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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 25, 193 MILK AND BREAD! Children’s Bread) By MYRA PAGE On the way to the children’s bread | line, at Third Ave. and the Bowery, | I pass by Wanamakers, with its win- | dows glittering with tinsel, red and green trimmings, and luxurious pres- ents with which to entige the well- to-do to “Buy Now and’ Bring Back Prosperity.” There are windows full of antiques, of handsome silk dress- ing gowns for “tired business men,” | Spanish shawls, “specially imported,” of heavy table linens and silverware. On one side of the store there are trucks lined up and being filled with erates marked “Glass—Handle With Care.” Women in heavy 4ilks and furs Pour out of the revolving doors and, chatting gaily, go to their waiting cars. A “Sally” shakes her dinner bell at them, stamps her feet near the Army dinner pot and calls, “Merry Xmas, remember the poor.’ Crossing over to the Bowery and | block of men and women whose white shabby clothes and aimless air mark them as unem- | strained faces, ployed from whom all immediate hope of a job has departed, weeks | ‘ago. The eyes of many are blood- shot from hunger and loss of sleep. Some are past-colored. They are in the last stages of slow starvation. Over these hunger-marchers there towers a monster sign of a smiling | mother cutting slices of bread for her | rosy-cheeked children, and, under- | neath, the words, “One More Slice | of Bread a Meal. Good For You, | and Helps Solve the Unemployed Problem.” One man slumps down on a grating and pulls his frayed overcoat over his head. He has been out again all night. Everywhere he dropped to sleep, in the subways, doorways or stations, the cops kept driving him out, “Keep movin’. This ain't no lodge. Keep -movin’.” Now he is dizzy for sleep-and a little food. He'll stop here, where there's a bit of warmth, and -even when the cop slams him on the soles he won't move on. Let.the cop do his worst. He’s moved on for the last time. Back of this sleeper is a small, east-side store, in which another sign screams in gilded letters, “Merry Xmas—Sale—Sale.” The entire block in front of the Salvation Army headquarters at the Bowery is jammed with children, with a scattering here and there of old women and men and a few mothers with babes in arms. The waiting throng. overflows into the street and more than one youngster is nearly run: down by taxis speeding business men-home to their Park Ave. residences. Each child carries a pail. It is still more than a hour before the small ladle of milk and loaf of bread will be given out, but each one wants to be sure to be in time. The kids tell me that the older ones come straight from school and wait maybe two hours or more, while the smaller tots may come even earlier. All hail from the Jower east-side. Most of them have little, pinched faces, worn shoes and hand-me-down clothing. One child is hardly any larger than the pail she carries. “My pop works on a building, three days a week,” a bright-eyed lad an- swers my question. “No, he ain't a carpenter, or nuthin’ like that. Jes works on biildings.” (He's a day- laborer.) “Yestiddy he wuz laid off, , ’n thar ain't nuthin fer us kids to) \ eat.” line on New York Bowery. ; set this ladle of milk for the two; making passes at the children and | children. She, like some of the other | hollering: “Keep in line, or I'll send mojhers, shows signs of having held | you home and you'll \have no sup- back her hunger “for when I eat, I| per.” This sobers the children. They feel I'm taking it from the children, | quiet down and draw away from his and it sticks in my throat.” | stick. One child tells me he lives in the | This S. A. officer has the sleek basement of an east-side tenement | appearance and hardened face of an with his baby sister and parents. | underworld thug. He has frequently “No'm, they ain't out of work. They | beaten the children. Only the day works all the’ time, day’n night. They | before he slapped and knocked two got three tenements to take care of, | little girls, aged four and seven, to for th’ landlord. He's a rich doc-| the ground. The children, overjoyed tor, what owns th’ houses. But the trouble is, he doesn’s pay ma pop | his wages reg’lar, Mom an’ pop; ain’t goth nuthin fer two months | now. Th’ army man come to th’ house, ’n whin he sen how ma baby sister looks, he sed he guess I could come fer milk.” | Waiting so long in line the young- sters grow restless, and there is some milling around and some get shoved | out of line. A Salvation Army man, reinforced by three cops, runs about, | swinging a long stick right and left, | children. beckoned to one of his city hall aides, “take care of this bum.” The two bluecoats, after beating up Collins. arersted him on the charge of “as- saulting an officer,” and his case is now before the judge. heading south, I pass block after Extensive Membership Drive for Red Builders News Club Starts with Sunday Banquet A banquet for which 300 tickets; to suspend his paper as he cannot have been issued, will start an exten-| get along without it, and that he sive membership campaign for the | will pay up soon.” New York Red Builders’ News Club, | | next Sunday afternoon at 3 p. m. at; NEW YORK TO MOBILIZE | the Workers Center, 35 East 12th St.| FORCES FOR RED SUNDAY | The drive for membership is part of] ‘This Sunday will be a Red Sunday | the drive for a home for the club, in New York. The drive increasing | All working class organizations will | the circulation of the Daily Worker be appealed to for new members for | in this district will be intensified. The district is sending out a call the club. All workers who are un- employed and sufficiently class con- | for 8 comrades from each unit to re- |new the work of previous Red Sun- | scious to see the necessity for build- | | days. Work will be concentrated on jing the circulation of the Daily | Worker are eligible for membership | house to house and carrier routes. All comrades must take part in the | in the club. activity of the Red Sunday if the cir- At the last membership meeting r |and jamboree Sunday methods of| CUlation of the Daily Worker is to be increased by the full amount set ir | building up and selling the Daily | the quota figures. Worker were stressed. ee The distribution of prizes, con- ANTINIUNCTION SESSION, DEC. 30 sisting of a 1931 Daily Worker cal- endar to the winners of last week’s revolutionary competition, with the amount of papers sold follows: Shoholm, 600; Reese, 441; Well- man, 362; Demaskes, 380; Barnes, vapid: | 373; Weinrit, 307; Stein, 282; | PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Dec. 24—In Stokes, 237; Allen, 212; Neilson, | ®#Swer to the injunction issued by Judge Harry S. McDevitt against the strikers of the Finkelstein Shoe Co. the Trade Union Unity League has issued a call for a mass conference | to be held Tuesday, 8 p. m., at 39 N | 10th St. The conference call appeals | to workers within the A. F. of L. locals, working-class organizations, | revolutionary unions, unemployed and unorganized workers to send rep- | resentatives to the conference so that a broad campaign can be instituted against the injunction menace and/ Women workers are being drawn | for the release of 11 strikers in jail| into the activities of the club. They | for participation in a mass demon- have volunteered to accompany the | stration against the injufetion. These men in their house to house work. | strikers were held without bail by In no case has a Red Builder to | judge McDevitt. This is a brazen whom territory in a working class | attempt by this lackey of the shoe| neighborhood has been assigned | manufacturers to railroad these failed to secure customers for the workers to Jong terms ‘in prison. Li deh The T.U.U.L. has also arranged a 239; Bobbick, 168; Wint, 169; Con- stanfinides, 175, Papers ordered for the day follow- ing totalled 1340. A total of 1886 papers were sold during the last week. The membership of the Red Build- ers News Ciui is composed of un- employed workers whose principal in- | come is derived from the sale of the Daily Worker on the streets, in the subways, from house to house, before factories, etc. | My Dear Sir: Red Journals Rebresented at ‘Amo’ Meet MOSCOW.—Recently a meeting of the departmental committees of the Moscew “Amo” automobile works, the active members of the labor unions and the worker correspon- dents took place. The meeting was attended by editors, reporters and representatives of revolutionary work- ing-class newspapers in Paris, Lon- don, Berlin and Prague. The meet- ing dealt with the great trial of the counter-revolutionary sabotagers. One of the workers of the “Amo,” Com- yade Lvov was a judge at the trial. Marcel Cachin spoke as the repre- sentative of the revolutionary work- ing-class press in France. He de- | seribed the trial as the expression of the fundamental contradiction be- tween the capitalist and the socialist worlds and as a sign of the approach- ing danger of war against the Soviet Union. He asured his hearers that the. French workers would rally to the defense of the Soviet Union. | Albert Norden spoke in the name | of Berlin “Rote Fahne” and declared that the most important lesson of the trial was that it was necessary to in- |erease the international campaign against imperialist war. | Walter Holmes, who spoke for the London “Daily Worker,” reminded his hearers that the British working class had already once succeeded in at having some milk and bread for Preventing a war against the Soviet | ‘ ; supper, started to prance around, and Union in 1920. The Communist press | working masses of the Soviet Union dropped their pails, spilling the milk Would do its utmost to inform the | were well aware that it depended on on the ground. A laborer, by the | Masses of the workers of the things | the international proletariat whether name of Pete Collins, who was pass- at stake in the trial and to make | Poincare was able to carry out his ing at the time, rushed to defend the | it clear to them how urgent was the | plans for an intervention in 1931 or | danger of imperialist war against the them for the defense of the first workers’ and peasants’ state. The last speaker was Comrade | Bela Kun, who declared that the | workers of the Soviet Union wanted peace, but were not to be frightened \by imperialist threats of war. The Strengthening of Fascism | (Cable By Inprecorr.) | BERLIN, Dec. 24.—Official figures of unemployment in Germany on Noy. 30 show that there were 3,700,- 000 out of work; on Dec. 15, there | were 3,900,000. The tendency is still upward in the army of the unem- | ployed. It will soon be at least 4,000,000 besides hundreds of thou- —- Fe ay wes mm & EO EP = UNEMPLOYMENT IN GERMANY GROWS) Ey WE} EC. BR NOW NEARLY 4,000,000 WITHOUT WORK) 4.4 a> Fe Von Hindenburg Aids Page Th ree Ss ‘SE Ea == HUNGER SPECTER | FRISCO SEAMEN | |\Many Willing to Join STARES IN FACE OF oad Work Scheme Turns Out to Be a IR ; a Worker Correspondent) ‘B. STOCKTON, Cal.—The bosses are still piling up fake schi to make us workers think they are “relieving” unemployment. Here are the two la- test “relieving” m ures featured in HALF OF COPPER Pure Fake Maneuver| MINERS REDUCED TO STARVATION |Trust Tries to Put the |sands of workers on part time. TUUL Union the papers. | Brunt on Toilers : \ ee ligaNereve avaeyta from each — | The Reichs prosecutor filed an in- (By a Worker Correspondent) worker on public wo each month.| (By a Worker Correspondent) dictment of treason against the fas-| San FRANCISCO, Cal. — One sees y, this is ible, but the| HOUGHTON, cist leader, Goebbels. ‘The Reichstag | countless unemployed seamen and| city auditor is going to call it a|that are : consented to hand Goebbels over to | ongshoremen traversing the strets “gonation.” ie threé ant | the court for trial. However, prelim- | of the waterfront in the port of San (2) Form “Cit have bi |imary inquiries are so lengthy that Francisco, Breadlines are formed in as cea ae eae up jit is doubtful whether the case will qifferent sections of the town, even | ever appear in court. * « bosses and bus: You see the money of us we give is a committee Ss men. on the waterfront corner. Embarca- % |dero and Clay St., near Seamen's According to urgent wishes of | Church Institute. One sees more in- | President yon Hindenberg to have the! tensified suffering among the broad Thuringia-Reich conflict settled be- | masses of the unemployed than ever | fore Christmas, the conciliation hear- | pefore, . bosses We workers here kton won't ing occurred before the Leipzig Su- | preme Court, where the fascist, rick, was completely victorious. All police | subsidies, including overdue monies, are now being paid, so that Frick can |continue the work of consolidating | Thuringia as a fascist bulwark. ee ae On Sunday, 60 fascists attacked ten | workers in Gutzkov, Brandenburg. The | workers defended themselves desper- | ately, injuring many of their assail- |ants. Four workers were injured. | Phe police arrived after the battle. ‘not. The workers of the world would “Officer,” the Salvation Army man Soviet Union in order to mobilizes show themselves worthy of the trust placed in them. It was the duty of the working-class press to expose thc lies of the bourgeois press in con- nection with the trial of the sabo- tagers, and to popularize the achieve- ments of the workers and peasants of the Soviet Union. @wo Ce er ee (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) demands for servicemen. The letter from Washington reads as follows: Postmaster, Worcester, Mass., The Solicitor for the Post Office Dep't has held the May Ist, 19th and June 2nd issues of the Young Worker to be unmailable. In view of this no further consideration will be given the request for its entry as second class matter at your office. Very truly yours, Signed. F. A. Tilton, 3rd Assistant Postmaster. ands mass unemployment meeting to be Since Wednesday's report regard- y | ing Philadelphia's bundle order was) neva Ja. {4 at the Broadway Arena, | written this city has increased its |- | daily order by 100, ‘This increase will| a'y'tyt. tg the math eweumen, Wine th next ‘Wednesday's weekly this meeting has been called muinly as a mobilization of all workers Reference is made in the above let- ter to “its entry as second class mat- ter,” definitely trying to give the impression that the “Young Worker” was only applying for second class mailing privileges for the first time. This, however, it is pointed out, is SUPPFFSSION OF “YOUNG WORKER” IS ATTACK OF FISH COMMITTEE the National Committee of the Young Communist League is planning to print the next issue of the “Young Worker” and send it through the mails. A series of mass protest meetings and demonstrations are being planned by the Y.C.L. as also umber of broad conferences in some f the larger industrial cities. An appeal has been sent out that all funds for the fight to keep the Young Worker be sent to the “Young Worker,” 43 East 125th St., New York City. U §S Diplomat Praises Hitler’s Fascist Gang ‘Bulwark Against Red’ That the German fascists, led by | Hitler, are the good friends of the | Wall Street bankers and form a bul- forget the fraud of us up for Jobless Arrested. work on county roai ng that | “uw wment i | ‘The police are continually arrest-| “Unemployment is’ so} ther never calling What we must nemployed Co: ree relicf from the Meanwhile | ing seamen on the costumary charge | | of vagrancy. Fighting and begging |is the only diversion from this mi- | sery. Cheap bootleg serves to push the specter of starvation in the back- ground. Everywhere one sees stag- | gering seamen with battered pails | looking for possible costumers in or- |der to get the price of gas. nT AR | Two thirds of the longshoremen x) fl § R K | are jobless, or on part time. Those that work are the favored members PRD } D uy ra) Rents Increase. The rents in many cases have in- creased and m other daily needs f the w as increased in ime there do is to or hop wood °t a bowl of day. | of the blue hook union, the I. L. A. 4 | Bootleggers in many instances con- | rol the job. This whole system of | job giving stinks of corruption and graft. mtage of I. L. A. ing only one day in the week at a terrific speed-up The bosses claim this port is the ‘mmediate return of th they have me crisis must 2 Hat CTD (CONTINUEN FROM PAGE most efficient in loading facilities “mall deposit den’ On Eo) No wonder so many accidents occur, 22nk directors and rich dey In the Cal min- I talked to many seamen and long- A committee was elected to protes | ‘ng town 'y one. ; Shoremen and they are ready for | organization in the Marine Workers Industrial Union, but what keeps them out is the lack of money to join. The near future has great possibil- ities for organizing militant revolu- tionary trade unions. At present we are concentrating on coastwise ships to Mayor Walker about the brutual ity of the police in bentiny up d positors asking for their money at various branches of the banks, and to demand a free mecting place for a mass meeting of tens of thousands 0: the depositors. If these demands arc not completed with, it is proposed who is wages out of his monthly earnings the unemployed, but Patter and ‘Ss Will not ad- any money, though they re- ene month more than the r receives in two years that a mass demonstration of the and steam schooners. New members depositors be called. Another com- th > growing are Hning up steadily. The only mittee was eletced to go to Albany Militant. blacklisted and thing that prevents the rapid organ- | to demand of the governor and Brod- | tried to te number of mili- ization is the part of the blue coat- | crick, state superintendent of banks, tant worke But I must say ed gunmen of the bosses and the an immediate accounting on the con-| ‘hat the c es of Calu- immigration tools of Hoover. ditions of the Bank of the United | met will not h this. But The most important shortcoming States, so that the small depositors | it Shows how they are afraid of an confronting the M. W. I. U, today may be fully informed on what the C’é@nization of the workers. is the lack of cadres trained for or- ganization at work and functioning port committees. Hundreds upon hundreds express they're willing to join the M. W. I. U. as soon as they get work. FRAME-UP RUMOP CHARGE ON ‘REDS’ Wall St. Knew Inside Dope On Banks ly $3,000. total of $19,000,000 in savings ac- counts. This, according to the Jour- | nal of Commerce, led to an unload- |ing of the bank stocks, which fur- | ther weakened the bank, participat- ling the general run and the final clesing of the bank by Broderick, state superintendent of banks. Instead of publishing facts about politicians are directing their fire against the workers who are organ- izing themselves to demand the re- turn of their deposits in full. As for “rumors,” an article in the New York Evening Post of last Sat- urday, by Frank J. Williams, ex- poses the fact that Wall Street has “the best unofficial espionage sys- most useful arm.” The main fact is that {t was not all “rumors” that closed the Chelsea Bank & Trust Co. On the very day that the Bank of the United States shut the New York Times attempted the old trick of Jaying the blame on “rumors.” Subsequent facts showed that the bank had been robbed from the inside by wholesale looting. However, the “rumor factory” of Wall Street is based on the fact that conditions are. A worker who sold copies of the Daily Worker at various branches of the Baz” of the U: d St c his conversations with v small depositors. He writes: | One saw workers who hod, lost their last few dollars, saved, through skimping on food or clothes, for sick ness, unemployment, etc. One work- er, too dazed io fully realize what the crash meant, came to me and in a low voice, seemingly a voice from the grave, wh ed $1,600, every penny I ha what am I to do? After I had explained the program of the small depositors he gave me a nickel for a Daily. “Give one to someone else,” “Sure I'll be at the meeting.” A woman, the typical old Jewish worker's wife, long, lean, haggard face, came to me and asked in Jewish “What shall I do, my last few pen- | nies, my husband out of work” again an explanation. She was up at the headquarters, almost immediately, I | moved from the 713 Chestnut St. to lis sick, goddamit we gotta organize.” | He also: bought the Daily, “Sure I'll | be up at the meeting.” Again I moved | this time to the main office at Wal- | nut and Juniper. One worker came up to me, “Will I get my money?” I explained the Party program to |him and asked him how much he had in the bank. | years, but we workers can’t save a | helluva lot.” | | |Phila United Hotel | Cuts Waiters’ Wages | (By a Worker Correspondent.) | PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — The United | Hotel Co. which is one of the biggest corporation in the world with seventy two hotels in this country has cut the “Not much,” he| tems in the world with rumor as its| answered, “I've been saving for 15} ‘0% Building Trades :| Workers in New York Walkine the Streets (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—As reported in the Daily Worker the other day, the district council of the building trade of New York has put a tax on the members who work, of one dollar’ per week, in order to help the unem- ployed members in distress. While in line this morning, to check up our booklet, we asked, who will be helped by the money col- lected? What do you mean who? One who knows the inside works of the local said, there are so many in the arrears and with the money col- lected, we will make them members in good standing. Ninety per cent of the members, work or no work, keep their books paid up to the minute. Only those who come to the meetings and make recommendations and vote “yes” a | the branch at Broad and Federal Sts.| when told. These are the ones whose the inside condition of the Bank 0 | é ‘ the United States and the Chelsea | 4 young Italian worker stands out- | dues will be made good. Bank é& Trust Co, the Tammany | ‘ide. $220 and goddamnit, my baby No member, no matter how deep \his trouble may be, will apply for |help to the local, because he knows | the local is not the place for it. | It will not be a rough figure, if said, that 80 per cent of the building trades walks the streets, and those who work, are making from $5 to $8 | a day, and not $13 to $20 as the scale | requires. Nevertheless the business agent’s salary is $100 per week and 20 bucks |car expense. (By the way, member, when has he last paid a visit—to the boss?) || FIRST ANNUAL DAILY WORKER CALENDAR FOR | “I ain't coming here no more,” one | against the existing unemployment rim little girl complains “We get FATHER OF 10 CHILDREN situation, it will also be utilized to) | wark against Bolshevism, is the gist of an interview given out by W. P. Cresson, author and former Ameri- an outright lie since the “Young Worker” is in existence for over 8 pushed around and hurted.” “But how you gona git ta eat?” “Shucks,” another retorted, “this ain't nuthin. Yd ruther git a scratch or two thin go without eny suppah 'n breakfast.” One mother in line, who is carry- fng her baby and holding another | child by the hand, has been evicted from her flat because she can't pay rent. She's not sure where she can | MUST HAVE DAILY WORKER From E. R. Ford of Farlbach, Minn., ; We received a $3 check to pay for the | Subscription of Fred Hallet of the explain more in detail the program | years and has had second class mail- wages of the waiters about 10 percent. | Every waiter has to take a half day | | off three times a week. | the big financiers have inside infor- mation. The Evening Posst sarticle points out, for instance, that “Long 1931 of the local T.U.U.L. against the in- ing rights since 1923. It is very junction menace. Wm. Simons, Jocal | ¢Vident, therefore, that the banning secretary of the T.U.U.L. will speak | Of the “Young Worker” from the same city and this letter: specifically on this problem. All) “Hallet is the father of ten chil- | workers are urged to rally behind the! dren. Be has a small barber shop | anti-injunction campaign by clection in the town and has a hell of a | of delegates to the conference and! time supperting his family. All the | full participation of the membership big employing barbers are fighting | in their respective organization at the! sleep tonight, but at least she must a CUT THIS OUT AND MAIL IMMEDIATELY TO THE DAILY WORKER, 50 E. 13TH ST., NEW YORK. CITY R + $30,000 DAILY WORKER EMERGENCY FUND Enclosed find ................. We pledge to build RED SHOCK EMERGENCY FUND him. He asks me to write you not mass unemployment meeting. ED SHOCK TROOPS ‘ For seers ee MOMMTS. occ ee cess pene es COMES. mails coming on top of the virtual exclusion of “Vida Obrera,” organ of the Spanish buro of the Communist Party and the “Young Pioneer” is only part of the general attack against the entire working class and its press that has as its goal the Bagging of the entire revolutionary labor movement. Particularly is the Fish Committee out to “get” the “Yeung Worker” for its antirmilitar- ist agitation to the soldiers and sailors, Defense Fights. A bill of particulars has been de- manded from the government in a letter issued today by the Interna- TROOPS for the successful completion ofthe $30,000 DAILY WORKER | tional Labor Defense. The defense plans to insist on a public hesring where jt will demand that Mr. Fish can diplomat, who recently arrived from Munich, “Adolf Hitler and his ‘brown shirt’ followers are acting as a top-gap to Communism in Germany today,” says the N. Y, Post review of the inter- view with Cresson. Cresson had many long talks with the leader of the German fascists. The Post goes on to say: “Mr. Cresson believes that, should the present government be upset in an economic crisis, Germany would look to Hitlerism to protect the nar tion from the Reds. “There aye thousands of men unemployed in Germany today, he sald, who would be easy marks | fer the Communists to work upon, but Hitler has discovered one of the most fundamental things in life— namely, thet young men, particularly it they are unemployed, must have and the other enemies of labor must defend openly their attempt to sup- ress the only revolutionary working Babes. At the eaipe Stoel some sort of outlet and that no bet- ter outlet can be afforded than to |els since 1908, with more than 9,000,- 1 4 WEEE sive them an opportunity to ‘play |000 unemployed, and with banks || CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N.Y. sole" “gassing tn all paste of the country. |] halt Every worker has to pay thirty-five cents a week for “insurance”, Workers, before the war broke out in 1914 pro- | fessional Wall Street knew it would come and sold stecks and bought organiz into the Food| grain.” The article goes on to say: “Hasn't it been true that for several days prior to each (bank) failure of recent months heavy selling has been seen in stocks. Wall Street knew by the grapevine route that bad news was to be announced. Some of the rumors were able even to tell the exact hour and day announcements would be made.” ‘The so-called “rumors” emanated formation of the bank’s condition weks before the crash came and were able to unload their stsock. No amount of framing-up by Tam- from Wall Street, where the big stock | young gamblers had learned the inside in- | Workers Industrial Union, | peasants were killed, seven seriously | and 20 slightly injured in clashes be- ; tween peasants and tax collectors in | the Croatian towns of Kovacic and Uerotin. The police shot wildly at the complaining peasants, CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDAIGET PROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated | BELGRADE, Jugo-Slavia. — Seven many stool-pigeons and dicks will be able to fool the workers as to the real conditions ef the country, with production down to the lowest lev- Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere Seven striking half-tone pletures ot the class struggle never be- fore published, including: An unpublished picture of Lentn addressing 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 from Marz, Engels, Lenin, ete, 12 pages—one for each mon: ‘Without subscriptions price 500 DAILY WORKER Base se a , \