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a - DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBEK 21, 1930 Page Th ra Lettre RSsS =-_ Ee «eo ss ne SEOPr Ss EX’ Ex E— PETTY GRAFTERS EXPLOIT MISERY OF THE JOBLESS Swindle Unemployed Workers (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—One of the numer- ous goofy “buy now” appeals to starving victimized workers is located at 416 Fourth Avenue just around the corner from one of the many soup lines that distinguish the wealthiest capitalist burg in the world. This particular fake layout has the mouth filling title of “Unemployed Camp of Nation-Wide Distributing Company. Panhandling Job. Workers are given cheap placards with the usual buy now and other hokum printed thereon. Each appli- cant also gets a personal introductory ticket with a panhandling sob story appeal to the bosses to give him a dime for one of the magical “buy now” cards. The game is to make the worker beg for a dime and then split with the racketeers who con- trol the charitable Nation-Wide Dis- tributing Company. This scheme to convert the Ameri- can worker into cheap panhandlers, scabs and bums is just another of the hypocritical “give a job” stunts. Huge signs strung across the store front entice the starving victims by pro- claiming loudly “1,000 Men wanted— Come in and make money” Plenty of slogans and hokum but no real relief for the starving jobless millions who want to maintain their self respect. MISSION HOUSE A FILTHY JOINT Must Be “Saved” to Get Sloppy Handout (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK—There is a mission on Forty-Second street, between Ninth and Tenth avenues, where they let men sleep on the floor if they sit through a two hour gospel service. The superintendent announces in a very kind voice before a room full of visitors: “There is a good meal waiting for every man, saved or unsaved, and a) place to sleep for the night.” ‘The “meal” consists of a bowel of greasy water, without meat or vege-| tables in it, merely some pieces of | bread floating on top. And two small Slices of bread. Sleep on Floors. ‘Those who are “saved” are allowed to go upstairs into the mission hall and sleep on the benches, or on the floor between the benches. The others remain in the basement, spreading newspapers on the concrete floor. This place is crowded nightly with men who can find no other place to keep out of the cold. They are crowd close together on the floor, or sit through the night in chairs if they can not find a place, and even lie down in the wash room around the toilet bowls. Filthy Place. This place, which is simply ex- ploiting the misery and helplessness of the men for the sake of contribu- tions, should be closed up. it is a menace to public health; after a few nights a man’s clothes are over-run with vermin. The papers on the floor make it a fire trap. ‘The air is foul with the stench of socks, rotten breath, alcohol, and the belching of disordered’ stomachs. During these cold nights the win- dows are not opened. It is to places as this that homeless meni must resort after the five nights per month allowed them at the mun- icipal lodging house. In the morning the men are lined up for a cup of rusty looking water, unsweetened and without milk. and two slices of bread, and sent into the street. Negro Plasterers Jim-Crowed In AFL Union, Chattanooga (from the Southern Worker.) CHATTANOOGO, Tenn. — I work in the building trades. My job is a plasterer. For this class of work it ig supposed to be $1.50 an hour. ‘There, are three Negroes in the plas- terers’ union out of about 400 Negro plasterers here, who work as low as 55 to 65 cents an hour or anything they can get. The three Negroes in the union and a great many of the white workers don’t get any work. ‘The Negro and white workers must organize together in the T. fl Uv. L, and demand $1.50 an hour And stop fighting among ourselves. MILITARY PREPARATIONS IN PORTO RICA, / SAN JUAN, P. R.—Major Gen. Wm. @. Everson arrived Wednesday from ‘Washington in a new type of fast plane to be used by the army soon. He immediately inspected the militia with Gov. Roosevelt and™ then left for an inspection tour of the National Guard hroughout the island. Con- Chicago Jobless Fed Heavily on (By a Worker Corresponderit) CHICAGO.—This is how the Chi- cago bosses serve the unemployment relief. On Nov. the 8th they had un- employment registration. Thousands of workers stormed the school houses to register. Of course they had po- lice to keep the workers in order. The charities were there giving sand- wiches and an apple and a hypocrit- ical smile to the workers. Countless Questions. The questions at registration were: Name and address, married or single, number of children, whether or not a citizen, number of years in Chicago, how long out of work, if you will accept any kind of work even military service, etc. We have not got anything out of registering so far and the chances are we won't get any help at all so it’s up to us workers to organize all unemployed and em- ployed. We see signs posted on store win- dows “Buy Now” and bring back prosperity. This is our bosses bunk relief. The Communist Party of Chicago (District 8) must take up quick ac- tion to fight for unemployed insur- ance. We have had the unemploy- ment signature petitions for about one month but was not put into ac- tion, The best way to organize our unemployment councils and factory workers is the house to house collec- tion of signatures. —AN UNEMPLOYED WORKER. HATTERS FOR A FIGHTING BOARD Defeat Misleaders to Fight Cut! (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK—A hatter’s slogan. To live up to the new slogan of Buy Now in this country you must get a new board of officers. Our present Officers are in favor of a new grade which means in seven letters a big cut, Sq live up to the slogan to buy now, at the election and elect a new board so you can buy now or any other time. —G. H. Hatter Editorial Note: True enough. To be able to buy anything to keep living, means to fight against the plot of the hat bosses and the offi- cials of Local 8 who are all too anxious to put over a wage cut. All hatters in Local seven and eight must work hard to elect a new board that will fight in deeds against wage slashes. Such a group in the union are militant rank and file workers who base their plat- form for election on a struggle against wage cuts. As for the BUY NOW publicity; as far as the vast majority of un- employed and workers who are get- ting their pay cut, it doesn’t mean much, There is no need to urge workers to buy when they have the money, Apple Selling Starts in Detroit (By a Worker Correspondent) DETROIT, Mich—The apple rack- et is now going on in Detroit, since last Thursday. I asked one of the jobless men who had a box of apples at different corners of the downtown sections about sales and they told me that the profits therefrom amounted to almost nothing. If you sold a box @ day you were very fortunate and besides standing on a chilly corner from early morning till late at night for a few paltry pennies, Said he was quitting after his box was sold. It is too bad as we note the jobless suicides in the capitalist papers from day to day and lots that are covered up by these papers. The unemployed should fight of course, not kill them- selves but being under the terrific strain from poverty under this most rotten capitalist system some minds will snap. Chicago Jobless Start Collecting Relief Signatures (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Ill—I am! nota mem- ber of the Communist. Party but am working with the Unemployed Coun- cils and am at present lining up signatures for unemployed relief. I feel with many others that this is the last crisis or “panic” as they used to call it and can last ten years if the workers allow themselves to be misled, In this town during the fall the Underground Construction Company was digging a six foot sewer on Monroe Street using a gigantic digger that can fill a Mack truck in three dips. It went along almost at a Registration NCR BOSS OPENS SOUP KITCHEN TO FIGHT DEMANDS Cut Wages (By a Worker Correspondent) DAYTON, O.—Mr. Patterson, presi- dent of the National Cash Register is one of the foremost in his fight against the social insurance bill for the workers. He opened a Soup Kitchen for the benefit of the unem- ployed which serves soup (read slop) operating from 4 p. m. to 7:30 p. m. The first day the capitalist papers Teport that 197 people came for the soup. Mostly all were men and several families came. Cigarettes and candy were given out after eating the “rich creamy soup.” Mr. Patterson is con- ducting this thru the welfare dept. of the N. C. R. This is in addition to the support Mr. Patterson gives to the Community Chest. He is a very enterprising gentle- man and goes to much trouble in order to blind the workers and make them believe he is some Christ sent to soothe the suffering. He has also opened a Conference Bureau. This was named by the president of the Community Chest, Mr. R. G. Cerwin; as the Patterson’s Conference Bur- eau. This is to take care of all those workers who in normal times have a steady job; and who have not visited | any charity organization: © Their whole history is taken and a personal conference is held with them, Mr. Paterson promising the bureau will aid individual cases to get back on their feet. Mr. Patterson would get hot under the collar if some of the former em- ployees would come to him and ask what about the jobs that you tcok away? He would not like it if the workers employed in the N. C. R. would throw down their tools in pro- test of the 10 per cent wage cut which was given them a few months ago. HYDE LAUNCHES ATTACK ON USSR Says, “Don’t Tolerate Anything Russian” (Continued from Page One) but it was arranged so that the news would “leak out” and was in evening papers yesterday, together with an in- terview in which fiyde confirmed the speech. Secretary Hyde is reported as almost frothing at the mouth as he shouted invectives against the Soviet Union; at times he seemed about to burst into tears. He be- gan by dramatically throwing aside his prepared speesh and ordering all those present to “leave the room” if you don’t have strong stomachs.” ‘Then, said Hyde: “I confess that I cannot under- stand the type of American whose stomach is strong enough to per- mit him to regard anything Rus- sian with a tolerant spirit. The Soviet has crucified American idealism, our religious’ principles, our theory of individual enterprise —in fact, everything America stands for. I cannot understand how any American can look upon the proceedings in Russia today as an ‘interesting social experiment.’ ” “Dumping” Again. Following this came a repetition of his charges about “Soviet dumping of wheat,” “reducing the American farmer's income,” set forward in the same hysterical style, and utterly ig- noring the sworn statements of the biggest. grokers in America at the Fish committee hearings almost para- lyzed the committee by all agreeing that the Soviet wheat sales had no effect whatever on the price, and were purely normal commercial tran- his charge of dumping by admitting that Canada is wild about the reduc- sactions. Neither did Hdye modify tion of its wheat price to 58 cents a bushel by some real dumping of his Federal Farm Board. Nor did he ac- cept the denunciation of American dumping of wheat in Europe which Rumania and other European wheat- growing countries make at the Gen- eva economic conference, Hyde did, in the same speech, try to defnd the Farm Board’s attempt to juggle tle market by large pur- chases of sales and to excuse its ob- vious failures to do anything for the farmers. He defended the harvester trust by condemning “the proposition for cheap production.” It is the United Farmers’ League which evi- dently worried the secretary there, for this organization is campaigning among the poor farmer for organiza- tion to force reduction of the pro- duction costs on farms by cheaper machinery and refusal to pay on mortgages and taxes, Can You Stomach Hyde? Workers whose “stomachs are not strong enough” to stand this organ- Had Laid Off Men and| CUT DRIVE (Continued from Page One) the product-unit costs again on an attractive basis from the point of view of a consumer and upon a com- | petitive basis in world markets. profit fund of owners has already exhibited so sharp a shrinkage that it cannot contribute very much more toward making these unit costs more attractive or more competitively ef- fective in the present state of the world’s consumptive demnads. Which alternative will the country choose?” It is not a choice of this kind at all for the bosses. Speed-up will proceed no matter how wages go. What the bosses want is a lowering of wages and a terrific increase in | MANUFACTURERS oF Me PACTORY AND) re speed-up, hoping in this way to keep up their profits and make the work- ers suffer the full effect of the crisis. But while the Wall Street Jaurnal, and the other boss sheets talk about the “theoretical” aspects of wage cutting and how to go about it, the bosses do not wait. They go right on with their wage-slashing drives. But whil ethe Wall St. Journal, and the other boss sheets talk about the “theoretical” aspects of wage cutting and how to go about it, the bosses do not wait. They go right on with their wage-slashing drives. For instance, “The United Business Service” at 210 Newbury St.. Boston, Mass. in a confidential service to Massachusetts employers dated Oct. 4 tells them just what to do “When Wage Reductions Become Necessary.” The bosses are all convinced that wage reductions are necessary, and their’ financial organs are telling them every day that further and more wage cuts will be necessary. The Unitec Business Service even gives the bosses the line: “The cost of living is now declining in the wake of wholesale prices.” (They forget, however, to mention the fact that while wholesale prices drop from 15 to 20 per cent retail prices remain stationary in most instances, the greatest drop being 4 per cent, while rents, and such other matters do not drop at all). “If the president (of the concern) announces a cut in his own salary first,” they tell the bosses, “the nec- essary reductions can be made all down the line.” Of course, they keep quiet about the fact that a wage cut for the workers “all down the line” increases profits and the gesture of a “wage cut” by the president is more than amply made up by a bigger share in his profits. There is no doubt that in the future there will be a concerted drive New York City. RED SHOC Enclosed find Name 5. This list is being sent by NAME . ADDRESS Bill, to take these war funds intended to murder the workers of the Soviet Union and use the money for unem- ployment relief here! The Scripps-Howard papers, first reporting Hyde's sensational speech, try to give the impression that it is an individual matter, express surprise over this attack on the only country with which the United States trade is growing, while United States com- merce is falling in every other quar- ter. The Scripps-Howard papers hint that Hoover should disavow Hyde's ized attempt to work up a war against the Wokers’ Fatherland, the Soviet Union, must organize now to stop it. Demonstrations and organized protest is needed. Take out signa- Statement. SOLDIERS ATTACK NEGROES HAMILTON, Bermuda, Nov. 19.— Fifty white soldiers; armed with ture lists and get all workers to sign ditions among the natives there are unbegrable. ae walking pace while the unemployed followed watching it. demands that congress pass the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance clubs and pistols, broke from their barracks and attacked a crowd of Negxo workers, injuring two. DAILY WORKER EXPOSES WAGE ‘The | NEW YORK RUBBER CORPORATION Simee 1891 BEACON, NEW YORK October 80th, 1936, Om sooonnt of cor ‘to F Cut this out and mail immediately to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St., For $30,000 DAILY WORKER EMERGENCY FUND Wo pledge to build RED SHOCK TROOPS for the successful completion of the $30,000 DAILY WORKER EMERGENCY FUND. Address AGAINST WORKERS by the bosses to slash wages still further using thsi fake argument of |a drop in commodity prices as indi- cating no lowering in the standard of | living. There is no doubt, also, that the social-fascist trade union leaders | will also aid this campaign by utiliz- | INTE RNATIONAL BREW ‘THOMAS SPURS US ing these same fake arguments. The capitalists who talk about keeping wages up are not jus tplain liars, but they have a bigger object | in view. They follow the policy of | the A. F. of L. fascist leadership who | want the workers lulled to sleep | while the wage cuts grow apace. A good example of this policy is the General Motors Co. Pres. Alfred | P. Sloan of the General Motors some- CHANICAL RusBeR Goons is his settca exseatiagiy aad one will soon right then- etustian Will be onsy 8 time ago said: “General Motors has not reduced either salaries or wages,” and he intimated this would not be done. But here are the facts: Oakland Pontiac plants: General 10 to 20 per cent wage cut in the spring, accompanied by cuts in piece rates which increased the speed-up. Ternstedt Mfg. Co.: Cut in the base rates which, combined with the less- ened bonus paid, amounted*to a 15 per cent cut. May, June, 1930. Cadillac Motor Co.: General 15 per cent cut in July. Fisher Body, Flint: 10 to 50 per cent cut which resulted in walk-out of all the 5,000 workers employed. July. Fisher Body, Detroit: Miscellaneous cuts in piece rates at various times through the year, amounting in many instances to 33 and one-third per cent. Buick: It is reported that older men in that plant are being fired and children of 15 to 18 hired to take their places at 16 cents an hour. Pres. Newcomb Carlton of the ‘Western Union has also said that he is against wage cuts and that his company does not cut wages. De- troit operators have just been in- formed that hereafter they will re- ceive straight time for Sunday work, instead of time-and-half as they have been getting heretofore. Against this “wage-cut drive, no matter in what form the bosses try to put it over with the help of the A. F. of L., the workers must organ- ize and strike. The Trade Union Unity League is leading the struggle against wage cuts. Shop committees must be organized in all plants where wage cuts are threatened. Do not think because wages have been cut already in your plant that that ends it. It is just the beginning. Whole series of wage cuts will be forced against you unless you fight. Or- ganize and Strike against Wage Cuts! K TROOPS cents. Amount Daily Worker Red Sun. | In Springfield Nov. 23 SPRINGFIELD, Mass, Nov. 19.— | The Springfleld Unit of the Party, which is part of District No, 15, de- cided to hold a Daily Worker Red Sunday on Nov, 23, in order to push | the circulation drive. At their last meeting, eight none-Party readers of | the Daily volunteered to function on a Daily Worker committee during the drive. RAINCOAT MAKERS MEET NEW YORK.—The Rank and Filo Committee of Local 20 (Raincoat Makers) calls a meeting tonight at 5:30 p. m. at Stuyvesant Casino, 140 Second Ave. to take up plans for} struggle. BUSINESS MEN TO WAR ON SOVIETS, Tries to Blame Masses) for Crisis J. H. Thomas, socialist secretary | for the dominions, cheered the hearts | of a bunch of fat American business men during the course of a speech to the American Chamber of Com- merce in London on November 18th. The socialist croney of Ramsey MacDonald, and lickspittle to his majesty King George, told the Amer- ican exploiters that the real cause of | the, crisis was the fact that the Rus- | sian workers would not submit to ca~ | Pitalist exploitation. He blamed the Indian and Chinese masses for their share in the crisis because they are not meek enough to the imperialists whom Thomas serves. “China, India and Russia—47 per cent of the world’s population—are in conflict and separated from the rest of the world, neither consumers nor producers,” Thomas told the American business men. He didn’t tell them of course, that the Indian. masses produce $5,000,000,000 in prof- its for the British masters every year and are forced to starve to death in the process. When he said the So- viet Union is not producing he lied in the usual socialist fashion. Under the Five-Year Plan, even the New York Post admits, the Soviet Union is building in five years or less what it took the capitalist scores and even | hundreds of years to do. But no one expects a socialaist lackey of British imperialism to tell the truth when talking about the Soviet Union or about the Chinese | and Indian masses. Thomas wanted to make it clear to the American im- Perialists that war against the So- viet Union would be a very great idea and that the British Labor govern- ment would gladly support such a step. YOUNG WORKER PUNCHES MURDERER ZOERGIEBEL BERLIN.—The former Police Pres- ident of Berlin, Zoergiebel, the man responsible for the slaughter of 33 unarmed workers, women, youths and girls on the Ist of Maay 1928 and the succeeding days, appeared as a witness in a case at the Moabit Criminal Court. As he was leaving the court a young unemployed worker sprang at him shouting, “Murder!” and struck him a heavy blow in the face. The worker was quickly over- powered by uniformed police and taken to the police station. Zoer- giebel was very shaken up and had to be assisted to his car. The young worker got 60 days in jail. MUST HAVE $30,000 FOR THE “DAILY” Necessary to Continue Increased Growth (Continued from Page One) ing the Daily Worker during the moving period was increased 30 per cent. @ deficit of $30,000. We must get this sum immediately, not only to carry on the tremendous campaigns before us, but to increase the circu- lation of the Daily Worker to ever wider masses, fight. This money is needed imme- diately to insure the success of the drive for 60,000 new readers for the Daily Worker. “The Central Committee of the | Communist Party has full confidence that the workers in this country will move immediately to assist the Datly Worker in its present financial crisis. The Communist Party calls on the workers in the shops and factories, in all workers’ organizations, ex- servicemen, workers in the armed | forces, unemployed workers, to im- mediately respond to this call by forming Daily Worker red shock troops everywhere. “Delay in getting endangers the) Daily Worker and is a hinderance in| the important struggles which face the entire working class, and in which the Daialy Worker takes a leading part. “Do not wait until you get a lot | ter or committee visits you. busy and collect funds now! The Daily Worker now faces | to spur them on to} | from 15 to 20 percent cheaper than | dumping campaign against the So- | coming war. At a very early session of the “Dis- |arament Commission” all the im- | perialist powers made it civur atta Socialist Paper Admits There Is No Soviet ‘Dumping’| RIGA—The central organ of the Latvian Social Democratic Party} “Sozialdemokraats” writes: “The So- viet Union does not do any dumping in Latvia. The Soviet share of our imports is from 4 to 5 percent and consists entirely of goods which we do not produce. In cases where So- viet goods compete with other im- ports, their prices are not appreciably lower than the others. Other coun- tries, however, do indulge in dumping | for instance Poland which charges 11 Lats 30 Centimes for petroleum per | 100 kilograms in Latvia whilst the same quantity costs 28 Lats and 20 Centimes in Poland. The same is true of Polish cement exported to} Latvia. Finland is another country which engages in dumping on the Latvian market. The prices for Fin- nish goods in Latvia are anything the same goods in Finland. Czecho- slovakia also dumps. Czech foot- wear costs 17 percent less in Latvia than it costs in Czechoslovakia. The | viet Union aims at damaging the friendly relations between the Soviet Union and other states. From the} standpoint of Latvia such a policy would be foolish and criminal. Growth of Heavy Industry in USSR MOSCOW.—During the present special quarter a motor oil plant and! two cracking plans will be opened in Baku; a power station will be opened | in Guryev. Twehty new pits with a} total annual capacity of 4,800,000 tons will be opened up in the Donetz Basin, and eight new pits in Siberia with a total annual capacity of .1,550,- 000 tons. Three Martin ovens will be opened in the Ukraine, one blast fur- nace in that Crimea and one in Si- beria. A zinc works will be opened in Belov. The big woodworks in Obu- chovsk and a number of smaller works in the neighborhood of Lenin- grad will also be opened up. The chemical industry will also receive a number of new works including one in the Urals, one in Konstantinovka, two in Voskressensk, one in Lenin- grad and several others in various parts of the counrty. A new arti- ficial silk factory will be opened up in Mohilev. Three new leather works | will open up in the Volga district and | two in northern Caucasia. ARMS CONFERENCE MAKES FAKE MOVE In an attempt to get around the exposure by Litvnoff of the Soviet Gelegation of the fake limitacton of armaments talk at Geneva in the present session of the Preparatory Disarament Commission, a motion was adopted including the Soviet amendment calling for “reduction of armaments,” but to make it wholely useless in pyactice, the capitalist del- egates inserted the worlds “as far as possilie.” The votes for thi smotion was 11 for one against and 12 abstentions. The imperialist diplomats realize the profound effect that Litvinoff’s speech has had upon ‘the working masses who suffer tremendously in the present crisis, while the bosses spend billions for war, and took this latest maneuver to get out of a diffi- cult situation. Their phrases about “reduction as far as possible’ means building up their war machines as fast as they require them in preparing for the baat | they would build up their armies and novies to suit their convenience, and | to aid them in their war preparations. | CONCENTRATION OF ARMS IN ITALY. ROME, Italy—A bill has been in- troduced to “unify the command of Italian army and navy aviation.” It was introduced by the government and will put the same in control of both sides of aviation, 5-YEAR PLAN IS FORGING AHEAD IN SOVIET UNION Report on Advances of First 2 Years MOSCOW.—The Council of Pear ple’s Commissars of the Soviet Union |has adopted the following decision concerning the economic plans for the special quarter October-December 1930. During the second year of the Five Year Plan which has just concluded,. great success was achieved with the. | work for the building up of socialism and the basis was laid for the com= pletion of the full plan within four years, The gross production of the whole of large-scale industry grew by 25 per cent, and the production of the heavy industries by 40 per cent. Cap~ ital investments in the socialist sec# tion of the economic system rose by 84 per cent, the capital investments in socialist industry showing an in+ crease of 89 per cent. As a result of the rapid development of production and the tremendous extent of the constructive work, the number of workers in industry grew considerably as a result of which unemployment was liquidated. This fact represents one of the greatest achievements of the working class in the current year, Another important achievement was the increase of the area under seed in the collective agricultural undere takings to 36 million héctares, ale | though the Five Year Plan gave 20.6 | million hectares as the final figures at the conclusion of the fifth year, In the most important grain districts more than half of the peasant farms have now been organized in collective undertakings. The Soviet farms have sown 8 million hectares for the com- ing year, whereas the final figures of. the Five Year Plan were 5 million hectares. As a result of the develop- ment of the collective and Soviet farms the total area under seed in the Soviet Union increased by 7.4 mil- lion hectares this year. Thanks to the fundamental devs elopment in the direction of collective farms and to the development of the Soviet farms, the grain problem may be considered as solved and it is now possible to further the development’ of industrial crops such as sugar beet and cotton. This great success is the result of an uninterrupted struggle against | tremendous difficulties intensified by the bitter resistance of the declining classes. The Communist Party and the working class of the Soviet Union developed their attack on the cap- italist elements and undertook the liquidation of the kulaks as a class, carrying through this policy as an integral part of the collectivisation of agriculture. With regard to railway transport it was decided: to increase the freight turnover by 59 million kilometre tons or by 31.2 per cent as compared with. the quarter average in 1929-30; to increase the daily average use of the goods waggons to 135 kilometres; to increase the productivity per capita by 26.1 per cent as compared with the quarter average of the preceding year. Capital investments for transport ta total 655 millions rubles, including in. this figure the reduction of the cost of building production. The capital investments for post, telephone and telegraph services to total 45 million rubles, ‘ ‘The expenses for people’s education and for trade training to total 805 million rubles, not including éxpenses | for the training of workers in indus« ' try . The total number of students to be 252,000 at the high schools, 453,000 at the technical high schools and 227,000 at the workers faculties, RED DEPUTY ARRESTED BRUSSELS, Belgium. —- Jacques - Motte, Communist Deputy, was seized _ by police yesterday when he sought; to enter the Town Hall and present” the demands of hundreds of work> ers outside. The workers held @ demonstration outside the hall in de- Get | The | Daily Worker must have $30,000 to/ continue and to carry on its impor-' tant tasks. together. immediately. Get your shop mataes “Send in your contributions with | the reading of this issue, Form your Red Shock Troop Committees in all | organiza- | shops, factories, workers’ tions, everywhere, with the reading! of this call. Rush funds to the Daily | Worker office. By rallying to the support of the Daily Worker you an- | swer the bosses’ attacks against the workers; you bolster up the organ- ization drive against wage cuts, you aid in mobilizing the unemployed and ee fight hunger and starva- on. “Rally to the support of the Daily Worker! Rush funds in now!” Make your contributions | | own subscription or renewal. mate to subscribe. Use the blank below. I hereby pa; Name ......+645 CY sacsesccesescessoces T WORK I .crccccccvedcesseseceasers New York City. SPREAD THE Daily, aiorker Readers, join the campaign for 60,000 circulation by sending your Get the paper regularly. Get your shop. Daily Worker, 60 East 13th Street, New York City. «» Address sere State Tear off and mail directly to the Daily Worker, 50 East 13th bt: NOTE: Print all Names and Addresses clearly to avoid error. fiance of the police. (Date.) ssoeeee months subscription to the Industry.