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——— Page Three — DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1930 Le a ee RS =—- Fe awe Ha ‘EZ’ Exa a &S EEO wr S 4 JOBLESS HAUNT AUTOMAT TO GET LEFT-OVER FOOD Don’t Stand for This Damnable Misery! (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK. — I'd like to write you what I experienced today. I am an elevator operator, At 5 p.m. I went on my relief time to the Au- tomat at Broadway, for a bite. While I was eating an elderly corner 38th St., | Why ‘Socialists’ Are tor More, Better Prisons | (By Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa—An item from today’s Daily News says that |an old woman pulled a fake hold- | up in order to be sent to jail rather than starve. Which answers the question why the socialists demand more and better jails in their plat-| | form. | The socialists and the A. F. of L. |fakers are against the “dole” sys- tem as they call unemployment re- | lief, which would lower the workers OAKLAND JOBS SCARCER AND ON Marcus Garvey Robs His Workers oj Their Wages Native Office Help Paid 50 Cents a Week While Two American Secretaries Drew $40 Garvey Always Checked Workers as “Booker Washington” Series, Starting Oct. 28 Will Show By H. BARNES functions at Edelweis Park is no KINGSTON, Jamaica, B. W. I. ‘| cause it can well take care of CUT RATE BASIS lief Goes on (By a Worker Correspondent) OAKLAND, Cal.—Jobs in Oak- | tions are worse than ever before. | Following is a list of the jobs of- | golden west. Tight for Jobless Re-|¥ (By Mail)—Local members of the Garvey organization are thoroughly aroused over the mystery of wh becomes of the organization’s fur at the international headquarters, controlled by Marcus Garvey, in this | city. | | While the average support of the Headquarters from the American land are becoming scarcer every day. field is at present two hundred and *@4ed, then, hundreds of dolla When jobs are to be had the condi- | fifty dollars per week no one kno: what become of the money. There | is not a penny in the bank to the} |liability on the headquarters, be- f. The divi and meeti performances and these bring in sometimes sif hundred dol-) lars a week. To be correct, her funds are continually drained by the headquar agement. In addition to the $250 received weekly from the American field must be queezed out of the impoverished rkers of this colony. Familiarity with the situation and | fered in this “industrial” city of the | credit of the organization. Instead | a careful study reveal the fact that INTERNATIONAL | Socialists for Geiman Metal Strike Szll-Out! (Cable by Inprecorr.) LI ‘ollowi: Jers and will e cuts of from three to instead of six to eight | as shorter ho: The agreement, it is ould continue to the end | | | Workers From Many Lands See Advance Pravda Scores of Five-Year Plan Byyening Flan MOSCOW.—A group of 35 work- ‘of More Profits MOSCOW.—Commenting on the new program of the Bruening gov- ernment, the “Pravda” writes the delegates from Germany, FE Great Britain, Bulgar ia, Turkey and Czecho- a to the congress of the Red tional of Labor Unions, the delegates to the Interna- nen’s Conference and the es of the Friends of the So- nion in Ireland and France have made a tour throughout the Soviet Union, Their joint declaration at the end main aim of the Bruening’ n is to squeeze still higher out of the masses on behalf nan trust capitalism. Trust capitalism is not prepared to foot of their tour des the bill to bring its own finance’,in places they visited and t must pay. types of factories, works ment expresses government institutions, hospitals, | « at the situation of the |there is an overdraft. In spite of | the Universal Negro Improvement Free employment office: Cotton | the reformist illusions spread broad- | Association is today a personal fi- |pickers (2) bring blankets, 75¢ per |Cast by Marcus Garvey of escape of | nancial concern of Marcus Garvey. | hundred, no board. In California a | oppression through the creation of | The new constitution which has not, a |¥eal good cotton picker can pick|Negro capitalistic enterprises, no and never will be printed, declares | e are now 140,000 metal ers on strike against the arbi- tration decision, and in spite of the hes of the ders. Clas woman came to me. She pointed) 1. },, so many beggars they say. to a young man at a near table and | But the 5 i A A} y think that something must told me how she saw him walking |), Gone uiso) they iearerens SebEt around in the place without anything ce : : to eat: He sat down, his head bent|‘t© Workers be imprisoned, “hence | cultural institutions, etc., nyed and promises to im- the hundreds of ituation of “the produc+ but in fact the whole ght of the Bruening program is | spected, varied ae the | types with whom they spoke, work- ocialist trade union | YP Have taken place | ™% Peasants, Red army men, wom- .mat and try to get whatever is left over the table. She believed him {Re¥ ask for more and hela’ jalle| bout S00 Iba pen MAG |commerial enterprise is being ‘car-| Marcus Garvey, shall preside at all tcc, ine uinikers and police /€% WOPEEPS, Peasant women, engin |to he borne by these masses, The hungry and asked me to give him) Work a s 5 tand| Pruners: $40° per month, eoard ried on. The organization does not | meetings of the organization, “while WElk ain Abend! a workers) aewac | ets. ete. great burden of taxation, poverty orkers, are we going to stand! : anes i a few cents from her, because she was too bashful to do it. I went over and gave him the money. | Many Do Same. Ne thanked me and ran to the counter for some food. A bus girl who observed the whole scene told me that many people come during the day to the Auto- on plates and eat it hungrily, be- cause so many are out of work. $1.50 DAY PAY IN CAL. RICE FIELDS; Must Organize to Fight Low Wages (By a Worker Correspondent) SACRAMENTO. — I find in Marysville that it’s very bad con- cerning the conditions that workers must content themselves with while working in the rice harvest. Men} are working from twelve to four- teen hours a day for two dollars a day. Hundreds of workers are try- ing to get a few days work and are starving theiaselves while waiting} for thd ever elusive job. At Nelson, the law will without| any provocation on the part of the) workers drive them out of town with the usual threat of beating hell out of them if they ever return.) Biggs, a small town close by has/ the same law concerning the ter- rible crime of “attempt at trying to find work.” $1.50 Day Wages. I heard of a job outside of Rose-! ville in the rice so I hit the highway | with the highest hopes of making | myself a little stake. Arriving at the ranch I was told to go into Sacramento and ship out of Murrey and Ready. Inquiring around I found out that wages were $1.50 a day and the grub, one slave volunteered the info, was nothing short of rotten. The bunk house by the way was out in the barn, with the horses, cows, chickens and pig- eons for company. No cots or mat- tresses. The only way that these rotten conditions can be bettered is for the workers to line up in the AWLC and Trade Union Unity League. Let’s go. Yours for a Workers’ and Farm- | ers Government, —R. M. M. SPECIAL EDITION OF DAILY NOV. 7 Cities, Districts Swell Flow of Greetings On November Vth the Daily Worker will celebrate the thirteenth anniversary of the Russian Bolshe- vik Revolution with a Special Edi- tion. The establishment of the dic- tatorship of the proletariat in Rus- sia by the armed overthrow of the capitalist class power represented by the Kerensky provisional gov- ernment will be commemorated. The November 7th edition f the Daily Worker will hammer home the lessons of the Bolshevik Revo- Jution. Through pictures, editorials and stories the #aily Worker will call upon the working class to struggle against the imperialist war plot to destroy the U. S. S. R. For this Special Edition every city and district will want to be represented in the form of greet- ings. Money for greetings should be immediately collected. | for all these insults from the bosses’ | parties? No, must be the answer. Vote Communist! We demand | work for the workers and prisons for the crooks like the socialists, republicans and democrats, who are all the same gang of robbers. —?P. B. 27,000 GREET GERMAN CP. Mass Election Rally Sends Cable (Continued from Page 1) allies the social fascists, with their We pledge ourselves to fight to- gether with you for tearing up the | Young Plan and the Versailles Treaty which is robbing and starv- ing millions of German workers and which was imposed upon them by American and world imperialism, by ernment and the entire Second In- ternational. Build Revolutionary Front! With you, and with the revolu- tionary front against the reaction- ary forces of German and American capitalism. Against the imperialist war preparations and the combined attack upon the Soviet Union we will build the revolutionary army of the international proletariat to de- fend the Soviet Union and turn the coming imperialist war into a civil war against our own oppressors, Down with the imperialist Young Plan! Long live the revolutionary soli- darity of the German ‘and American working class! Long: live Soviet Germany! If all the results of the Hoover |hokum on jobless relief were poured into one heap and divided | equally among the = unem- ployed of the U.S. each job- less worker yourself. 1 Deaf mute: $18 per week. 11 Solicitors wanted all on com- mission basis. Paid Employment Agencies: even own one square foot of prop-| the old constitution simply stated erty. Even the headquarters is not | ‘the president shall preside.’ ” (Art. paper, reports a secret agreement I They declare that they had op- a ry is for the shoulders of }owned by the Universal Negro Im- ‘provement Association. This state- | jment will cause a great deal of etween the government and the hb s, as well as the socialist union leaders, for a strike compromise, selling out the strikers. 3, Sec. 3.) The new constitution , Iso leaves to Mr. Garvey’s discre- ion the auditing of books, the mak- portunity of seeing the great work of socialist construction at first hand, new factories, the most mod- ern machinery, model homes, rec- hopes to close the yawning hole in the state finances. A new burden {consternation arong Garvey follow-| ing of financial reports, the calling ers in the states, nevertheless it is | of business meetings. It states “fi- |2 Deaf and Dumb boys, 21-23 years | true. Zoergiebels, Muller, Braun & Co.) old $65 per month, no board; Chore- man $30 per month. Room. | “Sunshine and Bunk”. | In ffont of the free employment agency there is a worker who has an auto for sale for $20. This worker | was one of the many who were at- acted by the rosy picture put out tions. He sold his belongings in the East and came out to the land of sunshine and prosperity. He found the sunshine because the cap- italists have not as yet found how | to corner the sun, but the prosper- ity he found was not for the work- ‘s but for the bosses. Workers Organize. The workers in Oakland are mob- What Becomes of the Monye? | The question then arises “what | has become of the people’s money”? Mr. Garvey does not pay the offi- cers of the organization. The Chancellor is in the American field | | ; accumulating his past, present and jfuture salary. Lady Davis, the} of cheques. One of Marcus Gar-| vey’s private secretaries is now the real ecretary-Generayl, And the} Constitution says “the President- General (Garvey) and Secretary- General’s signature can draw all the Association’s funds out of the bank.” (Art. 8, Sec. 4). | Robs His Employees. The official staff at headuarters consists of fifteen persons, with a | nancial reports and business meet- ings will be convened at periods.” | ; It should be noted that it does not say must be convened, and that it may be interpretated as periods of ten years, or fifty, even. Workers Seeing Behind Gervay Mask. The workers of this colony, groan- by California Inc. Chamber of Com-|Secretary-General, is in Washing-| ing under unbearable conditions and merce and other booster organiza- | ton, D. C., with her pocket-book full | at first eagerly swallowing the easy promises of Garvey of liberation at! ,, so much per head, are now demand- ing a show down and an accounting | of funds collected by Garvey. They are connecting the shortage of funds in the bank with Mr. Garvey’s luxurious manner of living, palatial residence, swell automobiles and chauffeurs, and with his growing harem in this island. They are re- membering the betrayal by Garvey erday“evening a gang of fas- ed a group of worke a member of the anti- ue had his skull smashed | by a bottle and died on the way to the hospital. ‘BALKAN MINORITIES IN | SHARPER PROTESTS; | ATHENS, Greece—Despite the es and the efforts of the or- rs of the Balkan conference | which was to be a demonstration of the solidarity of the Balkan govern- , ments, the minorities question soon |began to play a role. The repre- sentatives of Bulgaria and Albania raised the question, and the former complained bitterly of the Neuilly treaty which gave Yugoslavia a large slice of Bulgarian territory. the imperialist British labor gov- | |ilizing for the Unemployment Insur-| total pay-roll of five dollars a week. | ance Bill put forward by the Com-| There are two private secretaries! munist Party. They see the old! whose pay is forty dollars each per | parties as parties of the bosses,| week. They are the only ones who that blind the workers with fake’ get paid. They draw their certified ‘issues, They see that the I. WW. checks each and eyery week. The is not doing anything for the work- | most the others get as a rule is fifty ers but talking. They are organiz-| cents per week. As soon as an em-| |ing into the militant Trade Union| ployee’s back wages become heavy, Unity League and are enrolling on he is fired. On one such occasion the political field under the banner | there was a fight in the office in of their Party: the Communist, which a door was smashed to pieces. ‘a member of the crew on the ill- of the longshoremen’s strike a year) The speaker appealed to the confer- ago, and they are beginning to see|ence to abandon the ostrich policy | the wolfish exploiter of his own} of refusing to see plain facts, and| race behind Mr. Garvey’s mask of|to accept the resolution calling for liberator. a revision of the treaties. Lee The speech of the Roumanian| NEW YORK—Additional proof delegates was a counterblast to the of brutal exploitation of Negro speeches of the Albanian and Bul- workers by Marcus Garvey will be|garian delegates. He declared that given in a series of articles in the;a federation of Balkan States could Daily Worker, beginning October | only be based on a strict observance 28. TThese articles are written by | of the provisions of all the treaties | lon which | Party. Yes, Brother Garvey can fight when he does not want to pay a worker his wages. Most of the four and | five dollar employees are in arrears as high as sixty dollars. Mr. Gar- | vey generally hides behind his offi- cers, but the public should know that all the high officers of the U.| N. LA. are mere figureheads in of- fice, their position is equal to that | of an office boy, and whenever they attempt to expose conditions, he brands them as traitors to the race. Drains St. Andrew’s Division. The St. Andrew division which fated cruise of the S. S. “Booker T. Washington,” and tells for the first time the crew’s story of that trip. Watch for them. Jobless! Subscribes! “I am out of work now, but T am sending you a dollar for the subscription to the paper.” J. S., Belleville, Detroit, Mich. Reader! Renew! Sell the Daily! On to 60,000! the present peace of} |Europe was based. In conclusion jhe declared, “We demand the abso- jlute loyalty of the national minori- ties to their governments.” * The Communist daily newspaper “Rizospastis” reports that yester- day Communist leaflets were dis- tributed in large numbers in the proletarian quarters calling on the workers to demonstrate against the limperialist Balkan conference as a puppet show of governments on the strings of the various imperialist Great Powers. would rate 10 minutes work on a half pay basis. Workers, call the Hoover bluff! Throw back the Hooy- er scrapings. Answer the oily parasite. On to a 60,000 cir- \culation for the Daily Worker. Mobilize the Party and all sympathizers behind the cam- |paign for 60,000. Readers, de- mand your own organization get into action, name a Daily Worker representative. See that your unit, section district is in motion. Individual readers, join the Red army of the Daily Worker. Order 5 or more copies a day. 1 cent a copy in bundles. Sell them yourself. Slice off that 60,000 ocireulation! “A Chicken in Every Pot, an Automobile in Every Garage” Such was the slogan of the Hoover campaign in 1928, What it really meant was wide-spread unemployment, wage cuts, ex- ploitation, misery, starvation,— and additional fortunes for the parasites. Smash the capital- ist fakers! Vote Com- | munist! NEGRO WOR (This is the 26th Artfd@é in the Series on Tammany Hall) By ALLAN JOHNSON Nothing better illustrates the cruelty of Tammany Hall and the capitalist system of which it is an integral part, than the widespread racketeering that permeates the food industries. Consider that there are 800,000 workers without jobs in New York, even according to the prejudiced estimate of Rybicki, head of the fake city employment agency. Con- sider that several hundred thou- sands of these are near or below the starvation line and that it is a common sight in working-class dis- tricts to see half-starved men, women and children ransacking garbage cans and slop pails for scraps of food. And then consider that the price of food, scarce as it is for these 800,000 and their families, has been sent sky high because of racketeer- ing that goes on with the approval and convivance of Tammany Hall and Jimmy Walker, the dancing mayor of New York. A few months ago, when the capitalist parties were seeking to ingratiate themselves with New York workers in preparation for the oncoming election campaign, both the republicans and the dem- ocrats started “investigations” of food racketeering. The attorney general’s office, republican, de- clared, “Every food industry that the attorney general has studied so far, milk, flour, eggs and fish, has shown the existence of an active combination of profiteers. No doubt every other line of food distribution here has its ring of racketeers. There are so many racketeering groups in New York’s food industry that I am afraid it will keep us busy at least Mayor Walker Aids Food Racketecrs to Boost Prices While 800,000 Starve a year to run down all of them.” Democratic and Republican Food Racketeers, Dr. Shirley Wynne, Tammany health commissioner, said, “Drive out the food robbers! With unem- ployment general and money scarce, food racketeers are a menace to health.” We agree with every thing the good grafting doctor says, but his eyes are turned in the wrong direction when he speaks of the racketeers. They are all about him in the city hall. They are in the White House, too, where Hoover was sent after he gained the confidence of America’s “59” by permitting the food trust to skyrocket prices while he was food administrator during the war. Even the thick-skinned Senator Borah, who is’ surrounded by all the varieties of political corruption, was forced to call Hoover a thief on the floor of the Senate for his brazen “cooperation” with the profiteering food trust. Workers in New York pay tribute to Tammany Hall and its associated gangsters for every item of food that finds its way to their tables, The milk ring is an example of how the racketeers operate, Farm- ers in the New York milkshed are paid from five to seven cents for a quart of milk, Consumers pay from 12 to 20 cents for the same quantity. Some of the difference goes for legitimate distribution —_ expense. Most of it, however, goes to rack- eteers, Gunman Keeps Milk Price Yp. Larry Fay, a well-known Broad- way gunman, is the most outstand- ing of this group. He mingles with the high and mighty of Tammany Hall and has on his payroll the out- |’ standing officials of the Department of Health, A few years ago the reiterated protests of retail milk dealers forced him to suspend his milk operations temporarily. He turned his undoubted racketeering talents to the taxicab industry, where he worked with the then Com- missioner Whalen to hold-up the Checker Cab Co. for a fortum in graft. He is now back in the milk industry with the full permission of Tammany Hall and is responsible for some of the spread between the price the farmers get for their milk and the price that consumers pay for it, Fruit and vegetables, vital in the diet of already undernourished workers, are beyond their reach in many instances because, of literal highway robbery. Food trucks entering New York by way of New Jersey roads are repeatedly held up by food racketeers who levy a “cus- toms tax” on the drivers. When the drivers are recalcitrant they are either badly beaten, shot or the food is ruined. Sometimes all three take place. The tax is imme- diately passed on to the workers, with an additional increase because publicly that he was putting his entire staff of 144 inspectors to the task of ferreting out racket- eers, Walker immediately de- clared that the inspectors would do nothing of the sort, that the duty of inspectors was to inspect food and not racketeers. Walker need not have been so fearful of either Wynne or his “investiga- tion.” It is true that Wynne is waging {an underground campaign for the mayoralty and would do anything to embarrass Walker, but it is like-; |wise true that Wynne has known) these conditions have always ex- isted / Furthermore no one knows better than Wynne that every inspector on his staff without |exception is in the pay of the rack- eteers and that the investigation would have petered out even if Walker hadn’t crippled it before it started. Probe Dropped “For Lack of Funds” As for the “investigation” started by the republicans, that too went the way of all capitalist investiga-) | concerning the situation in the So-/| the | ters in which the crew was liberally of four and a half milliard marks to be laid on the shoulders of the apart from the cut of 952 millions represented by the cutting down of the salaries of the state officials and the cuts for the federal states and the municipalities, the cuts in unemployed and health benee fits, ete. The expenses for social and cultural needs will also be cut. Housing funds will be cut to a |minimum and new mass taxes will reation houses and s . Whilst a tremendous economic crisis is shaking the outside world, a tremen- dous constructive work is going on in the Soviet Union where unem- ployment is non-existent, where the situation of the workers and peas- ants is improving from day to day and where rapid progress is being made, The delegation consists of work- ing men and women from 10 capi- . talist countries and the delegates | be introduced, compare the situation of the workers| “Bruening’s program is @ proe in the Soviet Union with the situa-| gram for the plundering of the mil- tion of the workers in the capital-| lions, workers, peasants, employees, ist countries. The conclusion they | als, and tradesmen, It is no draw is that the workers and peas-| accident that the whole bourgeois ants of the capitalist countries|press approves of the program, should follow the example of the Only the right wing nationalist Russian workers and peasants as/Press continues to mutter about quickly as possible, Similar results| “the chief cause of all evil,” the could only be produced under the) Teparations burdens. dictatorship of the proletariat. “The social fascists pretend to be Thanks to the Communist Party the / in opposition, although they lose no workers of the Soviet Union had! opportunity to impress on Bruening been educated in a spirit of thorough | that they are ready and willing to internationalism. |join the government. The only The declaration then dealg with|complaint of the social democratice the national minorities whose prob-! press service is that the Bruening lems have been so magnificently | program will not accomplish its solved under the dictatorship of the | aim, i. e. the revival of trade and proletariat which was the most| ‘e ordering of Germany’s finances. powerful lever for the emancipation| “The publication of the program of the peoples from national oppres-{ was preceded by a clear warning to sion. The declaration refutes the|the Reichstag that Article 48 gave calumnies of the social democrats | the government the power to ignore Reichstag, if necessary. In viet Union and appeals to the work- | other words the hunger program ers of the world to abandon these} will be put through by dictatorial false leaders. In conclusion the So-| means, if necessary. German quota- viet Labor Unions are thanked for! tions on the international money organizing the journey and making, market have fallen. The crisis, a the studies of the delegation pos-| product of the world crisis, deals sible. terrible blows at Germany’s key in- dustries, and in this situation the | German trust bourgeoisie-is out on G ARVEY EXPOSED the ramp to save itself at the ex- ia |pense of the German masses. The Seaman on Booker T. ; ny supported by the national and social Washington Writes fascists. Our brother party, the eae ee | Communist Party of Germany, is dollars extracted from Negro work-) ers in the United States, Central| America and the West Indies as in-| failure. The crew was slandered right and left at the meetings of the Univer- cials, experienced in passing the buck, had prepared their own alibi and the death of the crew by num- |double pressure of the Bruening When the Black Cross Navigation) ,obilizing the masses for a political vestments and contributions, the of-| sal Negro Improvement Association erous expensive cables to headquar- | national fascism and social fascism, | for the overthrow of the bourgeoisie }and the establishment of a prole- tarian dictatorship!” | program and the Young Plan con- |demns millions to poverty and pri- vation. “Bruening’s program is the pro- ;gram of German trust capitalism and Trading Company, Marcns (ar |mass strike against the robber pro- ‘ 4 f t italism, i blew up with the sale at auction of |S" rust capitalisin,| Ageiies its steamship, the “Booker T. Wash- ington,” and the loss of millions of ficials of the company evaded the! rising wrath of the plundered work- ers by adroitly making the crew of the “Booker T. Washington” the scapegoat for the entire fiasco and called to hear a report on the cruise to the West Indies and the events} leading vp to the loss of the boat at aucticn Even before the return) _' of the vessel to New York, of |Remember Katovis, Levy, Gonzales, Weizenberg! slandered and blamed for every- thing from the failure to buy coal to the prolonged and costly stay in West Indian waters. And so suc- cessful were these officials in di-| recting the resentment of the They have been murdered by Tammany, by the Garvey gang, of the inconvenience to the truck drivers, Leonard Wallstein, counsel for the “reformist” Citizens Union which is trying to “improve” Tam- tions when the attorney general’s office announced that “a lack o! funds necessitated that the inquiry be dropped.” Why didn’t the at- masses in the U. N. I. A. against the crew that the members refused | to hear the crew’s side of the story. Now, for the first time, the crew's | side of the story will be told in a “by the A. F. of L. underworld. Charles Solomon, “socialist” can- didate for state senator in the 8th District, Brooklyn, was the many Hall by pleading with it not to graft so openly, has said. “There appears to be a real question whether the city administration is doing all it can to stamp out rack- eteering in the city’s food indus- tries.” That is the way a “reform- er” would put it, WALKER PROTECTS RACKETEERS. The truth of the matter is Mayor Walker has spent a good deal of time protecting the food racketeers from _ interference. ‘When Commr. Wynne announced KERS! VOTE COMMUNIST! torney general use some of the 500) million dollars that Tammany steals | annually from the workers of New| York City? The racketeering that Walker re- fused to stop and that the republi- cans considered too “hot” to touch is rampant today, and responsibility for a large part of the misery that is grinding the lives of New York workers and their families can be rightfully laid at the door of Tam- many’s City Hall, where last week one of the jobless committee was almost beaten to death for calling Walker’s attention to the fact. series of articles, written by a mem- ber of the crew, and which will ap- pear in the Daily Worker begin- ning October 28th, injunction lawyer for Miller's Can’t Stop Now “Have read the Daily Worker from the first day it was pub- lished. I am behind in my sub. Am still out of work and don’t know where I will go from here. Am enclosing a dollar.—E. P. Chicago, Il. Readers! Renew! Daily! On to 60,000! Do not vote for the murderers of our comrades! On with the ham- mer and sickle! Vote Communist! Sell the VOTE AGAINST THE BOSSES LYNCHING TERROR AND MASS UNEMPLOYMENT! VOTE FOR FIGHT ON LYNCHING AND FOR SOCIAL INSURANCE TO EVERY JOBLESS WORKER! ¥