The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 24, 1931, Page 4

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aacuunnnetner: Page Four A Worker Replies to the Article, “Dope for Workers,” and Relates His Own Experience | ‘We are glad to publish this work- er’s response to the article “Dope for the Workers.” With some of his points we are in whole-hearted agree- ment, with others, we aren't. But we leave it to other worker and farm- er readers to follow his example, take issue with any of the statements in either article, and present your own ideas on these questions; “What are working class families that you know, reading? What effect does this have on their ideas and actions? What type of revolutionary litera- ture interests them—or would inter- est them, if it were available?” We especially want to second, once more Comrade Blank’s appeal for workers to write down and send in working class stries. —EDITOR. By CHARLES BLANK MPHE question of reading material for the millions of werkers and their families dealth with by Com- rade Myra Page in the Saturday, Once I saw my reading a book in which much interested. I made the book so inter this “individual i penetrated her yo mind. The book He gave his life for us, tells about a bright, good-natured As many comrades do; crippled boy, mistreated and dis- And ho waskaown taal fi couraged by teacher even the girl he loved. of the crippled boy him to succeed teresting to her. Working class children may see their fathers struggling for a liv- ing, walking the streets for months without a job, and even themselves lacking immediate necessities, but they don't realize the class struggle in it, and are not interested about the class struggle. The revolutionary press must pay daughte she was ed her what ting for her, and I was shocked to hear how deep ative” bunk has ds, and The struggle and the antag- onism of the people around towards him, which made it ismpossible for made the book in- __ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JANUARY 24. 1931 stein STEVE KATOVIS By LEO JACOBSON (On the anniversary of his death— January 24th of last year.) Once we had a comrade, With our picket line, He knew before Gerard, r Of the “Fifty-nine.” He fought against conditions Of the A. F. of L. Those crooked politicians, who Are the workers’ hell. As a comrade thru’ and thru’. Comrade Steve Katovis, We pledge to be as brave, In the fight for freedom Between the boss and slave. We'll carry on the fight, DEMONSTRATION Mother and Children Evicted By B, FRANCIS. . A WOMAN holding a small under- nourished child in her arms and with two others tagging at her skirt opened the door and upon hearing that I was from the Tenants’ League, invited me in. “You are a Communist,” and when I nodded, she went on. Ever since 1 could remember I have been taught to hate you and your kind, and now, you come to help me.” Although the day was cold it was at first unbear- able as I stepped into the flimsy place that she called home. Home! The wind whistling through the broken windows, and through the floors, a table, a few chairs, a bed that was not a bed and a thin little pad that she called a mattress, and a small by IRWIN’ | bundle on the floor. ‘Till the very end, In your spirit with our might, For a Soviet Land. To Blue Blouses By W. WALD. “My husbnd’s and my bed,” she ex- plained with a wan smile. “You see, I have four other children who are attending school, trying to study on empty stomachs, yet thankful for the few hours of school where they ab- sorb at least the heat.” She stopped then went on: Lied of mixed emotions, his lips moving | By IRVING S. KREITZBERG. AM was furious. He was boiling. now burst out in a passionate flame of indignation. He was no longer the docile, knee-bending, Uncle Tom. He | was Sam Cullen, a Negro and a work- | er—and he was fighting mad. “T’ve worked for the Gregory’s all this month,” he bitterly told his fam- ily and the Robertsons and Logans | who lived in adjoining shacks. “Worked eleven hours every day. Some days it was so hard I just flopped into bed the minute I came home, my bones ached so. Two days ago they told me they didn’t want me any more. I asked for my pay and | the next day so’s Mr, Gregory could | pay me off. Went back yesterday |and Mr. Gregory told me that I'd what I'd earned. I told him I want my pay. I kept on saying I want my pay. Pent-in hatred, so long subdued, | aon at Gregory’ “Race Riots”. A Story Based on True Incidents, of Theft, Rape and Murder Against Negro Masses could not convince himself. “Guéss I'll go along with you, Sam. There’s something I want to buy Sam glanced at | him with understahding-eyes. “Have you my pay ready, Mr. Greg- ory?” Sam asked politely. “You here again?” Mr. Gregory ex- claimed angrily. “Didn't I tell you J | yesterday that you've taken more goods than you had money coming to | you?” “But you said~you’d figure it w | | again, as there might be a mistake. | Mrs. Gregory told me to come back | | taken goods for it; most likely over | I didn’t take more than two | All I took was two dollars’ worth,” | Sam answered. | “Well, I figured.it.up. and it’s cor- | rect. Now get out.of here and don’t | bether me about this any more,” Mr. Gregory barked at: him. Sam had made up his mind. He was going to get his pay. No white boss would brow-beat him any longer. “I want my pay and I'll stay here till I get it,” he militantly. declared. “You will, will. you!” Mr. Gregory January, 17th issue of the Daily serious attention to the “home RE t t = Wi k . |mow and then, his battered old hands dollars worth of goods. He got plumb | shouted. “Now you get out of here 4 Worker is not merely a topic for an| front.” It is true that the revolu- nvervain orkKers Ped bed bese a Ble pege at twitching and unsteady. What was! “My husband has been out of work | mad and yelled: ae | before I break every bone in your? ti article, but a problem that should be| tionary movement has not yet de- New York.—Editor.) ” Ihe to do? How tell his wife? How , fF five months, but recently man-| «you god damn nigger! Are you | black body.” He made.a rush at nN seriously’ discussed’ and analyzed. Not| veloped the necessary cadres for SS heat “Sorry, Tony, but you're too old ana |feed_ his bambinos? Where find aged to find a job for ten dollars @ | caning me a liar?’ | Sam, i ‘ being myself a “man of letters,” but| proletarian literature of this knid, amaze , ire eres So | work? He who was so old, so broken| Week. Ten dollars for nine people.| «; don’t know what happened to| “Hold on there, Mr. Gregory,” Tom a worker in the shop, I will try to| but we can do it just as we do it | In Moscow a few of us dropped into hae Ssiited eigen Git YOR EO Nao lard ao) reds Our gas and our electric has been} me, 1 just fell all over myself try- | Robertson cried. “You'll break no- : give «© workingman's point of view| om the industrial front in the shops |the Lumber Workers) Club one eve-| 02 t® Words ended, Tony Martell, | ; shut off so long that I cannot re- | ing to be nice. | body’s bones. What you'll do is pay F : leborer 972, staggered back as if from | He sat down on a park bench while ber whi ” | é é on this problem. and factories. ning and received an unexpected i © member when it was. “why no, Mr. Gregory. Of course Sem Cullen the wages he’s worked t rdty Pa {a blow while the rest of the gang | is eyes hovered here and there, / B i ” ‘As most workers who are active in| ‘To write about the life in their own| ‘Teat—a, remarkable performance by i searching out building after building | “Have you tried the charity insti- | not. I never thought of such a thing. | for. 1 ‘ sad hited a troop'of the Blue Blouses. The |!0oked on sympathetically. It was | | tutions?” I inquired? She nodded. | But Mr. G ’t you look over | ‘This was t h for Mr. Gre the revolutionary movement, I have | homes, just as a worker writes about Blue Bl 4 travell! i hard to believe. Tony—old man Tony, | Where he had worked. His jobs, his | © a! ; . ut Mr. Gregory, won't you look over | is was too much fo! . gory. r my weekday evenings taken with all| his struggles in the factory. We will louses are travelling troops| "i> nad worked for the boss since | buildings. His rough old hands had| “They are still investigating; still |the books again and make sure? May- | He went insane with rage. He cursed h Kinds of meetings. It is only on Sun-| be surprised to see what a wealth of that give vivid agitational perform- he had started the business. Tony, | helped place them there, so high, so |asking questions, still wanting to | be you made a mistake. | and swore and yelled and threatened. 0 day at the breakfast table that I| material, interesting to all those in ene using as material revolutionary | 4+” smiling hard working ‘Tony. |Rcble, so magnificent. His buildings, | know why an able-bodied man like | “All right,’ he says, ‘Tl figure it| whole god.damn.Niggertown a hhave a chance to be together with my| the home, the workers themselves| "story and the problems of the daily |, who had sacrificed his all. and now... it meant worse than | my husband cannot find work, and | out again tonight.’ ” Betting: fogettien Aye! bunch s family at close range. It is at this| will be able to furnish. In every home *t"ugele. Originally they were ama-| 70°) 2 tradition in the Dregnelli |death to be away from them. He | now the landlord is going to throw| “Made a mistake... . Hub” ex- of lazy, thieving, .hastards! Threat- p time that I find myself in the midst of an intelligent worker there is to|‘U" €Toups, now many of the ama- | rion and now he was being discarded, |loved them so. No, no. That would |uS out if we don't pay up our five | claimed Mrs. Logan. “Cateh Mr. | ening & white MAAC + nt of an ideological ‘struggle just as bit-| be found, often, the contrast between | teurs have become professionals and town into the junk heap. | be impossible, | Months’ rent. Where in the world | Gregory making a mistake.” | ‘The yelling had aroused Mrs. Greg- go ter as with the workers in the shop| himself, who is absorbed in the class|CeVote all their time to this work.|"", moment of hopeless rage tan | Suddenly a flerce hatred took hola / 9m 1 going to get ninety dollars?” I| “The only mistakes Gregory ever |ory. She came running in and ip 8 | Po or in the Union. struggle, and his wife and children,|7@ Blue Blouse movement has | through the crowd and a murmur of | of him, He looked up where his eyes | ®SSured her that we would do all in makes 1s when he's reckoning up the | moment sized up the situation. “She on T bring home the DAILY WORKER Who are far from seeing the reason |SPread to Germany (what about) sneer, that died -as the old man |still could make out the tiny specks | ‘he world to see that she should not Bille of colated tnike, Gr paying them!) Csappesret soe teu ee Boe and a lot of other literature; I urge| Of all the material sufféring in the|‘’ shine troops giving thelr per- | SPOKE: |that were men running here and | Pe evicted. EE ga nebestenn, 5. How eo. ol een oie Soe eee @ ot them to read; I take pains to find Class struggle, but look for reasons | /CUNMUNE Troops slving thelr per" | ‘Mister Dregnelli, you send me there around the scaffolds, amidst! “Has your husband been down to Site he ec Hose nalses, oF CA bles Bae Ae ee ee oe them the most interesting parts in|in luck or lack of initiative Aare |away; me who use to wake up at 4, | the partitions. He could actually hear the police station, to the free em- | °°"? : peereriaam botanical Bn the literature, but with no success The Daily Worker must urge 5 o'clock in the morning, me who voices singing out, “Mortar here, | ployment agency?” She laughed, and | “There'll be no mistake today,” Prat a ‘ent CME wie eae wi The fact appears still more painfull urge upon the readers to write in | The Blue Blouse technique at 1s; | you used to call right hand man, me |rough brick dizzy, hey you goddamn | the laugh brought tears to my eyes; | Sam told them. “I'm going to get | 17 re se eee pall tn 1 to me when I see that [ am unable to. about the ideolizieal differences | best is fresh and mobile; it aims at | who work all hours when business | wop Tasked for ‘three’ not ‘six-inch’ | it sounded so wild, so hopeless. paid. Tim going down there and! Tm) er ev marade naakoiiatate een We PEC draw them away from other books.| with which they are confronted in |the creation of dynamle mass sym-| first begin, when you poor man. You |block.” Why, it was music to his ears | «we have been Americans for three | 2% 0lng to take no for an answer. | “mm suamiiee ie One tM e Tain tyne to find out from them| thelr homes and give us true stor- |bols in which the struggles of the|forgeh whiat you say once, “Tony, X|.and ‘now ‘he’ was, ayay from it all. | generations good cltiens; and when |Z Ot going to let him brow-beat | Sey Se ENT! OT eT eg the what attracts them most in their ies of proletarian home life. | working class are expressed in sharp | have, you Ihave.’ You forget how I Again that hatred possessed him and | my husband appealed. ... . Damn |™e S6Y longer. It's time we colored | TO 1) Fes ly ne NS Meee | tool a Sa as ——— and concentrated form. The Blue | ative wagon wit you and woik, 3, 4,| with a strangling cry he arose and | the United States, damn them all,” [sales Bopper Belly te wt ane ae acon his bea (anda eee selli i 3 |5 in de morning—no eat, no sleep, no | dashed away. 2 {, | Manded what is ours.” sae ete CHS ok, Sudden ti Blouses are agitators and teachers, | Bae) 2 | she broke off. I could not stand it went off. Mr. Gregory dropped. Rob- Gett ° » | drink, woik, woik, woik allee time...) Late that night the watchman ot | any longer and after assuring her Sam was putting on his Jacket. His extebni panidh Bard’ sad DB but they are splendid entertainers as | now you no need me... .I too old.|the Dregnelli Bldg., under construc- that we would come back, I left. wife’s*face was strained, but she said |“ 57, an not ‘60 Sewardk: Hise penne FUN OO e Vv 1e2WsS well. Theirs is a truly folk art, the | You rich, much money. | tion, heard a hammering and a sound nothing. There was an unusual! / so ted for the swamps. He had SUE art of a revolutionary class that has| You forget, but Tony no forget. Al- of falling brick from above. Calling | | silence among them. Sam was going |.” raise inusions, about, heii able tom NF become “the people.” right, me go, me who help build you | the policeman on the beat they quiet- | “The religious reflex of the real down for his pay. He was in no mood | explain that it was all an accid( cant Review by BILL MURDOCH themselves:—“During the Lawrence up....me go... me...” He broke |ly climbed up to the 2ist floor. There | world can, in any case, only then | for a refusal. | tn white men's oourts. Hareenianite tions (Written in Danville jail, where| st of 1919, workers in Providence,| The Lumber Workers Club was off sobbing, his shoulders bent andjon one of the setbacks they found | finally vanish, when the practical re- | All these thoughts went through | in the swamps. and thet ames Wan Murdoch is serving a sentence, im- who had walked out in sympa- | Packed. Youth predominated. Before | shaken, while his employer shrugged | Tony with hammer and chisel in | lations of every-day life offer to man | their minds. Tom Robertson particu- | Yay to another ‘state, Derhale eee just posed by local authorities, and at the| thy, were ordered back to work. In the Blue Blouses came on, the young | his shoulders and tried to hide the |hand breaking away the still wet | none but perfectly intelligible and | larly, was ill at ease. He had a guilty | other state he senate bn ate ye Fequest of the United Textile Work- Maynard the U.T.W. sent its own| Workers gave a play of their own| twinge of shame showing on his face. |wall, while his mouth was frothing, | and reasonable relations with regard | feeling. He tried to tell himself that | te countryside was roused. Two to ers officials, because of his activities, members into the ° scabs.” dealing with the sex problems of For hours Tony wandered around |his glassy eyes vacant, looking out | to his fellowmen and to nature.”— what Sam was about to do concerned “niggers” had attacked Mrs. Gregory avin in encourazing the Danville mill)“ mer 4 to youth. Then came the Blue Blouses, | from place to place, his mind a chaos |into space. He was hopelessly insane. Marx: Capital, Vol. I, p. 91. only Sam. But try as he might he | vaiantly the husband hawt: defendearrcich strikers in their militancy, and in ex-| Work tain” conditions, 2s f1/S¢me ‘seven or eight men and two) . her, killing one of the attackers; onl! fina <> posinig the U.T.W. officials’ betrayal |Maine, the national office of the U. Women. The first number was the Br PR oi : to be shot in t ha bask bye Coeeint ary ogee sieike:) T.W. recruited other workers to run history of the October Revolution | “nieget®' ‘The (urdee Geel eat LABOR AND TETILES—By Robert the struck jobs.” ibis wee sont ae eee ota) Md ieee heen | weg Dunn and Jack Hardy, International! One shortcoming in the book lies,7 Celebration and the Blue Blouses | ig ; witching. Bet Age Publishers, $1.00 =... ... ... .«.|in a tendency to under-estimate the| Were helping to prepare the Soviet | U a ae Lace Ane PON. enn pa LABOR AND TEXTILES is written | ability of the National Textile Work-|™asses). In Pantomime, song and) ineuranee agents, bustage aan a pi with a careful regard for facts. No| ers Union to win leadership over the|@eclamation, with numerous quota- | high school boys had joined the ex) Dail exaggerations, no use of superlatives, | Workers in the south. In part, the| ions from Lenin, the ten days that bd ’ 2 pedition. The men were excited. Nq _ milit but a simple, working class recital of; Shortcomings of our own organiza-|Shook the world surged across the For Workers and Farmers Children only would they avenge the murdq pa . the facts of the industry, makes the| tional work are responsible for this stage, rising to climactic heights. The of Mr. “Gregory and tect whit tons book at once readable and convincing.| mistake on the part of the authors. | ball rocked with applause. | ‘woraanhodd, but hunting wlieiees waite A simple, yet detailed account of the) While it is true that only through) The Blue Blouse troop gave four the sport of sports. Bootleggers i crisis in the industry, with its na-| “patience, planned and tireless effort” | other numbers: two of them stirring Dear Readers of the YOUNG PIONEER: out a name you think the magazine ought a thriving business, OLD, . tional ind international complica-| will we organize the south, and that) Spectacles dedicated to the Red Army | The Young Pioneers are starting a cam- to have. Get your friends to enter the con- After searching Niggertown and rim SEND: tions, brings out in concrete form|so far we have made only the first| and the Red Fleet, and two humorous | paign to issue a magazine for workers’ te.t too! finding Robertson, the mob left “Tet the basic contradictions of the pres-| tentative steps towards organization, | recitations, one directed against bu- and farmers’ children. When we have your suggestions for a the swamps. All day they search —or r ent forces of production. one must be careful against giving|teaucracy and the other depicting a A magazine with a front page in colors! name, we will select one, and the comrade the swamps in vain, . 16a eee andéné The organizer who has qualms as| the impression that “our slogans are| Meeting of Young Pioneers to take Stories of adventure, sports, and the life who sent in that name will receive a beau- the mosquitoes were fierce. Droonifl ‘close to the best methods of interestiny| only gradually understood by the| action against bourgeois tendencies o* the workers’ children all over the world tiful . . . well, it almost slipped then. I spirits were continuously. linge os nies textile workers in the struggles of the Southern worker.” among their parents. The footlights will be printed in this magazine. wasn’t supposed to tell it. It will be a vived by flasks. With the approal can bu British, Indian, and Chinese workers) No one acquainted with present, ®@4 disappeared: the audience was Pictures and drawings by the best work- surprise for you, and I, for one, would like of tink they departed "GE atiool WT, might find the facts on the growth conditions in, the southern textile Part of all that was happening on 7g class artists will illustrate the stories. o be the lucky comrade who sends in that disappointed and in an ugly thood of the industry in these countries of! mills could make such a statement. | ‘he stage. How would you like to build an airplane? be i It was night when they react “ANNT) “great interest to the unemployed| The splendid spirit of the Danvilic| After the performance we met the | Or to learn woodcraft? You will find these So get busy now, comrades. Send in for lafeouna: * ” A HOM worker in Carolina and New Encz-| strike striking in spite of their| actors. They are unlike actors in cap-| things in the magazine. Or do you like to collection lists. Get your Jriends and school “Reaybe he's nade higueaaaece rela land. International solidarity must) union “leadersh’p,” the drastic action |‘talist America as one can imagine. work out puzzles? Well, you will find that, nates, 00 help, you. Collect money. at the Niggertown,” someone suggested. “Daily be built on facts. | demanded by the workers in Wood-| Tey are genuine worers, many of Soon ene meeen ere ee f Psceasinie Eat tots oe ree ee ‘To the Negro section the mob wa Vaneot The concentration of the industry,| side Mill, in Greenville, S. C., show, them fresh from the factory. They The first issue of our mag wine will come cP ee arc phoulln. ay He heel Bae NTE ate again. They broke. down doors really a AlRscalet fas vay GF cagee uid ween | that RAG URE. eters in thn dicate eked Ua Ghiseebda Wot SiDut Sk ates out for May First. May First is the in- THE PRIZE—For the Best District in the you can be sure that on deeded alate smashed windows, driving the frigfy] numbe ing conditions, new developments in| but we who are responsible for their |! dramatic art in the United States, eer el Oren Bone eee Dive acticin) irae eikeagaert gt hg cas ened occupants out of bed and hoff diniger) ‘+ “ | going to greet the workers’ children of all eyce out! m c machinery and the methods used by) organization, are lagging behind. jbut, “How strong is the Communist sointtriee onviiih (aay, : Gome on, conirades, let's gal. On toa Fathers, mothers, young men ones Fi the manufacturers to keep the work-| Political slogans can be very con-| Party?” and, “Do they allow the sing- % f get a beautiful Red silk banner, over five gandy magazine by May First: women, children, scantily dressed; ‘heir s ers in submission, are an important) crete to the workers of Danville|im& of the ‘International’ on the You Comrades Must Help! feet high, which was sent to the American were herded together in a ne; tion.” part of the book. Most important,| writhing under a rule of bayonets. | Streets of New York?” : A é c Pioneers by the Pioneers of the Soviet lane. Robertson was nowhere however, since it fills a long-needed|They understand the role of the| These Blue Blouse actors work hard | HED ea like to have a oy eat eae found. ie “GETTI gap, is that part which deals with a| state, and the necessity for organized! and are devoted to their work. Their ike that come out every month, wouldn’t = he pioneer group that collects the most The trouble reached..its cig] GOOD 4 description ‘of the strikes and strug-| and even armed struggle in the. im-| performances must always be timely, méney will receive either a pennant sent when one of the protectors of “AS a gles of the textile workers for the| mediate future. The Greenville work-| and so they must make quick changes by the Russian Pioneers, or a set of books womanhood, unable to withstand— years ag past eighty years. ers, dying from starvation, were ready | with only a few rehearsals. They are for a Pioneer library. temptation, began, pawing a me-to ro From the first national organiza-| to seize bread, without taking a state|-helping to achieve the cultural revo- The Pioneer or worker’s child who col- Negress in a cheap cotton nighte@™ a good | tion of mule spinners with its close| referendum on the matter, and they|lution; and they too are bringing to lects the most money himself will receive She boxed his ear, He swung a JM the circu craft boundaries to the young mili-| were under no “orders from Moscow”| the 150,000,000 workers and peasants a set of three books. right to her jaw, knocking her ter at’ pr tant National Textile Workers Union| to incline them to follow the example|of the Soviet Union the living word . He was about to kick the 12 mont! embracing all workers, young and old,| of their felow-workers in the Soviet] and deed of the man who lies under WHAT SHALL WE CALL OUR conscious girl, when a Negro Brooke, ¥ pact og tenga be ee = Union. the shadow of the Kremlin Wall. MAGAZINE? fered. Then hell broke loose. a account oe fake Ponape hagastececen eis Hie! eet workers might not This magazine will be OUR magazine; hea) fell upon the unarmed Neeij PARTY | al of our demands—they that means, yours and mine. We want lubbing and beating them. ANSWER employers and workers. Fall River, may not be interested in all the in-| “The forms of the bourgeois states ao eanieaden t6 pick out a name: ‘Theres were shouts of agony, and cri “Enelo with its struggles lead by women,| tricacies of revolutionary theory:—|4re exceedingly various, but their 5 tarti test beginni: pain and fear. Suddenly a fous seis Lawrence, under revolutionary lead-| put they did want bread and were| Substance is the same and in the last Nica pole alta chs dy Matalin ed burst into the night. ‘Then anc] ; January 15, to last for two months. Pick Me ak writes B, ership, Rhode Jsland, with its fight-| ready to take the action necessary | @alysis inevitably the Dictatorship of The Notte ete eres Me cnt nas ing rang and file battles, and, later.| to procure it. the Bourgeoisie.”—Lenin: The State tumble-down shacks that the Nef being at Au gate annuities ae the textile An empty stomach and a starving se angela FA E pede a nr Heseete Mo th wee ef Workers in thelr present and future| mil are effective, if somewhat ‘The centralzied power of thé state, you? But unless all of you comrades will peetny ape ‘Wen ty oe answer o struggles. Every organizer, every| D4"Sb, anti-dotes to the poison of the Peculiar to capitalist society, grew up help us get out this magazine by May ge day out of hight, the “atic member of the union, should procure| Press: The workers of the Soviet in the period of the fall of feudalism. First, we won't be able to have it. - The following day throughou'fl the worke Ubitin bobk aad | Union overthrew the government of Two institutions are especially char- The Pioneers are going to try to raise yy : nation newspapers Te] th] we'd send @ copy and learn of the | in "Goar in order to get bread and|a¢teristic of this machine: the bur- $3,000 within two months, to issue the mag- Magazine Fund, Young Pioneer race riot had taken traditions of bitter struggles on the| 306 and under the leadership of|¢@¥cracy and the standing army... . azine. Are you willing to help? This mag- Y0Uns Pioneers of America 43 East 125th Street resulting in the death of six Nef DAILY “s Part of the textile workers. “T the Communist Par‘: set up the work-| The Working class learns to recognize azine will take the place of the Young Pio- 43 Bast 125th Street Rigw dorks N: Xs one a woman, andone white Mf \ CLEAN | ‘The early struggles under the old] ge, “Gictatorship as the, necessary) this connection by its own bitter ex- neer, and will be even many times better New York, N. Y. I want to enter the contest The Negro section of the cl Mh. “rpc National Textile Workers Union, from| 1.15 of securing these and other|Peflence... . Hence arises the neces- than our paper is now! Dear Comrades: to pick a name for our new been burned down by an angr: MH jent tat 1891 to 1901 when the first attempts| joionds. The workers of the Pied.|*ity for the bourgeois parties, even for While millions of children of the workers I would like to help you is- magazine. I think it should seeking a murderer that was pe be were made to organize the south, the) ont are not any different. the most democratic and ‘revolution- are starving because their fathers are out sue the new magazine for the be called harbored there. He had attac J 1. puted H betrayals,of the workers under the| ; ; ary democratic’ sections, to increase of work, and workers’ childien have to workers’ and farmers’ chil- white woman and shot her hu § - wher t } U.T.W. from Lansay through Golden, e trouble has lain not with the) their repressive measures against the stand on the breadlines for a crust of bread, dren, I want it to be th CCIRER IRIS Bn he nntei vk ee “|The situation was uhder’ contre Bn 1 to McMahon are recounted with a| Workers, but with us who have had/ revolutionary proletariat, to strength- we need a magazine that will fight for us est kind of a digaeine ns Sheligapeeer te eeeee sete ds murderer was still at Jarge. is i is i simplicity that carries conviction. the leadership of the union, in that en the machinery of repression, that more than ever before. We must have a that all the workers’ children Poor Tom Robertson! He hi ma pt ; Of the activities of the American| We failed in the past, to tie up our|i, ¢p, thi Ment strong weapon in our hands to fight against yi}; : any EA rei | Boal objectives with thely das is, the power of the state.”—Lenin: sa will like it. no illusions about the just leration of ‘Textile Operatives, the hast intersted? eir daily needs. phe state and Revolution. the bosses, who have caused the workers I am sending you $.. T Id also lik to courts, but still naive eno | authors state:—“Accompanied by the| The textile workers are on the g; all their misery. as a donation to the mi Is hare rat rT ay yen boli " he hapewdoge sing iX-SOLDI mill-owners, théy visited mills in the| Move! From Maine to Alabama con- And every one of you comrades who read yine fund. I am also ti i begitbinge is collection lists Dri leve he could escape from tl |") DAN } vicinity of Charlotte, N. C. and were| ditions are ripe for struggle. Our| Selves to hold, leadership of the tex- the Young Pioneer must help in this drive! to pet my “riends to Bali - if thes Tucan do my bit. tor m of persecution and expe rom J. R dined by” the “Rotary Club. They) nion finds itself confronted with the| tile workers in the revolutionary Every Pioneer, every worker's child, must Leanllean " Oe: Sapo? by running away, to another S18 owing no made no contacts with workers or| task of fitting itself for these| struggles that He ahead. consider it his duty to work for our new Name . Benin Nani east es A week later “Aligona, -heay unions. “They had no members in| struggles. LABOR AND TEXTILES fills a mageaine! ‘ piontelaremtrire 6 yest the South at any time. They have| ‘Through the leadership of every| long-need requirement of our leader- The Pioneer districts will be assigned Age cise ABE weoseee tured in'a nearby Alas 2 Dy "none now.” struggle of the workers, for imme-| ship. It is replete with facts and certain sums of ‘maney they should collect’! ‘Address. .oesce. caus ssxeu AMAR Cos srsecehoks pie a ola Of the activities of the United Tex-| diate pressing demands, and through | data, and will be invaluable to the fox the Magaene Sat De Aeteace Meer rey, : Why i pleebipecps se tile Workers’ leadership in New Eng- intensive study on the part of our| workers in the coming battles against gota the. most mange, over. Jee quote. Willi Clty eee ciate BUmee bs CL CER EE Aa pe nannond a ing 0. ha ie ~ «notations speak for) membership, we will win and fit our-' the employers and their agents, Reprinted from the Xoung iPoncer—January Issuc, Ppollution/ i 1 H ‘0 ‘ ) } ore marel

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