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PS ey ee DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1930 Page Three LETTERS -_ Fe acy rs 3K’ Ea —E a SETOP Ss “ IN BRIEF— Conditions in Camden Worsen Camden, N. J. Daily Worker Editor: Keep away from Camden as) conditions are bad. And _ getting worse all the time. Campbells Soup Co. has cut wages to 28 cents per hour. RCA-Vietor Co. workers dave to} listen te their masters’ voice while | they receive 32 cents per hour. Or get the hell out and no jobs at that. Thousands looking for work. They want young workers, and civls, hey say, why you are only « kid, and cannot expect a man’s wages, Hundreds, thousands come from all over the country looking for work ve sleeping in the jails, | parks ani missions. The police are bad, beating up hungry workers. Yours for a union and a Farmers and Workers Government. —W. BROWN. Subway Men Work 6 to 8 Cars Brooklyn, N rest Daily Worker:— Subway men are now working 6 to 8 cars by themselves without getting any raise, and the com- pany is taking advantage of the unemployment. There are a number of Commu- nists working here. Why not help them in your circulars you put around? now West End and Brighton lines. —SUBWAY COMMUNIST. Stew: rd Hits Sear--n Brutally New York, N. Y. Daily Worker:— On S. S. Faleon (Red “D” Line) one of the men of the steward’s de- partment dropped a tray of silver- ware and the chief steward called him several pet names, then he hit the man with the butt of a knife. The man tried to protect himself, and was sent to the master of the ship, one of the many tricks of the bosses to take money from the sea- men by “logging” (fining) them on false charges. If the man was “logged” he loses two days’ pay. —A WORKER OF THE SEA. Jobless Ejected From “Public” Park New York. Daily Worker:— One of the presents donated to the inemployed by our city fathers and n-laws was the interest taken by aforesaid in regard to our health, preventing us from contracting colds and pneumonia in not letting the jobless sleep in “public” parks while it is still warm weather. The jobless, leg-weary, heart- weary and stomach-weary were mo- lested and ejected by the police Tuesday night, August 26. The un- dersigned was one of those hun- dreds. who were awakened in Bry- ant Park in the early morning (1:30 or 2 o'clock), which is a little earlier than my regular arising. —WM. VANHORN. Ford Still Laying Off Men Detroit, Mich. Daily Worker: Dear Comrades:—The philan- thropical Ford Motor Co, still con- tinues to lay off and fire wholesale thousands of workers, and not a word in the boss press. The rolling mill has been shut down for two weeks, the open- hearth furnaces are down and even the coke ovens are on a very cur- tailed production. The rest of the plant is working anywhere from two to four days a week, Workers are at the factories by the thousands trying to obtain work, Conditions are certainly ripe for jobless day, Sept. ist. Workers, demonstrate for social insurance. —UNEMPLOYED WORKER. “Justice” Says “No” to Communist Candidate! ESSEN, Germany. — Comrade Floring, who stood a: Communist candidate during the last elections and is likely to run again, is being charged with “high treason” on six counts, The material for the ar cution consists of the following: A post card which he published {n 1928, denouncing the coming imper- ialist war; @ speech made in 1929; another speech in 1980 and two articles and a leaflet in which he denounced the war plans of the bosses! “Justice” it would seem does not want Comrade Floring to vun for office! me nnennniinsannng Strike Against Wage-Cuis! Demand Unemployment thsurance! Pearer Setrensenantny If they ask for more money} Alt one-man trains are | in service on Sea Beach, | Daily Worker:— to impossible to get a job. always get the same answer, 0 MUST BUY FORD'S CAN TO GET WORK ! Union For Fight Chester, Pa. Editor Daily Worker:— The Ford workers came back | get another jolt. A Ford worker |gets more bumps these days than |you can get in a Model T Ford on |a country road. j Must Own Cars. The management says that unless |we own Ford cars we cannot work |in the Ford plants. Workers seen driving other makes of cars will be fired. Everyone owning and driv- ing other makes of cars to work {have already been fired. Nothing jbut Ford cars can be seen in the yard betwen Lloyd and Ulrick Sts. lin front of the Ford plant nowa- days. Ford Exposed. Ford has been thoroughly ex- | posed by the Communist workers }in his Chester plant. Ford reads |the little “Ford Worker” and | knows all about speed-up, overtime | without pay and firing for no rea- son except that a spotter caught the worker washing two or three | minutes before the whistle blows. |He also knows one worker is doing what two or three workers used to do. Ford says “If Communism gets a foothold in any country then that country needs Communists.” So- resen, big cheese of Ford Motors, says; “We are not afraid of ‘red’ workmen in our factories. If their propaganda gets results there must be some cause for it.” Ford Plant Lousy With Spies. But Henry Ford fires workers right along for “Communist” opin- ions, He sends in stool-pigeons to | hunt out red workmen in his factor- ‘ies. He knows that they are right |and knows the rotten conditions | that exist in his plants. So he fires the Communists because he wants to force his workers to produce profits for him, He knows Com- munists fight bosses like himself. —FORD WORKER. Demand the release of Fos- ter, Minor, Amter and Ray- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. New York. Dear Comrade Editor:— A patient of mine, a past com- mander of Camp 53, Spanish Amer- ican War Veterans, brought 4 let- ter to me which he sént to Charles G. Lawrence, Room 7, City Hall (the Lawrence wh» was in command ot the War Veterans’ parade on May 1, 1930) and copies of which he sent to a few New York dailies, but none of the latter published the letter. I personally know quite a number of veterars of foreign wars who not only feel in the matter the way this veteran does but who will know well how to use their arms in case they are drafted again to make the world safe for “democracy.” Comradely yours, M. MISLIG. s 8 8 Room 7, City Hall, N. Y. C. Dear Mr. Lawrene On the same day that I réceived your notice to participate in the parade of Foreign Veterans which is to be held on May 1, 1930, the newspapers carried an item which was disturbing to me and I am sure to thousands of other war veterans and probably to many more thousands if they knew the import of that item. Steel Pittsburg, Calif. Daily Worker: Over 700 workers responded to the call of the Communist Party, to voice their protest against the coming imperialist war and in de- fense of the Soviet Union, Pitts- burg is a opén boss ruled town, cons trolled by the steel trust. Despite the presénce cf practi- cally the entire police department, and many of the special police of the Columbia Steel Company, thé workers refused to b> intimidated, They listened to the speakers, Me- Kinney of the Comnunist Party and A. Brown of the Y.C.L., denouieed Vote Communist’ the coming imperialist war and re- Join the Auto Workers | | from their two weeks’ “vacation” to; Hold Rousing Anti-War Meet in California Experienced Canner Makes | Only 75 Cents in 7 Hours 'Bosses Work Young Girls At Miserably Low Wages to Get More Profit Oakland, Calif. I have been looking for a master for over six months, but find it next | I have visited all work places in Oakland and | help wanted.” I am a food worker, but, like thousands of others in the canning industry who are out of work, I find that there is no market for labor power. ~~ are full of canned fruit. ‘The warehouses As long as | the boss can’t find a market to sell | the goods for profit he is not going ito hire anyone, unless oe can | work for almost nothing. is | typical of what most a vad | the unemployed workers experience. | | Finally I was interviewed by al straw boss and he promised to a me out. I rejoiced. Work Children. The next morning, I tried them | out, and found that young girls of | 12, 13 and 14 were canning fruit at my table, although California is sup- posed to have a law against child! labor, but the bosses’ greed stops at nothing. Being an experienced | canner I made 75 cents for 7 hours, | but the young girls made from 30/ to 50 cents for 7 hours, besides be-| ing called out and frightened by a mean old forelady. and I worked so much harder and made 90 cents for 6 hours, but got cheated 30 cents on the punch, which means one had to wash the fruit, pick out all the bad pieces and fill one dozen 2-pound cans, for which you get 2% cents. Well, of course, I would not stand to get cheated and demanded from the boy my 12 punches. The young man, being a company stool-pigeon, his duty was not only to steal punches, but to watch, look and listen to what the girls are talking about. I was not the only one so cheate; I called the superintendent. e tried to quiet me down by offering 30 cents, but I said: “You greedy cents a day, but you have to cheat them.” He said I was no lady to talk like that. The company is not, supposed to do that, I said. They | tried to quiet me down and lead me into the offices, so that the girls would not hear me, but I was good} and mad and told them they could keep their 30 cents, but they will | not be able to do this all the time,| with all the workers. Some day they will assert themselves. Joins F, W. W. Of course, this means I am with- out a master again, but what’s the ‘ference? I would starve on the job, anyway. The girls are quitting every day. I have since joined the food workers group of the T. U. U. L. I now realize that by quit- ting we will not bétter our condi- tions. We must stay on the job and organize the workers into the Food Workers’ Union of the T. U. U. L., under the leadership of the Com- munist Party. Believe me, that is what I will do on the next job I get. Yours for organization and action. OAKLAND FOOD WORKER. One Past Commander fe * The New York World carries in its columns today a statement that in the line of march a body of the white czarist guards is tc have a place. N-w the white czar- ist guatds always defended the most despicable despotism known to the memory of men, always fought against freedom in their own country and participated in the most atrocious acts against their own people; even when the Kerensky government was estab- lished it fought to unseat that government. + «+1 for one will not mareb in such a parad’ Thousands of others feel as | do. I protest most vehemently against the iritrusion of the white ezarist guards in the line of pa- rade. I served in the Spanish-..mer | can war and I had the distinctic | of being commander of a post | I hope you will immediately take steps to eliminate from the fine of ‘narch the line of parade he czarist gua“ds. Fraternally, (Sgd.) JOHN ROBINTON, Past Commandes of Post 53, Spanish-American War Veterans. Center sponded with cheers when told the progtam of the Pirty of turning the imper.alict war into a lacs war and planned their defense of the workers fatherland, the Soviet Union. Theré wete many Mexican and Negro worker presént as well as white workers, over 50 vorkers asked for application cards to the Party. Due to militancy of the workers thé police made no attur “t to interfere with the speakers, After the meeting almost half the érowd insisted upon escorting the ‘spetkers to (heir car in order to | Prevent any porsible interference | iby the police. Next day the fruit was better) bosses, it is not enough that you} are working your children for 30, Their Fight For Relief Is Growing | Daily, the lines of jobless workers But the workers are beginning to see that the bosses that threw then out of the factories to starve, live | in gearing up their war machine. The Workers’ Unemployment of the bosses. Vote Communist to b NEEDLE UNION IN GALL TO BUILD THE STRIKE FUND | Battling For 7-Hour Day and 5-Day Week (Continued on Page One.) every building begin the organiza- ler, to immediate tion of a united front shop strike | them- | | committees and to set for Ives a quota, which they, as a shop jor building will raise every week, | during the period of the dri | their contributior to the organization and strike fund. Build Shop Committees. “The campaign for funds must be closely linked up with the build- ing of shop committees, with the building of our union, Every need! y/ trades worker a member of a shop committee! Every needle trades worker a member of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union. very member of the Industrial Urion must become in good stand- | ing. EF y needle trades worker must contribute to the union’s or- | ganization and strike i.” | The Needle Trades Workers’ In dustrial Union, affiliated with the Trade Union nity League, lays, | correctly, the greatest stress on the building of united front shop and strike committees to fight the piece work, standards of production, con- tracting and sub-contracting, wage- cuts, mass unemployment, check off System, company unions, police terror, and hunger which saps the workers life blood and _ vitality. It is fighting for the seven-hour day and five-day week, for week work, and for unemployment insurance as | provided in the Workers’ Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill of the Commu- 0,000 nist Party. Fighting a powerful combination of enemies: bosses, socialist and A.I’.L. company unions, company unions, and the capitalist police and courts, workers to join with it in the cam- paign to build the T.U.U.L. “Organ- ize and Strike Fund” and to fill the | ranks of the T.U.U.L. unions. POLISH FASIS# “GROWS: PARLIA. MENT DISSO1 VED The deepening of the economic crisis and intensified war prepara- tions against the Soviet Union, are giving Polish fascism a splendid chance to exhibit its full-fledged growth. Premier Pilsudski has at last dissolved the already much crippled parliament, and is deter- mired to carry on his dictatorship without even a skadow parliament. The first step toward the present state of affairs was made on Aug ust 25, when Pilsudski got tired of ruling as a figure behind the th ‘one and openly assumed the preshier himself. Last Wednesday, he issued a very strong denunciation of par- liament. ow, parliament is gone altogether, Tn view of the necessity to ¢ through a serious struggle against | the fascist dictatorship in Poland, | representatives of several organiza | tions in the U. S. A, came together ; in conference and organized 1| rovineial committee to carry on aj lass campaign against the Polish | fascist regime. This campaign is to be closely linked up with the | struggles of the American prole tariat against war and against fas- cism, especially against the attacks of the American ruling class against the foreign born workers. | The provisional committee ap- peals to all workers’ organizations throughout the country immediately to proceed with the formation of provisional local and district com- mittees against Polish fascism: these provisional committees to con- ist of delegates of Polish, Ukrain ian, Lithuanian and Roumanian militant organizctions, as well as of the LL.D. and of the T.U.U.L. unions, The tasks of the committee against Polish fascism will be: (a) To protest by ps r resolt tions against Polish faselsm in st} workers’ organizations, which should a be filiated fe the purpose of ighting } (b) To strations dictatorship whieh is pr ML meetings and demon- dy faseist ring for war against | (e) To org nferences of workers at which local committee for struggle against Polish fascism, mmittees will replace the lcommittees, and will take enerally in the American anti. | est movement | | (d) To obtain financial aid for Uriel to be elected | ye as | it calls on all) | laid off. | houses a | which they n front of the factori in riotous luxury, and pour billions Bill demands that five billion dol- lars be immediately appropriated for the jobless from the war funds back up this fight! MATTHEW WOLL'S INSURANCE CO, AIDS WAGE CUTS |New B.&O. O. Scheme Is} | a Graft Plot | (Continued trom Page One) }cut out of which the bosses and Matthew Woll, as well as many | other leaders of the A. F. of L. will make a lot of graft. |. The Trade Union Unity League | in Baltimore is exposing this scheme | to the workers and calling on them lto continue the fight for the Un- | employment Insurance Bill of the Communist Party. They point out that Matthew Woll, who through | the Civie Federation is calling for ‘war against the Soviet Union, at the same time joins in the boss at- tack on unemployment insurance, (using the growing misery of mil- {ons of American workers to fill | his own pockets through his hold- up insurance scheme. The fight for the passage of the Unemployment Insurance Bill, which begins on September Ist, with huge | Jemonstrations throughout the | mass | country, will continue on even a broader scale after “Unemployment ” The It will be brought up in shops, mine; ard factories; in workers’ organi- zations—everywhere; mobilizing the workers in a mighty mass move- ment, and through their class ford | to demand that the war funds and | part of the big profits of the bosses | be turned over to the unemployed in the form of unemployment insur- ance. Together with its struggle for un- employment insurance, the T.U.U.L. is mobilizing both employed and un- employed—as the bosses try to pitch against one another—to “or- and strike against wage- Just before Sept. 1, an in- fied wage-cutting drive was arted by the bosses. The leading | Wall Street financial papers are | coming out more openly every day calling for wage-cuts for all work- ers without exception. basic industries have already cut wages, some of them several times. In Detroit the Snyder Tool & Engineering Co. laid off its lathe an] milling machine men who were getting 85 cents an hour and re- hired them at a rate which does not amount to more than 35 cents an hour. This is a process which is widespread. Workers are fired or ganize wage rates, ur other unemploy are rehired at the cut wage rates. The bosses find it expedient to co this at the present time in view of the fact that 8,000,000 are unem- ployed. Hence they lower the stand: | ard of living of the entire working- class, with the A. F. of L, leader- p doing its utmost to keep the rkers from fighting back, and iding the plan with all their strength, dlines which were hidden ng the summer are now coming out again with longer rows of un- ed in them than ever be- Nine bread lines are operat- : in Detroit. There are many in New York and Chicago. The lroads are sharply reduc- ing their for The New York | Central recently laid off 2,000 rail- road shop men. Four workers in the Chicago & North- western railroad shops and rownd- e to be laid off Sept. 2 Many workers will ept. 1 that the jobs indefinitel, find after disappeared. The fight for the Unemployment Insurance Bill must be broadened. Millions of workers must be brought into the struggle against the bosses and their rotten system which is re- sponsible for unemployment and | wage-cuts for the workers, On with} the fight for the Unemployment In. surance Bill, Build a giganti movement to force the bosses to sive the unemployec unemployment insurance. Vote Communist! Demand the release of Fos: ter, Minor, Amter and Kay- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance, ‘The Communist Party fought for Sacco-Vanzetti~the Commu- nist Party demorstrates on Sarco. Vanzetti day—vote Communist! ttt lamin revolutionary workers’ organizations and the political prisoners In Poland, | westerh Ukraine and White Russia, () To organize patronage groups to tnke ers in & » of the political prigon- systematic mannéty Unemployment Insur- | ance Bill will be spread in millions of copies throughout the country. | Nearly all | They are rehired at lower | hundred | thought they had, have i NTE RNATIONAL German Shop | Workers Hit Social-Fascists BERLIN (I. PS. ds Ter meeting of | the workers of the A.E.G, Turbine |(German General Electric Co.), led by the Revolutionary Trade | Union Opposition, after hearing an address by Comrade Ulbricht, re- solved to appeal to all the trade junion members in Greater, Berlin, replying to the article published in | Vorwarts by the General German | Trade Union Federation, which calls | ae the workers to vote for the| i. This appeal first describes ne meaning of this attempt on the} | workers, its intention of pressing | the Young tribute and the increased pels for German financial cap- | ital out of the workers, and then| continues by pointing out the use| to which trade union bureaucracy jintends to put the power placed in its hands by the workers’ votes— | the granting by the future Reichi tag of new armored cruisers, new jtaxes and duties of every descrip- tion—the robbing of the work | Social insurance benefits, The ap- | | peal exposes the anti-labor attitude | of social democratic trade union bu- reaucracy, draws a comparison be- | tween Germany’s misery and the victories of socialist reconstruction |in the Soviet Union and closes by | calling upon the workers to vote| for the Communist Party. FEW RICH MEN RULE AMERICA Only a Fight Can Get; | Unemployed Relief | finement (Continued From Page One.) “rulers of America,” because Hoo- ver is a mere office boy for the big bankers. He refuses to give the un- |employed a cent toward relief from starvation, but has assured thé rich that their taxes will be reduced this | year as they were last year—makes | them a present of $300,000,000. In Pennsylvania, the ‘Marine News” of August, tells us that ;Mayor Mackey of Philadelphia, | where there are tens of thousands jof jobless actually starving, refuses to aid them, but says he is appeai- jing to the state legislature to give $1.000,000 a year to improve the port of Philadelphia—to benefit the Interocean Steamship Corpora- | tion, line owned by Morgan, and the Quaker Line, which have asked this subsidy. Yet all of the “rulers of America” are fiercely opposed to unemploy- | ment insurance, and try to condemn it as “charity or “subsidy”. The Communists reject charity, and |think that the workers have been too “charitable” by allowing the | capitalists to rob them. They de- mand a tax on great incomes made from this robbery, and the turning {over of all war funls to Unem- | ployed Insurance. No Hard Times for the Rich. The N. Y. Timés having sent a questionairre to the 59 capitalists who rule America, ‘and William | Green of the A. F. of L., who helps} |them, the answers show that all] are opposed to aiding the unem- ployed, and some lie like troopers |by saying that “there is no depres- sion,” etc. Of course there is no hardship for these parasites, and they don’t give a damn for the mil- lions who are starving. Sidney Mitchell, a big banker, says that what is needed is “more work and less talk.” Which means jexactly nothing, as the jobless work- ers cannot live on such phrases, which are precisely the “tlk” Mit- chell mentions. Twenty of “the 59” were pleas- jantly enjoying their vacations, while | | millions of workers have ‘“vaca- | tions” filled with hell from worry | and hunger. Adolph Zukor, a movie magnate, says time are bad because the bosses neglected their business |—which is rot. They are tending | it enough to cut wager every: | | where—while their own profits go} ! W. H. Crocker, a San Francisco! banker is one of those who says | that times are so bad, that people just imagine it. Boss Press Against Jobless | Two big capitalist newspaper owners, McCormick of Chicago and | Howard of New York, admit times are bad, but savagely oppose Un- mployment Insurance. MeCormick | says it is “exaggerated” and How- ard trickily says it is all right if| “under public control” and with | low wages, which means in fact | that he is against anything real, | but for some fake scheme. Green of the A. F. of L. chatters | jabout “flood control” but little else. Thus, on September Ist, when work- | lors go onto the streets to demand | in mass demonstration the adoption of the Workers Unemployment In- | | sutance Bill, they should know that | unless they fight for it persistently, the “rulers of America” will give | them nothing. Tammany grafters go free— | (office Briefs fi. | All Lands; PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia strike at Cenodievo s ing steadily maintained. are trying to import ers. The bos strikebreak- cota « BERLIN.—General former commander army, candidate of party,” in a speech expressed him- self in favor of a dictatorship with of the the “peoples? out “radical solutions.” VIENNA.—Monarchist dem o n- strations are being held all Austria in c Franz Joseph’s cists are taking th manifestations, * * * MOSCOW. sariat of the Soviet solved upon consideral to the list of those entailing physical work, en- titling women to a prolonged leave of absence before a r ¢ 56 days before and days after). Fifty-six additional professions were included ir emplo agronomic a. technicians, etc + 8 * KOVNO.—As a protest agai new regulation, according to also political prisoners must compulsory labor, about 500 polit- ieal prisoners in a Kovno ion of Uni additions profess besides the list techni- , physi- cians, cians, which * BUCHAREST. —In the Park Cis- migiu “young” fascists attack all persons who appear to be Jewish. Lately a middle school professor }was attacked by “mistake.” The police remain passive. ak ae: AMSTERDAM.—According to De Tribune, three Indonesian Commu- nists, Mohamed Ali from Tange- rang, Djamal Oedin and Hadji Machmoed, from the western coast of Sumatra, were arrested in Singa- pore by Ramsay MacDonald’s police and delivered to the Dutch govern- ment of Java. De Tribune ex- pressed anxiety that soon new “sui- cides” will be reported. 1200 March to Bury Murdered Unionists (Continued Prom Page One.) day, they came on the s in groups. The miners indignation against these traitors is boundless Men, women and children shouted at them: home, you m At the grave Anr Harke ff, widow of one of the murdered min ers knelt and pledged, “I promise | before your grave that I will carry on this fight continue to class.” Petrella, after kiljir had fired a shot at M Harkoff She had just opened the Sacco-Vat zetti meeting, as its chairman, wl Petrella started shooting. Build the Union! The procession marched great banne! “We shall a our murdered comrades by building the Mine, Oil and Smelter Workers’ Industrial Union,” “The anarch murdered our comrades,” “The anar- chists are the stool pigeons of the bosses,” “Defeat the bo: es “Join the Communist Party Speakers, including Frank Borich, secretary of the M.O.S.W.L.U.; Max Salzman, district organizer of the Communist Party; and Carl Hacker, su, that I the v will king for y serve Harko Defense, told of the events and the reasons for them, on the day of the murder. They pointed out that while Petrella and his murder gang walked away in safety, 20 police concentrated on a mad hunt for all possible members of the M.O.S.W I.U., hold ing the widowed Anna Harkoff in the police station for hours brow-beating and threatening ‘her, and raiding and searching her house. that is written by and south—it ix the YOUNG WORKER ts being pubtist 1 STRIKE AT WORKER ADDRESS omy Mail tor the Unemployed Delegation is in prison—vote Communist! prison | | have gone _ a hunger strike. secretary of the International Labor s wornnn "Tix monthn Und 80 ¢8 UNION SRUARE Czech Workers Protest ne War Moves worker teh the istra~ force Soviet Hit Coop Congress Decision De elegates (Wireless by I r) VIENNA, Aug. 31—The Co- operative Congre nded. Dele- gate Kleptzig of Germany proposed members of c¢ > eo-opera- vored crec closed and the delegate Soviet Union ing. gates t the tat- orld crisis the congre Y to deal with the Sov Uni ‘olu on the war resolutior dang st L Fakers (Contimed from Page One) of the nation- a bunch of pett 1 social-fascists, revolutionary nand for the I munist Unem- loyr ura Bill, want to ney of the work- that well e bi loyed, ho daily f f ice é evolution- ary « r Communist Part me out with f lich n- Unemploy- t is the duty worker to cs of Green, ment In a Bill of ey expose Woll, Morrison and Co. JOBLESS BUDAPE hungry workers } with starvation, tried to fake i lum where they « and shelter FOREIGN INSANITY 31. Vote Communist! rest, near Mt. able, Rates: $16— and Wishing. - OBERKIRCH KINGSTON, ON. WORKERS! YOUNG WORKERS! Build the Fighting Youth Help Maintain the Weekly YOUNG WORKER HHEKE is only one youth paler in this country aper! the working cliss The YOUNG Ht is a rent a weekly. % Won nae " end in ar: Th cemtx for a for three months, Act today THE BOSSES! fam a young worker and wish Co subscribe Co our paper=the YOUNG months. NeW YORK CITY ——l