The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 20, 1930, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, N MBER 20, 193 0 Page Three Wwe tre RS | - Fe ay res. ‘KEK £a E_ DULUTH STEEL MILL LAYS OFF Jobless Councilin Dem- onstration Here (By a Worker Correspendent) DULUTH, Minn.—The steel plant is laying off men that have been working there ever since they started. ‘They are using the speed-up system to every advantage. On Nov. 10 the unemployed council of Duluth held a mass demonstra- tion which was attended by 3,000 workers at court house square and demands were presented to the city council, but the city council refused to act on the demands. Register Fraud. ‘The city council is calling upon the workers of Duluth to go to thé Civil Service Commission to register for city work at 50 cents per hour. After you register they tell you to come back in a,week. When the workers come back they give you a job and you are told that it is not city work and the pay is only 35 cents per hour. The city is making 15 cents per hour on every worker that goes to work. On Saturday, Nov. 8, the tools of the bosses, the police department, ar- rested 13 workers on vagrancy charges, These workers are all will- ing to work, but there is no work in Duluth. The Trade Union Unity League has retained a lawyer for these workers because they pleaded not cuilty. The trial came up in court 18 ond the 13 workers de- “manded a jury trial and it was set for Nov. 20. Charges Dropped. iwo hours after the trial was set for Nov. 20 the judge was forced to drop the charges because of the mass pressure of the workers on the out- side. ‘This test case proves that the va- grancy laws are just part of the bosses’ fight against the working class and is especially used as a means of picking up unemployed workers from the streets and railroading them to the work farm and the county jails. This is how the bosses of Duluth are relieving the unemployment situation here. The T. U. U. L. and the unem- ployed council will carry on a more intensive campaign to build the T. U. U. L. and unemployed council to force the bosses to grant the real re- lief as proposed in the Workers’ So- cial Insurance Bill. WORKERS PAY FOR CALIF. “CHARITY” Suffering Widespread in Golden State (By a Worker Correspondent) SACRAMENTO, Cal.—The commu- nity chest drive is on in Sacramento. The laundry workers and all other workers that are working are told if they want to keep their job they must contribute from one dollar to a day's pay. The average wages of the laun- dry workers is 35 cents an hour, 8 hours a day. These laundry workers are in the fake A, F. of L. which says “you must give or we will help the bosses starve you to death with the rest of the unemployed.” Jobless Crisis Worse The unemployment is getting worse every day in the golden West. You can’t go on the streets any place in Sacramento that you won't be asked by twenty men for something to eat. I saw three men today that told me they had not eaten but once in three days. There are people here that are living on raw cabbage and bread. It is not just poorly dressed men that are begging but well dressed men. I went out to solicit for the Unemployed Council. I talked to businessmen that told me they could not give to anybody. They were not making a living for their families. They cannot pay their rent. One restaurant man told me men come in and eat, when they are thru they tell him they have not got any money. He said he could have them jailed but that would not get any money for him. And he knows that they are good honest men and would pay him if they could, but are starv- ing. This is Hoover's prosperity. Labor Sports Union Swimming Class Open NEW YORK —The Labor Sports Union is now holding swimming classes under the supervision of qualified, licensed instructors and life guards every Monday and Wed- nesday from 7:45 a. m. to 8:45 p, m., at the 54th St. Pool—54th St. and First and Second Aves. (near the corner of First Ave.) Elementary and advanced swimming as well as life guard work and water front safety will be taught. These classes are open to both men and women work- ers, ‘There will be a charge of 10 cents for all those who register excepting those workers who already are mem- bers of the Labor Sports Union or are unemployed. Upon, presenta- tion of an L.S.U. card or an unem- ployed council card there will be no charge. Send or bring in your application tely to Room 309, 2 W. 15th York City ' Peliz Put In Solitary Cell Health Is Bad (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Ray Peltz, a Young Communist serving a sentence from one to ten years for distribu- tion of unemployment leaflets at Ford's plant in Chester, has been locked in a lone cold and empty dis- ciplinary cell since Friday, Nov. 7. The cell is called Siberia, and those placed there are deprived of all privi- leges given to other prisoners. Peltz is not allowed to get any exercise or fresh air, gets one meal a day and no books whatsoever. Even their junky novels are not given. The official reason for the punish- ment is that Peltz is lazy and does not want to work, The truth, how- ever, is that the keeper, a cruel, stu- pid creature, heard Peltz discuss po- litical and social problems with the prisoners, something he doesn’t Ike, and this is reason enough for him to put Peltz in solitary confinement and punish him with everything im- aginable in addition. Health Being Shattered. Since Peltz is in prison he has not been permitted to receive any books or newspapers. Everything, even a Current History, is too radical for the broad-minded, enlightened keeper, and all books which this sixth-grade graduate hasn't heard of are no good. The International Publishers sent Peltz upon his request some books on economics and other such subjects, but they were not given to Peltz and the keeper wanted to know why he doesn’t read “American” books. Peltz tries to be cheerful and bear up with it, but the barbarous treat- ment is ruining his health. NO RESPONSE TO TINH SPEECHES Phila. Workers Not Taken in Nov. 11 (By a Worker Correspondent.) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Being out of work and having nowhere to go I went to the Armistice Day celebra- tion in Independence Square here. Mayor Mackay complimented the American Legion as “an organiza- tion that is a guarantee of our polit- ical future.” Cutthroat Butler Present. General Butler, who would not take boss orders as a cop and was promptly banished for his insubordination, also spoke. He learned his lesson, for now he goes out of his way to declare his subserviency to the bosses. He said he not only wants to see “Amer- ica great, but on top.” Here the class-consciousness of the master class declared itself in loud applause from the stand, but the crowd remained silent. The bosses knew what he meant. (The Soviet Union will soon be on top if we don’t stop them. “The impertinence of those D—m Russians in starting a better system than ours! a system that is sure to triumph as night follows day.) No Applause. It was significant that there was no applause from the crowd, which looked on in sullen silence. I ob- served many whose faces bespoke hunger and worry, in strong contrast to the well-groomed satiated appear- ance of the parasites and their women who filled the stand and from whence ‘all the applause came. If the bosses think that they are preparing the workers’ minds for a war on the Soviet Union while they starve their bodies, they are all due for a rude awakening. Director of Safety Schofield wants 2,000 more cops for Philadelphia. To chase bandits or go on a Siberian ex- pedition? Before this coming winter is over we will know. Convert. DALTON STARTS FAKE UNEMPLOYED COUNCIL NEW YORK.—Dalton is operating again, with an organization he calls the “Dalton Brotherhood.” This swindler of the jobless has already been exposed once some time ago in the Daily Worker as a man who gets the last pennies of the unem- ployed workers under promise of jobs and then does not deliver the goods. He has been running these rackets every year, and expects to cash in this time big. At a meeting Saturday at Astor Hall near Manhattan Lyceum Dal- ton made big promises about getting good jobs for the workers, “no cheap jobs.” He took up a collection, the amount Was not announced, and sent out for “coffee and” which was dis- tributed. #4. member of the Unemployed Council got the floor and plainly ac- cused Dalton of being a crook and a liar. Vivtims of his who lost their 2 apiece to him previously were pres- ent but did not get a chance. Dalton states that he will continue to run what he calls an “Unemploy- ment Council” at 64 East Fourth St. Don’t be fooled by this use of the name of the militant jobless’ organ- ization. ‘MINN. COMMUNITY CHEST DRIVE IS ON Mulcting the Toilers| for Boss Charity (By a Worker Correspondent) MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.—The an- nual community fund drive is on here with its usual “pledges” of thousands of dollars by individual bankers, flour mill magnates and other par- asites. Of course, anyone with horse- sence knows that these capitalists never pay one penny on their “pledges.” All the money that is col- lected comes from the workers’ pockets. Threaten Jobs Many places are forcing each and every employee to “dig up” from eight to twelve dollars of his wages for the fund. If the worker dares to refuse, he loses his job. It is hardly necessary to say that the fund has warm, luxurious offices with a staff of do-nothing parasites who draw a big percentage of the fund money in fat salaries. There is the usual retinue of “pretty” bon-bon eating, cigarette-smoking, parasite- worshipping stenographers who have @ smile for the wealthy and a sneer for the poor. Conditions Worsen Mayor Kunze has organized an “Unemployment Board to count the unemployed to find out the occupa- tion of each so that he can split their jccs with the unemployed (and there- by lower the standard of living that the Hooverites have boasted so much about). Begging is becoming more common every day. Theatres are full of empty seats. Automobiles are becoming less numerous on the streets. Depart- ment stores have several counters in charge of one clerk. This winter is going to be hell, but what will the next two Hoover winters be? And on top of it all the capitalists put on a display of their new motorized 151st Field Artillery (light artillery was not motorized during the war) on Armis- tice night to show the workers what they will try to slaughter them with if they do not submit to poverty and starvation. PLAY OFF SINGLE AGAINST MARRIED Many Jobless Have No Decent Shoes (By a Worker Correspondent.) NEW YORK.—The capitalist press very recently announced that Mr. Klein, shoe manufacturer, was giving 15,000 pairs of shoes to the unem- ployed workers of New York, These are to be distributed by the Oak St. police station (presumably because Mr. Klein knows that the police are the ever faithful servants of his class and that they can keep control of the unemployed better than any organ- ization that exists at present). Several thousands of unemployed workers flocked to the police station with worn out shoes on their feet, When they got there they were sharply questioned by the desk ser- geant, who, as soon as he learned that any man was single, would tell him that unless he was married,and had at least two children that he would get no shoes at all. Jailed For Protest. It goes without saying that if a worker protested or argued that he would be quickly and easily sup- pressed by being instantly thrown in- to jail on a vagranch charge, which charge would be ever so easy to prove. This is another ruse to make the working class think that Mr. Klein and his fellow robbers are soft- hearted philanthropists who weep oceans of tears for the poor workers. Government Takes Employees’ Money Then Starves Them (Continued from Page One) loud when they are plucked, are framed as “nuts” shooed into the “Lizzie House” or have hand-picked guardians put over them to act as “yes men“ for Hines and report that their wards are “suffering from delu- sions” when they complain that they are hungry. Four Veterans Bureau sharks are under indictment now down in Essex County, Virginia, for perjury in trying to frame an ex- soldier as dippy and put a Vetbu guardian in charge of his cash. Hines has done so well on his gypping job that Hoover has put him over the civilian worker's pension fund, and the squawks are coming in already, Hines is the baby who would handle the Unemployed In- surance fund if the bosses’ govern- ment decided that it had to do some- thing and put through the Musteite and socialist program to have the government handle an insurance fund. My hat is off to the Communist Party for forseeing the necessity for Unemployed Insurance administered by the workers themselves, Workers! Follow the Communist Party! It picks the right road every time! Demand Unemployed Insur- ance ADMINISTERED BY THE | WORKERS THEMSELVES! Two Districts in Missing List Report for Campaign; Pittsburgh, Denver Answer Two districts, previously reported missing in the Daily Worker cam- | paign for 60,000 mass circulation, today show up with reports of activity, | These are District 5, Pittsburgh, and Mankin, Daily Worker represen- ¢ J. tative in ittsburgh, writes: “We have worked out a plan of action, The district bureau meets Wednesday, when this plan will be proposed. Then I will be able to inform you how things are going. I am sure once we go into action we will not only fill the quota, but we will go over the top.” CHECK ON EVERY MEMBER IN DENVER From James Allander, district, Daily Worker representative in Denver, we hear: “The district committee outlined @ program for the district three weeks back, which is already in ac- tion, Money has been sent in on District 19, Denver. INTERNATIONAL NEWS © Vid tes - IN SOVIET RUSSIA Right and Left Wing! Form Alliance MOSCOW.—In view of the in- creased activity of both the right and | \left-wing opportunists in the Commu- nist Party of the Soviet Union re-| cently, the Krasnya-Presnya district | of the Moscow Party organization has adopted a resolution registering the successes of the Party policy (in- sponsible to a great degree for the weakness of the district in all our campaigns. Regular, systematic fac- renewals and subs by this time. “The system we have for check- ing on every member is, I have en- closed a blank. every comrade must record his or approval of the Unit Secretary and mailed to the district. Also work is being done for the establishment of Daily Worker carrier routes.” So far the only districts which have not let out a hushed whisper in the campaign are: District 7, Detroit; District 10, Kansas City; District 11, Agricultural; District 13, California. We hope they don’t stampede into the campaign without due reflection, but we would call their attention to the fact that the drive has now been in progress for several weeks. ROCHESTER SENDS SYRACUSE CHALLENGE A lively note comes in from Adam Andressi, Daily Worker representa- tive in Rochester. He says: “Rochester challenges Syracuse in the drive for subs and sales of the Daily Worker. We are carry- ing on the campaign now and ex- pect results soon. The activity of every member is necessary in this drive. We have on hand about six hundred signatures to be can- vassed and every member gets so many names to be visited and must report at the next unit meeting on results. “We are going to concentrate on three shops to sell Daily Workers in front of these shops: Bausch and Lamb Optical Co.; Hickey Freeman, and Eastman Kodak Co. We will send a report in every week.” BUFFALO WILL DO “DAMNDEST” FOR DRIVE Buffalo is taking a large dose of self-criticism to ward oq an attack of a disease which is not confined to that section, the symptoms of which are described by K. Imoni, the Daily Worker representative, as follows: “District 4, Buffalo, recognizes the fact that the poor Daily Work- er circulation in the district is re- On these blanks | her five dollars in subs with the | tory gate sales are almost unknown | — the house to house campaign is | dead. In the city of Buffalo the bundle orders amount to one one | hundred daily. Not a single unit is taking the Daily Worker for factory gate or house ‘9 house sale.” But action is promised “Buffalo challenges the combined | efforts of every other section in the | district. The sections are pledging to do their damndest to make the/| drive a success. District 4 challenges | District 15, Connecticut.” UNIT AGAINST UNIT crease of real wages, the introduction of the 7-hour day, the 5-day week, the abolition of unemployment, gen- | eral compulsory education, etc.) and pointing out that the socialist sec- |tor of Soviet economy has now all \the mest important levers in its] hands, in other words, the Soviet ties (kulak resistance, counter-revolu- tionary sabotage, technical, economic | and cultural backwardness, the or- | ganization of an international boy- | cott by the imperielists, etc.). These | successes were achieved in the strug- | gle against the right-wing deviation, which is a kulak agency within the Party. The aim of the right-wing | opportunists is in the final resort the | IN ST. PAUL DRIVE the report from Gust Skandera, the Daily Worker representative, who says: out and adopted: Nucleus No, 1 and Nucleus No. 2 to secure twen- ty Daily Worker subs each in a so- cialist competition. That both nu- clei establish a house to house can- vass. That the factory sale in South St. Paul, packing house cen- ter, be carried on by Nucleus No, Paul Foundry be started by Nu- cleus No. 2. That Sundays in No- vember be set for Red Sundays.” WISCONSIN ORDER Is GIVEN A BOOST O. J. Arness, Superior, Wisc., writes: “Please put me on the mailing list for twenty-five copies of the Daily Worker, I shall appreciate it if you will get this bundle on the ‘chain’ if not endless, at the earliest moment so the bundles will begin to slide into this town of prosperous capitalists and ‘Coopera- tive’ renegades. “We shall try to increase the bun- dle shortly and thus try to acquaint the Superior workers with the fact that there is a Daily Worker drive on and also make known to them the real solution of the unemployment problem.” BOSS PRESS WEEPS (Continued from Page One) ism, wages have been cut for the whole working class an average of 20 per cent in the last year! There are no unemployed workers in the Soviet Union! In America there are 9,000,000, and the working class here has had over $8,000,009,000 less to spend than it had last year! So, in the Soviet Union, with factor- ies working day and night, still man- ufacture cannot keep up with the de- mand, while in the United States factories are slowing down because the demand for goods has fallen! ‘This accounts also for the “queues,” the lines of buyers waiting their turn in the Soviet stores, while here, cer- tainly, there are stores everywhere, JatlCommunist In Cuba; Faces Sure Death With military rule clamped down throughout Cuba to prevent “dis- turbances,” a demonstration took place Sunday at Alcranes, Matanzas Province. The demonstrators clash- ed with police and detectives. Sev- eral persons were hurt. Jacobo Augustin Pino, a Commu- nist, was arrested and is being held in solitary confinement in a military prison on orders of President Ma- chado, Comrade Pino faces death. Bloody Machado has instigated the murder of hundreds of Communists in Cuba, and it is very seldom that a Communist leaves a military prison alive. The widest mass protests must be aroused by the workers in this country to save the lives of the Com- munists now in jail in Cuba. Machado issues statements dozens of times daily stressing what he wants everybody to believe, namely, that “order” has been established, and that his regime is solid, At the same time secretary of the interior, Del- gado has issued a statement declaring the government “would continue its presen’ » / towards Communists and other agitators.” One hundred and fifty persons who took part in na demonstration in Havana on Friday were each sen- tenced to 30 days in jail. The judge, Sanchez, would not even listen to any evidence. He claimed to have seen the whole thing. 4 OVER “FAMISHED” \cisions of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth WORKERS. BUT NOT THOSE OF U § |Congress of the Communist Party of ? ¢ Me) the Soviet Union concerning the in- with goods of every description, and there are millions of people needing those goods, but there are no “queues” here because the workers have no money to buy! Which country, workers, is really prospering, really advancing, really doing the most for the working class? Capitalist America, where the rich can buy and the poor can and do starve, or the Workers’ Republic, where, despite great difficulties, the useful class, the working class, is eat- ing, is secure against starvation and misery—because they have over- thrown capitalist rule and are wip- ing out even the last remnants of tho capitalist class, the parasite class! DANCE FOR TLD. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Nov. 18.— In order to effect combat the epen use by the bosses of the Flynn Anti- Sedition Act in Pennsylvania and release of militant workers, who are serving or awaiting sentence under the infamous Anti-Labor Law, the I, L. D. is making all preparations for its third annual concert and ball which will take place this coming Friday, November 21st, in the New ‘Traymore Hall, Franklin and Colum- bio Ave. Philadelphia, All defense of militant labor will assemble here at this affair. This event is part of a yeneral campaign conducted by the I. L. D. at this time to release Bill Lawrence and other class war prisoners victims of the Flynn Sedition Act, The ad- mission to the affair is 50 cents. Every worker is urged to attend it. i} “The following plan was worked 1. That factory sale at the St. | ARRANGE CONCERT sxsw "ar ee restoration of capitalism, as proved | of the right-wingers and the counter- | revolutionary Kondratev group. The further development of the So- lcialist offensive, the intensification lof the class struggle and the diffi- | culties encountered, have increased | the resistance of the opportunist ele- | ments against the Party policy. They | |seek to revise the Party policy both | nationally and internationally. De- feated and exposed as the agents of the kulaks, the right-wingers have |now become a secret fraction, wait~ ing for a favorable opportunity to |open up a struggle against the Party. They formalfy recognize the Party policy, but secretly fight against it. The tactic of silence adopted py Bu- charin and other right-wingers 1s un- der the circumstances nothing but a secret struggle against the Party line. The left-wingers have adopted the right-wing minimalist standpoint on the economic field and the right- wingers have adopted the inner-party | attitude of the Trotskyists, thus mak- ing possible a block between the two groups. The struggle of this block |often takes the form of self-criticism and seeks to discredit the Leninist leadership of the Party and the Cen- tral Committee, in particular Com- | rade Stalin. The hypocritical atti- tude of the right and left-wingers, their block against the Party in or- der to undermine the Socialist offen- sive against the capitalist elements, and the strengthening of fractional- ism in the Party make it the duty of all members of the Party to be watehful and see to it that the de- compatibility of the right-wing and Trotskyist ideas with continued mem- bership of the Communist Party are rigidly carried into execution. 2,500 JOBLESS CHEER SPEAKERS FROM COUNCIL NEW YORK.—While 36 pickets were being railroaded in special ses- sions yesterday because they engaged in mass violation of an injunction, there were, near by, 2,500 jobless workers demonstrating at a meeting called before the city employment agency where you don’t get jobs. The jobless gathered around the speakers of the Councils of the Unemployed, cheered heartily for the demands of he councils that the city give relief to the extent of $25 a week per man, meeting at 27 East Fourth St., to join the council. They did this although the Musteites were trying to force them to listen to their bunk shouted through a loud speaker mounted on a car. The indoor meeting elected a dele- gation to go over and demonstrate against the eviction of a worker in Brownsville. | Dangerous to Neglect aa Kidneys Heed the warning of burning pale and night rising due to bladder and kid- | ney weakness. Doctors warn against neglect and advise action to prevent Salons trouble. For rapid relief, ask your druggist Se the nepady ae cr near! y @ cen’ yy doe- gen tors ighout the world. Santal Mlidy | wae THIS FRIDAY at 7p. m. ~ Daily Worker Reps Conference At the Workers Center All plans will be made to carry through the Daily Worker Campaign for eight thousand increase in circulation in District Number Two. EVERY UNIT MUST BE REPRESENTED 35 E. 12th St. police dispersed a conference of Com-) HITOPPORTUNISTS News From All Lands BERLIN, Nov. 18.—Wage negotia- tions of the banks and bank clerks’ union broke down because the banks/ demanded an all around wage cut of 10 per cent in the new agreement. VIENNA, Nov. 18.—Yesterday night | munist Party workers, driving the} workers from the hall. searched, Many were | PERU FEDERATION - REFUSES 10 QUIT Call Cerro Regime a Fascist Tool Reports from Lima, Peru, state that the leaders of the National Federa- tion of Workers, which led the gen- eral strike here, have declared that the governifient’s dissolution order of the unions is illegal. They said they would issue new instructions on the MOSCOW, Nov. 18—The political | bureau and the central control com-/| mission of the Ukrainian Communist Party unanimously demanded the ex- pulsion of Syrzov, Lominadze, Shatz- kin, and others on account of their proved factionalism. The resolution Iso demands disciplinary action Union has entered on the stage of |'5° i | Socialism. ‘These successes were | ®8ainst Bucharin, Rykov, Tomsk! and achieved despite tremendous difficul- | Other rights. Nee fa LONDON. — Unemployment in- creased by 38,213 in one week here, the total rising to 2,237,501. Since the labor government took office the figures have risen by 1,157,476. Pe are LONDON, Nov. 18.-Negotiations | are under way between railroad bosses and union leaders on the pro- posed wage cut. The union mis- leaders said they would “think it Action in St. Paul gleams through | in the agreement between the ideas | over,” but they were afraid, they said the men would bitterly oppose any wage cuts. Fide ters MOSCOW.—The Soviet pork trust “Svinovod” has organized 258 Soviet farms for pig-breeding instead of 250 laid down in the plans. 840,900 hec- tares of land have been allotted to these farms. On ae MOSCOW.—In the economic year 1929-30 the credit side of the Soviet budget showed a total of 12,527 mil- lion rubles. This was 7.4 per cent more than had been originally cal- culated, and no less than 52 per cent more than the budget for the eco- nomic year 1928-29, The debit side of the budget totalled 12,246 million rubles WOMEN’S COUNCIL LECTURES NEW YORK.— Two lectures have been arranged under the auspices of the United Councils of Working Class Women. Council 17 will hear Louis Baum on the War Danger tonight at 140 Neptune Ave., Brighton, Brook- lyn, N. ¥., at 8:30. “ Council 8 will hear Anna Kornblatt on The Role of the Women in the Soviet Union, tonight, at 1622 Bath- gate Ave., at 8:30 p.m.» 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. | general strike which the workers would accept in opposition to the gov- ernment dissolution order. Police in Lima raided a house in which 300 revolutionary workers were said to be meeting and arrested @ number. Those arrested were charged with Communist propaganda, A statement to the press in Lima. \by the leader of the Federation of | Workers declares that the 24-hour | general strike of last Friday was ate |tacked by the Cerro government, “the brutal fascist reaction of ele- }ments connected with Wall Street \and London.” FASCISTS TELL OF THEIR TERROR PLANS BERLIN. “Tempo” publishes a res, Berlin leader of the National Fascists, Goebells, at a meeting of the fascist storm detachments. Goebbels is reported to have said that many fascists expected a rough house in the Reichstag every day. This was not possible, but is the so- cial democratic deputy Landsberg again dared to condemn the Fehme judges with murderers then Lieuten- ant Heines (a notorious fascist fehme murderer) would drag him down from the Tribune and the National Fascist fraction would drive the Reds out of the Reichstag in a way that would make them forget to come back again, That would make a great impression on the masses of the peo- ple. When the fascists entered the government, and he, Goebbels, be- came Minister of the Interior, then he would always feel himself as an official of the fascist party. When for instance, he felt himself attacked in a newspaper, then the storm de- tachments would be sent to the ed- itorial offices of that newspaper and each of its editors would have to drink a pint of castor ail. He, Goeb- bels, as Minister would see to it that the police arrived too late. The only way to break the Communist terror would be to kill half a dozen og them as a warning to the others. All per- sons driving in foreign-made cars should be beaten up and the cars de= stroyed. * Conference at six p. m. HE WAR PLOT AGAINST THE SOVIET UNION EXPOSED! MASS MEETING AND CONFERENCE to defend the Russian Workers Republic TONIGHT Irving Plaza, 15th Street and Irving Place Mass mecting at eight p.m. AR ANNA LOUISE STRONG Just arrived from Soviet Russia; Managing Editor of the ‘Moscow News” MOISSAYE J. OLGIN Editor of the Morning Frethett DR. E. REED MITCHELL Instructor to the Red Army Medical Steff I, AMTER Member of the March 16th Unemployed Delegation, just released from jall HARRIET SILVERMAN Secretary N. ¥. District Friends of the Soviet Union AUSPICES FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET UNION, N. Y, DISTRICT 199 BROADWAY Dail own subscription or renewal. Get mate to subscribe. Use the blank below. I hereby pay $. Daily Worker, 50 Eas‘ I work in . Tear off and mail directly to the New York City. SPREAD THE orker Dorty US.A Readers, join the campaign for 60,000 circulation by sending your the paper regularly. Get your shop- see AUATOSS ...0eee50+ . State .. +» Industry, Daily Worker, 50 East 18th Street, NOTE: Print all Names and Addresses clearly to avoid error. port of a speech delivered by the - a

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