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19st DEMAND FOR LINEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES: We, the undersigned workers in the shops, mines and mills, unemployed workers, members of labor unions and other workers’ organizations, demand the immediate enactment of a Bill providing insurance for all un- employed workers, We demand the creation of an Unemployment Insurance Fund for the benefit of all work- ers who are unemployed or partially employed because of inability to find work or because of sickness, accident or old age. Pending the enactment of such legislation, we demand immediate emergency relief by the city and state governments. WE DEMAND: DAILY WORKER, NEW. YORK, MONDAY; JANUARY 26, Page Three = “Why Has Center Like Detroit No Red Builders News Club?” Waukegon, Ill. Wants to Know The Waukégan Re@ Builders’ News , bundle order, an incréase was made Club is starting something. Little | by 200. Now .Sarah Victor, Daily more than a week old, it is already | Worker representative, sends an or- showing good work and lots of pep.|der for 300 additional. This brings O, Salminen writes; Detroit to within 99 of its original | “Please increase my bundle by | standing. Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill The Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill proposes: 1,—Unemployment insurance at the rate of $25 3 week for each anemployed worker and $5 additional for each dependant. 2.—The creation of a National Unemployment Insurance Fund to be raised by: (a) using all war funds for unemployment {nsurance; (b) a levy on all capital and property in excess of $25,000; (e) 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 elected solely by employed and unemployed workers. All who sign the lists now being circulated by the Workers Na- tional Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance or tts qub- sidiary 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, 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. another five Dailies; that will make | | DALLAS, TEXAS, | ORDERS 20 DAILY Again we hear from Mel Werm- | blad, district Daily Worker represen- | tative of Kansas City, and one of the my bundle ten copies daily. The oy workers DO want to read the Daily. All we need is to, let them ow they need it and want to read it.” Salminen makes some good sugges- " 3 7 week h unemployed w: 5 additiona reach eee an tions on the importance of revisiting | most enterprising. He writes: 1. Unemployment Insurance at the rate of $25 a week for eac! ployed worker and $5 additional for eac Wjeyadakbes (aie camsik apes do eto assay deseuaaa Nee ita « homes where samples were left in| “Please enter a daily bundle or- dependent. bill. Get the co-operation of ali workers you know in the sig- | en eanvassing, He con-| bad - ofadied belle setorbeeg 2. The creation of a National Unemployment Insuranze Fund to be raised by: nature Grive. All organizations should activize their members in { inues: jurst, Dallas, s. ji i 7 a ii ni loyment Insur nce. (b) A levy on all capital and property accumu- the collection of signatures. Write to the National Campaiga “Then some etitieism:/“T'a like to | Hurst was sent down to Dallas from nt Using all erg Se ro Nags — y Di a a. i 000 ¥y ae PI id property Committee for Unemployment Insurance, 2 West 15th St, New | know why such a center as Detroit | this office about a week ago. I will ted in exeess of $25,000. (c) x on all incomes ov 000 a year. ; York City, for strastare planks. | has no Red Bullders’ News Club? | keep after him to build 2 mass cir- 3. That the Unemployment Insurance Fund shall be administered by a Workers’ Commission elected solely culation for the Daily Worker in Dallas, and as soon as he gets the territory developed we can increase the number of Dailies.” V'@ like to see Detroit blush into | organizing one immediately. It is | J the UNITED ACTIVITY of all the workers who are talking about and spreading the Daily every minute that builds up the circulation.” Salminen hit the nail on the head. United action and a ‘Red Builders’ News Club in every city of the United States” is the answer to the 60,000 circulation campaign. We want tg, hear more from the. other News by empleyed and unemployed workers. ae TERROR FAILS TO [ALBANY MACHRON oo iad END LENIN MEETS GOVERNORS’ MEET San Antonio, AngelesDemand Armories Workers Defy Cops Cash Relief { | LEADS IN PAID- | IN-ADVANCE CLUB H. R. of Dinuba, Calif, leads in the Paid-In-Advanee Club. His sub- scription is paid up to April 17, 1934. He writes: “Enclosed find $6. I'd rather let site Clubs. “BEST PAPER ( EVER READ” “Enclosed is $1.” Please send the Daily Worker, the best paper Ihave ever read."—M, Felinssi, Detroit, Mieh. ANSWERS SUB FUND APPEAL W. H. W. ef Nampa, Idaho, is quick to respond to the appeal for dona- tions toward subscriptions for un- employed workers. He writes: / “Monev is coming in rather slow, put I will spare $10 for luck, $6 to, pey for my subseription and the $4 one that isn’t getting the te sem paper, if you have any names,” “KEEP SENDING DAILY WORKER” “Ween on sending my dear Daily Worker, I am sending my renewal for the year and the rest for fight- ing the enemy cf the working class. I send yon money order.”—M. M., Chicage, Tl. GOVERS PRECINCT, SUBS PILE IN ‘A. H. Johnson of Chicago gets the prize for being the steadiest Daily Worker canvasser in the country. ;Shortiy after the last elections he “announced he would cover his whole 3 inct. Ever since, we've received *atY average of 10 subs every two weeks, a clockwork regularity. ~ We pre- “diet the whol? city will be covered by ““the time the.next election day comes _ erdund. MAY HUNT NEW OB, SENDS $1 “Enclosed find one dollar bill for which send me the Daily Worker. HE wit enu-e me to hunt another but I don't care if ft does. 1 want some news thet I-can rely on as belng the ¢ruth.~ Yours for ‘a Workers’ Government.”—J, R. Bredhead, Col. ‘TROIT ORDERS PICKING UP you have the money than have it in |the bank. Please send ‘The Five- | Year Plan.” | Who will beat this record? KENTUCKY | GETS BUSY | “I have turned my route over to | T. writes W. R. S. of Pendle- ton, “He is letting the colored eom- rades, B, and J., make deliveries’.’ FINDS DAILY | A-1; SENDS SUB “I have received regularly ,the or- gan and find it A-1 to follow the wonderful struggle that you do in U. SA, Enclosed find a money or- | der for another month's Subscription. | Every month I will send you my | money order.”—P. M., Quebec, Can- | ada. AR MOVES ON | (CONTINUED FROM PACE ONE) | | The conclusion is that the Soviet | Union must be destroyed. | Following this same line of talk, |Prof. John R. Commons of.the Uni- | versity of Wisconsin in a speech Fri- | day before the League of Nations As- | sociation in Chicago declared that the | United States (that is the bosses and \bankers) “will be involved” in a Eyro- | pean war as “Europe is plunging to- | Ward one of two kinds of revolution | Communism or fascisnf.” | “In the midst of these struggles”, | said Commons, “the league of nations jean scarcely get itself regarded as jmore than a piece of paper.” But |this merely expresses the antagonism [between Britain and the United | States who at the same time are pre- |paring war against each other for | world markets and colonies. The | so-called conference in Geneva todis- |cuss a United States of Europe was |a mobilization of the European cap- \italist nations for war. The “peace” Since the cut of $99 in the Detroit ' manifesto issued by ‘the 27 capitalist «USSR. INCREASE, Cut out this list, sign it and have your fellow-workers sign it. Send it immediately to the-National Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance, 2 West 15th St. New York City. All lists must be in the hands of the National Campaign Commit- tee by February Ist. countries represen’ed as in the same vein as those which preceded the last world war, All these facts are proof that war is rapidly approaching and the capitalists are preparing their propaganda to plunge the workers in- to another slaughter which will pyt the last world war into the shade as a minor conflict. Two leading capitalist statesmen have admitted that the bosses are plunging into war. Henry Morgen- thau, former U. S. ambassador to Turkey, in a speech before the Brook- lyn Institute of Arts and Sciences rec- ently said: “If something serious, something definite is not done Furo- pean civilization is in danger. Europe today is an armed camp.” He fails ta point out that the United States, too, is an armed camp ready to plunge into war. At the same time, Salvador de Ma~- dariaga, one of the leading spokes- men of the League of Nations de- clared that the so-called “peace” ef- ’ forts of the League of Nations have failed. “We find”, he said, “that brute force is governing a consider- able and growing nymber of nations.” He pointed the direction for the war swhich he says.is, coming: “There are new. strange. forces.,in the Asiatic world”, he declared, “bolshevism and nationalism, which were unknown to that highly civilized East.” . Under the guise of “pacifism” the war preparations are being rushed against the Soviet Union. The deeper the crisis gets in the capitalist coun- tries and the more the Seviet Union advances under the Five-Year Plan, the bitterer become the attacks against the workers’ republic. 1931 CALENDAR FREE! Quotations frem Marx, Lenin, etc., in the first annual Daily Worker Calendar for 1931. Free with six months subscription or renewal. New Jersey A. F. of L. Official Breaks Strike of Workers in His Employ; Thugs Pack Meeting (This is the 19th ‘of a series of artieles on A. F. of L. and political eorruption in New Jersey.) ee meee By ALLEN JOHNSON. - Everything about Bilt Lyons, the most powerful of the three A. F. of L. leaders in Newark, stamps him as being the sort of man who never vhould have been allowed to get within a mile of a workingman’s conditions and sherter- hours. Lyons, an official of the A. F. of L., fought these demands as fiercely as any other employer; with all his power, and that of his allies, the cops and capitalists of the city, as well, Lyons won the bitterly fought strike, but not until after one of his trucks, was sent rolling into the Passaic River. at a cost of $40,000, they were imme- | decision, Lyon called another strike. diately visited by Lyons’ leutenant and “shaken down” for several thou- sand dollars. The pretext, in this case, was that the delegates would aid in the evasion of certain building laws, When the building was half fin- ished, the delegates returned. The irenwork would have to be fire- He called another and still another, but the company still insisted on pay- ing by check. Lyons called a fifth strike and then the company went to court. The judge decided, however, | Side. PHILA. HUNGER MARCH JAN, 29 (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) propriated only $150,000 for unem- ployed relief and for the 250,000 un- employed. Such “relief” by the city council is an insult to the unem- ployed. The bosses and the government are responsible for the present unem- ployment. They must, therefore, pay for it. The delegation of the unemployed councils which came to the city council meeting on Jan. 8 to present its demands was not admitted in- This time, however, the dele- gation will be backed by the thou- sands of workers participating in the march and the demonstration follow- ing it at the city hall. The unemployed will assemble at Indepandence Square, Sixth and Chestnut Sts. From there they will march to the city hall. oan ears Youngstown March. YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Jan. 25.— The Youngstown Council of the Un- employed calls on all jobless here to refuse to starve, and to come out and hunger march on the city hall to- morrow at 3 p.m. The hunger march on Jan. 5 forced promises from the city council that relief would be given and evictions stopped. So far the jcity agents of the employers have | not done one thing to carry out those promises, and this hunger march to- morrow is designed to get action on that Lyons’ services to the majority of Newark’s capitalists far outweighed his disservice to them because of the high prices he charged for “pacifying TEXAS MILITIA BACKS BILL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) bill. In spite of intense opposition of the officialdom of the A. F. L., other locals demand that the speak- ers of the unemployed council given the floor in their meetings. A united front conference is being called of all workers’ organizations to prepare for @ mass demonstration at ths city hall Feb. 10. On Jan. 30, the T. U. U. L. invites all to @ social affair at the workers Center, at 7:30 p. m. The T. U. U. L. exposes and fights the disruptionist schemes of the Lovestone leaders here, Schaeffer and Lipschitz. The San Antonio situation shows what can be done by persistent work in the way of gathering support for the Workers’ Unemloyment Insur- ance Bill. The misery of mass un- employment is so great that in spite of rigid military discipline, even the worker militiamen swing round to its defense in some cases. San Antonio jebless will have mass demonstration in support of the bill on the day that it is presented to Congress, Feb. 10. They are able to plan for this in spite of great obstacles, newness in the struggle, language difficulties, pre- vious misleadership of renegades. Mass Demonstrations Feb. 10! There must be a mass demonstra- tion in every city and town on Feb. 10. If the workers and jobless of San Antonio, in a Southern state, can do this, can even bring over to their be | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONED and trying to arrest them. They ar- rested Geo. Papcun but had to r lease him because of the workers’ response. ‘Then the police surrounded Turner | Hall and would not allow over 1,000 workers to come into the hall. The Party mobilized these workers andj} they marched to the Workers Cen- | ter, though the Workers Center is about 25 blocks ‘away. The hall was crowded, many work- | ers had to stand on the stairs and | on the street below and listen to the | speakers defy the police and explain the program of the Communist Par- | ty. The workers were composed of Negroes, Mexicans and white. This | is an accomplishment for the Party | in the southwest and especially in| San Antonio, as for the first time | the Party was able to bring out the | white and Negro and Mexican work- | ers to its mass meeting in such a| mass. The police wanted to break | up the meeting at the Workers Cen- | ter but they dared not do it, because | of the feeling among the workers | who were determined to give battle to ensure the holding of the Lenin | Memorial Meeting. | Comrade Alma Krause, secretary | of the Unit, opened up the meeting and acted as chairman. Joe Mur-| phy, a worker, wsa the next speak- | er, explaining the lessons that Lenin | had taught the workers and also told | of the life of the great leader. George | Papcun spoke, exposing the police | and the city officials, callings on the workers to organize. { LOS ANGELES, Jan. 25.—Despite | police intervention, 900 workers ral- | lied to the Cooperative Center at a mass Lenin Memorial meeting, cheer- ing Lenin and the Communist In- ternational. The workers pledged a ten-fold increase in their activities on behalf of the Unemployment In- surance Bill and the February 10th national unemployment demonstra- tion. The carly mobilization of the workers for the Lenin Memorial | meeting called forth heavily armed | police forces, closing off the Turn- | verien Hall, the place originally ad- | vertised for the meeting. All sides to the hall entrance were blocked by scores of police. Tom Ray, the chairman of the meeting, was just bailed out of prison. He has a broken arm in a sling as the result of the Hunger March. He received a great ovation | from all present. The workers re- | solved to rally wide masses against the fascist and police terror shown | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) workers, beginning with first week of unemployment. 2.—S25 each week to all married unemployed workers, with $5 week- ly additional for each child or de- pendent. 3.—No evictions of unemployed for non-payment of rent. 4.—Free light, gas and coal dur- ing entire period of unemployment. 5.—All vacant houses and arm- ories to be opened to the nyem- ployed, as sleeping to the unem- quarters. 6.—Abolition of “shark” employ- ment agencies, and establishment of free city employment agencies. Roosevelt answered that: “Under the terms of the state constitution the money of the state could not be spent nor its credit pledged for individual relief, which under the circumstances must be dispensed by the localities.” Then he said he had instructed mayors of all cities, two months ago, to open the armories and public buildings, with cots, blankets, and food for the needy, “if the city au- thorities are unable to adequately take care of the situation.” The committee of the jobless de- myanded whether breadlines, Salva- tion Army cockroach stews,” and sleeping on cement floors in police station was “adequate.” Governor Laughs. Roosevelt laughed, and said, “It's tough all right.” The spokesmen of the committee reproved Roosevelt for laughing at the misery of the jobless, and stated that the unemployed were tired of consoling phrases and wanted to eat and to sleep warm and that they would take .n example from th? workers and farmers of QOklahom:; and Arkansas and go directly aft¢ the things needed to live on, by mag action They'll Take It. The governor made no yea] answer, though in his version of the inter- view, given to the press later, he says he told the jobless that “Our Amer- ican form of government makes no provision or allowance for direct ac- tion,” and that this ended the inter- view. The unemployed here think one thing was gained by the interview, the promise to open the armories, if requested to do so by the mayors of the cities. The unemployed workers here are now organizing to see that | the armories are pened, and call on | all in other cities to do likewise. Par- in the slugging of organizer Fried- | ticularly, big Feb. 10 demonstrations man and the raiding and closing of | ust be prepared, to back up the the Turnverien Hall. The manage-| Workers Unemployment Insurance ment of the Turnverien Hall an- | Bill when it goes to congress, that \abor,” those broken promises. nounced today that the police or-} dered the closing of the Turnverien Hall which was engaged for a Fos- ter meeting, stating, “It is plumb suicide to hold the meeting,” and to day. And the jobless are beginning to | see that one governor and oné mayor after another tells the jobless that “our American form of government” In more ways than one, Lyons robs union-~in short, Lyons is the typical A. F. of L. official. the workers in Newark. He has in- stalled a permit system in the build- Fist of all, Lyons is no worker. {ing trades which works in the feliow- He is a gunman, a gambler, a race traek tout, a collector of brothel graft for the police force of Newatk, a bootleggér, and an employer, an ex- ploiter, himself. : He has converted the headquarters of the @eamifitters’ Union on Acad- emy St. into a horse race betting and crap shooting joint, as well as a speakeasy. In common with Fay and Sherlock. the other A. F. of L. lead- ers in Newark, Lyons forces members of his unions to spend. their spare time and money in his combined gambling house and saloon. Those workers who refuse ta do so find it ineonceivably hard to get jobs. And if workers are suspeeted of being an- te continued good health..cannot be vouched for. Like Brandle, tlie A. F. of L. offi- cial in Jersey City, Lyons is an em- ployer as well as a “representative” of workers. He ts\a-dealer in ma- sons’ supplies, thereby utilizing his position as head of the pbuilding trade unions for private profit. For Lyons sees to it that contractors who don’t buy masons’ sypplies from him have strikes called on theiz jobs until they do. Lyons is also a partner in he trucking firm of Callaghan & Co. i Call Strike Against Lyons. ‘ee to Lyons’. policies, their ing manner. He allows workers who can’t afford to joim the A. F. of L, uniens to go to a job after they have paid him $5 ¢ach for “permit cards.” Before being given a permit card, however, the worker must agree that he will give Lyons $2 for every day that he works. This sort of graft is a normal practice of A. F. of L. of- ficials, Incidentally, one of the reagons that workers who, never having been. told of the real nature of the A. F. of L, want to join it byt can't af- ford to, is that Lyons charges a $100 entrance fee, although the union con- stitutions provide for a $50 fee. Need- less to say, the extra $50 go to Lyons. $70,000 for “Strike Insurance.” 2 g i : i 3 & ve $70,000 was marked “for strike ance” on the company’s books. In the construction of the completed Lefcourt skyseraper, made more than $200,000. Li proofed, they announced. How much would it cost not to have it fire- proofed? the builders asked. Three thousand dollars, answered the dele- gates, Too much, replied the New Yorkers, we'll have the ironwork fire- proofed. They got estimates on the amount it would cost to have the job gone. The lowest bid was $10,000. ‘They called up the delegatés and told them that the $3,000 was ready. Be- fere the building was finished the builders paid out $60,000 in all to these tatives of the A. F. of L. ‘The erection of the Branford The- atre was particularly juicy picking for Lyong Sherlock and Fay. As planned by the architects, the theatre was to cost $800,000. Before the building was completed $400,000 more, was paid these three labor “leaders” to avoid 3? LE Has Served Time In Jail. | Against the will of the Newark Po- | lice Department and most of the em- ployers of the city, Lyons once spent five months in jail. It came sbout in the following manner. In 1921, 2 few heavily perfumed old ladies with little to do and myeh time to do it in, started an anti-saloon drive which resulted jn the raiding of some of the better known speakeasies in Newark. Quite by accident, and without the knowledge of the chief of police, Ly- ons’ speakeasy in the headquarters of his union on South Orange Ave. was raided. A completely equipped gambling establishment was found on the premises, racing charts on the wall actually covering the ornately framed A. F. of L. charter. A battle between rival capitalists followed, the police chief siding with those who wanted Lyons freed. The latter group lost and Lyons was sen-. tenced to serve from three to five years ih jail. Actually he spent five months there, with very little dis- comfort to himself. ig Governor Silzer later refused to re- appoint the judge who found ‘Lyons sullty. ; ‘While Lyons was in prison, gunmen who packed his union meetings re- elected him to his old office. In 1925, Lyons, with the aid of these same gunmen, was elected again and his term extended to three years. His | term as head of the Building Trade | A section unemployment confer- ence to elect delegates to go to Wash- ington with the Workers’ Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill will be held on Sunday, Feb. 1, at 1 p. m., at 334 E. Federal St., Youngstown. All work- ing-class organizations in this sec- tion, which includes Farrel, Messury, Sharon, New Castle, Warren, Ohio, Nilés, Girard, Struthers, Liverpool, Campbell and Youngstown are re- quested to send delegates. Ratifica- tion of those elected at the conferr ence will take place at the mass meeting to be addressed by William 2 Foster on Feb. 7. Seaoe tae STAMFORD, Conn., Jan. 25.—To- morrow, a united front conference will be held here on unemployment, and the jobless will march the day with their demands on the city hall. A united front conference is to be | held in Hartford, Tuesday. Thursday, there will be a united front confer- ence in Bridgeport. Wednesday there will be @ united front conference in New Haven, to select the delegation to Washington. “If the state is the product of the irreconcilable character of class an- tagonisms, if it is a force standing above society and) ‘separating itself from it, then it is clear that the lib- eration of the oppressed class is im- possible without a violent revolution.” Council has since heen extended to|--Lenin: The State and Revolution, 12 years in the same manner-—pack- meeting room with gunmen ho kept their right hands in their @t all times; that is, before after they themselves had cast ballots for Lyons, p. 116, TAKE A LIST TO WORK WITH YOU FOR JOBLESS|™ (NSURANCE! support those armed forces of the state which the employers have built up to suppress just such demands ot the jobless that capitalism must give relief and insurance and shal] not be allowed to let its extra wage slaves starve when it doesn’t need them, then demonstrations can be arranged in every town. So far word has been received of such Feb. 10 demonstrations only in Hartford, Conn.; Springfield, Mass.; South Bend, Ind; New Britain, Conn.; Duluth, Minn.; Chicago, Il.; Johnstown City, Pa.; Wheeling, W. Va.; New York and San Antonio. ‘Where are the others? Arrange your demonstrations and let the world know about them. Send all particulars. especially time and place of assembly, to the National Cam- Sam} paign Committee for Unemployment Insurance, 2 West 15th St., New York, and to the Daily Worker. Murphy Opens Up Another Flophouse Detroit, Mich. Editor Daily Worker:— Another city flophouse is ready to open up in the Studebaker factory which is vacant at Beaubien and Piquette Sts. and another breadline at Hastings and Catherine Sts. an- nounced in the capitalist press. The jobless increase shows up the fakers and their bunk about thous- ands of workers going back to their jobs as the capitalist press with bie headlines a couple of weeks ago tried to make the starving jobless believe. Things are getting worse here every y. Fight, workers, don’t starvel—F.S. defy the police and their backers, | hes only starvation for them. They adding that the hall was available | for the socialist party, the A. F. of L but not for the Communist Party or the Trade Union Unity League. | Secretary Buzzell of the A. F. of | L Labor Council, speaking before the | American Bar Association Thursday | night, together with the professional patriot, Smith, of the Better Amer-, ican Federation, praised the A. F. of | L, as the mainstay of the capitalist government in the fight against Communism. The Lenin Memorial Meeting at the Workers Center closed with cheering and the pledge of the un- employed to organize for a fight for relief, as well as pledges to build the revolutionary unions among the agri- cultural workers. Unanimous reso- | lutions were passed to extend the | fight for the release of the impris- | oned Imperial Valley organizers. | OMAHA, Neb. Jan, 25,—John Dawson, Party organizer in Omaha, | Nebraska, was arrested Wednesday, just two hours béfore the Lenin Memorial meeting. Immediate ef- forts to bat) Dawson were turned down and hé is being held under the | pretext of “investigation.” The ar- | rest was an obvious move to destroy | the Lenin memorial meeting. But it | failed miserably, and the meeting turned out to be the most success- ful Lenin Memorial ever held in Omaha. | Comrade Paul Cline, district or- ganizer of the Party, was the main | speaker, and William J. Patton acted | as chairman. | Close to 200 people made up a ca- pacity audience. Nine workers joined the Party, are beginning to wonder whether some other form of government wouldn't be petter. In the Soviet Union there is no unemployment, and when there were a few out of work, ‘they all got insurance, as a matter of cours Many Jobless in Oregon City, Ore. OREGON CITY, Ore.—The, locas papers publish that we have 300 men registered as unemployed. There are about six or eight hundred besides a large number who have no children, who knew it was no use to register. The Indians would kill their aged, not starve them. What are the work- ers going to do, wait until they are too weak to fight? The company here is going to pay the large sum of }one fifty a day for men with large families. The state expects to give three dollars for three days a week work, Come on Daily Worker, get busy and organize these scabby man- gy mills, CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDAIGET VROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE €NTIRE TEAR Feautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere nt 4 WHEE CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACOS, ¥.T. “PHONE 781