wil: | | Groh wth in Latin Article Shows Utilities One of the most important cen- | iers of gravity of Anglo-Ame antagonism lies in Latin A The struggle between the two im- perialist powers for the tion of Argentina and Brazil is par- The British Trade Mission, headed by Lord d’Abernon, to Latin America last summer, which was the British ani to Hoover's trip to Latin America, rep- resented a desperate attempt of British imperialism to consolidate its position and also to strengthen its economic grasp as m as it could in that part of the world. The ion achieved considerable suc- conflicts with American imperialism was thereby greatly sharpened. Many open an veiled clashes between the two big- gest imperialist powers which of course are also seriously reflected in their generally strained relation- expl ve | ship occupy an important place in the arena of international politics ‘almost continuously. In view of this situation, an ar- ticle on “U. S. Capital for South American Utilities.” recently pub- lished by the New York Evening deserves considerable atten- tion. According to the article, the Inter-Continents Power Co., which the Westinghouse Co. the ete,, con- Post, International Co., Electric American Equities of U. s. Amerie, ca Power Trust ‘One Company Controls $20,000,000 Worth of Properties trols approximately $20,000,000 worth of properties and o i 100 towns and es with a tion of more than 860,000. territory covered by Inter-Conti- nts Power is rich in natural re- sources and’ offe probably the eatest possibilities of development of any land in the temperate zone.” Thus, the control of power in this area is simply the first step, and the guarantee for further exploita- ion of the workers and natural re- ources i uth American coun- tries, e net earnings of this com- | pany in 1 xceeded $1,100,000. The Inter-Continents Co. is only one of the large American capitalist concerns engaged in exploiting the | Latin American workers, but a mere mention of this one instance is ufficient to show the economic, dominance of the American imper- | ialists in Latin America, which, of course, is closely accompanied by political control. However, the in- tensified exploitation of Latin Amer- ica by American imperialism will, on the one hand, sharpen further its already too ed conflicts with British imperialism, and, on the other hand, it will inevitably be met by the stubborn resistance and growing revolt of the rising Latin American proletariat and peasantry. The world revoluti the only solution to these irreconcilable con- | tradictions, More Suppressive Measures in Rumania BUCHARES' —Recently the “democratic” gov- ernment suppressed a number of | bourgeois oppositional newspapers, | including “l’Independence,” the or- gan of the Rumanian liberals; “Cur. rentul,” the organ of the Ave: party, and the Hungarian oppos tional newspaper “Brassoi Lapok.” The revolutiormry working class newspapers have, of course, been suppressed long ago. The draft law for the protection of credit has been considerably in- In the latest draft im- prisonment up to three years is pro- vided for all persons spreading ru- mors calculated to endanger the credit of the state or of private fi- 7, Rumania (LP.S.). | nance institutions. Even these dictatorial of the Maniu goyernment are not sufficient for the Rumanian bour- geoi and Vint E nu, leader of the bourgeois so-called liberal party, demands the resigna- tion of the Maniu government and the appointment of a dictatorial go ernment of the national concentra- on, The government has just prohib- ited the meeting of the municipal councils in Nagyvarad (Grosswar- dein) and Temesvar on the ground that no less than Communist municipal councillors have been elect’ in these two places. “Democ- racy,” but not for workers. French Steel, Text PARIS (I.P.S.).—The workers two blast furnaces in the Longwy | steel works in Lorraine have gone on strike against the victimization of certain revolutionary workers and for the strict carrying out of the 8-hour day. Both furnaces are lcold. It is possible that the strike will extend to the whole wo which employs 6,000 workers. In Barentin (Department Seine. inferieure) 500 workers in the loca! spinning mill have gone on stril for a daily wage increase of s' franes. The strike will probably extend to the whole 2,500 workers | employed by the local textile indus- try. of | ile Workers Strike In Morez the strikers have re- turned to work and now receive wage increases from 35 to 50 times an hour. Violent col! occurred between the workers and the police when the former went to the railway station in masses to welcome their comrade, Andre Den- vez, who served a month’s impris- onment in connection with the rike. The workers carried Dan- vez shoulder high and marched ing revolu- nrough the streets s tionary songs. The police attacked d arrested four workers, After- wards the police were driven off |and the four rescued. Prepare May 1st Fight, Says Harry Eisman (Continued from Page One) fighting back. We must be Pioneers in the real sense of the word.” On the May Day demonstration he said: “Mr. Hoover has designated Mav 1 as ‘National Child Health Day.’ |He is trying to instill in the min of the workers’ children, how pros- perous the workers and their ehild But Mr. Hoover does not | jhelp the children. About the millions of child laborers, about the children |of the unemployed who have no food jand clothes he raises the slogan of a fake ‘Child Health Day.’ As lo’ |as there is a bosses’ government the | workers’ children have no chance to get strong and healthy. | “Comrades, Pioneers, we must play up Hoover's fake “Child Health | Day.’ We must call all worke: children out of the schools. This) will mean arrests and persecutions | must help to defeat the bosses by mobilizing the masses of workers’ | children on May 1. Get on the job issue more leaflets and school bule letins and picket the schools on May 1. Join with the rest of the workers in the fight for the right to dem-| onstrate on Union Square. “As for myself, I want to say) that the little information I can get | about the struggles of the workers, | serves to keep up my Pioneer spirit. 12 my imprisonment has drawn) children closer to the revolutionary movement, I am glad to serve the five and a half years. While I am | staying here, I am studying and | preparing myself for the future! jbe active in when I eome out.” ARREST THREE IN MEXICO. Three persons were held in Vera | Cruz last Monday on the charge of | inciting to rebellion by distributing | seditious literature, i | Attention! All Sympathetic Workers’ Organizations! SEND May Day Greetings for the May First Edition of the DAILY WORKER jally now should you et the forward march of the revolut tionary ‘ movement— now when masses of workers showing ever increasing re- sistance to capitalist exploi- tation and oppression—now when workers by the hundreds of thousands are mobilizing to demonstrate on MAY DAY against unemployment, speed- up, low. wages, against the coming imperialist war—for defense of the Soyiet Union. Indicate to these masses of workers that your organiza- tion is part of this mass moye- ment by inserting greetings in the DAILY WORKER. In doing this you will help the DAILY WORKER print addi- tional tens of thousands of copies for distribution at fac- tory gates and thereby help to spread the call for “Strike! Down Tools on May First SPACE RATES: $10, $15, ATTENTION! WORKER ‘TATIVES! Visit all workers organtzatton and request them to insert MAY DAY GREETINGS in the Dally Worker. Get greetings from shop keepers, coopera- tives, and everywhere you can. measures the | sta jmates the truth for the capita | day were as follow Be Today is the Jew Bedford textile rship of the Textile ighting National Tea istration of New Bedford s Unity League and the Commu vorkers the great 1928 strile, are stration on May Day, along with th WILL BUILD NAVY SECOND TO NONE| NONE Lie About Reductions; Increase Unlimited Mill Comm er iT (Continued trom Page Oz) of prospective savings in tonu and meney based upon a compa of the three-power tre demands mate at the disarmament conference. Ut is impressive until the question ge f lexitimaey of the comparison is sed. Why should we, for = stance, m re the achiev sof 1930 in terms of the impossible de- mands t! were the bi of the at conference of 1927, which n the slightest chance of being cepted? V trying to as this information, moreover, the pub- lic is treated to still other mates of proposed naval reduction: based upon quite different method: of computation. For these the sec- ary of state is sponsor, Other Y of a private nature pro- duce still other resul!-, and all seem to depend upon what the individual nee in this respect was | reduction, but an increase and calibre of the Ameri- In the words of Senator Capper of Kan: the imperialists see “peace, parity and profit com- ng out of the Londen conferene While the first two “P's,” peace ana val confer not parity, are for the consumption of the ma in preparation for the coming war, the other “P” appro: Navies second to none and war for the profits of the American imper- | ialist robbers is aimed at. RED UNIONISTS WIN. BERLIN (IPS).—Twelve lists of |° the revolutionary trade union eppo- sition were put forward in the 15 coal pits in the Gleivitz district. The total results show a splendid victory for the revolutionary trade union opposition. Opposition 165,849, re- formists 8,037, Ch ‘ascists 2,144, Polish lis In the elections of the pit coun cils in,the Ruhr district the revo- lutionary trade union opposition has won majorities so far at 100 of the most important pits. The r the Krupp-Rheinhausen pit ye: opposition 2 | 157, reformists 1,285, Christians 1,- 485, yellow fascist list 510 votes. second anniversary of workers, who fought mi an desires to prove or dis- | dford! the famous strike of 30,000 tantly under the lead- fitee which later formed into the Union. Photo shows a mass dem- in April, 1928. The Trade Union Party, recalling to the New Bedford rallying them for a great demon- e workers thruout the U.S.A. YEN ‘WILL PAY [MPERIALISTS Seizes Customs From | Chiang KaiShek s to the New yesterday reported that Yen of the Anti- taken over the ne at Hsi-Shan, the leader Nanking bloc, has of control all customs r ientsin excepting the portion rep- resenting the proceeds of the origi- nal 5 per cent tariff. However, Yen Hsi-Shan, being 2 loyai tool of the imperialists, “care- fully respected the foreign claims on customs revenues,” and leaves the toms administration to re- mit freely that part of the revenue for foreign and domestic debt to the nector general at Shanghai, who the direct agent of the im- perialists in China, After all the deductions Yen Hsi- Shan will get about $4,000,000 a year, thus reducing Nanking’s in- come by the same amount. | Detroit Meeting for Porter Will Demand | in| Release of Prisoners) must be the answer of the workerst DETROIT, Mich., John Porter meeting, to be held here Friday at 7:30 p. m. in Dance- land Auditorium, Woodward, ne: Forest, mass demonstration for the release |of the New York delegation of the ‘unemployed, for the release of the Gastonia defendants and demanding that Powers and Carr in Georgia shall not be railroaded to the elec- trie chair for organizing the work- SOIL SCIENTISTS OF WORLD MEET IN LENINGRAD. LENINGRAD, April 1 than 170 foreign scienti thus far signified their intention to | attend the Second International Congress of the Society of Soil Scientists, whose sessions open July 20 in Leningrad. The first con- gress was held in Washington in 1928, and was attended by a notable iet delegation. Write About Your Conditions | for The Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspendent. THE PARTY An indispensable hand book functionary of the Party a Its contents should be discussed PUBLISHED MONTHLY, thr ‘ough re; be trained for leading work in the Party, of various fractions and in reading circles. viding the Party membership makes its appearance possible ar purchase of bundle orders and secur- ing of subscriptions. ORGANIZER which must be used by every nd every member who must d at Unit meetings, at meetings and will continue to do so pro- for One Year for Ten cents per Copy—Yearly Sub, $1.00 Combination Offer with The Communist only Two Dollars Send all orders 39 East 125th Street and subscriptions to the WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS New York City MAY DAY « BUTTONS o ow SLOGANS WORK OR WAGES DEFEND THE Are Ready and Should Re Order: DISTRICT OFFICE OF THE Prices: 1¢ ner bu Te ver button te un SOVIET UNION from the RTY utton to individuals ft. and organizations COMMUNIST PARTY U.S. CENTRAL 42 Enst 125th Street OFFICE , New York City | 1 every , Demmstrate 79 DETROIT 4 WORKER BODIES PLAN MAY 1ST Amter Appeals From Cell for Fight (Continned from Page One) ence was held Fri at Grand Rapids, , M w delegates from work organizations. Yes- terday in Flint, Mich., another was held. Amter Speaks From Jail. While active preparations for the May 1 political strike and mass demonstration are conducted by the elected the unemployed their comrades outside, of representativ now held in Tombs prison, New York, continue eir agitation and leadership. The delegation is composed of William Z. Foster, Robert Minor, Israel Amter, Harold Raymond, and Joseph Lesten. Monday Minor oke through the barriers with a ringing appeal for mobilization for 1, and for building the Trade Union Unity League and the Coun cils of the Unemployed. Y< : ued a state- » cowardice terda: + scor’ the capitalist c¢ shown by alen the three Tammany judge: the trial court, who fear- ed to any eyidence of police bruta' ar, who tried even to | prevent the defendants from intro- ducing testimony knocking out the police slander that they fled from ‘the demonstration, and who denied semblance even of a trial as | the capitalist law provides. April 15.—The | to strike on May Day. will be turned into a huge | Amter states further: Bosses Don’t Mean Relief. “All fake schemes of the bosses to | relieve the unemployment situation have failed and will fail. The boss- es have no intention of helping the | millions of unemployed. They are | putting the whole burden of the economic crisis on the shoulders of the workers, giving them unemploy- ment, wage reductions, longer hours and more terrific speed-up. In this | they are helped by the fascist A.F.L. ile ders and the social-fascist social- | ist party. “Pull mobilization for May Day | Workers in the shops must organize Form shop committees of workers in the shops and factories, men, women and oung workers, white and Negro workers, go out as an organized body |and march to the demonstration. |The unions of the Trade Union Unity League and the rank and file Jof the A. F. of L. unions must get ready to strike on May Day. The Unemployed Councils must bring all the unemployed to the demonstra- | tion May Day. | Organize and Fight. | “The bosses have no solution foc the economic crisis—except war. The workers must continue the fight \for the T-hour day, 5-day week, against speed-up and wage redu: tions, for work or wages and un- employment insurance, against im- perialist war preparations and for defense of the Soviet Union, We must mobilize 1,000 delegates for the ril 24 May Day conference. The fight goes on!” The April 24 conference will be |held in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. | Fourth St., at 7.30 Ds m. Addressed to Every Big and Little City HE DAILY WORKER, distributed and sold at shop, mine and mill, will help make effective the slogan “Strike—Down Tools on May First!” HE DAILY WORKER, sold and distributed at shop, mine and mill, will help you mobilize thousands of workers wour May First Dem- onstration, HE DAILY WORKER campaign for mass cir- culation is on, You are not participating in ‘this campaign unless you sell and distribute the Daily Worker regularly at factory gates, from house to house, at workers meetings. How many copies do you want to help you mobilize for May First? Also—How many copies do you want to sell and distribute on May First at your demonstration? PLACE YOUR ORDER TODAY! 100 copies at. 500 copies at. Six Page Saturday) Edition 1000 copies at. i May Day ! 1000 copies at... READ THIS: There | must bo several thousand workers who, upon ir own initiative, could pur. chase one hundred’ copies and cell and distribute them in heir shop, in their neighbor- hood. It would be a sign of this fighting, militant broadening struggles period if we would get a thow orders from individual workers, DAILY WORKER 26-28 UNION SQ., NEW YORK

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