Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
| DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1980 Page Three LHDETTE RSs EE Fe ay es x a Ea EE SHor Ss MINER’S CHILD DIES OF HUNGER AS HOOVER SPEWS “EQUALITY” LIE “Rquality?”—Bosses Rioting in Luxury As Working, Jobless Feel Pains of Hunger! Poor Farmer Sees Need of Toilers Unity Concord, Calif. Dear Daily Worker: Cleveland Bosses Fearful of Growing Fight of Workers For Real Jobless: Insurance CLEVELAND.—Fearful that the misery and destitution of the un- employed in Cleveland will lead to an increase of Communist influence this winter, and seeking to counter the agitation for the Unemployment Insurance Bill, the employers and their tools in the city government have suddenly started up a ballyhoo in the local papers that “some- thing is going to be done for the unemployed.” That “something” amounts to little more than an insult to their intelligence. The City Manager announces with a flourish of rtumpets a $200,000 emergency bond issue to provide employment in the department of parks and public property. This measly sum, which the city politicians are already itching to use for rewarding their friends, would mean only INTERNATIONAL “Pravda” Tells Why Sabotagers| ALL LANDS REV C LQRCUICO | senteo- ince arco + ” on ‘reports from Hankow, fightin, MOSCOW. Pravda” writes: ing continued in the BRIEFS FROM \Latin America Workers Show ‘Move Milttancy Reports from all Latin American countries show the workers are in- “The execution of the sabotagers Hupéh between who aimed at organizing a food troops and the Nanking for shortage in the Soviet Union, has the neighborhood of Tukian; two or three dollars apiece even if it were honestly used for the unem- ployed. It makes a poor comparison with Buffalo’s $10,000,000 for public works, which incidentally only provided work for 471 workers. |creasing their struggles independ- ently from the Nationalist fakers. @/ In Bolivia, the Workers Union Fed- What we poor farmers need is a} union. We must cut out the middle- man and all the gamblers from the| (By a Worker Correspondent) 4 Warrior, Ala. I want to tell about conditions in the town of Warrior, Ala. The only 2 camps around here where any of the mines aré run- ning are at Belltona, and Neitona and they are running only one day a week. There is lots of talk about starvation but down here people are really small commission merchants to the big grain and fruit brokers. We small farmers in northern California haven’t made a thing in the last two or three years and it is much worse this year. Most of us can hire no help and must do all The Community Fund is taking time off from urging unemployed workers to scab (as its representatives have done in the present hotel strike) to ask for an emergency fund of $750,000 on account of the unemployment crisis. Of this sum, $286,000 will go to making up this year’s deficit, and the rest (after paying big salaries and other over- head) will be used by the bankers and bosses who control the fund in such a way as to discourage any rebellion among the starving been received by the broad masses British gunboat bombard: red of the toilers with unanimous sat- troops, The revolutionary forces isfaction. The verdict of the State have occupied Tsingli to the north of Political Administration is the ver- Hankow. dict of the victorious proletariat and s * * the verdict of history. The process! PRAGUE-4A crowd of 2,000 took has once a; demonstrated the part in the Fascist anti-German and eration has demanded the release of two union leaders who were arrest- ed by the new imperialist regime, and at the same time insists that the unions be given the right to or- ganize and strike. It demands that two strikes now in progress be set- . ago. They told us we could go x } yards anita A starving to death. aa to the farmers and: pick cot. {the work ourselves. Then the damn| unemployed. : es : truth of Lenin's words that capital- anti-Jewish demonstrations which| tled in the interest of the workers, A few weeks ago they! ton for our meals if we wanted to profiteers take all the fruit of our! |. The Communists are the only group in Cleveland making any real |ism_ conducts a con: ant struggle were renewed in Prague recently. or they will call a general strike labor, same as the man in.the fac-| fight for real relief of the unemployed. Every time the unemployed | against the proletarian dictatorship, The Fascist Nationalist mob pt| industry by industry. . found a family of miners here} half dead and one little boy in the family about six years old did starve to death. The paper forced to come out and admit | He hadn’t eaten for days. The rest! of the family had not eaten either, but he was the smallest and the| first to die. Many more boys aed this little one will die this winter unless we are able to force the coal | operators to come across with some | of their profits tovhelp us. The town of Warrior made a | bluff of helping the starving min- ers by opening a soup kitchen, but it closed down a couple of weeks eat. They tell a story here about oye mine operator named Morse, who was asked to give something to help out the soup kitchen. He told them “I can’t give anything. Don’t you know I am paying $2 for one day’s work a week for many of these men in my mine. I guess I am doing my share now.” We have got to organize and force rats like this Morse to come across with more than $2 a day for 10 hours work. We have got to make them pay us $25 a week if they can’t give us work, like the Communist Party Bill says. —A MINER. Hospital That «NEW YORK.—The Broad to Workers Exploits ‘Help’ (By a Worker Correspondent) Refuses Aid St. Hospital is very imposing tory is robbed. Red Tags This year it has been nothing but red tags for me and the other small ranchers arownd here. These red tags are hills of the railroads stating that the fruit shipped to the East did not cover the rail- road charges. And now-when we must live only on fruit the fat official of the gov- ernment keeps taxes up and build more schools and roads than ever. Then that big collar boy tries to blame his failure to do anything for the farmers onto the Russians. But we know that is the profiteers’ fault and the fault of the grefting offi- cials the profiteers put into office. Fruits Rotting are one dollar a bushel — just as grain is rotting in the granarie: We know the consumers need this food what with millions jobless and demonstrate, the bosses and their p has to be made of “doing somethi get wise to what the Communists full rights. The Communis real unemployment insurance. are likewise the only ones fighting for litical tools feel that some gesture ng for the unemployed,” lest they are telling them and demand their | Vote Communist Cry Demonstrators, (Continued from Page 1) \invitation only, and every session since has had _ sergeants-at-arms carefully hand-picking those let in| |—no workers allowed. | But the masses of oBston will assemble before the convention hall in Hotel Bradford, Tremont St., at| 11.30, with signs and slogans calling all workers to “Vote Communist,” | jup to have the lives .of workers starving and out of a job. The workers will denounce the war ;waged in unison by A.F.L. chiefs, Green for United Fascist Front jploited famine and hunger in the 5a Fu 8 “overt and covert, peaceful and mili through the streets and destroyed| tary, bloody and unbloody. | windows in German and Jewish busi-| “The bourgeoisie has always ex- ness houses, It us he weapon BERLIN—The dis nst striking workers. of the Berlin Comm In the 1 and semi-colonial issued an appeal to the Communis lcountries it has decimated whole voters (over 700,000) for peoples by hunger and famine. It demo ation against the t has attempted to overthrow the So-'a Fascist dictatorship, (Continued from Page 1) throughout the land. We have been hoping against hope that we would emerge from this reaction.” (Quite an admission for Mr. Green!) “We have, in an optimistic way, interpreted the slightest evidence of improvement in favor of a return to prosperity and normal conditions. But it occurs to me, Legionnaires, For this coming winter Green and the Legion take up Hoover's cry of attack against the Commu- nists as the most courageous lead- ers in the fight of the unemployed viet Government with ‘the bony hand Bruening government, }of famine. All this is nothing new. Communist demands. \But yet it must beg confessed that pase a | the revelation of the crimes of these) ROME—The off | sabotagers in our food supply organ- statistics of the Fa ization, shows something new in hu- have just been pul jman depravity. These criminals not the economic er in lonly attempted to deprive the tensifying. On the Ist of masses of meat, but they even at- were 160,000 m tempted to cause ptomaine poisoning workers than on t pt. there unemployed me date last | matter, dirt, eyeballs, hair and even is much more ser teeth were potted. Sick animals were ficial figures would s also used for canning. The sabot- sive trade balance agers ruined hundreds of thousands August was 3,600 the of- . The pas- n the Ist of of head of cattle and destroyed im- Sieg ag ee his terror against the workers. | orders | which eri A cable from Panama City says that Colonel Almedo Alfaro, a re- cent arrival from Ecuador, discuss- ing the situation in Ecuador, de- clares that there is mass unrest. He says that in the event of an up- |rising, “fear is felt of the possibil- | ity of a class war.” In Cuba, Machado is increasing is- were reported in Havana. One newsboy was killed by Macha- do’s police for selling La Semana, ized Machado’s regime. GOVERNOR RISKS WORKERS. SACRAMENTO, Calif., Oct. 9.— Following two disasters in the San Francisco-ewned Hetch-Hetchy mu- The pears and peaches are rotting i ’ ‘ a ; ; : ‘ i on a large scale. They organized year, In ar ay en sais eae : on tne Getta: walt they, throw tone|%,{e, workers! Unemployment Tn-] that this coming winter is going t|the canning of inferior and rotten of the unomployed come up for reg | Young bas recommended concret of onions in the river when they|funds the A.F.L. is aiding to pile meat. At their instructions waste istration so that the real situation] ing the inside of the tunnels to prevent spread of fatal methane gas. Workers oppose this method, saying the concrete dust is equally dangerous. This project has cost . it is s stivi ri vat | starving, but the profiteers doubles |», -/: " 4 a mh sein ; * Jooking and as one enters the lobby it is suggestive of first | Starv! A fascist American Legion and capi-| ¢o) 1 is ae 11 lives, largely owing to insuffi- n : 7 or triples the price so these people}; _); o sbainet C 2 unemployment insurance, as |mense quantities of vegetables. They . a pies + ‘ face ee class hospital care (if you got ie nee HA Soe erg can’t buy it. Of course the profit- Seo saaatittas tetaibns ie well a in the struggle against | sabotaged the fisheries with-all ole Shier ay Ghidiiee cent ees tat paviemnd superatie and sta i Sat its : iter iz Shar et y, it Menieteiatel 2 | gratz, 12 efuse m . rear of the first building is an old unsafe and insanitary eers who won the factories keeP|nrade Union Unity League, and for-| we sible means. their food as it was rotten. Officers ing which contains the workers’ This building reveals the true nature of the hospital—cold, hard, stingy and out to make profits on the misery and ex- ploitation of its employees. Fire and Hire Workers here say they have ne- ver worked in a place which treats quarters. FAKE RELIEF MOCKS HUNGRY Evicted Families in millions from having any money at all. I believe that you are right about the factory workers and the small farmers getting together and shooting all those who ride on our becks — then tke bankers wouldn't rob us of our ranches and the profiteers wouldn’t rob us of the fruits of our toil because we would own and run the banks eign born workers. Emphasizing the war prepara- tion character of this convention, the republican.administration at Wash- ington has sent the president of |U. S. and two cabinet officers so far to address it. Ordinarily one cabinet official is considered enough, and not one presidential speech has been made since Wilson’s war speech This united front of the top ranks of the two fascist organizations, under the direction of the Wall Street president, is a threat against every American worker, They must combat it viborously. Green and the bosses want the workers to starve quietly this winter. Work- ers, don’t starve, fight! Rally be- hind the Communist Party. Vote Communist, and broaden the strug- “No doubt the execution of these declared the food could be eates. vile criminals will cause a storm of Therefore the soldiers were charged hypocritical indignation in the capi- with conspiracy and tried. The sen-| talist world. The enemies of the 80- tence was ¢ soldiers, four to five! viet Union will try to make capital months imprisonment; 57 soldiers | out of their own crimes. The bour- 616 month each. , P| geois press will exploit these neces- 3 . | sary executions in order to detract = b et | attention from erimes of the bour- _ SSUSSELS—Six Polish workers, known as anti-Fascists, were arrest-| isi rtures in the prisons f S aaiae cha aes Se 65,000 ¢4at their work bench and taken to| Greet the Workers and Peasants of the Soviet . Union oo the Thirteenth Anniversary of the i i i : in 1917. i ‘ eet eg aged Mag roe eee Tents for Winter <r bei Ns ee aca Attacks Foreign Born Ge against the rotten capitalist | workers and peasants in Qhina dur- Soe a ete aviraee Aol ah He ing hi a F ._ | system, i i iang- nd. The Red Aid of| 5 stream of workers being hired and Davis spoke against the foreign sated Gan anal pees eS) ae aE ae Balgliin ta darianding tlicix, felease | Bolshevik Revolution -shek, quitting in a short time. They give forty or fifty a month with room and board and sixty and meals if you live owt. The dormit- ories are overcrowded, the beds are old and filthy and there’s plenty of parasites (bedbugs and roaches, I mean, though there’s the human kind too.) Slop for Food The doctors, nurses and the “bet- ter” sort of people have their meals brought to them on white linen but the “help” must scramble and wait on themselves. They get a lower grade of food, sloppily prepared and eaten from broken and insufficient dishes. The chairs are broken down and the tables ‘covered with dirty “sticky oil cloth. if food is stingely dished out and a request for more qualifies one for admittance to the observation ward. Why they are so mean they heat the milk to prevent us from drinking it. The workers there must under- stand that a hospital is simply a business institution out for profit and it will do anything to their workers to maintain that profit. Refuse Workers Aid Three workers were refused ad- mitance only last week because they could not pay. They don’t care whether you suffer or not, the first question is: “Can you pay?” if not —out to Bellevue you go. This Broad Strect Hospital has been donated by the various “lead- ing” citizens (robbers and exploit- ers of the working class.) You find their names plastered up all over the hospital. There is plenty ef mo- ney but not any for the workers. ‘These miserable conditions can be remedied if the workers will organ- ize under the Medical Workers Union and strike for decent wages and living conditions. CLEVELAND, Ohio, Oct. 9.— Capitalist charities here are asking for old clothes which can be re- modelled into “garments” for 4,000 children who otherwise will go naked through their unemployed parents’ poverty. Capitalism pre- fers this method to paying the parents unemployment insurance. It is announced that the “bond fund” to employ the jobless which was an issue in the last election will not operate for a wek or two and that it will care for only about 400 or 500 of the thousands of starving here, even then. It amounts | to only $200,000. Those getting jobs from it must prove that they are old residents of Cleveland. Four children, ranging in age from ten to two, were picked up on the street here recently, starving and‘cold. Their father had been} out of work for months and has | disappeared, probably another sui- cide. In the present wave of unemploy- ment, hundreds of thousands of Ne- gro workers are walking the streets. When Hoover, the socalled prosper- ity president, came to Cleveland to report to his banker bosses, five thousand colored and white workers, both unemployed and employed, | marched down the streets of Cleve-| land to present the Workers’ Social Insurance Bill. Wm. Poole, a Ne- gro worker who is a member of the American Negro Labor Congress and who joined with the other work- ers i ndemanding Work or Wages, was singled out by police and sev- erely beaten up and arrested. Register Today! CALLS FOR WAR ON SOVIET UNION Grafter Issues Attack (Continued from Page 1) a telegram to a group of Amertcan capitalists who demand the stop- page of all Russian imports into the United States, that he will Itro- dueje a bill to prevent imports from the workers’ republic. With the advance of the Five- Year Plan in the U. S. S. R. while the capitalist countries go deeper into crisis, the imperialists are in- creasing their move toward war against the Soviet Union. The bosses’ plan for war against the Soviet Union is part of their preparations for a more drastic at- tack against the American work- ers, as contained in Hoover's Kings Mountain speech. The fight for the defense of the Soviet Union is con- nected up with the protection of the interests of the American work- ers. Vote Communist! Mobilize for the defense of the first work- ers’ republic. Defeat the bosses’ war plans. Demand all war funds for the unemployed. Vote Communist! Forty Billion Dollar, born, urging a “selective. immigra- tion” and high tariff. He followed Hoover’s lead, and lied: “We are the first country to stage a come- |back from the depression. For the first time in history of depression there have been no wholesale wage ‘reductions.” He pointed to the Lewis sell-out in the anthracite, fas- tening on the miners a five and a half year slave contract with com- pulsory check-off and _no-strike clauses and worsened working con- ditions, as “evidence of better em- ployer-worker relations.” ight in the face of the director of census’ statement that there are 9,000,000 out of work in U. S., Davis repeated that there are only 2,000,- 000 now, as against 6,000,000 in 1921. Green in his introduction boosted Davis as a “great friend of labor” and “a future senator.” Mayor Frank Murphy of Detroit spoke today, with sonorous dema- gogy declaring that there were only 76,000 jobless in Detroit (a flagrant lie!) and in opposition to unem- ployment insurance, Philip Randolph of the Brother- hood of Sleeping Car Porters of- fered a tame and liberal resolution deploring the wave of lynch mur- der. Muste Fake Relief. The Muste unemployment insur- ance fake was put in record by Flor- ence Curtis Hanson of the Arher- ican Teachers’ Federation. Instead | of the Communist demand of $25 a week payments with $5 additional for each dependent to each jobless worker, the Muste-Hanson_ proposi- tion is for 40 per cent of the man’s wages. Instead of the funds being administered by the workers and jobless, through their election boards as fhe Communist Party demands, the’ Muste-Hanson proposition is to | make them strike breaking funds AMTER SPEAKS IN CLEVELAND OCT.26 CLEVELAND. — I. Amter, for- mer Ohio district organizer of the | Communist Party, will be in Cleve- land on Sunday, October 26, Am-| er, who is one of the five who were jailed for leading the unemployed workers in the March Sixth dem-| onstration in New York City, is now | on tour to organize the jobless work- ers for immediate relief and for the Workers Social Insurance Bill put forth by the Commuist Party. Cleveland workers have followed with intense interest the struggle to free the March Sixth delegation. Wherever the announcement of Am- ter’s visit to Cleveland has been made, the most enthusiastic recep- tion was given to the news. In fact, Cleveland workers are marking Oc- tober 26 as a Red Letter Day. Preparations have already been made to have a monster mass meet- ing on the afternoon of October 26 at Bricklayers Hall, 2101 East 21st Street, and to conclude the day with a banquet at the Party headquar- | of these sabotagers take notice, any by the police under social at ee ata m crahte, the murder PARIS—A business agent of at of workers in Poland, the execution Communist weekly, “La Lorraine of national revolutionaries in Indo-;Ouvriere et Paycanne,” Comrade | China, the systematic slaughter of | Max Heny has been arrested under Yugoslavian revolutionaries, etc. the charge of having engaged in| “Up to the present the working anti-militarist work by permitting) masses of the Soviet Union have | the printing of an article about con-| shown too much consideration for ditions in the army barracks. He is their deadly enemies. Towards such the 17th business agent of this paper enemies, however, there will be no to be arrested on the same charge. mercy shown, Let the bourgeoisie |In Paris, Comrade’Desire Legendre, | and the social fascists howl against | business agent of the Communist| the red terror! We must and shall Daily, “Humanite” was arrested on answer all such perfidious attacks the same charge, | with merciless severity. Let those who feel inclined follow the example VOTE COMMUNIST! workers in the Soviet Union, and| the condition the American workers are in today. | Many workers complimented But-| cher on his stand, and he is on the| job, more eager than ever to asl the Daily Worker. W. E. Butcher, Daily Agent in Cincinatti Fined By Boss Court CINCINNATI, 0. — W. E. But- cher, local agent of the Daily Worker, who was arrested here sev- eral days ago was fined $17.00 for “disorderly conduct.” Butcher had defeded himself against a shop- keeper who presumed to tell him where and where not to sell the Daily Worker. Before some three or four hun- dred workers in the court Butcher 225th thousand, paper bound, ters, 1245 Prospect Ave. told about the victories of the READY FOR CIRCULATION the following new pamphlets from the International Pamphlet Series No. 6.—SPEEDING UP THE BY JAMES The Speed-up and Rational “The most important book of th Six volumes, paper bound, 256 WORKERS BARNETT ization in Industry......s+.e0.6+ for collegians, They are written The Friends of the Soviet Union will send a Red Album to the revolutionary museum in U.S.S.R. as a message of intenatiornal solidarity with the names of all militant workers in the United States also a short history of the labor struggle in the indus- trial centers where the names are collected. Price of Greetings 25 Cents Unemployed 19 Cents Friends of Soviet Union 175 Fifth Ave., Room 511 NEW YORK CITY Bishop Brown's Books COMMUNISM AND CHRISTIANISM 247 pages; twenty-five cents. “Like a brilliant meteor crossing a dark sky, it held me tight.” MY HERESY This is an autobiography published by the John Day Company, New York; second printing, cloth bound, 273 pages; price $2.00, ie year 1926.” THE BANKRUPTCY OF CHRISTIAN SUPERNATURALISM pages each; twenty-five cents per volume, stamps or coin, These boks are primmers for children, yet a post graduate course from the viewpoint of the Trial, j ° spege through ‘administration by a board|| No. 7.—YANKEE COLONIES Vol, I; The Sciences, Vol. II; History, Vol, III; Philosophy, Vol. IV; i Who Needs Their Prohibition Issue Now EA peng ear bio re Be HARRY GANNDS The Bible, Vel. V; Sosiology, Vol. VL (Continued from Page 1) legally the lovely American saloon system—as {with an employer majority on it,| tudy of the Philippines, Hawaii, Porto Rico and other ‘ rn of this for stimulants, as implied by abolishing pro- | enough states will remain dry to block the repeal jand some labor fakers added for Tei 7A da Op ui Rae Teteere aa polls tna hy veblsha. The thind ¢ kine ' hibition, they will have just that much less with | of the 18th Amendment. But they have gained |camouflage. 8—THE FRAME-UP SYSTEM Sil bevesaky fn Beutanites aed ibe ctkee tances ea ee | which to buy other commodities. That is, the liquor | enough strength to more openly than ever defy the | Paul Vaccarelli, convicted gunman By VERN SMITH : six months, a eo | traffic can only grow at the expense of other in- | prohibition laws. Enforcement now becomes impos- |and booze runner, implicated in a ‘The developmnt of the frame-up as an employers’ weapon in . i dustries. Making the country “wet” will not solve | sible allogether; now we are in for a big exposure jdozen gang murders, racketeer ex- the class war, told against the back.g¥oyynd of famous labor Send fifty cents for copies of Communism and Christianism | unemployment or in any way alleviate it. of the already vast bootlegging industry. Hoover's |\traordinary for the Tammany ma-|f 0 0 0 ees essen inane ss eens eee and the first three yolumes of -the Bankruptcy of How the Sovict Union Solves the Problem. In the Soviet Union the liquor question is solved simply, as it should be solved in every country. The government manufactures and sells through the cooperative stores. Wines and liquors may be freely purchased. Then, to intensive campaign is carried on by the Communist Party, trade unions, schools, etc., against excessive Consequently the whole problem is re- drinking. duced to a minor question and is to complete solution. But capitalist America is not interested in such an intelligent solution. The prohibition question will remain as a source of corruption and erime, like # many other “questions” under capitalism. “Noble Experiment” for Corruption. | The “wets” have not won a complete enough vic- tory to enable them to open up again full blast and NEGRO WORKER To the big caj aleoholic drinks | brings but little even better than aveid abuses, an their workers. well on the way We must unite struggle against defend the Sovie lutionary unions Vote Communist We must support the Communist Party. noble experimeat has failed completely. pitalists who, for efficiency pur- poses, need “dry” workers, the growing wet wave inconvenience. They will be able, hefore, to enforce, by reason of the great unemployment, the necessary “dryness” among Workers, the main thing is not to allow the hub- bub reised ever’ the prohibition question to divert our attention from issues of real importance to us, all our forces to fight for unem- ployment insurance and against wage cuts, We must the menacing world war. We must t Union. We must build the revo- of the Trade Union Unity League. Workers! ! (Written at Hart's Island Penitentiary.) chine in New York, chief of the} Loyal aLbor Legion (a fascist thug anti-labor outfit) is here as a dele- gate. Hungarian Workers to Ratify, October 8 DETROIT, Mich. Oct. 9—The | various Hungarian workers’ organ- izations called a ratification mass meeting yesterday at Jefferson and Post. This meeting was to ratify the program and candidates of the Communist Party in the coming 9.—STEVE KATOVIS: The Life and Death of a Worker By A. B| MAGIL and JOSEPH NORTHT No. 10.—THE HERETAGE OF GENE DEBS By ALEXANDER The story of the develop’ leader and his role in the labor movement . SPECIAL DISCOUNT ON QUANTITY ORDERS Rush orders for these pamphlets for use in election campaign meetings to WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 48-50 East 13th Street, New York state and congressional elections. S! VOTE COMMUNIST! This is Bishop Brown’s quarterly of one of His lectures on the greatest and most timely among cur- TRACHTENBERG rent subjects, So far they have ment of this famo working class 10 Send for a free Subscription 25 stion of Rome. Christian Supernaturali¢m. HERESY magazine, Each number consists been as follows: January, 1980, The American Race Problem; April, The Pope’s Crusade Against the Soviet Union, and July, The Science of Moscow and the Super- sample eopy. cents per year, Single Copies 10¢ each. THE BRADFORD-BROWN EDUCATIONAL CO, GALION, OHIO VOTE AGAINST THE BOSSES LYNCHING TERROR AND MASS UNEMPLOYMENT! VOTE FOR FIGHT ON LYNCHING AND FOR SOCIAL INSURANCE TO EVERY JOBLESS WORKER! ——