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DAILY WORKER, NEW YOKK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 50, 1951 LLO UT FEB. 10 IN MAS S DEMONSTRATION TO BACK UP IN SURANCE BILL DELEGATIO NT 0 CONGRESS otel New Yorker Pays Lowest Wage to Women Workers; Rich Revel Here. Miserable Pay Equalled by the Slave-Driving) Speedup and Long Hours New York. Daily Worker: ‘The conditions the Hotel’ New Yorker employees work under match those of czarist Russia, It is a good example of what Karl Marx fore- told the wage earning class would suffer in the advancing decay of capitalism. Miserable pay, a line at the door each morning asking for work and speed-up. Here is a list of the wages the stockholders of the New Yorker pay ‘the different groups. Scrub women, $13.75 for a seven day 56-hour week; chamber maids, $12.50 for a seven- day week with every 14th day off. This group begins ‘at 8 a. m. and fin- ishes at 4 p. m. providing their 18 Tooms are made up. Floor clerks get $18.50. Inspectors have the rooms of two floors to look aftes and work all hours. They get $20 a week. Vicious Speed-Up. Knowing that such wages don't Permit proper nourishment the man- agement gives a meal at noon to be sure we will have enough strength to do the work. A fellow worker who scrubs floors Night Shift in Americ: (By a Worker Correspondent.) WEST LONG BRANCH, N. J.—The entire night shift ‘at the American Silk Mills, Broadway and Oakwood Ave., walked out last night. Similar occurrences took place about three months ago. ® ‘The weavers object to fines for imperfect goods where such defects are caused by poor machinery. These fines average from, $3 to $5 per’ week (and the company refused to pay the | was telling me how the inspectors jhurry them. She said the inspector | follows her in the toilet even and re- minds her of how much work she has to do. She also told me she went to some fake welfare organization | thinking those long hours were un- lawful and that they would do some- | thing about it. They didn’t, of | course. She said Al Smith pretends he is a friend of the working people but and low pay when he talks over the radio there. Slave-Driving Manager. The manager, Hity, is paid well for his slave driving. He used to be a waiter and comes from Cincinnati, | Ohio. He gets $10,000 a year and a ,seven room suite and meals. | He writes speed-up letters to the | employes often and has the inspéc- | tors read them to us. Last week oné of these letters said this among other things, “Your time here is valuable jand wasting it is dishonest and criminal.” Damn little is wasted in | that hopeless slave deri. | —MRS. C. an Silk Wins Demands promised bonuses for perfect work. The trouble started on Tuesday, when the men demanded to See Ga- ther, the manager. man. stated that he was out of town to produce hinr for a meeting. At midnight an agreement was reached. The manager was forced to grant all demands. of the night shift. All fines for imperfections caused by machinery will be done away with in the future. Lumber Town Nearly 50 P.C. Jobless Anacortes, Wash. This town is a lumber town of about 1,200 workers, 500 of whom are jobless, It is about the same all over Washington. Wages are cent along with part time work. Many people are thinking, but it is pretty hard to organize them yet. —Lumber Worker. 50 Cents a Day Wages inthe South Clouterville, La. Daily Worker: 2 This country around about is shouting with woe for the pain of Hoover's prosperity is great, for the land owners are paying 50 cents per day and you must work from “can’t till can't” for that 50 cents, The end is not yet in sight for many suggest that Hoover’s 25 cents per day is just off a few months and you are lucky to land a 50 cents per day job and what in the hell this will lead to should be fight, not starve. Many are out of work and it is a miracle how they are still breathing. Their sad faces tell the story. ‘The moneyed men say times are not hard and that the people need no help from the Red Cross and so far they have not got it. Mellon, Bosses Fight Demand ef the Vets for a Cash Bonus (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the demands of the rank and file who face starvation, were forced to “modify” their stand, and deglare that “on principle” they were for the cash bonus. Mellon said in his testimony and statement before the Senate Finance Committee that at no timie, except during the war, was such a demand for government funds made. Mellon admitted that the bosses.could easily get aS many billions as they needed to plunge the workers into war. Now that those who were forced to fight for the capitalists face starvation and demand relief, Mellon says the gov- ernment faces all sorts of dangers if it lifts its finger to keep the un- employed from starving. ‘The attitude towards the veterans dematid for a cash bonus shows up the whole policy of the bosses to- wards the ynemployed workers. Bil- lions ‘are now spent for war prepara- tions} billions given to the bosses in tax returns; the bosses’ profits, through their big corporations keep on iling up—but when the workers demand relief, the whole machinery of the. capitalist government is set against them. The vets will not get what they unanimously demand through the channels they have chosen, the capitalist representatives. They must mobilize as workers," to- gether with the rest of the working class, half~of which faces outright starvation, to force the bosses’ gov- ernment to disgorge some of its wealth wrung fro mthe workers, Elect delegates to N. ¥. Confer- ence for Protection of Foreign Born, Feb. 8, at the Irving Plaza. $30,000 DA |Chicago Bosses Try to Bar the Red Can- didates From Ballot (CONTINUED FROM 2 ONE) partisan basis” and the Party’s ex- posure of the non-partisan scheme of elections had its effect on the capi- talist politicians, who, through this | fake scheme are trying to hide the | class nature of the political parties {and the government as a whole. Two labor fakers, Alderman Oscar | Nelsqn, Thompson floor leader and | vice-president of the Chicago Federa- tion of Labor, and Alderman Bowler of the 25th ward, leader of the street can men’s union, were especially in- strumental in these attacks against the Communist candidates, because the Party exposed the fascist rule of the A. F.’of L. bureaucrats pretty clearly from the very beginning. The Communist Party will put up a fight to prevent the bosses from throwing out its candidates, because in all iinstances there were plenty signatures Secured ‘and all objections by the board can be easily repudi- ated. At the same time, without hav- ing any illusions in the legal pro- cedure, the Party appeals to all the workers through leaflets and mass meetings to organize and protest aaginst all these attacks, to organize the Vote Communist Clubs in their wards, and no matter what the de- cision of the Thompgon-Nelson-Ca- pone clique may be, a fight must be conducted and the masses of workers mobilized to secure over 25,000 sig- natures for our candidates for mayor, city treasurer, and city clerk. Alf workers organizations are asked sto elect delegates to the February 8th ratification convention, and all revo- lutionary workers should attend the three-day election bazaar on January 30, 31, and Feb. 1. CUT THIS OUT AND MAIL IMMEDIATELY TO THE DAILY WORKER, 50 E. 18th ST, NEW YORK CITY : a RED SHOCK TROOPS For I ys nothing about our long hours | The night fore- | and the men gave him till last night | being slashed from 10 to 30 per | WORKER EMERGENCY FUND Vet Gives Fish Answer; Calls All to Struggle Detroit, Mich. Daily Worker: I am writing these few lines of what I learn in the last 16 months since I am out of a job and I wish you would print it in the Daily Worker. During the World War I tried to enlist in the army like lots of other fools but they would not let me for I was married. So they drafted me \and kept mé for 2 years, one year | without pay on account of my wife. No Help From Murphy. IT am now out of work. I went to | Mayor Murphy’s employment office |ahd asked for a job and they told ‘me since I am a veteran I could go | to the Servicemen’s Bureau and they | will take care of me, So I did the first thing I was asked there was if I belonged to the American Legion. | I says no. So that was all they done | for me. In the Detroit News an article on the Veterans Bureay saying that they are going to give every Vet 4 flag after he is dead. Well, I like to tell the mwhat they: can do with mine. Regarding Mr. Ham Fish and his deportation of members of the Com- munist Party, I will say that he can not deport them as fast as he makes them himself. But he must be a big fish if he can’t see it. The city is taking care of 10,000 | homeless men in the Municipal Flop- house and. half are ex-servicemen. Does Mr, Fish think that they are | still patriots. Well, he is badly mis- | taken. Get together boys, fight for what's | coming to you like good soldiers. | —Ex-Serviceman S. N. |U.T.W. Surrenders Strike of 4,000 in Danville Textile Mill (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) company was working part time even before the strike started. These scabs wére escourted by the North Carolina staté police to the state line, and by Virginia militia the rest of the way. The U.T.W. pro- posed to have the strikers take over the job of the militia! The W.T.W has. absolutely discouraged all at- | tempts at mass picketing, and has made the strikers pledge to obey the | law, including the injunction. The orders of Gorman are being voted on by referendum today, and the result will be announced tomor- row. But with the whole machinery of the U.T.W. back of the order to surrender, and still more, with the U.T.W. counting the ballots, it is felt here that they will be accepted. ‘The strikers are very angry at this final betrayal by the U.T.W., however. All those who voted at the meeting last night against Gorman’s propo- sition were simply not counted. United With Fish. Pelagra and pneumonia are ravag- ing the strikers. They are starving. The local Red Cross has openly de-/ clared dt would not help any strikers. Gorman in his speech of surrender to the mill owners, made a vicioiis attack on the Communists and on the National Textile Workers Union. He is just back from Washington where he saw Congressman Fish, and he declared to the strikers last night that the Communists were trying to blow yp their homes, by that the Federal Gor nt would soon have Officers in Danville to run all the Communists and N.T.W. organizers organizers out of town. (A full anal- ysis of the Danville strike will appear in the Daily Worker Monday.) Gannes Speaks at Philly Onen Forum This Sunday Nite PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 28.\— On Sunday, Feb. 1, the subect at the Phi- Jadelphia Workers School Open Fors ‘uy will be “American Imperialism in Latin America.” Harry Gannes of New York will speak. Comrade Gan- nes, at present on the Daily Worker staff, has a great deal of experiences in the Anti-Imperialist movement fn the United States, and has particu- larly made a study of the role of American Imperialism in Latin Amer- ica. . The Forum meets regularly ev Sunday 8:15 p. m. at Mamoth Hal, 1203 N. 6th St. Admission is free. Discussion follows all lectures, Districts, seqtions, cities! Use the Daily Worker to mobilize workers in your territory for the Feb. 10 dem-| onstrations and hunger marches throughout “the country. Send in special stories between now and Feb. | 10 and order extra copies of the} issues in which your stories will ap- | pear. Show the workers in your sec- tion that the Daily Worker is not only concerned, with struggles in their part of the country, but turns its pages over for their use. Snap- shots of industrial scenes, marches, mass meetings in the locality add to | the attractiveness of the articles. Here’s a chance to gather thou- sands of workers in the unemploy mént campaign and set a high cir- culation mark for your district at the same time. EVERSON, WASH., STARTS WITH 10. From £E. A. B. .of Bellingham, Wash., we received the following: “The unit buro has organized a group at Everson and has assigned 10 Daily Workers to them.” A Red Builders News Club would put Everson on its feet. How about one? | MAKES SON A RED; NOW SENDS HIM DAILY “Enclosed find $1 for one month and please send the paper*to my son, | Robert, as I have made him a red,” writes C. H. S. of Detroit. “He is 16 years old and I think we can make ® good rebel out of him.” | PORTLAND UNIT SHOWS ACTIVITY M. Levitt, Daily Worker agent in Portland, writes: “Enclosed find -money order for $5 on account of Portland unit. Sales of special issue are progress- ing very good.” —— “CONTINUE TO SEND ME THE PAPER” “I am sending you $1 on account of my sub. Will send you more if my job lasts. Have been out for 3 months. Continue to send me the paper, I like it.” B. A. H., Chicago. | all my bills behind—my “Daily” for Feb. 10 Meets; Order Bundles In Advance way work up a steady increase in| circulation. Let's hear from you, Milwaukee, IS BEHIND IN ALL ,BILLS BUT SENDS $1 “I am a reader of the Daily Work- er paper. I did not cover my bill for five months, because I am not working over five months. DALY, AWORKER electric light and gas bills. Now I send $1 and please send me the Daily Worker.” F, B., North Detroit, Mich. NON-PARTY READER SALUTES “DAILY” T. J.C. Jr. of Phoenix, Ariz., sends $1 to extend his subscription and writes: “Please accept my most sincere congratulations on your good work throughout the country. Although Tam not a member of your Party, I have great’ hopes for the success of the proletariat in their strug- gles.” LAWRENCE, Mass:, Jan. 29.—To- morrow a mass meeting of the Un- employment Council of the National Textile Workers’ Union with Jim Reid as speaker will be held at Need- ham Holl, 180 Essex St., Lawrence. ‘This meeting is one of a series to be held in preparation for the mass demonstration on February 10 to the City Hall. Hundreds turned out to the last BEACKLISTED AND SUPPORTS ‘DAILY’ Workers Realize Value. of Daily Worker Workers from Arkansas, Youngs- town and Butte respond to the needs of the Dajly Worker, From a worker in the copper country in Butte: “I have been blasklisted here in Butte seven months ago -.. and all I can do now, J think my subscription is aboyt to expire so I borrowed $6 to pay my subscription to help my paper and every worker should help the Daily Worker either way he can.” From Arkanses we get the follow- ing: “I am thankful to you for the many hours I spent reading the Daily. I have passed it around and they all like it, but they are too hard up to take it. J} will try to sell the Daily on the street, as many will pay a few pennies! for a copy but cannot have money to subscribe.” From the Steel territory, the South Slav | Workers’ Club, “Zora,’ paper because this is the workers’ of | ‘NEW ENGLAND JOBLESS GET READY FOR FEB. 10 MARCHES meeting of the Unemployed Council held at the Oliver School, which was granted by the city authorities for this purpose due to the pressure of organized unemployed workers. Be- cause of the enthusiastic response of these unemployed workers to the de- mands of the unemployed council, the suerintendent of schools refuses to grant any more schools or public halls for this purpose. This maneuver cannot thwart the growth of the unemployment move- ment among the textile workers. in ene Conference in Hartford. HARTFORD, Conn., Jan. 29.—A very successful unemployment con- ference was held on Tuesday night, with thirty-eight delegates present. Two were elected to the Washington Unemployed Delegation, and a large number were elected to the state delegation which will lead a state | hunger march on the Capitol on | Feb. 10. About 20 dollars was raised | at the conference to finance the un- employed delegation to Washington. Unemployment conferences have | already been held in Stamford, Hart- | ford, New Haven and Bridgeport this week. Another will be held in Springfield, Mass., on Feb. 4. Nat, Richards of Hartford is still in jail; he was arrested last week for distributing Daily Workers to the unemployed. The authorities intend to keep him-locked up till his trial in March before the Superior Court, in connection with the Riverside Bank failure case, on which he faces | a ten-year jail sehtence if convicted. | Richards is accused of destroying | | public confidence in the banks by | | exposing the rotten conditions there. | | Foster Speaks Today. 29.-The t I have} jut Youngstown, sends in $50 to the NEW.HAVEN, Conn., Jan. Daily. | “Realizing the importance of | Connecticut District of the Trade the only fighting workers’ Daily in America, especially when the ruling class is increasing its attacks upon our working-class organizations and the fighting Daily, we members and the sympathizers of our club have decided to contribute #50 and pledge full moral support and further pos- sible financial aid to the Daily Worker.” These’ letters express concretely thegpower of the Daily Worker in most important sections of the United States. However, we never know from day to day when we will be issuing the Dally. We able to pay the notes we can expect serious action from our credit- first of the month is now coming ground. New debts are fall- ing due and the old notes and other bills that make up the deficit will again be pressed for payment. Tho Union Unity League is sending in! 6,000 signatures this week for the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill. Hundreds more are coming in daily. The New Haven mass meet- ing on Friday night, where William Z. Foster will speak, will mobilize the unemployed workers of New Haven for the hunger march Monday, when the Unemployed Delegation will pre- sent demands to the Board uf Alder- men for an Emergency Appropriation of $1,000,000 for the unemployed. Ten delegates elected at unemployment conferences in the district will go to Washington on Feb. 10, to join those from othre districts in presenting the bill to Congress, In addition, a large state delegation will lead a march on the State Capito] on Feb. 10. De- mands will be presented to the state legislature for an appropriation of 25 million dollars for the unem- ployed, and denouncing the paltry Districts Should Utilize | INTERNATIONA Crisis Deeber in ‘Latin America ‘The economic crisis in El Salvador, | Guatemala, and Honduras, is acute. | Coffee is a major industry in Gua- temala and Honduras. The market prices of December, 1929, already 50 | per cent lower than before, dropped | 20 per cent still lower in the course | of the year. In Honduras, which de- | pends just as much on the banana production, the United Fruit Co. has | cut the wages more than 60 per cent, and more than 50 per cent of the population is unemployed. The goy- | ernment of Mejia Colindres, to retain | the support of the United Fruit Co. and the imperialism it represents, is | converting the banana fields into military camps and by order of the | Yankee government officials, is send- jing part of the army to the Hon- | duran fontier to help “pacify” Nica- | ragua, The Indian population in these countries exceeds the combined pop- ulation of all the other races. The system to which they are subjected is completely feudal. | | The working day is from 14 to 18 hours, and the wage is from two to two and a half cents a day. ‘Their | accounts are kept in little books and | their buying power is limited to the | | amount credited them by their | bosses. Last year they were threat- ened with a wage cut and thousands | abandoned the farms, Vine Sra MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay. — The | | bourgeois dailies are complaining | that ragged women and children | | come into aristocratic neighborhoods to beg. “The Manana,” a capitalist | paper, has asked the police to assist | in ridding these sections of such “un- | Sightliness.” It does not matter that the number of unemployed increases by leaps and bounds, and that con- sequently people are reduced to beg- ging. What matters to these full- bellied bourgeoisie is that they are annoyed by the unaesthetic aspect of the faces of the hungry. The tour- ists, with their luxuries and sniobbish- | | ness add insult to injury. The bour- | geoisie offers no solution to the com- | mon misery, The situation of the workers of the | United Fruit Co. in the banana zone | -Grows|GANDHI FAILS 10 P VIOLENT STRUGG On the day after Gandhi was re- leased to put over the Round Table ‘Conference Scheme for British im- perialism, a mass demonstration of over 10,000 workers and peasants in Calcutta was fired into by MacDon- ald’s police. Five were reported killed and scores wounded Quite contrary to the wishes of the British and the Gandhiist sup- porters the violent'struggle of masses is intensifying. The British want Gandhi to r he the masses, But the revoluti struggle has gone far beyond the control of Gandhi or his well-wishers in England. The release of Gandhi took place after MacDonald announced in Pat liament that the three imperialist parties of Britain, Conservative, Lib- eral and Labor, had agreed on the policy announced at tl Conference of offe: form of Dominion behind which British Round Table a spurious status to India imperii Fede & J ri 50.000 POLITICAL PRISONERS TA TADIA of Columbia is acute. Of the 9,050} formerly employed, 4,364 are at pres- | ent working, and the miserable sal- aries of these have been reduced. These figures are only for those di- | rectly employed by the United Fruit | | Co. and do not include the allied in- dustries dependent on these workers for a living. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) was met by Superintendent of Po- lice Mills and plenty of cops who re- fused entrance to all but six. The six sent in were William Simons, district secretary of the Trade Union Unity League; Everett of the Coun- cils of the Unemployed; a young worker representing the Metal Work- ers Industrial League, a representa- tive of the textile workers; Copeland, @ Negro longshoreman, and Mary Davis, a Negro domestic servant. Simons presented the demands of the unemployed to the city council, and ©. ©. Cox, president of the city council answered that there was nothing doing. Cox made it plain that he was speaking not for himself but in the name of the council, and said that there were no funds provided for re- lief as demanded by the demonstrat- ors, that most of the demands should be laid before the state legislature or | before the national congress. Simons then demanded that the city council endorse the demands when they were laid before those bo-| dies, and Cox refused. Simons then read an official state- ment of the demonstrators, that a large part of those 35,000 and of the cor ‘ons of thousands of unem- ployed in ‘> -ity realized that the erpitalist government had no inten- ~ of focding the starving unem- ployed, but that as long as the cap- it-lists hove plenty of food the job- less refuse to starve to death and will take the food. €!mons delivered his report to the c¢ 1 cutside, ard the action of the city council was heartily “booed”. The crowd voted junanimously to back up the delegation to Washing- ton with a still bigger demonstration here, Feb. 10. ete Sai Preparations are being made rap- idly to conduct the largest and most militant demonstrations for unem- ployment insurance that the coun- try has ever seen. The date is Feb. 10, and employed and unemployed in every city and town are urged to demonstrate in support of the Work- ers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill, which on that date will be presented to congress by an elected committee of 150, along with the hundreds of thousands of signatures demanding passage of the bill. HUGE DEMONSTRATION IN PHILA: 18,000 MARCH: JOBLESS RELIEF DENIED of the jobless for non-payment of) rent. The last three meetings of the un- employed council were crowded. A mass meeting will be held at Work- ers Center, 337 Hamilton St., on Feb. | 6 at 8 p. m, at which Wm. Simons will speak. More Milwaukee Councils. MILWAUKEE, Wisc., Jan. 29. Part of the preparations for mass| demonstrations here Feb. 10 is the formation of an unemployed council on the north side. A mass meeting) for this purpose will be held in Teu- | tonia Hall Annex, 2317 North Teuto-| nia Ave,, at 8 p. m., on Feb. 5. | Frank Zaye, recently released from the workhouse, after serving a ten| day sentence, because he demanded | that the bureaucrats of the local charity relief organization open the doors so the workers would not have to stand in line in the rain, will be| one of the speakers at this meeting. | The local capitalist press ann-| nounced sometime ago that the rail- road shops would resume work and | re-employ about 5,000 men. Speak-| ing to the railroad workers, this cor- | respondent was informed that this} was a fake report and that not. only | no workers were taken on, but more were laid off. Similar newspaper stories that Seaman Body was hiring | 2,400 men is another one of the fake | “good news of good times” policy of the Hearst papers. Mass Meet Jan. 30. | didne: Srna aE PERE L ACIFY MASSES: LES GROW IN INDIA could s' then its hold on India. MacDonald announced this policy as one “to bind India to you (Bi by bonds of confidence” as well as by armed jon. “confi- dence,” of cou will be that of the Indian bourgeoisie like Gandhi who together with the British exploit the Indian n ses. ley Baldwin, leader of the Party i Sir John Qn, sponsor of the Simon report on India, which called for an “iron hand” to rule India, concurred in MacDonald's rep The Round Table Conference ¥ composed of over 100 of the leading feudal lords and capitalists of India, and tha representatives of British imper- Donald made it cle policy of enlisting Gandhi nd workers thei ed violent cutbrea f we are prepared to march our aps from e Himalayas to Cape a is {fom one end of o the other) then refuse to s to go on with this plan,” MacDonald. There was no re- 1 to allowing MacDon on with this plan of strengthening the bond with Gandhi against the Ir said | workers and peasants. Despite all the talk of “bonds of confidence,” the British are increas- their atta on the Indian workers and peasants. During the past ten days there has been serio’ y and other cities. dreds of arrests were made. On very day GandMi was released, reported that one Moslem illed and fifty wounded when police at Hilphamari fired on a group of peasants and workers. Over 300 were arrested, and armed forces brought into town to patrol the streets. Gandhi, realizing the difficulty of the task, as the masses have gone far beyond the mild measures proscribed by the Nationalis on his release said: “I am not at all happy at the thought of @ntering again the whirl- pool of life in the outside world, with its strife, suffering, sorrow and sor- the the Associated Press On his arrival in Bombay, Tuesday morr he informed the British imperialists that he had a difficult task as the masses had broken away from the Nationalists. “The authori- ties,” he declared. vidently do not yet understand that the Nationalist movement has so affected the minds of the masses that their leader:, however eminent they may be, ara utterly unable to dictate any course of action.” ‘This is an open admission that the masses are out of the hands of the Nationalist leaders, and that Gandhi fears he may not be able to put over the projects for which he was re- leased. He has appealed for the re- lease of other Nationalist leaders to help him subdue the masses; The Bombay nationalist news- paper, however, asked the British to have patience with Gandhi. “Gandhi and his colleagues,” they wrote on the day he was released, “can always be trusted to consider the issue be- fore them calmly and dispassion- ately.” The British are very anxious to rush through the results of the | Round Table Conference before the masses overwhelm both the British imperialists and the Nationalists. Lord Peel, conservative member of the Round Table Conference, said: “It would be a great misfortune (for British imperialism) if this mighty scheme could not be started on its great career.” Viceroy Lord Irwin, last Saturday, issued an appeal to the Nationalists to cooperate. Th* release of Gandhi is the first step “to start this @nighty scheme.” Mac- Donald's talk about troops from the Himalayas to Cape Comorin is tha | iron hand in the velvet glove—the threat of more bloody terror if the British yoke is not accepted. Gandhi will fail in his attempts to On Jan. 30, at 8 p. m. a huge mass/ get the masses to accept this scheme meeting will be held at Miller Hall, Eighth and State Streets to ratify the election of the delegate to Wash- ington. The conference held on Jan 18, in which 28 organizations partic- ipated, elected Chas. Gheen and is | calling this mass meeting to rally the masses of workers. throughout send-off and endorse the Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill, the number is rapidly increasing. This mass meeting will be the be- Milwaukee workers for the great dem- onstration on Feb. 10, when thou- sands and tens of thousands of work- ers will demonstrate their determina- tion to get unemployment insurance Milwaukee to give him a rousing) ginning of the mobilization of the| of further enslavement. He already is discontented with difficulty of his task. The Indian revolution is sweep- ing beyond the scope of the Nation- alists. The Indian Communist Party | has already issued its Draft Program | of Action through which the masses wil’ be led to the final victory against British imperialism. KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Demands for food have doubled in 17 days, the Red Cross reports on southwestern states. Children will starve unless food is rushed to many places at once, is the warning. CAMP AND HOTEL as the delegates at Washington, pre- . . Allentown Prepares. sent the demands to congress, It will | also begin the struggle for immediate ALLENTOWN, Pa., Jan. 29, -- A‘ ¥elief from the fakers in the common | NITGEDAIGET PROLPTARISN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE TEAR Enclosed find We pledge to bufld RED SHO} EMERGENCY FUND outlook for weathering this financial | crisis ig very poor. There is still money that has been | $10,000 which is all the -togislature has appropriated, in the face of over 100,000 unemployed. I dau hk | hunger march will take place here | Council who, under cover of lying! Aer rto, E Feb. 10. All will assemble at Fifth | Promises of jobs and relief for the and Hamilton Streets at 9 a, m. and; Wemployed are increasing their at- seeeseeds CONES CK T2OOPS for the successful completion of the $30,000 DAILY WORKER Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped collected on donation lists, money then march, tacks on the working class, | Sport and Cultural Activity NAME), /\ || from affaizs, outstanding tickets for MILK TRUST PROFITS There are 10,000 unemployed here,| So far in the campaign for signa-| Proletarlan Atmosphere AME Oss ged vvv'ceys TAPRO Ree ee ee eee ees e nea seeneeen een eeeseeeetaeeeene Daily Worker Anniversary, etc. This} BUFFALO, N. Y.—Farmers around | facing starvation. ‘Their demands tures any workers’ organizations have ov A WHEE ADDENER ia eWeek 6 ovo ock thas \ meney should be immediately turned | here sell their milk at 4 centsaquart| are @ lump sum for unemployment endorses the Bill including A. F. of L. CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, ¥.Y. PHONE 731 in and rushed to the Daily Worker, and it is sold in the city for 13 and 50 E, 13th St, New York City. relief, free gas, electricity, coal and/and R. R. unions, About 8,000 signa- 14 cents a quart, rent; no sheriff's sales of furniture | tures have already been secured and - ~ ee!