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' DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, NOVEMB ER 6, 1930 Page : Three CELEBRATE 13 YEARS OF SOVIET UNION NOV. 7th! DEFEND THE USSR! LES TrrSres ‘SK Ea E | im S&EOPYP Ss 4 E- Fe ay rege > Full on of Hosiery Misleaders Employes’ Tax WORKERS WILL CELEBRATE THE BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION THROUGHOUT COUNTRY NOY. 7, ‘ EINTERNATIONAL 8k EWS ISVESTIA HITS Com. Sulimov Now Is NOVEMBER 7th MEETINGS METAL WORKERS Ch ; il airman of Council | eS ° . ° DISTRICT and MEETING HALLS SPEAKERS | ’ : e | “ ” w Hits Hosiery Workers W2ll Be Used by|’: sme! BUILD RED UNION of Peoples’ Commissars r Yr fer Poke idan) New eeaiort: rail Bier i} ee ‘itchburg, Maynard, Quincy, Norwood, ble by Inprecorr.) | * dy, Lawrence, Lowell, Haverhill, Lanes- coe (Cable by Inp ‘ | rcs ville, Lynn, Nashua, Manchester, Concord, A ree er : | MOSCOW, Nov, 5.—The Presidium ‘ Musteite “Eficieney” Leaders Opened the Way 2088 Politicians ieckat tot Fight Victimization Of aig Guia team’ cnn Shows Up Hypoeriey usteite iciency”’ Leaders Opened the Way No.2 New York—Bronz Coliseum W. 2, Foster Strik AF Te een eee tae Of Capitalists . 7 a No. 3 Philadelphi: Karl Browd % Cs 4 4 U € Ss for Huge Wage Slashes and Big Speedup (By Worker Correspondent.) is Wilkes-Barre (Nov. 7) ad Seranton (Nov. 8) wb, Bngdabl Strikers Soviet Republic removed Syrzev from Pp es j chmies : ; utr ee BAL tc) Baltimore, N. H. Tallentire BERLIN, Nov. 5. — A new arbitra-| the post of chairman of the Council) yoscow. — Referring to the in- (By a Worker Correspondent) Degr Sir: No. 4 falo, Y¥.—Harugari Froshinn Hall, tio mission to “settle” metal|f People’s Commissars. Comrade! citement against the alleged Soviet * PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Conditions in the hosiery industry |_, Today in all the schools of the city Genesee, and Spring Mts; cP | ee ei ele “zx-min-|Sullmov was appointed his succes-| Gumping, the “Tavestia” declares that aL A, Pa.—Conditions in siery Yar Sew. York schuel teacuan wice| New. & @ Cleveland, 0. Slovenian Audit, 6417 St. Clair — R. B, Miore | Wages Was appointed today. Ex-min- Sul ae Henin and inhale eee are worse now than ever. z | “requested” to give 1 per cent of their a ‘ ae ee H, Benjamin | ister Brauns, Catholic, is chairman; | SF mreRete REP DEER oe ae thi nothing but a new attempt Knitters who work on two 48-guage machines on night| monthly pay for the next 6 months to ROperey ce are CRIT Eee rabati | Jarres is for the employers, Protege Uenss ack Piineatias je 1 mobilize public opinion against shifts and who formerly worked on one machine are now doing | aia the unemployed workers, Teach- wana a: Ohler Higvodrome: Hall ae sor Sinsheimer, was appointed for the | te tee ae a Belsteite imes | the Soviet Union. All capitalist twice the work for 60 per cent of the wages. In other words | ers do not realize that East Liverpool, Ohio J. Karson, Roy Mahoney | union by the reformist leaders. Ses- | 13-_ ses SINCE | countries practice dumping, The A ; nah 2 Sh 5 Dizdahr, Rabinowlts | sions begin on the 7th of November. | !905, and was the organizer of the| German iron magnates sell their their wages: have been cut down 70 per cent since the agree-| (1) This is the entering wedge for Dixon, Blumenthal kaka 1 yc | reat strike of 1912 and 1914. He was! products abroad 80 percent cheaper 5 30, i fac aken i ideration.|a wage cut for all civil service em- 0, = f+ Williams, Larkin | The workers in the Flohr, Stoc : Szarist | © yas : ment of Atigust 1, 1930, if all facts are ta’ in consideration t ier C t S » LdoU, 4 Canton, 0., Music Hall, 810 Tuscarawas, E. Flick, | and Wolf factories are still striking | 8trested many times under Cazarist| than on the home market. The Great Speed-Up. Ployees. Today we are “requested : Horwath, Parks eet a NS ite rule a nd banished to Siberia. Since | Canadian wheat pool sells wheat on fs : rife { he hosier ill districts that | to sive the 1 per cent, tomorrow it Alliance 0., German Hall, Summit & Willow Guillod, Bers | against victimization, They are out a = oneal Rumors have been rife in the hosiery mill districts tha’ lait be tanen 2 ase y ia tee Hall, 726 Jefferson Ave, “ Stephenson Patterson | under revolutionary union leader-|the revolution he has occupied im-| tne y, s, market 40 percent cheaper workers have fainted because of the speed-up on the two sab ad ha a Bee ie . eaiteuet HeAt, Dis Lalor Temple ae Fone | ship, : | Portant posts, including that of Com-| than in Canada. The accusation “machine system (introduced by |1..¢ week wrote hat 1h soma Bae CET aS Mp BE. neon | Today collisions took place outside | Mander in the Red Army |that the Soviet Union is striving to SECOND WAGE CU the Hosiery misleaders in ropean countries like Germany all Conneaut, 0. (Nov. 8), 942 Broad St, FE. S. Johnson | of the factories. Police arrested five. | |flood the world market with lows a | agreement with the bosses). |government employees’ salaries were Rat pares ile al poe Hatheray, Over gang stehe} |Siemens dismissed 36 red stewards; | priced goods is absurd, Soviet ex | ‘The speedup because of such large |out, it then went on to suggest that St. Loulx—Odeon Hall, Grand and Finney ave, =" Betaeht Osram dismissed 45; General Elec- port is 2 percent of world trade and AT SP ARROWS P | eRe c tp SURI Spokes Wine has /i¢ is only correct that American gove i gs le tric 80; Norddeutschekabel 45; Berg- | | with 2 percent it is not possible to 4 e|caused wholesale layofts and curtail- | ermment employes should contribute Uilwauket National Ave. mann 60, etc. The reformist leaders | P effect the world market materially, ments in many mills during the last | toward helping the unemployed. TT, ey SIE. Hele (ee approve of this, Hundreds of work- «| The Soviet Union exports its surp= St 1 Workers Get the habaencis | Bankers Get Money y akee’ Pullman, Roseland, South ers are still joining the opposition. {Jus products and vey often, Drea a ¥ | s 9 L i” olis, Gi +» Indi: Harbor, we very) Migs at v] s it ler ob- ee. orkKer Zu si Show Tins for paca Pe (2) New York city is the financial Chicago. Indianapolis, Gary, ‘Indiana Harbor, Delegates were elected everywhere | : & : I | which lacs a Peas as Worse End of Crisis he Gotham Hosiery Co. has dis-| center, the Wall St. not only of U.S.A. no. » Minneapolis, St. Paul, Duluth, Hancock, Ironwood today, for a revolutionary metal) Publish Figures On In-} tain raw mater ein |charged some workers, while others | but of the world. The budget of | No. 10 Kansas City, Mo. Open Forum Hall, 1218 workers conference to build a new a ae ri | from abroad. These items total four- | i E, 12th st Paul Cline, E. Peterson dustrialization 1s ‘ (By a’ Worker Correspondent) have been put on a schédule of 15|NYC is 1700 millions of dollars. Sioux City, Iowa, Workers Hall, 508 5th St. ’ Ciara Speer | union. During the last few days, ustria | fifths of Soviet imports. In the year dee hours per week, 3 days of 5 hours | Enough money for all the Tammany Oklahoma City, Okina. Merry Gardéen J. I. Whidden | 800 apprentices joined the opposition. 1929-30 the import of machinery toe SPARROWS POINT, Md.—The last | each, | Hall politicians (and the bankers— cae Neb, Labor Lyceum, bait eg ey Baan MOSCOW. — The newspaper “In-| tailed 60 percent, Naturally, theré of bait ae hee, eee | At the Master Hosiery Co. an open|¥d.) but the unemployed workers San ‘Ant mio and Houston. Texan - hts : dustrialization” publishes the follow- is a fundamental ditterenos betwee workers at Sparone Point for the| SHOP, sitls work 50 hours per week at:| must depend on charity. 12th St. Poul Cline, E. Peterson, ana. CZECH IRON WORKERS | GB Concerning the progress made PY | the export policy of the Soviet Union. workers at Srareve igi are isig | WOT injurious to their eyes, examin-! ‘The couple of dollars collected speaker. Also musical program.” 4 | Soviet industry in September: In the latter case export is a form Taenchoat ihe Coie ee nit the| ts or the lousy\sum of $550 ver | from the school teachérs wil not | clark Handiccat: eueanert «slags muee FIGHT MASS LAYOFFS) the appeat of the central Com- | of imperialist aggression and a hunt mills nere, creating a general slack. (“CC® This makes 10 1-2 cents an|sojve the problem of unemployment foal program. i ekyeay tints pugecas mittee issued on the 3rd of Septem-| for profits, whilst for the Soviet Are aE odes causing the shutting) 1)” and poverty. | and Clark. “Clara Speer, D. Resnick, Aine PRAGUE. — The attempts of the | Pe stirred up the whole of the work-| Union export is a means of acceler iB i At 2530 North 4th St the head-| (3) The money collected will go feal Program. . Vorks in| ine Class. At the beginning of Sep-! ating the industrialization of the down of important production units} rt f the A ‘ Federati A acy Oklahoma City, Okla.—Parade through streets directors of the State Iron Works in : ‘ muGh An the Wlaat tushdoes and open | Wt ers of the American Federation (into the pockets of politicians, most moving Russia at Merry Hronétch and Podbréfova to carry | tember it had already become clear) country. The Soviet Union cannot hearth furnaces, ‘The shutting dewn |i, Ful Fashioned Hosiery Workers, of it will not reach the unemployed. | Ferg ees Necaa Beeaeen nt ONeTe out mass dismiscale and to clos | that our difficulties were only tem-|do this at the cost of the capitalist of these main scources means that | U¢mployed hosiery knitters who for-| (4) There are about 800,000 unem- Houston, ‘Tex speakers, pee fee se a 14 days have | Potary. The end of September and| countries and therefore we rejected diner Maeinekee Gepentent onthe merly considered themselves labor | ployed. One meal or two meals won’t | No. 11 Elia Reeve Bloor | 40wn the works for lays likewise will be shut down, conse- quently the other departments like the hot mills, shee mills, pipe mills, wire mills and rail mills are working on a part time basis. Mills Shutting Down In the hot mills there are forty- eight mills and of this number 12 to 24 mills are shut down every week and the forces of workers are divided in such a way that every man must take one week off out of every three weeks work. Besides this lay off of @ week, the mill only works four days @ week in most cases. One week the men come to work on Sunday night and already the impression that be- cause they start up Sunday that there is going to get busy again, but to the workers’ disappointment the mills are shut down Thursday. Another Wage Cut aristocrats are now asking for meals. | | The A. F. F, F. H. W. has 18,000 | | members thruout the country, 9,000 |in the largest hosiery centre, Phila- delphia. Musteite Mis]eaders However, of the 9,000 only 1,000 are | paid up. The remainder of the | | workers refuse to pay dues because of | | unemployment and distrust of the fakers, the bureaucratic officials of the union (It was in this union that the Musteite leaders Budnez, Holder- man, Adelman and others worked out their theories of high-class col- laboration with the employers—Kd.) Obviously the TUUL must come to the rescue of the hard pressed hosiery | | workers. These workers would wel- come a real rank and file union. —FPort Richmond Hosiery Worker. che company treats the men just’ UNEMPLOYMENT like horses—if there is a load to pull} the horse is brought out to pull the w-con—and in the case of the work- ers when the Bethlehem Steel get) their orders Saturday from the main office, they get all hot and bothered and start the men to work Sunday night to get the order finished. In addition to the part time work ‘and slave-like methods of production the workers were given the second wage cut within a period of three and a half months. Two wage cuts totalling 914 per cent were given to every worker on the hot mills from the rollers to the. screw boys. Many of the workers, ‘especially the dou- blers, pair heaters, single boys and screw boys, are now only drawing 20 to 38 dollars for the two-weeks pay. i Woman Worker Begs for Car Ride (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—I was riding in the Madison Ave. car today. At a stop in the thirties, I heard a woman pleading with the motorman, “please ENDS IN USSR. Grows In Capitalist! Countries | (Continued from Page 1) |ernment which has abolished unem- | ployment altogether. Proper Lessons These great facts—the vast growth of unemployment in capitalist coun- tries and the abolition of unemploy- ment in the Soviet Union—are not | escaping the attention of the workers of the world. Nor will they fail to draw the proper revolutionary con- clusions therefrom. On this 13th An- niversary of the great Russian Re- volution ever Jarger masses are turn- ing their eyes to the Workers’ Father- jand for guidance and leadership, and more and more they determine to defend the Soviet Union against the menacing attacks of the world capitalist class. The German work- ers with their giant strides towards a Soviet Germany, are the symbol of the awakening masses. Jet me ride to-Stanton Street; please | my feet aré sd tired.” The motorman had to refuse; for he couldn’t take An Inspiration In the United States the question the money out of his pocket, nor the | chance to let her ride free, so I paid for the woman's fare. A wealthy dame, sitting in the} front of the car, who had been too proud to do this, murmured “Very sweet of you,” to me. I turned toward her, showed her the VOTE COMMU- NIST button on my lapel, and spoke to the poor woman. She told me she was a needle worker, and from the way she kept saying “Yes” and “Sir,” one could see she had spent many servile years drudging for the rich, who now were too proud to even give her carfare! ‘This poor woman also told me she was threatened with eviction, and I gave her the address (27E. 4th St.) of our Employed Council, promising that our workers would protect her if we coujd. And we will, comrades, won't we? TRIPLE COMMUNIST VOTE IN ROCHESTER ROCHESTER, N. Y., Nov. 5.—The Communist vote for J. Louis Engdahl, candidate for lLieutenant-Governor here this election was 525, Foster, for Governor, got 487. Two years ago, the highest Communist vote was for Bill Dunne, candidate for Gov- ernor, and was 185, The vote this year is three times as big. | of unemployment must be in the very center of our struggle. We must fight | more militantly than every for unem- | ployment insurance, as embodied in the Workers Unemployment Insur- ance Bill. We must systematically organize the employed and unem- ployed into the revolutionary Trade Union Unity League unions for a joint struggle for unemployment in- surance, against wage-cuts, etc. We must utilize the favorable situation to build the Communist Party. And through all our work must run this revolutionary inspiration of the great Russian Revolution. Moore to Address A.N.L.C. Mass Meeting In Youngstown, Nov. 8 YOUNGSTOWN, ©. Nov. 5.— Negro and white workers will turn out in record numbers November 8 to welcome Richard B. Moore, now on tour for the national convention of the American Negro Labor Con- gress, and to give endorsement to the Struggle of that militant organizatice: against the bosses lynching terror. The meeting will be one of the largest cver held in this city under auspices of the American Negro La- bor Congress. It will be used to rally the masses for support of the coming national convention of the Congress at St. Louis on November 15 and 16. help them. N. Y. City school teachers ought to fight this charity fake which is | really a wage-cut. —School teacher. Murphy Now Jailing Jobless | (By a Worker Correspondent) DETROIT, Mich., In this city of Detroit we have a new Mayor. His j name is Murphy and he’s so good to | us and he's organizing soup kitchens | and flop houses and charge ten cents | for it. And then his wonderful police | throw the jobless into jail and say we don’t want them in this city. But in the near future they will call on these same “bums” to fight for that democracy. But we workers ain't going to be fooled. We know | we got to clean our own house right | here.in America and will organifie | under the banner of the CP and fight against starvation and for de- fense of the Soviet Union. I urge all workers to join the C. P. the only party that fights against the bosses and starvation. We Detroit workers are organizing. We are waking up. We know the bosses tricks. We will fight, we refuse to starve and some day the mighty power of the workers will crush the bosses and their system which is rot- ten.—P. S. Individual elass fighters scattered over the country catch the signals in the Daily Worker and move as one collective force. Swing into the drive for 60,000. Send subs. Boost bundles, Paid subs will give us a 6-page paper. Send them in. Ella Reeve Bloor ‘court House Ella Reeve Bloor Nov. D.—Savo Hall Los Angeles, Nov. Nov. 7th— Di Beach, San Pedro, San Bernardino, San Polk & Turk Sts. Wm. Simow: and Lou Sherman No. 15 New Hvaen, Hermansons Hall, 158 Crown St. Geo, Siskind Waterbury, Venta Hall, 103 Green St. Geo. Primoff New Britain, Ukrainian Hall, 1 Erwin Place Sam Darey Bridgeport, Moose Temple, S40 Main Street Stamford, Workers Center, 49 Pacific St. Harry Yaris Hartford, Lyric Hall, 585 Park St. Wm. Schneiderman Springfield, Victory Hall, S41 Dwight St. Nat Richards No. 16 Charlotte, N. C., Workers Hall Dewey Martin & M. Powers Nov 19 Denver, Colo, Barnes School Audit. 14th and Glenarm St Frederick, Col Labor Temple, 61 S. Second St. »» Frederick Union Hall Cleveland Lands Blow in Campaign for 60,000! ' Some Districts Snoring | aroused great indignation amongst | the workers. The staff of the iron works in Hro- netch, 2,000 strong, went on strike jand marched in procession to Podbre- | zova where the workers of the iron | works there also struck. 3,500 work- ers then marched to the offices of the State Iron Works and sent in a| deputation. Collisions occurred with the police. Three deputies of the Communist parliamentary fraction spoke »to the assembled workers. Des~ pite the efforts of the police to pre- vent it, the Communist Deputy Vallo reported to the workers concerning | the results of the negotiations. The |masses compelled the head director ;to address them. ‘They refused to be taken in by his vague promises and | | put an ultimatum for the 21st of Oc- | tober. The workers then demon- |strated through the streets despite | |this still more clearly. Hoover, Woods, Walker and the other hokum slingers are trying to window dress the crisis. Workers lying in parks are a poor ad for capital- ism. Now Butler, the schoolmarm, fairy-steps into the picture with this , remark: “It would be a triumph for civili- zation indeed if the City of New York might, once and for all... For Tae Workin G be made neat and clean.” | Woman Give the jobless a can of Black) Flag. Spruce up. Let them re-estab- | lish the respectability of the com- | munity in which they starve. Set} |them to clear away the litter of | capitalist dope sheets that serve as! covering in the squares and parks— |the fresh air bed chambers in which they will freeze for the rest of the winter. If the workers must starve | Ite them do it neatly. |Rip the wrappers off all boss fakers! The Daily Worker will do the job but we must have mass cir- culation. Get behind the 60,000 campaign. ii DAIL wonrde, Cleveland sends in 11 subs towards | | had to spoil our day by remarking | all the attempts Of the police to dis- perse them. The action was com- | pletely under the leadership of the | | Communist Party and the revolution- | |ary trade unions. |its goal of 200 by December 1. This | is Clevelands first blow. More action | is promised next week. Cleveland | activity must also register in bundle orders. Increase the factory gate sales, Build the house to house routes. Six special election campaign editions totalled 460,000 in actual, no-kidding figures, counting the regular editions of the six days when specials appeared. There were about 300,000 extra papers above the usual run on special edi- tion nights. Even so the pressman “What happened to that million?” Well, well, a new day and a new Daily Worker rep in Los Angeles. By fostering race hatred against the Negro workers the United States imperialists achieve the dou- ble objective of (1) splitting the working class and weakening its resistance and (2) of isolating the Negro workers for an even more vicious and intensive exploitation than inflicted upon the white work- ers. In this they are supported by the labor fakers in the American Federation of Labor and by the treacherous “socialists.” One of the main tasks of a real liberation movement is to fight tooth and nail this policy of isola- tion. On the contrary the Garvey misleaders advocate it. Instead mob- ilizing the resentment of the Negro masses into a militant struggle against the real oppressors—the white capitalists and their govern- ment—the Garvey misleaders Preach a general hatred of the white race, hatred of the potential allies of the Negro masses, the white workers, as well as of the white exploiting classes. In actual practice the Garvey misleaders de- fend and cooperate with the white exploiters, as in their support of the bosses political parties, Garvey’s defense of his “imperialist friends” in his Jamaica paper, “The Black- man.”—Editor, * . . By a Seaman on the Cruise of the “Booker T. Washington.” Collect Huge Sums Yet Could Not Pay §$ 25 Fee on Cruise of Garvey Ship “Booker T. Washington” » A typical example of how the Garvey misleaders 5; capital: for a black capitalism; lords afd ladies, etc.) for ‘black titled parasites. Negro workers! Repudiate the misleaders! fpecrialist oppressors! * On the way to Miami, we overt | everything in our way, and that sure made us feel good, Up to that time | Soon Became Laughing Stock the “Booker T. Washington” was the| In the face of all this show, how- largest ship to enter the harbor of| ever, the U. N. I. A. was soon to be Miami, and she made a pretty sight| the laughing stock of the capitalist with flags flying and all the officers} press, of the white capitalist press of decked in uniforms of red, black and| Miami, who laughed in glee when tt Breezy. We docked up at Miami with| developed that the ship could not huge crowds of colored people all around. pread the illusion that the Negro masses can achieve liberation from imperialist oppression by simply exchanging white gods for black gods; white white oppressors for black oppressors; white titled parasites Rally to the revolutionary Struggle for the overthrow of (dukes, even pay the $25 harbor fee. What had become of the huge sums col- lected by Mr. Carter and Lady Davis in Havana, Kingston, Colon and all the other ports we had stopped at? This was what had also surprised the people of Colon, who had gen- erously dug down in their jeans and |the beginning of October confirmed | the offer of the Swedish match king In the last! Kreuger who offered to purchase our month of the economic year a great| total export of matches at conditions |; spurt was shown in almost all in-| favorable to us, in order to have an |dustries. The oil, engineering and | undisputed monopoly and screw up other industries show a considerable} the prices, The French banks dic- | increase of production, The Don Ba-| tate hunger prices to the Hungarian | sin in particular has fine progress | polish and Balkan peasants and now jto show. Towards the end of Sep-| seek to conceal their predatory oper- jtember the daily production was | ations by accusing the Soviet Union | raised from 70,000 tons to 89,000 tons, | of price-cutting. Further, this cam- | and by the middle of October it had! paign aims at inciting the peasant grown to 103,000 tons daily. The|masses of the agrarian countries manufacturing industries also show | against the Soviet Union in order considerable improvement. In Sep-/ to have reliable and cheap cannon- tember the production of the cotton | ¢9qger when the time for an armed industry increased by 66.3 percent. | intervention arrives. The original plans are being exceed- | The action of the imperialists ed in the electrical industry. The| ‘, 4 e | against Soviet grain will not only in- production of agricultural machinery | crease the price of bread, but as @ increases Py SOA percent. “The per result also rob the industrial workers level of production for the year 1929 | of employment producing machinery, to sst4 ny 24.2 percent higher Ba etc., ordered by the Soviet Union. in 1928-29. The increase of the productivity of labor in September is noteworthy. | The daily productivity per capita in- SOCIALIST VOTE creased 5.5 percent, a level which | was not touched at any time during | the year. It is no longer a question | of stopping the deviations from the | — original plans, but of forcing the * “ pace along the whole industrial front. | Misleaders Get Blow4 Elect No One (Continued from Page 1) BAN ON WAR BOOK. DETROIT (FP). — Generals Die in Bed, a war story by Charles Yale! congressonal district, Brown, fee Harrison, has been banned by the ceived a vote of 4,051. This year thé Detroit public library. The book) “socialist” candidate, Crosswaith, brought out revolting truths of the polled 3,895 votes. The same holds conduct of the allied armies and ex-| true with regard to the vote cast for pressed in a critical light the class) the assembly candidates in the dis« distinctions in work in the armies | tricts which are part of the 21st cone of the allies. | gressional, Harlem. In the 19th, 21st, and 22nd assembly districts, Harlem, the “socialist” candidates ran behind Individual class fighters scattered | over the country catch the signals in the Daily Worker and move as one collective force. Swing into the drive for 60,000. Send subs. Boost bundles. Mr. Carter only to have the boat tied up in the stream “unable to proceed | because of lack of funds.” What had become of the money?.Had Mr. Car- their vote of last year and consid- erably behind the vote Norman Thomas received in those districts a year afo. For instance, in the 19th assembly district Norman Thomas received 902 votes, the assembly can- didate getting a vote of 564. This year the assembly vote for the “so- cialist” candidate was 339, nearly a | half of last year’s vote for the as- | sembly candidate and almost one i ft Ne Th ¥ x ter and Lady Davis bought that ba- Ee ke eae ees See nan plantation after all? And how| The “socialst’ candidate in the 8th is it they could get away with mur-| CoMsressional nee pane os der like this without creating a stink, | C- Nines poll 7 Sun as a if it were not that all the other high|® total vote o tha Desig oe officials were in cohorts with them?| Vote was below aa eel : bias Carter, Future Assured, Unconcerned | °f 24.108 cast for Thomas last year In Miami the capitalist press|!" the assembly districts comprising Bloated over the fact that the vessel|'e Sth congressional district. This, was broke. The bosses’ paper even| Notwithstanding the huge amount of hoticed aw Mr. Carter was uncon-|™oney spent for Vladeck’s candidacy handed over thous \nds of dollars to cerned. He had cause to be uncene| cerned. He had his future assured.| The Miami Herald reported: “Carter found in the beautiful pri- vate salon on the forward deck sur- rounded by directors and private} secretaries, apparently cheerful de-| spite the problem of raising funds for | coal to continue to New York.” | Even this boss paper admitted that | the crew was more concerned than} Carter about getting the ship back to New York: | “Members of the crew, however, are concerned most with getting back | home, and are said to be reluctant to consider such delays justified as have been necessitated in each port! while the sponsors of the system! raise money by soliciting subscriptions | from the colored inhabitants to pur- | ckxse the necessary provisions.” er aa In my next article I will tell how armed men came aboard the boat | at Jacksonville, Fla., and how through | Carter's stubborness we came near losing both our lives and the boat, is and the endorsements showered upon him by the capitalist press. In the 14th congressional districts down- town, Jacob Panken made a striking- ly poor showing, getting 6,726 votes out of a total vote of over 25,000. ERMAN Box RUSSIAN, ENGLISH, G translator, seeks work—lessons. 25, Daily Worker. Sufferers from Kidney Weakness should get rapid relief from their burn- ing pains and discomforts through the use of Santal Midy. This remedy, discovered by a doctor almost a cen- tury ago, has been used year in and year out with great success all over the world. Ask your oan druggist for some, Santal , Mlidy aia