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Children of the New Day | NTE RNATIONAL NEWS Executions in China Will Not Stem the Tide of Growing Revolution DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1930 Page Three DWETFERS | A &S ERO FF sS 1 ~~ Story of Soviet Youth FLINT AUTO WORK ERS’ CONDITIONS | WORSEN AS THOUSANDS ARE FIRED |A Written Version of the Russian Movie For | é | American Working Class Children ‘Polish Genera 4 Strike Protest Fascist Terror Prepare For Corres, Conference ‘Communists in France Fight Young Plan |rang again. Finding the door un- By MYRA PAGE | locked, she opened it and went in Worker Correspondence Con: Fatima Thrown Out. The room was empty and dark, ference, the Central Bureau Anna slid out of the room, draw-| except for a light over the desk. of the Worker Correspon- ing her shawl closely around her. Tash was sitting there, bent over To better prepare for the (Continued) New York City and Vicinity HANKOW.—The way in which the five Chinese Communists met their death in Hankow on Septem- Into U.S.S.R. Program Fight Against Bosses Must Be Taken Up Again Under | dents has decided to post- She ves nel The sartiee she, a ook. i ae io bee 8 should make ite Bet i * i ‘i ., Walked, the madder she grew. ‘'atima shuffled her feet, uncer- elena Ba ean rs ist s he oem 5 Anto Workers Union Lead Borer Sab). Bunter; OHe-| ane ‘were ceaey times ndeck: Me ersineasontheretts hun away. or. ¢0| ne ne reer) eval hesitant cowards in the ranks Sellen Saad A Beet eee | think they'd haul her into court nearer. Tash locked up. “Oh hello,| strike began here today against the militant labor movement to Se ee patric sain Daily Worker: Flint, Mich. All workers in New York) over that little brat! What was Fatima” she said dreamily, “Did the arrest. of opposition leaders “P®™* sae Lasoait! I am giving you theoutlook of conditions here in Flint. There are | and Northern New Jersey | tong, anyhow. Hadn’t she worked) you want something?” “Vanya— anq in protest aa the blood-| According to an account given the poring masses stressing the @ great many unemployed. General Motors has laid off five thousand | who have at one time or at Fatima’s age? And should she | Nick—where are they?” “They are | sheq Sunday when many workers|Py @ reactionary Chinese paper, importance of the coming elections since September 1st. The Chevrolet plant and Fisher Body No. 2 are another written in to the) 0 to work again? Huh! She/all away for the evening. The were killed. Large forces of police the five Communists were brought | 7 Germany and declaring its com- to close next week, for a period of three weeks for change of model. | Daily Worker, Labor Unity | walked on. That idea, now about) office is closed until tomorrow,” | armed with rifles and machine|t® ®@ Public square for execution. plete proletarian revolutionary s0- This will throw out ten thousand more. | and the language press are| learning to read and write. That and Tash went back to her book. | guns patrol the streets. The square was filled with an lidarity with the German Commu- The workers fall for this bunk of model change in two or three | urged to attend this confer-; Was another matter! Maybe she Fatima turned and fled. The rain| _* « enormous crowd of spectators. | nist Party in_ its struggle against weeks. But Chevrolet never has®—-—-—-——-————--~-——-- | ence without fail. |could even learn to write her own was pouring down on the pavement] BARCELONA, Sept. 17. — A With the color of their faces un-|the reaction, It expresses approval started their new work until the|©@r enough to supply our table) 4 |name, and read the paper. But with a heavy, dull thud. Fatimal strike of all bucding workers here Changed, the five victims utilized|0f the programatic declaration of middle of November in former | with the kind a food neened an Worker correspondents can could she? . tramped on and on, her mind full) hogan today. Collisions occurred their last five minutes by telling caine spun nias Barks ae is ye vil keep Up payments on my home and) iv i } i of one big question “ as Sa ke ‘ikers. Police the crowd the crimes of Chiang| declares tha e carrying out o: cia | ese Rasen loling and otinc| 27 ESSA gad cil eg: | walled agli down she suniy iso|tu¥?>Tecongh Labi sha'camo.te (armen coat aud etchare, Poloe| oe Ors eM acctng then foo tiie program lathe only way, te Chevrolet Slave Drivers. j necessities, and they tell us the ularly. the cellar basement. When Fatima|the entrance of the house where ieee ‘s eeaeaine in sina “"|volt and overthrow the murderous emancipate the masses of the Ger- The Chevrolet is a slave-driving | crisis is caused ty over production. ee came back that evening, from her Lenin once lived. The big iron, a ae FS “| Kuomintang regime. Their voices) "an workers from the shameful shop on the order of Ford's, with | Why, T need shoes a ae ae Shop committees, the unions|day at the Pioneer center, Anna gates which guarded the courtyard! BUDAPEST, Hungary, Sept. 17. Wee er aeaerceu OY tne BRarS Spee aay eee aie ae i i es are| Mundreds of other things and no i ity | m i vords, “Get were locked. ee Sunday police arrested 200|Which severed their heads from oreig! perialism, and parti- ; bas gig apts raed at 41; money to buy them and yet work- take sala oe oe | ae Shane i Gurk ran barking to the inner sean anne ee See ty their bodies. cularly French imperialism, The cents per hour and bonus. After) ing all the time, who wish to help in the or-| more. Huh? Where shall you go? Side of the gate. “Hush, Gurk” ing members of the Young Com- a appeal points out that the Com- three months you work up to 51 Workers, wake up; can’t you see ganization of the workers in| Anywhere, it’s nothing to me, Only the caretaker cautioned him, ‘it is! munist League. cacao Hay ot France has al- cents per hour and bonus. this is all a big trick to fool you their shops through the me-| get out. They got the law on me. too late to be making such a noise.” = 3 000 SHOPMEN way) en worked and voted Now, this looks like it might be | into believing that you are holding dium of the revolutionary|They say it’s not allowed that But as Gurk kept on, the caretaker Foreign Workers Drawn 5 - (eam the enslavement of the pretty geod to the worker on the| out by not buying. How can a pres, to join the organized | children should work now. So get rubbed his cheek. “Do you hear or xerman masses and refers to the outside. worker buy anything when he Workers Correspondents. | out.” With up-raised hand, Anna| Smell someone outside? Maybe splendid solidarity expressed on so Bonus Fake. works all the time and cannot earn| latastad towed Gin Satine; Gn Tens eh?” Slowly Ree roleal erase Trane, Chica (a aacaes eee eer is wl h te ith, | if y K | i open the gates and peered out into! , Sete eae es 3 WOFKINE Classes dur- But here is what happens. All gitar) acre Hee bane: | MUSICIANS STRIKE. | terror, dashed up the stairs and We wet aetcnesas Re A ake was | committee of. the metal curenkara é ing the occupation of the Ruhr. repairs and maintenance loss of time in production, due to one ma- for a drink or any other cause. Another thing I want to get over impression that these red labor PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Sept. 16. |—Two hundred and twenty musi- through the court into the street. Where was she to go? What there. Gurk bounded through the junion of’the Soviet Union proposes Fight Now for Jobless In-| _ lt reminds the masses that the international debts and the repara- chine or more being out of com-| to all the workers is this. I am an| cians working in 200 Philadelphia | should she do? Aimlessly she caretaker’s legs, nearly upsetting) ‘Re orsanization of widespread eul- surance Bill! Souununiet = Party amas, the only mission, is shouldered on the work-| ex-serviceman and spent many days/ motion picture houses have an-| wandered on, block after block.| him, and dashed on down the streets | ron th roe S aca 17 aha Pe ag pn aes party which fought _ logically ers’ bonus. Innumerable other costs | in action in the Argonne and Flan-}swered a strike call issued by the Suddenly she stopped. Of course!|Some times dogs show more das aaaliats em; nove in the Soviet (Continued From Page 1.) Gears tue) oreupalion (Of, German are added which the workers know | ders and I like everyone else think | Musicians’ Union, The strike is|She would go to her new-found|than humans, don't they? Soon | Thnion ‘ ae ‘ more, He says exports are “in-|(°™7try by the troops of French nothing of, so, when. pay day) the good old U.S. A. is the good|the result of a rejection by the/friends. They had told her to come | Gurk was in Fatima’s arms and her) TPT v1 scthods suggested! erencing’” The becker that imperialism, The French Party ex- comes, production schedule has/| old country, but when it comes to} Stanley, Warner and Fox inter- if she needed anything. Soon she, Wet face was against his warm,| so6 font perce salen Senin | with 8,000,000 unemployed in this|PreS8e® Complete approval of the been maintained and secured at the) labor I am with the red labor) ests of the union’s ultimatum that| was ringing the bell at their head-| quivering body. ees ailor Gone and forei 4 country, with mee “being Git statement of the German Party in expense of the workers’ bonus.’ | unions. Why? Becau:e they are| more men be employed. ‘quarters. No one answering, she (To be continued.) | perigee the! publication of epeetall wlolestln, with handveds ch thon |i Deokres We) eball tear) op THe hak TACs plant geome toe | Hllb pas and only’ witkees! ftabdi mn sere; pee DUB EC A MOH BDBCIA See ear 4 fs “ 4" | the robber treaty of Versailles and day through. Th d-up and|So many workers I have talked Rae lee ae erences 2nd printed mais) sands 0% Door carmers facing Tuin/lthe Noung Plan ‘which enslaves lay through. ie speed-up ¢ 0 $ " Ay | jter in foreign languages, broad-| the home market grows smaller and| Germany and we shall annul all conditions are terrible’ No time| with are filled with the erroneous Fight Dismissal of ‘GUNMAN KILLS leasting for the foreigners living| smaller. They look for more dis- POST OFFICE British Railwaymen lin the Soviet Union, ete. tant and greener fields. But these i » the | unions and the Communist Part; > ae ee | gear . a... |tions payments which have been pho jaa oka aie are going to destroy us all. i —e n order to enlighten foreigners nas are black, too, because every-| placed on the shoulders of the driving shop. ‘Two thousand have Organize For Fight. LONDON (IPS).—At _Bishops- jon the progress of socialist recon-| where the crisis rages. masses by international capital- been put on the streets to starve in Workers, they are showing you _ FIRES WORKERS gate freight station, London, 400 CHICAGO TOILER struction in the Soviet Union, joint What are the facts? Exports are ism.” The appeal point out that & p il A excursions are to be made to con- down 30 per cent. Automobile ex-| when the French workin class tounee a hk lithe pated eiceay ut aes ‘the ee seecent ele Sueey and ports are down 65 per cent. They|comes to power it will alae iat 5 k ; A A state farms, children’s homes, ete. | wi mn sti : caus inter-alli i Despite the management's prom-| bonus system like at Chevrolets, Has Outrageous Speed-up workers. During two working Workers Must Rally For * 7p). “Contra Gbainittess Bh. the mt ih Peg ie Sat pees (at the inter-allied debts which showing you the way to get decent \days they adhered strictly to every reports from the U. S. Department |have placed great burdens on the ise of the 1929 wage scale to induce the workers to return to work the working conditions in the factories, System | valid regulation, with the’ result Greater Struggle | 6 . }metal workers’ union resolved at |the same time on measures for the of Commerce show that the crisis | shoulders of the toilers. It also ex- v a : oF ; sats Z | s not only growing worse world-| presses complete approval of the mise wes never kept. Here is| Shops and mines, showing you the | Continued From Page 1 that within 48 hours the whole Yonti isei f ‘i Li nag aed . [eres ig, PP ‘ hat kind of a files they made, | way to rid the city, state and na-|are being aula serena goods station was stopped up and! a pes eee zB) San reo ae nuattilis S ee Wi wide, but is extending to such coun-| minority policy of the German piece-work prices remained ext and tional government grafters from | and doubled-up, 8 men being as-| the greatest disorder ensued. The work. orking at terrilic speed, metal workers union. Special at- trie as France and Sweden, which|Comunist Party towards national the company 1929 wage scale was maintained by speed-up. In order to make last year’s scale which was not cut only the price of operation being reduced and the fifty per cent more production and in that way the big-hearted General Motors maintained its 1929 wage scale. Meatless Days Now. Iam one of the employes of this stomach-robbing company and I want to say at our home we have permanent meatless days. I cannot worker | obliged to turn out from twenty to | office. day. fight for what we produce. Thousands are on the verge of starvation. Are you going to stand by and let your class brothers fight alone. All you auto workers, join the Auto Workers’ Union. I know lots of you and have worked with you. Remember, you will soon be 40 and no longer wanted. Protect yourselves now by lining up with Raymond in Detroit. —A FISHER WORKER. | signed to do the work of 4, and | boxes, work formerly done en- tirely by collectors. Schedules of working hours are being changed, in many cases ignoring and vio- lating outright the law that a regular must perform his 8 hours of service inside 10 continuous hours. Clerks are spepeded mercissly and ‘written-up’ (charged with failure to maintain standards) and punished for not exceeding continually the minimum of as- | station management was obliged Cut out the meatless and eatless|on top of this are compelled to|to withdraw the dismissals. Let’s not only demand but/collect letters from street-corner | The action on the part of the | tailway men is a flat contradic- | tion of the policy of the English trade union of the railmen, which works in closest collusion with the ‘ailway companies, and furthers in | word and deed that rationalization | which has led to these discharges. The London local committee of the | railwaymen’s trade union congrat- ulated on August 26th the rail- waymen who had carried through | this movement, and condemned the | bureaucracy of the trade union | they were able to maintain them- selves alive, before the wage-cuts began, but lately, no matter how fast one works, it is impossible to jearn a decent living. To further | lower the wages, they fired men in many departments and hired women at a much lower price. | With the beginning of the crisis thousands of workers were laid off j altogether. This gave the foremen jan opportunity to improve on their | graft operations. They decided not | to wait any Icnger for “birthdays” jor Christmas, but to collect cash from the starving and unemployed workers. tention is to be given to inducing |the participation of foreigners in | the life of the wo : jin the socialist témpetitions and movement. |shock troop SOCIALISTS SUP- PORT BRUENING War Danger Sharpened by German Election were not at first acutely hit by it./ minorities which shall be granted War for Markets. |complete right of self-determina- What Hoover is really doing is|tion to break away from one coun- telling the bosses that they must! try and join another. The French speed up exports. This leads to/ Party anounces that it will support war, There is a big scramble on/|all national minorities which strive now for world markets. That's why | for a unification with Soviet Ger- billions are being spent for war|many. With regard to the danger armaments. |of wage cuts, the appeal points The bosses are now resorting to| out that only the struggle of the a trick in writing about the econ-| German Communist Party for omie crisis, They are now compar-| higher wages, the seven hour day ing the figures of production with|@nd the five day week can fend the same months in 1929—when in| off the dangee represented for 1929 the crisis had already reached| the workers of all countries by a severe form! But even when the| the enslaved state of the working They began to sell jobs, ee fiz a sae in-| class of Germany. In particular thi sorting 16 letters per minute by leaders who refuse everywhere to in the factory. One of the fore- (Continued From Page 1) stance’ Hae ae ee ae appeal refutes the aandarcis i 2 at least 20-per cent. Their tasks}4° anything to prevent the dis-/ men, Clarence Webb, who lives at|q,: F syeht the | done Hore eee a eengs are i f th isi i i are constantly increasing. They! Mmissals. This action against dis-/3134 North Luna Ave. sesording |e at cue easy rian Oey He LSOT chs. Kelow last week, | Seuole afte Dontasoieie and se are compelled now to take 3 and|Charge was preceded by a smaller)t, the workers in the Majestic| Gee oe . the. “proletarian | and? 161,846 cee _below last year, |ociel demotrate | SEAE ie Gerhart | 4 ‘spearation-schemes’ per year| Oe with the same object two| shops, sold jobs to William and|"ution in Germany. when the crisis hed alresay | COmMUnEY Harty. as made scot: i i weeks ago. The successful result) pees. idence -.| But the revolutionary develop- reached a low level. Auto output} Cessions to nationalism in its pro- instead of 1 or 2, for which they | i . Baptiste Federici. ‘They held their| rae F i 4 newdata A deal rviVile must prepare at home on their|0f this movement has aroused the obs only a short period. The fore.iments in Germany have already is down again. The New York) St@matic declaration, and declares Oi atl i | interest of all English railwaymen, on rd sole their jobs |Zendered such an attempt futile, Times index on auto production is| that its declaration is inspired jown time. Failure to pass the man fired them and solc their jobs ‘ ‘ 5 solely f orol New York. | for the forming of a broad rank! examination 95 per cent perfect | Specially where it is intended to. to other unem:toved workers |A bourgeois - socialist coalition, at 60, compared to 130 last year,|S0lely by a spirit of proletarian Daily Worker:— | and file committee for some work,|onq wit hthe required speed of | discharge a large number of work- when ay, itae 1 e foreman | °Penly or under cover, will have!when the crisis was eating at the | internationalsm. The Trade Union Unity League a delegate objected, saying: “We| ig per minute is severely pun-| &*S- | demented cue money to give them| My one result: the further shar-| vitals of American capitalism. No Cpe nee ene sre Be aow enters in the second year of| will have too much rank and]; | i ay A y to give tieM | pening of the class struggle and upturn here. | e ane f 2 ; Ag Lass ished. The Bishopsgate freight station back the jobs. They paid him| : é ; i : ee measures and sops proposed by the its existence. A certain analysis of | filism. _ Unfortunately those who Laborers are being paid to do| Workers have followed the slogan! again and got their obs back, but | the continuous weakening and de-' The leading financial writer of fakers is to help along the “cau- the activities of the T, U. U. L. re-| are afraid for “too much rank and | BP ‘ iss by the Minority 7 A * i jeay of the Socialist party. the New York Times (Sept. 17)!,..., : wi : the work of clerks and carriers issued by the Minority Movement again for a short period only. He | P ) tious” policy of the bosses, Only veals the fact that a great measure | filism” regardless of their accep- at $350 per year cheaper, the|®S the workers’ charter, which fired them again and sold their| The effect of the German elec- writes: se heoee . of indifference, indecision and even | tance of the Party line, are still too Shorea Lee de orK ‘being ives the struggle against dismis-\ jobs to other unemployed victims, | tion in bourgeois Europe is a “It is difficult not to see eyi- | the Communist Party and the revo- hostility on the part of many lead- | numerous oe eee eae done ‘by abst of Mellon's sals a first place. The immediate They came back to the factory : .d| growing eset besos bess a al dence also of cautious lowering | lutionary unions really fight for the ing comrades in the trade union | idea that the chosen few are to Treasury Department at $600 to influence of the Minority Move-| demanded their money back from |&" intensification of preparations of the wage scale.” demands of the jobless and pre- field is responsible for the slow! carry their respective organizations $800 per year which is $650 ment among the railmen is not the grafter. He refused to give | for imperalists war as well as Thefacts make it imperative that are for organization and strike progress of the T. U. U. L. | in their pocket. These elements are cheaper than Post Office laborers, Yet very strong, but the fact that it back to them and started to|War against the iet Union. both employed and unemployed ze i. tal. Bandi délagatna The sooner those leading com-| enemies of the rank and file and | Questioniig a supervisor’ or.|the Daily Worker was the sole’ screa- for help. Albert Marth, one |€0" Daudet, the notorious French | unite in the struggle for the Work-| #8%inst wage-cu oss . gates rades in the trade union field who | must be exposed and fought mer der or protesting against it is | ewspaper supporting the struggle! of the special ; slicemen at the Ma-|Leon Daudet, the notorious ers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill| to the Sept. 28 City Unemployment hinder the progress of the T. U.| lessly, regardless_of their popular- i “i will certainly greatly popularize jesti i French monarchist leader, even and immediate relief. The half- Conferences! ity and position they now occupy.| met by the supervisor with the au Ack 7 Pop! Jestic, came running. $ z ga “War o U. L, to become the revolutionary ” a B ‘ab Cah 1 PY-/ threat of summary dismissal for the Workers’ Charter and Without asking any questions he, Went so far as declaring: “War |) = eet eee will be expost ¢ workers, the | ‘ fh {to carry out orders” under the ment. victims and barely missing a third | °tY+ Sha wad A ae Teltonty nae" Set ia aot’ afar’ ete Law and Reruns and = tentiged ene win ime gal, wenil oeevenl moni | © Bishop Brown's Books ns mi r meted out for the slightest in- committee. ie bil granting the affair. The two badly wounded 4 fe sabe e Right Tendencies Prevalent, Declares a Abtap vielen iN the | fraction of rules, without pay, them the 44-hour working-week men were taken to the hospital, | °US Bs asad ik ta a CODERS MSV AEEN SMES What is the use of accepting the| Siena to ignore the central ody, (of course. Protest by several is still burried in committee, where William Federici died be.|France, observes that “the out- | 225th thousand, paper bound, 247 pages; twenty-five cents. Patty 1 the trade unions’ ac-| Sible as to ignore the central body, fi awaiting Hoover’: 1 it eashr F come of the German elections arty dine an the trade unions’ ac-/ ine T. U. U. L. Council, which|¢™Ployees that has the slightest ing Hoover's nal execution. | fore he reached the operating table. ee i G “Like a brilliant meteor crossing a dark sky, it held me tight.” tivities in theory and act otherwise | youd be the clearing house of all|S™blance of organization is met! The one bill passed supposedly while ‘his brother, Baptiste, is in Means the ruin of the German : , : in practice? In the work of organ- evolitioiass bade a activity | With the threat of criminal prose- in their favor, modifying the Re-| dangerous condition. | parliamentary ay iely _and MY HERESY izing the unorganized and to draw in New Lat ¥ | cution for “conspiring to inter- tirement-Act, is in reality against) The Majestic factory has 0 gant frankly demands a more militant in the rank and file workers of the |“ At the tast meeting of the T. U. {ete with the U. S. Mails”, pun-|them, favoring only the super-'o¢ gunmen as “special police.” {ve Policy” than that of 1] ‘This is an autobiography published by the John Day Company, A. F. of L, unions to fight for) uy, Gaanan Ha Ns as ‘the iShable by 3 to 10 years im visors. ‘ Their eabicts to Kean the Sorkers (Pee New York; second printing, cloth bound, 273 pages; price $2.00. the program of the T. U. U. Ly | Une i i iH shes ers a the | onment in’ a Federal. Pent! On the contrary, with the next! from organizing 4a) to bent aipithel In the meantime, the demand “The most important book of the year 1926,” tendencies prevalent in the A. F. of Mead Cana propoels nt where | 1EY- session of Congress ‘Lame Duck’, unemployéd, With the aid of the(of the Minister of War, Andre RGN L, unions are being transplanted in f 3 ; Fake Uni ‘the much-dreaded Darli bill fot 5 Maginot, for an increased mili- | were the delerates from the unions ake Unions. 4 Darlinger bill regular city police force they are ; > KE RTT 7 . } Bi Pata ‘and leagues? : | Against allthis the Postal suspending the Civil-Service-Act /patroling the streets for six blocks t@"Y budget is much strength- THE BANKRUPTCY OF CHRISTIAN While accepting in theory the This absence of delegates from workers are now in no_ position for 2 years and empowering the around the factory, arresting every- lened by the outcome of the Ger- SUPERNATURALISM principle of industrial unionism the, +] i cht to defend themselves. The 50,-|President to reorganize it, intro-|hody, men and east man elections, and it has already By craft divisions still prevail. In the} Be aeh det tie thee Taree | 00 organized clerks are divided duced last year and dropped, may come out to ie tactory with | bea officially announced that the is kultiees Denes pone, ape ReRes ene eM euby fee cant leading committees popularity is | and leagues, expose them and elect | into 2 organizations: The United/even be revived and jammed! erature or newspapers. ‘They usy, | asked increase will be made. Thus REE Pein SUA ES ores: still more important than capability | others in their places. ; National Association of Post Of-;through by Mellon for this ‘64.’ sly take the arrested workers to|t€ intensified danger of mete These boks are primmers for children, yet a post graduate course and devotion to work. .1 nicely ‘The rank and file of the unions fice Clerks controlled directly by|Then lay offs and discharges the private police station within RUt only reflected | in seid is for collegians. They are written from the viewpoint of the Trial, phrased speech is still given more) and leagues affiliated to the T. U.|the Department and the National) will be wholesale and brazenly-| the factory. where they beat them|{T™ the mouths of journalists, |! Vo); ‘the Sciences, Vol. IT; History, Vol. III; Philosophy, Vol. TV; consideration than to activity and/U. L. must begin to root out “ti Federation of Post Office Clerks |open. Also, graft will be ram- up, In snite of this terren Wier Dut. also in deeds, acts of prepa- ‘The Bible, Vol. V; Sociology, Vol. VI. understanding. iremnants of monopolized leadership | —iMdirectly through Mr. Green pant. ‘ture is being distributed at the fac-|T&tion carried on by the French ; Metropolitan Area Conference. | and expose those elements by every |8Md the A. F. of L. So are the Scoff At Jobless. |tory hy the Communist Party and | ®°vernment. ASE Bees Sena ic nen teem ores vUne (evince mawee. 11 @BsHcnotRs I remember, when at the first| means possible, Let us strengthen letter carriers through the Na- So, a very cold winter faces! the ‘Trade Union Unity League,|. The imminant danger of war |] The first and second volumes have been published. The third volume Metropolitan Area Conference be-| the Trade Union Unity League! | tional sociation of Letter Car- the postal workers. Unless they! The encourarement received by the is also observed by an ar will be ready ‘in September and the ofher three af intervals. ¢f fore the Cleveland Convention in —CHAS. BLANK, ‘riers. So supine are these or- organize militantly to resist these} eunmen for beating up unemploved|actionary American Catholic six months. 1929, in New York, a proposal made Leather Worker. | S@nizations, that the Letter Car-| attacks. workers led up to this murder. Now| “letkyman, Edmund A. Walsh, | Send fifty cents for copies of Communism and Christianism 4 pememecs Sen tke Mat mene | tiers’ ¢ onion withdrew a demand; In the last session, the senate| to the slogans used in advort’ ‘nq the | Vice-president of Georgetown Uni- and the first three volumes of the Bankruptcy of ‘), Three Dollars a Week for Cigar Girls; $100,000 [eae SEND vee, eae ieee 8s, inayat house committees united in|Maiestic radio, such as the “beau-|Versity and regent of its school of Christian Supernaturalism. House for the Boss Jacksonville, Fla. ness,” he says. But I met a little with Mr. Hoover and Big Busi-}| Boston, vafter his infamous conference refusing even a sop, rejected the | Proposal for a new post office in referred particularly to tiful tone,” should be added a new one: “Washed in the blood of un- employed workers.” |foreign service. Walsh, who has ‘just returned from a tour in Eu- ‘yope, said that in the outcome of { HERESY Editor Daily Worker: lady that worked for him by the/ness, where he bartered . F. la-' the argument that this would pro- Sethe ttpletntha> \ |last Sunday’s German elections he | Dear Comrade:—A few lines to let} name of Miss Eva Mitchell that|bor’s demand for big wages in| vide more jobs, and stated, “it is) SPEED MEANS MONEY FoR ‘av @ possible danger to Euro-'|} This is Bishop Brown's quarterly magazine. Each number consists you know about the cigar industry | enlightened me on how he made his| return for the empty promse not not policy to subsidize unem-| BOSSFS: DEATH FOR pean peace, = || of one of his lectures on the greatest and most timely among cur- of Jacksonville, x money. jto cut wages or lay-off forces. | ployed workers in any way. WORKERS! r rent subjects. So far they have been as follows: January, 1930, M. Swisher, who owns the| She had to work from 6:30 in the! Nor ca the Postal workers look | through the postal department.” | NEW YORK.—Because of ‘he MSSACHUSETT MILLS AGAIN |] The American Race Problem; April, The Pope’s Crusade Against Swisher Cigar Factory and manu- evening until 5:30 in the morning| to Congress, the nominal boss, Against this teriffic speed-up speed-up on the new city hall un- SLUMP the Soviet Union, and July, The Science of Moscow and the Super- factures the King Edward cigar on| for $3 a week and $1 of that was/for help. Under the department, and unemployment the Commu-| der construction here, with con. BOSTON.—Between June and stion of Rome. Send for a free sample copy. 16th St., says business is very} deducted for some midnight “slop”| interpretation of the Corrupt nist Party and the T. U. U. L,. tractors competing for speed- July 1930 over ten and a half: hike good. He has been in the ‘cigar| which they call lunch. The $1 was |Practice ct, the postal worker call for organization in real| honors in their campaign to ac- thousand workers lost jobs in the | Subecel pam 25 cents pet: Year, | pardon a open and * ied vii they ate the/ practically is disfranchised. junions, ® fight against disfran-|complish as possible with ax few 1,081 mills of Massachusetts. ‘The | Single Copies 10¢ each. ing & ,f jome in| “slop” or not. |. The, numerous bills introduced ment, support in this election for! men as possible. Ra Nowove. oo Number of workers employed in " > Jacksonville. That means she got $2 a week | in the last Congress designed to| the Workers Nnemployment. In- 24. a vonstyestion BRK eerie’ Gitta ceeode Undine. de THE BRADFORD-BROWN EDUCATIONAL CO. “Nobody’s Business.” for doing night work. How is this|remedy the postalworkers’ condi-| surance Bill, strike against wage Filled in a 150 foot plunge to “reased 13.6 per cent and the ag- $ GALION, OHIO “How he does it is nobody’s busi- for industrial democracy? —L, B. tions were permitted to die in cuts and speed up. death, gregate payroll 16 per cent. ls ae ad