The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 30, 1930, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SAT URDAY, AUGUST 30, 1930 Page Three LEeTrreERSsS =-_ Fe ay res mm & HOorprP Ss ‘5K’ =a =E_ CHESTER, WORCESTER JOBLESS OUT SEPT. 1 AMER: RADIATOR Must Organize to Fight Rotten Conditions Buffalo, N. Y. Daily Worker:— Rotten! does workers’ conditions in the plant where I work, but it seems better than any word I can think of at the present time. Yes, it is worse than retten when men have to work from 6 a. m, till 5:30 and even 7 p. m., with only half an hour for lunch and at breakneck speed, . without even time to get a drink of water, without getting behind in whatever work he might be dojng, and then get paid $12, $14 or $16 for a 4-day week. Long Hours. Rotten doesn’t begin to describe it, when a man after working under such conditions and long hours can’t tell you how much money he has made when quitting time comes, and on pay day, if he asks his fore- man concerning his small pay, the foreman just puts on one of his dignified looks and says, “I'll see about it,” and that’s the last of it. Gas Turned Off. Who is there that will say mere vottenness (ten times worse than rotten) when three men are doing the work of five for 30 per cent less than the pay for three men, which they are forced to do. At the same time their families are suffering, their children cannot get the proper food and clothing, while the land- lords and collectors are pounding on their doors daily, Their gas has been cut off and they are burning oil lamps 'n the city because they can’t pay their bills, after working fvom morning to night at a break- reck and killing speed, Some say call on charity, No able-bodied, self-respecting man wants charity, but wants only his own, that is, work at reasonable hours, at living and saving wages. The only way to get to it is by the workers organizing into a revolu- tionary union and fight for their rights. BY A WORKER AT THE AMERICAN RADIATOR CO. AFL CUTS WAGES; BIS LAYOFFS (Continued From Page One.) after a three weeks’ period. A dispatch from Charlotte, N. C., n the Journal of Commerce (Aug, 29), states that the bosses are talk- ng about shutting down all the tex- tile plants in this territory. “A good deal more talk has developed this week,” says this boss sheet, “in regard to a complete close down of print cloth and sheeting mills dur- ing September.” In fact, most of the workers are already unemployed and are suffering severely. Even this imperialist spokesman is forced to admit that the employes had a poor time of it for many months past,” and that they will get a worse time when the mills close down, A telegram from Indianapolis to the Daily Worker says that “hun- dreds of thousands of poor farmers and workers are facing starvation in this state. In Marion, where two Negro workers were ‘ynched recently, the steel and glass work- ers are workine two and three days a week.” A mass demonstration is going to be held at the Capitol building in Indianapolis, on Sept. 1st, under the leadership of the Trade Union Unity League, to de- mand the passage of the Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill. With the drop in auto produetion and building trades will come low- ered production in the steel indus- try, which is now working at the low rate of 54 per cent of capacity, as against 95 per cent last year. Unemployment this fall and win- ter will reach the most frightful ex- tent ever recorded in the Uni States. The millions who®have al- ready been unemployed for over six months have exhausted their slim resources and now face starvation. Suicides are rampant among unem- ployed workers. Those on the job are facing miserable conditions, due to mass wage-cuts and tremendous speed-up. The bosses, recognizing the ter- rible plight of te workers, are pre- paring for a big fight against un- employment insurance. This is the ‘meaning of the action of Green in lying on unemployment, and of Woll, Roosevelt, the Manufacturers’ Association, Hoover and the “social- ist” party in attacking the demands of unemployment insurance as con- tained in the Unemployment Insur- ance Bill, advocated by the Commu- nist Party and published in full in yesterday’s issue of the Daily Worker. Every worker, employed and un- employed, can realize the serious- ness of the situation which confronts the entire working class. A sharp @ace ficht must be put up to save “vacation” | | | | | | Dear Editor:— Please publish this letter in the Norwalk, Conn. | Daily Worker for me. | The A, F. of L. bureaucrats fight the left wing in their organizations. | They use every reactionary method to be safe from the militants, Here in South Norwalk like ever; the local International Hod Carriers fight since 1926 between the rank and file left wing and the reaction- ary leaders. I as a member of the organization have been a witness of what happened in it. From 1926 the beginning of the fight, the business agent Joseph Cappiello, the secretaries, Alphonso Capasso and Salvatore Somma ap- propriated over $3000 from the treasury for themselves without notifying us. We charged them in court but in spite of what they were doing to destroy the books, to bribe the law- yers, they were expelled from the union and after two years we won the trial. Left Wing Slate Wins. The new election was made, we won the leadership but the business agent, Antony DeFullio, the newly elected, was anothers reactionary who spent part of his life as a po- lice officer, We hold the offices for almost two years but in January, 1928, at the officers election we lost the control. This was based on the propaganda against us as bolshe- viks, against religion and the social order, In two years: of our control we saved $5,000 and have sent hun- dreds of dollars to the fighters of the class struggle, while since it has been founded over 24 years ago never sent a penny. Have Rank and File Control. The rank and file had followed us, seeing that we were good fight- ers for them. The reactionaries couldn’t fight us openly and started underground to cooperate with the headquarters asking help from them to expel us in any way. So last February three members of the left wing were expelled from the union and to seare the members of the rank and file.they called the police. We at once sent a protest to the headquarters signed by many members making them understand that the organization was collaps- ing, So they sent. the organizer to reinstate the members who were ex- pelled. A vote was made and re- sulted in 90 per cent in favor of re- instatement. Later on in March we elected the left wing chairman. The masses were with us, so we had 99 per cent. of the vote. The business agent and others got angry and started to fight again. They had found hard soil to dig and clean us away. They invented a frame-up to make us be discriminated against by the members. Four of us were charged with working under the! wage prescribed by the union, A | jury of five was elected by the vice president to investigate this charge. Fake Investigation. Four of them (on the jury) de- clared openly as enemies of the ac- cused and made a motion to pay a fine from $75 to $100 before start- ing any investigation. When we started the investiga- tion the accused presented the evi- dence with vofs and but the jury answered, “We don’t want to know as we consider them guilty and they must pay $150, $100, $75 and $25.” I, as a member of the jury, pro- tested such a frame-up and when reported to the assembly to be rati- fied or rejected they called the po- lice to scare the workers in making them accept such a report. At the appearance of the police we protested and over two-thirds of the members quitted the hall, but the reactionaries remained and voted without opposition. Now we have started on to work to form a new union with a revo- lutionary program to be controlled by the rank and file, Hod carriers of South Norwalk, fight the reactionary: bureaucrats, join the new union. ce * Editorial Note: There is a ten- dency among left wing and revolu- d| tionary workers in the A. F. of L. unions to cal] the unions social fas- cist and abandon them to the tender mercies of the social-fascist official- dom. This is not in accord with the line of the Communist Party and millions from death by starvation, It is to the interest of the bosses to see hundreds of thousands die off, to get them out of the way. The A. F. of L. is leading in the wege-cutting drive. The “social- ists” are the shock troops of the capitalists against the class hattles of the workers, Demonstrate on Sept. 1st and de- mand the passage of the Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill. All war funds to the unemployed! Don’t let the bosses pitch the unemployed against the employed to achieve wage-cuts. “Organize and strike against wage- cuts and speed-up!” under the lead- ership ‘of the Trade Union Unity League. Vote Communist, so that working-class leaders can fight for the demands of the workers in the Fourgeois legislatures and congress. y-® ae Epi |where such organization exists = JOBLESS T0 FIGHT not describe the| Local 146. There has been a hard documents | FOR WORKER BILL! Worcester Jobless Are Becoming Active Chester, Pa. Bditor, Daily Worker: . I am one of the 10,000 jobless) that are pressing the bricks in Chester, Marcus Hook, Eddystone and the other towns hereabouts. | Once in a while we hop over to Philadelphia, Camden and other places to look for a job, but always | the answer is the same: “Sorry, | but there isn’t a thing in sight.” | pecay I was down in Claymont, | looking around to see what’s doing. Both the Worth Steel and General Electric turned me away. As I was leaving the General | Chemical Co. I took a look at the ‘announcements, ete., appearing on the bulletin board. | It is headed “suggestions” and |gives the name of a worker who got a reward of $20 for the design | | of a device which delivers bags of sodium from the sewing machine in an upright position. This elimin-| ates one man from the packaging operation in the statement appear- ing under this “suggestions.” Then there appeared another worker’s name, who got a reward | of $10 for suggestioon No. 2, that} eliminates one man from the un-| loading operation. | Meanwhile the bosses ask for more suggestions. It’s a bargain to save the wages of two workers, all for the small sum of $30. Yép, brains have got to be rewarded. We have a suggestion to make gratis. How about eliminating the bosses, as the workers did in Rus- sia, and then be when a worker figures out an improvement he and his fellow-workers will get the} benefit. | Also, since we are living under | capitalism, why not demonstrate on September Ist at Third and High- | land Sts. and Third and Parker Sts., Chester, Pa,, and demand social in- surance for the jobless, UNEMPLOYED. * @ | Worcester, Mass. The Daily Worker:— Space in your paper would please readers of Worcester, Mass. The workers are steadily organizing | with recruits that come daily from |the ranks of the unemployed. | | Nightly meetings aye held at the | | Communist headquarters and a pro- gram of activities is being arranged. | Unemployment has reached an} alarming large number of people | and there is much suffering and | hunger, and the city of Worcester does not give «id to the increasing | jnumber of workers out of work. { | The streets and common are| crowded with men and women out |of work. Police are kept busy ar- resting men and women “vagrants.” | | The local newspapers do a neat job | | of covering so-called “burglaries,” | “hold-ups” by the hungry. The local newspapers brag in big | | headlines editorially, “Yes, we have | no crime wave.” All nice bunk for | the ignorant and the bosses to read. But watch the workers grow in Worcester, Mass., with acctivities. | —A WORKER. ** * (Editorial Note:—The Worcester workers. can get more space in the | Daily Worker if they will send in the material. A city worker corre- spondent group should be organ- |ized to send in regular worker corre- spondent letters to the Daily Worker about conditions in the shops, un- employment and the activities of the Trade Union Unity League and the Communist units.) the Trade Union Unity League. In the case of the hod carriers of South Norwalk, the left wing work- ers claim that they had the sym- pathy of the majority of the mem-)| bers but were maneuvered out by the reactionary elements. Clearly it was their duty to defeat these so- cial-fascist elements on the basis of the day to day struggles of the workers, and not split away, prob- ably abandoning a considerable number of sympathizing workers to the clutches of the A. F. of L. be- trayers who are now in the saddle firmer than ever. Especially is this true of building trades workers, This should serve as a lesson to all our revolutionary workers in the A. F, of L. unions to intensify their work in these unions and to win the majority of the members to the position of militant class struggle under revolutionary leadership, The Daily Worker ts the Party’s best instrument to make contacts among «tke masses of workers, to build a mass Communist Partv. Vicious Anti-Soviet Photos | Exposed as Pictures of War | Time Atrocities of Hapsburg: NTERNATIONAL Terror Grows in Finnish Tony Rinaldi, Ex-Soldier of Austrian Army, Backs Up Article By Comrade Sailor re In the Wednesday. ue|the martyrs of the 1848 revolution. of the Daily Worker, in the article|The hangman the notorious | of Comrade Martin Sailor, were) #overnment hangman, Lang of Vi-| published two photos that were used | "ra who hanged in his life dozens , o fworkers and who by order of his) HELSINGFORS.— The Finnish by the capitalist press officers» hung Battisti twice, pur-| fascist league, “Suomen Lukko,” is neuncing “the posely breaking the rope the first | circulating in its district organiza- the hanging of priests, etc., in the | time in order to prolong the torture, |tion a secret circular advising that Soviet Union,” and were exposed as Many photographs were taken of |OPe” terror be resorted to during photos of executions which took was for de- Bolshevist terror, the barbarous methods of ihe Au-|the election to the Seym. The Com- strian govemnment of the Battisti|Munists are to be prevented from exeention and spread in the Au-|t@King part in the election. Only strian army to terrorize the differ- | fascists are to be permitted as can- jent nationalities. But, instead of |‘idates for the bourgeois bloc. succeeding, the opposite occurred, | Pressure is to be put on the rews- | Then the continuous executions, the |P&Pers. Measures are to be taken barbarous methods of binding the|t® force the voters to vote for the soldier before the trenches, making | f@scists or not at all, Terrorist in- them targets ‘for the enemy, the/|Structions were sent to the officials hunger, the terror in general, |#il over the country insisting on the |brought the masses of the army|Tevision of the electors’ lists and into the movement that culminated | the removal from them of any rev- in the insurrection of Italian, Croat- | !vtionary elements. ian and Austrian soldiers in Rad-| In true accordance with this line, kersburg at the end of 1916, Iuden-|the “cleaning” of the town councils burg in the beginning of 1917 and/of revolutionary elements is being Rising On Northwest _ Indian Frontier Grows; Afridis Continue Drive BOMBAY (LP.S.)—On August 16 Afridis attacked Fort Badana, 20 {miles southeast of Parachina. The |conflict is still going on. It is al-| |leged that the Afridis have suc- |ceeded in reaching the city gates of | |Peshawar and in forcing their way ‘Bring Ub Boss War Danger at Coop Congress |into the European quarter, from which they, hov have been ejected by the British troops. Reinforcements are being brought | up with feverish haste for the gar- rison of Peshawar, The station No- wozera is in danger. There has been much unrest in the town of Sukkara, anf in the surrounding villages, since the mas- sacre committed by the Moham- medans here. Many troops have jbeen sent to the province of Bom- | hay. The risings on the Indian north- west frontier have now spread to jthe whole of the tribes west of |Peshawar. At the present time TAX THE RICH TO SOUTH AMERICA of the power of “the 59 men who . ” = the C nis arty of Brazi 3 rule America”—as Ex-Ambassador peicrasuaiacaetrendmae 6 oi Ale a |Gerard admitted last week. The | * 4 eit fyiibur bean ir the revolt of the fleet at Cattaro in 1917, which. was suppressed by the place during the war in Aus Hungary. So that the information| will be complete, I wish to give the | following details: | | In the photos I recognized imme- diately two photographs taken of the execution of Cesare Battisti, was in 1914 the socialist deputy of | {°° Command of the present hang the city of Trento in the Austrian|M29 f Hungary, Vice-Adwiral parliament. With the outbreak of | 1°": the war, like man of the soci iat This statement, the truth in every leaders of the Second International, |“¢tail, is given in order to anmask he became a national chauvinist.|#84in this scandalous maneuver of He went to Italy and with his prop.| © bourgeoisie and the bourgeois aganda speeches helped in the cam-|P©ess, who used their own criminal paign to involve Italy in the im-|#¢tion to the purpose of accusing perialist war. Consequently, to his | R¢ Soviet Union. national chauvinism, to his betrayal (Signad) TONY RINALDI. of Socialism, he went voluntarily to An ex-soldier of the Austrian army the front and was staken prisoner! during the war, born in Trento) at Monte Corno as an Italian cap-| and before the war a supporter | tain during a battle. He was| of Cesare Battisti and the social- | brought to Trento, the city which) ist party in my own city. Today | he represented in the Vienna par-| Iam an American citizen, a mem-| liament. He was hanged in the} ber of the C. P. U. S. A, Vir-| castle of Buon Consiglio, where lie | ginia, Minnesota: | —— & ae FEED JOBLESS IN REBELLION (Continued from Page One) | under a militarist, | Tavo General Prestes has recognized | his errors in not previously break- ing with the “Liberal” policies, and | declared for a worker and peasant | government by independent armed struggle against both imperialisms. , ba ae ) the work | The Communists’ reply is critical, ing class, and on both, appeals tol int pledses to eraeerr hin in any | workers, employed or unemployed, Bin sevolatianee Sacto Tt 4g to show their support for the Work- | "°®) Nevouullonar yaction. ers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill | U2derstood that the soldiers of the by themselves coming onto the|Erestes Column should throw dut| fd apes if ‘ the officers who betrayed the anti- | streets September first, to demon- | ; geliline Gatileo BRAG oe BKen to | strate their support, to carry on the | epee er ees a ne steacal fight for this measure daily in their | °N® ° the armed bands in struggle. shops, and to elect Communists to Congress so that there, to Hoover's (Continued from Page One) | huge sum for war expenses reach- ing at least to $2,800,000,000—shall this capitalist government not be compelled to turn over this to the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Fund to finance the payments men- tioned? This is another question the Com- munist Party proposed to the work- mountebank It is worth noting that Brazil is an agrarian country, with great es- | own fat face, Communists may | tates predominanty Ifeudal; even make a fight to force this conces-| slaves are used in production, sion from the greedy bosses. Neither must we forget that Workers who have been kidded coffee is the ruling factor in the along for y rs by capitalist papers | economy, and that with the general about how “high” wages the work-| world c and particularly the ers were getting, always told that | coffee « , the bourgeois demo- if they themselves didn’t get high |cratic revolutionary situation ages, others did, should realize that, | against imperialism is clearly according to the Bureau of Kcon-| marked in the present political con- omic Research, the working class in 1928, got only the same percent- age of the national income as it} got in 1910, that is, only $36.05 per | cent. | the stat eof Sao Paulo, the Amer- Yet the working class is the | ican imperialists (American Smelt- majority of the people, and hence! ing Co., General Electric Co. and | it follows that a small minority|Henry Ford) with investments | which are parasites and do not | chiefly in the state of Minas Geraes, | work, nevertheless take about 64/ are opening armed struggle through per cent of the total income of the | use of the “Liberal” party militar- | whole population of mAerica, prac- | ists, Tavora among them. tically two-thirds of the whole $90) the national ec Raa 000,000,000 produced in 1928 be he national economy is so shat- Sa) tiie Heute-mce ince Vn beak tered that objective conditions are favorable for an armed rising, and ‘avoral r an armed ig, an ditions. Against the domination of Brit- ish imperialism, economically cen- tered in the coffee plantations of | called for the immediate establish- ment of councils of workers, peas- ants, soldiers and sailors; attracting | | the mass support around Luis Car- | los Prestes by pledge to support | each revolutionary action of the Prestes Column. | The Communist Party of Brazil | is a real force, with experience and following. It has a paper published by its members within the armed | forces. Only recently 200 sailors were discharged from the navy as | Commun: but many remain. Thus it is clear that in the clash between two imperialisms and their | tember first and show the capital-| ative lackeys, an _ independent | ists you mean business! Vote Com-| Struggle by the revolutionary munist in the November election to | ™@sses led by the Communist Party carry the fight to the national| has broad perspectiv capitol! | National Bureau of Economic Re- search proves that the average wage of 1913 was $594, and in 1928, though gone up in figures to $1,205, yet with this figure the worker could buy no more than he could with $705 in 1913, The total | national income which rose from | $29,605,000,000 in 1909 to $89,419,- 000,000 in 1928, has benefited, made richer, the handful of enormously wealthy. ‘ All war funds to the jobless! Tax the rich to feed the poor! Fight for the Workers’ Unemployment In- surance Bill! Onto the streets Sep- The Communist Party fights lynching—vote Communist! “ote Communis ‘agrarian | against the “rebels.” there are about 40,000 armed insur- |gents in the field. The Urangsai | tribe has joined the Afridi tribe and | these are advancing on the town of Kohat, 70 kilometers southwest of Peshawar. The Afridis, supported by other tribes from the northwe province, are marching on the towns | jof Nowshar and Parachinare, A/| large number of Red Shirts have ap- | peared northwest of Peshawar. centinued, In Uleaborg eight and in Kuopio ten left councillors were expelled. \ similar “cleaning” took place in ‘wiaskio and Wybor: The town council of Kajan de- ded that the ten Communist dep- ies should resign from their man- ates, Five who refused were kid- ‘pped by a group of fascists and Jegedly deported over the Russian uder. They were Wartainen, C. hinkanen, A. Mood and O. Tossa-! ainen, and the only woman mem-| er in the council, Ida Kumtinen. | Shortly afterward a well-known fas- | cist appeared in the editorial of the | Briefs From All Lands paper Kainum-Sanomat and demanded of the editor to show| ULAN BATOR, Mongolia—The | hin. his notes about the town coun-| Mongolian Trade Union Federation’ cil meeting and the kidnapping of| elected its chairman, Tchumbu, to re NOE i editor was told) attend the Fifth World Congress of | that he had te be extremely “cars-| the R. I. L. U. ful” in the making up of this case, | aoe In Helsingfors the revolutionary! pRAGUE, Czechoslovakia.—Th¢ dates, despite all shreats. It is gen-| “lutionary trade union opposition in erally expected that during the next | pre, Teformist unions took | place | meeting of the councils the fascists |" Tecently. The conference lai¢ will try to forcibly eject the revolu-| down the principles for activity of | Haaee mentor: |the opposition in the reformist When leaving the police station |“™!0"* | after an examination by the polit- ak } ical police, the revolutionary coun-| BERLIN.—Chemical workers, rep- cillor, Laapola from Wyborg, was|tesenting 62 chemical and arma- attacked by “unknown persons” and | ments factories, met here to discuss taken to a car. Workers, who heard|the tasks of the revolutionary | his eries for help, rushed to his as-| Workers in the chemical and arm sistance and rescued him from the |ments industries when war comes. hands of the fas } “+ * BERLIN.—Minister of State Tre- | viranus, who made a warlike speech | P OLITICAL P RISONERS jat a public gathering recently, in| reality expressing the policy of the | IN POLAND ON STRIKE) tincenbure government, recently | broadcasted a statement, sticking by his original proclamation. | ee 8 HELSINGFORS.—The court of | “justice” here has sentenced the} editor of the “Women Worker and impris- ass hate.” LODZ, Poland (By Mail).—In the prison in Wloclawek the prisoners protested against the intolerable conditions, against torture and rot- ten food by loudly knocking at the cell doors. Political and criminal} Peasant” to seven months prisoners stand solid. This “mu-| onment for “inciting to cl tiny” was brutally suppressed. ere ers are on hunger strike. ‘They de-/ GERMAN PARTY IN mand an inquiry into the conditions of the prison by a state commis- | : _ Many prison-) BERLIN (LP.S.).—The mobiliza- ers were seriously injured. tion of the masses by the election | Prisoners in Posen protested so) campaign of the Communist Party management that they were heard In a demonstration in a large hall | by the population in the neighbor-’ in the Red east of Berlin, addressed hood of the prison, They broke jy Comrade Heinz Neumann, 123 | workers ture, in order to draw the attention| party, In a sub-district in the rea hos Ss! south of Berlin over 4,000 workers prevailing in the prison. The di-| demonstrated in the streets, In and short rations. _ |to an enthusiastic mass meeting. In| Police tried to isolate the pris-| Essen another meeting was required | oners by closing the streets leading | on. The fire brigade| unable to obtain entrance to the was called in and the cells put| hall where Comrade Florin was} under water. | speaking. | | overfilled mass meeting called by Fight Sell- Out) the Communist Party in the largest | g —— jhall in Mannheim. The leader of| (Wireless By Inprecorr) PARIS, Aug. 29.—Armentiers | Diet Deputy Lenz, who was present | | left the hall be- | fuse the compromise proposed by|fore the discussion. Comrade | the reformist to resume work on the | Remmele had dealt in an annihilat- | terms that the Lille workers re-|ing manner with the national so- have redoubled their pressure| aroused much indignation among against the strikers, threatening to|the many national socialists pres- withdraw the family bonus unless | ent. The revolutionary trade union| his arrival by a demonstration pro- leadership has appealed to the| cession of over 5,000 persons workers to counter this attempted | = scaipeansie In the prison of Olito all prison- | sion. Soldiers were brought in; | energetically against tie prison | has been successfully commenced. windows, window-frames and furni-| joined the Communist | of the population to the conditions | rect cause was particularly bad food | Augsburg, Comrade Remmele spoke | | to accommodate over 4,000 workers to the prison. Comrade Remmele spoke at an French Workers |the Mannheim national socialist, the | workers who are out on strike, re- | during the addres: turned to work. Th etextile bosses | cialist. The flight of their leader | work is resumed by September 1. | Comrade Remmele was received on sell-out by direct action. | Vote Communist! Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Fund OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ORGANIZED 1884—INCORPORATED 1899 Main Office: 714-716 Seneca Ave. Ridgewood Sta., Brooklyn, N. Y. Over 60,000 Members in 344 Branches Reserves on December 31, 1928: $2,299,114.44 Benefits paid since its existence: Death Benefit: $4,149,001.77 Sick Benefit: $10,125,939.86 Total: $14,274,941.63 Workers! Protect Your Families! In Case of Sickness, Accident or Death! Death Renefit according to the age at the time of initiation in one or both classes: CLASS A: 40 cents per month—Death Benefit $355 at the age of 16 to $175 at the age of 44, es CLASS B: 50 cents per month—Death Benefit $550 to $230. Parents may insure*their children in case of death up to the age of 18 Death Benefit according to age $20 to $20v, Sick Benefit paid from the first day of filing the doctor's certificate, $9 and $15, respectively, per week, for the first forty weeks, half of the amount for another forty weeks. Sick Renefits for women: $9 ner week for the first forty weeks: $4.60 each for another forty weeks. for further inf tion apply at the Main Office, William Spubr, National Secretary, or to the Financial Secretaries of the Branches. VIENNA, Aug. 29. A ternational Co-opera the Soviet Union deleg to the congr > questions of war da for the unemplo: a ing lockout k Comrade leaders and ac operative Tanner, forn Finland, most outrag rupted the speecl s delegates. The Ger 1 ul fas- cist, Lorenz, slar t Soviet Union. Con standpc including the ec the | wheat pool Co-operatiy for adr the negat delegates TOKIO.—The ¢ the Mukden gover reports that p have broken ¢ in the province of Chi The sants arn pikes and rifles strated under the Cc Party. FARM IN THE PINES Situated tn Pine Forest, near Mt Lake. German Lable, Rates: $16— $18. Swimming and Fishing M. OBERKIRCH Box 78 KINGSTON. N.Y R41, WINGDALE, N. Y. Now L. DAY SEK-END Seventh A O11 W 1800 Monument at rran gram Gods of Ligh ) ung Farein Directed by Kraness ELECTION CAMPAIGN J. LOUIS ENGDAHL RICHARD B. MOORE and JACK PERILLA Campaign Manager Election Debate- A Surprise CAMP FIRE where camp fire newspaper will be read, and you know what that means. Don’t miss. CARNIVAL and BALL with a large orchestra our Added features are be- being arranged Make your reservations NOW! 110th Buses leave Seventh DAY oe P.M SATURDAY 1PM SUNDAY 9 A.M.

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