The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 5, 1930, Page 3

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Page Three WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1930 FOOLED ONCE TO FIGHT FOR WALL ST, ‘PROFITS, NEXT WAR HE WILL FIGHT FOR OVERTHROW OF HUNGER SYSTEM | Worker Is Now Jobless and Blacklisted After Helping Make “World Safe for Democracy” ONE OF THE MICH. BOYS WHO REFUSED TO FIGHT THE SOVIET WORKERS TELLS OF WALL STREET INTERVENTION IN ‘19 Calls on All War Vets to Prepare to Turn Next Imperialist War Into War Against Bosses One of Many War Rehearsals ow Going On More and more war vets are be- ginning to understand that they fought the last world war for the glory and profits of Wall Street. Now they are determined to fight the bosses who exploit, then throw ee To the Daily Worker, Dear Comrades:— Detroit, Mich. I have served in the world war in North Russia with the 339th In- fantry, 85th division. When we were on our way there they told us two great things had to be done, that was to save “democracy” by downing the German imperialism, and also bolshevism, which was started by the German spies according to what the capitalists of our democratic United States said. I was one of those Michigan boys who refused to fight against STORES GUT OFF “my fellow workers in the Soviet Union. When we landed there very little the’ bat Photo shows a section of a sham m on the streets to starve. tle staged on Governor’s Island. _— Los Angeles T.B. Workers Pledge Their Solidarity) Install Machines and Lay Off 780 Harrisburg Miners Railroad Men Are Getting Axe in N. Y. To the Daily Worker: It was during the time America line in the last imperialist war, call of “saving the world for democracy.” 1 was working on the Baltimore run between Butler-Mt. Jewett & K | good many bands rendering patriotic Portage, Pa. was whipping its working class into ing for volunteers under the guise » & Ohio Railroad firing a passenger ane, Pa. along this line I heard a airs to get America’s young workers blood heated to the boiling point and? instill a hatred for Germany. got this feeling. I too| ARMENIAN BIRO | One day, a brother-in-law and T| fiehting was done while we were Los Angeles, Cal. “ee went to Pittsburgh, Pa., to enlist in * 9. oer company and some of the} | Dear Comrades: Harrisburg, Ill) .poine to give every man a chance to % , * New York. the U. S. navy. I was turned down | AGGING B F H | N D C R E D | T OF ILL reid sacs Hartirerralileniate We are workers whose vitality | | Daily Worker, ae unl, Each man nance wait for his PONoE poauy Workers ae flat because I was 1% inches too) “= : # tue interior. Then we were called] | has been sucked out of our bodies| | Dear comrades: turn. Which means that we work Herels more of) Hoover's ““proe- | short, My’ “brother ees JOBLESS MINERS back to Archangel. There we were stationed a long time to protect a lot of lumber which was put there by Russian imperialists while they by capitalist exploitation and thrown on the scrap heap of charity. We are patients at the Ex-Patients Tubercular Home of I want to write about some ot the rotten conditions that are ex- isting here in Harrisburg. I work in the Peabody No. 3 mine, This only one week in 27. If the mine only works one day during the week your shift comes perity.”. The New York Central | Railroad, in its 30th St. yards, | laid off three engine crews and four yardmasters. The yardmas- then attempt to enlist as he was 16 years old and six feet tall and thought they may tell him he was| too tall, I was then drafted and did} Failed Halt Fascist In- citement on USSR A E 1,.that means you only wor! i 5 i c | were one of the allies, but when| | fos Angeles ars : elon oe y | ters in the past used to get $67.50 | not claim any exemption on ac- ., a 5 } e was down since the 16th oi|one day in 27 weeks! Well, the| s, ; 4 Chicago, Tl ‘ things were turning towards victory Although sick and penniless} | March. Now the company opened|., as Saee dtakat 3 a week. Now they are gettting |count of my job or on account of 8 aoa aE go, Hl Prepare Convention] tor the bolshevike: the lamber wes wo, teal te atunt nortinne tol (uarct:_, Now the company opened! men have stopped the mine from| $4759, being married. So I was called in| To the Daily Worker: National Miners Union Sparta, Ill. Daily Worker: Dear Comrade:—Just a few lines on conditions in the Sparta coal fields. Miners here cannot get any credit from any store in town. They only work two or three days per week (pay comes every two weeks). Out of this the fakers of the United Mine Workers of America get $5 or $6 check-off. When the coal op- erators find a militant fighter working in the mine the superinten- dent gets him to one side and wants loaded on steamers for Great Britain and after the lumber was all ship- ped, we returned home. It was said by some of our soldiers who advanced farther into the in- terior that the bolsheviks instead of fighting tried as much as they could to avoid it whenever it was possible. A few holsheviks would come over and pretending to surrendar would bring in leaflets secretly telling them to go back and fight our own bosses and establish a Workers’ Govern- ment like they had. I did not be- fight in solidarity with our fel- low workers. Recently two patients of this institution were discharged because they were ar- rested during the Unemployed demonstration, February 26. We also participated in the demon- stration on May Day and for the Imperial Valley agricultural workers. ~Now our Daily is in danger. Take our nickles and dimes. Our Daily Worker must not go under. lieve those reports were true at first as our bosses were telling us a very to buy him off. He tells him: “I will give you $50 if you will quit this town never to return, or even attempt to get a job from this com- pany.” The mine,’ ere is owned by the Moffat Coal Co. The men are much different story. JOBLESS AFTER WAR. True democracy as our boss called it. They promised us we would al- ways get jobs with our honorable discharges, but they also urged us to Enclosed find check of four dol- lars. It’s all we got. —GROUP OF T. B. WORKERS AT THE EX-PATIENTS HOME small individual union, I did not look into it, but as time went on Commu- ready tried to do so. Before the mine closed down there were 780 men working in the mine. Now the company has put in more machinery—especially 2 big cutting machines and is only going to work 30 men on a shift, In other words the company wants to produce the same amount of coal with 30 men as they have done with 780. But the company is “kind hearted” and is working despite what the fakers told us to do. We are going to stay out until the coal operators will take the machines out. What we need here is some organ- izers for the N.M.U.. The men are all ready to fight. They don’t give a damn for Lewis and they don’t give a damn for Fishwick. Comradely yours, A HARRISBURG MINER. WAR VET. WIFE AND KIDS STARVE ASKS WHAT TO D0 horse every sixteen hours because the horses were no good. But I had to be on the job day and night. I was a hero then. This bloody bourgeoisie made us fight poor workers and told us to “fight for your country” and they would give us all we needed. Yes, today we have “enough’—we can Where they used to have eight foremen in the freight sheds now they have only one, and he is pull- ing a truck. The Rohe Bros. butcher con- cern here in this city is going to discontinue killing cattle on the 26th. —JOBLESS WORKER. Indianapolis, Ind. Workers Flock to Unity League Indianapolis, Ind. To the Daily Worker:— At a meeting at Tomlison Hall, Sunday afternoon, called by the T. U. U. L. 1,200 workers attended, a the first draft from the county of Clarion and passed all examinations O.K., and was plenty tall enough then even though I was turned down only a few months before. I spent several weeks in camp Lee, Virginia, learning how to walk twenty miles a day and learning a| lot of war songs and spent some of | my time converting the conscien-| tious objectors (the conscientious objectors were the men who had refused to fight and do the cap- italist class killings. They said they wont kill anybody.). We used to} |get much kick out of running these men aruond the drill field, and then, when one of the C.O.’s would fall! ;down exhausted, one of us poor patriotic fools would souse a bucket | full of cold water on him, others| would kick him in the ribs and get} How the Armenian Party fraction of Chicago showed its lagging be- hind and underestimated the radical- ization among Armenian workers, was shown on June 7, during an Armenian fascist mass meeting, whose speaker was S. Vratsian, the former premier of the Armenian bourgeoisie republic, which has be- come, from 1918 to 1921 the base for intrigue against the Soviet Union. His speech was like any other im- perialist agent and its purpose was to mobilize the Armenian workers against the Soviet Union. Where did the underestimation come to? That was when Armenian comrades misrepresented the situa- tion at the district office, about the possibility of preventing this fascist meeting by declaring that we did not have sufficient strength or the Ar- . ? { i * saris A 1 y r i is 2 i s vould not support divided—half Negro and half white. |join the American Legion, After |™St activities growing more and Bb ae Ape er a i bes Bane a te tue aye tue fe Bue artes heyataes waaetttie The boss has succeeded in getting|being with them for a while they |™ore, I later picked up one of their ee : Last time I was wounded on the) 5/4 maa response to the pro-|some to say they would do the kil-|when two comrades distributing a couple of them to quit, But the|aided us in getting jobs, but times | !eaflets calling for an open meeting.| Not Suicide But Fight head in France, with the First Cav-|© eae th t National Miners’ Union has sev- eral members here who keep up the fight and who have told the super- intendent to jump into the lake with his $50, that they will remain and fight it out to the end. The local of the N. M. U. here has already elected delegates to the National Convention of the Na- tional Miners’ Union, and has also elected young miner delegates to the Illinois Youth Conference to be held on July 20, where a strong delegation of young miners from every part of the state is expected and where the basis will be laid for the building of a strong youth sec- tion of the National Miners’ Union in this district. The young miners see that both factions of the U. M. W. A. fakers will never attempt to better their working conditions. The young miners saw that the recent “rank and file” Belleville Convention, that was held May 20, was only a maneu- ver of a bunch of petty crooks who are trying to dig their noses into the “feed bag” of the fakers, which is nothing else but the check-off. They use progressive phrases about “rank and file” only to mislead the mine But the miners will not be m d by these crooks. They look forward to the only rank and were different, then a man could find a job himself without their aid. Later things got quite dull, for a time, and I could not find a job in my home town. I left for the North Michigan woods. There I met a fel- low, who belonged to the I. W. W. He showed me where they raided the I W. W. Hall in Seattle, Wash., shooting down workers in their union meeting. I joined the I. W. W. shortly after believing they were for a workers’ and a farmers’ govern- ment. I remained with them until I came back to the city. After finding conditions growing worse and worse for workers through unemployment getting more tense, I found no I. W. W. organized as it should be, but to a greater amaze- ment I found there was an Auto Workers Union, but thinking it a I attended, found it a true workers’ organization. I immediately joined finding out that they really carried out what they said, and that it was an organization for all nationalities and races of the entire world, As short as I am in the organiza- tion I discovered one thing, that the bosses are preparing another imper- ex-soldiers to go and again defend bosses’ “democracy.” But I say not a single man and not a penny for the bosses’ war! Workers, turn your guns against your real enemy, the boss. Long live the Soviet Union thru- out the world! —AN EX-SERVICEMAN. Support the Daily Worker Drive! Get Donations! Get Subs! IDAHO TILLERS IN PINCH Wall Street’s Grib Grows Daily KAMIAH, Idaho Daily Worker, Comrades: Since I wrote you some time ago they were about to lose they tried to shift the loss to others; all this illustrates that there can be no such thing as honesty under capit- ialist war for which they will ask us | On Hunger Detroit, Mich. Dear Comrades: Will you kindly publish this let- ter in the Daily Worker paper? I would like to write a small article about conditions in the city |of Detroit. I am down and out, tramping over Detroit looking for |a job. I am out of work since Aug- ust. I ain’t got a job yet. I am get- ting dam good and hungry. Further- more I don’t know what to do with myelf. My wife and two children are getting hungry too. No job, no mo- ney, no clothes. I ain’t got even money to buy writing paper. I just | simply don’t know what to do. Every time I hear my kids cry- ing to get something to eat and I can’t get it, I feel like committing suicide, The only thing I can get is go to some Jewish bakery and get stale bread. Sometimes I get a soup bone, pound or two, that is what we lived on for the last three months, That’s what people are eating today in this bloody Hooverian prosperity Free country, yes, you can starve if you please. T am a 100 per cent American. I used to think all those foreigners alry troop, so they took me to Lon- don. I was there for nine days. I was almost dead. I was fit to walk so I requested to go back. They put me in jail where I stayed for forty days. That was a nice rest for me and a good lesson. Comrades and workers, in the next war we wil] not fight the work- ing masses, but we got to fight the bosses back. 1 fought for 18 months. Today my family goes hungry. I call spe- cial attention to the workers to join the Trade Union Unity League and the Communist Party. Best we ean do is to read the Daily Worker and other working class literature. This way we'll know exactly what to do in the 1 :t war. —EX-SOLDIER. _* * Editorial Note:—Suicide is the last refuge of those workers who do not understand clearly the cause of their misery and have been de- moralized ideologically by the cap-| italist system. Not suicide but workers revolu- tionary struggle against the hunger system, under the leadership of the Communist Party. The life and death problem facing millions of workers and their families will not gram of the T. U. U. L. as explained by the speakers, Wm. Browder and B. D. Amis. Noticeable among the young work- ers was their attentiveness and ap- proval of the T. U. U. L. program. One were signed. Every piece of litera- ture that was available was sold. One fourth of those that were pres- ent were Negro workers. In the evening about a hundred, mostly Negro workers, attended a meeting and listened to the T. U. U. L. speaker flay lynchings, ete. The workers of Indianapolis are ready to actively respond to the T. U. U. L. program. —Worker Correspondent. Demand the release of Fos. ter, Minor, Amter and Ray- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. hundred fifteen applications | ling for the capitalists. But those more determined would not agree to kill so they would get all the | dirty work in camp and be put} | through the conversion test each| |day until they would agree to kill| workers for the capitalists. All my friends passed the over- |sea tests in due order. One Mr. | Butch Rosser passed all examinat- ing doctors with only one eye and un-noticed, but after coming back he was held up and had to do a lot of explaining about where his other eye was as they had no record of | him with one eye. Anyway, my first surprise came | when I was ent into a machine gun sche>! run by the Massachu- setts division, and in one week’s time I passed as a machine-gunner and sent up to the front lines to | fight against soldiers with many | years of experience. My experience |in Camp Lee «as six trips to a rifle lrange with Springfield. So think how fast capitalists can | Being Gouged by Bankers, Promoters leaflets, prepared by the Armenian National Bureau, exposing the role of fascist Mr. Vratsian, many non- Party workers came to us and ex- pressed their indignation against this meeting and condemned us for allowing such reactionary meeting to go on without an a‘tempt to stop it. Such underestimation and laggin- behind is a clear sign of the rif, . wing tendencies which has cost ©.” so much and should be stamped out. The Bureau of the C. C. should be criticized also for not giving proper leadership and not making an attempt for mobilizing the sym- pathetic working class organizations. —J. MORRIS. make soldiers—only six lessons o. a Springfield rifle and a week on a Vicas machine gun you are 0.K.’d and sent up to b The bes awak g we talked with a bunch of German prison- who were being taken back to build roads for the Allies. These workers asked us why we were so enthused about shooting off workers. They asked us if we were not workers from Amer* too. They told us they were glac be prisoners as they would not hay . jto kill any more workers for the capitalist class and would get a : i ate fees ea ee ca i 8 rf .|chance to eat more often while file union of miners, the militant a local capitalistic concern has|alism. Capitalism is rotten and|came here and packed this country.|be solved by self destruction (which Brenham, Texas | refused to let surv:yors in on their] building roads. And believe me or Newton! anes ieee ccoaon eee belly up.” As I was one of/ corrupt; a sanctified fraud, and|but I see the difference now. Today|is what the bosses want) but by places. Wonder why they didn’t Forward to a mass conve! the N. M. U. and a successful strug- gle of the miners under the lead- ership of the N. M. U. in Septem- ber. Support the strike of the anthracite miners—against wage- cuts, unemployment, ete, must be the -central slogan of all’ Illinois miners and the working class ‘heoughout the country. Comradely yours, LEO L. BROUX, Youth Organizer, rict. Acting Di Illinois Di: AUTO EXPORTS DROP, the stockholders I will give you a few figures to show the country here is passing into the control of Wall St. and why. In October, 1918 we organized a “farmer's store,”. Into this we poured over $13,500 of our hard earned cash. The farmer stock- holders imagined there was no limit to the amount of debt the company could carry and the whole- salers were willing to unload the war price stocks on credit. Because it was igmaterial whether they lost the accounts or reduced prices after makes a man corrupt and dishonest in spite of their good intentions, The main cause of the failure was that at the end of 1927 the company had $5,500 in accounts receivable, at the end of 1928 the amount. was $7,200 for the end 1929 the sum o/ $9,300, as there is no money in thc country, collection is impossible, out of this sum $500 could not be col- lected now, and not over $2,000 next Oct. and Nov. if wheat prices are fair but as the price of wheat is low now about 80 cents per bushel and as there are about a million bu. I have to go to them and ask them for some stale bread! If it wasn’t for them I would starve long ago. I spent four months in France, where I was a horse messenger. For four months I was getting a new Made Deaf, Now Jobless, Is Gypped of Compensation revolutionary struggle fo~ *he over- throw of capitalism and the estab- lishment of a workers’ revolutionary government that will guarantee bread and life to the working masses. Daily Worker: I am enclosing an editorial from jan Austin, Texas daily paper. The | editor should read “Cheap and Con- tented Labor” by Sinclair Lewis. Down here in Texas the damn pro- | moters are climbing to fame on the \backs of the Texas river bottom farmers. We have splendid pecan groves and many farmers have budded | their trees with finer variety of pecans, But all must be cut down or sub- merged by dammed waters—chain call out the National Guard? —TEXAS FARMER a wae Editorial Note: The farmers have been hard hit for many years by the chronic agricultural crisis. The present crisis has impoverished many more thousands of poor farm- ers, swept hundreds of thousands foreclosed farmers into the cities to starve, and has witnessed the grow- ing grip of Wall St. upon the tillers of the soil. With the price of all food staples falling, with thousands of farmers not, these words sapped in ow thick heads deep for we often ha a talk about the lesson those Ger mans gave us, So workers, when the war mor gers arrange another capitalist ws for you do not shoot any of yor brother workers from other cou tries down, and they too, will r shoot you down. But let all the capitalist war-mongers who pro by wars do all their own shootin and J assure you, there won’t be x many wars arranged. So always re member that all workers are ow ; 1% ‘ brothe rkers regardless wha the 1920 panic and were willing to| i0G.us mete are about a million ba.) | Seward, Pa, [me hear from you as soon as pos-/dams, chain lighting, and chain| ruined and wiped out, with Walll country they belong to, and. lr WASHINGTON,—Automobile ex- | take a loss in order to foreclose on crop ae yaldcvee sh Sone | ae Sir: ecanrrene nial sible and oblige, eu farms. Wipe out the individual] St’s government gouging them! the workers all fight for the #ork- pinay os e 0 a am in need for advice ‘0 help —W.H.H. f. sian thee’ Baten eines eek = ports from the U, §. during May | the farmer's store, so they allowed Howecnesddatinh2) causes. nuder: , P ane he farmer. through its Big Business tariff, the dropped $14,000,000 for May below 1 according to the Department Jommerce announcements, Forward to Mass Conference Against duly 4th. Unemployment, Chicago Mass Starvation Faces Thousands Cleveland Workers Cleveland, Ohio, Dear Editor: Fary Screw Cabinet laid off 500 men. Cleveland will have 75 per cent of men out of work by fall. Cleveland needs some real organ- izers and builders up—the Trade Union Unity League. Construction work here in Cleveland is put off until 1931, All hopes of work this summer are shot to pieces. Conditions here are getting worse every day. By July 4 thousands of men will be laid off by some plants like White Motors, Ford, Peerless, Hub and steel mills. M. J. PATRICK, Cleveland Worker, it to continue until 1925 when they cleaned up and part of the stock- holders organized a new company and bought the assets and assumed the liabilities. June 10 last the secohd company into which we poured over $555 was turned over to the creditors, thus over $19,000 have been squan- dered in our fool attempt to relieve our economic misery by trying to be capitalists, and play the capit- alists’ game with a deck of their marked cards and in a game where the rules are against us. This has taught me that the only defense for workers is non-partici- pation, non-cooperation and boycott and clean-cut opposition to all cap- italistie operations. Besides the loss of money I have discovered that our managers and business as- sociates on the inside have not been honest with the farmer members of the company, that they misman- aged the business and then hid the facts from us, and tried to deceive and force us into losing more money in order to pull their chestnuts out of the fire, and betrayed us into giving property as security for the debts of the concern; and that while consumption or plain starvation among the wage workers, the ma- jority are not now at work, the farmers will have less money than @ year ago, and can hire less help, and some will not be able to pay for labor they do hire, while wages are not high from the wage work- ers’ point, they are too high for the farmers’ net income, so you see the local capjtalists sell to the public (who ever that may be) on tick and go begging while the higher ups have some security and clean up on the local capitalists and through the invisible channel Wall St. gets the net proceeds, all the local con- cerns including the banks are dom- inated and being absorbed by Wall St. especially west of the Missis- sippi River, and all this is necessary to enable the U. S. imperialists to become dictators over all the earth. This region is just beginning to feel the full pressure of unemploy- ment, all winter bread lines of 25,- 000 to 40,000 existed in the coast cities but with the approach of hay- ing and grain harvest these are now drifting into the interior where the sawmills and mines are laying off originally they had honest and hon orabie intentions when they saw men, —LINDEMANN. in my present predicament. I lost my hearing February 138 while working in a tunnel at Lorain, Ohio, for Dravo Contractor Co. of Pitts- burgh, Pa., and have. received no compensation as yet. My claim was refused as I learn from the doctor I don’t know why. I went to Rev. Burchmore of Johnstown, he sent me to Attorney Frank P. Barnhart of the city. He said he could not make a case of it, but would write to the commission of Ohio. That's all the satisfaction I have got so far. This was the first part of April. or direct to anyone who can help know as I am in a bad condition | financially, I can get no work on account of my hearing so me and my wife are in need for help in some way that we may keep to- gether. at the time and I went deaf all at once. Was under Dr. George M. Blank, National Tube Co., E. 28th St., Pearl, Ore., Lorain, Ohio, care until February 26 when he told me to go home for a while. T have written to the Industrial Commission of Ohio but can get If you can do anything for me|“labor” Editorial Note:—The plight of this worker who lost his hearing and was refused compensation by the bosses and their eovernment, is tt one of any. Even resort to the bosses’ own laws on compensa- tion e ta many workers t futility of individual action, legal or otherwise. Behind their refusal to pay, the bosses have the local and state government machinery, the polic high-priced lawyers, the newspapers, etc. The workers only get (even en- forcement of the capitalists’ own laws) conditions, wages, hours of work, compensation, ete., me in this matter please let me | by bitter struggle against the boss- es. A strong union of tunnel work- ers (and such has been started ta Detroit) under the leadership of the revolutionary Trade Union Unity League could in the course of strug- gle make such outrages as per- I was running an air dock drill) petrated on W.H.H. impossible. The plight of W.H.H. drives home the urgent need for organization of the masses of workers into the unions of the Trade Union Unity League. W.ILH. should get in touch with the International Labor Defense in the largest city near Seward to see if any action could be taken to re- no answer from them. Please let cover the compensation due him, We don’t want the damn money— | we want our pecan groves and |those who have farms want their farms. But we have a corporation- owned government. It is not for the people, nor by the people. It is needless to think -° owing a house because a home is not secure. Any political group or cap- italist group or auto group can make you move when they want your property or a road through your property. And taxpayers paying, paying, paying. Heavily burdened with taxes, taxes, taxes and yet must give sidewalks to widen streets and the lovely trees that have been eared for by years by their owners, must be cut down. In Llano where the pecple have sold to Dam Corporation they are taking up their loved one’s bodies buried many years and will have to move them, 20 miles away. Not even the dead are safe from the capitalist class. We need a Moses down here to help us. If we had equal rights (?) then laborers and farmers could injunc- tion the corporations. Some of these folks threatened to | bring deputies and put us under a | peace bond because many farmers farmers are groping around for a solution to their problems. As the Texas farmer from Brenham says looking for “A Moses.” The pauperization of the masses of working farmers is part of the capitalist system. Serfdom to the bankers of Wall St. is today the lot of millions of struggling farm- ers, Today the only force capable of leading the workers in alliance with the poor farmers into a revo- lutionary struggle against capital- ism is the Communist Party. the farmer in Kamiah, Idaho con- | cludes, no more dill capitalist enterprise eut fight against the cap revo- lutionary struggle and not collab- oration. In the Communist Party the poor farmers will find their cham- pion in their day to day struggles and for the final overthrow of Wall Street’s rule. Today the poor farmers have no alternative but to fight side by side with the revolutionary workers in the cities for immediate demands and for the destruction of this sys- tem and the establishment of a Workers and Poor Farmers Gov- ernment that will guarantee life, land and peace, i ing class, let the capitalist class fight their own damned wars, | Fight for the defense of the | Soviet Union! Help to make a real workers and farmers government in {all capitalist countries by fighting and sticking with the working class! Build and sell subscriptions to al” the working class papers. Blacklisted Unemployed World War Soldier.—T.J.R. \Flour Bombs In War Rehearsa ta Cruz, Cal. iTo the Daily Work A samvle of capitalist wanto waste! Thousands of pounds |white wheat flour wasted in mak jbelieve war. Bags of wheat flo. are used as “bombs” to be droppe {from planes in mimic war now go \ine on around here, Multitudes of jobless workers ask ing for “Work or Wages” are a) swered with bombardment of bag of flour dropped to make “spectacr lar hits.” A battle royal will be waged wee of July 12 at Santa Cruz. We ask for bread and they (th bosses) give us flour “bombs. —GEO, D, HERSON,

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