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é ne ott vos - Page tobe Brooklyn Worker Tenants Take Up the NW. BOSSES JAIL Fight for Children of the Unemployed HUNGRY W' WORKERS School Children Starved and Ragged|6 Months and Fine for Many While Authorities Do Nothing About It To the Editor: The children of Lena Weinstone, active member of the Tenant League, came home and told their Brownsville Workers mother that something must b mates and friends. a Weinstone went down to find she found a terrible situation. The hildren sick and starving. The house cold. Light and gas had been turned out by the respective com- panies for non-payment due to un- employment. Raise Question of Relief. Oh that same day a regu monthly parents’ meeting was called by the school. L. Weinstone dedided to act. raised immediately the question. - sit is or tion of the fp rents and teacher the Tel ants’ League whic! nt the demand from the city authori! for free lunches, clothing for chil Brooklyn, NEY? ye the matter with their school- The children did not show up to school eral days at the Fulton and Howard Ave. School. lof unemployed, free gas and light, no evictions of unemployed. “That this | | shall be the main problem at these | meetings instead of taking up all kinds of nonsense. “he principal was shocked, but it worked. On the next.day the light and gas were opened and some food brought in by a member of the Mayor’s Com- mittee and a policeman. But this . must be, developed rapidly on | planned scale involving all arents’ organizations and their The schools should be de- | nded for meetings. All this work | be conducted under the guid- | Q of the Unemployed Councils and Tenants’ Leagues. mu: Boas Press ‘Fools Sableds Tine ind Again Clev Editor Daily Worker: I want to tell you about a tr is played a little too often. the Cleveland News and other Cleveland papers will have a well written < ticle about such and such a facto hiring hundreds of men. land, Ohio. When the men rush out to get the} promised job they find a sign on tt door “No lp Wanted” or else a long wait together with hindreds of others, the employment manager them “Nothing doi: ‘ar Boss Trick. s occurred so often that r how long the working men going to tolerate this system. The are Sees Organization La New York. Comrades: I attended the demonstration that took place at city hall Tuesday and the way it was arranged was pitiful. Everything that was undertakeh by the workers was done individually. There was no unified mass action at all. To see one or two~policemen drive off a crowd of two or three hundred workers was enough to rob even the strongest Leninist and Marxist of some of his enthusiasm. A policeman would brutally strike or start to struggle with a worker and a milling crowd would +stand around and hoot and how! every kind of revolutionary phrase imaginary instead of going to his aid. Workers Beaten Up. I saw two plain clothesmen hold- mg a worker and getting ready to take him to jail, where they would probably frame him up on some trumped-up charge. To rush these two detectives and rescue the com-, would Rave taken the Several | rade hundred workers around there but} @ moment and been very simple. For this This was not done. Why? “Times Are Tough D New Orleans, La, To the Daily Worker: Times are tough down in N. O.} “America’s Most Interesting City”; “The playground of America” etc. About the most interesting thing to be seen here is the number of people out of work. The workers here have plenty of time for play as they have no jobs exgept selling apples, candies, etc., on the street to an unemployed army |~ that has no money. Bosses Fight Real Relief. The bosses have appointed an un- employment committee. Six Dollars for Two Days Starvation “Relief” in Perth Amboy Dear Comrades: Just a line to let you know our taxes are going up thissyear. Just as I heave been telling the workers mm ben giving cut relief on the streets deing work of no value to anyone, a ing $4 per day for four days’ | work, A worker gets $16 in two weeks. And now they will make this up by raising taxes. The besses thought $16 gwas too Perth Amboy, N. J. CUT THIS k that ” | parties for tt Consisting fi this state the boob bosses have , SP italists know that their ng disturbed and this is ‘ir methods of one f soothing them, but their promises don’t feed us nor| ao they warm our homes. The capita! hold million dollar | daughters, the capi- | | talists buy diamond dog collars for | ets, the capitalists plan new | for their own profits. | | their We are walking the streets in sleet | and rain vainly looking for a job. | Ye can not get work so as to live | the capitalists live without | working. | Now is the time to co-operate and | smash this rotten system, once and} for all. Don't wait, organize!—J.S. | cK in Demonstrations reason: there was no one to lead. By} | leading I don’t mean one individual worker who would have rushed in heroically and the workers would have followed him. No, that is non~-| sense. An unorganized group will) not follow one man. However had} there been a~group of 10 or 20 men to rush these two dicks then would | the assembled crowd follow. | | Here is my suggestion. Instead of | having members of the various ay ganizations act independently in the} crowd, have them instead in units.} Then it a cop or any other tool of | the bosses tries to get funny they) knowing each other and being in a compact group. Editorial Note: Police assaults upon isolated groups or individual workers has been a recurrent fea~ ture at many recent demonstra- tions. The need for organized Workers’ Defense Corps is thus brought out more sharply. Ag- | gressive and vigorous defense by | such Workers’ Corps would go far to protect workers from police brutality. 8. \ own in New Orleans” of six hundred Hoover type charity fakers to relieve the situation: | The masses still hold a faint hope that something definite will be done for them despite the fact that first official word of the boss committee | was “be patient.” The workers will soon realize that they can expect nothing from the | Master class except that which they | force from their greedy clutches thru united mass action. Meanwhile the local Unemployed Council will keep up the fight for a larger membership and an increased signature collection. | —Sec'y Unemployed Council. much money for the workers, so now | they give the workers §3 per’ day jand only 4 days in two weeks, mak- ing $6 per week. There are thou- sands of workers behind with their taxes now so what will happen when taxes are increased. | I know a -worker who, went to | Woodbridge to pay half year’s tix and the collector refused to accept anything short of his full tax. —Ex-Soldier, iT AND MAIL Leon gual ers TO THE DAILY WORKER, 50 E. 13TH ST., RED SHOCK TROOPS For jarticle “One Deer Costs Year and | for food, but for | do not have to go to jail for this; | hall crowded with a worker audience, | | were bailed out; trial is set for Wed- Shooting Deer (By a Worker Correspondent) WENATCHEE, Wash., Jan. 27—~ Two penniless starving workers were sentenced to six months in jail and $500 fine each for shooting a deer “out of season.” These penniless workers could not pay the fine; if they were in @ position to do so. they would not have shot the deer. | Workers, hungry and having starv- | ing families, go out and kill a deer or a rabbit and for that “crime” | they are sentenced to a long prison term. In the Seattle “Times” of Jan. 22, the reporter frivolously heads this $1,000.” This is how the capitalist | press derides the misery of the hun- | gry toiling masses; the workers, who.| after creating the tremendous wealth} of this country, are thrown out on | the scrap heap and when they refuse to starve quietly but go out and get food, then the bosses’ hirelings, the \.activity in increasing circulation of | Worker circulation. Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill The Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill proposes: 1—Unemployment insurance at the rate of $25 a 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 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 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 {ts sub- adiary 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. 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. ‘Red Builders Determined to Fight in Spite of Terror of Police; Plan 2 More Clubs .: Club is not letting up on its ts splewald jout a steady increase in Daily Although they \the Dajly Worker, although two of | have sold considerably on the streets, the most active |they have not yet formed a Rid members are| Builders’ News Club. courts, the police, do their dirty work and sentence two starving | workers to a long prison term, be- cause they “shot a deer.” | The capitalists have private hunt- ;’ ing grounds of thousands of acres, | where they can shoot and kill, not | “sport” and of course, the bosses ean do this and | only hungry workers are sent to Jail | for shooting a deer. This is but another example 7 what workers can expect from the | capitalists; only by organizing into strong unemployed councils, coun- | cils of farmers and workers, will the | starving workers be able to get food | from the capitalists. As in England, | Arkansas, where Negro and white | farmers united and. marched with guns in their hands, to the city hall and demanded and got food; workers everywhere are realizing that only by | their own mass, organized strength will they get food. Workers and farmers! and fight for food. Organize —A.F. | ‘TAMFORD HOLDS HUNGER MARC? '2,000 at Town Hall As’ Delegate Is Beaten STAMFORD, Conn., Jan. 28.—The united front conference held a suc- | cessful meeting here yesterday in a| aT elected a committee of 15. The com- mittee then, with the conference dele- gates ari the audience following, marched on the Town Hall to pre- sent demands for immediate relief. There was a crowd of 2,000 waiting at the Town Hall. When the delegates arrived they went up to the main entrance, were refused admittance and were told to go to the side entrance, where the first two delegates who happened to be Simon Scott and Morris Fitch were grabbed and pulled in and the rest. were barred out. Fitch was politely escorted down- stairs to the cellar and given a good slugging again by four uniformed thugs the same as May Ist, while Scott was being interrogated hypo- critically¥in the Council Chamber. Then Fitch was allowed to come up and on being asked what he wanted started to tell about the brutality which had been practiced on him. He was arbitrarily forbidden to say any- thing but what pertained to his de- mands. Hundreds of workers followed the delegation back to the hall and many of them joined the unemployment council. Three were arrested during the day for distributing leaflets and nesday. The meeting also elected delegates to the state and National Convention on unemployment and to present the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill to Congress. Delegates representing thirteen workers organizations participated in this conference, among them the Laborers Union with 600 members. PLAN TO DENY YOUNG REDS DIPLOMAS, A bill introduced by Assemblyman Badham of Los Angeles would with- hold high schoo] diplomas from boys and girls suspected of Communistic leanings. NEW YORK CITY $20.00 DATLY WORKER EMERGENCY |FUND Enclosed find ...... We pledge to build RED SHOCK ‘TROOPS: for, the successful conipletion of the $30,000 DAILY we EMERGENCY FUND NAME or -dollars months sentence | In addition, had the Party and Y.C. for selling the) L. activized its members in day-to- | paper in the|day canvassing for subs and sales, subway. Seattle would haye no difficulty in Clarence Ty increasing its orders instead of cut- ner, 20 years| ting their bundle down, a bad ex- old, a new mem- | ample to other cities and to the new ber, and Lor- Red News Clubs springing up every enzo Stokes, 22,| week. a Negro Red| Builder, were arrestedand dragged to court | “MUST HAVE MY COPY EVERY DAY” where Judge) ,, 88 ™y Daily Worker subserip- Burke handeq| #28 must be just about due I am down the vi.| ¢Mclosing you $1 for renewal as I Glous 6-monthe| Simply must have my copy every sentence. ‘The, 2%: 1am also enclosing an addi- Tnternationsl| #nal dollar in order that you may Labor Defense is | appealing the! case. Bert Well- | man, another member, was ar- rested and held| dars.”—J. O'H., Bloomfield, N. J. SENDS $2 THOUGH “MONEY IS SCARCE” “Money is scarce. W, McDermott, one of the Chicago Ked ders’ star sellers. ged 60, a native, he sells 50 a day in 2 hours and goes in every direction. Was Mailed $2 to a locomotive engi- without being| Old address. Wouldn't want it lost | pee Oy eg te ad permitted to|in the mail. Thanks for sending worker, new etrns COMMuNicate Daily Worker. Sorry I'm late with \the Daily. bad ong with the Daily. | money. Breaks me up to think I [rested. but raised so He received a/ can’t help Daily Worker with money send me two Daily Worker calen- | | much hell they had to | urn him Joose. suspended sen | tence. At last Sunday’s Red Jamboree, | the Red Builders News Club in a | resolution declared: “We demand the immediate release of these two work- hard to keep my sub going.”—A. H., Norwalk, Ohio. FRANK SELLMAN KEEPS HIS WORD In our column of Jan. 15 we ers. We will back up our demand | printed a suggestion from Frank Sell- by mobilizing the workers against |man, Spokane, Wash. Two days this sentence, and by doubling our | later we received two 3-months, one efforts in spreading the Daily Work- | 2-month and .one 1-month sub, with a" | the following letter: Seven new members joined at the “& few days ago I was critizing last meeting, making a total of about | the comrades all over the country 70 functioning now, A total of 1,625| for not getting behind the sub copies were ordered for Monday. New| drive in earnest and suggested that York City will soon announce forma- | each comrade should at least bring tion of new clubs in Harlem and the | in two subs during January. Just Bronx. They'll show the courts they| to show that I practice what I mean business in the 60,000 circula-| preach am sending you four subs tion campaign. and you can be sure more will fol- Jow. Well, what about it, com- rades? LET’S GO.” ALBANY BUNDLE INCREASED TO 25, One week after the Albany Red | News Club was organized, their bundle, UP A DOLLAR” order is increased from 15 to 25 cop-| “Enclosed you will find a check of ies a day. ‘The increase is significant | $3,” writes J. L., Bentleyville, Pa. “I in view of the activities of the Albany |am a little behind in sending this | Unemployed Council which halted an | meney, but 1 am out of a job for} eviction of a Negro worker and his | three months, so it’s hard for me to “HARD TO PICK family. | pick up a dollar. I hope the day will : come when most of the people will | SEATTLE CUT open their eyes so that we can pre- | SHOWS NEGLECT From William Phillips, Daily Worker representative of Seattle, we received the following: “I am compelled to reduce the bundle of Daily Workers for Seattle to 250 copies instead of the 400 that have been coming here.” % A cut like this shows that the com- vades in Seattle have failed to work vent this unemployment.” | “DAILY FIGHTS | OLD ORDER” | “For the enclosed $6 please credit my subscription to the Daily | Worker for one year. This paper | sarely pleases me with the work it | delivers against the old order—it is wonderful.”—I. Z, Detroit, Mich. THOUSANDS MARCH ON NEWARK CITY HALL, DEFYING THE POLICE. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) and city commission rejected them all, Knocked Down 3 Times. On Kasper’s attempt to report to the great crowd outsidethe city hall the results of the interview, police attackedagain as viciously as in the beginning of the march. Kasper was knocked down by police three times and three times rose to talk. Finally the crowd was smashed, but oar up into indignant groups all , discussing the brutality ith which the demands of the star- ving unemployed were received, and promising to be out in force for the Feb. 10 demonstration for unem- ployment insurance and to march on Trenton and serve their demands here, when called. 5,250 Names. The Newark Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance called this demonstration. 5,250 names to the national commit- tee of workers who demand the mes- sage of the Workers’ Unemployment Active preparations are being made in Newark for the Workers’ Interna- tional Relief tag days, Saturday and f 4 Today it sent} Sunday, to raise funds for the march on Trenton. All who will help col- lect come to 93 Mercer St. Six Arrested. Those arrested were Bernard Ro- sanski, Wendel Goshler, Mary King- ston, Jessie C. Brown, Shirley Etlin and Mildred Schulman. Rosanski was held in $5,000 bail, charged with assaulting a policeman named John Engart, The others are held on $250 bail each, charged with loitering. They will be heard tomor- row before Judge Simandi in First Precinct Court. Kingston, Etlin ang Schulman were also arrested in the Hugi dae Vaal ee Gp ise trial on that case Feb, 5. WORKERS SLAVE TEN AND TWELVE HOURS IN VA. RICHMOND, Va.—Most textile and knitting mills in this state operate on a 10 or 12 hour basis, and many operate nights. John Hopkins Hall, state commissioner of labor, said that the 1930 value of output of each Virginia wage earner employed in plants and factories averaged $5,033. ‘The amount that each worker re+ ceived for this work, was about ten and fifteen a week. INTERNATIONAL SNEWS © DUTCH R.R. MEN VISIT U.S.SR. AND 0: K. 5-YEAR PLAN) Issue Appeal for the Defense of the Soviet Union MOSCOW.—A delegation of Dutch , railwaymen consisting of 5 railway- |men not organized in any political | | party, 4 Communist railwaymen, one | | socialist railwayman and a Catholic railwayman, has published the fol- Seattle must | thusiastically now on Welfare | do more intense work in getting un- | Young and old in the Soviet Union. Island on a six-| employed workers to organize a club. | Although millions Jowing statement immediately prior to Jeaving Moscow for home after having spent some time studying | rare conditions in the Soviet | re one as the Soviet Union has xisted it has been misrepresented by the bourgeois and social demo- cratic press. During our stay in the Soviet Union we were able to con- vince ourselves that the slogan, Five Year Plan in Four Years, was en- | supported both by of unemployed | workers in the capitalist countries are suffering misery, we saw with | our own eyes that unemployment does not exist in the Soviet Union, | |and that the speedy work for the | tion of the working masses. or } building up of socialism has only one aim—to improve the conditions of | the masses of the workers and peas- | ants. talist rationalization, socialist ration- alization offers tremendous possibili- ties of work and improves the posi- social insurance scheme in operation in the Soviet Union is without paral- | lei in other countries. The position women in the Soviet Union as In contradistinction to capi- | The | |Hungarian Jobless and | Peasants Fighting for Unemployment Relief BUDAPEST, Hungary.—The gen: eral misery and impoverishment ot | | the workers and peasants in Hun- | guy is assyming acute forms. Re- cently @ great demonstration of un- | | employed workers marched to | Town Hall and sent in a deputation |to the Mayor. They demanded work | 'or support. The unemployed occu- | | piea all the corridors and steps of | the Town Hall and took up a very | threatening attitude when the mayor refused to receive the deputation. \ The social democratic-ieputy Peyer did his best to calm them and him- | self introduced the deputation to the |mayor. A few empty phrases was all they obtained. In the meantime | & large force of police had been mob- ilized who cleared the Town Hall with great energy. At the same time | a@ demonstration, of poor peasants took place before the parliament buildings in order to hand the gov- ernment a memorandum concerning |the impoverishment and _privations }of the poor peasants. Peasants |were present from all parts of the country. Here too nothing but emp- | ty phrases was the result. Serlin Bank Clerks Vote Down Wage Cut BERLIN.—The ballot vote of the | | bank clerks and other employees in Berlin concerning the arbitration de- | cision which provides for a wage reduction of about 14 per cent, took | place. An overwhelming majority of |the bank clerks voted against the | acceptance of the decision and thus | | for a strike. Whether the strike will the | WORLD ECONOMIC f CRISIS IS WORSE, REPORTS SHOW |Cables to. U. S. Dept. of Commerce Tell of Worsening WASHINGTON, Jan. 27.—Cable | reports to the Department of Cont- | merce show that the economic crisis is getting worse in many capitalist lands. Following are some excerpts from these weekly cables: AUSTRALIA.-Trade and industry is experiencing a rapid decline in Australia with outlook unsatisfactory and obscure. Decline in export prices and the lack of usual foreign loans has- cut the import buying power of the Commonwealth by about 50. | per cent, The country is faced with an important unemployment prob- lem. BRITISH MALAYA.—As the re- sult chiefly of declining values for leading export commodities, Malayan | business conditions and trade were depressed throughout the past year. GERMANY.--Steady recession in practically all industria} lines and a substantial decline in retail trade volume characterized the past busi- ness year in Germany. The year | Opened with business distinctly on | the downgrade. German production Jin practically all lines has been | sharply curbed in keeping with the steady decline in demand. This has thrown a large amount of labor out | of employment, with the result that unemployment throughout the year | has been at record levels. According jto the Institute for Economic Re- | equal of the men on all fields of life, | actually take place depends on the |Search, German building activity in cipates the women of the Soviet | Union from their former position of | | | economic dependence on the men. Despite the sabotage of the coun- and the intrigues of the imperialists, viet Union under the leadership of the Communist Party have achieved | tremendous successes. The factories, restaurants, prisons, barracks, clubs, ter-revolutionary Industrial Party | the workers and peasants of the So- | between tic representatives of | the employees cnd the bankers in | the Ministry of Labor, Many of the | | big banks refused to permit the bal- lot to take place on their premises | and compelled their employees to go onto the streets in order to take part ;2 the voting. | SEEK 8-HOUR DAY FOR CARMEN. | SACRAMENTO, Cal.— With the theatres, hospitals and other institu- | opening of the California legislature |tions which we saw in the Soviet | bills of interest to Jabor are -being | Union convinced us that a new world | presented. One introduced by As- is being built up there, and we un-|semblyman Morrison of San Fran- derstood why capitalism does ity ut- |eisco provides an 8-hour day for car- | | most to destroy the Soviet Union. On| men on the Market St. Rwys., the | | workers against wage cuts and dis- | | ute, but do not keep filled lists in} | are only ten days left for this dis- | trict te reach its 250,000 quota. vince the Dutch workers of the sit- uation in the Soviet Union. our return to Holland we shall use |same hours in force on the Munici- | all ow energies in order to con-} pal system. Workers in the pri- | potenagercied lines now have a -10- hour day. (CONTINU of 150 elected from all over the country. Every effort must be made in the few days remaining to per- | fect organization, not only for these demonstrations, but to carry on the fight against evictions, for local de- mands, after Feb. 10. Build the fighting unions and leagues of the | Trade Union Unity League, to strike against the wage cuts with which the employers try to take advantage of this unemployment crisis! fight against wage cuts and against long hours is part of the fight against unemployment! And the fight for relief for the jobless is part of the struggle of the employed) The charge! The National Campaign Commit- | tee for Unemployment Insurance stated yesterday: “New York ¢ity has sent in 59,000 signatures to date. The total in the district nears the 75,000 mark. There “Detroit set itself a quota of 200,-) 000. There may be tens of thou- | sands of filled lists on file in De- troit, but we know nothing about them. So far this district has sent in about 30,000 signatures. “The Cleveland district is nearing the 20,000 point. Minneapolis also has about 20,000 signatures to its credit so far, California has reached the 10,000 mark, as has also Seattle. “Chicago and Boston and the rest of the large cities may have tens of thousands of signatures in their headquarters, but there is no record of any large collections in the office SPONTANEOUS MARCHES SHOW | EAGERNESS FOR INSURANCE BILL mass meetings, hunger marches, etc., are coming in too slow. Hundreds of meetings and demonstrations, street meetings and bread lines, have | endorsed our Bill. The chairmen of | these meetings, those in charge of | them, have been too negligent in sending in she endorsement of the gatherings in the name of the num- ber of workers present. tee for Unemployment Insurance, 2 West 15th St., New York City, again calls upon all workers and organ- | izations, all Trade Union Unity League secretaries, to send in all filled lists at once. Continue the | drive for signatures to the last min- your districts and cities. Send these | in today. Collective endorsements from all organizations, local and na- | tional, from all mass meetings, large and small, from all hunger marches, must reich the se committee by Feb. 5th.” THREAT DENVER JOBLESS LEADERS DENVER, Colo., Jan. 28. —- At the on the State capitol, a certain Bishop Rice, backed by the city government, tried to head off the demonstration by a meeting of his own in which he assailed the councils of the un+ employed. Fred Reskin interrupted to answer and was jailed and third of the National Campaign Commit- tee for Unemployment Insurance. Collective endorsements are + being received by the dozens every day. The branches of the International Workers Order take first plice in collective endorsements, with Hun- garian and Russian mutyal aid or- ganizations next. The total number of workers endorsing our Bill upon bined collective blanks ts fs 150,000 ‘te “Collective endorsements from degreed, then tried in secret and given a 30 dgy sentence, which the International "Labor Defense is ap- Pealing. At the close of the demonstration at the capitol building, 1,000 marched on the city hall demanding Reskin’s release. Allander, Guyn and Sanchez, speakers at the capitol demonstra- tion were summoned before District Attorney Wettengal and this Amer- ican Legion member threatened them | for their remarks, particularly for | saying this if the senate does not give some relief, there is plenty of | food in the warehouses. Wettengal calls this “the next thing to revolu- tion” and threatens to “send over the toad” these three workers if any of the jobless do as in Oklahoma and “The National Campaign Commit- | time of the Denvey hunger march! | represents a revolution which eman- | negotiations which are taking place | | 1930 was approximately 20 per cent | | below 1929 in point of value. At the | summer height of the building sea- {son approximately 40 per cent of all | building and construction labor was unemployed. ‘GERMAN POLICE _ KILL2 WORKERS Three Others Seriously Injured in Collisions BERLIN.—Last night at Geesthaht near Hamburg a collision between workers and fascists occurred: Police intervened supporting the fascists. | Police fired and killed twa workers, Geick, and Benthien, and seriously wounded three others. Three police | and several fascists were reported in- jured. The socialist police captain Haase, commanded the shooting. Nineteen | workers were arrested in raids. Collisions between workers and fas- cists. occured yesterday in Trier in which one worker and one fascist were severely wounded. TAKE A LIST TO WORK WITH YOU FOR JOBLESS (NSURANCE! \4 FIRST ANNUAL DAILY WORKER CALENDAR FOR 1931 Seven steibing Ratt-tacts nen ners he Views of th sieges demonstrations the mon Five tox cartoons <t the Mistorteal date on the big eventy DAILY WORKER $0 EAST (TA STREET, N. T. ©. B: w ia ty gots CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDAIGET PROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN TRE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Soe 02.25) Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere s17 A WEEK CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACOF, ¥.T. seize food to seve their lives, PHONY 781