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“seus coe seetaesy _ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1930 _ Page Relea di LE rc se > RR: Ss Los Angeles, Kansas City and Detroit Boost Orders in Drive; Small Centers Show ‘Increases =—_- Fe acre rs bt SF Oop s EK’ 2x = __— Yare Plunder Gang to Confiscate the | Homes of 25,000 Philadelphia Jobless Workers Who Cannot Pay Small Taxes Vaunted “City of Homes” Now City of More Than Thousand Sheriff Sales Weekly Workers Must. Fight This Robbery by Or- ganizing Into Unemployed Councils and Strike (By a Worker PHILADELPHIA.—It has istration intends to confiscate Correspondent) Come out that the city admin- the homes of 25,000 workers because they could not pay their taxes or water rent. It means that these workers had been out of work for quite a while, because no one would risk losing his home he is supposed to own because he could not pay the taxes. Nevertheless the city machinery is set in motion to carry through their dirty plan and the sheriff has been instructed to seize the homes of all who fail to pay the taxes. JOBLESS CONDEMN CITY GOVERNMENT Cynically “Reject Help for Needy (By a Worker Correspondent) MINNEAPOLIS.—A delegation of the Unemployed Council of the Trade Union Unity League appeared today before the so-called “Public Welfare Committee” of the city council and forced the bosses’ politicians to read and take up the demands of, the Un- employed Council for immediate re- lief for the 40,000 unemployed now, on the verge of starvation in this city. These demands-had been present~ ed last Friday to the city council which proceeded to “pass the buck” to the committee, which in turn, de- claring that théy did not know where the city of Minneapolis was going to get $12,000,000 for unemployed relief, cheerfully passed the demand along to the “Ways and Means” committee. From the very first. it was very evident that the city aldermen were going to try to ignore the presence of the unemployed delegation which numbered 20. When the leading la- bor fakers of Minneapolis, Walter Frank and Stanley Anderson, heads of the A. F. of L. building trades council, entered also with a delega- tion, they were “recognized” by the bosses’ politicians of the council and invited to sit at the council table which was set off from the rest of the chamber ‘by a rail. While\the fakers and the city council lolled at ease smoking huge, expensive cigars, the rank and file workers of the A. F. of L. together with the delegation of the Unemplayed Council stood out- side the rail. -It was only after the Spokesman for the unemployed, Geo. E. Powers, district secretary of the Trade Union Unity League has re- peatedly insisted on the right to voice the demands of the unemployed that the aldermen were forced to listen. Frank, who with Anderson and other fakers are responsible for the breaking of the Northwestern Box and other strikes, confined his re- "marks to a complaint that on certain work “organized labor is ignored.” What he wanted was that the fakers should be permitted to give out jobs on certain city work and thus in- crease their prestige, power and in- come. They had nothing to offer in the shape of concrete proposals. for immediate unemployed relief. Powers, representing the unemploy- ed, attacked the city council and the labor fakers for using the sufferings of the unemployed as a political foot- ball. He pointed out that the de- mands for the appropriation of $12,- 000,000 for immediate relief were en- tirely feasible and practical. When city council members inquired how the money Was to be raised, they were told by the répresentative of the unemployed delegation that there was plenty of money in Minneapolis to pay the bankers’ interest to dec- orate the strets with expensive ever- green displays, to provide the mayor with a new-seven-passenger car, but that when the unemployed were con- sidered, there were impossible ob- stacles in the way of doing anything. One alderman asked Powers if he “wanted the city council to start @ revolution. The answer to this sally ‘was that if the city council as the committee of the bosses in Minne- apolis, doesn’t get buy and do some- thing besides talk, the unemployed will take matters into their own hands, that the warehouses and stores filled with food and clothing would be visited by the unemployed and that they would take what they need- ed, whether the city council liked it or not. = W.LR. HAS CLASSES} “sme IN MUSIC, DANCE The Cultural Activites Dépt. has established music and dancing schools as follows: Caren Coope- City Near Bankruptcy. Mr. Ashton, city treasurer, made a hypocritical plea ta the delinquents that they pay the rent and taxes. It will prevent court action, he said, and relieve the city’s financial dis- tress. It will furnish fygds to the council to appropriate for the reliet of the unemployed. Now isn’t that nice of the Vare gang. They had to mention the un- employed ‘workers in order to collect about $7,000,000 to $10,000,000 from the unemployed workers who cannot pay taxes, in order “to relieve un- employment,” as they put it. They talk of relief in order to fool the workers. Must Stop Confiscations. Now it is obvious that they intend | to carry out mass confiscations, but there is no way of stopping these robbers only if the 25,000 workers whose homes are threatened with seizure get together and fight it. Then the city council would hesitate and wouldn't even think of trying it. The organizations that can fight this battle against mass confiscation are the Councils of Unemployed, who demand a tax strike for jobless workers, no evictions and a fight for real unemployment relief at the bosses’ expense. Unemployed Councils are at 39 N. Tenth St., 1331 N. Franklin St. and 2802 Kensington St. Join now. ee Philadelphia is the vaunted “City of Homes,” with about 425,000 indi- vidual one and two-family houses. Sheriff sales during the last few years have averaged about 1,000 a week, but the sharpening of the crisis has brought about: the condition de- scribed above. PASS THE BUCK BUT NOT REUEF Anything But Pay Real Relief NEW YORK.—A wild goose chase for relief as one boss charitable in- stitution after another passed the buck to the next one was told the Daily Worker by an unemployment worker, Ira Allen. On Dec. 1, Allen, being in imme- diate relief, went to the Prosser Com- mittee, 40 Wall St., the committee that is raising $6,000,000, ostensibly for relief. At the Prosser place he was referred to the Emergency: Em- ployment Committee on 297 Fourth Ave., where part time starvation jobs were being handed out. After wait- ing hours and hours in line he was told on the second day to go to the city employment bureau. There he was told to go to the Municipal Lodg- ing Housé annex, a refrigerated place. Kept On the Run. The next few days Allen spent in running from the Municipal Lodging House to the St. Paul Church, 214 Broadway, where he was given a.meal ticket and referred to the Trinity Church at 72 Wall St. To complete the vicious circle Allen was then given a card to the City Mission at 38 Bleecker St., where upon presen- tation of the card he was told to go back to the Trinity Church address. Allen is but one of the many thou- sands of jobless workers that are being driven, insulted, referred to this and that, all in the bosses’ fran- tic effort not to pay a cent out of their swollen profits for weal relief. Ave. Tnter-school activities such as sing- ing and goed totaal chorus, brass band, symphony and mandolin orchestras are also being developed in the vari~ ous branches. ine methods of teaching are fol- lowed: nahi and individual in- ate WT R. music school instructs which can be anit wee tones petsantia ge Ce a ee te ok mhusic is also taught i Plot Be with all ite classes. All workers atid workers’ children who want musical or dance instruc- tion should enroll at the workers In- ternational Relief, 131 West 28 St. Don’t miss full circula- tion tables each Wednes- LSNR. EXPOSES PITTS. FIRE TRAP Negro Chi ld Was Burned to Death (By a Worker Correspondent.) PITTSBURGH, Dec. 11.—As a re- sult of investigations carried out here by a committee of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, of a fire which took the life of a 6-year-old Negro child on Thanksgiving Day, the following interesting facts have been unearthed: i The fire, which broke out when the widowed mother of seven children was preparing the noon-day mea] for her children, started on the second floor of the house, where the chil- dren were. The house is one of a block of six similar homes, each with three rooms, one on each floor, each home having only one entrance, the front door, and no fire escape, or even hallway conecting the three, floors. When the fire broke out in this souse on Sweeney Way the children shouted in alarm, and one little girl of six rushed upstairs to the third floor to escape th esmoke. There be- ing no hallway for escape, but only Stairs connecting each room, the child on the third flor was burned te death before the fire was put out. These facts make clear that this home is another of the hundreds of fire- traps into which Negroes are segre- gated in the “Hill” district of Pitts- burgh. The mother, whose husband, a hod-carrier, died two years ago, has been supported by the local “Wel- fare” Fund, which paid her rént and gave her less than $10 per week to feed her children on. The children were repeatedly forced to ask as- sistance from neighbors, who also are among the poorest paid workers in the city. It i sto fight against segregation of Negro workers and to force con- demnation of the hundreds of fire- traps in this city, for which Negro workers are forced to pay exorbitant rents, and to fight against evictions, that the League of Struggle for Ne- gro Rights is now beginning a cam- paign, in which it has the cd-opera- tion of the Unemployed Council on the “hill,” which is calling a mass meeting for Wednesday night, Dec. 10, at the Pythian Temple, 2011 Cen- ter Ave. (Wylie Ave. entrance), to discuss these problems. Admission is free. All workers are urged to at- tend. SHARP INCREASE IN N. Y. JOBLESS Out of Work Grow in Oct. by 250,000 ALBANY, N. Y., Dec. 11—Unem- ployment is rapidly growing worse in New York state, according to la~ test reports of Frances Perkins, In- dustrial Commission. Never since unemployment figures were kept in this state, that is, since 1914, have the unemployment figures been so high. ‘The drop in employment for Oc- tober, among factory workers, was 3 per cent; in New York City it was 3 1-2 per cent—the only time this was exceeded in one month was in the early part of the crisis of 1929, when there was a drop of 51-2 per cent, What is happening in New York is indicative of what is going on throughout the entire country. The) jobless army is growing larger all the time. The three per cent drop for the month, applied to those at work in October, would mean that at least 250,000 workers lost their jobs in that ‘one month alone. BELATED REPORTS RED VOTE GAIN Not even yet, over five weeks since the day of election, have the cap- italist election officials of Chicago released figures on the large Com- munist vote increase in that city. Only now, have the Maryland state vot efigures been maae public, as far as the Communist balloting is con- cerned. Both Illinois and Maryland gave out the Republican and Demo- cratic figures right after election day. In Maryland, Samuel Parker, Ne- gro waiter and Communist candidate for governor received 855 votes. Isa- dore Samuelson, Communist candi- date for attorney general got 970 votes. Lena Lipman, needle worker, candidate for comptroller got 995 Lipman and showing it is still pushing for Bobbie Hall, Los Angeles, Membership meeting called on Wednesday. Getting good co-op- eration now. Red week extended. Street sales picking up. Increase 50 copies dai sey in “1,000 A DAY FOR 3 DAYS,” KANSAS CITY Mel Wermblad, Daily Worker rep- resentative at Kansas City, writes: “We are planning a special drive on Dec. 18 ,19, 20, at which time we will need about 1,000 copies daily. Our activities will include Red Sundays as well as week-ends, at which times the comrades will take up a house-to-house cam- paign. “We will start organizing all units in our district for this work.” LACKAWANNA UNIT ENTERS 60,000 DRIVE Lackawanna is starting a race with Albany to determine which city will outdo the other in the drive for 60,000 circulation. P. Stevens wi “We have decided to begin with five copies of the Daily Worker to sell in Lackawanna. We are also challenging the Albany Unit in the | Daily Worker Red Shock Troops | Campaign plan. Begin sending Daily Workers at once.” WORKER CORRESPONDENCE BUILDING CIRCULATION We receive an encouraging note from the secretary of the workers’ correspondence group in Oakland, California: “Proceeding with our corre- spondence. Have called a confer- ence for Dec. 20. We wish to spread out more in the shops. The sale of the Daily has increased from 75 to 125 daily. We know that after we have builf up a mass Worcorr League embracing all the industries we will increase it still more.” RED BUILDERS’ NEWS CLUB MEET NETS SALES The Red Builders’ News Club held UNITED COUNCILS CALL CONFERENCE Preparations Made for WIR Bazaar NEW YORK. — With the joint bazar of the Workers’ International Relief and the United Councils of Working Class Women only a few weeks away, the bazar committee announces the need of all workers and workers’ organizations to col- lect matérial to be sold at the bazar enabling workers to buy useful ar- ticles at greatly reduced prices. The United Councils of Working Class Women is callling a series of city-wide conference to intensify their activity in making blouses, pil- lows, lamp shades, etc., and in col- lecting material for the bazar. The conference will be held at: 2700 Bronx Park East; *400 Boston Rd., Bronx; 143 East St., N. Y.; 43 Bay 28th St. Brooklyn; 118 Bristol St., Brooklyn; 61 Graham Ave., Brook- lyn, on Thursday, Dec. 11 at 8 p. m. The W. I, R. branches and scouts are also active in collecting material. All material collected, is urged to be brought ‘> the bazazr offices, at 131 W. 28th St., and at 799 Broadway, Room 535% TAILORS MEET SATURDAY IN FIGHT ON WAGE CUTS Detroit has just increased its order 100 a day and 200 on Saturday, | Lenin Medallion this morning from ; Hanna, Los Angelees: | help of the G. P. U., can take good the campaign for 60,000 circulation. a successful meeting at University Place, corner 14th St. The meeting lasted 21-2 hours and the speakers all unemployed workers, addressed an audience of some 800 wor! Eighty-five copies of the paper were sold. Many workers gave five and ten cents for the paper and others con- tributed so that the paper/might be distributed free. Lena Rosenberg, Lehigh: “I have made arrangements witha number of small boys to sell the Daily Worker on the streets. We have decided to order a bundle of 50 copies.” RED BUILDERS HAVING “BEST OF LUCK” From E. Mazzerello, etary ot Sacramento Red Builders’ News Club, comes this message: “The Builders’ Club received the the New York Red Builders’ News Club, and we thank you. Our lit- tle club of ten members is being knit closer together and is begin- | ning to look like an organization. We are having the best of luck with the work because of the will- ingness of the members to put out their best.” INDIVIDUAL WORKERS JOIN 60,000 DRIVE Indicative of the awakening spirit of individual readers all over the 60,000 readers is the letter from K. “Send five copies of the Daily Worker every day. We must get 60,000 circulation for our paper by Jan. 1. Compared with the num- ber of workers, the circulation of our paper is not enough, Many comrades do not realize that the Daily Worker is the only English mass paper in the United States. Will send more money shortly.” BIG CROWD HEARD HATHAWAY TALK Amter to ‘Speak at the Next Forum Meet NEW YORK.—Several hundred workers had to be turned away for lack of room when Clarence Hatha- way, editor of the Daily Worker, gave a clear and comprehensive ex- position of the forces that are rap- idly driving toward another im- perialist world war and primarily to a military attack against the Soviet Union. The intense interest of the audi- ence was manifested both in the seYious attention paid to the speaker and to the lively discussion and the numerous questions raised. A shock of unmitigated. joy and pride flashed through the audience when Hatha- way made reference to the fact that the workers’ and peasants’ govern- ment in the Soviet Union, with the care of the counter-revolutionary INTERNATIONAL BREWS oo VALENCIA POLICE | KILL, WORKER IN GENERAL STRIKE} Struggle Flares Up Again In Spain The temporary lull in the series of general strikes in Spain has come to an end. Associated Press reports from Valencia Tuesday tell of street fighting between strikers and police in which one worker was killed, one cop was seriously wounded, many were hurt, and fifty arrested. Clashes occurred immediately after a@ 48-hour strike had been declared in Valencia, The capitalist press was absolutely silent on this general strike, and no news was published about it until the severe collisions took place resulting in the death of a striker. While the cops were cargying on roundups of strikers, fresh fights Started throughout the city. Three street cars were overturned and at- tacked by crowds of strikers who in- sisted on the stoppage of street car service to make the strike effective. The authorities are blaming the Communists for leading the strike. BIG BANK CRASH IN NEW YORK CITY Thousands of Workers Affected (Continued from Page One) crashes in the South and West, the Journal of Commerce, leading Wall Street organ complaized that the! banks were not in a very good posi-. tion, and that these crashes could not be taken as “local” matters. Their prediction has now come true. There are now many promises that the Bank of the United States will re-open, but the “re-assuring” state- | ments of the vice-president, Herman 8, Gottlieb, made last night to thou- sands of depositors turned out to be untrue when the depositors attempt- ed to get their money this morning. How severely the workers are hit is shown by the fact that one man stood in line two hours to get $2, undoubt- edly the last bit of money he had left between him and starvation. There will result tremendous suf- fering among the workers from this closing-up. On November 24 an attempt was made to merge the Bank of the United States with the Manufacturers Trust Co., the Public National Bank and Trust Co., and the Internationai | Trust Co. The merger failed to go. through, as the capitalist newspap- | ers put it because of “failure to agree on details”. The fact undoubtedly is there was a more fundamental reason and that these other banks knew of the situation which led to the clos- ing. A number of Wall Street banks who can see a chance to make money out of the misery of the masses, have wreckers within the country. The audience cheered and applauded vig- orously when the latest Sunday newspapers’ report of five of the counter-revolutionary intervention plotters and wreckers were sen- tenced to death, was read by ‘the speaker, The two forums held thus far this season show that the Workers’ School Forums have become an in- dispensable institution to hundreds of revolutionary workers of New York. Next Sunday the Forum will NEW YORK.—The Tailors Rank and File Committee of Fifty organ- ized some time ago to fight the check- off, piece work and wage reductions, calls a mass meeting Saturday at noon at Stuyvesant Casino, 142 Sec- ond Ave. ‘This meeting is to continue organ- ization work for the struggle against the attack on the tailors’ standard of living in which the Hillman clique and the employers combine. A meet- ing of 400 tailors held Nov. 29 adopted demands that the unemployed insur- ance fund should be turned over to a committee of employed and unem- ployed elected ai a mass meeting of tailors; that insurance is to be paid to all alike regardless of whether they are in good standing; that all unem- ployed shall be exempt from dues payments. The clothing workers voted for strikes against wage cuts, for the 7- hour day and 5-day week, for week work and a minimum wage scale, for equal pay for equal work for youth and women. The Committe of Fifty calls on all men’s clothing workers to form their shop committees. be held in the afternoon at the Ir- ving Plaza. I. Amter, member of the March 6 Unemployed Delega- tion, recently released from jail, who is now the district organizer of the Communist Party, will speak on the very important topic “Ram- say MacDonald—Social . Imperial- ist.” Comrade Amter will analyze the role and nature of the labor government of Great Britain and the very long strides taken by the MacDonald Government toward open fascism, as expressed in the Mosley manifesto for a dictatorship. Although this Sunday’s forum will be held in the afternoon all the suc- ceeding forums will be held Sunday nights at the usual time and place. Some of the most prominent leaders of the Communist movement are scheduled to speak on. successive Sunday nights. 1931 CALENDAR FREE! Paid in advance? Pay for six months more and get a 1931 Calendar Free! offered to loan depositors of the United States 50 per cent of their reposits at the rate of 5 per cent. This shows, first of all, that these deposits are not worth more than half of what the workers put in the bank, and be- sides the banks ask 5 per cent when the workers are only given 3 per cent on their deposits. The financial papers state that the Condition of the Bank of the United States had been disturbing the stock market for days before the 52 branch- es closed up. et Cae oe NEW YORK.—About a thousand people were reported to be standing in line Thursday at the Manufac- turers Trust Co, bank at Simpson and Southern Boulevard. . “s . Two More Banks Close Down. Two banks closed down in North and South Carolina Wednesday. The National Bank of Greenville, N. C., closed its doors. It had deposits of $1,021,220. The First National Bank of Ayden also closed its doors after heavy withdrawals of deposits. CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDATGET PROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $17 A WEEK CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N.Y. PHONE 731 OSES iia ons cee een oes ov ORIN ai teWaed Sch evn er CROPPER! Cut this out and mail immediately to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St..New York City. RED SHOCK TROOPS For ‘ $30,000 DAILY WORKER EMERGENCY FUND Enclosed find ee MOMArS. eee ee cenis. We pledge to build RED SHOCK ‘TROOPS Aor the successful completion ofthe $30,000 DAILY WORKER EMERGENCY FUND NAME Dene eeeeneneeeereeeeeseseseeees BRIEFS] FROM ALL LANDS LONDON, Dec. 10.—Today’s official | j unemploy ed figures show an increase | | of 19,000 sin last week, This brings | the total to 639 jobles | Britain. The result of the treachery of the ILARRIOLA ADMITS YFAR PLAN IS BLDG. SOCIALISM in Great) Completely In Accord With Marxism reformist leaders is that the reyolu- PARIS.—“Le Soir” reports ‘that tionary miners’ union has recruited] Professor Labriola, an ex-minister Many new members. The best mem-| and professor of the University of bers of the reformist union destroyed their cards and joined the new union. ie oe bourgeois fascist socialist posals on behalf of the masses in the Reichstag. The Bruen- d complete. ing program remained Sora | the Soviet Union. BERLIN.—Yesterday afternoon the | parties | voted down all the Communist pro-} working | Naples has delivered a lecture in Brussels on the Five Year Plan in Labriola is a go- cialtst. He declared that the Five Year Plan was the greatest effort “ever made to achieve Socialism. The plan was completely in accord with Marx- ist economics. He declared that the Soviet authorities were doing every- PARIS.—A telegram from Hanoi| thing possible in order to reorganize states that in the y morning} all branches of economic life on So- hours of November ive Indo-! See clalist. principles. In conclusion he nese revolutionaries re beheaded.} declared that there was no reason The murdered victims w Ngyuen- | for the statement that the Five Year Van Toai, Tran Van p, Tham | Plan would not be carried out fully. Nam, Le Uang Huy Mai. The executed revolutionaries were five of the group of ten, who had been sentenced to death in the trial and Bai Xuan of May 28, 1930. | This telegram, stating laconically the murder of five shows that French imperialism is continu-| ing its “pacifying” of Indo-China by the most ruthless methods of white terror. There are still 26 victims, waiting in the prisons to be beheaded like their comrades. ee a WARSAW.—At Kowel a trial took Place against 64 wo. 's accused of being members of the Communist Party of Western Ukrainia. Forty-one | of the defendants were found guilty. Their sentence was as follows: Four were sentenced to eight years each; one to six years; nine to five years and 27 to four years each. In total a term of 191 years of imprisonment has been meted out. The county court at Lublin sen- tenced 14 members of the left social- ists to a total of 62 years imprison- ment. In both trials the prisoners accused the prison authorities of terrible tor- tures of the prisoners. One of the defendants said: maltreat animals in such a cruel way as us.” Ex-Soldier “Ashamed” of Washington Cops (Continued from Page One) ponents of prohibition stage a dem- onstration on Capitol Hill with many, many banners and a band? “I am not a Communist, but a few more cases like this and I shall be one. I am ashamed of this country that I fought for and ashamed of the government that sends uni- formed agents out to beat and jail men and women because they do not | agree with the White House. Signed, Harold B. Foulkrod.” Foulkrod is inexperienced enough to think that the cops were sincere when they said that they attacked the workers because there was a law forbidding banners to be displayed on Capitol Hill. Actually, the tear gas bombing and the beating up of workers were in line with the policy of capitalists and their hirelings everywhere, who try to crush the ris- ing militancy of workers by fiendish brutality and oppression. 3 DAY JOINT BAZAAR Workers International Relief United -Council of Workingclass Women January 2-3-4 BENEFIT: Needle Trades Strike Fund Unemployed Hunger Marches Children’s Camps of W.LR. STAR CASINO 107th St. and Park Ave. Collect articles, ads and Honor Rolls for Souvenir Journal and get tickets at W.LR., 131 W. 28St. GOING AND GROWING! MEET SUNDAY IN FIGHT TO FREE 8 Rally for Imperial Val- ley Prisoners NEW YORK—A mass meeting in “They could not) behalf of the eight Imperial Valley prisoners who are serving sentences of up to 42 years will be held.at.the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St., Sunday, 2 p. m.with J. Louis Eng- |dahl, general secretary of the In- ternational Labor Defense, B. D. | Amis, and Anna Burlak as speakers. The meeting is under the auspices of the district I. L. D. This mass meeting {s part of the> campaign carried on by the Inter- national Labor Defense for the frec- ing of the eight workers who. were imprisoned for their attempt to or- ganizez the workers of the Imperial Valley, known as the “death valley,” into a militant union. Their hall in El Centro was raided while the work- ers were preparing for a conferency of all the agricultural laborers in the valley. Eighty-seven workers were arrested and thrown into lfige trucks end jailed. Many Mexican workers were deported _and eight imprisoned after a frame-up trial with a number of stool pigeons and dicks as the only witnesses for the prosecution: J. Louis Engdahl will take up the whole history of the case and tell of the amnesty campaign which will be shortly undertaken by the Inter- national Labor Defense, : Every Party member, every Young Communist must sell 25 copies of the Daily Worker before fac tory gates each week to be in good standing, FIRST ANNUAL DAILY WORKER CALENDAR FOR 1931 Seven striking half-tone pictures of the class struggle never be~ fore publshed, incioding: An unpublished pictare of Lente dressing Moscow workers, the biexest st Mirae aa tas demonstrations in Five smashi Ba! class struggles ‘a ~ Historical data on the big events: of the class struggle, Support the Paper That Fights for You! VOLU N TEER DAILY WORKER TAG DAYS Saturday and Sunday, December 20 and 21. The Daily Worker is in a serious financial crisis! the full support of all our readers wil] make it for the Daily Worker to continue publication! Workers: everywhere are looking to the Dally Worker for gui in their struggles for unemployment insurance, speed-up and wage cuts. The Daily Worker going up daily. WE MUST KEEP THE DAILY | Important seeeatione from Marx, Engels, Lenin, 12 pages—one for each monthex printed In two colors on peeve eite'] os nat ‘eatly und. pen Red worker's home, a FREE Without subscriptions price 500 (Only one Boe ne te each orkers DAILY WORKER 60 EAST 18TH STREET, ¥. ¥, ©, By Mali: 50 cents = month, alton ontelde Man Manhattan and rol iho; 2 months, $1.50; 3 $2.25; 6 months, $4.50; 1 year, $8, é | ae eC