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- pital.In the red tape he was asked af i ! W YORK, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22. 1931 — Page Three DAILY WORKER re EEE ay rez ErreEerRrs ‘EEA E.. | Cal, Women Cotton Pickers Tell of the Miserable Conditions They Work Under No School for Children Who Are Forced to Help in the Picking to Meet Expenses MILLER AND LUX COTTON PLANTATION, Calif.— | This article is written by a group of women cotton pickers on one of the numerous Miller and Lux ranches near Bakersfield. Miller‘and Lux are one of the biggest land holders in California. At this Miller and Lux cotton plantation with two hundred workers. Who have many things to ¢6¢—————_—________—-—-— through to get.to pick a little cotton|“Treatead Lilke do we might eat @ Uttle while longer. ‘A family of us live in a tent with} Soxs” Says Vet Httle camp stove which is burned out a ge ee ind the fire falls through at the front | uffalo, N. ¥. a r ‘ of the stove. This father and mother| Daily Worker:— money for gas to take the| Dear Comrades :~— children to the id with them and| I 2m writing these few lines tq tell there were four, the smallest seven | Some of my experiences here in a months’ which cannot stand v so-called free country for which I get i re ath served in the last war in the inter- | est of the capitalists. Right here in Buffalo where ] live I am one of the millions of unem- rear-aht Sid. cadet fire aud ployed. Recently I got a job in the almost to death. The older sister put | water on the ehild. The child was taken to the county hospital in Ba- | 0f three days a week. Worked a few erstiald and Bln us condition, | Weeks and I was taken sick with ajing days? Is that meal supposed to | were awarded to the following, who cold losing one day. bry tomers are nab Fired From Job. You have to-sign your life away: before they take in any member of a > | BORED SRE Si 0A COREY Ho |more as they had another man in my place, Now, fellow workers you see what happens for those who served in the last world war. , «| We ex-servicemen are treated just like dogs and worse. But believe me fellow workers when the next war comes I'll know which way to shoot. It will not be against any worker of any country. So fellow workers when we are called for service again Jet's turn the guns on the bosses. —A.A.8. how much he made a day and he told them that {f his whole family worked hard they could make $1.50. ‘Na School for Children. ‘The children cannot go to school, as they have no clothes, shoes or anything, and they have to pick cot~ 38 F - ; E & a S Z gz i Oregon Bosses Slashing Wages PORTLAND, Ore.—The Crown Mil- ling Company, flour mills, have con- tributed to Oregon prosperity with a 15 per cent wage cut. More will come on top of this. All over Portland bosses are cutting wages and the workers’ misery is inv creasing. It is fighting time for the: workers and complete organization in- to militant class unions of the Trade. Union Unity League. 3 Workers, form shop committees and get in touch with the T. U. U, L. and start. the battle against wage-cuts. Crown Mill workers, write in and give ; | the story of conditions in the mill which is one of the largest: in Port- Jand. Join the Trade Union Unity League. Fight against wage cuts. p iid i Rp » eS 5 | 2 ie # » i s i z i a5 a u é : i tgs Z ff i | FY £eg: Hi re 328 g32 5 38 } $= | natures for the unemployment insur- tome home at night oF | oice petitions. Join the Unemployed Council. city park under the stagger system) When I reported for work they told! me that they did not want me any-| Get the unemployed to secure siz- ‘ Canton: rece Put Up Fight For Reai Reliei Canton, O, Daily Worker: The conditions here in Canton are becoming worse and worse every day. There sre thousands of workers, | women and children on thé brink of | starvation. Gas and electric is veing | turned off by the scores. | Our honorable Mayor notified the | delegates that presented our demands | to the city council that he would give | us @ report. On the 16th of January; the delegates were there, 15 in all, to! see what he would do for the starv- ing workers. But when the mayor called us in he said he could not do anything; he. didn’t have the author- ity to do anything. Big Hearted Mayor. There were two little children with the committee to see his nibbs. They | |had nothing to eat all day, 60 the| honorable mayor got very big hearted | and gave them a dollar to buy their But how about the follow- | supper. last forever? | There was a demonstration at the | Goodwill Mission the 15th against the | rotten soup they gave out. The Mis- | sion gave a family of four a basket of carrots with a few onions mixed in and they were mixed in too, for the onions were so rotten you couldn't pick them up, they ran through your | fingers. When the Unemployed Coun- | jel went to thé Mission to protest the poor misguided preacher or boss there | was asked to eat one of his samples (of garbage. He was so badly scared | he almost had heart failure. Building Strong Council. We have a strong Unemployed | Council here and the workers refuse to starve any longer. We are going to organize a stronger counci] and go and take what we need. The city has ‘na money for the unemployed but, they can buy their cops pear! hafidled guns and new clubg to beat the workers down. “But jf won't, be jong for the workers will give them‘ a taste of their own medicine. 4 —W. A } i ' ‘TO MARCH UPON NEWK CITY HALE | United Front Session | |. Plans Active Drive | NEWARK, N. J, Jan. 19. — Fifty: | delegates from 36 workers’ organi» | ations met in Slovak Hall here yes- | erday to plan further details in the | | unemployment, campaign. Sam Nas- | sin reported for the National Cam-/ |paign Committee for Unemployment | Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill The Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill proposes: 1.—Unemployment insurance at the rate of $25 9 week for each anemployed worker and $5 additional for each dependant. 2,—The creation of a National Unemployment Insurance Fund te be raised by: (a) using all war funds for unemployment insurance; (b) @ levy on all capital and property in excess of $25,000; (c) = tax on all incomes of $5,000 a year. 3.—That the Unemployment Insurance Fund thus created shal) oe administered by a Workers’ Commission elected solely by employed { nd unemployed workers. { Alt\who sign the tists now being circulated by the Workers Na- onal Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance or ita aub- idiary organizations, demand that congress shall pass the bill, tn Ite tinal form as (possibly) amended by the mass meetings whicb ratify tt and elect the mass delegation to present it to congress, or as (pos- sibly) amended by the mass delegation itself. The final form of the bill will follow the general line of the three points printed above. Pinte Wage | All workers are called upon to help collect signatures for this bill. Get the co-operation of all workers you know in the sig- nature drive. All organizations should activize thelr members in the collection of signatures. Write to the National Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance, 2 West Lith St. New York City, for signature blanks. | for their sales, N. Y. Red Builders Aid Jersey City in Circulation Campaign;' 20 Win Daily Worker Aprons The Red Builders News Club of | New York ordered 1,700 copies of the | Daily Worker forgMonday, it was re- | rorted at the last Hot Dog Jamboree | Sunday at 35 E. 12th St. Prizes of red Daily Worker aprons | reched a quota of 200 or over for| the week: | Barnes, 605; Wellman, 485; Stokes, 304; Shoholm, 300; Weinrit, Reese, 265; Turner, 260; Halowchek, 248; | Glassover, 230; Allen, 226; Gomez, 225; Bobuk, 224; Stein, 219; Him- melreich, 218; Kalt, 213; Ryan, 205; Marino, 205; Bassen, 201; Forando, 200. Arthur Allen is the youngest mem- ber of the Red Builders’ News Club. Twelve years old, and still in. gram- | mar school, young Allen is on the | streets on Friday afternoons and Sat~- urday, sélling an average of 50 copies a day. He shows promise of giving the more mature mémbers a good run Watch out for the vevng bloods! I. Amter, district organizer, put | new fire inte the Club when he ~ointed ‘out the tremendous infia- we of Red Builders’ News Clubs sould the Fish Committee recom- mendation of barring the “Daily” in | ‘ve mails go through Congress. In addition, should capitalist news ser- |, Viees refuse to deliver the paper to the news stands, the Red Builders’ News Clubs become the basis of dis- tribution of the Daily Worker. “It is a very imnortant institution,” he said, “not only for the Communist Party, but forthe whole‘revolution- “ary movement of the country.” A committee of five will work out. in conjunction with the Executive Committee, methods to advance the, sales of the Daily Worker. Jersev City will wake un this morn- | ing to find eight N, Y. Red Builders on the streets, showing them how to se)l the “Daily” and how to organize a Red Builders’ News Club of their own. We wish them luck! Party. Enclosed find $6 check for 100 special editions of the Daily Worker. Am about ready to start something again.” & Is NO WORK, BUT CAN'T DO WITHOUT “DAILY” “T haven't had any work until just now. Enclosed you will find $4, which [am sending you on my subscription. | My time expired in August. You see, | T just can’t do without the Daily Worker. Please keep it coming to me."--J, J, Cameron, Okla. SENDS $1 FOR HOME | TOWN CIRCLUATION From Theodore Bozyan of Newport, | can comrades have been deported. R_ I,’we received $1 for a bundle order. He writes: “T am going to try to build up the | eireulation of the Daily Worker in my home town. My city is not an industrial city, but there are enough workers to enable me to do some- thing for my Party.” ‘Mexican Gov't Attacks Red Miners Union Persecutions increase in Mexico. The organizer of the Red Miners’ Union at El Cuba was arrested and is tack Was recently made on the Na- tional Office of the Unitary Trade Union Confederation of Mexico and many comrades arrested. Eighteen workers in the Federal District were imprisoned when this local was re- | cently forced to close down. These | workers are in danger of being de-| ported to the Marias Islands. | Valentin Campa, genera] secretary of the Unitary Trade Union Confed~ eration of Mexico, has also been con- | fined to prison. Communication is forbidden to all of these political prisoners and many have suffered barbaric torture. The police of Mexico City continue to persecute militant Communists and offer rewards of 50 nesos for each Party member and 1,000 pesos for each leader. In Tamalipas the-organizers of the revolutionary movement have been atrested. In Pueblo, Comrade Udeses Vilchas, wounded in former encoun- ters with the oppressors of the work- ing class. has been imprisoned. In Huaquechuela, two peasants were ordered to give up their arms to rep- resentatives of the fascist govern- ment. Thev refrsed and were imme- diately shot. The entative of the Sovkino filn in, together with @ group of r artists, were also arrested Venezuels. The Caribbean Red Aid has or- ganized a campaign to obtain the freedom of 1.500 revolutionary work- ers and students imprisoned in the |dungeons of Venemusla and Curacao. | Unless this campaign is successful the |middle-aged of these w will die in prison and the young come back old men. Ecuador. The government of Ayora has ins} | formed the press that renresente | will be sent throughout the coumry to campaign eainst Communism. Honduras. Concurrent with added protection to fascist bands, the government hes persecuted zealously the revolutionary organizations. The national leaders of the workers’ movement, as well as members of the Red Unions have been arrested. Three North Ameri- ates will believed to be assassinated. An at- | INTERNATIONAL NEWS © 500 FILIPINO RAILROAD WORKERS STRIKE FOR BETTER CONDITIONS Misleaders in the Philippines Put Up Sham Organization to Keep Back the Worker- Peasant Fight for Independence The economic crisis has hit the) Gabaldon, though he mouths phrases hilipines and in its wake there {s a| against Roxas, belongs to the same sharpey attack against the workers | Wealthy land-owning class that |™ Morilo 500 railway workers went| Roxas does and offers no différent on strike. They were affiliated to the program for an independence fight. Union Obrera de Moio. The strike; Roxas having failed to keep up in- jers be reinstated immediately. resiited when the vosses broke an agreement entered into with the workers. | The workers demanded that the | ours of jabor be limited and over time to be paid for. They insisted on one rest day a week; that workers be not fired indiscriminately; and that the a group of dismissed work~ The bosses would not comply with this de- mand, and the strike ensued. The Proletarian Labor Congress, iated to the Pan-Pacific Secre-| ariat, imediately supported the strike and called on all the workers in the Philippines to aid the strikers. The Philippine authorities who rant so much about wanting independence aid the imperialist police in arresting Chinese workers who support th Communist forces in China. They ave calling for “deportation of all Chinese Reds.” A sham battle is going on in the Philippines between Issure Gaaldon, one/time re Washington, and the Philippine Sena Gabalden achieved spurious fame py disagree- ing with aS on the question of im- mediate independence. He charged Roxas, Osmena and others with tem- porizing with Wall Street and not, really desiring independence. But HUNGER MARCH ATTACKED BY 500 terest of the masses in the fake ¢am- paign for independence, has resorted to a despicable trick. He has organ~ ized a society called the New Katt- unan, utilizing the name of the in- |surrectionary movement of 1808 td cover his alliance with Wall street. The “principles” of the New Katipu- naa, while talking about “economic nationalism” does not say a le about organizing the workers and peasant: to fight for mmdependende. It js 2 program based on the desire to create a wealthy industrial ang Jand- owning class in the Philippines which could more effectively exploit the Philippine masses in the interests of \Inited States canitelism, Leander J. de Bekker, New York newspaperman, who claims to be an anti-imperialist, while on a visit to the Philippines recently, gave an in- terview to the Philippine Herald ich exnoses his pseudo-impérial- ism. De Bekker said he was th favor of Philippine independence “pravided that we (?) are given full assurance that you are secure and free after American sovereignty is lifted here.” This is the same argument made when the Platt amendment was faste ened on Cuba and is the stock argu ment of all imperialists for holding the Philippines when they have no more logical arguments. ARMED POLICE; RESIST BRAVELY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | for the International Labor Defense, Leo Gallagher. | Twenty additional delegates of the | unemployed were denied admittance | to the heavily guarded city couneil | chambers. | Series of Raids. | The most extreme police terrorism | ers’ Co-operative and the Tradé Union Unity League headquarters. The entire membership of the ¢x- ecutive council of the National 'Tex- tile Workers’ Industria] Union was arrested, and then released, with the exception of Paul Stein. The others arrested (besides Stein) were Mike Billick. Karl Hama, Jack Hardy, Flores’ Bildyto. Ramon Carorio, Pat- 4 | has surrounded this demonstration of | rick Chambers, Norman Halfell, Jee Also. an edition of the workers’ pa- per. “Ei Trabagidor Hondureno,” has| the starving unemployed here from | Artpse,.Jim Edwardson, Joe Turchine been suppressed. Get a 1931 Daily Worker calendar free with a six | months’ subscription or re- | newal. Ai ts unknewn here. About 100 pegple | use the same lavatory—men, women | roof and a the word) "an Cut “ormen’s Wages very CLEVELAND, O.—The Van Swer-| | Insurance, and J. Kasper reported on | MINNEAPOLIS | the Jocal movement and was elected, ON THE JOB | secretary. | “We have, followed the policy of Plans were made for the hunger, apportioning the list @ you send Stamford Foliless March on | | City Hall, Monday at 7 P.M. when raining. It is| ingens who have gotten control of never cleaned, Tt is about thirty feet the Cleveland Ry. Co. are planning pit af the sheep shed Which | to give the carmen a direct cut in | 1981, During the year of 1930 their The workers gre gritting their teeth their schemes were to cut the wages ‘Yet to ae they must | on the rapid transit 15 cents per hour a [and speed-up the runs, and all sche- Sunderstand, yet are Will: cules ‘on ae city lines have heen about it and it ts up t0 | cneeded-up with no extra pay for the be erecta ‘Workers’ Industrial | increased amount of work. this message to them) ‘Their bus department. {s losing Organized they will be able to botist| thousands of dollars and the carmen some.of this misery. are standing the losses. The Vans «umWomen Cotton Pickers. | trimmed the carmen of over « mil- Yon in 1930. They have thousands to spend on experts and salaries for the fat boys but the carmen are left out in the cold. The carmen who have openly fought the policies of the Vans have been fired and even abused by the g?e it wage cut in the industry. ‘The bosses ef the U. 8. Hosiery Co. operating three mills in Pht and one at Langhorne, Pa., had an agreement with the workers. Tears Up Agreement. But what's an agreement? Just another scrap of paper. So the bosses had the name most conven+ the i oMcials of their union Division 268. Bing aie, . It is plainly to be seen that the com- bee in oo pany and the officials are working in : “ Chinaman. perfect harmony. ve : See dk ‘ *.500 Hosiery all tagt’s Knitters Strike — — 7 Philadelphia, Pa j Teason for the strike of th: "Sher néties: Now there will be more |1500 hosiery Knitters of the United ‘Wpeed-up. Sha man doing twe men’s | states Hosiery Co. is because of an sy Woe. to put, Se ak A et aa put over on the workers jd injurious to the ¢yes. Tt is compulsory. The workers are now fighting the company. OR. bundle orders. The workers present adopted resolutions of protest on the Portland cases and the Centralis mareh January 28, on the city hall, it in to the different secticns,” | where the budget discussion will then | writes B. Siskind. “The Sections be going on. have distributed to the units and | Wilburne, a Negro worker, was, the comrades are on the job. We {elected and A. Kruzpainter to the al-| will send a special communication | terate national committee which will in our weekly letter emphasizing the | present the Workers Unemployment | need and ureing the comrades to Insurance Bill and the signatures to, get on the job.” it, to congress on Feb. 10. | ‘The conference set aside Feb. 8 as | & special signature collection day. March on New Je STAMFORD, Conn., Jan. 21.—The | unemployed council of the ‘Trade | Union Unity League has issued a call | | TN KANSAS CITY for all unemployed workers of Stam~ H ference | Mel Wermblad, district Daily | ford to participate in a march to the | davooumiin of aed ba oe | Worker representative, is rish} on his | City Hall on Monday, 7 p. m., Jan.| for signatures here. prepare for the | toes directing circulation and increas- | 26. where the Common Council meets, hunger march on the state capitol at ; ing @ new bundle order by 35, He | ‘0 demand unemployment relief. Trenton some time around: Feb. 1,| Writes: | A mass meeting will be held at the | and to conduct the campaign for| “Comrade F. J. Evrard has been Workers’ Center the same evening, MORE ACTION SHOWN funds to send the New Jersey dele~ gates to Washington and for other organization purposes. The conference adopted resolutions endorsing the Unemployment Insury, ance Bil] and the Workers Interna | tional Relief. “Relief, Not Charity. ‘The hunger march on the city hall here on Jan. 26 will put up demands to the city council, then considering | the 1931 budget, for $10 a week cash rellef for each unemployed worker, and for $2 adqitional for each de- pendent. They demand the removal of La Fera, “Overseer of the Poor” who now handles charity and is gen- erally believed to have stolen huge sums during his term in office, and they demand that his place be taken | by a committee of the workers and, Jobless of Newark, who shall dispense relief, not charity. ahs Other demands are made in other | cities, for no evictions, no cutting off of light and gas, food and clothing for school children. the demonstration in their uniforms | ond demonstrate especially for this | demand. appointed to act as city Daily Worker | Where delegates will be elected to| Agent. He's a real hustler and I ex-| Washington and to Hartford for pect to see our street sales as well as monthly subs to increase under hts leadership. I will co-operate with Kim to the fullest extent and will Place mare comrades in action to in- | crease our street sales.” JAILED WORKER FINDS DAILY TRUE ‘From Harts Island, N. Y. ©. we received the following letter: “Just a few words of concratula~ tions for your ever-growing, truth- ful workers’ paper, the “Daily Worker,” Some of the amazing facts I have read in the Worker, concerning some certain political “Big Shots” can't be denied. Keep up the excellent work Daily Worker end 60,000 circulation will be a mere | trifle eventually. Don’t neslect to send me mine. On my release I | will pay this three months’ sub and pay in advance.” “STRONGEST WEAPON” SAYS EX-SOLDIER “Have been in the hospital for six weeks and the Daily Worker has been ‘The Daily must not the strongest weapon for the cause.”--C. H. Jones, Washington, p> od — 60 YEARS, READY TO START SOMETHING AGAIN “Jam over 60 years old and can get or earn enough to pay ‘Tunch and 4 place to sleep,” writes Fred Milbrat, Linden, N. J. “Sorry I can’t do any better for the rf |vanging @ mass meeting on Friday | Foster, general secretary of the T. U. .| 10,000 signatures must be hed. Feb. 10, | Two successful unemployed mass | meetings have already been held in Stamford, and the Unemployed Coun- cil is rapidly enrolling members every day and busy collecting signatures. re Sie Waterbury Meet Sunday. WATERBURY, ‘Conn., Jan. 2}. The Trade Union Unity League will hold a meeting at 774 Bank St. Sun- day afternoon at 2 p. m., to prepare the organization of a hunger mareh to demand unemployment relief early in February. Vee cae New Haven Prepares Mareb. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Jan. 21.—The New Haven Unemployed Council of the Trade Union Unity League is ar- evening, Jan, 30, at which William Z. U. L,, will be the main speaker. This meeting is to mobilize the unem- ployed workers of New Haven for the hunger-march on the following Monday, Feb. 3, to the meeting of the Board of Aldermen to demand unemployment relief. Over 5,000 signatures have already been collected by the Connecticut District, and by Feb. 10 the goal of On Wednesday, Jan., 28, the New Haven County Unemployment Con- ference will be held to elect delegates to Was! , where the National Unemployed Delegation wil) present the demands for relief to Congress. + 8 e To March On Trenton. NEWARK, N. J. den. 21—-Aetive | pen when they pass through New Waterbury, New Haven, Have Mass Meétings Next. Week to Prepare Hunger Marches; rsey Capitol Soon New Jersey. Though the date has | not been decided upon, some prelim | inary plans are worked out. The marchers from Paterson will | be met in Passaic with a great dem- | onstration and will go om reinforced | to Newark. Here, after another demonstration | by the local unemployed and militant | workers, they will gather recruits and go on to Elizabeth, to repeat the dem- onstration there, The same will hap- | Brunswick, and the nest demanstr>- tion is in Trenton, itself, where they will be joined not only by the 4.¢n- | ton jobless, but by the marchers from | other sections of the state. arty on Ballot in Detroit for Snecial Senatorial Election DETROIT, Mich—In the second state senatorial district, on Jan. 26, a special election will take place. This district is populated mostly by work- ers. About 50 per cent of them are workers of the auto industry and of foreign birth. There are also thous- ands of oppressed Negro workers un- employed. Many workers and their families are living in misery. The Party is doing all in its power to mobilize all members to participate in the election campaign. Also non~ partisan workers are mobilized to make this campaign 9 rea] mass cams | scious for over 24 hours. | Service Men’s League, the I. L. D.and | the beginning. Demands for a per- | mit to the Unemployed Council to | march were denjed, Virgil Martin, | chairman of the Fire and Police Com- | mittee of the City Council. brazenly | ready being done for the ployed.” On Jan. 17, Bonchi Frideman, sec- tion organizer of the Communist Party here, was followed from the | Workers’ Co-operative to his home by police and horribly beaten, his resi- | dence being also completely wrecked. | Friedman's condition is serious, as he | has internal injuries. He was uncon- | unem- | | | | Jan. 18 the police broke up a dance | at the Spanish Co-operative Workers’ | Center and smashed all the furniture, but without. arrests. Force Hearing. On Jan. 19 a committee of the Un- employed Council of the Workers’ Ex+ the American Civil Liberties Union | | forced a hearing. Their demand for | @ permit for the march yesterday was refused. | The newspapers carried. the threat of Police Officer Hynes that he “ex~ pects. resistante and as a result his men will be heavily armed and will carry riot clubs to beat the Reds into submission.” Op. the evening of Jadn. 19 there were simultaneous raids on the Worke | Frees Cop Who. “Mur.| dered Negro Worker BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Jan. 20.—The usyal white washing of white police- men who murder Negro workers o¢- curred here today when @ verdiet of justifiable homicide was returned in tha case of Policeman Hollum, who brutally murdered Frank Grady, Nex gro, on Bush Boulevard a few days ago. | Testimony at the inquest indicated that Grady after being arrested and searched for weapons hed leaped from the police car and drew a gun | (probably from under his fingernail) and fired at the officers. Hot Dog Jamboree of Red naign under the principle of “Class Against Class,” and for the Unemy Ployed Insurance Bill. Enclosed find . EMERGENCY FUND preparations for the hunger march on the state capitel at Trenton are being made by all Unemployed Coune cils and elty campaign committees in NAME ADDRESS ..... $30,600 DAILY WORK™R EMERG Builders News Club, 27 East sky, Jack Silver and an unnamed Chinese worker. The police closed the hall to prevent other scheduled meetings later. On the same evening there was % | Stating: “Everything possible is al- | second raid on the Co-operative and a raid on all known workers’ homes, in which the police smashed up everything. FIRST ANNUAL DAILY WORKER. CALENDAR FOR 1931 Seven striking half-tone pletures sgle never ber View the bi strikes and Temovstrations te the ter 8 Five smashing certoons of the tines beragyiee Peres ae wow DAILY WORKER wast so ATR STREET, ¥. ¥. O. By 2 wo om ga tale Me ils tan Ge eet CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDAIGET PROLPTARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE TEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere nia wens 4th St, Sunday, 3 p. m, re | CUT THIS OUT AND MAIL IMMEDIATELY TO TH E DAILY WORKER, 50 E. ISTH ST., NEW YORE CITT RED SHOCK TROOPS For We pledge to build ED SHOCK TROOPS for the successful completion of the $30,000 DAILY WORKES ret rere rere reer err errrrrerrrerret i it rt CAMP NITQOEDAIORT. BEACOR, WF. + Mallar. .....6..05 oye ORD Orr