The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 16, 1930, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1930 Page Three — LETTERS Ere cy rst Kx 2s = iki SHOPS CANTON JOBLESS COUNCIL TO MAKE - CENSUS TO ENLIST ALL WORKERS IN BIG DRIVE FOR WORKERS’ BILL Worker Killed in Rush to Get Jobs at the International Steel Co. Here (By a Worker Correspondent) CANTON, Ohio.—Workers have been gathering at the International Steel Co. (German capital) who are supposed to hire 200 men soon. Monday morning about 500 were there and 100 came to the Workers Unity Center where a great dis- cussion was held and the entire_bunch then went to 5th and Rowland Ave. to one workers’ home and turned on the gas and electricity which had been shut off, Act On Eviction. From there they went to Correll Ave. where one worker had been served with an eviction notice, ®aroused the whole neighbor- SOCIAL FASCISTS STEAL CP. VOTES Refused Recount By Bourgeois Judge (Esperanto Worker Correspondent.) BERLIN.—We have in Germany the largest extent of “democracy,” i. e., during the elections everybody has the right to vote. He or she deposits his or her vote with the name of the party he or she is vot- ing for. The voting is done Secretly, Those who do not believe it have seen an illustration of it during the last election of the factory coun- cils. I am quoting this as one of the numerous examples which ex- pose our “democracy.” Steal Votes. In the mine shafts of Shamrock there are 3,000 miners, the majority of whom sympathize with the Com- munist Party and over 400 are sub- scribers to the Communist press. However, # miracle took place dur- ing the election, when it was an- nounced that the Communists re- ceived only 340 votes and the social fascists 1,600, The workers were indignant.when they heard about it. What's to be done?,. The comrades immediately circulated lists collecting names of those who voted for the Commu- nists, The result was 700 signa- tures. The workers went trium- phantly with this undeniable evi- dence to the judge, but they forgot the class nature of the judge. He refused to recognize these signa- tures; for him.they had no meaning, RR COMMISSARIES MEANEST OF ALL Graft Much and Feed Rotten (By Workgr Correspondent) LISBON, Ohio.—There are graft- ers of all kinds that exploit the workingman, but in my estimation the worst and lowest of the bunch are the railroad board and commis- sary outfits. This gang of belly-robbers sit in their offices smoking cigars and liv- ing off the fat of the land and the sweat of the workers. They feed the men (call it feed) at 35*cents a head and charge them $1.35 a day for board, and what board. The stuff they send out is the worst, especially the meat. When a farm bull gets so old that he can’t earn his pasture they kill him and throw him in cold storage for ten years and then send him out there. When I think of the garbage I used to eat there it makes me went how I stayed well. Toughest part is that a man can't even back himself. He is compelled to eat this rotten chuck or lose his job. The fact proves that the rail- road authorities not only know about these damn conditions, but support them, Comrades, these’ conditions will not better themselves. We've got to better ’em, and to do that we must organize, and the one organization in this country that specializes in this and works for the interests of the working class is the Communist Party. Forward under the hammer and"sickle, 1 —I. N. Dangerous to Neglect painsin Bladder and Kidney s soihamecamrtes hase Laat ed af dard wo rel hoa These workers hood én the question and or- ganized a council of the neigh- bors to watch this home and protest the eviction if carried out, The women were very mili- tant. ‘ Tuesday the workers thronged about this steel plant all day, as they had advertised for applica- tions. It is estimated that 1,500 workers were there. One, Joseph Kutas, was killed in the mad rush to get in the employment office and another broke his arm and another his leg. DEATH AND STARVATION, Yet they say we are bums and don’t work. This same day three miners were trapped in a coal mine at Dalton, west of here, and all three were killed by carbon monoxide gas. Death and starva- tion everywhere for workers. Today, Wednesday, hundreds of workers again assembled at the In- ternational Steel even after the fat officials finally said they would hire no more for at least ™ months. The Unemployed Council had been holding daily meetings there and the bosses and police finally showed | their terrorism by grabbing three comrades, Douglas, Yubase and Stewart, Start Canvass. The Unemployed Council is now preparing to start campaigning for signatures for social insurance, in an intensive house to house census. We have decided to issue in one sec- tion of the city at a time the Social Insurance Bill (the Workers’ Un- employment Insurance Bill) a ques- tionnaire and propaganda leaflet, following up with personal contact and talk with the workers while col- lecting signatures and question- naires. Plan Fight. The latter we have drawn up lo- cally and contain such questions as: Are you facing eviction? Can you supply your family:with bare neces- sities? Do you favor social insur- ance? Did you donate to the Com- munity Fund? Did you ask them for relief? What did they say? Are you aware of the misery facing workers this winter? Will you fight or starve? etc. We feel that this plan is bound to be posse —A. R. Hegewick Jobless to Form a Council & Lia HEGEWICH, Ill.—Most of the workers here are about at the end of the rope. In the shops that sur- round us, most of them are work- ing on very low short time, some of them are almost completely closed down (this is Hoover's prosperity!) And yet—somehow these work- ers do not participate in revolution- ary activities of a red ‘workers’ party, that is to say, the Commu- nist Party. Of course I hear that we have a branch of the I. L. D., but the number of workers in this branch is very small—very small compared to the number of work- ers here. Now, having this in view, I think that the opportunity is here to organize an unemployed coun- cil, which is the only workers’ or- ganization that is really fighting Negro Totlers Being Won tor C.P. Platform: Detroit, Mich. Dear Comrades: I am writing my experience in the Detroit Tag Days which were held on Saturday, October 11th and Sunday, October 12th. Starting Saturday from house to house giving the message of the Communist Party to the workers where it is eagerly accepted. In the colored district the work- ers were afraid to open the door. When I explained my purpose the workers said the doors of their homes were open to the represnta- tives of a working class party. At First Hesitant. The Negro workers still are timid and told me that they were fooled so many times that they are afraid of white men who speak of organizing all workers, black and white into one organization. After. discussing the problem with them they agreed that the C. P. is the party for all workers. The worker wanted the Daily Worker days I received 8 weekly readers of the Daily and distributed leaf- lets and collected 50 cents. I am sure that our successes would be greater if all comrades went from house to house instead of donating five dollars and that’s all. No one knows about the C. P. or the election campaign except the party member himself. —SAM ™. Vote Communist! MASS AT CITY HALL, TODAY Demand ‘Relief From Estimates Board es (Continued from Page 1) Emergency Unemployment Relief Fund. 2.—Turn the City Cash and Sink- ing Fund into Unemployment Re- lief Fund. 3.—Turn All Funds asigned for Interests and Redemptions on City Bonds into the Unemployment Ke- lief Fund. 4,—Assign 10 per cent of all City Income to the Unemployment Re- lief Fund. 5,—Drastic Cut of the Salaries of All City Officials. 6.—Immediate Weekly Payment of $25.00 to all Unemployed. 7—Referendum Vote on the Workers Unemployment Insurance Act proposed by the Communist Party. 8.—Administration on employment Relief by a City Board of Shop Councils and Unemployed Councils elected by the workers. 9—No Payment of Rent, ‘Gas, Electricity and Fuel by the Unem- ployed. 10.—All Vacant Apartments to the Unemployed Free of Rent. 11.—Free Food and Clothing for School Children on the Unemployed. 12.—Abolition of all Vagrancy Ordinances and Laws. The delegation and demands will be voted on at seven meetings of the unemployed in various parts of the | eity at noon today. From these delivered to him. During the two} meetings, the jobless workers and employed workers supporting them will proceed to mass demonstration before the city hall at 2 p. m., when their committee makes its demands on the board of estimates. Communist Candidate Leads. Elected on the delegation are: J. Louis Engdahl, Communist Party candidate for Lieutenant governor; Sam Nessin, secretary of the Coun- cils of the Unemployed; Maude White, Negro needle trades worker; Fred Palmer, unemployed metal worker, and Lester Allen. Allen is ity Un-| TAXI MONOPOLY PLAN RAISES SOME ‘SAVIORS’ NEW YORK.—The Walsh report for a taxicab monopoly in New York has stimulated various groups ef parasites to try once more to keep their hold on the taxi men,| Chief aniong them are the insurance! brokers, who have organized a series of paid street meetings ($5 a night for speakers with badges) to “fight the monopoly.” Their front is the “Non-Partisan jueague Against a Taxicab Mono-| poly” headed by Kirk A. Landon) as chairman of the board of direc-| This man is president of the Cabco Insurance Co, They ‘will probably endorse repub- liean, democratic and socialist poli- ticians who answer their question- the Taxi Weekly, this organization, also running under the name of “New York Taxi Transit Associ- ation” name: these three parties. It ‘does not mention the Communist Party, which is the only one that jfights for the interests of the cab drivers, as the Trade Union Unity | | League is the only union organiza- | tion that proposes a militant strug- | gle against exploitation of cab| drivers. Vote Communist! a 70 years’ old veteran of the Span- ish-American war and other armed conflicts of the U. S. governnient, but he sees the imperialist war prep- arations, the plans of the bosses to | use the unemployed in fresh slaught- | ers and he tells the jobless workers | to fight for themselves, not for the bosses. Make Them Feed Jobless. “On to the City Hall! Join the Hunger March! Demonstrate for One Hour, Thursday, Oct.,16, at 2 cil in a leaflet distributed from its The leaflet calls on all jobless and militant workers to demonstrate in support of the demands of the hung- ry jobless on the city government, which will be presented at that time “While the ever growc?‘,.. by the committee. aire with the proper fake promises. | In a double page advertisement in| EINTERNATI ‘SHOWS UP ROLE OF “LABOR” GOV'T AT CONFAB OF BRITISH IMPERIALISTS Dutt Says Police of Labor Fakers Same as That of Imperialist Exploiters LONDON.—Exposing the action | “This role of the labor govern- of the British labor government in) | ment at the Imperial Conference is | the present Imperial Conference, | the exposure of the real policy of the Daily Worker here prints an| the labor party, that that policy is| article by R. Palme Dutt, analyzing | identical with the poli¢y of capital- the significance of the imperialist/ism. This is the first great lesson gathering. of the Imperial Conference for the! “For the first time a labor goy-| Workers. p. m.”, says the Unemployed Coun- | headquarters, 16 West 21st Street. | ishrP | ernment represents British capital- ism at an Imperial Conference. its | |line of British capitalism is sup- ported by the entire capitalist 'press,” writes Comrade Dutt. “This unity is expressed in the joint manifesto nf the Federation of ‘British Industries and of the sues of the Imperial Conference, which has been stated to represent |also the views of the labor gov- | ernment. *This unity, which is thus laid| bare at the Imperial Conference, is the most powerful expostre of the real character of the labor party | asa party of capitalism. Capitalism’s Spokesman. The labor party on the platform claims to represent an alternative to the capitalist parties; platform it speaks of socialism and denounces the other capitalist par- | ties. But as soon as it comes to action, and above all as soon as It comes to the larger empire, India, etc., | vealed? “The labor party acts as the di-| | rect spokesman of British capital-| ism, in unison with the other capi- talist parties. Boss Press Uses “Legs” and “Kiki” to Cover Up the Starvation of the Masses By HARRISON GEORGE. “A death,” —N. Y. Telegram. en le “Public interest” in the capitalist newspap- Are they interested in the fact that millions of workers are jobless and starving? Hell, no! They are interested on- in keeping them from uniting for revo- lution, Which is only reason they speak regretfully once while about unemploy- ment and lie about “something being done” or “better times ahead” In the “Legs” Dia- mond case the capitalist papers are interested in using it to make “the public” interested in it —to cover up the starv- ation of the workers, ers? Impossible! ly NURSE held the morning nev close to the sleepy eyes of the patient (“Legs” Diamond) to show him how much pub- lic interest there was in the prospect of his $8 Sou the ina —_________—_6to"hide the wage cuts, ¢___. to “get the public mind” off the fact that THE issue is the working class against the capitalist class and that the Communist Party is leading the fight of the working class, But in doing this, what a cancerous and rotten capitalist society they indirectly expose! Here is “Legs” Diamond, gunman and gangster, JOBLESS REDS JATLED IN CHICAGO Governor Holds Fake Conference (Continued from Page 1) woman worker, and an unempleyed young worker, entered the lobby of the hotel demanding to enter the conference room and plac their de- for unemployment insprance. ‘ ~ UNEMPLOYED. THE FOLLOWING NEW No, @=SPEEDING UP THE WORKERS BY JAMES No, 7—-YANKEE COLONIES A Stuay American No, 8=THE 7a UP SYSTEM The stor; of the de leader and tt is role in the 40:50 BAST 187M STREET READY FOR CIRCULATION INTERNATIONAL PAMPHLET SERIES The Speed-up and Rationalization in Industry... By HARRY GANNES Ql je Philippines, Batvensions ee By VERN SMITH The gavetoprant of the frame- ye, as an employers’ the clas ainst th By ALEXANDER TRACHTENBERG SPECIAL PISCOUNT ON WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS mands before Governor Emmerson, PAMPHLETS FROM THE BARNETT +1100 Hawaii, Rory, Rico and other. 10 dy eprsdveevebeeanden a agetes 3 weapon in NEW YORK CITY and were immediately arrested and bundled into a waiting police car. Over a hundred police were mobilized around the hotel long before the del- egation arrived. Hundreds of unemployed workers gathered there were dispersed and made to “keep moving” by the spe- cial cordons of police who surround- ed the hotel. A special detachment of mounted police pushed and jostled the workers around, refused to per- mit them to picket the hotel, took away the signs and banners and rode their horses to the workers to “keep the sidewalks clear”. An unemployed Negro worker, ex- hausted by hunger fell to the side- walk, unconstious, the blood flow- ing from his mouth. The wagon took him to the city hospital, but the workers reported that he was already dead when the ambulance ar- rived. The workers are not being fooled by this fake conference of bankers, bosses and their tools and henchmen, They do not expect any relief from this “conference” other than more flop houses, and slop, They are or- ganizing behind the demands of the Unemployed Councils and T,U.U. in the fight for real unemployment insurance and will demand that the delegation to see Emmerson be im- mediately released, sped The International Labor Defense of Chicago is on the job securing bail and lawyers to fight for the re- Tease of the delegation. BUENOS AIRES.—The Uriburu, pro-Wall Street regime has arrested 388 working-class leaders. S!. VOTE COMMUNIST! 1 as cruel as any savage, involved in forty murders, more anti-social than any can- eroized! His miserable carcass held up as the one thing in which everybody should ‘an animal nibal. Hi 00k AT KeeD be interested! UR EYES ON HIM |«tegs” Whether him. Never suicides! of worr' driven in into the count so don’t g Then we’ Taw and the stuff Even led “Kiki”, is dragged out, photogra) made a fuss over. rottenness of capitalism. “Kiki's story, Mulrooney said, w the stone was as big as a marble— that he had paid her $30 whenever he called, and last Thursday had given her $100 to buy a coat.” The girl, of working class par- entage, drawn into the night club and show girl life, into prostitution by the lure of the dollar, by capital- ist emulation, pawed over by gang- sters and now by their equally sav- age allies, the police. Capitalist emulation! Get the money! Get it for yourself! In Soviet Russia there is ialist emulation: Try to surpass ot! in doing something for the happiness of all. “Legs” Diamond’s “girl” is only one. Look how capitalism openly encourages prostitution of chorus girls and gangsters, Before me is the October 8 edition of “Variety”, the widely read theatrical paper. In an inch and a half headline across the topgef the front page it says: “CHORUS GIRL'S HEAVEN”. Then a-smaller headline: “It’s Chi- cago and the Boys—Racketeers Squander Their Dough on Out-of- Town Class—Jewels for the Hinting —Fur Coats Before Christmas — Johns that Always Say ‘Y¢s’.” Below alist of twenty-eight names—"changed a bit to protect the girls’-—gives individual testi- testimony of how it pays to hea prostitute for Chicago gangsters. Read a few samples and see for yourself: “Thereso Meridthean: Baby, they are honeys. You ought to see my swell apartment. I'd take you up, only Joey, that’s his name, might bump yah off, he’s that jealous, Boy we have aes melon every Diamond was shit. death, Crowds of reporters with pencils poised hang upon his words. the starving workers! The daily list of jobless “Workers? They don’t jacks, tear gas and ma- chine guns!” press is made of. mond’s chorus girl, cal-¢, club last March, that he had pre-¢ sented her with a diamond ring — Acres of space in every capitalist paper. How How he is near What he was wearing. he was smiling or in pain. What he says about others and what others say about © mind about The thousands ied workers, sane, pouring asylums! long as tney. 0 ~—- Bolshevik! ll applaud for order black- Such is the capitalist “Legs” Dia- phed for the front page, interviewed, And here again we get a glimpse of the unspeakable as that she met Diamond in a night morning, no matter if they cost a buck apiece. I never eat so much good food since I started trouping.” “Margot Melson: I didn’t know they was such guys as this town’s got, Talk about swell times, Say we never do come home till morn- ing.” “Viola Burns: I aint a bit afvaid to ride around in my boy friend’s car, because it’s all lined with steel, At first I was a little afraid when he showed me one of those machine guns in the back seat, but when he explained it was in case anyone attacked us, { felt better. And pres- ents! Baby, he’s liberal!” “Carol Boyera: Me and my guy has split because I saw his picture in the paper as a gangster, And in a way I’m sorry I gave him the air, as nearly all the girls are go- ing around with gang guys.” show will have a year run in this lousy burg I’m set for life, I got a John who comes in the morning with dough sticking out of his ears, and most of it is century notes.” “Irene Gray: All my life I’ve been looking for a break like this, Look-ey! Them’s real stones and that watch keep time. Worth two grand, and I’ve only known Johnnie three weeks.” “Norma Watson: I'll tell you this boy and me is awful close, and the only reasor why I’m sticking with him is becauSe he’s got plenty of sugar and he spends it. I don’t know or care if he is in the rack- ets.” “Peggy O'Day: No girl can be bei for trying to advance her- self. No, indeed! Only this is capital- Trades Union Congress on the 1s-| on tne| “Helen Ackerhow: Fellow, if this; ie “The interests of the British| workers and of the workers ‘in tne| dominions and in the colonies are} irreconcilably opposed to tne| | schemes and maneuvers of the hand- ful of exploiters’ representative! who meet in the Imperial Confer-| ence, “The Imperial Conference is the conference of the enemy. “The Australian workers are at war with the Niemeyer strangle- hold of the British money-lenders, | | and their agent, Scullin. | Here Is Real Issue. “The South African workers are at war with the racial segregation | and tyranny of Hertzog. “The Indian workers and pea- sants are fighting in the greatest mass struggle of their history {against the despotic. government that: “represents” them at the con-| | ference, | “The British workers are fighting | the rationalization policy of Mac-| | Donald. “Here is the real struggle, here is the real issue of the empire. |‘ “Against the Imperial Conference | of the exploiters we shall build un" the unity of the subject workers in the cammon struggle to overthrow British imperialism.” CITY BUDGET = OVER BILLION Wanamaker Gets Mil- lion Graft (Continued from Page 1) profit to them of almost two mil- lion dollars. The city, according to the budget, | will spend $150,000,000 next year in| condemnation proceedings for lands | supposedly needed for schools, sub- | ways and parks, At least $65,000,- 000 of this $160,000,000 will go in excess payments for lands which Tammany politicians have acquired | in advance. Sixty-five million dol- lars for Smith and Walker and Curry | and McCooey and Flynn and every | exploiting friend they have, but not a cent for the relief of New York’s| starving, for those whose weary search for a crust of bread often ends in suicide or insanity. More Machine Guns and Tear Gas. It is not literally true that the budget-makers were not thinking of New York’s working class when they | drew it up. They were, decidedly. | The police department has been al- more armed thugs and strikebreak- lowed on $8,000,000 increase over last year, from $53,000,000 to $61,- 000,000. Eight million more for prisons, where the ruling “59” hope to be able to put those workers who are militant enough to fight rather than starve. However, the budget does include the salary raises which Mayor Walker and his “poor friends” voted themselves a few months ago. And it does include the salaries that are paid to thousands of Tammany gangsters whose work consists only of mutilating ballots! at election time. But the budget makes no mention of the thousands of individuals who are granted rebates in taxes which in the long run are paid by workers in the form of rent. Let us look at a few of them. First of all there are the news- papers in New York, whose taxes are millions less than the city char- ter demands. The Daily Worker has mentioned the exact figures on this matter before. ‘Then there are Rodman Wanamaker’s unoccupied lands on Riverside Drive, upon which Grover Whalen’s employer saves several hudred thousands a year be- cause of fraudulently low tax as- sessments, Rockefeller Gets Tax Reduction. Again, there are John D. Rocke- ist emulation! And capitalist so- ciety is based on the robbery and ers, Who are tired of slavery and poverty and mean to put an end to this degenerate system with its prostitution, its Fish Committees, fascist labor fakers, “Legs” Dia- monds, Heywood Brouns, Texas Guinans, Hoovers, Tammanys and capitalist newspapers that glorify prostitution and strike-breaking! The workers, the working class, the class that is useful and pro- gressive, iaust turn, is turning, to | elected, misery and starvation of the work- } ONAL REews © BRIEFS FROM ALL LANDS | BERLIN.—In the first half of | September the number of unem~ | ployed workers in Berlin—Bran- |denburg has grown considerably. The number of workers registered as unemployed is 400,000, During the last two weeks there has been an increase of 100,000 throughout the Reich. The Institute for Investigation Into Economie Mutability says un- | employment is only beginning in | Germany. A ate [he French Communist conducting an energetic by-election in the In the first PAR a campaign in the Oth Paris District. yote, the Communist candidate, Thorez, defeated the socialist rep- resentative. Another election is to take place to decide who will be ao oe MADRID.—The unrest in the Spanish province of Galicia is in- « ing. In Santiago de Compos- tela, Orense, Pontevedra and La Cruna a general ike has been declared, In Luga also the gen- eral strike is being continued, al- | though the capitalist press reports “all quiet.” In Pontevedra clashes occurred between strikers and po- lice, several persons having been injured. In Vigo a general strike |for 48 hours was carried out, , « . * JOHANNESBURG, Africa—A report in the working-class paper, ‘Umsebenzi,” states that Comrade Elliot Tonjeni, a leader of the Af- rican people, was placed under ar- rest. He is charged with having violated the race discrimination laws against Negroes. feller’s properties on W. 53rd and 54th Sts,, upon which the most rapa- cious member of the “59” saves mil- lions of dollars every year in re- duced taxes, An examination of the city’s tax books will reveal that \thousands of the city’s wealthiest }merchants are paying less taxes |than even the city’s capitalist char- ter makes obligatory. The Altman Department Store on Fifth Ave. is as good an example as any. Altman’s four stone buildings are assessed at $20,000, which would be laughable if it didn’t mean that the difference is paid by every worker in New York. Altman’s five other buildings, on 385th St., are equally under-assessed, To prevent compe- tition, Altman’s bought enough of two blocks opposite, north and |south, to prevent any effective com- | petition from starting across the |street. On one opposite block Alt- man’s divides ownership with an of- fice building. It owns four lots, the office building one. The assess- ment on the office building has gone up since before the war—not enough, because it is a Fifth Ave. merchant who is concerned, and not ene of them pays his share of the city’s taxes—but Altman’s assess- ment has actually decreased 15 per cent in the same period. It may be coincidental that the owner of Alt- man’s is a good friend of Al Smith’s —and then again it may not. The burden upon workers is fur- ther increased by tax exemptions | granted to all sorts of religious and semi-religi-us organizations. The close link between Tammany, the Catholic Church and the underworld is again brought to light by the tax exemption, granted to the Knights of ;Columbus Hotel on Eighth Ave. and |51st St., which by no stretch of the imagination can be considered a re- ligious organization. The assessed valuation of the property is $2,000,- |000, which means that the hotel should pay about $75,000 in taxes, Actually it doesn’t pay a cent. (The subject of tomorrow's are jticle will be “Graft In the Police Department.”) Long Hours, Little |Pay in Troy, N. H. Troy, New Hampshire. (By a Worker Correspondent.) Working hours are long here, as the workers are not organized in any union. Here are a big blanket mill, a toy factory, a box shop, as people call it. One big swell guy named Plates owns it and he runs his shop 10 hours a day and pays from 17 cents for boys and girls under 20 years and older 25 cents an hour and no time and a half for overtime. The same condition’ are in the Troy Blanket Mill and speed-up also. Workers are hired and fired as the bosses please and even the workers’ pay is kept back one week. For two weeks’ work most young workers are getting about $17 to $18. And new machines are pyt in to get more profit for the boss and harder speed-up for these workers. We would certainly need some kind Communism! of organizers in this burg. VOTE AGAINST THE BOSSES LYNCHING TERROR AND MASS UNEMPLOYMENT! VOTE FOR FIGHT ON LYNCHING AND FOR SOCIAL INSURANCE TO EVERY JOBLESS WORKER!

Other pages from this issue: