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_ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1931 Page Lyles To the Daily Worker: day. This is done so that these unemployed. and $12 a week.or less. With and clothe their families. of 25 grinders. this are put in every day, laying off more workers. ‘The conditions in this foundry are so bad that the workers hate to think cf the place when they come home. ‘When you ask a worker how the place is inside his answer will be: “It’s hell.” When entering the foundry you can hardly get your,breath be- cause of the dense smoke and fire, The plants are so old that the workers’ lives are in danger at all times. In many of the plants ex- Mass Semi-Starvation Is Lot of Workers “Employed” Under Hoover's Stagger Plan In Dayton Malleable New Machinery Installed and Instead of ey ting Hours Lay Off Workers fron Workers Risk Their Very Speed-Up Hole Lives In This} Dayton, Ohio- The workers in the Malleable Iron Co. one of the largest | foundries here in Dayton are working three and four hours a workers cannot call themselves The majority of the workers in this foundry make $10 such wages they have to feed In the No- 9 plant a grinding machine is taking the place More machines like o— plosions take place and many “works. ers lose their lives. The speed-up system is put more and more into practice. The mold- ers, grinders, chippers, laborers and the other workers have to speed up to make anything. In this speed-up many workers are injured and killed, Some of the workers carry hot iron and they are made to speed up 80 that they drop the hot iron and burn themselves. Something like this oc- curs every day. —™M. J. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) mstration in support of the Work~ ers’ Unemplayment Insurance Bill, which developed into a demonstra- | tion also in support of the Com- munist candidates in the coming city election. A speaker at the demonstration | didate for mayor of Chicago. strators were Phil. Frankfeld, Ma- thewson, Poindexter, Banks, Gray of the Trade Union Unity League, Ru- bicki of the International Labor De- fense, Williams, Bydel, Poansjo, Ross, Ware (for the Communist Party) and Marks and Andrews for the Young was Otto Wangerin, Communist can- | Other | speakers and leaders of the demon- | SON aa at on loyed council here had a ~4 ting of 300 m.cers yesterday in oe ite of the fact that the Glen Alden e: Oo. which has been closed down t ince Dec. 27, announced yesterday hat they were going to open the F ines. Mike Zaldokis, orgaizer of Mine, ct 1 and Smelter Workers Industrial ion (The National Miners Union) = n. | | | é | finally forced their way into the of- Communist Leaguc. AAAS DENVER, Colo., Feb. thousand demonstrated here for un~ employment insurance yesterday, The | pelice saw the jobless coming and|~~TWo thousand workers demon~ threw a cordon around the “Piggly Wiggly” warehouse in the vicinity of the meeting. The whole police force was out, armed with riot guns. There was also a mobilization of federal and state detectives, An American Legion stool-pigeon tried to disrupt the meeting by at- tacking a Daily Worker salesman. The Workers’ Defense Corps beat up the stool-pigeon and threw him out. ‘Then the police arrested the Daily Worker salesman and one member of the defense corps. Poses e Battle In Johnstown. JOHNSTOWN, Pa., Feb. 11—Five thousand jobless gathered around the city hall yesterday in mass demon- stration for unemployment insurance and for some local demands. There were 300 police around the hall, be- sides the “yellow dogs,” detectives and plain clothes men, who walked around and pushed and provoked the demonstrators. At 12:30 sharp, when the speakers began, the elected delegation tried to! | | | | ALLENTOWN, Pa,, Feb. 11. — Two ; thousand Allentown unemployed | demonstrated yesterday for insur- ance, and presented local demands tothe city council for $1,000,000 fund from the city government, and $225,000 from the community chest, for $15 a week relief, etc. Three of their seven delegates, Fisher, Steve Appel and John Mack fices and found the city council! cringing there behind a screen of bulls, dicks, and guards. \ when the demands were presented ‘the councilmen were silent, but May- or Gross quavered that the city council covld not appropriate any- thing for relicf. Fisher’s answer was that the jobless know the city coun- cil never. intended to do anything for the starving unemployed here, | but that the jobless ‘will refuse to starve. The demonstrators marched thru ithe streets, held another moeoting rot.44 more members for the un- 11.—Five | 5,000 Hungry Demonstrate in Denver; Cops Guard Food Store push through the door to lay their cemands before the mayor, The po- lice pushed them back, but one, a woman delegate named Wherry, got inside. She went right on and told the mayor she represented the un- employed here, and wanted to know what he was going to do for them. The mayor evaded. He wanted her to call him up and make an appoint- ment by telephone. man threw her out. to talk from the city hall steps, and the detectives and “yellow dogs” pounced upon him from all direc- tions. At the same time, ail the po- ie began an attack on the crowd. Fifteen workers, were arrested. . * Demonstrate In Rain. SAN FRANOISCO, Calif, Feb. 11. one @ woman, strated in the rain at Third and Stevenson in support of the delega- tion in Washington for the Unem- ployment Insurance Bill, demanding immediate relief and pledging sup- port to the Daily Worker. The demonstration demanded the immediate release of the Imperial Valley prisoners, Mooney, Billings and all other class war prisoners, Tt demanded the repeal of the criminal syndicalist law. Following the demonstration the workers marched in the rain to the headquarters. Many signed up in the Unemployed Council, pledging | support to the international demon- stration on Feb, 25 against unem- ployment. March fro m4 Points TOLEDO, Ohio, Feb. 10, —- Hunger marches lasted from 5 p, m. to 8 p. m. here yesterday. Two thousand workers and unemployed workers took part in the marching. The parades started a tfour points and met at the Court House Park? where seven speakers were heard. Pennsylvania ene ne Out For Insurance for Unemployed received that United Mine Workers District President Boylan sent orders to the hall owner not to let the job- less use the hall, and on being told that the meeting was going to take place, himself called in the state po~ lice. The “Times Leader” reports that the rank and file of the U. M. W. are criticizing their officials because nothing is being done in the way of relief. The U. M. W. instead is helping the companies enforce their new and harder rules about “clean coal”, “big car loads”, ete, and is planning to agree to a wage cut. ° Council Grows. CHESTER, Pa, Feb. 11. — Five hundred Nero and white workers demonstrated for unemployment in- surance here yesterday, at the call | of the Chester Council of Unemploy- ‘od. They stood throuehout the ine tense cold, and cheered the speakers, Afterwards they marched to the headquarter of the unemployed coun- cil, held another meeting, Pap 100 era and many joined the coun- The day before, there were 50 at the unemployed counci} meeting and 45 of them were Negroes. The same council will hear the Teport of its delegate to Washing- ton, at an open meeting tomorrow, at 120 West Third St. At 11:30 a. m. there will be an hour's talk over Then a police- | Rodgers, the first speawer, started | Special Disk Pages Once a Week Will Lay’ Basis for Solid Circulation in Campaign District pages are not only the latest incent~ Summary By Districts ive toward reaching the 60,000 mark in the cir~ culation drive of the Daily Worker, but will be- come the kernel of mass circulation thruout the 3 2. A > country. A special district page every week, de- : a : Paes ds a ae i voted to local news of interest to workers, in- : 26 54 33 82 ee sé. creases. the effectiveness.of. the paper in. that i oe A ee Oa eS particular section and develops contact for per- |1, Boston 559 420 «656 428) 979 984 5 manert circulation, aN, ¥. 1816 7745 1803 7683 9561 9436 —76 Two districts have already taken the initiative | 3. Phila. 901 1556 898 1065 457 1963 494 in ordering these special pages: After Feb, 13, | 4 Buttato 2446 «607 «244 «397752 110 ;Chicago, every Wednesday, will have four col- : eit i ee at ae ud ue a uae oh. tise. epoond:- page for lis own news ‘ples |, padierg ant att ine 408 ie at tures and advertisements. Philadelphie, the se0- |4 cnicago 1729. 3462 4704 8464 5181 it ond to fall in line, ordered its first page last |4 mopis. S66 878«BT2BRS 1443. un Monday and has selected every Thursday for its [10 Kans.cty 330 488 «6329 «662OT88. 96 special issue, Such districts as California, Seat- | 11 agric. 68 43) (BT 48M — tle, Minneapolis, Detroit, Cleveland and. Pitts- | 12 Seattle 369. 00 870 748 1069 a burgh must participate in ordering district pages. | 13 Call. 872 1505 $69 1260 2377 248 Later, this will lay the basis for special editions | '5- Conn. a lay aan when districts will order special pages every day. ie en hd a These possibilities, when developed, will put lis Batte wld a 25 tremendous.impetus into the drive until the goal | 19 penrer youn 24 A for 60,000 Daily Worker readers is attained. Unors. 10088. si The offer to districts is four columns of space ey) Sere on the second page every week on condition that 11080 21939 11038 21368 $3019 32406 —603 districts order at least 2,000 copies of that.issue, | Note:—Tnese tables do not Include miscellaneous, $8 per thousand to be paid in advance. All copy | foreign and special editions. The average press run must be in three days in advance, of the date of | for the past week was 31,560, issue. For a Friday paper, material must be in by Tuesday, Circulation figures in this week's tables do Philadelphia Shows Largest Cut for Week District 3, Philadelphia, has the biggest drop of 494 after last week’s increase of 532 in special orders... District .7, Detroit, ts -next-with-a loss.of-. 296, following solid increase last week of 244. District 12, California drops by 248 due, prin- cipally, te Sacramento’s cut in bundles from 250 to “90, vecorded in Monday’s issue, District 4, Buffalo, shows a decrease of 110, mostly due to special orders which boosted last week‘s figure, but which are now dropped. District 15 Conn. Outstanding Gain The inost outstanding gain for the week is found in District 15, Connecticut, which put on a@ gain of 341, of which 204 are special orders. This f.gure is aided by Danbury’s regular order of 150 copies a day which the fur strike there stimulated. A number of Red Builders News Clubs have been planned in various parts of the country: Saginaw, Mich., San Antonio, Tex., Mobile, Ala., South Bend, Ind., Barberton, Ohio, Mil- waukee, Wis. and San Francisco, Cal. We would like to get some reports from these sec- tions so that these may be added to the list of functioning News Clubs, or be assisted in deve- loping their organizations. Unemployed coun- cils are recruiting their members into the News Clubs, and Barberton, Ohio, is the first to form one independently, Fraternal Organizations Join 60,000 Campaign The Finnish Workers’ Federation of Colum~- bus, Mont., is the first fraternal organization to enlist its membership in the Daily Worker campaign, and has alreau, appointed a Daily Worker agent to speed the work in the organi- zation. Fraternal organizations sympathetic to the revolutionary movement can thus assist the Daily Worker in its drive for 60,000 readers. Class conscious workers must intensify their fight against unemployment and boss exploita- tion by organizing against mass lay-offs, wage cuts and starvation. The Daily Worker is the sharpest weapon in the fight for immediate un- | employment relief. Mass circulation will rally | thousands for hunger marches and demonstra~ tions, demanding Unemployment Insurance. 1) Organize Unemployed Councils to Fight} —’| for Unemployment Relief. Organize the WALL ‘ST. PROFITS ON PEONAGE AND FORCED LABOR IN GUATEMALA Even Children Are Forced Into Slavery to Pay “Debt” of Parents Woll Is Silent About Convict Labor in Latin America; Wants War On Soviets By HARRISON ¢ GEORGE. HAT about this “forced labor,” workers? You have read that, on- Tuesday, the American capitalist government has barred Soviet lumber. But it does not bar Cuban sugar, which last week the Daily Worker exposed as produced by forced labor! Today, the Daily Worker takes up another case of “forced labor,” by American imperialist bankers and plantation owners in Guatemala. Not a single grain of coffee enters the United States from Guatemala, but what is the product of forced labor! It is picked by the hands of Indian plantation » ssa workers, which the 1931 “World Al-| knives, sacks and baskets to pick cof= “ade manac” itself on page 666 admits are | j fee), They are charged with ‘held under a system of peonage” or | vances,” usually for their chear cot- od practical slavery. | The population of Guatemala js | ton clothes and their miserabi 2,500,000. And 60 per cent of these | tation. They are charged with “fines” are pure blood native Indians. And | imposed at will by the boss, and de these 60 per cent—these 1,500,000 | signed to keen the worker in debt ne workers—are practically the slaves,| matter how hard he tries to make Guatemalan Indian workers, such as are held in virtual slavery by debt to plantation owners, their labor forced by Guatemalan law, picks every grain of coffee coming from Guatemala to the U. S. A. the property, of 2,700 landowners. enough to pay up. 2,000 Demonstrate. DULUTH, ‘Ainn.,, Feb. 11. — Two | thousand demonstrators for the Wor- kers Unemployment Insurance Bill presented an ultimatum to the city council here yesterday. They were out in weather two degrees below zero. There was a great militancy, and the crowd forced the police to release two speakers they had ar- rested, Hundreds of unemployed marched through the steel city under placards carrying slogans: “We Will Take It.” The demonstration forced a con- cession, a-promise not to shut off gas of unemployed workers, and to abolish the vagrancy laws. re, re March on Socialist Mayor READING, Pa., Feb. 11.—A thous- ound marched to the city hall here yesterday and demonstrated for the Workers Unemployment Insurance bill. A delegation of seven interviewed Mayor Stump, and this socialist party LOS ANGELES, Cal., Feb. 11—Ten thousand unemployed here demon- strated in the face of 500 police, na~ tional guard and the fire department. yesterday. The city hall was guarded. by pol- ice and machine guns. A Japanese worker was brutally assaulted by the police “red squad” while addressing the crowd. Placards were displayed and leaf- Jets thrown out announcing the meet~ ing which will be addressed Feb. 18 by William Z, Foster, general secre- tary of the Trade Union Unity League. The police raided the offices of the ‘Trade Union Unity League, the Com- munist Party, the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, and the co-operative. They held A, Romani ‘on suspicion of criminal syndicalism.’ ‘The International Labor Defense office was raided and everything brok- en up. The police have closed Plummers Park against the meeting “Sunday for Foster. The meeting was to be ® picnic. Another arrangement has been made. Foster will speak at a banquet at 7 p. m. Sunday, at The Co-operative, 2706 Brooklyn. On Wednesday, Feb. 18, in the eve- ning, Foster will speak at a mass meeting at Walker Auditorium, 730 South Grand St. * 9 Arrested In Sacramento SACRAMENTO, Cal., Feb. 11.—Two thousand demonstrated in the plaza of Sacramento, the state capitol of not reflect these district editions. Philadelphia Summary By Cities really started this week with a special order of 12,000 of Monday’s paper. The coming week will reflect increases in Chicago, which gets a j ayo H its special page on Friday. THE CIRCULA- i aa 4s 86 TION GAINED BY SPECIAL DISTRICT 3 se af af 2 PAGES IS THE BEST POSSIBLE CIRCU- — = LATION BECAUSE THE PAPER IS MADE | Bosten 83 8388 MORE READABLE TO WORKERS WHO RE- | Newark 1% 2600 76 CEIVE IT IN THAT LOCALITY. 5 Ue i 10g0 6440 1052 —8 . 61 1386 Special Orders ae 48 36 for the Week ecu. saat : Following are the special orders for the week: | Putfele RIE tae bss District 2, Perth Amboy, 348; Dist. 4, James- |Reebenter,, Sf tt ey town, N, ¥., 216; Dist. 6, Youngstown, Ohio, 498; | \xron e gs abe ee Dist. €, Moline, Ill., 96; Chicago, 16; Dist. 10, Salt Canton. ii ee a | Lake City, 300, San Antonio, Tex. 50, Center- | roledo..... 88 145 87 —t ville, Ia, 12; Dist. 15, Ansonia, Conn. 16, Dan- | Cleveland 367 412368 Fy bury 900, New Haven, 300. | Detrott .. 934 1563 938 =“ Circulation figures in the tables this week \Geand-Rapid) 89 100 80 show a decrease of 603. This may partly be | Milwaukee RR IY AE 6 explained by last week's. special orders of 1,- | S* Ees'® fae oe aaae : 009 which boosted the total gains, ‘These are | Snean: Ae eens ’ now taken off, leaving a gain, apparently, of (s¢ paul . $7 9288 400. However, figures in this week's table are ow 633) 66 also stimulated by special orders to the extent 31 186 88 of 500, so that the net result for the week is 7% .308 «73 49) @ loss of 100 a day in bundle orders. While a =1 this drop is mainly due to orders boosted too AOS ABA” 35% 18 hastily, it also shows that circulation is ‘be- SA es ae 2 48 2) coming solidified. Solid growth is what counts, lm ame a al| and not flashy, spectacular advance orders van " Denver ..~ 72 206 ce) ry which later must be dropped. | oxta, city wy 100 10 member declared that he was against capitalism, but that the demands of the unemployed for insurance, for immediate relief, against evictions, etc., were illegal. Stump had the nerve to say that the Daily Worker is lying when it tells of the starving unemployed in Reading. This in the face of facts, and the admission that a family of eight receives but $4 weekly even if it gets “relief” here. Hofmeister was spokesman of the committee of the jobless, Shields, a Negro worker, and Scott, of the Communist Party, spoke, exposing Stump and the socialist party hy- pocrisy. The unemployed declared they would continue the fight. After the return of their commit- tee, the demonstrators decided they would use the city hall as an audi- torium and marched in to hear the report of their delegation. A resolution was passed, calling for a bigger demonstration on Feb. 25. Angered at 10,000 Demonstrators Angeles Cops Raid All Offices employment insurance. Six hundred marched on the capitol building where the joint unemployed councils committee presented demands for the release of the Imperial Valley pris- oners and of ail political prisoners. The demonstrators then marched. back to headquarters of the Councils of the Unemployed, where they were attacked by the police and the crowd broken up. Nine were arrested. Many were badly beaten up. The headquarters were smashed The demonstrators resisted mili- tantly. STEEL DOCTOR KICKS WORK! Sick Man Thrown Out, of Dispensary (By a Worker Correspondent.) SPARROWS POINT, Mde=¥eb, 11. —in the Bethlehem Steel Mill a sick worker is looked upon as undesirable and hated by the little bosses and the doctors. All these small flunkies are 80 sold to the company, bedy and soul, that when a sick worker comes before them they worry and fret themselves sick until the worker gets back on the job to produce profits for the company. An opener in the tin mill strained his back and chest from lifting the gles Employed Workers Unions. Mobilize the Employed and Unemployed for Common Strug- Into Fighting ©~ Under the Leadership of the Trade Union Unity League “Investigation” Shows ’ (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) this morning’s paper and does not represent local conditions only. When the Red Cross announced in September that they would furn- ish no food, those on the inside of social work felt it was a wise an- nouncement at that time as it forced the planting of fall gardens by many who might not otherwise have done so, The Extension Division advised us that some 45,000 gardens were Planted, which far exceeded anything ever done in spring gardening. Thous- ands of families canned meat in August, though of course that was a new venture and they had to depend on the direction of the demonstration agent and the ability to chill the meat. As the fall moved on most of us felt that we would be able to hendle our own situation, with a question mark about some of the poorest counties. You may remember that certain tin mill dispensary, where an “iodine expert” told him to go back to work. The worker then went to the main dispensary, and there the “iodine ex- perts” demanded that he go back to work, despite his protest that he was very sick. The opener said if I go to work, you will be responsible. The doctor said he would not be respon-~ sible for anything, and with that one doctor opened the door and the other doctor kisked the worker out of the dispensary. The worker was forced to pay $4 for treatment of injuries received from the doctor and in the mill, “You ro to worl, br don’t tell them I sent you over to work, but that you asicd to mo to work yourself.” They use this scheme the “employees’ representative” he was told that nothing could be done about it because there were no out- ward marks to show what the doctor did. ORGANIZE TO END STARVATION; _DEMAND Ni | here packn of 1 en reported to the! RELUBES ~* At the very outset, the doctor said L| to the man: “Terrible Harvest of Tuberculosis and Pellagra Growing in Arkansas” Farmers and Workers Starve Together, While Wage Cutting Drive Is Pushed sections of the state—and they are wide spread—have suffered from a series of floods. The failure of the American Exchange Trust Company early in November precipitated our crisis, as it took one-third of the purchasing power of the city of Lit- tle Rock right off the map and was followed by a perfect debacle of bank failures, more than a hundred, or one-fourth of our total number of banks having closed in the past sixty days, and the end is not yet. A few of them have been reorganized, but there are counties in the state with- out a single bank. You will realize also that this as so terribly crippled the people who had something and who certainly would have stood by. Our Christmas Seal Sale has been terrible and the letters which came in were: absolutely heartbreaking in their revealations of destitution and stark want. We open many of them in this office and a great many were referred back to our county chairmen for attention of the Red Cross chap- ter. The local Red Cross units have done everything humanly possible to meet the need, but they have not behind them adequate funds from statement of the National chairman to the contrary notwithstanding. The attitude of division and National Red Cross has been incredibly blind. The England food riot was not disorderly, but it was determined. When a chap- ter has $3,000 and a thousand families on its hands the situation is evident. Tn one of the worst hit counties, Yell, I was advised by a worker yesterday that Red Cross headquarters: have “Heen closed three weeks with a sign m the door stating the chapter was out of funds, That county had a ornado in December to add to its sought to suppress the true situation. The state health officer is in close touch with the terrible situation and he says conditions are appalling ex- cept that three or four counties in northwest Arkansas are better off for food than the rest of the state, wu) National headquarters,, the press | PAZ0® ‘These feudal barons are Germans, native Guatemalans and Americans, the Unite’ Fruit Company monopol- | izing banana production. Every worker is held in bondage to the landowner by a develish sys- | tem of “debt.” The symbol of slavery being a little book, carried by every Indian worker in Guatemala, in which his “wages” are entered by the land- | owner, and the “debt” the worker owes to his master. On the inside cover of each little book is the “contract” by which the worker is bound by the law of Guat- | emala to life-long servitude at forced labor. This “contract,” printed in Spanish, translated into English, reads as follows: “Contract of work of the ‘mozo cuardillero’ (agricultural worker) with the plantation (blank for the name of plantation) owned by (blank for name of plantation own- er). “I declare to owe, in account with said plantation (its name) owned by (owner’s name) for an indefinite time and at the rate of pay used in said plantation; de~- ducting with my own personal la- bor the debt contracted; and re- signing to look for work with any other contractor, not to leave the plantation without permission from the boss, and without having paid my debt. I agree to remain sub- jected to the conditions above men- tioned and to fulfill the obligations contained in Articles 23, 27, 28, and 29 of Decree No. 486 and Article 1578 and 61 of the Civil Code.” So the laws of the nation of Guat- emala guarantee the feudal slave- holders the forced labor of 1,500,000 workers! And the “usual wages” of these workers for 14 hours a day is two and one-half cents! An American worker who recently visited Guatemala examined these horrible little bovks. ‘This is his story of what follows the ‘contract’ on their “The rest of the book serves to record what the Indian gets from the landowner, in goods or in cash wages. But he never gets to see a penny of cash wages. Because on the opposite page he is charged with every im- eginable thing, beginning even with the fee demanded by the labor con- tractor who obtained the workers for the landlords, Their land has been stolen and they,have no way to live unless they do “agree” to this slave contract. “They are charged also with work- ing instruments (machetes or work- Brateful 1f you will present this mat- are sending this letter to sev~ eral other state secretaries and a copy to the National. We wired yo Jast night direct without waiting go through the National because we were afraid of delay as we saw the newspaper reports of proceedings in Washington. Thanking you in advance. Sincerely yours, (Signed), ment “Each Guaie: an ‘peso’ is worth one and one-third American cents, and, examining the books of thirty Indians who had, in desperation, run away from the plantation “El Za- pote,” owned by Senor Hasiastiche Plantagen, where they had worked for nearly ten years, from October, 1920 to February, 1930, I selected one | book as an ave example. “There were six entries showing the wages credited to the worker from October, 1920, to February, 1930, a tetal for nearly ten years work of 6,605 pesos, or what in American money would be about $88.07! No wonder, with such wages, their labor had to be obtained by force! “This is a wage that, however mis- erable may be the worker's food and clothing, he can not help living up and exceeding, and thus being bound in debt for life to the plantation, and even if he dies his children are obliged to work out his debt to the plantation owner! “He is bound to the plantation and }sold with it! In fact the value of a plantation depends on the number of ‘contracted Indians.’ “Fifty million dollars of American capital are invested in Guatemala absolutely because these Indians are force to do work for 2 1-2 cents a day, and thereby produce enormous super- profits. “Go where you will in Guatemala, you will see the branch offices of Grace and Co., and other American coffee merchants. “In the cities you will see the branches of Morgan’s National City Bank, financing the coffee and sugar crops, half of which is iniported into the United States. “More, you will find there, a group of corrupt ‘labor leaders’ with a paper organization called a ‘Confederation of Labor’ which is part of Matthew Woll’s and Bill Green's Pan-Ameyican Federa- tion of Labor, but which prevents organization of these Indian workers and acts as a tool of the government, just as that government acts as a tool of American imperialism.” Workers! Matthew Woll and Con- Sressman Fish howl for an embargo on Soviet products. They gabble about “forced labor”—in the. Soviet Union—but they are silent on the real forced labor of a million and a half workers of Guatemala, here at Amer- ica’s door! Why? Because American capital cannot profit from the work- ers in the Soviet Union where the workers have overthrown capitalism, while it does profit from the slavery of Guatemalan workers. And Woll and Fish are supporters of American capitalists! CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDAIGET PROLETABIAN VACATION PLACR OPEN TRE ENTIBE THAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $11 A WEEK CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, §.¥