The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 8, 1930, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

DAILY WORKER, NEW YO RK, FRID. -YEAR PLAN MODIFIED Y SIXTEENTH PARTY ONGRESS DECISION increased Attention Will Be Paid to Manufac- turing Industries xrowing Number of Workers Demands More Manufacturing Goods MOSCOW (IPS).—The Supreme conomic Council of the Soviet nion at present engaged in overhauling the Five-Year Plan of construction in accord- ice with the instructions of the xteenth Congress of the Commu-} st Party of the Soviet Union. In-| creased attention will be paid to the | ments provided in the remainder of manufacturing industry. This year | the heavy industry of the Soviet Union exceeded the level of produc- tion laid down in the Five-Year Plan for the economic-year 1932-33 by 11.4 per cent and thus carried out its Five-Year Plan in three years. The manufacturing industry however, reached only 72.4 per cent this year of the level of pro- duction fixed in the Five-Year Plan for 1932-33, It is therefore not be- hind in the development, but does not keep pace with the rapid pro- gress of heavy industry. A forced development of the ma- nufacturing industries is necessary therefore, particularly in view of the fact that the proletariat in the Soviet Union is growing far in ex- cess of the figures of the Five-Year Plan and the manufacturing indu- stries are not in a position to satisfy the increasing demand, The invest- the Five-Year Plan will therefore be distributed afresh in favor of the manufacturing industries and in praticular with a view to a speedy development of the raw material sour dustrial products to the manufac- turing industries, for instance, ma- chinery, tools and building materials must be increased. The collec- tive agricultural undertakings and the Soviet farms which supply the manufacturing industry with raw materials must be specially devel- oped. WAR AGAINST THE REVOLT IN CHINA Boss Press Admits Intervention (Continued From Page One.) perty, but the object less apparent might be the protection of Nanking’s pr ze and assurance of Nanking’s continual control of this great w ay to the heart of China.” {The Yangtze River). Misselwitz is just as specifie in ard to the policy of the United tes in China. He says. “The tude of the United States Min- ter to China, Nelson Johnson, from his acts in recent months, would indicate he might countenance such a tacit understanding that in the usual protection of Americans sion of bandit-C menacing Nanking.” Tt is story from which the above quota- munist as a first page top story in the New York Telegram yesterday, was com- pletedly suppressed in the later edi- tions of the same paper. Not a word is mentioned about it in the later editions and in its place there appeared a brief United Press dispatch from Washington report- ng that-the State Department said that “any military action of the United States i rected solely toward supporting our 1s there and that no co-opera- tion whatever with the nationalists in their war -against bandits was contemplated.” Evidently Mr. Misselwitz has spill- ed too many beans, and has been too fank in his story. It is clear that the Hoover government, for fear of opposition of the workers, prefers to carry on the activities of supporting the Nan- king Kuomintang regime and sun- pressing the workers and peasants revolt behind the screen of “protect- ing American citizens in China.” But class conscious workers know the facts, and a campaign against war on the Chinese Revolution is being launched throughout the world. Every class-conscious work- er knows that the wealth created by the sweat and labor of the work- are being used to maintain the regime of oppression and exploita- tion in China, while millions of job- less wokers are starving. The de- mand for “hands-off China” will be linked up with the demand for the Workers’ Social Insurance Bill which provides for using all war funds for the relief of the jobless. AFL FAKER WARNS BOSS COMMUNISM. SPREADING ASHEVILLE, N. C., Aug. 7.— Another A. F. of L. faker has seen the trend of events, and wants the bosses to hurry’ up and accept the offer of the A. F. of L. to be a company union and to comne™* unionize their mills and save them from real workers’ organization. Communism is spreading rapidly into North Carolina, according to President W. B. Plemmons of the Asheville. Central Labor Union, slated to be next president of the North Carolina Federation of Labor. “Employers and~the public,” he said, “will have to choose between the conservative labor policy of the A. F. of L. or the radicalism of Communism.” The industrial depression, with the “refusal of employers to meet new conditions; the shooting down of strikers; the crushing of pro- tests by armed troops, all feed the flame of Communism,” Plemmons explained. He urged the creation of a state labor department with pow- er to demand investigation of labor disputes. ‘This last is in line with the com- pulsory arbitration agreement with the building trades employers al- put through by the A. F. of L, chiefs last week. tect, as usual, foreign lives anc pro- | _ IN GRAND RAPIDS | tions are taken, which was featured | of police | China would be di- | HOUR'S BATTLE Shout Down City Chief Defend Communists GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Aug. 7. —2,000 workers employed and un- employed, former war veterans young workers, Negro workers, fought local police for over an hour in a protest ogainst imperialist wars and unemployment. For the first time City Manager Welsh took off his hypocritical jmask of posing as a “liberal” and} | personally directed the attack of the | police upon the workers. At exactly 5 p. m. sharp the de- monstration started when a member of the Communist Party began to speak, exposing the city manager \for refusing the workers a permit} and their interests he might go fur-|to speak at Fulton Park, the site ther and include aid in the suppres- | of the War Memorial of the workers hordes| who gave their liv s in the last World War for profits for the bos- nificant to note that the | ses. As he was speaking the captain heard to ask the man- ager who was near by in the crowd if he should attack. “Shall I pull him in?” the cap- tain shouted, “We're ready!” “Just a minute,” Manager Welsh replied and jumping up on a plat- form began to tell the workers how good their conditions were and that he wasn’t partial to any group. When the workers began to boo him and shout for the Party speak- ers to take the platform, he gave the signal for attack. About 50 police seized the Party speaker and brutally attacked men women speakers and all the workers, who began to protest loudy. The police attacked workers in the crowd who showed their indignation and began to protect the speakers. The battle lasted for over an hour, the police tearing down ban- ners which calied upon the workers to “Defend the Soviet Union,” “De- mand Unemployment Insurance,” “Organize Shop Committees” and “Strike Against Wage, Cuts,” be- sides slogans asking the workers to join the Communist Party and Young Communist League. DETROIT BAKERS SMASH WAGE CUT Refuse to Let Bosses Split Their Ranks DETROIT, Mich. ug. 7.—When | the bosses of the Consolidated Bakeries cut the miserable wages of two of the drivers $5 a week, the rest of the drivers, supported by the inside workers threatened to go on strike immediately, unless the wage-cuts were revoked. At first the bosses adopted an arrogant at- titude, ,telling the drivers that all of them would have to accept re- | duced wages for several months to come. When, however, Mr. Skrwik- swi and the other bosses realized that representatives of the shop committee had the solid backing of the entire shop, they hastily dropped all talk about cutting wages and agreed that the present wages would be maintained, thus exposing the bluff they were trying to put over on the workers, that “business conditions made a wage- reduction necessary.” The bakery workers now realize more than ever the value of a fight- ing organization, and are now ask- ing for application cards in order to sign up with the Bakery Work- ers Section of the Food and Packing House Workers’ Industrial League of Detroit. The conditions of these workers are rotten. For a measly average wage of less than $20 per week, the inside workers are forced to slave at feverish speed, 12 and more hours a day in terrifie heat, bad ventilation, with filthy toiets, n decent water to drink or to wash The supply of heavy in-| iE - Fe ay rma SOUTH WORKERS RALLY TO THE GL. - ELECTION DRIVE Textile Workers Show Solidarity Charlotte, N. C. Dear Comrades: Some of the locals of the National Textile Workers Union and the In- |ternational Labor Defense here in | Charlotte and Gastonia just held |their first picnic in solidarity with the English and French textile strikers who are putting up the most militant struggle against their oppressors of any section of the country at the present time. One year ago some of us did not know that there was any textile workers—only in New England states and the South but thanks to | the N.T.W.U. we have learned that {we are not all the slaves in the | world. Will Vote Communist. At our picnic we had several speakers who mentioned other sec- tions of the country where we have fellow workers and comrades who need our support and solidarity. We have learned through the N. | T.W.U. that there is a union that | will fight for the workers and not | for the bosses and from the spirit | shown today in the gathering of our | picnic we can accomplish what the | workers have done in the Soviet | Union, where workers run things | themselves, When the speakers announced that our Party, the Communist Party, was running candidates for political offices the applause was deafening. Then the most backward workers would come forward and show some kind of energy to help bring the change about. The Boot for Bulwinkle. Although we had present 24 mem- bers of the Committee of 100 from | Gastonia who looked mighty sick from their past actions, even these applauded when the speakers said the Communist Party was running a man against Major Bulwinkle for office. For Bulwinkle had made a | statement that if the people wanted j the Communists out of the South ;to have him elected and he would see that they went. But the workers seem to think that Bulwinkle will have to go and not the Communist Party. | | | | | For Solidarity. A plea from the southern work- ers goes through this letter to all | textile strikers in England, France | and all over the country, to be ready to defend the Soviet Union and to | overthrow their own boss govern- ment and establish a Soviet Repub- | lie here and in all imperialist coun- | tries, Southern workers are with all workers. Let’s go to work and fight and not starve. Altogether, to de- mand the war budget for unem- ployed relief and other money such as Fish’s unlimited funds to inves- tigate the activities of us Reds. —TEXTILE WORKER. ‘DENVER WORKERS FAINT ‘ON HOOVER PROSPERITY DENVER, Colo. August 7.— Despite optimistic statements by business leaders regarding the re- turn of Republican prosperity to Colorado, workers are not becoming millionaires by saving their wages. The canning factories pay women $1.60 for an 8-hour day. Many work- ers have no wages to save. Wm. Simms, aged Colorado pioneer, hand- led freight for the Denver & Rio Grande Western R.R. for 25 years. Now he has had to appeal to friends jand fellow employes to raise a $300 mortgage on the little cottage oc- cupied by him and his wife. All of the stock holders of the D. & R.G. W. are getting along without appeal- ing for charity. Otto L, Alvottin, an unemployed worker 41 years old, collapsed on a Denver street last week, after go- ing without food for three weeks. He is “too old” for the speedy fac- tory machines. The Rocky Mountain air is won- derful but it has'to be supplemented occasionally with food before even a great political party can induce a feeling of prosperity. | | | | with, int work rooms infested with cockroaches and worms crawling through the pastry and bread. The drivers also are terribly exploited, being compelled to toil over 12 hours daily for less than $25 per week, exposed to all kinds of weather and having three jobs in one, They must make deliveries, collections and also are expected to solicit new business for the boss, for which extra work, they get nothing. The Food and Packing House Section, is extending the organiza- tion drive to include other bakeries, packing houses and restaurants. Regular meetings are held every Thursday, at 7:30 p. m., at the | Trade Union Center, 4364 Wood- ward Ave., near Warren, . Workers’ Industrial League, owe | ers Work Lo Buffalo, N. Y. | Daily Worker: It is a prevailing opinion among hotel workers in general that this season is a very poor one in com- parison with those of previous years. We find less tourists traveling then | ever before, Also we experience the fact that far less salesmen are on {the road today, showing only too | well that the big bi z i | | | |to finance their missionary work- ers. We work 12 hours a day; two missing watches; the penalty for a watch is 50 cer Besi you are obliged to lars per month to the superinten- dent of service. | With tips to depend upon mainly, and no tourists traveling, one is lucky to get by. And after paying $20 a month kick in to the grafters, you’re lucky to have sufficient funds left to provide yourself with| the necessities for existence. Space limits me to non-elaboration of details stated above, but will say that workers here are having to tolerate unbearable conditions, tho they are far from being as fright- ful as those endured by basic work- ers in the hell holes of industry. Kick-in Graft System. In our hotel in particular, the pre- vailing word is “kick in’ and the bell boys do, or out they go. If they | go out to eat it costs them a dime; if they’re late, 10 cents, 15 cents or 25 cents; if they go out to the | drug store or fruit store another thin dime must go the way of the captain, a typical stoolie of the bosses. Besides the captain gets | “kick in” on every bottle that’s sold| in the place. This captain in particular is a most slovenly individual, a human leech, who besides extracting every nickel or dime from you that a | with dirty wise cracks and repeated call downs. He has incurred through his beastly treatment several nom- de-plumes, such as “Old Pig Face,” “Sour Faced, Shrimp,” “Pot Bellied Nincompoop” and many other ap- propriate acid phrases. Vicious Straw Boss. He swaggers around like a Napo- jleon, for he’s a shrimp in size and |surrounds himself with pompous ( make a good keeper on a slave ship bound for Devil’s Island. Then there is another clerk who extends you the same refined treat- ment. He makes the guests happy, the help sad, and he’s dumber than |a pig in a colony of peacocks. He |should be clerking in some country hotel where they still stick the pin in a potato. It is not my purpose to discuss personalities, but they are one of the forms of the present evil system and will go to the discard with it Intensify Fight For Jobless Insurance (Continued from Page One) gratulate themselves upon this kind of “bootleg” wage mainte- nance, but their congratulations cannot be very sincere. As the country works further into the real business of reinstating in- dustry on its old basis, it will necessarily find that re-adjust- ment to a hew scale of prices is | inevitable. The great reductions that have taken place in the past eight months already make that unavoidable.” This is the plan of the bosses, a general attack against the standard of living of all workers, while un- employment grows apace. The wage-cutting drive stresses more than ever the importance of organizing in all shops, factories, mines, mills and workers’ organiza- congress. The Bill provides for social in- surance for all unemployed work- ers, to be paid first by transferring all war preparation funds to un- employment insurance; by a levy on all fortunes over $25,000 and a graduated income tax on incomes of $5,000 and.over. The unemployed workers would receive a minimum of $25.00 per week. Unemployed and employed work- ers—both are affected by the dras- tic wage-cut drives and growing unemployed — must mobilize for “Unemployment Day,” September Ist. They must gird for a sharper fight to force through the Work- ers Social Insurance Bill, The bosses are getting the help of the A. F. of L., the “liberal” petty- bourgeois with their fake insurance schemes—which provide nothing for the workers—their imperialist gov- ernment. The workers must close their ranks and sharpen the fight for the Workera Social Insurance Bill. Prepare for September ist! Demand the release of Fos- ter, Minor, Amter and Ray. mond. in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance, professional blogd sucker like him hem up, can get, delights in tormenting one|the pos: tions to force the adoption of the | Workers Social Insurance Bill by | ng Stretches | nae EE |) TARRYTOWN AUTO MEN MUST UNITE TO FICHT BOSSES oro] Strike Struggle On Or- der of the Day Tarrytown, N. Y. Daily Worker: The slave driving General Motors as another one of its hell holes this town. At the Chevrolet- Fisher Body plant here the workers work twice as fast as they did last year and they make between $5 and a day (if they are lucky to have work). This is exactly half of what they were getting a year ago. Now they are working only four days a week, Many have heen laid off altogether. We are expecting an- other big lay-off in a short time. Had Walkout. At the beginning of the year the workers had a walkout in some de- partment, But it was not organized very well and when the workers had a meeting with the bosses thos that spoke were fired immediately. The rest of the workers got scared and went back to work. Now the workers are again getting tired of the rotten conditions. Already 50 of the workers are buying the Daily Worker which is the only paner that tells them how to organize into the militant Auto Workers Union, These workers see that the Daily the only real worke ? paper. Workers in Tarrytown in the Chevrolet and Fisher Body must not let the bosses cut their wages, speed , and lay them off whenever ses want to. t building op committees of fighting work- 's. Keep the rats and bosse sh AY, AUGUST 8, 1930 Grafted Upon, Hotel Work- stools | hi Page Three SRS jin SENTENCES FOR OBLESS LEADERS e By C MONTH s Protest Admitted Seu, ommission (Continued from Page Une) at the door o: had gone he huge demons: wages. The n: n at tempted to march with them to the city hall from Union Squar was broken u and most bru black sands of polic Police Comm jack wie in person. T with “unlawfu Z aulting a denied other legal ious ands of thousa its granting of bail. Magistrate Flood, who had denied them bail previously, although his own brother when accused of murder had obtained easy bail from New | x York courts, held them over to special sesiosns. No There is no ses as judge and as prosecutor: A suit before Judge Ford for trial by ury was d Mass protest by 11,000 workers iseum demanded their se, March 19. on the fourteenth, they had of city in Bronx Col: elea for finally crashed the gates hall, and laid demands befo’ mates, _presi¢ Walker. An April 11, they were convicted “unlawful of c ling. ‘The ten days, unti sion, three years’ i ery out of the shop committees. Join | that. the Auto Workers Union that has lead the workers aga General Motors in Flint and Det . —WORKER. when destiny in the form of social revolution moves the working to victory. class | airs, not realizing that tends to| And present times besides, the make microscopic his pygmy per-| mass education of the work is sonality. The writer thinks he’d) making this more and more possible. cently wrote: “The Communist to al philosophy thinks | clearly than the professional intel-| |lectuals of the schools.” And this is true, for in the workingclass vement today are thousands of | working men who are far superior |to capitalist university professor: |when it comes to thinking in the intellectual realms of higher logic. —A 8] R HOTEL WORKER 1,000 DEMONSTRATE IN FUSKEGON, AUGUST 1 |_ DETROIT, Mich, Aug. 7.—The In spite of police refusal to grant a |permit, 1,000 workers, mostly anem- |ployed, came to Hackley Park on August 1, to demand “Work or| | Wages,” and to protest the bosses’| |war preparations, Dolke, chairman jof the Muskegon Council of Unem- |ployed, opened the meeting. There |were two speakers, both of whom! |were enthusiastically applauded. |Many Negroes, women and children jattended and listened attentively. After the meeting a group walled! over to the meeting place of the| Unemployed Council, and although! there were no chairs to sit on, stood | around. FARM IN THE PINES Situated in Pine Forest, nenr Mt Lake. German Vable Rates: $16— S18. Swimming and Fishing M. OBERKIRCH N Rox 78 KIN | 4; worker of, today in all that relates | °f @ more | wore |, ons Judges y were held in jail for Commis- then headed by since ousted over a matter of pad- ding the payroll, recommended the ndeterminate sentence. aviety of grafter and crook s been given easier sentences than f the city hs » to lay the up by a ec tal Iding attac cemen, comm: ioner Grover e five w policeman. ’ bail until habeas corpus proceedings and all sorts of Wal] technicalities coupled with the ce of tens of workers finally forced before Jury Trial. trial by jury in special { ons; three Tammany judges act this case ury, an di 's’ assistants also. enied, A few day: 1 the work or we re the Board of Jed over by age assembh 1 the Parole one Cooley, -|in many NSTALMENT PLAN SHOWS CRACKS Workers Can’t Pay Bills Bt NEWARK, N. J., Aug. 7.—A crack in the installment buying ystem, due to the and grow- ng unemployment revealed sterday by the x of a bank- ruptey petition by Albert Leon & furniture dealers of this city. ground for bankruptcy was 1,000,000 in furnitur Id ments, on which no col- m could be made. As unen oyment grows worse, th on will be multiplied, | creasec in- 1 strain on the banks, which with 1 ; akness i ces show v ich the capitalist press tries to cover up. MARTIAL LAW IN SUATEMALA St. Gov’t Fears orkers’ Uprising WwW Reports published in La Presna, | | Spanish language new: in New York, state that in | mart 1 law has been in ey r|sinee July 21. The puppet govern- vient to the is in a very un- It has suspended the with the excuse that nt, which is United Fruit C stable state. | constitution “the government has knowledge of | the | pro der.” t that seditious elements are agandizing to disturb public or- DETROMT AUTO “WORKERS JNION IN BIG FIGHT ‘Reopening’ Fake Gets Support for Sept. 1 MUSKEGON, Mich. Aug. 7.— | Detroit auto workers are learning that the Auto Workers’ Union not only fights for their interest, but is dependable in its statements, from the fact that the union foretold be- fore the so-called “re-opening” of |the auto plants that thousands would be left jobless, in spite of the | hullaballoo about “everybody back to work.” In a leaflet given out in 7,000 copies by the Auto Workers’ Union Monday to the thousands who failed |to get their jobs back at Ford’s | Rouge River plant, when the work- ers, angry at being lied to by the capitalist press and the auto barons, | welcomed the A. W. U. speakers | and held a protest demonstration on Ford’s own property, the workers were told that unemployment was not ended by any means. “And those of us that will get jback for a while will be driven at |a speed worse than even this hell- hole of speed-up has even seen,” the leaflet added. | “Organized in the fighting Auto | Workers’ Union and Unemployed | Councils, we can make the bosses |come across with unemployment in- | surance from the billions they in- s be- Due to the crisis here, the work-| tend to spend on war preparations.” ers are becoming radicalized. On| Before the speakers at the Rouge May 19 a mass unemployed demon- | River plant were arrested they met ation took place in Guatemala,/a splendid response from the work- ‘under the leadership of the Commu-|ers and called on all to organize nist Party. Since then the suppres-! and attend the demonstration of @ measures of the Wall Street | unemployed insurance on September Mayor | tools in the government have grown sharper. culminating in the suspen- |sion of the constitution, and the |establishment of a fascist dictator- | ship. |based, aceording to the commission, {on previous convictions—such frame- up convictions as are usually visited upon defenseless migratroy workers. Mass Protest. Maher admitted that there were “bundles of” resolutions from wor! ers all over the country demanding the release of the jobless leaders. |He did not ead any of them. He read only a few of the “nearly 100” petitions from liberals: Forrest | First. HIT BOSS HOAX ABOUT ‘UPTURN NEW YORK, Aug. 7.—Another | capitalist hoax about “improve- ment” in the industrial situation was smashed today by the public- ation of facts on the automobile and other industries. The Ford plant in Kearny, N. J., failed to open. Over efuee Reteia 3,500 workers are still walking the Retnas Bea: __.|Bailey, John Haynes Holmes, Sin-| streets jobless, as well as many , On April 29, Judge Gavegan re- | clair, ete., all protesting the severity | thousands in Detroit. fused a writ of probable error. June| 67° the sentences, A TTceHCee EAL auEROIATS & the ‘ease was argued before he | Maher distributed mimeographed| output in August will be as low eRe pute ‘d a ~ ca oe Atte s of a letter sent the commis-|as it was in July, or lower, is borne Prac ss of a ypeals, the |Si0" by James Walker, mayor of |out by reports from the steel in- ee pen Now York, refused te even |NeW York. ‘The letter throughout | dustry, published in the New York mater nthe case. ‘The International |(20 Per cent of its length dealt with | Evening Post (August 6): Labor Defense is now making ap-|‘%© aPpearance of the jobless lead: Little impetus to demands for An intelligent Marxist student re-| Peal to the U. S. on cons esterd ¢ Buildi Maher, the decided. Mahe records ¢ Amter as,reasons for the severe sen- tence (an actual parade without per- mit gets only ten days sentence, and | proceedings at board having already er gave the revolution- of Foster, Minor and |these four were accused of only at-| tempting such a parade). Ra; mond’s extra severe sentence NEVIN BL 111 W. 31s Vel. € JS LINES it (Bet. 6 & 7 Avs. Hickering 1600 PHILADELPHIA ‘CHICAGO $20.50 LOS ANG PITTSBU WASHIN' KINGSTOD LAKE HU Return xELES RGH GTON $61.00 $2.50 INGTON $4.00 ASBURY PARK Baltimere 84. » Louis Everywhere. trips at greatly reduced rates. requested to 100 Buttons. 500 Buttons. 1000 Buttons Order the ‘VOTE COMMUNIST’ | BUTTON HELP THE COMMUNIST ELECTION CAMPAIGN! The “Vote Communist” Button Is Just Out! Tens of thousands of workers should wear this botton. All Communist Party organizations are requested to im- mediately place an order for the bottons. and sympathetic organizations and trade unions are also place their order thereby help the Communist for thes All fraternal e bottons and ELECTION CAMPAIGN. SPECIAL PRICE OFFER: Order from the Communist Party, 48 FE, 125th St, N. ¥. C. (Larger Orders by Special Arrangements) Supreme Court, | itutional grounds of denial | I and trial by jury. ; the arole Board’s offices in the Muni- were merely in the nature of an interview to the press ers hefore the board of estimates, id Walker's indignation at what they said. Then he said he had almost forgotten the incident be- e the board of estimates (!) and nished by saying that he would not object to parole, but: “It may be as- sumed that the conditions of your parole will not give these men any license to repeat the offense for which they were convicted and that they will be informed that they will |be held legally responsible for any violations of their paroles.” materials has resulted from the resumption of automobile manu- facturing operations owing to left-over inventories, starting on smaller schedules and uncertain- ty as to retail sales.” In its covert language, this re- port speaks volumes. It shows that overproduction, as pointed out time and again by the Daily Worker, is still as bad as in the worst period. Hence production will not go up for a long time—possibly :-ot at all for |the rest of this year. RKERS’ CO-OPERATIVE CAMP WOCOLONA WALTON LAKE, MONROE, N. Y. (50 Miles from New York) wo Blectricity, running water in Sports, swimming, boating, bungalows, mass singing, ing, dancing, musical and fires, — €0 ely atmosphere, tural programs : : 7 SOCIAL PROGRAM Excellent Orchestra Aeroplane Rides Rates Reduced for Members of Trade Union Unity League to $17 Per Week! Regular Rates $21 RESERVATIONS WITH $5 DEPOSIT TO BE MADE AT New York Office: 10 East 17th Street; Gramercy 1013 MONROE, N. Y., Phone: Monroe 89; “You Must Not Miss the Following PAMPHLETS of a Series Prepared by the Lanor Resrarcu Assocta- Tion and Published by INTERNATIONAL PAMPHLETS ODOR oe ie WAR IN THE FAR EAST, dy Henry Hatt This important subject treated by a newspaperman in close touch with current political developments in the East CHEMICAL WARFARE, by Donato 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 Stronc cate A description of the agricultural revolution in the Russian village WORK OR WAGES, dy Grace M. Burnunam ‘The author has nade 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 N. Sparks . 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 WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 wast 1251H srREET “NEW YORK CITY (Special discount rates to organizations) ry go

Other pages from this issue: