The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 1, 1930, Page 5

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)

«97% DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1930 Page Five Crew Forced to Beg on Streets on Cruise of ‘Booker T. Wash.’ (Continued from Page 1) officers of the organization were all this time living on the fat of the land. What they could not graft from the impoverished workers, they bought at the best hotels. They rode about in automobiles and took sight- seeing trips into the country-side. And in going to and from the boat they would not allow any one so humble as a member of the crew to ride in the same launch with them. ‘We were not permitted to touch the hem of their garments. No white southern planter could have treated us worse. Crew Clashes With Garvey’s Imperialist “Friends” An interesting incident occurred at the time we arrived in Kingston Har- bor. The imperialist British govern- ment was no doubt afraid that the arrival of the vessel would incite the inhabitants of the island to rebellion against British rule, and they sent a battleship and timed its arrival to reach the port at the same time with the Booker T. Washington. Both vessels dropped anchor at the same time, and both put their steam laun- ches into the water at the same in- stant. Both launches started for the pier, one containing a crew of sail- ors from his Majesty’s battleship, and the other containing the purser, the deck engineer, a quartermaster and the boatswain of our boat. The pur- ser stood in the launch and gave a good imitation of Nelson at the battle of Trafalgar, and he ordered the Black, Red and Green to be hoisted in the bow of the launch, as if in defiance of the British battleship. Both launches reached the pier at the same time, and a lively fight en- sued between the boatswain of our boat, and one of the sailors of the British battleship as to which launch would make fast first. The boats- wain beat up the British tar so badly he had to jump in the water. After that we had no more trouble with them. Vessel Libelled in Kingston. While in port, preacher Carter had another chance to grease his palms with some libel dough. We had been in port about 15 days when one even- ing a launch came alongside with government officers; and to our sur- prise, one who seemed to be in charge, struck our vessel with a staff resem- bling silver, and declared that he was arresting the boat in the name of his Majesty King George the Fifth, king of Great Britain, Ireland, Emperor of India, and lots of other titles that are too comical to mention here. It turned out that somebody had ordered 150 grate bars from a man by the name of Serrant, the proprietor of the local iron works ashore. Everybody in authority refused the blame for ordering these grate bars because it was known they were not needed. Preacher Carter started im- mediately inciting the crew to attack the Chief Engineer claiming he must have ordered them. Only the inter- vention of the officials in the launch saved the life of the Chief Engineer, the men having started to beat him up. Rica Picieings Carter Collects Big Libel Damages. A few days later, an dgent from Lioyd’s came aboard and testified that the grate bars were useless and that under the law, Serrant could not libel the boat, in fact he advised Carter that he could start suit for damages against Serrant because the bars were so rotten if we had made a fire on top of those grate bars they would not have lasted one watch. Carter rushed ashore, feverish at the chance of getting some more libel money. We understood that he forced Serrant to pay a fat judgement, al- though as before we saw not one penny of it, In my next article I will tell how the workers of the Republic of Pan- ama sent Carter $1,100 in cash and what became of it. 5,000 MARCH ON JOB AGENCIES luree Return of Fees; Seven Are Arrested Council, and by Tom Roy, chairman of the Employment Agencies Com- mittee of the unemployed. All those arrested were charged with “robbery” because they were do- ing what they could to stop the fiend- ish robbery from hungry workers of their last cent by the job sharks. Further details are not available. Worker Tells of FFraud An idea how the employment of- fices work in Sacramento is gained from the following statement of a worker, J. K. Sylvia: “I paid the Carrillo & Bancroft employment office at 1112 Second Avenue $2 fee and 80 cents transpor- tation for a job hauling straw for a certain Mrs. Britez at Lincoln, Cal. “I found no knives and forks on the table, and nothing to eat but bread and coffee, and other insani- tary conditions. As the ticket said “conditions fair.” I got witnesses’ signatures that they were not fair ‘nd came back and demanded my fee and transportation back from Carillo. He refused. I put the claim before the Labor Commissioner, White. White kept me waiting 20 days, running back and forth, tak- ing oaths and making statements, and finally told me I could get noth- ing. I reported conditions to the housing and dairy inspectors, and they made no investigation.” Conditions of “relief” are indicated by Sylvia's experience also. He states, he was down to his last ten cents, and went to the Community Chest, where he got three tickets for 30 cent meals at Harts restaurant. The restaurant makes 12 cents per meal. He later got three more meals and then was told not to come back again. The Salvation Army gave two thirds of those appearing before it for food one ticket each for a 25¢ meal at Mary's restaurant and noth- ing more. Here they make 10 cents profit on each 25 cent meal. As Many Workers Killed During Peace As In War Time PORTLAND, Oct. 30,—The toll of industry in Oregon ts illustrative to the workers of the rotteness of the boss system. In the same length of time that Orepon troops were in the world war as many workers were killed in Oregon industry as were in the war. The same number of worrying women, orphaned children and starv- ing families were produced in the peace period, really a peace that) ty passeth understanding. The same Oregon that releases such figures with the usual hooey about industrial research for lessen- ing of accidents, imprisons workers for protesting against the conditions that breed such murders. Just as the war workers killed and maimed were supposed to ke looked NESSIN AND THREE, HELD FOR COURT To Be Railroaded With No Trial by Jury (Continued from Page 1) a star-chamber proceeding was Rob- ert Lealess. He told of how he spoke after J. Louis Engdahl, the chairman of the delegation,’ was ordered thrown out by Walker. Lealess told of the order Walker gave to “throw him out.” “Then in the back of the room where we were,” Lealess stated, “about 25 detectives and police jumped on us, threw us to the ground and beat us. They split my lip, kicked me, and threw me out into the hall.” As usu- al, the Judge stopped any further ex- posure of the beatings meted out to the Unemployed Council representa- tives. Robert Stone followed. He repeated the story of the beating, and no amount of cross-examining by Boet- ien, District Attorney, could change the truth about the vicious slugging in the Board of Estimate’s Chamber. Maude White and Lester Allen, the two remaining members of the com- tion of the beatings. But this didn’t mittee testified, repeating the descrip- seem to make any impression on the judge. It was evident what was go- ing to happen. When J. Louis Eng- dahl got on the stand to tell how he was kicked out of the City Hall on orders for Walker, the District Attor- ney objected because “it wasn’t part of the case.” Nothing seemed to be part of the case that didn’t fit in with what was evidently the pre-con- ceived determination to railroad Nes- in, Stone and Lealess to jail in the same fashion Foster, Minor, Amter, Raymond and Lesten were sent over. The last witness for the defense was Harry Gannes, of the Daily Worker. He told of witnessing the beating right in the Board of Estimate’s meet- ing room. He said he watched the cops in the rear of the room jump on Lealess and Stone, throw them to the floor, trampled on them, beat them, and then kick them down the stairs. The judge wouldn't permit him to go on with the description of the beating ir. the hallway or on the stairway. Joseph Brodsky argued on the ridic- ulousness of the “unlawful assembly” charge. The judge didn’t seem to need much argument.’ Without much ado he ordered Nesin, Stone and ealess held over to the Special Sessions wher ethey are denied a jury trial and are left to the mercy of three other Tammany judges, after by “our "government so it is with the victims on industrial casual- list. , It is impossible for workers to get insurance against their dangers of toil unless they vote Communist. Only a true communist social in- surance bill will provide for the workers. The boss fears a united class that voting communist will show him exit. Vote Communist. INTERNATIONAL oR EWS LONDON. — “Manchester Guard- ian” prints in its number of Oct. 14 an article about the terror in the | beaten, and one of them, Olexa Poll- | tasc, was made to run along the| village street and shout “Long Live Ukraine under the headline, “The | Marchall Pilsudski,” while several Tragedy of the Ukraine.” It shows) cavalrymen ran after him beating the unheard of terror which the | him all the time. | “punitive expeditions” of Pilsudski Beaten to Death | are spreading and the suffering of “On the 27th and 28th September | the Ukrainian peasants. We only) cavalry detachments raided several | can reprint a part of this article,| villages in the district of Grudek giving details and names: | Jagiellonski, Ruinous requisitions “On September 14 a detachment | were made and many peasants were of the 4th Polish Cavalry Regiment | terribly beaten. The following men | arrived at Houiateze, in the district | were beaten to death: Olexa Mensals | of Bobrka. Large quantities of grain, | (in the village of Bartatow), Mikolaj vegetables, bread, eggs and milk were | Moroz and Stefan Siktasz (in Staw- requisitioned without any payment.|czany), Antoni Szandra (Kiernie- At midnight the mayor was ordered | wice) and Hrynko Szmagala (Lubien to reveal the names of villagers with | Wielki). arms in their possession. He said he | “On the 22nd and 23rd detachments knew of none, whereupon he was of armed foot police invaded the vil- seizezd by five soldiers who gave him | lage of Kupczynce (Tarnopol), de- fifty strokes with a stick. Eight molished the cooperative store and other villagers were similarly beaten.| the reading room and smashed the “In the night of the 14th a cavalry \ instruments belonging to the village detachment at Stary and Nowy Jo-| orchestra. Many of the villagers ryczow thrashed some thirty of the were beaten. A peasant named Teo- villagers with their riding crops. On! dor Czajkowski was beaten to death the 16th some Polish cavalry men | in the village of Dolezance. On the arrived in the village of Gajda, near 23rd the police arrived at Pokropiwna Lemberg. On the way there they | (Tarnopol). Many of the peasants had caught some peasants who were | were seized and compelled to kiss | going to work in the fields and beat | “the Polish soil” and to utter in- them unmercifully. They comman- | sults about “mother Ukraine.” Wlo- deered a large quantity of food stock. dzimierz Kril was so beaten that his | They caught a number of peasants, | men, women, children, beat each one |in turn until the victim lost consci- | | ousness. Cold water was then thrown over him and the beating was some- times renewed when consciousness returned. “Iwan Romyszyn and his son and | daughter were so beaten that they were in a dreadful condition, and so }were the two children of the mayor of the village. Damian Prus was so roughly handled that his leg was broken. The cooperative store was | demolished by the Poles and the storekeeper, a woman, flogged... “In the village of Hurowce in the | | district of Parnopol, foodstuffs were commandeered, the peasants were life is in danger. Many peasants | were so covered with blood and bruis- es after the beatings that they were | hardly recognizable. “The village schoolmaster, Mikola Antoniak, his wife Ann as well as a number of other villagers (names in the possession of the correspon | dent) were very gravely hurt, The wife of Michael Szkolny was forced to sing the Polish Anthem while she was being flogged....” After relating the damage done to village stores and creameries, all of which corroborated by names of the victims and the villages the corres- pondent mentions, that the library of Tarnopol, containing 40,000 vol- umes, was destroyed. BANKS, TAMMANY AIDES,| TRE-STATE MEET MANCHESTER “GUARDIAN” REPORTS ‘Severe Labor PILSUDSKI TERROR IN UKRAINIA Wholesale Beatings Given to Men, Women and Children in Villages Shortage In Soviet Union MOSCOW.—In a leading article dealing with the labor shortage in the Soviet Union, the “Pravda” de- clares that the task of supplying in- dustry with labor power is the most important politico-economic task of the moment. The end of unemploy- ment and the fact that the Labor ex- changes cannot supply the demand, does not mean that the reserve labor forces of the Soviet Union are ex- hausted. More use must be made of foreign labor power, including even unskilled labor power. Further, the masses of the poor and middle peas ants represented a great reserve of labor power for socialist industry. The production of the collective farms will be more economical than on the private farms and this will result in a surplus of labor power which can be used for the benefit of industry. This process will also improve the material situation of the collective peasants who remain. The problem of drawing the surplus labor in the villages and on the collective farms into industry must now be solved. Further, a more intensive mechanization of the labor process! must be adopted in order to cover a part at least of the gap. The organs of the People’s Commis- | )Sariat for Labor will reorganize them- selves in accordance with their new tasks. The solution of the labor- power problem is the preliminary for the carrying out of the plans for so- Cialist construction. The regulating role of the People’s Commissariat for Labor is increasing. AUTO PRODUCTION SHOWS DECREASE Crisis Deepens in Face| of Bosses’ Lies DETROIT, Mich, Oct. 27.—The, September output of motor vehicals in the United States and Canada total 230,888 against 232,840 in Aug- ust and 429,729 in September, 1929. REVOLUTIONARY [Individual Beaders Mug TO LEAD STRIKE | Defective eye sight of MacDonand and Hoover makes it difficult for them to see objects too close to the leye. Hoover sees the European crisis very clearly. MacDonald easily makes New Metal Union out 12,000,000 unemployed in the hie eel banca United States but the millions of BERLIN.—Only 73,000 out of the’ jitess on his own isle are all out of | 150,000 striking metal workers took jooy5, part in the ballot yesterday. Of this) "Workers will remark that unem- | number 32,847 voted to continue the | ployment in Gt. Britain mounts under | strike while 40,432 voted to return tne “1abor” government as well as in on agreed terms (arbitration). the U. S. under the undisguised capi- The reformists have officially or-|talist government. Only in the U. S.} | dered the workers to resume work.’ S, R. has unemployment been ban- | Intense bitterness is widespread in) ished. | the ranks of the workers as a result; The Daily Worker rips off the mask | | of the “socialist” betrayal. |from Hoover, MacDonald and all Many to Hold Out. | other defenders of the starvation sys- | | Many factories have decided to|tem. Workers, get your units, organti-| | i: ‘i ship zations behind the campaign for 60) the strike under leadership | soi eapecbassd toda? : thousand circulation. Readers, order | your own bundle each day. Sell, dis- tribute. 1 cent a copy. Conf. Nov. 4 to Form |of the revolutionary strike commit- tees. At the session of the revolu- tionary opposition yesterday evening | decision was made to lead the x strike, in the above factories. A pre.| During a recent opening of Mayor| | vious decision to organize a new|Walker’s mouth the following drop-| revolutionary metal workers union | Ped out: Soaelconneried | “There have been obsession on i A | the part of relatively small groups y for fe en ge “If a worker's child wants to tos: = ed by the police, but ppy parasites carrying out the decision to found can mash up the sod with brutal {a revolutionary union. croquet blows from sun up to down. | Historic Decision | Knife up all boss class hypocrisy with A resolution adopted by the Cen-|, mass circulation for the Daily| | tral Strike Committee pointed out| worker. | | the historic importance of this deci- ETAL WORKERS Join Campaign to Boost Daily ga Circulation to 60,000 Mark BIG GUNS DON’T LIKE DAILY Daily Worker: “As yet I do not belong to your Party. But I enclose one dollar for the Daily Worker. You don’t count on me to do my part on a campaign for the Daily Worker, until every worker in America would at least know what the Daily Worker and the Party is all about. The big guns don’t like this paper. Let’s see that the workers support their paper. —ES SOLDIER From Allentown, Pa.” sion and declared that the formation | of a revolutionary union represented the will of the masses of metal work- {ers as expressedd in innumerable meetings, resolutions, etc., during the| | period of the strike. MORE MASS VIOLATION NEW YORK.—A worker writes to the Daily Worker, telling of the mass Imperialists Plot on picketing in front of Zelgreen cafe- | | teria: “True to capitalistic form, the brass-buttoned hijackers swung their | |clubs low on the heads of defense- less workers. While their conferes ast eRe were slugging without mercy, the) Red Armies, “Advance _|blue coated fat bellies, were asking Meanwhile the New York Times’ ys, the workers, to be nice about it. secial correspondent reports that the when with each commencement of Communist movement spreads Still the song, ‘Solidarity’, a worker was eae aida ee ake aoe smashed in the jaw, by the ae | thi ickeri Armies, and that Chang-Kal-shek is eee ees ee nay’. so doubtful of the usefulness to him | eras if ia “ake 9 of his own troops to fight the Red| “And, T say, that we did ‘take Army that he is sending a division too easy’. Comrades, we can’t smash of Feng-Yu-hsiang’s men to Kiang-| injunctions unless we appear in much si province, which is nearly all con- | steater masses. At 257 W. 34th St., trolled by the Red Army now. |we should have had at least one} hundred comrades, carrying placards | nt 2 ae aes eee coerpones on high. If our workers are going} ‘m to be slugged (and there is no doubt | ‘As yet, little: good effect has: been | spout that, whatsoever), then let the| U.S. S. R. (Continued from Page 1) bands that raided oveh the border According to the official figures of IN BIG MERGER. PLAN NEW YORK.—Further consolida- the Detroit Manufacturers Associa- Hits ALTEN BILLS tion, These same figures have also| | been published by the United States a apparent from the military reoccu- pation of the Yangtse provinces, and competent ebservers declare that the bandits and Communists are so firm- ly entrenched that it will take years j onlooking workers know why. Let us| picket the cafeteria at 257 W. 34th) St. in tremendous masses. Let us| smash with our solidarity, once and | MASS. BUILDING SLUMPS Boston—(FP)—Ageregate value of building permits applied for in 55 cities and towns of Massachusetts dropped 8.7 per cent in September as compared with August, and were 35.4 per cent below September 1929, according to the dapertment of la- bor. Building permits in cities to- talled $6,965,829 for the month, an increase over August, but town per- mits as $1,001,482 showed a sharp drop. For the first nine months of 1930 building permits in cities showed a drop to $63,639,000 compared with $108,619,000 in the same period of 1929, and in towns a drop to $15,000,- 000 from $20,000,000. "lection Campaign Rally and Ball for the benefit of “VIDA OBRERA” Spanish Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of U. S. A. tion of big banks to which the Tam- many administration of New York proposes to turn over $200,000,000 that ought to go to unemployment relief, was announced yesterday. The plans were allowed to break out as a rumor, with the officers of the banks stating that “it is still in the discussion stage.” This is the ordi- nary way of preparing the market for merger announcements. The merger will result in the lar- gest chain bank system in the world, with deposits of more than $700,000, 000 and resources of a@ billion dollars. The merging companies are the Bank of the United States, Manufac- turers Trust Company, Public Na- tional Bank and Trust Company, and International Trust Company. BOTANY PLANS NEW LAY-OFF, New Machinery to In-| tensify Speed-Up PASSAIS, N. J., Oct. 29.—While thousands of Passaic textile workers are unemployed and unable to find work in any line, the Botany Mills, one of the mills involved in the big textile strike in this city two years ago, announce in big headlines in the local press that the company is in- staling new looms which will enable it to further reduce the number of workers it employs. The company is also installing the conveyor sys- tem to intensify the speed-up of the comparatively few workers it will re- tain. Adding insult to injury, the com- pany and the bosses press attempt to put over these changes as a sign of coming prosperity—bosses prosperity which, as usual, will be confined to the bosses and the coupon cutters. ‘The Botany Mills admits that while seven years ago it had 7,000 workers on its payrolls, today the number has been cut to 3,000, with further heavy reductions in sight with the installation of the new labor-saving machinery. In the meantime, the suffering of the workers and their children has reached such a point that a few days ago two workers’ children fainted in school from hunger, haying had not even the usual dry bread and coffee to which the starvation wages paid by the bosses limit them. Thousands of Passaic children are shivering in the cold in need of clothing and nu- tritious food. ‘The workers of Passaic must real- ize that the Communist Party is the only party fighting against speed-up and lay-off and for social insurance for the unemployed, and must turn | out on Nov. 4 to vote Communist and against the bosses hunger policy, Pledge Fight on De-; portation MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 30.—88 dele- gates from the states of upper Mich- igan, upper Wisconsin and Minnesota met Sunday, Oct. 26 at Camels Hall. Duluth, Minn., to draw up a plan of action for the building of militant Councils, and to consolidate the fight against the attack on foreign born workers in this country, and in the | state of Minnesota. Finnish and | Italian miners from the copper coun- | ty, Jugo-Slav workers from the Iron | Range, Swedish, Russian, Ukrainian, Hungarian workers from the Lumber camps and steel mills of the district | came to tell of how the bosses are using the system of pitting one na- tionality against another in order to increase and continue the exploita- tion of the workers, native and for- eign born. A railroad worker from Duluth told of the origin of the sys- tem of finger printing. “It originat- ed in the steel mill," where every | worker is asked for his finger print | when hired, Comradg Martin Kussisto, Secre- | tary of the International Labor De- | fense in the District of Minnesota, gave the main report. Beatrice Siskind reported for the organization committee, emphasizing that the Councils for the Protection of foreign born, A district committee was elected consisting of workers from the dif- | ferent nationalities and sections of | the district. Eric Nielson was elected secretary. Five delegates were elected to the Washington Conference, FOSTER, BEDACHT IN N.J. SUNDAY NEWARK, N. J., Oct. 30.—Newark, Passaic, Paterson and Trenton will | be the scenes of four big election rallies conducted by the New Jersey Communist Election Campaign Com- mittee on Sunday, Nov. 2. At 1p. m, in the Laurel Garden Arena at 457 Springfield Ave. New- ark, Foster, Communist candidate for governor of New York, begins a busy day. From Newark he will proceed to Passaic to the mass meeting at 6:30 p, m., Kanter’s Auditorium, 261 Monroe St. And, to wind up the day with a smash at the officialdom who denied the use of Paterson’s Central High School at the order of the silk bosses, Foster will speak at the Union Hall, 205 Paterson Street at 8:30 p.m. On the same day, Sunday, Nov. 2, at 2 p. m., Max Bedacht will speak in the capitol city, Trenton, where the stench of New Jersey's sewer graft scandals has been getting a fake election airing. Bedacht speaks Department of Commerce. For the} first nine months of the year, pro- duction totaled 3,660,530 against 4, 874,676 for the corresponding period of last year. This definite decline of auto pro- duction is one of the expressions of the deepening of the economic crisis | in the United States. It is worth while to note the continuous lay-offs which occur in the automobile fac- tories, and which has only reduced production of 2,000 automobiles. This shows definitely the systematic speed-up system and rationalization introduced, in the shops, which is growing daily. While mentioning the Automobile production, it is worth while to com- pare the sales of autos. The reports for September shows a total of 55,664 new passenger cars registered, com- pared with 64,442 in August this year, and 99,677 in September last year. This is a decrease from August this, year of 13.62 per cent and from Sep- tember last year of 34.6 per cent. Ford cars registered in September have decreased 37.8 per cent. These figures show that the sales are much Jess than the decrease of production, comparing September of this year, with August of this year and Sep- tember of last year. The Daily Wérker is better. Sell it for 3 cents, and cheat nobody. to dislodge them.” for always, the lood-sucking lecher- | call- | US injunctions—one of the most | Pager oi See tary ates poisonous tools in the hands of the aid leavened iccitas ago, is meeting | @Pitalists to starve and crush the December 11 and will establish per- | WoTKers manent centralized Soviet Govern- ment of the Chinese Soviet Republic. | ROOM TO LET — With Comrades, TONIGHT NEW HARLEM CASINO 116th ST. & LENOX AVE, NEW YORK, N. ¥. “Red Star Jazz Band” Latin Amercan Dances Tango Exhibition (ang aes furnished furnished, i Awaat nasi SS urnished or unfurnished, in cozy, CAVE IN LIVERMORE, Cal.—(FP)— Hetch} Hetchy, the San Francisco water project in which two explosions have already cost 19 workers’ lives, thanks {to immediate safety and rescue equipment, may take more at any time. A new cave-in was narrowly averted recently, and the men are | still compelled to work in danger- | | ous gas conditions and are discharg- ed if they complain. steam heated apartment. Very rea- sonable. Apply mernings to 12, or evenings. 68 East 101st Street, Apt. 3. Admission: 50c in Advance 75e at the Door SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1930 CONCERT and BALL Given By THE RUSSIAN STUDENT LEAGUE of the Universities of America ISA KREMER The International Balladist in Her New Repertoire of Folk Songs I, SELIGMAN, Pianist, and others HUNTS POINT PALACE SOUTHERN BLVD, AT 163RD STREET We want 60,000 circulation | and we want it now! | TIME IS VALUABLE Don’t lose on problems of | PRINTING | Save time and money by consulting LOUIS SMITH 32 UNION SQUARE Telephone: Stuyvesant 4010 Concerning your Printing Problems The Bosses Attack The Young Pioneer! The Post Office Department has refused Second Class mailing rights to the “Young Pioneer,” the paper of the workers’ and farmers’ children. As an answer to this attack of the bosses, the “YOUNG WORKERS’ ORGANIZATIONS! ATTENTION DAILY WORKER Election Campaign Edition—Monday, Nov. 3 Use This Election Issue to Help Mobilize More Workers to V BUNDLE ORDERS: 8c A HUNDRED TO ORGANIZATIONS $3.00 FOR 500; $6.00 A THOUSAND Take this up at your next meetin. Order a bundle, Elect Committees to sell and distribute these Daily Workers. Place your order immediately at Daily Worker Office, 50 Ir Suits and go 93 Avenue A, FOR BETTER VALUES IN MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S PARK CLOTHING CO. PIONEER?” will come out in a 16 page, 15,000 edition on its Seventh Anniversary, November, 1930. Workers! Support The Young Pioneer! ANSWER THE BOSSES! RUSH FUNDS AND GREETINGS TO THE 7th Anniversary Issue YOUNG PIONEER, 43 East 125th St., New York City WINTER IN THE SOVIET UNION! | The Theatres in Full Swing | The Russian Landscape in Full Glory aos ote Communist! 35 East 12th St., 9th fl. Special Winter Prices: $260 up ($260 return trip includes*five days in the Soviet Union at the expense of the World Tourists) Overcoats to Cor. Sixth St. ATTENTION BAY RIDGE WORKERS RED ELECTION RALLY Will Be Held at The Finnish Workers Hal!, 764 40th St., Brooklyn TONIGHT at 5 P. M. Sharp at Arcade Hall, 15 E. State St., Tren- ton, Speakers in Finnish and English—Free Admission. Sailing: Nov. 12, S. S. ACUITANIA Dec. 6, S. S. BREMEN ASK FOR PARTICULARS: WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. 175 FIFTH AVENUE Algonquin 6656. += NEW YORK CITY (TICKETS TO ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD)

Other pages from this issue: