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EEE eee ~~ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, KEE EK ED BH S SHARON =- Fe ay ree xssz E New York, N. Y. daily Worker: The worst tug in New York har- jor, that’s what the towboatmen call he Flora Roe of the Roe Towing ‘o. Thad the misfortune of being member of the crew for a few lays and here is what I found. The company was so eager for orofits that for a few days we ran vithout food because they wouldn’t o off the run long enough to pull nto a dock and get food. There was 10 «drinking water aboard. The ‘ose’le was full of bedbugs, lousy, a wo by four six fose’le where we al- nost had to crawl in and out. No rights and we couldn’t even kill the vedbugs when they bit us. Loses Steam Fast Everytime it rained or she took water on deck the fosc’le was like a shower bath. The fireroom was a madhouse, a damn hot job steam- ing that tub. Five doors broken, tubes breaking, we lost steam quicker than we made it; it meant we had to work like hell all the time. We had to trim our own coal from a two by four coal bunker, which we couldn’t move around in, even to ‘Flora Roe” Worst Tug in N. Y. Harbor For Conditions handle a coal shovel. Can’t Stand Tub After a few days when we ha a bellyful of that old stinking tub and couldn’t stand it any longer, we quit. Then the skipper was going to call the police and charge us with mutiny but when we got to the dock he got cold feet. She was so rotten, for example, that she had ten new firemen in 3 day ‘When we quit we had one day’s pay coming to us. The company re- fused to pay us, claims we had no right to quit on the run. We went up to the Legal Aid Society, Ship- ping Commissioner, and U. S. Mar- shall to see about getting our money, but it was like talking to a stone wall. They offered us all kinds of phoney advice, everything TELLS OF SPY but to take action and get our money. Line Up Men. Anyway we lined up 4 members in the M. W. I. U. on that tugboat and will conitnue to do so because that’s the only way we'll better our conditions, through a fighting revo- lutionary union of seamen, long- shoremen and harbor workers. —M. W. I. U. MEMBER. International Harvester Speed-Up Inferno - Chicago, Ill. Daily Worker: Dear comrades—I worked for Me- Cormick International (Harvester) in Chicago as a machinist for six “months and I never saw such a hell- ish plate*in my life. “The people work here just automatically, never allowed to talk to one another and the foreman watches everyone if he doesn’t make four and a half a day he is fired the second week and if a person makes more they cut the price in half. So the poor working- class can’t afford to get a square meal except hot dogs and coffee. * Workers Ridden. Last winter I saw lots of the workers had no overcoats and it was very cold. I had an old raincoat I gave to one, he had a family. It is a pity the way they treat them here. Most of them are ignorant farmers. If anyone hag been over six months he is compelled to buy shares ofthe company, and if he doesn’t he is laid off for good. The bosses have a new scheme, they have the work- ers join a school and pay one hun- dred and fifty dollars or fifty dol- lars down and five dollars a week. You get a card and they give you a dirty job for a few mcnths and every night the bosses meet and collect the cash, you have to buy tools, too. Everyone should join the T.U.U.L. I got laid off because I had a Daily Worker in my locker and they ex- amine the lockers every Saturday. Yours forever, —MACHINIST. Hatchery Dispenses With Credit As Crisis Hits Chicken “Petaluma, Cal. Daily Worker: I send this for what it may be worth. “The Penngrove Hatchery.” Dear Sir: Due to the general business de- pression that is being felt by every one and especially by. the poultry farmers of this particular section, where many of the farmers depend entirely upon poultry for their in- come, we have definitely decided to make a change in the policy of the Penngrove Hatchery, by which we Raisers hore to contribute materially to the assistance of every customer that we may be permitted to serve. By dispensing with credit sales, salesmen and field service men, this hatchery will, until further notice, delivery chicks within a radius of twenty miles from the hatchery, at $100 per 1,000 from January 25th to July 25th, and from July 26th to January 24th at $120 per 1,000. An additional discount will be al- lowed for quantity orders.” —H. M. ' BURLESQUE! (Continued from Page One) ing with the hoity-toity girls while they watchfully wait the r-oment to sally *.:th with “gentle” hand upraised to reprove the unruly Com- munists in the most “courteous” fashion. Such, we gather, was what hap- pened if we take the Times for it. Tranquilly and, must say, fittingly sheltered ‘the burlesque theatre, Captain of Police Day, in coz cond of the “kin? and courteous” goril- Jas, said h. saw a “group of civilians appzesching in such a manner that they interfered with vehicular traf- fie and he watched the efforts of Patrolman Woods to separate them.” Well, th. burlesque stage is noted for thin and risky plots, but one may take it for granted that vshen ‘a line of cops, foot and horse, drive ac dof people down a street, that vehicular t.affic which on this street ru’ in the opposite direction might naturally have trouble, In- deed that was precisely what the police drove them down that street for. Also, it was a part of the bur- Jesque drama for the hero of the act, Patrolman Woods, to get into the crowd and start a row,,of course solely with a meticulous regard for “vehicular. traffic.” “A Vehicle! My Kingdom for a Vehicle!” Anyhow, Police Captain Day, ac- cording to the Times was utterly amazed when the heroic patrolman, thus conscientiously striving to aid vehicles whose “corpus delicti” has not been proven and did not enter into either the story or the street, was “set upon and beaten by sev- eral civilians.” Captain Day thereupon did his duty, and with his men sailed forth with bare hands but trusting heart to remonstrate with the “civilians” for such ungentlemanly, or as May- or Walker would say, for such “bad manners.” At least so says the Times. For in spite of the fact that some sixty people were beaten up and five sent to the hospital, the Times relates: “Captain Day testified he saw no use of blackjacks by the police and no violence.” This might seem mysterious, even to the naive angels of the Civil Liberties Union, but Captain Day, not for nothing having gone through a burlesque training course, gave the following “explanation” which should be immortalized in a bronze plaque and attached to the Times editorial “rest room: “The captain said he saw no blows struck; but-he saw several civilians, in an apparent effort to feign being attacked by the police, throw themselves to the pave- ment so violently that they may have been bruised.” A Miracle, Nothing Else. This, we submit, is the height of something or other. Here, clearly, is the eighth wonder of the world! Not to speak of the sixty people, who in twinkling of the eye, could all get such a sudden idea to carry out such a devious, not to say pain- ful plot against the gentle and cour- teous police, what can we make of the five who carried it to the point of actually cracking their own | skulls! Commuprists, of course, are likely to do aayiaing, but what about the Hearst reporter? Alas, his head must have been cracked even before he bumped it against the pavement just to spite the astonished Cap- tain Day! What can we make of all this? We'll tell you in one word: Bur- lesque! Anna Burlak, Atlanta Defendant, Speaks in Milwaukee, Aug. 12 MILWAUKEE, Wis.—Anna Bur- lak, organizer for the International Labor Defense in the south, and one cf the six workers facing the elec- tric chair in Atlanta, Ceorgia, will speak at a protest meeting in Mil- waukee, Wiscorsin, Tuesday, Aup- ust 12, at ["aymarket Square, 6th and Vliet Sts. A meeting is also arranged in West Allis, where Burlak will speak on Wednesday, August 13, at 68rd and Greenfield Aves. MORE PINS FOR FAITHFUL SLAVES HUDSON, N. ., Aug. 8.—In lieu of better wages or shorter hours, te Gifford-Wood Co. is handing out service pins to its employers. The honor is reserved to workers who have slaved five years for the big coal and ice firm. The presentation is an annual custom, at which em- ployes are lectured on the necessity of working hard, ROLE OF WOLL AGAINST SOVIET A. F. L. Fakers More} |remained unaffected by the world Vicious Than Ever | Nat. Mil. Home, Wisc. Editor, The Daily Worker: The labor fakers of the craft unions in the United States are busy framing all kinds of lies against the Soviet Union—the workers govern- ment. They, the labor fakers are working hand in hand together with the bosses, exploiters and reaction- ary elemerits to crush the only work- ingmen’s government in the world, by agitating and publishing all kinds of lies concerning the condi- tions of the workers of the Soviet Union. Anti-Soviet Raids. Raids on Soviet emissaries in for- eign countries organized by the cap- italist governments and supported by the labor fakers to attack the workers and peasants government. The Fish Committee to investigate the Communist Party of Ameria. Woll, the labor faker of the A. F. of L. organizing to attack the Soviet Union by blocking trade with the workers and peasants government. They, the labor fakers ate mis- leading the masses of toilers by tell- ing them that Soviet workers are not getting paid high wages com- pared to the wages of the workers of this country. Spread Lies About Soviet. This is a lie. The workers in the Soviet Union are getting more sec- utity to make a decent living than any other capitalist country. To prove facts that the labor fakers are liars, why didn’t they try to stop other countries importing goods which receive lower wages than the workers receive in the Soviet Union. Every intelligent qorker can’t be- lieve the labor fakers, and each thinkable worker can easily see that all the agitating against the Soviet Union is nothing but a frame-up directed against the real workers and peasants government. With good faith and deep sym- pathy, MAX ROSS KIUKIANG IN GRIP OF RED ARMY New Mutiny Impends; Workers Will Rise (Continued From Page One.) vening or making any agreement to do so. But the London Daily Tele- graph’s diplomatic correspondent says flatly that it is well known in government circles that such an agreement is already made, and that it was arrived at after close con- sultation between agents of U. S., Great Britain, Japan and France, ani that preliminary instructions tc attack with al} naval and military forces the gre#ing power of the workers and peasants have been is- sued by all these governments to their diplomatic, consular, and army and navy officers in China. The whole intervention is to be covered with a vefl of declarations that it is only for “humanitarian purposes,” and for “protection of nationals.” Admit Revolt Grows. It is admitted that the imperial- ist powers hoped Chiang or the northern coalition would be able to murder the rising workers and pea- sant armies witho.t the expense of foreign invasion, but that recent events point to stalemate on the northern front, and victories for the Red Armies on the southern. It is practically admitted that without foreign aid for Chiang, the Chinese workers and peasants will take over the country and establish a Soviet government. The military situation is clear only in this, that more dozens of villages and some more towns are welcoming the Red Army. Chang- teh, an important city of Hunan province, has been occupied by the Red Army. On the northern Lank of the Yangtze river, opposite Kiu- | kiang, fighting is taking place, with th» retreating Nanking government troops burning villages which are about to be taken by the Red Army. Detachments of revolting peasant troops are all around Kiukiang on the south. The city may have al- ready been taken by the Commun- ist led peasant armies. At any rate, there is a report to that effect in Nanking and Shanghai. More Marines In Hankow. In Hankow there is great un- easiness. The Red Army is within a few miles of the city’s defenses, the foreign concessions are heavily garrisoned and barricaded, the workers ate organizing and plan- ning a revolt when the attack on the city begins. Saturday 18 Com- munists organizers were executed, but there are many more in the OF CAPITALISM IN WORLD CRISIS PR HONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1930 on Page Three ” INTERNATIONAL Millions More Jobless RUBIO HANDS Throughout World | MORGAN & 60 Hl ‘ i It is clear to every worker that | 5,000,000 CASH sides and from all countries reports $ 1) U, | flock in of growing unemployment. | | the world crisis of capitalism be- comes severer every day. From all ; | Even France, which for some time| Viexican Gov’t Is Tool! of Wall Stréet crisis, is now entering into the full] | |swing of the world cr A few sla | quotations from the Journal of] MEXICO CITY, Aug. 10.—The] Commerce (Aug. 9) will make this| Rubio fascist regime in Mexico is evident: beginning to bear fruit—for Wall] “France is beginning to feel the | Street. A pinch of the world-wide loss of, he made t purchasing power. . . . The ad- vantage that the French indus- trialist has long enjoyed over for- eign competitors by virtue of an the International Com- | mittee of Bankers on Mexico, it was | announce s ago. The Bankers Committee is really a Mor- gan tool, clothed with governmental internal price and wage level be- , powers. All arrangements for this low that of the rest of the world, |“present” to the Wall Street bank- on a gold basis, is fast disappear- [ers was made while Rubio visited ing. . .. France cannot continue |New York early this year. Also, to escape forever the effects of a | the agreement was formally con- world-wide depression that has re- | cluded between Montes de Oca, Mex- duced the demand for her prod- |ican minister of the treasury, and ucts as well as those of other na- | Lamont, of the firm of Morgan and tions.” Company, in New York recently. In France, as the crisis worsens,| The $5,000,000 payment is sup- the workers sharpen their struggles| posed to be for claims against the against reduction of living stand- Mexican government. The money is ards. A whole series of strikes cul-|taken out of the hides of the Mex- minate in the huge offensive of 000 workers in the North of F demanding higher wages. Fascism in Crisis. In Italy, the iron-clad censorship cannot hide the upward swing in un- employment and the downward swing of the economic crisis. Offi- cial figures now set the unemployed at 400,000. The highest official fig- ure ever recorded in Italy was in 1921 when it was given as 660,000. Mussolini’s figure of 400,000 is un- true. By fascist terrorist methods | many jobless workers are not per-| mitted to register. Thousands of| but which the Mexican pewsants never received. This step shows the complete sub- servience of the Rubio fascist re- gime to Wall Street. Rubio and his cohorts do exactly as Stimson, Hoo- ver, Morgan & Co. tell them to do. Morrow’s hand is plainly visible in \the deal though his name does not |figure in the news. Morrow, former member of Morgan & Co. still gets a good deal out of the millions coined by these bankers from their Mexican dealings. e The recent action of the Rubio others et eee ue ate to! government in handling millions starve. e real figure 18 closer) over to the Bankers Committee is to 800,000, but one of a long line of acts dic- The New York Times Italian cor- | 7 : ; : *_|tated by Wall Street and readily respondent, Arnaldo Cortesi, who is | agreed to by Ortiz Rubio. Not the really a fascist agent, is forced to) joast among these is the breaking admit (Aug. 8) that: _ [off of diplomatic relations with the “The depression in industry is | Soviet Union when Morrow was in therefore rather greater than is | London, forging a war front against poi by thes nncnlogmen | Pe Workers Socialist Soviet Repub- ‘igures, since e number of © lics, pa, Stine actually displaced by the industrial depression probably ex- ceeds the 400,000 listed.” In Germany the official figures of the workless has jumped to 2,- 757,000. Unofficially, but actually, they are about 5,100,000. Not a day passes that thousands are not laid off. Frederick Oechsner, Berlin correspondent for the N. Y. Sun ‘Big Jobless Increase Is Shown in Austria VIENNA (IPS).— According to official figures just published, un- employment in Austria increased by 2,400 from the 30 June to the 15 Ph July and totalled 152,340 com- (Aug. 9) writes: pared with 107,200 on the 15 July “Thousands have already re- |last year. For the first time un- ceived notice to quit in the steel [employment in Austria has increased and electrical industries and other |jn the first half of July, which is factories are contemplating sims /the boom period for the building in- ilar reductions in their staff.” ° | dustry and other seasonal trades. The streets of all big industrial |The above figures only refer to those centers of capitalism are literally workers still drawing unemployment being flooded with unemployed. In|jnsurance support. The actual un- England the number officially is|employed figures must be about tw- well over 2,100,000. lice the size, A dispatch from Melbourne, Aus-| tralia, to the New York Times 4 (Aug. 9) gives a harrowing picture | FARM “RE Ny of growing unemployment—helped along by the Australian “Labor” are rapidly approaching a crisis. Unemployment has reached the unexampled total of 180,000, roughly one-tenth of the total- number employed last year. . . “While the unemployment fig- ures are attributed partly to the winter and partly to the repercus- sion from the New South Wales coal strike, the causes dwindle in importance when compared with the economic and financial factors upon which future calculations are based.” The tramp of the jobless millions echoes throughout the world. In Hungary there are 400,000 unem- ployed, admits tke London Daily Herald; in Austria, 450,000; Japan, 800,000. In Latin America there is severe unemployment in every single country, and in Cuba it has reached frightful proportions. Make Capitalists Pay For Real Relief (Continued from Page One) the grain gamblers of the Chicago Wheat Pit, the fact that cotton fell $3 a bale Friday when the govern- ment estimate showed that the drouth had not seriously hurt that crop and that the crop would be a drug on the market, and the further fact that corn broke eight cents from the gamblers’ high with fore- cast of rain, both show that the miseries of the farmers are being used as a means to feather the nests of capitalist grain speculators. Others who are cleaning up are the food monopolists. Retail prices in the eastern cities for milk, eggs, meats and so on being suddenly raised, although they had never gone down while the surpus was being worried about. In the New York Times of Saturday, the city Health Department admitted that: “In June about 150 carloads of the finest quality produce, including Constantinople held great demon- | beans, lettuce, carrots and eggplant stration for end of World War. | were abandoned.” That is, 1921—Drivers and freight hand- | stroyed, in order to hold up the lers of United States Trucking workers for high prices. But now Gorporation, at New York, Struck | still higher prices are demanded against wage cut. 1923—Workers | “because of drouth!” held hunger demonstration before “Relief” a Fake. Berlin city hall, 1925—Two hun- The capitalist press, which is dred thousand textile workers in | making a terrible noise over the Yorkshire, England, struck | tragedy of Mrs. Hoover’s garden against cut in wages. | being ruined, and painting in high colers how sorry Hoover and his | associated hypocrites are and what |‘ereat things” they a‘ dung to “relieve distress,” conceal under clouds of words the anti-farmer and anti-worker nature of this fake “relief.” Undoubtedly there will be some carefully selected cases, where the disaster threvtens immediate star- vation and perhaps pestilence, the | Red Cross will “take care of.” But e——_—— Today in History of the Workers August 11, 1916—Workers of Demand the release of Fos: ter, Minor, Amter and Ray. | mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance, Organize and strike against wage-cuts! ernment has sent 130 soldiers to|it has Jim Crowed the Negro suf- city. New regiments of Nanking troops have entered, but mutiny is| sants. brewing in the whole government| and of U. S. are ready for action army. ae has sent 150 move in the river. help kill Chinese workers and pea- ferers and aided only the rich Gunlfats of both countries among the whites. In any case, for every dollar it gives out it w.!l make forced collections yin factories , 000,000 payment will} world e ican workers and peasants. It is) ve | Supposed to be for lands taken— Party, which is in power. Says the | cable from Australia: INDLE “Australia’s domestic affairs de- | marines, the British “Labor” gov-|in cases like .the Florida cyclones | BRITISH BOSSES ADMIT CRISIS WILL LAST WELL INTO 1931; PREPARE WAR Make Bid for Alliance Roylin Fascists With German Bosses Against U.S. Attack Workers Shows Intensification, 2 Ave Stabbed of Anglo-U. S. Fight | (Wireless by Imprecorr) the gist of a surve ed by| nists at Spandau severely stabbing the British Electric: nd Allied| them. Today unemployed work Manufacturers’ Association. This) caught one of the fascists involve boss agency, however, does not tell) and seriously injured him, the whole story. At the same time,| “Welt am Abend” re: rts that they try to put the blame for the| the goverenment is preparing to crisis on the operation of the re-| reform” the franchise by raising Parations and the American debt! the minimum from eighteen to settlement instead of the funda-) twenty-one, and to abolish the pro- mental contradictions of capitalist] portional list system, substituting economy. he a . iti 7 Wis’ cdubavabeie cdinected ian: wall the reactionary British system of LONDON, Aug. 10.—That the} - ; nilornis SeaeiB: ail” Be BERLIN, Aug. 10.—Last night a wor sting well into 1931, was, fascist gang attacked two Commu- | THE FIGHT FOR TOILERS’ RULE STARTS AT HOME 'On With the Fight For Social Insurance |To the Honorable J Dear Sir:—Since the: |in America (home of the free) for Communists I, as a believer in Com- munism, wish to leave. Having worked for about fifteen years in shops, factories and home (for American high wages) and not having saved enough to take me to the next state, let alone Russia, I am, of course, forced o remain here | —though here is no room for me. However, I am quite ready to go to Russia if the country in which there is no room for progressive ideas is ready to send me—as well as my family. Yours for Communism, | —JEAN PINCUS. | Editorial Note:—One of the pur- poses of the Fish committee is to “discover” that workers strike, dem- | onstrate, ete., not because they are | getting vicious wage-cuts, beind speeded up, being drawn into war | against the Soviet Union, etc., but | because of the machinations of \“Moscow gold” agents whose inter- est in the American workers starts | and ends with lurid incitement to | insurrection at any and all times. American workers, whether for- eign-born or native, have created the wealth of the bosses by their labor, and now that many millions are jobless and starving and the rest working under intolerable con- ditions, must press the revolution- | ary struggle here to overthrow capi- talism and under a proletarian dic- tatorship control the factories, mines and mills to gain bread, peace and social security. Demand the release of Fos- ter, Minor, Amter and Kay- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. tres. The civil population will also take part in these manoeuvres un- der the direction of the fire’ ‘cade, the red cross and various patriotic sport organizations. At a signal from the defense headquarters all the factories will start up their syrens, all lights will be extinguished and the civil population will troop in an orderly fashion to the dug- outs prepared for it and where it can suffocate quietly out of the way when real gas is used. i ‘ single constituencies where all votes against American imperialism, be-| are wasted except those cast for the cause it receives the lion’s share| sucessful candidate. Compare the |under the Young Plan. The British| recent French election, where the jin their struggle for world markets | same scheme was instituted, when |maintain that the American impe-|the Communist Party considerably rialism has a great advantage of | increased its votes but lost eats. — its heavy holdings in war debts. pa cee iE The bid for “revision of the ae | reparations system” is also an | OZECH ARMY IN fort to line up Germany on the side | of British imperialism against Wall | Street and the French, The Na-| tionalist press greeted the Manu-| WAR MANE F facturers’ Association survey glee-| fully. The nationalist organ,} Deutsche Tageszeitung declared: | 4 y “The growing English unemploy-| Details of Widespread ment has made British participa-| r. * tion in the German tribute long) War Preparations |since illusory. A determined battle| against the madness of the Young) PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (IPS). Plan is a task which cannot be con-|—This year’s manoeuvres in Czecho- fined to any one national govern-| slovakia will be held on a much ment.” larger scale than last year’s. They In the coming German election) will be held in Slovakia and a west- the f cists are strengthening their |ern army under the Pressburg com- force to perpetuate the dictatorship|mand will engage with an eastern under Article 48—and to extend it!army under the Kaschau command. into a sharper fight against the|Slovakia will be turned into a the- Communist Party, vanguard of the|atre of war, only the dead and German working class. |wounded will be missing. Although While it is true that the repara- | Czechoslovakian militarism has tions settlement and the Young|shown on more than one occasion Plan throw tremendous burdens on|that it is capable of providing these the German workers, and are ex-|in peace time also. tremely profitable to the leading] Large scale air manoeuvres will imperialist bandits, it is not the|hd conducted in Eastern Bohemia basic cause ¢ the crisis. The cris id in Central Mahren. Gas attacks is due mainly to overproduction oc-| wil] be conducted on the most im- a a period of decaying | portant industrial and railv-ay cen- The British bosses who predict = an extended period of crisis claim that “recov-~y will coincide undoubt- | edly with revision of the whole re-| parations system.” This has. been) met with wide approval among the | fascist elements in Germany. The German bosses want a reduction in| the reparctions settlement so that| they can put the greater share of | the wealth wrung out of the Ger-| man workers into their own pockets instead of having to transfer it to the imper‘alists in Paris and New) York. | and demand contributions from | farmers to more than make up for | it and stow up funds to aid the next imperialist war. | But the main “relief” is that of | credit. And here is where the | vilest hypocrisy reigns. The Grain | Stabilization (?) Corporation of Farm Board is said to be “prepar- ing to supply stock feed on credit a few requests have been received to community corporations, put only This work is expected to ioo~ large | in future relief work.” So the farmers will have to pay for their “relief,” and if, as in the | majority of cases, they are not | members of “comunity corpora- | tions” they can damn well go with- | out “relief.” These corporations | are in the hands of rich farmers, | which means that they either do not need it, or will reject the idea of helping the poor farmer who does need it, even if he happens to ELECTION place a copy of this Elec mass organizations. Write WORKING CLASS Against CAPITALIST CLASS Is the Main Election Issue of the Communist Party PLATFORM COMMUNIST PARTY U.S. A. Five Cents The prime duty of every revolutionary worker is to tion Program in the hands of every worker in the shop, factory, trade union and for orders and quotations to: WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK CITY be a member. In either case or any case, the poor farmers suffering from the disaster will get no relief, and if | they are forced by need into taking “credit,” should it even be possible for them to get it, they will be en- slaved by the debt through one | agency or another to the big} bankers. | Real! | Secretary of Agriculture Hyde, who pretends there is no diffe ent interests between rich and poor farmers and grimly states that the | drouth will teach farmers to “or- | ganize for collective action,” of | course wants the rich farmers to | organize “co-operatives” and freeze | out the poor farmers, They should organize, these poor | farmers, and fight collectively, not for fake “co-operatives” but for a Farmers’ Insurance and Relief Fund to be run by themselves and col- lected from taxes on at present non- taxable bonds, corporation profits and a capital tax on speculators in farm products. Loans should be | made without interest and crop failure should cancel the debt pro- portionately. FARM IN THE PINES fo Vine Forest, near Mr erman ‘Table, Kates: $16— $18. Swimming and Fishing M. OBERKIRCH Box 78 K pON, N.Y Bungalows wi a Le ty fy fy te Li (> te > Le Lo ly fe hm Cultural singing. PHONE BEACON Th Rot ) b- | As Always= Spend Your Vacation at Camp Nitgedaiget FIRST PROLETARIAN NITGEDAIGET CAMP~—HOTEL Hotel with hot and cold water in every room. Tents—to remind you the old. days. Program for the Summer of 1930 The Artef Studio (Mass theatre with the Artef) Comrade Shaeffer will conduct mass Cultural Program—Comrades Olgin and Jerome Athletics, games, dances, theatre, choir, lec- tures, symposiums. etc. CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N. Y. N.Y PHO By Train: From Grahd Central every hour. By Bont: twice daily ith electric lights. BST AUROOK 1400 VvvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvVvvYVv ‘