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DAILY WORKER, ‘NEW YORK, SATURD. AY, IBER 29, 1930 _Fage Five WAR IN (Special Cable to the Daily Worker.) By H, VALECKI. MOSCOW, Nov. 28.—The trial of the central committee of the coun- ter-revolutionary organization called the “industrial party” started in Moscow on Noy. 25, In the high court of justice of the Soviet Repub- lic, eight men, all of them univer- sity professors and engineers and prominent specialists, are in the dock. The public proceedings are at- tended by many representatives of the foreign capitalist press and by members of the foreign missions and embassies in Moscow, who sit in the box reserved for diplomats. When several days ago the text of the ‘indictment of the state prose- cutor, Krylenko, which is based on the statements made by the accused in the preliminary examination, was published, it was said in the bour- geois and social-fascist press of all countries that this was another case of “monstrous forgery” on the part of the Soviet Government, and it was said, above all, that the statements of the accused regarding the prep- aration of armed intervention against the Soviet Union on the part of the imperialist governments and their general staffs were a pure invention and a maneuver in order to divert attention from the supposed failure of the Five-Year Plan. All organizers of the intervention whose names were given in the in- dictment, Poincare, Briand, the mem- bers of the French general staff, Joinville, Janet and Richard, the prominent member of the British conservative party, Churchill, the English expert in active espionage, Col. Lawrence, the middlemen, the {industrials and financiers, Rabushin- sky, Nobel, Lianov, who had taken Deterding—all of them have indig- nantly denied their participation in the preparation of intervention. The public trial has begun. The accused on whose statements the in- dictment is based appeared before their judges in order to account for the crimes with which they, are charged. Their appearance in court alone gives the lie to the fair tales spread by the bourgeoisie. The public pro- sedure, which will take up at least ten to fourteen days, will afford an opportunity for full discussion of all the details of their criminal activity and of the actions of the capitalist wire-pullers on whose behalf and for whose money they have worked al- steady. In answer to the question ad- dressed _to them by the president of the high court, Comrade Vishensky, orincipal of the Moscow University, f they plead guilty in the sense of the indictment, all of them said, *Yes!? All of them declared their willing- aess to give to the court full details of their activity. The first to be called on to speak was the chief defendant, Professor Ramsin, professor at the Technical High School of Moscow and head of the Diesel Institute, which position ne filled at the same time he was thairman of the central committee of the “industrial party.” He was Ls the Went s elect of Bod coun- ter-revolutionary government which was to be formed after the intended overthrow of the Soviet Government. His statement to the court, which takes the form of a more than six- hour long lecture, does not only fully confirm the indictment but ampli- fies it by a wealth of detail. He described the preliminary his- tory of the sabotaging organization | headed by him when on the thres- hold of the Five-Year Plan. The old engineers who were instructed by the Proletarian Government with the honorable and well-paid posts in the Soviet economy—Ramsin himself had ($750)—but who had not given up the hope of the restoration of the capitalist order, noticed that the rapid development of the Socialist economy “threatened” to create a sound basis for the new order, they made up their minds to wark actively against it. This was to be done in the form of sabotaging on a large scale the economic plans of the Soviet Govern- ment which was bound to lead to an economic crisis. He, Ramsin, and also some of the other defendants, took advantage of journeys abroad on behalf of the Soviet authorities, in order to get into touch with the Russian Czarist emigres, from the circles of the old Russian financial and industrial world. They met them in Paris. They met” the leaders of the Torgrom, the committee of the industrialists and financiers, and through them, the leading French statesmen and representatives of the general staff of the army. In this manner sabotaging activ- ity in the Soviet Union itself was placed on a much broaded basis and was given greater possibilities for ac- tivity as a coup de etat in the Soviet Union itself could not be contem- plated, The plan of armed intervention was eagerly taken up as the only hopeful way. Considerable financial means were also placed at their dis- posal.” According to Ramsin, thesum handed over to them in the last years fo rtheir sabotaging activity amounts to about four million rubles ($2,000,000), which was used for the “work” in the most important do- mains of industry and transporta- tion. They received monies in Mos- cow from two members of the French embassy who were protected by their diplomatic immunity. He described minutely the inter- views which he and some of his col- leagues, now in the dock, had with the said gentlemen. Instructions and questionnaires were placed before all of them, and in this manner they delivered their reports and commu- nications. Special attention was paid to military espionage and plans for placing in jeopardy the defense of the country. The war industry, and especially those branches of indus- try and communications which are of particular importance in the event of war, were especially concentrated on. The date of thei ntervention was already fixed. Originally it was to take place in 1930. It was thought from the standpoint of the internal situation in the Soviet Union this year would be most opportune as the Seattle Passes Quota For Dec. In 60,000 Campaign; N. Y. Parade Brings Sales District 12, Seattle, has passed its quota for December in the cam- paign for 60,000 circulation for the Daily Worker. The Seattle quota was an increase of 420 by December Ist. tdditional readers. uota in all districts is twice the De- sember quota. Seattle reached its juota at the same time as District \9, Denver. A report on Denver was sublished in yesterday’s Daily. These two districts, Seattle and Denver, are the only two which have veached their December quotas. They sromise to increase their tempo dur- ng the next month. The fact that two districts can reach their quotas shows what can be done when there are live wires present. All quotas were carefully determined on a basis of Party membership and Daily Worker readers, If these two districts reached their quotas it proves it can be done in any district where the Party is back of the drive. Daily Worker Parade Success in New York The first New York truck and sandwich parade in the Daily Work- sr campaign for 60,000 readers or- sanized by Section 2 registered a hit Wednesday and resulted in the sale of 150 Daily Workers. There was one truck of 25 work- ‘rs who marched along Sixth and Zighth Aves. between 22nd and 50th 5ts. Wednesday from 11:30 a. m. to tp. m. shouting Daily Worker slogans, Several of the workers wore Daily Worker signs. The marchers created a sensation in front of the numerous employment agencies. They were cheered at the Needle ‘Trades market. Plans are being laid for next week. In the meantime this challenge | has been sent out by I. Grossman, Section 2, Daily Worker agent. “Section 2 challenged every other section in the district to parade next week. Sections 2, 4 and 5 to combine in one gigantic Daily Worker parade to put the Daily Worker on the Manhattan map.” The January 1st¢—————— This district has already put on 434 New York Red Sunday Nets 150 New Readers The first Red Sunday in New York in the Daily Worker drive for 60,000 readers netted 125 additional house to house subscriptions and 30 mail subscriptions and renewals. This re- sult is not sufficient for a New York Red Sunday but this was the first mobilization and was not as com- plete as it should be. Next Sunday a real offensive is expected. Each unit has been di- vided into three sections. One sec- tion will turn out on each of the next three Sundays. Sympathetic workers must also join in the work. All out next Sunday for the Daily Worker! Report at section head- quarters 10 a. m. Sunday. Red News Jamboree Again Next Sunday John Barnes, who is a Red Star member of the New York Red Build- ers News Club says: “Two months ago the section Daily Worker Rep first approached me to sell the Daily Worker. The first day I only sold 18 papers but this encouraged me to continue. I increased it every day and now I am selling an average of 70 papers daily. “My approach to the workers is ‘every worker must read the Daily Worker because it is fighting for un- employment insurance and against wage cuts, and fights against lynch- ing in the South.’ “These slogans appeal to the work- ers and I find no opposition in sell- ing the paper. “I urge all unemployed workers to join the Red Builders News Club and go out and sell the Daily Worker.” Unemployed workers, come to the 1931! a@ salary of 1,500 rubles a month| hope to their Russian agents that by ‘campaign of lies started by the cap- great capital investments provided in the Five-Year Plan for industry would not yet have had a direct ef- fect, with the result that the popula- tion would be experiencing for the time being only the difficulties of the Socialist construction, without being able to enjoy its benefits. These difficulties were to be “helped on” by bringing confusion into the economic life to which the sabotaging organization was to con- tribute by making full use of the high posts held by its members. On the other hand, the organizers of the military intervention held out the that time the war preparations, the purely military, as well as the polit- ical, would have advanced far enough to strike the blow. The plan was as follows: Through “incidents” on the Rumanian-Soviet frontier hostilities were to be initi- ated by Rumania, then Poland. The ally of Rumania would step in, and the war could naturally be extended. France and Britain would only make themselves responsible for supplying the said countries with war material. They would also give naval help in the Black and Baltic Seas with their navy and air fleets. For the blow from the North against Leningrad, a special role was assigned to Finland and the other Baltic states. The role of Germany, and that of the other states, was also carefully considered only to- wards the end of 1929 when it could be seen that this “account was drawn up without the host,” and that the preparations inside as well as out- side Russia would not be complete by that time. The date of the intervention was put off till 1931. Such is the gist of Ramsin’s statement. After him the other seven defendants spoke and all of them said the same. Every one of them gives details from the domain of his special work. The motives of the defendants, who in spite of their hatred of the Proletarian Dictator- ship, were induced to confess their misdeeds to the court, are obvious. The unmasked criminals look upon this as the only possibility of escap- ing proletarian justice, of being able to save their miserable lives. It goes without saying that the italist press and the imperialist gov- ernments will go on even after their assertions concerning the indictment can no longer be maintained, but they will not find it easy to get over the statements of the accused made at a public trial. The discovering and unmasking of the machinations which were made | for the preparation of an armed in- tervention against the Soviet Union for a fixed time, as well as the de- struction of the nest of traitors who had to prepare in the Soviet Union itself the ground for this interven- tion, present a severe blow to the plans of the imperialists, However, nothing would be more wrong than the assumption that thereby the intervention itself, the war against the Soviet Union, is made impossible. The motives which are driving the imperialists to war against the Soviet Union, the crying contrast between the progress of So- cialist construction, on the one side, and the world crisis, which is shak- ing the foundation of the capitalist order, on the other, the fear of the swelling revolutionary tide in their own countries, all of this will spur on the imperialists to continue the feverish preparations for an armed campaign against the Soviet Union. According to the statements of the defendants in the Moscow trial, the new date for the intervention is ifxed for 1931. The proletariat of the Soviet Union which accomplished the October Revolution, which defeated its enemies during the first imperial- ist intervention of 1918-20, and dur- ing the civil war, which through peaceful work re-established its econ- omy, and is now engaged by extreme efforts in completing the gigantic work of social reconstruction, in in- dustry and agriculture, will overcome all new attacks from outside, It will do its duty as it even has done it now. It is up to the proletariat of the capitalist countries. It is their duty to see to it that the armies 9f the imperialist robbers, even before they reach the frontier of the Workers’ and Peasants’ Republic dash them- the rising revolutionary proletarian selves to pieces against the wall of armies! PATERSON, ‘PASSAIC TO HOLD CONFERENCES | The Daily Worker campaign for 60,000 circulation will be the subject of discussion at conferences of Daily Worker readers in both Paterson and Passaic this Sunday, Nov. 30. The conferences will also discuss ways and means of building up worker corre- spondence. The Paterson conference will be held at 2 p. m. at 206 Market St. on Sunday. In Passaic the conference will be held at 287 Monroe St. at 4p. m. Get a 1931 Daily Worker calendar free with a 6 months subscription or re- newal. next hot dog jamboree of the Red Builders News Club, Sunday night, | Only by tomorrow, Admit Might of Knowing Futility of (Continued from Page One) organization. He received from this source fifty thousand roubles. * 8 * MOSCOW, Nov. 28.—This evening's | session concluded with the state-| ments of all the defendants, and the motion of the Soviet prosecutor re- garding the calling of witnesses. ‘The session began with the defend- ant Fyedotov’s concluding statement. He detailed the causes preventing the wreckers from terminating their work, even after recognizing the fu- tility of their efforts. Losing his self possession, Fyedotov spoke of “group instincts” suppress- ing the voice of reason. He himself recognized, he said, before his arrest that the Soviet powe rtruly repre- sents the masses and leads the peo- ple to a better life. “The socialist regime enables a rapid development of economic prosperity of the masses end their cu'‘nre,” said Fyedotov. He confessed his guilt in member- ship of the central committee, and as one of the leaders of the wreck- ers’ work in the textile industry. His guilt, he said, was particularly heavy because he, as a professor of eco- nomics, knew political economy and the teachings of Marx and Lenin. “The court verdict,” said Fyedotov, “whatever it be, will be correct.” The following two defendants, Och- kin and Sitnin, contributed nothing new to the material already adduced. Their statements made the impres- sion of dishonesty, suppressing many things. Ochkin, formerly Ramsin’s secretary in the fuel institute, men- tioned the field training of leading workers as unnamed field wreckers. He showed lack of education, falsely quoting Archimedes’ expression, hav- ing him say: “Give me a lever and I will turn the globe.” His detailed report was of some interest, giving the exact place and time of meetings with the French Agents K and R for the purpose of delivering spy material. Sitnin stated that Lopatin induced him to begin the wreckers’ work back in 1922. He described two stages of the wreckers’ work, before and after the decisive Paris conversations about intervention. He confirmed the for- mer statement of Kuprianov about his meeting Konovalov when the lat- ter reported about Poincare having received representatives from the commercial and industrial commit- tee in Paris. He denied participa- tion in military and espionage work. After the conclusion of the defend- ants’ principal statements, Ramsin, Charnovsky, Kalinikov made supple- mentary statements. The sensational significance of Ramsin’s statement, as yet is unknown. He said that the last meeting of the representative of the central committee with Denisov was in Paris in July of 1930. The central committee of the “in- dustrial party” was represented there by Ossadchi, who was then acting president of the State Planning Com- mission of the Soviet Union. Ossad- chi is now arrested and can be ex- amined. Besides, an important point in his statement was the fact that Shein was the connection for the purpose of delivering material in the oil industry. Answering an inquiry, Krylenko, Soviet prosecutor, said he waived the paragraphs of the rules of the prole- tarian law court permitting him to dispense with the court examination because the defendants pleaded guilty. “I cannot do it,” said Krylenko, “because there are important points yet unmentioned or falsely presented. On account of the defendants’ state- ments I deem it possible to extend the indictment, especially regarding the conclusions of the original in- dictment.” Krylenko proposed citing ten wit- nesses to throw more light on the facts These include representatives of the secret party known as “Toiling Farmers”: Kurovsky, Kassovsky, like- wise Ossadchi. The latter is impris- oned pending investigation as mem- ber of the central committee of the “industrial party.” The investigation is not finished. He still can be examined as a wit- ness. It ‘is particularly important that he throw light on the last con- versation with Denisov. Krylenko proposes to bring to the trial various additiona! documents. said Krylenko, Sabotagers Give Details of the Imperialist Interventionist Plots; Soviet Proletariat’ Hiding Fact Counter-| Revolutionaries Confess All ,; Would he be able to propose further } | proceediags. The defense agrecd te | this. The court adopted Krylenko's | proposition. The session adjourned | until the evening of the 28th * * MOSCOW, Nov. 28.—The statement of the defendant, Fyedotov, who oc- | cupied a leading post in the textile |industry, made a deep impression. | He revealed how the counter-revolu- | tionaries endeavored to make use of | the right elements in the Commu- | nist Party of the Soviet Union, for | their own purposes. Fyedotov says: “The ideas of the right elements appeared to us sym- pathetic, because we calculated in advance the degeneration of the NEP (New Economic Policy) in a capital- ist direction. Therefore, members of the wreckers organization endeav- ored to influence adherents of the right deviation in the Communist Party, to supply them with ‘argu- ments,’ ‘substantial data’ in the press and in books, to support the right wing conception.” Fyedotov especially could do that because being engaged in the textile industry he “defended” light indus- try versus heavy industry in the spirit of the right elements. The wreckers wanted, however, to prove the impracticability of the gen- eral party line, not only by theoreti- cal arguments, but, as Fyedotov says, “by tangible lessons.” These “tangi- ble” arguments were to be furnished wrecking work, in order to create chaos in the economic life. This had to cause the “bankruptcy” of the general line of the Communist Party. These entire mechanics of using the right opposition by the wreckers organization shows how this right opposition objectively furnished sup- port to the wreckers’ work and there- by also to the tntervention plans. The same applies in the present situation to the letest bloc of the right and le‘t cppositionists, Syrtsov and Lominadze. It is clear that the maneuvers of the right, whether they appear openly as cprortunists. or as masked “left” oppositionists play also in other sections of the Comintern the same role of supporters of their own bourgeoisie and as people favor- ing the plans of the imperialist enemies of the Soviet Union, not to speak of the renegades of the type of the Brandlerists or Trotskyites who since the imperialist attack on the Eastern Chinese Railway openly sided with the enemy, combatting in @ most cynical way the Communist campaign against the war danger. Jobless, Freezing On Streets, Resist Being Chased Off Subways| NEWY ORK.—Sleepers are being chased out of the subway these cold | nights. Not that anything like a night’s rest is obtainable, jouncing | over bridges and roaring through tunnels, or dozing on the benches in the stations. A group of fourteen was in a desperate mood, however, early the other morning at thirty- fourth street, when a guard tried to put them out. ‘They ganged up on him, Got him in a corner and took his black-jar away from him. After a beating he got away, and the fourteen scattered in various directions when they heard | he had summoned the police. However, it was a spark of re- sistance. The workers are learning to fight back. Needle Trades Ball to Help Dress Strike Fund NEW YORK.—All preparations were made for the ball of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union, which will be held Friday, Dec. 5, in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. ‘The ball should be made a demon- stration of solidarity of all workers for the coming strike of the dress- makers for union conditions. The whole income of the ball will be used for the dress strike fund. Tickets are only 50 cents. Buy your tickets now at the union office, 131 W. 28th St., or at the Morning Frei- heit, 50 E. 13th St. WORKMEN’S SICK AND Reserves on December Death Benefit: $4,399,910.97 Total: In Case of Sickness, Death Benetit according to the age at the time of initiaation in one or both classes. CLASS A; 40 cents per month—Death Benefit $355 at the age of 16 to $175 at the age of 44. CLASS B: 50 cents per month—Death Benefit $550 to $230, $15, respectively, per week, for the firsi another forty weks, for another forty weeks. 27: E. 4th St. You get papers on credit for the first day's sales. OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ORGANIZED 188{—INCORPORATED 1899 Main Office: 714-716 Seneca Ave., Ridgewood Sta., Brooklyn, N. Y Over 61,000 Members in 348 Branches Benefits paid since its existence: $15,176,529.98 Workers! Protect Your Families! Parents may insure their children in Death Benefit according to age $20 to $200 Sick Benefit paid from the first day of filing the doctor's certificate, $9 and Sick Benfits for women: $9 per week for the first. forty weeks: $4.50 each For further Information apply at the Main Office, William Spuhr, National Secretary, or to the Financial Sceretaries of the Branches, DEATH BENEFIT FUND 31, 1929: $3,158,239.43 Sic. Benefit: $10,776,019.01 Accident or Death! ‘ase of death up to the age of 18. t forty weeks, half of the amount for by their sabotage, by direct technical | tartling News of Growing War Plots Against Soviets! Smash Bosses’ War Moves! ENTE RNATIORNAL BREWS © JERSEY POLICE JAIL DAILY WORKER AGENTS JERSEY CITY, N. J., Nov. 28.—Two | Daily Worker agents, Hoffman and | Albert Covington, were arrested here | Saturday for the “crime” of distrib- | uting the Daily Worker. They were | thrown into Jail on charges of look- | ing “suspicious,” and were denied the | | right of the use of the telephone on) the excuse that it was too late for a call or for an immediate hearing. | They were held in jail until Monday | morning when a hearing was finally | held and they were told to imme-| diately get out of town. It is not safe for workers to walk on the streets in this city. On Sat- urday night a Negro worker was picked up by a motorcycle cop for merely standing in front of his house. In the city jail where the workers were kept for two nights and a day the cells were cold no blankets for | sleeping, and the food consisted of a thinly sliced bologny sandwich and a cup of coffee for supper, a half dipper of oatmeal and a roll for | breakfast, some goulash for dinner. WORKERS RELIEF SHOWS GERMAN STRUGGLE FILM NEW YORK.—A German film of| workers’ life, “Harbor Drift,” will be shown under the auspices 6f the Workers International Relief, Sunday evening, at 7:30 at the Hungarian Workers Home, 350 East 81st St. The film will be shown in the place of the one formerly advertised. The picture is a visual expose of the hardships thrust upon the work- ing class by the ruling class, and the imperialist “Young Plan.” The ports of Europe, unemployed workers, misery and fight are flashed across the screen. Unusual scenes along the docks where the huge steamers from America come, are shown. Contrasts of tourist wealth, of the poverty of the unemployed workers treading the docks made a vivid movie. Tickets are only 35 cents in ad- vance, at door 45 cents, for sale at the Hungarian Workers Home, and WIR National Office, 36 East 20th Street. HELSINGFORS.—The new Finnish | Reichstag has passed the anti-Com- munist law which its predecessor re- | fused to pass. The new law is di-! rected against the revolutionary |miners of the Mansfeld area were | Briefs from All Lands BERLIN.—The wage negotiations between the representatives of tne | Rhine shipping firms and the re-| |formist irade union leaders have} been abandoned. The employers de-| |manded wage-cuts while the reform- | ist leaders, under mass pressure, were | unable to abandon the workers de- | mand for a wage increase of 3 marks |a week, A strike will probably take | place. BERLIN. — Three conferences of | the miners of Central Germany took | place in Eisleben, Bitterfeld and Bockwitz with a view to organizing} a counter-offensive against wage- cuts, Sixty delegates of the copper present at the conference in Eisleben | which discussed the threatened wage | tionary «mions came into question. |The conference in Bitterfeld de- cut and declared that after the ex- | that the workers of a fa perience of the last Mansfeld strike 1 |only the leadership of the revolu-}a great meeting of delegates from clared itself in favor of a strike for | wage increases. It was decided to conference in Bockwitz expressed ap- mines. Government Toppling (Cable by Inprecorr.) BERLIN, Nov. 26. — Bredt, minister of economy in the Bruening govern- ment, resigned today in accordance with a decision of the Economic Party —parliamentary representation of the small and middle traders—which de- mands more reactionary policy and opposes the price dropping scheme even in its present ineffective form. The resignation means further use of article 48, which provides for a dictatorship. working class movement, which is now completely at the mercy of police arbitrariness. At the same time the new law facilitates the de- velopment of the Finnish bourgeoisie to an open fascist dictatorship. SPEND TODAY AT THE HELP BUILD THE Attend the SIXTH ANNUAL “ICOR” BAZAAR For the benefit of Jewish Colonization in Biro-Bidjan, U. S. S. R. LAST Saturday, November 29 165™ INFANTRY ARMORY 68 Lexington Aven (Between 25th and 26th Streets) Articles of all kinds at "DU MPIN G” prices Program: TODAY HUGE BIRO-BIDJAN BA Ridgeley’s Band, and Vernon Andrade’s Negro Orchestra Two Restaurants and fine Buffet every Night! Last Day of Bazaar—aAll articles will be sold at your own price. TIOKETS—Tonight 75 SOVIET UNION! DAY! ue, New York City LL. TWO ORCHESTRAS ents; No hat checks | the 7 hour shift with corresponding | strengthen the groups of the revolu-|the farms had caused thov \tionary trade union opposition. The | proval of the draft law put forward | by the Communist Diet fraction to} increase the security level in the | Bredt Quits; Bruening contac ON. | INCREASE; GRAIN PLANS EXECUTED \Ufa Farms Are 18 P.C. Ahead of Prog MOSCOW. — It is reported from | Ufa that tne collective farms in 28 districts‘ of the Bashkirian Republic have exceeded the pl: supply by 18 per cen’ rey have delivered 118,000 cwts., of grain over and above their quota. New grain transports are arriving from all dis- | tricts. Last month w collec tive farms were organized Bash- kiria. In addition 3,881 individual peasant farms have linked up with the already existing collective farms in the Republic. It is reported Novosibirsk pro= anized from ducinb combine ma the collective farms in the area, Thirty-two collectives ‘wi repre- sented. Their reports showed that the plans had been carried out splendidly and that the example of ands of individual peasants to throw in their Since lot with the collective farms. the signing of the collective ment the membership of the c tives has risen by 28 per cent and the plans have been carried out 100 per cent, The collective farms have | delivered 30,000 tons of grain to the State. In addition the collectives have rendered great support to the individual farmers. The conference adopted a message of greetings to the Central Committee of the Com- munist Party assuring it of full support. RED NITE IN CHINA. A costume dance for the benefit of Section 5 will take place tonight at the Co-operative Auditorium, 2700 Bronx Park East. Tickets are 49 cents. Get Your Costumes Now NEXT WEEK “uerers “Vp ie mom Sy 4750 11m 008 TICKETS AT: New Mas: 19th St. (Phone ALG. 4445); Workers Bookshop, 50 East 13th St.; Rational Restaurant, 219 Second Av.; La Fiesta, 88 W. Eighth St.; Columbia University Bookstore, 116th’ St. and Broadway. AND OTHER CENTERS FIRST ANNUAL DAILY WORKER CALENDAR FOR 1931 Seven striking half-tone pictures of the class struggle never be~ fore published, including: An unpublished picture of Lenin ressing Moscow workers, Views of the biggest strikes and demonstrations in the U. 8. Five smashing cartoons of the class struggle. Historical data on the big events of the class struggle. Important quotations Marx, Engels, Lenin, etc. 12 pages—one for each mot printed in two colors on vy paper, size 842 x 14. Neatly bound. Indespensible in every Red worker's home. with every six month's subserip- tion or renewal. Get your fel- Jow worker to subscribe. You get a calendar, he gets too. Without subscriptions p 500 (Only one calendar to each worker. DAILY WORKER 50 EAST 189TH STR me Si 112 Bast from e © By Mail: 50 cents a month, outside Man- hattan and’ Bronx, Manhattan and Bronx, one 2 months, § 3 months, 3; 6 months, $4.50; 1 year, $8. month CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDAIGET PROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere 317°. WEEK CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N.Y. PHONE 781 ALL YEAR VACATION PLACE $0 per week, Write Avanta Warm, Ulster Park, N. ¥.