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Hii AD OF LARGES IN WORLD SAYS 5-YEAR NBOUNDTOSUCCEED PL: ‘ Visits U.S.S.R. and States “Labor Is Running ° Russia “T Foun Today” Russian Farms Doing Splendidly—| Are Completely Mechanized” just Un Hardin, of the , in an igtter- trade by Amer- | Soviet | n’t use any and Russian the get uestion but that | suceeed in its eceno- | ne added, no about it. I ming Russia today. nomic confere s with | Rykoff and other leaders, | most powerful people in conferences were those who t the workers.” Jed“ Mat will not be much ex- | d peasants are satisfied | andard of living raised | he pointed out, “Russian labor is undoubtedly better off than it was | der the old Czarist regime.” fampbell had made extensive in- vestigation of the collective farms in the Soviet Union. His conclu- sions w ‘I found the Russian | farms doing splendidly—on great tracts of land, working night and | and completely mechanized, | day |and Canada combined. I ardin, Mont. w things to criticize. f the tremendous fac- tories being t and of those al- ready in operation. .“I saw a fac- tory making trucks there. They v Russian-made, but all the ma- terial was an assembly of stuff you could trace to America, either di- rectly or in design.” “You must remember Russia is a country with natural resources as large as those of the United States A country like that, with its millions of people, can't be ignored.” In his glowing account, however, Campbell left out a few things which workers must rémember. All this is goin gon in the U.S.S.R., while in capitalist countries mil- lions are being thrown out of work, due to a severe and sharpening economic crisis. All the tremend- ous development under the five- year plan is in the interest of all the workers, and not for the benefit only had He told ous socialist upbuilding will gradu- ntil the needs of all the| ally work away from Communism | just shows his inability to under- stand historical development, de- a very high degree. Even now, | spite his desire to be “fair.” It is | this very development which he describes with such enthusiasm which brings the Soviet Union closer to socialism. The 5-year plan tends to wipe out the Nepmen, small business men, and the col- lectives, which he so aptly describes spell the doom of the rich peasant, the kuluk—all leading to the ulti- mate goal of socialism. DETROIT DEFENSE CONFERENCE FRI. SAYS DE PRIEST Fight Attack On Flint} Strike Leaders | DETROIT, Aug, 14. — To fight! the growing boss terror, as partic- | ularly manifested in the Flint auto | strike, the International Labor De- fense is calling upon all working class organizations to send dele- a conference to take place | Aug. 15, at 7:30 p. m., at 2 The call for this conference says: “The most important work of the | conference wil] be to organize the| deft of twenty-six strikers and | of the Flint strike. Hundreds | of workers were brutally clubbed when they exercised their right to picket. Two thousand strikers were driven out of town for ten miles at | the point of the bayonet and the | gun, Sixty workers were thrown | into jail. Ten organizers of the Auto Workers Union and the Interna- | tional Labor Defense were taken from their vells for a “ride” thru the woods and there brutally beaten with rubber hose, blackjacks and | other gangster weapons in the hands | of the Flint police, | “In addition the conference must | take up the defense of more than a dozen workers now sentenced to ninety days each in Highland Park for the offense of speaking to the workers and distributing leaflets in front of the Briggs Body plant. Among these workers is George Powers, secretary of the Michigan District of the Trade*Union Unity League, and Gojerean, also sen- tenced to thirty days in Detroit. “The conference will have to take up the’struggle against the discrimi- nation against the Negro workers here in Detroitsthe attacks on the foreign born workers. The confer- | ence must take up the fight against the Fish Congressional Committee, which aims at establishing more vi- | cious laws against the workers and carry through wholesale deporta- tions of foreign born workers. “While centering its major activ- ity in the immediate cases in Michi- gan the conference must take up the fight for the freedom of Foster, Mi- nor, Amter and Raymond, sentenced to three years in New York, the re- lease of the many workers sen- tenced to forty-two years in Cah. fornia, the saving from the electric chair of six workers in Georgia for the crime of holding a meeting, and for the release of the growing hun- dreds of workers jailed throughout the country. The conference must draw the conclusions from the wave of terror throughout the country and the activities of the Fish Com- mittee. It is part of the drive of the bosses to solve the present deep- ening crisis at the expense of wage cuts and unemployment for the workers, and for preparations for war, particularly against the Soviet Union.” ELIZABETH WORKER KILLED ELIZABETH, N. J.—Anton Bod- nar, 48, was killed in an accident after working only ten minutes on the first job he had had in months. | vention, JE THANKFUL Lynchers Negro’s Best Friends. He Avers CHARLOTTE, U. C., Aug. 14— — That the Negro masses snould be thankful for slavery and recognize that their best friends are the im- perialist bosses who exploit and op- press them was the servile message seriously delivered Aug. 11 to the three thousand members of the Ne- gro Shriners in their annual con- by the millionaire Con- gressman, Oscar De Priest. Thoroughly exposing hiniself as frankly aligned with the oppressors and lynchers (his fellow millionaire exploiters), De Priest warned against the Communist Party and its program of aggressive struggle against lynch terror and oppression and called upon his hearers rather to “cultivate the friendship’ of the lynchers and to trust to this ele- ment “and your own leaders’ — meaning Negro bourgeoisie leaders uke himself, and incident«"y expos- ing the complete collaboration of the treacherous Negro bourgeoisie with the oppressor class. The crowd which at fi S Was pay- WORKERS “MICHIGAN Detroit. A two-day outing will be held this Saturday evening and Sunday at the Workers’ Camp. Direction:—Take Grand River St. car to Farmington and from there to camp. ee Grand Rapids. Grand Rapids Communist picnic, Sunday, Aug. 31, and Monday, Sept 1, at United@ Workers’ Cooperative Camp, 7 miles east of Bostwick Lake on M-44._ Swimming, dancing, games, Admission 25 cents. eee: Grand Rapids F.W.LL. Meeting. The Furniture Workers Industrial League mass meeting, Tuesday, Aug. 9, 8 p. m., 756 §. Division Ave., cor. Franklin, third floor. OHIO I. L. Dy Pienic, Will have a sub-district picnic at Blue Bell Island, foot of Grand Road Hill, Conneut, Ohio, on Sunday, Au- gust 17. re ee. Akron, Ohio, T.U.U.L. Pienic. Akron, Ohio, Trade Union Unity League pienic at Frank’s Farm Sun- day, Aug. 17. Follow route 18 from Taimadge Circle, about one mile to first road left, Look for signs. Autos will leave 790 Washington St., Akron, at intervals between 12 noon and 3 P.m. Dancing. games, speaking. Ad- mission 25 cents, * * Cincinattt, Pienle and outing, Sunday, August 17, at Richters Farm, on Cliff's Pike. Athletic events, games, music. = Attention! Me is the father of fourchildren. | Vote Communist! { call or write WLR. Office, 22 T FARM N. J. Negro Workers |Roused, Form A.N.L.C. ELIZABETH, Aug. 13—Thor- oughly aroused by the use of white | | gangsters against Negro bathers at | the new municipal William G. Dowd DAILY WORKER, NEW PREPARING FOR OBLESS PROTEST Jnity Council Tonight; imming pool following an unsu sful attempt by the city author Meets Tomorrow |ities to bar Negrocs from the pool, ae | Negro workers last night organiz W YORK.—While many work- | al of the American Negro f nal organizations, A. F. Songress at a meeting held last L, and independent union local: re | night. adopting the resolution broade Fifteen Negro workers and five |by the Trade Union Wnity Council white workers became charter m pledging support to the Wo plans for many mass ew York to greet the th World Congress of the Red International of Labor Unions. The T. U. U. L. is the American | section of the R. I. L. U. The | OUT NEGRO GIRLS Trade Union Unity Council is the st) city central body. The v and its unions utilize the eetings of greeting to Betrays Kulak Strike; ine r. 1. Ta.U, congress Friday, and . enlarged council meeting to- Aids Lock Out of 4,000) nisnt, to prepare for the mass dem. NEW YORK.—There is no end to | age 9. the betrayals committed by th*/ Soveral unions have already an- Amalgamated company union. 17 sounced their preparations for the the shop of Dennis & Co., N. J., tne | Aucust 15 meetings. The Marine company union is forcing 10 Negro | Workers’ Industrial Union will have | girls out of the shop and replacing | speakers in several languages, Ger- them with five men of their own | may, Spanish, Italian and probably | clique. In the Dennis shop in New | Chinese, to address an international Jersey there are 20 Negro girls | gathering in their hall at 140 Broad working at $15 and $16 per week. | St., tomorrow night. | This shop is 100 per cent Hillman’s| The Needle Trades Workers’ In- ns on Unemployment Day, thew Woll’s fairy | of a small set of parasites such @5!«“gnion shop.” This means that the | dustrial Union executive council | convict labor and'| those who feed on the labor of the |poss keeps the union books and | meeting tonight will make last min- | oviet goods in this | workers in capitalist lands. And|thoy deduct dues and taxes from|ute preparations for including the d that in the Soviet | Campbell’s belief that the tremend- | ty. girls for the Hillman company | greetings to the R. I. L. U. The Trade Union Unity Council meeting tonight will be at Irving Plaza Hall, 7:45 p. m. union. Instead of forcing the bosses | to pay equal wages for equal work, | the company union is beginning to carry out its agreement with the bosses, to throw more workers out | lon the street and to increase the} POLI CE TA KE A | speed-up of those remaining in the The Hillman clique is scared WHITEW ASH B ATH shop. Fake Investigation of August 1 Ambush NEW YORK.—“The prediction that an investigation of alleged po- lice brutality by the police would result in a white washing of the j to death of the possibility that the workers will follow the lead given | by the Needle Trades Workers’ In- | dustrial Union | The Industrial Union is doing |everything possible to accomplish \just that. At one of its meetings | Tuesday in Brownsville, 300 locked out children’s clothing work- | ers enthusiastically supported the program of the Industrial Union. | YORK, FRIDA |bers of the local and immedia‘ Social Insurance Bill and ele jelected officers and put the local delegates to the enla | ROAD on a working ba g, the militant unions | } HU Leaflets calling the meeting urged the locked out workers to unite in the shops, form rank and file strike |committees and wage a real strug- \gle for “week work, minimum wage scale, unemployment insurance paid | by the bosses and controlled by the | workers, the 40-hour, 5-day week, equal pay for equal work, all work to be cut in New York and made in New York, no overtime during the slack season and against the speed-up and standards of produc- tin.” @ et, oa One Mistake. (The wage, hour and insurance de- mands should be supported by all workers. The demand for all work to be cut in New York and made in New York shows a lingering craft ‘and sectiohal spirit which such an organization as the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union should ing very little attention to De Priest grew restive as the full inort of his servile message was reuli ed and several members began to heckle the millionaire Negro misleader. Upon his conclusion several work- ers asked the floor to challenge his statements, but were denied the op- portunity. Vote Communist! CALENDAR WISCONSIN West Allis. A “Labor Unity Picnic” has beer arranged by the Trade Union Uni eLague for Sunday, August 17, 11 Greenfield (Gebaj) Grove, 8333 Green- field Ave, Dancing, games and short talks. | ~~ MARYLAND _____ Baltimore. This Saturday and Sunday will be Red signature collection days. Every comrade and sympathizer report to the Party headquarters at 622 W. Balto at 1 p. m. Saturday, and 10 a.m. Sunday. Mass, nic at Maple Park, Methuen, Mas on the organizational work. Boston. Marcel Scherer, tary, will speak. program. Hall, 42 Wenonah 8t., Labor Lyceum, Chelsea, Mass. at a. m. sharp, NEW ENGLAND Attention! WORKERS INTERNATIONAL CHILDREN’S CAMP OUTING Sunday, August 17 TO HOLMS PARK, WESTMINSTER, MASS. See the children tn netion. Play, songs and sports—all by ‘the W.LR. Scouts. Alxo sport events by the Labor Sports Unton, Buses wilh leave at 9 A. M, from New International Hall, 42 Wenonah St. Roxbury. Transportation $1.25. Dinners The. Fi RELIEF ‘or full information Harrison Avenye, Boston, Mans. Be tn Lawrenee. The National Textile Workers Union District No, 1, Lawrence, and the Shoe and Leather Workers’ Or- ganization Committee of Haverhill, The Workers International Relief is holding a mass meeting in Chil- dren's Camp this Sunday, August 17, in Holmes Park, Westminister, Mass. the National 'Secre- The children and the Labor Sports Union will have a Buses will leave New International Roxbury; 93 Staniford St., Boston, and the Sheises culprits is borne out today by the reports of Inspector Bolan,” says J. Louis Engdahl, general secretary of the International Labor Defense, | and Communist candidate for lieu- tenant governor of New York State, | who organized the Labor Jury's in- | vestigation of the riot after the Au- | gust 1 Anti-War Demonstration in | Union Square. | “Defying the testimony of wound- | ed bystanders, including a member | of the International News Service, the police witnesses have flagrantly denied seeing any brutality on August 1, “The testimony of the physician | who treated some of the wounded jis summarily dismissed as that of {a Communist,” says Mr. Engdahl, |“with the implication that such tes- timony is therefore invalid. “On August 22, the anniversary |of the death of Sacco and Vanzetti, | workers and sympathizers will be joined by new numbers of indignant citizens who are outraged by the jeontemptuous and _ contemptible |treatment given to workers not be advocating. Organization of | out-of-town shops, not an attempt |to lay down an embargo on them, is the correct demand.—Editor.) A big mass meeting is being pre- pared of men’s clothing workers for next week at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. The Industrial Union is also preparing a shop com- mittee conference on a date to be announced soon. Name will hold its first annual pie- on August 17, to raise funds to carry Sports, games, refreshments, entertainments. ee NAME .. ADDRESS Use This Blank! GO TO’ WORKERS, ASK THEM TO HELP KEEP DAILY WORKER GOING AND GROWING! Use This Blank At Once! Y | Ratifying” the Naval Treaty A, h \ SCORES ASSAULT |of the State of New York and the} Kidnapped Teachers | Held On Flag Case | NEW YORK.—As a result of a raid by the Ku Klux Klan on the | Children’s Camp, maintained by the | Workers’ International Relief at | Van Etten, near Elmira, N. Y., on | Tuesday, the International Labor | | Defense has sent the following tele- | | | gram of protest to Governor Frank- | lin D. Roosevelt. “According to information re- | ceived here Children’s Camp at Van Etten, New York, raided by state police, Tuesday night, after threatening demonstration by Ku | Klux Klan and American Legion during which hundreds of klansmen burned huge cross. Several teach- | ers and caretakers arrested leaving | children without care and supervi- | sion on. International Labor De- | |fense reperesenting thousands of | workers emphatically protests against this brutal outrage and de- mands immediate release of all! those arrested. We demand right ; of workers children to have such recreation centers as they have built up at Van Etten and denounce this campaign of legal and extra legal | terror against the children and their leaders.—J. Louis Engdahl, General Secretary, International Labor De- | fense.” | Six or seven hundred Ka KI: Klan members marched to the} | camp and burned a fiery cross 30) feet high. They then surrounded | the camp, permitting none to enter or leave, destroyed the wall news- papers, and burned the camp fiags. Mabel Husa and Aili Halmeen, | two of the teachers, together with | two children were taken captive in |a Ford automobile belonging to the | |camp, held for two hours, and then |taken to the city hall where they | were forced to kiss the American | flag. | The first to be forced to kiss the | |flag was a young boy, Wallenin, who resisted and bit the flag. Mabel Husa was badly beaten on the back and arms. Some of the campers who were pursued escaped, those who were seized were not released until in night. On Tuesday night, the state pplice raided the camp and made the ar- rests which today’s telegram to Governor Roosevelt protests. Among those arrested were the two kidnapped: Mabel Husa and Aili Halmeen. They were charged yesterday with “insulting the Amer- ican Flag.” STEALS MILK FOR HUNGRY CHILDREN PHILADELPHIA.—Geo. Thomas, thirty-two years of age, the father | of four children, has been out of work for six months. The bosses’ | court fined him $2 yesterday for | stealing a quart of milk to keep his | kids from starving to death. Organize and strike against wage-cuts! ‘ ! Get Donations Quickly! Amount Address Total The total amouni in donations appearing above has been collected by Pee eee eer eee eeenereeeneneeeeesene: |of Hudson, New | the sounding of the horns of their auto- | mobiles, 850 Negro and white work- | MOORE SPEAKSTO HUDSON WORKERS Communist Candidate Continues Tour NEW YORK.—In spite of the at- tempts of the bosses and hoodlums Yo to disturb meeting by threats and the Jers gave a very good reception to Comrade Richard B. Moore, Com- |munist Candidate for Attorney General, Comrade Richard B. Moore ex- posed the conditions of the workers | necessity of the workers to support the election program of the Com- munist Party. tion platform were sold to the 350 workers that were present at the meeting. The workers showed a real interest in the campaign and platform of the Communist Party. A number of workers joined the Party. The dates still to be covered in the coming two weeks are: August 15, Utica; August 16, Syracuse; August 17, Rochester; August 18, 19, Buffalo; August 20, Niagara Falls; August 21, Jamestown; Aug- ust 23, Spencer and August 24, Binghampton. CALLS ANTI-LYNCH CONF. The Youth Committee of the American Negro Labor Congress calls upon all young workers, Negro and white, in New York City and vicinity, for struggle against op- pression of the Negroes. The white ruling class has instigated a series of brutal attacks in the past few days. provoked in Corona, Long Island, where some white hoodlums at- tacked the Negro baseball team, and the riot on Welfare Island, then, too, the fight in Williamsburg, where the Negro workers are prevented from using th eshowers, and which almost resulted in a lynching. it be- comes clear that the time has come for a militant organization of young Negroes to defend the Negroes against the attacks of their oppres- sors. Not a é¢ent for armaments: all funds for unemployment insurance. DETROIT! OUR DOOR WORKERS OF ALL RACES TWO-DAY SATURDAY EVENING AUGUST 16 Extraordinary Camp Fire Social and Cultural Program Dancing Galore Healthy and Plenty Food! EXCELLENT Watch for signs. By Street Car: THESE BOOKS ARE G! Vv. I. LENIN—The Fight for a Program, Party Organization and ‘Tactics (1894-1904). Lenin's most significant writings dealing with the theorles and policies of the Narodniks, Economists and Men- sheviks This book is pC a | valuable to Party members ani militant workers in the United Sates at the present time, 1.25 G, V. PLEK HANOV—Fundament- al Problema of Marxism. The father of Russian Marxism and one of the most brilliant of Marxist publicists presents gere a philosophic and historical} ‘an- THIS NOOK 18 GIVEN FRER OR SENT WITH ONE Y¥ wr AL j+ portant single ninist work. Here-the Communist leader, dis- ciple and for many years co- Baily 26 UNION SQUARE One hundred copies of the elec- | YOUTH COMMITTEE ANLC, Beginning with the fight | tk TWO YEARLY SUnst | Arrest 4 At Factory | Gate Meet in N. J. | PATERSON, N. J., Aug. 18.-At la factory gate meeting, held in Pat- erson at Barbours Flax by the Young Communist League, four jcomrades were arrested. } The meeting had been in progress jabout ten minutes when a cop came jalong and demanded a_ permit. When he was told that we had a verbal permit and that the chief | never gave a written permit, he or- dered the speaker to get off the | platform, which she refused to do. The speaker and three other com- jrades, who were protecting the |speaker, were arrested while the | crowd was “booing” the police. HOLD 42 HANDS “OFF CHINA MEETS Tens of Thousands At Demonstrations NEW YORK.—Tens of thousands lof workers in all parts of the city \last night enthusiastically partici- jpated in 42 meetings for the de- fense of Soviet China. The meet- ings were called by the New York District of the Communist Party. All of the speakers pointed out at the same time the growing crisi: in the United States, and the nec- essity for all workers lining up be- hind the Workers Social Insurance Bill, whose first demand is: “Not a Cent For War. All Funds for So- cial Insurance!” | At Second ve. and 10th St. an en- | thusiastic meeting of between 800 jto 900 workers took place. The meeting was first scheduled at the squarc near 10th and 2nd, but the |ing up by demanding it move. In- | stead of breaking up, the workers voiced their protest and followed | the speakers to another corner. En- thusiastic applause greeted all the | speeches. A group of meetings were held at the following places: 125th St. and 5th Ave., 128th and Lenox, 132nd and Lenox and 114th and 5th | Ave. The crowds of workers gath- | ered at these meetings at 9:30 were urged to march to 110th St., where a huge outdoor meeting was held. | There were over 2,000 workers pres- ent at this point. At the time the Daily Worker goes to press scattered reports were phoned in telling of the big | crowds everywhere. Detailed infor- |mation will be published in a later issue. Vote Communist! DETROIT! ARE OPEN! AND NATIONALITIES COME! WORKERS CAMP CARNIVAL SUNDAY ALL DAY AUGUST 17 Sports, Athletics Swimming Singing, ete., ete. Comradely Atmosphere! ORCHESTRA REMEMBER—Aug. 16 and 17 at the WORKERS CAMP! MAKE NO OTHER APPOINTMENT FOR THE WEEK-END! DIRECTIONS—By Auto: Out Grand River two miles beyond Far- mington, turn right to Twelve Mile Road, turn right to camp. : Take Grand River Car to Far- mington and there the camp bus. Another FREE BOOKS OFFER WITH DAILY WORKER SUBSCRIPTIONS Read These Marxian Classics During Summer issued by INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHERS IVEN FREE WITH OND 'T $6.00 YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION A’ ayaig of scientific Socialism The book has become one of the popular Marxist classics, 1.50 Vv. 1 LENIN—The Bolshevik Party in Action (1904-1914), In | these important excerpts from ‘The Collected Works of V. I Lenin,” there are presented the essential problems of Russian Socialism uring, the revolution: ary time of 1905-1906 and the | years of reaction that followed Together with “the Fight fcr a Program” it gives a complet: picture of Lenin's aderehir Over a period of 20 years. S1,tHy | ‘HIPTIONS $1.06 LY SUBSCRIPTION AND Get these books for summer reading FREE with Daily Worker subscriptions, Worker NEW YORK, N. Y. | police attempted to break the meet- | ‘GLOAKMAKERS READY 10 FIGHT 'Great Meeting Votes | For Joint Conference | NEW YORK.—Speaker after speaker from the floor at the meet- ing of 1,800 cloakmakers.who pack- ed Bryant Hall yesterday afternoon, during working hours, told of his | previous fighting against the left wing. But these speakers, and the great crowd of their fellow workers | who applauded them, see now that Schlesinger and his company union have only defeat and starvation and | unemployment for the workers, and that the only thing to do is to build the Needle Trades Workers Indus- trial Union. Most of those present were mem- bers of the International Ladies Garment Workers. But they all voted for the rank and file mass | conference of cloakmakers, union, company union and unorganized, | which will be held Saturday, Aug. 23, The conference was proposed by the N.T.W.1L.U., and the mass meeting yesterday elected from the } floor a committee of 15 to aid the industrial union in calling it to- | gether. | Some speakers suggested that the | time was ripe for struggle, and that | if the international union would call a great mass meeting in Madison | Square Garden, the workers would | flock to it. The international union speakers explained that what was needed was not just meetings for the sake of meeting, but real organ- | ization. Formation of rank and file ! shop committees in all shops, united | front committees taking in members | whether or however organized and | struggling for better conditions, also preparing for the joint conference August 23, is the preliminary step to take, There will be a meeting of the shop delegates at 7.30 Friday in Manhattan Lyceum to nominate of- | ficers and members of the executive council of the union, and to plan the drive in the dress trade. GREAT DECREASES IN CAR LOADINGS. WASHINGTON.—The severe na- jture of the growing crisis which | grips the country is seen in the great decrease of the number of freight cars loaded. The number loaded in the last week of July, 1980, was 8,907 lower than that of the previous week and 183,204 cars below that of the last week of July, 1929. Strike against wage-cuts; de- mand social insurance! GLENSIDE UPHOLSTFPY All Repairs Done at Reasonable Prices ROBERTS BLOCK, No. } Glenside, Pa. Telephone Ogontz 3165: PITTSBURGH Remember DR. RASNICK When You Need a DENTIST 6023 Penn Ave., Room 202 Phones: Office HI. 7699 Res. MO. 8480 Physical Culture Restaurants QUALITY FOOD AT LOW PRICES 19 North vth St, Phila ents 97 Bleecker St.. New ¥ ity 21 Marray St.. New York City PHILADELPHIA CAPITAL BEVERAGE pe Taiercuteasane nea comely SODA WATER ‘and BEER 2434 West York Street Telephone’ COLUMBIA 6265, % Workers International Relief SCOUT CAMP LUMBERVILLE, PA. a camp for workers’ childrem RATES $6.00 AND UP. Adults accomodated at very reasonable prices. Phila. Office 38 N. Tenth St. . PHILADELPHIA American Restaurant 1003 SPRING GARDEN 8ST. Fresh Food — Friendly Service POPULAR PRICES DAILY WORKER Philadelphia Utfices 1124 SPHING GAHDEN $T. M. SILVEH, Representative Woplar 8540 PHILADELPHIA rhe work we make ie good. Ur- ganizations work—our spectalty. Spruce Printing Co. (ot % SHVONTH 84. PHILA PA Beli—Market 6888 Usion Soxstone— Male ‘080, Printers PHILADELPHIA CRYSTAL LUNCH Fresh Food FRIENDLY SENVICD NS. K Corner 11th and pring F Demand the release of Fos- ter, Minor, Amter and Ray: mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance ai chileeieens Maem & a ee eT: