The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 19, 1930, Page 3

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Page Three LE ETEe RS ‘x’ Ea = SHOPS EF Fe acy res eek: Half Force at Studebaker’s Laid Off Indefinitely; Jobless Crisis Acute in South Bend; Mayor Dodges Demands Erskine, President, After Huge Layoff Goes to Conference to Fight Jobless Needs Unemployed Council to Continue Fight for Real Immediate Relief From the City (By a Worker Correspondent) SOUTH BEND, Ind.—On Nov. 12th just one day after Armistice Day, the Studebaker Motor Corp. shut down more than half of its plant “until further notice.” Although the bosses told the workers that work will start December 2nd every worker has his doubts about it. This happens just at a time when Mr. Erskine, the pres- ident is boasting through the local press that he is preparing to go to the Indianapolis conference for the fake relief of the unemployed, a conference called by Gov. Leslie, which will be held sometime the first part of November. Fully Half Force Fired. The shutting down of half of the Studebaker plant means that these workers are virtually discharged and thrown among the vast army of un- employed workers to starve and freeze this winter. The unemployment situation is acute here. Men and women workers are walking the streets begging and women workers are offering to sell their bodies for a piece of bread for themselves and children. One young woman worker’ walked into a store and instead of buying something she offered to sell her body in order to buy milk and shoes for her father- less children. No Real Relief. The capitalist papers are full of unemployment plans for relief but there is not a concrete step being taken to provide jobs for the 20,000 unemployed workers, who walk the streets day and night, hungry, sick and cold. They have here social welfare com- mittees and the Salvation Army but the crooks at the head of these or- ganizations only talk and fool the workers. “Investigating” Bunk. The school children came home the other day with cards from their teachers, regarding unemployment. The card says: “You are helping the South Bend public schools to pro- vide the social welfare committee with information regarding unem- ployment.” Every worker here knows that the number of jobless workers in South Bend is well above the 20,000 mark. And all this investigat- ing by the ruling class to sidetrack the real issue—unemployment insur- ance. Make Demands on City. * The Unemployed Council sent a delegation of 5 members to see the mayor last Saturday, but “his royal highness” hearing that the workers were coming did not show his nose up at the City Hall all day. The Unemployed Council and the unemployed workers generally are determined to put up a strong fight against charity and staggerism in South Bend and that is evident by the ever increasing numbers at the Unemployed Council meetings. Fellow workers!- Demand and fight for real unemployment insur- ance at the bosses’ expense. Join the Unemployed Council and fight evic- OREGON BOSSES FIGHT JOBLESS Committees Without Number, Promises (By 2 Worker Correspondent) PORTLAND, Ore.—A political move hides behind a fake effort to relieve unemployment in Portland. The workers of Portland are not to be de- ceived by the so-called committees, official and otherwise. ‘The mayor's committee of “civic leaders,” @ semi-official group, have met and all the prominent business men and politicians have been either telling how they have not cut wages (much), or laid off any employees since the crisis set in, or they have been crying how hard it is to plan “public works” relief with the tax conservation committee to check on them. This tax conservation committee is all that worries the grafters as they do not want to have disbursed the proceeds of their thievery any further than they can help, Committees Galore With the addition of this latest Zommittee Portland is feeling like the seat of Hooverites. Seven commit- tees, some of them three months old, have been appointed by different or- ganizations to co-operate with the mayor to “relieve” unemployment. ‘The governor of the state is not as deceitful as most grafters are, as he has merely called a meeting to form @ committee to stimulate business. ‘They will continue their efforts to make Oregon an economic ilsand by yodelling, “Buy in Oregon,” with ‘what, workers? “Friend of Labor” The newly elected governor, Julius Meier, “friend to labor,” announces thrqugh his store officials that they have not cut a single wage. They couldn't, or the girls in their employ 450,000 CHI. JOB- LESS STARVING Registration Bunk Is Bosses Trick (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Ill—On Saturday, Nov. 8, the unemployed of Chicago were registered as per instructions of the Governor Emmerson Committee for Unemployment Relief. This commit- tee is like all the other committees of the bosses. The sole purpose of such a committee is to fool the work- ers into thinking that the bosses will de something for them. The Unem- ployed Councils of the Trade Union Unity League distributed leaflets to the workers, exposing the fake regis- tration and asking the unemployed workers to join the unemployed coun- cils and organize and fight for real unemployment relief. A mass meet- ing was called for 3 o’clock in the afternoon at the various headquar- ters of the unemployed councils. Get New Members. ‘The meeting called at 409 S. Hal- sted St. was rather well attended and about 3 o’clock a young woman, who said she was a news reporter for the Evening American, came in and wanted to stay and make a re- port for the paper for which she is working. Of course we let her stay and One of the comrades told her in plain words that she could stay, but when she made her report that she should tell the truth. She began arguing about the “suffering” of the Russian workers. We got 10 new members for the unemployed council. 450,000 Jobless In Chicago. ‘We watched the papers for the re- port, but as yet there has been noth- ing said of the meeting, and we're sure there won't be. The capitalists are working overtime to fool the workers. Here in Chicago there are at least 450,000 unemployed workers and all that the city administration has done for the unemployed is to make all sorts of promises. In the meantime they have opened the old county jail for the workers to sleep in, Thousands of workers are sleep- ing under Wacker Drive, in old dis- carded buildings and huts made of tin and boards from the railroad cars. During the warmer weather the un- employed slept in Grant Park. So many slept there that the park is now called “Hoover Hotel” by many work- ers, Workers See Fake Schemes. The capitalist papers announced that 200,000 workers were going to register, but at the end of the regis- trations there were only 70,000, which means that thousands of workers know that this registration was not going to do them any good and did not bother registering. ‘The workers are very much dis- gusted with the state of affairs and this winter will see thousands in dem- onstrations against hunger. The workers are beginning to realize fhat they must fight against charity and demand real unemployment insur- ance as proposed in the Workers’ So- cial Insurance Bill. This bill must be popularized and get workers to sign the petitions demanding that this bill shall be passed. Organize squads to go from house to house and get workers to sign! Appeal to employed workers to sign and thus draw in all the workers in the strug- gle for unemployment relief! Must Pray, Sing tor Hours to Get Cottee, Bread (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—No job, no money. I went along Bowery St. I saw a man carrying a sign. “Unemploy- ment relief” 5 and 10 cents meal Y. M, C. A..” and this is what I got for 10 cents: A cup of hot, muddy water and a piece of rotten cake. This is what the Y. M. C. A. calls unemployment relief. When I got through a man said to me: What's the matter, is it cold outside? Get out. At 7p. m. I saw a long line of peo- ple near a Bowery mission house. I joined: the breadline. At 8 o'clock the doors were opened and we got in. There we were told to pray, but we didn’t know any prayer. At this time they gave us a book to sing from, but we didn’t know how to sing. Must Sing. ‘The chaplain got mad and said: Everybody stand up. If anyone of you don’t want to sing you will not have anything to eat tonight. Other- wise, if you don’t want to pray, get out of here. So everybody got up and started to sing and it looked like a crazy house, each one was singing in his own way. Then we were told to stop singing and six preachers, one after another, two men and four women, very Well dressed, necklace and ring, came up. One speaker said: What is your suf- fering in comparison with Jesus Christ’s suffering, and so on. Religious Bunk. Speaker No. 2: Everybody suffers in this world because we doubt be- lief in god. Speaker No, 3: there are some guys who are telling you to unite, organize and to build a new society on a different basis without belief in god, but they are hypocrites and fakers. You must not forget that god is the foundation of every- thing in this world and he went on to speak about wisdom. Two hours after we went down in the cellar and we got a cup of coffee and a piece of bread. I think it’s good wherever there is a breadline to distribute some leaf- lets about the Workers’ Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill. —Unemployed Worker. Out of a job? Got spare time? ‘You can earn a little money and take a crack at the system by sel- ling Daily Workers. Come up and we will explain. 35 East 12th St. I went there right away | (Continued from Page One) | against the unemployed, a wage| slashing drive has taken place and is being intensified. Millions of work- ers are working part time and are near the hunger line. The unorgan- | ized workers have had their wages | cut mercilessly, but now the cam-| paign will be directed also against the orgsnized workers. The employ- ers are determined to lower the wages and conditions of the entire working class, to speed them up ruth- | lessly and thus throw more hundreds | of thousands into the army of the/ unemployed. | Thus the struggle of the unemploy- ed and employed workers becomes 2| joint struggle—one that must be| carried on with all energy and mili- tancy. The foreign born and Negro work- ers have beeh the objects of special attack by the capitalists and the gov- ernment. The militant foreign born workers face the threat of deporta- tion for struggling for working class demands. The Negro workers face | a fearful lynch-terror at the hands of the capitalists, who hope to crush the rising spirit of rebellion among the Negroes and to deepen the chasm between the white and colored work- ers. The workers must unite against these attacks of the bosses. To get out of the crisis, the gov-| ernment is making feverish prepa- Soviet Union. Fearing the splendid} achievement of the Five-Year Plan, which has abolished unemployment, increased wages and lowered hours, | while socialist industry and collec- tive farming are being developed in a phenomenal manner, and while, at the same time, the crisis is grow- ing in the capitalist and colonial countries, the capitalists think they can avert the coming clash with the workers by pointing to the Soviet Union as the cause of the world cri- sis. Millions of workers will refuse to accept their propaganda, and will defend the Soviet Union against their attacks, We workers are determined not to starve, but to fight, It is mad to believe that we who: produce all the wealth will agree to starve in the richest country of the world. We demand unemployment insur- ance to be paid by the government and the bosses, and administered by the workers. We demand gthat a national insurance fund be cre- ated out of the war funds to which} shall pe added a tax on all incomes above $5,000 and properties above $25,000, and that each unemployed worker shall receive $25 a week and five dollars for each dependent. We want no capitalist charity. We re- ject the stagger plan of Hoover and the A. F. of L. leaders. We want none of the fake unemployment in- surance schemes of the socialists. ‘The campaign for unemployment in- surance must be intensified. To this end, a conference of na- | ment. Unemployment Insurance Must Be Won! York City on November 11, and has launched a national signature cam- paign for the Workers Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill. This confer- ence was attended by delegates from twenty national workers’ organiza- t$ions and elected a National Com- mittee of twenty members. Local conferences will be held in all in- dustrial centers before December 15. By January 15 the local conferences will elect a quota of delegates, who| will meet in Washington, D. C. about January 15, to lay the bill before the | U. S. Congress and demand enact- | Signature lists will be issued and the Bill will be backed up by a/ million or more signatures of unem- | ployed and employed workers. The workers must have no illu-| sions as to this demand for unem- | ployment insurance. Only through the most militant struggle, by dem- onstrations, etc., will the workers procure any relief. ThTerefore, the) campaign for signatures will be coup- | led with struggles for local relief, for the prevention of evictions, etc. with | strikes against wage cuts, struggles against speed-up, for the seven-hour | day, five-day week. The unemployed councils and revolutionary unions | paign will have a soundly trussed organizational structure, The National Committee’ calls on rations for war, especially against the | the workers to condemn and expose all schemes of charity coming from Hoover to Green and Norman Tho- mas. It calls on the workers to de- mand unemployment insurance. Around this issue the millions of the workers of this country, foreign |born and native, colored and white, | unorganized and organized, young |and old, must unite. Workers of the United States! DON'T ‘STARVE — FIGHT! Let the capitalists and capitalist gov- ernment know that we workers no longer will be fooled by their talk. We want unemployment insurance to fight for it! CHILD LABOR HIGHEST IN “SOCIALIST” READING READING, Pa.—Fifty-one per cent of the youth between the ages of 14 and 16 are working in the “socilaist” percentage of child labor than any- socialist party can be expected to do is gather figures on child labor. JOBLESS WORKER GIVEN SIX MONTHS. CHICAGO, Ill—Influenced by a boss judge, a jury came back with a verdict of guilty after seven hours of “deliberating.” The “criminal” was James Sammons, found guilty of va- grancy. He will be given six months. The judge impressed upon the jury the fact that this trial will set a precedent. Fro mnow on all “va- tional organizations was held in New grants” will be given six months at least. New York and Seattle Show Best Gains In Campaign For 60,000 Circulation The day to day circulation of the Daily Work- er is beginning to swerve upward as the cam- paign for 60,000 readers" begins to gain momen- tum. This week's tables show the first distinct gains of the drive. The total Daily Worker cir- culation has increased about 1500 in the period between Nov. 6 and Nov. 15, New York Circulation Increases by 716 Daily —A Chicago Jobless Worker. PAE Foe Sa SLTEe aie er oreo would have to become full time pros- titutes instead of part time as they are now. Meier and Frank can not reduce wages of $9 a week, Oregon is like the rest of the Unit- ed States and the only unemployment relief is for the workers to form a Trade Union Unity League Unem- ployment Council and support mili- tantly the Communist Party's de- mand of social unemployment insur- ance. The reactionary bosses here will not listen to anything that’ may be said by workers unless it is said with a real militant union’s voice. Workers, join the TUUL and fight the fake unemployment relief meas- ures of the boss politicians. Support the Communist Party in its demands for the workers. An increase of 716 circulation registered in New York where the sections have commenced aetivity and where the Red Byilders New Club has factor in circulation. never ordered papers before have be; Dailies. Some sections sizeable increases in their orders. 6 from 101 to 125; Section 4 from 14’ Many units which have in New York have made Section 2 in- creased its daily order from 215 to 347; Section has been units and become a gun to sell 7 to 164, The coming Sunday in New York will be Red Sunday. Substantial increases in circu- lation are expected to result. Seattle Circulation diineas ie thaak Boosted by 235 = since then Seattle increased its average daily circulation gee te ee ee ii by 235. Similar gains are shown in Pittsburgh, 2y is Pa 5 ° 3 : a, £E Connecticut, Philadelphia, Minneapolis and ‘ 33 Bp 2. 2 33 35 2| after the f Kansas City. ; Some districts actually selected the period of | Boston’ ...... 67 66 «49 «107 «133 «17848 the 60,000 campaign to decrease their circulation. |New York Cit; 851 5189 857 5725 6040 6582 542 District 1, Boston, lost 24; District 4, Buffalo, Parga i ah 309 o on ws lost 10; District 8, Chicago, lost 19; District 13, | pittsburgh |. 130 83 128 196 213 324 111| In this California, lost 12. Youngstown . 25 21 25 56 46 81 83! challenges The following districts have sent in no reports | Cleveland... bod td > 858 461 632171 on the campaign: District 5, Pittsburgh; District | Gerre'*_ nd eee ab a) chien ace at 10, Kansas City; District 11, agricultural; Dis- | siiwaukee , 80 203 «82 «248 «883 Beha trict 13, California; District 19, Denver. St Loals nu 100 110 102 130 310 212 = 2] hae ts ti Here are the tables showing circulation | Chlesge > a ne ee changes between Nov. 6 and Noy. 15. Study gt. Pout ..... 65 8 6 65 149 129 —20) ceived so them carefully: City 1s 18 19 © 31 45 «6 65 S71 65 «636 «436 «701 268) ; “6 47 50478780 Summary by pistricts, 250 307 245 (378 647 83 24 8 120 99 «115 99 «219 «214 ~—5! section to | Oakland 9 1 78 125 154 208 + Denver .. 68 42 «466 «42 «1051088 Okla, City . 6 100 106 & He Le orale the Red in —10 i H 5. Pittsburgh | 520 122 584 280 642 1 Miscellaneous, Foreig: n Chicago. Y 838 B43 BOR 1 Detroit sont sky ame ‘| Circulation Not Included Chi 1270 2366 1271 2386 3636 1 F senee aats' 800 8s 8S 808. TSS $o| It should be noted in the above tables that Ly one bide ES rhe cia + 30) miscellaneous subscriptions, foreign subscriptions 12, Seuttle , 287 450 201 690746 235| and special edition orders are not included. are insuffi 13. California | 700 740 688 740 1440 2 15. Connecticut 203 223 205 184 4296 47| ‘The figures for Cleveland, which show an in- 16. South ...., 67 68 68 68 135 1 A Hr) oe 100 498 201. 48d. a8 986 j| crease of 566 are not correct because of an error the United 18. Denver | 2 i . 7 125 180 ~ 5| in the Nov. 6 figure on which the increase Is Unorganized _A5 _18 _85 _18 _108 _10 __| based. The present figure of 1947 f 8643 13963 8743 15419 22600 24257 1651 uh ig Overdue Total aAAN In one aes Sen ey patter as should and unabli is correct, must be built up, so that the cam- | and relief NOW — and we intend} city of eRading. This is a higher! where else in Pennsylvania. All the| Summary of Subscriptions November 6 Overdue Subscriptions . 4829 Paid-in-advance Subs . 3814 Total 8643 November 13 Paid-in-advance Subs . 197 New Subs and 131 Renewals in Week ceived 197 new subscriptions and 131 re- newals which shows the biggest increase so far in the mail circulation but not as much subscribers were dropped off the list during the week either because of moving and leaving no address or because they were far overdue The table indicates paid-in-advance subscri tions are increasing and that overdue subs are going down, which is what it should be. ever, figures on subscriptions which are overdue are complete only to November 1. due to the fact that expirations are compiled by the month. For this reason the figures ap- pear better than they are. Complete List of All Challenges Is Shown Our reports from now on will show exactly challenges which are all that have been re- Chicago challenges Detroit; Buffalo challenges Connecticut; Buffalo challenges the rest of District 4; Milwaukee challenges the St. Louis the bundle orders; Oakland challenges Boston on percentages; Akron, Canton section chal- Ienges Section 2, Cleveland; Cleveland Sec- tion 3 challenges the Toledo, Ohio, section; challenges the Daily Worker Boosters Club of Circulation Gains Insufficient For Drive The circulation gains, although encouraging, must be speeded up. Factory sales, house to house routes must be built up in every city in This means that the Party, workers’ organiza- tions, red workers must prs into the campaign for mass circulation, ‘ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1930 INTERNATIONAL Ra Ews FS See ee an EER Pratt Calls for a Basic Fight on the Soviet Union (Continued from Page One) Your conference of the Friends of the Soviet Union, in Irving Plaza Hall to- morrow at 6:30, followed by a mass meeting there at 8 p. m, at which Anna Louise Strong, just back from the U. S. S. R, will be a main speaker. The heart of Pratt's remarks is as | fellows (quoted from the capitalist press) : Avoiding War! “Make no mistake. If we wish to avoid war we can in all possibility do so with a fleet second to none. Without it we must be forced in against our wishes.” Discussing what he characterized as “that group in whom the seeds of anarchy and rebellion reside, that believes in war, revolution or any means which we consider fair or | foul, to spread its own conception | of government and social order | throughout the world,” he said: “The world in which they live and | the one in which we live are so | totally different that the two can | not exist side by side indefiniaely | without great compromise on one | side or the other, or war ultimately | may result. They may openly pro- | claim war or any means to attain | their ends, and if that be so then some day it may fall to our lot to meet the challenge. “It is useless to hide our heads | in the sand like the ostrich and think we are safe fom destuction in the face of such a detemined, subtle policy.” NERAL STRIKE SPURS REVOLT (Continued from Page One) Times from Madrid, dated Nov. 17, says: “Despite the fact that social- ists had asked members in other cities not to strike, the Sindicato | Unico accomplished a fairly com- plete cessation of normal activity in| Barcelona, its original stronghold.” | The Communists are urging the workers to demand increases in wages, ard immediate relief for the unemployed. In order to aid the fascist regime, and direct the mass) discontent into channels desired by the republican bourgeoisie, the so~- cialists are doing everything they \can to break the militancy of the workers. Referring to the Sindicato Unico, which the New York Times accuses of being Communist and opposed to «+ 4673 4070 8743 Subscriptions ... week the Daily Worker office re- be expected during a campaign. 140 le to continue. How- Overdue subs are shown as paid-in-advance subs A drop will appear irst of the month. campaign an absolute check on all will be kept. In this way we shall determine which challenges have substance and | ranspiring regarding the following far. Philadelphia challenges Detroit; equal the number of subs and double Builders News Club of New York cient. The tempo of the campaign, States. Subscriptions must increase. | formed between the right and left- USSR WORKERS DRIVE AGAINST ALL BRANDS OF OPPORTUNIST ELEMENTS Warn Bucharin He 1s FISH TO PROPOSE Playing Criminal ANTI-LABOR SPIES Game MOSCOW.—The newspapers in the | |Also Demands Deport- ing of Communists Soviet Union continue to print the comments of the Party organizations on the latest activity of the right and left-wing factionalists. A meeting of | Party workers in Charkov adopted a (Continued from Page One) resolution expressing approval of the | ready decided upon in the beginning. expulsion of Riutin, Slepkov, Nuss!- |tn fact, it is doubtful if it was even nov and Kavraiski from the Party |a useful fake to Fish, for there re- and calling on Comrade Bucharin fo |sulted in spite of all he could do make a public statement immediately | much counter propaganda from the concerning his attitude to the block | point of view of Fish. Chief in this \latter class was the complete blast- jing of the Whalen documents, the \forgeries which got the Fish com- mittee appointed in the first place. Fist stated that his committee would propose that the authority of wingers. Bucharin’s silence makes him the center point of all anti-Sov- jet forces and anti-Party elements. Bucharin’s criminal game can only be interpreted as agreement with Riutin | and the others. The Charkov organ- ization warns Bucharin that the Party is prepared to use the most energetic measures against the lead- ers of the right-wing deviation, just as it did not hesitate to use such measures against the Trotskyist lead- ers, The workers are reacting to the| double game of the opportunists by | flocking into the ranks of the Len- inist Party. In Leningrad 114 work- ers of the Stalin factory have applied for membership of the Party, 60 workers in the Marx factory and 400 of the best workers in the Red Pu- tilov factory. In Nizhninovgorod 350 workers engaged on building the great motor works there sent a letter tu the Central Committee of the Party con- demning the opportunists and pledg- ing support to the Leninist Party. the socialists, their cable says: “It is increasingly powerful throughout the country, and is challenging the con- trol the socialist party has always had over the labor unions.” An Associated Press dispatch from Madrid states that the strikes are becoming so serious “that many feared it might lead to a revolution- ary movement.” With the aid of the socialists the strike in Madrid had “quieted down.” However, the grievances of the work- ers have not been done away with, and the betrayals of the socialists is being exposed to the wide masses of Spanish workers. Hundreds of Com- munists are being arrested daily. The A. P. cable from Madrid also says that “in each city where the strike was effective, workers were demand- ing more pay for shorter working hours. The authorities, laying the blame for the movement to Commu- the department of justice be extended over the investigation of the propa- |ganda and other activities of Com- munists in this country. That is the new federal spy service, and it will be used against Communists and all militant workers whether Commu nists or not. Fish also stated that his commit- tee will recommend that the federal deportation laws be strengthened and immigration restrictions be made ap- plicable directly to Communists and to countries which the United States does not recognize. This probably involves registrations, etc. It means that membership in the Communist Party becomes grounds for deporta~ tion, which is to legalize an inter- pretation already illegally in force by. the department of labor in the Viku- kel and Serio and other cases, also by the department of state in the matter of visas for those coming to the United States. ° PRINCE VACATIONS; JOBLESS STARVE. LONDON, England—The Prince of Wales has just finished arrangements for his trip to South Africa next year. He will squander thousands of dollars. Over 2 million unemployed are starving in England. RUBBER WORKERS GET LAY-OFF NAUGATUCK, Conn. Nov. 18— Notices were posted in the rubber shops here this week that the plants would reduce its working hours to 4 days a week, At the same time the papers say business is looking up. I wonder just what it is looking up. —Rubber Worker. Barcelona.” The socialists, of course, receive the thanks and gratitude for the action from the fascist Berenguer nist agitators, rounded up radicals in considerable numbers here and at government and the monarchy. Conference at six p. m. WAR PLOT AGAINST THE SOVIET UNION EXPOSED! MASS MEETING AND CONFERENCE to defend the Russian Workers Republie THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 20 Irving Plaza, 15th Street and Irving Place Mass meeting at eight p.m HEAR ANNA LOUISE STRONG Just arrived from Soviet Russia; Managing Editor of the ‘Moscow News” MOISSAYE J. OLGIN Editor of the Morning Fretheit DR. E. REED MITCHELL Instructor to the Red Army Medical Staff I. AMTER Member of the March 16th Unemployed Delegation, just released from jail HARRIET SILVERMAN Secretary N. ¥. District Friends of the Soviet Union AUSPICES FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION, N. Y. DISTRICT 799 BROADWAY Daily, own subscription or renewal. mate to subscribe. Use the blank below. I hereby pay $ I work in New York City. NOME cocceeesesseessssseseeseses Address SPREAD THE orker Party USA Readers, join the campaign for 60,000 circulation by sending your Get the paper regularly. Get your shop- (Date.) months subscription to the Daily Worker, 50 East 13th Street, New York City. CY csscescecseecscveseccescceseeees BHA sesvesscrscnssengeerssonees «+» Industry. Tear off and mail directly to the Daily Worker, 50 East 13th Street, NOTE: Print all Names and Addresses clearly to avoid error.

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