The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 1, 1930, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, N Page Five Daily Worker at the Shops and Factories tor Aug. 1 Ss EW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 193 MILLIONS FIGHT SHARP CRISIS FORCES. ~ CZECHOSLOVAKIA TO ait aie TRADE WITH U.S.S. | Section of Czech Iron Industry Depends Upon Grvad @ behaiw Y Manitesto of the Communist Party of the U.S.A. (Continued from Page One) ton Fish is the foremost instrument of this attack. The committee tries to cover up this capialist attack against the workers with a crusade against the so-called “red-menace.” But the American workers have enough experience to know that every worker who expresses dissatis- a ate EPORTS are received from all parts of the country of the intensified * campaign of selling the Daily Worker at the shops and factories, The workers are ready and willing to buy the Daily. These increased activities before shop sand factories assure the best mobilization for August First faction’ with the wages paid him and who organizes to fight for an| Demand Billions Spent Sov 8 U. S..in Maneuver to The bosses and their tools the police are well aware of this. Special increase is a {‘Red,” a Bolshevik. For War Go to Jobless) sr oe aaa \injet We ers letails of police are assigned before those shops and factories where the Every capitalist agent is branding workers who demand bread for |Czech Boss Press Admits Futility in Trying to j Workoreare eine y ach re ual a york ate nen ae the unemployed and who propagate organization of the unemployed (Continued Visa Pags One) (Continued Fr ) girls’—workers from shops or unemployed workers, face the Ts Spee rE 4 masses so they may be able to fight fo. bread, as “Rede” ~- Palsheviks. Hinder Soviet Development Workers. who raise their voices against the beastidf lynching ex- peditions indulged in by southern capitalist gentlemen, and who propa- gate that the perspective victims of these lynchings should organize for self-defense, have always been condemned as “Reds,” as Bolsheviks. The code of “Americanism” imposed by the bosses, enforced by the sosses’ policemen and the bosses’ courts, codified in the bosses’ laws, and glorified by the bosses’ agents of the type of Matthew Woll, demand that one must believe in wage cuts and speed-up, one must believe in child labor and in capitalist wars, one has to participate enthusiastically in lynehings and uphold segregation, or one is a “Red,” a Bolshevik, an undesirable alien. The practice of condemning as “criminal” and “Red” every move on te part of the workers to maintain or achieve decent working conditions and a living wage has reached a point that to be a worker means to be The Daily Worker still continues In New York C the Tammany Within the last few and intimidations of the police. sold in front of these shops. e arresting the workers selling the Daily. ae intil | days six workers were arrested for selling the Daily Worker. The answer ast of | has been more sales and more support for the workers. The workers from these shops are beginning to realize more fully the need of the ly Worker as a mobilizer of the working class in its struggles against American Imperialism. yut strategy inte — 1 | aroused work arations. The bosses are out to capture the world markets from one another. By armed force, and by the slaughter of the working- class, they are on the brink of war for a re-division of the world colonies. PRAGUE (LP.S.).—The crisis in Czechoslovakia is compelling |the Czech bourgeoisie to think of | concluding a trade agreement with |the Soviet Union, despite the fact |that Czechoslovakia is one of the Lining Up. Ah ih , ; : |few remaining countries which does Th increasing their arma- ; Agta ae beak eg |not recognize the Soviet Union. A ‘Atidveaty Aimiaean speaking for the \iron industry is w roking on Russian Pandiay alii APY ots Maiod, de: orders, particularly in Vitkovitz. Lube tA Jet fae The course of development and the ose tale ais She seventy oh 8 west changed sentiment of the Czech w in which the United States is in- | AW ae severe country is favorable to world trade. The needs of an industrial country are erably hi than th ian country, js more raj ess to make any : pt to er the course of devel in the Soviet Union. On the the quicker the tremend- East is drawn] 1, i, ld trade and| 5¢ and quicker it}. the present econ- th recognize 1 ne ind cons of an a excha would Now at this time we must push the sales before the factories. Now, n the bosses are carrying on an open preparation for a war on the viet Union. Today, when the capitalist press is lashing with a fury of hate, only comparable with that of all the capitalist class in the last orld , against the Soviet Union, the Communist Party of America the n ant workers in the Revolutionary Unions of the Trade Edueation League. Today, when yankee imperialism is head- work Union he $ 4 { zeoisie y in a from which all tries treated as a criminal. The police treat workers as outlaws. When they | volved “Mexico should without eure SLE ith ies SO RTeine | Gani daeaeaee ere (ee | lining its attack against the victorious Chinese revolutionary workers approach workers on strike, when they méet unemployed workers dem: | vacillation . . . place itself so ke {*Brawer Presse” which inithe et ion willl be “erie nd peasants and preparing for armed intervention against the Chinese cnstrating for relief. they approach and meet these workers with tear side of the United States. an al ficial organ of the Czech Fi ng up its industry and it will Soviets, we must throw all our forces behind the Daily Worker. It oes eae with machine guns, with loaded pistols and with ready night- | War Lael apiaaie cee belly: 2 The “Prager f reed) forcianinroduetsite ailancrens: move forward in larger numbers before every op, factory sticks. against the Sovi 5 elly- In striking contrast with this, the same police usually approach the gangs of criminals in the underwor!d armed only with itching palms. | The fascist bureaucracy of the A. F. of L. meets this emergency as a pace-maker for the bosses’ attack against the workers. Bill Green, the President of the A. F. of L., meets the wage-cutting policy of the Amer- writes the following: “The transformation of an rarian country inte an industrial/c! extent. ted not t It would be very short aw the obvious con- nd in every army post and navy yard in United States, Workers! Not only on and before August 1st must the Daily Worker be on sale in front of every shop and factory, but every day | after August First. The results of August First must be broadcasted crawling Mexican rulers already have placed themselves under the beck and call of Wall Street. They declare their readiness to bleed their | | | an- | i} | other. jean bosses and their nolitical attack upon the working class with a| Working class in the coming war STRIKE AGAIN LAE | AY-OFFS | a continuously immediately after August First. Our intensified prepara- statement that the A. F. of L. is the front line defense for American | for Wall Street. i Fuk wo Sh fava 2 N der for August First are only the gathering of the workingclass fo> capitalism. Matthew Woll, the most vociferous spokesman of the Ready to Plunge! [eee Sb tances | tore intense struggle after August First. The struggle must be carried \ F. of L., and an oven agent of the Czarist counter-revolutionary spv | War preparations have taken ten- AO MIA pal IAD N rf Hy the Soviet , but it| on in the shops and factories. The lining up of police in front of shops organization in the U. S., is trying to drown the groans of the hunery |league boot steps beyond the war "s a iG Ge iy JUPROTY Fa | must be ning, | and factories points out clearly that the capitalists are sending their toots millions of unemployed in the United States with the noise of his anti-| Preparations on the eve of the last ey ee | an ~~ | cache e stor to the facto Our comrades selling the Daily Worker have answered Soviet attacks. Woll and Green endeavor to prevent the American | World conflict. In 51 capitalist | ; | Active « e Com-| them effectiv They are continuing and will continue the sale of the of | 1700 At Bond Electric! Negro Co. Fight Second Cut | As the nimbenehwace cuts erow| apace, and as the workers incre: |their struggles against wage countries, with a population 1,437,000,000 people, there are 112, 500,000 men either under arms or militarily trained ready to be plunged into war! In the United States Hoover and the imperialist bosses are rushing towards war. The naval treaty is @/the Jeading bosses come out with Pie Ptsr sever wets _,..|the worst lie in the present crisis Pointing out the big war strides | saying they do not propose to cut of the naval treaty, Congressman | wages, James J. Farrell, presi- Andrews, a member of the House dent of the U. S. Steel Corporation, Naval Committee recently said: | speaking for a large section of the | “The terms of the treaty pro- (pig hosses, yesterday said that wages! c, vide for construction of cruisers |i] not be cut. i \* by the United States of greater Band Electric. | tonnage and cost than have ever | . Recently 700 workers in the Bond been produced by any bill re- | flectric Co, in News . went | These activities Increase the sale of the dailies in shops and factories after August First. d. | Howe comrades, the deficit of the Daily Worker now a little tinuc than $8,000 must be liquidated if we are to carry on this work effectively, Our “soldiers” are in front of the factories, we must give the ployed, | them sunport all along the line. The speedv liquidation of the deficit, n for the bill} the raising of the balance of $8,000 of the $25,000 emergency fund will Party r the road for a real intensified struggle for building up of regular ctorv sales after August First. It will make more vossible the y building un of the army of everydav readers of the Dafly Worker. | Wine ont the deficit still remaining, send all funds immediately to the | Daily Work workers from fighting against wage cuts and speed-up and for unem- ployment relief by trying to make them fight against the Soxiet Union. Every problem of the day confronting the worker calls out of him: Organize! Fight against your bosses! The fascist Woll is endeavoring to blind the workers to this de- mand and hysterically cries out to the American workers: Fight for your bosses! Woll plays the role of a capitalist spy and provocateur in the ranks of the working class of the U. S. At present he is engaged in furthering ; the war plans of American capital against the Soviet Union. With the tosses, he prefers drowning the American workers in their own blood in the defense of the profits of American capital to seeing the workers tule in Russia. With the bosses, he demands that the American workers defend with their lives the system which not only demands of the worker to work or starve but which deliberately starves the workers by its inability to provide them with work. The workers must organize and fight against the fascist agents of the bosses. Woll and Green and their A. F. of L. bureaucracy have €| Daliy Worker. The workers are answering the bosses. y | must be continued and strengthened. front of . in Workers First to Go JOHNSTOWN addition to the s 5,000 unemployed here in this steel and coal center, the wage-cut, part- | and speed-up program of the | es is causing reser wider masses of the w Dani the Lorain eel Company toil side by side two 1 three hou ly for tely 40 cents an hour. perating the cars get only an hour while motormen work 10 | Lee } There September 1st ase dem un agita the Commur continuo propo: Polish, rs for MOSCOW PREPARFS FOR AUGUST FIRST MOSCOW, (LP.S.)—The Central Council of the Society for the Pro- trade in comnany stores, and not Nowed to quit. fin Wada bette urieonceampencoee Union | are trained to bite Negro prisoners. turned the labor unions into company unions. They fight the bosses | Ported to congress.” lout on strike against. drastic wa NaHS” howe tdatiyewon 7) dave a xerson is at the; No er is interposed to im-| motion of Aviation, Chemistry and tattles against the workers and not the workers’ battle against the| , THe antagonisms between the two cuts. This shows the growing : : nt in Wa con- | portation of mahogany lumber from | Defense has issued a circular to all bosses. "| chief imperialist robber powers, the {sistance of the workers. The bo SOge of “the. 1800 workeray nor- secretary South Ameica, where convict and | its branches calling for a mobiliza- To defeat the bosses and their agents, it is necessary to organiza United hele cl) Great Bultsis 1s jes had cut wages for the second ete empl Sill at ee Sony p| as to how best to accompl peon labor is used to produce it. tion of the broadest masses of the militant fighting industrial unions, To defeat the fascist leadership of nak aes ani sa baer oa |time. . Ten per cent was cut off of) ont 75 now remain, Wages | Senator Reed of | P | There is no barrier contemplated | toilers in connection with the anti- the A. F. of L. by Green and Woll, the workers must follow the militant Hoe a chit un hata rece workers wages, and 50 cents) sange from 85 to 45 cents for un- | demands exclusion of Soviet 1 | to import of rubber from Harvey | war campaign on August 1st to con- leadership of the Trade Union Unity League. ia, Wanada, Unina, tn the “ar @as% /to $1 from all other. workers. Many | J ij0q labor. The wire factory in| Coal, senator Tasker L. Oddie of | Firestone’s plantations in Liberia, | solidate and strengthen the defen- in Europe, these two exploiting na tions come into sharp conflicts. Ludwell Denny, in his book, “Amer- ica Conquers Great Britain,” shows that war between the two is inevit- able, grows nearer every day. |Negro and Latin American workers °°" 09100! |work in this plant. The bosses)! ic O° ic OS workers refused to return to work. Magis We ky " oe rad The Metal Workers Industrial| th? fitst to feel the brunt of the hairman of the committee on mines, yesterd formal request of the treasury partment that nese import from the Soviet Union be prevented. | | New York papers yesterday car- The workers must organize a mighty mass movement against the war preparations of the bosses. The capitalist conspiracy against the Soviet Unions must be defeated. The bosses are our enemies—not the Soviet Union. The workers must mobilize in mass and fight for the establishment of a national social insurance fund. They must fight against all war ual 3,500 workers is along with from where the U. S. state department | >|gives its approval to Firestone’s agreement with the Liberian cap- italist government by which he buys slaves from the native chiefs for one cent a day per man paid to the sive capacities of the Soviet Union and to carry out the Five Year Plan in four years. The immediate task of the organization on August ist |is to secure new members and to in- crease its influence on the broad i | . lay-offs at Schwab’s plant. an* armament appropriations. Against appropriations for mass mur- Ee Vege ee Gs Tne te orreee peod| Mines a pean Sanenliie tor | tied new and even more fanciful | chiefs, masses, der of workers, in capitalist war, we demand appropriations to keep Halien taperialiers:| Polaud, Roi«| against wage cuts four or ‘fivedays and then closing | npHes of the the workers alive in unemployment, old age and disability. 2 2 |}down and othe yn ear saies mania, Bulgaria, Hungary and the opening up. The Communist Party of the United States calls upon the workers No worker should be misled by | PY, suppose to unite for a strucgle against wage cuts and for social insurance. No matter what your belief may bé otherwise, you must unite to defeat the capitalist attacks on yout wages. Organize and srike against wage cuts! No mater what your belief may be otherwise, you must unite to secure adecuate social irisurance against unemployment, old age or any other disability. Fight for full social insurance! to prevent a new capitalist war. No matter what your belief may be otherwise, you must unite Fight against imperialist war! Na matter what your belief may be otherwise, you must unite to defeat the anti-labor laws that are now being hatched by the Fisn Committee. Demand the immediate dissolution of the Fish Committee! Unite for the protection of the foreign-born workers! Demand the release of all class war prisoners! Defeat the capitalist war preparations agianst the Soviet Union! Rally around the Communist Party to fight for the demands of the workers. Support the Communist Party election campaign. CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. U. S. Wars Against Chinese Revolution (Continued fram Page One) have been wounded. Thus gunboats of American im- perialism take a direct hand in suppressing the Chinese revolution when it becomes evident that the Nanking government of Chiang Kai-shek, the tool of American im- perialism in China, has decayed into a living corpse, and that a Soviet power of the workers, peasants and soldiers is rising. The Palos is one of 12 American gunboats comprising the American Yangtze patrol. The total Amer- ican naval force in Chinese waters is composed of 30 vessels which are stationed there to maintain the system of imperialist and semi- feudal exploitation of the Chinese toiling masses. The rapidly rising revolt of the Chinese masses which is sweeping the whole of South China naturally brought all the gunboats into action, with many of them concen- trating toward the important revo- lutionary areas. One more gun- boat has just been ordered to Changsha, and more are proceed- ing toward Hankow. An Association dispatch reports that “additional Nationalist forces north of Hankow were said to have joined the Communists and the middle Yangtz was reported swarming with “bandits and reds.” The Japanese concession in Hankow is reported to have put up barbed wire for defense, fearing an immi- nent capture by the workers and peasants. The ‘revolution has also pene+ trated north to the territory under Feng Yu-Hsiang’s control, - while Chiang Kai-shek with all his poison gas and German advisers has been unable to pass through Fen, lines, the Red armies have suc- ceeded in marching north. Eight- een towns and villages. in the vicin- ity of Loyang, in the western part Endorse Jobless Insurance Bill (Continued from Page One) trades. In this line, 87 per cent of the workers are unemployed, ac- cording to G:2en. This compares to 16 per cent in July 1929. ere is this famous building program that Green and Hoover sponsored? It was another fake trick to fool the unemployed. The Bi Yesterday the Daily Worker pub- lished a Bill providing for unem- ployment relief. This Bill is speci- fic and detailed. This Bill provdes for the payment of $25 per week to all unémployed workers, and an additional $5 per week for each de- pendent member of an unemployed worker’s family. It provides for a heavy levy on the bosses’ income to pay for the unemployment insur- ance. It provides turning over the war funds to the relief of the unem- ployed, under the workers’ super- vision, Only enemies of the work- ingelass will fight against this Bill. The Communist Party and the Trade Union Unity League have set aside September 1st, as Unemploy- ment Day, to organize the workers in a mighty s to fight for the pr Seo rear ea Ale of Honan province, have fallen into the hands of the workers and peas- ants in the last few days. According to a United Press re- port, the Communists marched through Hunan and Kiangsi toward north China “without meeting any resistance.” In Shanghai, the citadel of the Chinese proletariat, the workers ate intensifying their revolytionary activities. Preparation for the August 1 anti-war demonstration is proceeding at full speed. The at- mosphere there is so charged with revolutionary spirit and the masses are becoming so radicalized that the authorities were forced to declare martial law for 48 hours in an at- tempt to prevent demonstrations, other border states along the Soviet Union groan under the weight of increasing armaments — preparing for war against the Soiet Union. Alex Doboer, chief justice of the Supreme Court of Hungary, points out that armaments have increased 63 per cent in the capitalist nations since the formation of the League of Nations. Only the workers can throttle the war-mad imperialist bandits and their headlong rush to war. It is now the open role of the social fascist “socialists” to blindfold the workers to the rapid war prepara- tions. MacDonald, British imper- jalist lackey, takes the lead in arm- ing British imperialism for war. He carries on even now a war aginst the Indian masses. Crisis of World Capitalism. Along with the rapid war prep- arations, we can see the ever-widen- ing fissures in the structure of capitalism. A world crisis is shak- ing capitalism. Over 25,000,000 un- employed walk the streets facing starvation. In the United States there are more than 8,000,000. In today’s demonstration the Commu- nist Party, U. S. A., puts forward as its leading slogan: “Not a cent for armaments, all funds to the unem- ployed in the form of unemploy- ment insurance.” This slogan must be spread after August Ist in all the factories, shops and mines in this country. The cry must be taken up by every worker. “Fight the imperial- ist war danger!” “Defend the Soviet Union!” Only the workers can pre- vent the profit-mad bosses from plunging the workers into another war so that the bosses can increase their profits. The workers must mobilize now to stop the war danger! adoption of this Bill; to organize and strike against wage cuts. This Bill must be popularized among the workers. Every worker, on reading it, will endorse it. It will lay the bi for wider struggles for un- employment insurance. Today, in the demonstrations against the im- perialist war danger, one of the chief tasks is to spread this Bill among thé workers. Organize them to fight for it. In Chicago the A. F. of L. fakers, realizing the importance of the Communist Party move in setting aside September 1st as Unemploy- ment Day, have set in motion a fake plan to fool the workers. They have hired the Municipal Stadium in Chicago for September Ast, for an “unemployment gather- ing.” This is an attempt to de- fleet the growing fight for real un- employment insufance as provided jn the Bill advocated and drawn up by the Communist Party. Support the Bill for unemploy- ment insurance. Tight for it. Spread it among your shop mates. Discuss it and demand its adoption. the propaganda in the capitali press about “no wage cuts.” Thi is the smoke screen to hide the ever |sharpening blow of drastic wage cuts. It is an attempt to prevent militant organization which is neces- sary to fight these wage cuts. The Slashes Continue. Wages have already heen cut. They are being cut every day——in |the steel mills, auto plants, mines, shops—everywhere. Here are a few facts: The Anaconda Copper Co. cut wages 15 per cent, the National | Cash Register Co. cut wages 10 per cent, the Youngstown Steel Co. cut wages 10 per cent, hundreds of tex- tile mills have cut wages from 10 to 30 per cent, the General Motors have cut wages right and left. The of mass wage cuts. All of these wage cuts were accomplished with the help of the A. F. of L. and the Musteite fakers. The workers are showing growing resistance, The Trade Union Unity League is leading the struggle against wage cuts, under the slogan of “Organize and Strike Against Wage Cuts!” Demonstrate against war and unemployment on August Ist! Demand that expenditures planned for armaments be turned over for the relief of the unem- ployed! Demonstrate August Ist! FARM IN THE PINES Situated In Pine Forest, near My Lake. German Table Rates: 816— $18 Swimming and Fishing. M. OBERKIRCH Box 78 KINGSTON. N.Y R14, Daily Worker has reported hundreds | wages 5 cents on the ton means that the miners now get 60 |eents per ton instead of 65 cents. The mining companies do not pay for deadwork so a miner may work all day and even all week for nothing. One miner 7 received 67 cents for six days work after the deductions were made for losives and doctor’s fee. Another miner re- ceived a check reading “No dollars and no cents,” for one week’s work. To make sure that a ton of coal is taken out the miner must take out 21% tons to be id for one. For a three ton car, a miner allowed 1.4 tons and not more than 1.6 tons. Boys 15 and 16 years of age re- ceive 20 cents an hour for outside work while grown men get 30 cents.| Children 18 and 14 years old work- ing in the mines sometimes receive| only a dollar a week or even nothing. In order to take advantage of the discontent of the workers the fake progressives under the leadership of Hapgood are trying to gain the confidence and support of the min- | |ers for the United Mine Workers | Union claiming that the U.M.W. | will be organized on a new basis | and that Lewis will go. The Wind- bar miners, however, are rather | wary of them as they were sold out | by the United Mine Workers Offi- | cials in 1921. In spite of the United | |Mine Workers Officials and the | stool-pigeons who report discon- | tended workers to the bosses and} have them fired, the miners are| | waking up and are ready for or- ganization. Their sentiment seems | to be for the National Mine Work- |ers Union which they feel as a real revolutionary organization of class | conselous miners, will best be -able is | PLACE most unique and glorious vacation and w Ideally located at Highlanc A most gorgeous estate an for play and rest. Write for booklets or phone Highland Falls 340-260 Bear Mountain and West Point, overlooking picturesque Hudson and Storm King Highway. SCHILDKRAUT'’S | ON THE HUDSON attractive for a sleeping solari showers; sun ar all outdoor spo eek-end holidays. 1 Falls, between Social and at instructors and a most elegan Hudson, id pine woodland Caledonia 7165—Long Beautfiul Music and Nightly Dancing Camp Accon:modations $25 to $30 Per Week Also Attractive Hotel Accommodation With or Without Baths at Reasonable Rates. SCHILDKRAUT’S ON THE HUDSON OPEN ALL YEAR [Bethlehem Steel Company has cut iti,» which | or “Simmons,” and | posed to be posing as a drug clerk. | This follows the farcical and ad- | mittedly useless raid of police on | the drug store of one Schafran on | Ave. B, day before yesterday. It |follows a melange of “testimony” |of known Russian monarchists and | professional patriots before the Fish committee, along with | but contradictory and unsupported | stories of convict labor in Rus |told by navy “intelligence service” | men and others posing as se | Hearings on the | shiploads of Soviet Un ready docked in U. § ors. n pulpwood going in Washington. The Amtorg Trad- ing Corporation is presenting proof that no conv is used in} producing or transporting this wood. Convict labor is the excuse used to keep out the pulpwood, “dump- ing” is the excuse offered for a proposed barrier to manganese. The convict labor excuse is re- duced to the extreme of ridiculous- ness when it is remembered that much U timber and other prod- ucts come from convict or peon labor, Negro and white convicts work in the coal mines of Alabama; peonage prevails among the Negro lumber camp workers of Flori i sippi, Lou 2 and Arkans Florida last fall Negroes were taken from the jails and sold directly into luntber camp slavery. Peonage and convict lumber workers in the south are living in lice infested camps, paid, if at all, BY lin brass token “money,” forced to to carry on the struggle in this period. PINE TERRACE HOTEL AND CAMP Acclaimed by Thousands to be America’s Most Beautiful Veg etaria.n Resort Rooms with and without bath; also open air and gi nd air bath: . ens equipped with a great attraction; tennis and handball courts; bathing and boating. hletic activities under competent food a la Schildkraut served in t dining room overlooking the City Telephone: Acre 1247 sup- | lurid | lission of two | ports are| on now in Lowman’s office | In| You Must Not Miss the Following PAMPHLETS of a Series Prepared by the LaBor Researcu Associa- tion and Published by INTERNATIONAL PAMPHLETS ——+0-4-0+—_— WAR IN THE FAR EAST, éy Henry Hau........ ie This important subject treated by a newspaperman in close touch with current political developments in the East CHEMICAL WARFARE, dy Donatp A. CAMERON... A discussion of poison gas in the coming war, not as imaginative fiction, but as a scientist’s statement of facts MODERN FARMING: SOVIET STYLE by Anna Louise StRoNG A description of the agricultural revolution in the Russian village WORK OR WAGES, éy Grace M. Burnuam The author has made a special study of unemployment and social insurance and brings together the latest information on this vital subject THE STRUGGLE OF THE MARINE WORKERS BY LING SEARRS Sy ons Some ns Aa aaa nna\n at wae Ceca is Cate Former editor of the Marine Workers? Voice, tells of the little- known conditions under which seamen and longshoremen do their work and struggle for organization Send Your Orders to the -10 -10 WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 east 125TH sTREET NEW YORK CITY (Special discount rates to organizations) WORKERS’ CO-OPERATIVE CAMP WOCOLONA WALTON LAKE, MONROE, N. Y. (50 Miles from New York) ctricity, running water in wimming, boating, rac- ngnlows, mass singing, camp= cing, mosical and’ cule fires, comradely atmosphe: ‘grams : : : ’ 1 SOCIAL PROGRAM Excellent Orchestra $21 PER WEEK Aeroplane Rides RESERVATIONS WITH $5 DEPOSIT TO BE MADE AT New York Office: 10 East 17th Street; Gramercy 1018 MONROE, N. Y., Phone: Monroe 89; CAMP FIRE AND CONCERT will be given at STETSON’S FIELD Saturday, August 2, at 8:30 P. M. AN ATTRACTIVE PROGRAM HAS BEEN ARRANGED. ALSO BUFFET Proceeds Daily Worker Emergency Campaign Fund

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