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Crisis in Arkansas Stores Close ARY 23, 1931 Worsens As and Farmers Starve Boss Press Ke ® eps Up Endless Flood of Lies) About “Upturn” (By 2 Worker Correspondent) LITTLE ROOK, Ark.—The “Arkany sas Democrat” every day carries on ite front rage right under the mast head a news item usually captioned “Business Improving,” giving isolated, smngil examples about how indystry is yeviving, jobless getting work, etc, ‘This is whistling te keep up one's courage. Anything te fool the people té maintain “business psychology.” Facts however tell a different story, is estimated that at least 1,000 stores and business establishments bave closed shop during the past months and that scores of closing-out-sales are now taking place. Some streets fre actually empty and deserted. This terrific collapse in business is due to the drought and the general weakening of United States and world capitalism. The chamber o feommerce here is engineering the business “booms” re- ferred to gbove. Anyone disagreeing Streets Desolate. As one walks through the streets : Of this town one finds sceres upon | bank closed its doors in Little Rock seores of empty business places. It | today (Jan. 17). “Genial” Rolph Gives More Breadlines San Francisco, Cal. Now that our smiling faker (Gov- Editor Daily Worker:—- J} know J should get kicked for not writing in more often but every day I read the Daily Worker and scan the letters from the shop for no ether reason then to hot the comrades from th" ‘wealth and shion” are doing towards byilding up the o.... vary paper in the country. » Arnold Window Glass Fools Workers Springdale, Pa. and 7 a. m. and not a solitary man was hired. Shows Up Bosses. Well, comrades I don't see where with it is a “red” of course. Incidentally we can report another the poor ignorant taxpayers are re- |lying on him alone to give us back | that myth called, ah that is “pros- perity.” $ Yes the breadlines are stretching out yonder and day by day it is coming near. By that I mean the inevitable crash of imperialism and the dittatorship of the masses. Dear Comrades:— It is not often that I write to the worker correspondence but today I wie ete atte t bea fr is hurting our movement because News came out|it only shows the workers how much stan: Caner AY with Wiodiiva | truth there is in our program and) headlines giving information to the| What the capitalist press really is. effect that the Arnold Window Glass|In other wards we don't need to ex- Company had hired two hundred and| Pose the bunk the bosses hand out fifty men and that they would hire | They aye actually dumb enough to) Many more on Monday 19th. On that | ¢xpose themselves and workers every- dgte there were about one thousand | Where are looking for’ leadership. workers gathered between midnight! —UNEMPLOYED Canadian Locomotive Workers Laid Off Kingston, Ont., Canada. Editor:~- Dear Sir:-— Jyst a line from here reporting on dit , pies Ros otiaian Locomotive Works in| quarters in the kitchen lecturing this town leid off 400 and Will lay about pie in the sky. ‘ of another 100 in two weeks, then) It is common talk they intend} @ complete shut down. No more or-- fingerprinting all transients. ders. making a total of 1,100 out of| In Torornto any one seen applying | Work in Kingston. for kesp at a police station is ‘vagged’ | The free employment bureay here|6 months and then deported. jthem of the good soup to be had) | across the street at the kitchen. Persecute Jobless. A presbyterian minister | erner Rolph) has taken over the du-} \Ford, Press Foo! Thousands About Take On Detroit, Mich, Dear Editor:— Just a few lines to inform you in regards to a lot of boloney. A friend |of mine went out to the Ford plant | after reading the news in the papers to report for work. So when he got, there, there were so many people, one could hardly budge, but was told to wait. In the meantime the newspapers were notified to come out to take a picture of the crowd. After taking a picture of the crowd they hired a few perhaps for a few days or weeks ahd told the rest of the gang to go home. And that same day the pap- ers came out with pictures on the front page announcing that Ford took on over 100,000 men which is a lie. Ne Job No Home. Now to get back to this friend of mine. He belongs to the same lodge as one of the officials, he is as high as one can go, 32nd degree. Think- ing he could get on at Ford's I drove him up to this fellow’s home and af- ter talking wor awhile he said it was impossible to get him a job and what the papers had said wag paper talk just to kid the public along. Here is another instance where a workers served his master very well | Only to be fired. Altho he tells me he is a republican he talks nothing but | Bolshevik. This fellow invented a |machinée he said to take the place | of 35 girls. After he got though with |it, his masters rirn’t give him any |thing and told him he could have| his job and after he insisted on being | paid for his invention they gave him |the air. That was his reward, he is closé to fifty. Conditions are rotten. sides, hold up murders. The mur- derets 9-* z “+ the un- »ployed are jailed and blackjacked 5 —A.C, Lots of sui- “eranton Officials Par Showing Sovkino| Film, “Old and New” Official: of Seranton were worried New” the Sovkino epic of collectivi- zation, which was to be shown there, ‘The film, which is directed by Eis-| Fenstein, 1s the greatest picture of| subscribers, Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill The Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill proposes: 1.—Unemployment insurance at the rate of $25 a week for each unemployed worker and $5 additional for each dependant. 2.—The creation of a National Unemployment Insurance Fand to be raised by: (a) using all war funds for unemployment insurance; (b) @ levy on all capital and property in excess of $25,000; (c) a tax on all incomes of $5,000 a year. 3.~-That the Unemployment Insurance Fund thus created shall be administered by a Workers’ Commission eleeted solely by employed and unemployed workers. All who sign the lists now being circulated by-the Workers Na- tional Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance of its enb- tidiary organizations, demand that congress shall pass the bill, in its final form as (possibly) amended by the mass meetings which ratify it and elect the mass delegation to present it to congress, of 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. acute 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 their members in the collection of signatures. Write to the National Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance, 2 West 15th St, New York City, for signature blanks. Comrades in Little Rock, Ark., are quick to understand the need of the Daily Worker in the area where re- cently starving farmers of England, Ark., armed themselves and marched in a body, demanding food from the England storekeepers. From F. B. we received the following Jetter: “Comrade D. Z. is now getting % copies every day. We want to order for our unit here 50 copies of the Daily Worker. Inclosed is money for one week. We will in- | crease size of bundle as quickly as | forees are developed for efficient distribution of the papers.” BOISE, IDAHO, ON ITS TOES From Theodore Pierce we receive 9 not requesting an increase in bundic ‘order to 15, ST. 4 SCORES INDIFFERENCE “In regards to your statement that you are in the wark about “uifalo, you are right, as I am also fn the dark,” writes Leo S. Wood, Daily Worker agent. “This district has been so loose that the comrades do not realize the value of the Daily Worker. Comrade Chaunt has given us good plans how to carry on the drive, The sections feel that they don’t have to co- | operate with the district.” | Hagler nail. (from| Tecently that the workers of that SPREADS! DAILY, lon ) y is head-| city might learn about life in the U.) IN THE SOUTH | China on pension) makes his hea \SSR. So they confiscated “Old and “Enolosed ‘find $2 for the Daily ‘Workél's for the néxt. two months. received the copies you sent me and land had the crowd that had gathered | every worker that saw them was en- | to see the picture, dispersed by police. tirely carried away. I think inside of five years you may have a million that is, if You can run is run by a parasite by the name of! Fifty thousand acres of bush Jana | Russiay » Feconstruction ever made, | your paper that Jong. (We will—and Streud who carries a union printer’s card. All transients in search of food are sent by Stroud (who tells \is to be cleared in the Province of | Ontario by ‘vags.’ The place is al- ‘ready nicknamed “Beulah Land.” OKLAHOMA GOVEDNOR ORDERS ALL JOBLESS MEETS SMASHED Unemployed Organize; ly ‘Worker, “Open Led Arkansas Affair 2 in the Warehouses for the Unemployed” n 1OONTING piel Ranincemniic amployment relief, and that Murray is trying to smash this growing nfove- ment. WAGE ONE) ~ ? The entire capitalist press carries stories of 3 “meb" of hungry men ang women in Oklahoma City, who with shouts that they were hungry and Jobless yaided a grogery and seized food, The bourgeois papers would have the workers believe that these hungry men and women were an ir- responsible mob engaged in plunder. The Truth About oma The Deily Worker is in. receipt of reports from that district which give the true picture of events in Okla- homa, The report states that events there “are developing with breatliless speed. In Oklahoma City alone 1,900 workers are signed as members of the Unemployed Coynciis.” : Janyery 14, according to the { capitalist news: ge i t ill -* H i z a4 at tl a 5 i i i fi 9) ers approached the workers, explained guilined a practical organizational form for putting this into practice, so that the workers will not be misled by those who desire fo capture and betray the movement, The reports of the seizure of food in Oklahoma City on Tuesday by 1,000 hungry men and women show that the workers of Oklahoma are putting these organizational proposals into effect and that under the leader- ship of the Unemployed Councils they are demanding and getting the food which the eity and state governments refuse to give them. Organize Everywhere This movement is not confined to Oklahoma City, Everywhere in the state the workers are organizing to demand and secure relief, In Dun- can, a spontaneous gathering of more than 500 workers and farmers took place and formed an organization under the name of “Workingmen’s | Army.” Their leader, who was mis- guided and ynder reformist illusions refused to line yp with the Unem- ployed Counci} and the United Farm: ers League. The revolutionary worke 1 the national campaign for unemployy ment insurance, and showed them the Daily Worker, Which they read with great eagerness. The overwhelming majority of the workers in this town have lined up with the Unemployed Council in the fight for unemploy- ment insurance) In “Webh, City and m Little Roca the workers are also organizing. Un employed Councils have been formed Vand mass meetings held in both these towns, and the Daily Worker ig now in yeceipt of information that 1 , Ark. action of the farmers was led by a members of the Oklahoms City Unemployed Council, that only through organ- they get relief, and they he cogein at “breathless spced’ ler revolutionary ee aa of (Unemployed Council, film gives the Soviet line in regard to the peasarits. ' Those in Glass Houses Shouldn’t Throw Stone By HELEN KAY. { Ham, Fish, in his conclusions on! the Communist investigation, tecom- | mends that the United States gov-| ernment send ‘inspectors or agents to investigate the prison camps and the pulpwood land timber-cutting districts of Soviet Russia, and report. back regarding the alleged produc- tion of Iumber and pulpwood by con- viet labor”. :} Periodicals and newspapers are full of the “misery of the poor convicts in the Soviets.” Story after story fill the I. W. W, papers, A. FPL. papers and other capitalist sheets, dealing with the “slavery in the Rus- sian prison camps.” This is an out- right lie. There is no such thing as slavery in the Soviet Union. Plan Attack On U. S. S. R. | One anti-Soviet campaign follows | gnother, The capitalists feel the ground beneath them giving way, They fee] the decaying pillars crum- bling under them, and in sharp con, trast they see the remarkable growth of socialist construction in the Soviet Union, They fee] their own system tottering. They absolutely refuse to do anything for the starving work- ers and farmers unless forced tq by the mags action of the workers. They realize that the workers of the world are watching the huge successes of the Five-Year Plan with eyes thav fay, “Well, brothers, why not follow the example of our Russian fellow- workers , . , no more bosses ,, . no more breadlines,” For this reason propaganda of all sorts is manufac- | » tured by the rulers of the capitalist Govjet Union, : y trying to discredit the waters’ Pu land in the eyes of the working by falsely accusing it first of dumping grain, to “ruin the poor American farmer,” already pape Ry nan is th Imiporetlon ot man 1 convictemtde goods, which {s supposed to be “ruining the poor American | having’ een called previously “The| longer!) You may sehd your paper | General Line.” In moving scenes, the| to me each day.”—D. E. C., Durham, N.C. “Enclosed find $1 for contribu- I Little Rock, Ark., Active in Section of Militant Farmers; Bundle Increased to 50 Daily tion to the Daily Worker. This is all ¥ can do as I am still crippled up and don’t know if I will ever be able to work.”—A. Kiefer, Den- ver, Colo. | SENDS $10 FOR SUB, DONATION --I. Isaacs of Wilkes-Barre, writes: “Please find enclosed check of $1¢ for renewal of my sub ana salance for the fund.” Pa., FINDS DAILY FOR WORKING CLASS “I enclose $6 wih which please renew my subscription fer OW year. Long life to the Daily Worker. The Daily Worker is the only paper for the working class.”—Henry Carlier, | Ohio. | ALBANY BUILDERS INCREASE BUNDLE in Albany is already showing action, | We received the following: “Please increase order from 10 to 20 daily. RUSH. Send us some more calendars and sub blanks also.” | BUNDLE RAISED FOR DETROIT After a cut of 600 in bundles, De- troit, increased: its order by 200, ac- cording to a wire from Sarah. Victor, Daily Worker representative. ....'.. READS FRI 50 CENTS “I have read the Daily Worker several times from my friend and I found that this is the only paper which really defends the interest of the workers. Therefore, I enclose | 50 cents to save the Daily Worker.” —E. N., Lincoln, Nebraska. Ease Thvie INTE El Salvador Dictator Tails Four Workers The movement to organize unions to fight for better conditions in Sal- tions by Romero Bosque, the agent of Yankee imperialism in power. Many organizers and leaders of the attempt to liberate the workers from the mis- | erable conditions to which they are | subjected have been arrested. The Red Aid (IL.D.) organized a protest and the masses responded. More than 200 were rescued from the pris- ons. Four are still in jail. Petitions for better conditions, de- seribing the feudal system by wnic! the workers are exploited, were sen' jto the government. The answer o1 |Romero Bosque was to describe the workers’ conditions as seen from tne |eomfortable position of the bour- |geoisie. The Communist Party reé |sponded with an accurate aescnip- tion of the real suffering of the masses Bosque. On the day of the trial of the four comrades still in prison, demonsira- | tions ‘for their freedom took plac¢ | all over Salvador. This brought forth | more severe persecutions of the work~- jers. Many more were arrested, revo- | lutionary organizations were attacked |and the leaders imprisonea. It is a struggle of class against |¢lass. Workers the world over mus. unite against the white terror of Sal- vador and the conditions which the fascist Romero Bosque and his gov- | ernment impose.on the masses. Help rades! free our imprisoned com. . BUENOS AIRES.—The death sen- tence imposed by the fascist Uriburu feurs, Ares, Montero and Callso, for attacking a scab during a recent “Te, was commuted to life impris- ress i This was the reaction of the fas- | cist dictator to the protests of the proletariat persed by the armed henchmen of the government. It was, however, working-class solidarity which forced the would-be executioners to com- mute the death sentence. Such cowardly “kindness” and “elemency” myst be fought against, | Which they have been condemned. | ing.” | Workers the world over must- unite | ist governments are preparing to ward to free the victims of “capitalist jus- tice.” Particularly the American workers, since Uriburu is a “friend” of Wall Street, are quivering in “sympathy” with the poor Russian convict, Now the Treasury Department has installed regulations prohibiting tm- portations into the United States of “Convict Made Goods.” This is di rectly an attack upon the .Soviet Union, It is not aimed at any of the colonia] importations where rea) slave labor is enforced, and ts used by such as Hamilton Fish and Woll of the American Federation of La~ bor to spread lying propaganda against the Workers’ land. The general line of attack began of the Soviet land tried to insinuate that all labor in the Workers’ Father- land was forced . . . that a worker was constantly threatened with the loss of his privileges if he did any- thing contrary to the “dictator's de- sires.” No Such Thing As Forced Labor. In the Soviet Republic those in the eonditions. The only principle in- volved is the maxim of “He whe works shall eat.” There, a worker realizes that he must do his share in the construction and the soclalization ot the country. He realizes that the benefits of his labor go to society as a whole, and thus back te him. It {s a matter of proletarian discip- line, of socialist ethics, for a worker to do all in his power for the better- ment of Society. Here, on the other hand, a worker slaves his life away and makes some manufacturer rich. He reaps na benefit from his labor +. he sees another, the boss, grow fat from the s urplus that he cre- ated. / The means of the workers’ existence are owned by the capitalist class Capitalist society is based upon pri- vate property and “criminals” are made by the capitalist system itself Poverty will force workers to steal A gnawing stomach must be satis- fied. Ninety per cent of all laws deal with the rpetuation of private property rights and its Mlations. A worker must be punished for desir+ ing what “belongs to another,” and. therefore, the principle on which the American prisons are run 1s one of punishment. Th a Communist society this prob: Jem of private property is removed, worker,” already on the bread lines waiting for a handout, Their huce hearts under their bass drum bellies and it is not necessary to ‘become “criminals” in order to attaly the means of existence. Therefore, we with convict, Jabor, then the enemies | shops work under the best of union | | | see in the Soviet Union, where so- cialism is being constructed, that a convict is looked upon as one who has not as yet lest the heritage of the past, as one who still retains a bourgeois ideology. Here a worker when he {s forced to steal takes from an individual only or from some exploiter or group of | exploiters. There, the robber takes | from the masses of the people. For | this reason the prisons are in reality schools where workers can-be turned out; better members of society. The | prison is an educational institution so that those retained for correction and not for punishment may be de- veloped into useful members of the new social order. No Convict Labor. No convict Igbor in the sense that it is known jn the United States ex- ists in the Soviet Union. The pris- | ons there are not run for punishment or private profit. The workers in the | prisons are paid for their labor on | the same scale as unton worers. | Their hours and conditions are glso | the same. Walter Duranty, In Monday's (Jen 19) issue of the New York Times, says on this question; “Criminals, in the ordinary sense of the word, are better treated in the Soviet Union than in any other country—with dye allowance for the universal shortage of living ouarters and commodities, They work, hut they GET TRADE UNION RATES FOR THT'R LA- POR, the produce of which ‘is sold EXCLUSIVELY WITHIN THE SOVIET UNION, and they have ‘parole’ holidavs yearly, which they almost never break,” “Up to now the Treasury and La- bor Departments have been unable to prove the use of convict Igbor in connection with any specific care oes,” Even Fish, the loudest enemy of the workers, must make this ad- mission, and he requests that the government send “inspectors , or agents” to investigate. Social Fascist MacDonald told Com- mander Bellairs, member of parlia- ment, that there was no valid proof brought gorth anywhere showing that any Soviet exports were produced by foreed or convict labor. S_ about the 10,000,000 starving workers, ers. These four-flushers hand out evictions, soup lines and a flop house or two, ers to rob the farmer by mortgages and rents to such a degree that he is left starving 12 months out of the year. They don’t bother about the poverty and suffering in America, Just so long as it doesn’t affect their private board. But somethine ust be done about the “forced leWr in Russia.” | They are shedding croco- dile tears because the convicts work under union conditions. This is ters rible . . . not at all like convict labor in the United States, where only 10 out of the 48 states pay their pris- oners. The “Northwest Laborer,” organ of the Northwest Conference of Build- |ing Laborers’ Unions, comments edi- torjally on this question: “The point we emphasize is not whether Russian lumber is made by convicts—though there seems to pe no evidence to subs stantiate the charge-—the phase of the controversy that interests us Is that those who ere loudest against Russian prison products (if there are such) were strangely silent when American prisons were being ru for the profits of private contractors, the prisoners being exploited to the utmost.” These persons are still si- Jent, and the most vicious convict la- bor still flourishes. (To Be Continued.) Biock ae ’ People who live in glass houses shouldn't even toss pebbles about on account of a possible hail storm of bricks. The U. S. ery of horrible prison conditions in Soviet Russia brings down tomorrow an avalanche on the actual situation of convicts who produce goods in U. 8. prisons, Don't miss tomorrow's article, Enel find EMERGENCY FUND Boss. Doésn’t Care If American Workers Starve. ‘The lying hypocrites who make the Jaws of “our country” don’t worry vador has been met by brutal persecu- | aa | LIES ABOUT Is Preliminary to the “Keep Your Feet Off the Table,” Izvestia Tells Ham Fish, Jr. RNATIONAL rey ISVESTIA” RAPS BOSS PRESS FOR “FORCED LABOR” IN USSR Boyeott Against Soviet Goods; Imperialists Make-Slaves of Colonia al Masses | MOSCOW.-~“Isvestia” deals with | latest slander of those who are fighte | ing against the import of Soviet time |ber into Great Britain, the allesa- Sarcastic and biting comment in | tion that compulsory labor exists in the Moscow press greeted the pub-| the Soviet, Union, The newspaper lication of the Fish Committee re- | declares that this new slander hag Port. Izvestia, in an editorial headed, | heen brought into currency. by these | “Skyscraper of Impudence,” says that | the “ninety-page report of the Fisn | circles which seek to bring about an This was ignored by Romero | Demoustrations were dis- | Jommittee demonstrates the most omplete failure of the Right Honor able Representative, his assistants \from the American Secret Servic> and | their White Guard emigre gangs. fevestia goes on to say: “To oppose recognition of the | Seviet Union and simultaneously to | derand official investigations of conditions existing in said union-— that is literally a skyseraper of im- pugence We are learning to do things on an- American scale, but inselence on a scale like this we never expected from people who ought to realize that they represent an important State administration. When Mr, Fish asks the American government to demand the right of investigation of our lumber camps we can only reply; ‘Take your feet off the table, Mr. Representative, you are not in your own home.” PUSH WAR PLANS AGAINST SOVIETS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | | The new Red Builders’ News Club | and his tribunal on the three chauf- | parations, so that the masses of workers may be blinded to the facts, | the assembled capitalist diplomats is- sued a manifesto deploring the “an- xi over “talk in various quarters | concerning the possibility of an inter- |national war.” They repeated the Kellogg pact phrases. But behind the scenes the work of | forging @ united battle front against | the workers, not only in the Soviet} | Union, but in the capitalist lands, | went on with the sid of the “Labor” | ministers. | A “study” was ordered fo unemy | ployment, the commission “being apr | prehensive in regard to the unem- | Ares, Montero and Gallso must be | ployment position in Europe and the | liberated from the living death to | very grave consequences it is produc- economic boycott of the Soviet, Dinion. Based on the “siatements” of mys- | terious “eyewitnesses,” “fugitives” and | others who all |prefer to rengain | anonymous, the conservative press demands the prohibition of the im- | port of Soviet timber into Great Britain. The “Dally Telegraph” does not content itself with this, but de- | mands also the prohibition of the import of Soviet coal, oil and wheat on the ground that these commodi- | ties are produced by slave labor, | “Isvestia” points out that the Sov- | et Union is the only. country in the | world where labor is really free and | where the exploitation of the work- | ing masses by. the capitalists has been | abolished. In the capitalist, coun- | tries the “freedom to work” meant | simply the freedom to work or starve, | and even this freedom ceased to ex- | ist during times of great unemploy+ ment like the present. In the Soviet Union all workers had the right to work, and, further, the duty. The overthrow of capitalism had made an | increasingly improved standard for the workers possible. Not even the most progresstve capt- { talist countries could compare with the Soviet Union with regard to the | amounts expended by the state on | education, culture and social services. | Real freedom exists in the Gaviet Union and it is this fact which causes the fury of the bourgeoisie and pro- duces such satirical scenes ag the conservative diehards, the represen- tatives of British colonialism, the in: | ternationally noterieus slave-holders and oppressors of the colonial peo- wiles, as the defenders of the workers. Last summer in Geneva the 12th ses sion of theInternational Labor Office of the League of Nations dealt mith the question of slavery and forced | labor in the colonies. An exhaustive | report Was made concerning the vari- | ous forms of compulsory. laber still in operation in the colonies, Great In short, the combined capita}. | Britain was in the lead as slave mas- | ter. These facts, however, did not | prevent the hypoeritical tories from shedding crocodile tears at the “ter- off proletarian revolution while they | prepare for war against the workers’ ies wheat exports and thereby they hope to endanger the Five Year Plan advance, 2) In order to bolster up the rich | yopean wheat importing and export- | ing countries in order to smash Sov- | republic. ” ae . | yible” conditions of labor existing in The definite steps taken were the} the Soviet Union. following: { 1) A committee to unite the Eu- FIRST ANNUAL DAILY WORKER CALENDAR FOR or about the millions of hungry farm- | They aid the robber bank- | CUT THIS OUT AND MAIL IMMEDIATELY TO TH E DAILY WORKER, 50 E. 13TH ST,, NEW YORK CITY $20.0C0 DAILY WORKER EMERGENCY We pledge to build RED SHOCK TROOPS for SAOPPRM Oe eROreneeeen enone nnee Deane Dee EET EneEe eee ERODES EEE OHEEEES GEeEEDEEEEESELERES EDDM RAR RREEER ET peasants in Poland, Bulgaria, Ruma- | nia, Denmark, Hungary,‘ete., against | | the poor peasants who see in the Soviet Union the beneficial results of 1931 | the farm collectives, 2 committee was | Seven sttling belf-tene oituier jformed to discuss the matter of fore Carty oF - na | n anpnbils leture. of Leain | Gredits. | Adutessing Moscow. werkerk. 3) Finally, a committee was form- | Views of the bigcest strikes and demonstrations in the U, 8. Five amashing earteoms ef the clase struggle. Historte a te mer alir ag to Important Marz, Eee ea to discuss “the general organiza~- tion of the European union” against | the Soviet Union. Which means, of | course, the actual military prepara- | tions for intervention. | For this work, Arthur Henderson, | the British labor minister, thanked | Briand, who together with the French | General Staff is working to put Czar- | ism back in power in Russia, Hen- derson thanked Briand “especially | for the fina] success” of “a very suc- cessful session.” | | | | Protest Suppression | of “Young Worker” BUFPALO.--A resolution condemn- | ing the act of the post office in ban- ning the Young Worker from the) mails was enthusiastically adopted at Buffalo and Jamestown mass meet, ings addressed by Comrade Soderber® of the Internationa! Labor Defense. The workers’ willingneess to fight on behalf of the class war prisoners was shown in their great response to an appeal for a collection made by the} lspeaker. Almost $90.00 was collected | |at the meeting and several - new | members were taken in. The International Labor Defense in | District 4 is now progressing rapidly | and point by point the 8 months plan is being rushed into effect, Good response is being received by work- ers’ fraternal organizations here in Buffalo as well as throughout the District. DAILY WORKER 0 EAST WTA STREBT, H, ¥, 6, By 80 eants 9 “ntl ee He coat a Saale CAMP AND Hi NITGEDAIGET PROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN CHE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere tA WEEE CAMP SITGEDAIGET. BBACON, 5, PHONE 731 RED SHOCK TROOPS For f FUND jollars.. cepts. onthe $30,000 DAL uccessful completion LY WORKER apeeaneenes