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— 2 + $80 a month and keeps, DAILY WwoRnun, heW Luan, WabiesDAY, boon Ai ( 18, 1981 lwo Big Bank Crashes in Sioux City, Ia., Pricks Bubble of ‘Prosperity’ Unemployment and Hunger Grows Despite! Bouses Bunk of Better Times Daily Worker: The workers in Sioux City have ‘finally found out what capitalist prosperity really is, and what methods are used to Sioux City, Iowa. keep them blinded to the actual conditions- During the year 1930 and especially in the fall the Cham- ber of Commerce conducted a vigorous prosperity campaign through the medium of the two local yellow journals. pointed out that Sioux City was in the heart of the only district that was untouched by hard nae and unemployment. Banks Crash. This fake prosperity was brought to a show-down on Dec. 7, when two of the leading banks went broke, fol- lowed by thirteen member banks, in- volving over 15,000 worker depositors. ‘This was the capitalists’ Christmas present to the workers, On Jan. 1 the capitalists handed | Tae unemployment and hunger ha: been getting worse. Workers and farmers in the Sioux City territory, wake up, get to think. They ing. Don’t wait for a breadline. Join the Communist Party or the Unem- ployed Council and fight to get what you have produced and what right- ?maha Jobless to March for Relief On February 25 (By a Worker Correspondent) Omaha is organizing to demon- strate. After the enthusiastic meeting of Feb. 10 at which Wm. Z. Foster was the principal speak- er, the workers of Omaha seem to realize more than ever the need of organization and demonstra- tion. Every day since-the meet- ing, thé workers come up to the Center, at 11714 N. 16th St. and are joining the TUUL and the Unemployed Council. The workers in Omaha are plan- ning a large demonstration on Feb. 25 and the present indica- tions are that Omaha will see the greatest demonstration in its his- tory on that date. iS Unity For Feb. 25th All Bodies Should Put Special Issue Labor BOSSES ORDER BURNING OF 3,000 CHINESE MINERS Pitheads “Cl losed to) Save Property liberately ordered the burning of 3,000 | miners trapped in a mine fire, in| order to save the property of the| owners, is the report contained in| two capntalist newspapers in Peiping, China. The news was wired there | Pao. When a fire broke out in the Fu- shun mines, owned by Japanese im- perialists, in order to keep the fire property, mines to be sealed, condemning the 3,000 Chinese miners working in them That imperialist. m mine owners de-| from Mukden by the correspondent | of .the . Yung. -Pao-and--the Takung} from spereading and destroying mine | the bosses ordered the} Page Three Worker Correspondence Class in Chicago School Registration for the Workers Correspondence Class may be made Fri- day evening at 8 p. m. at the People’s Auditorium, 2457 W. Chicago Ave., or by mail to 1413 W. 18th St. This is a practical course devoted to the question of editing shop papers as well as Workers’ Correspondence proper. Good English is not essential. For other courses, registration should be made at 1413 W. 18th Street. FUNDAMENTALS OF COMMUNISM. Instructors: D. E. Earley; Ly- dia Bennett, Eugene Bechtold, N, Ross etc. Places: 1355 W. 14th St., Friday; 3335 S. State St. Tuesday; 4848 So. Ashland Ave., Friday; 2457 West Chicago Ave. Wednesday, 1041 Milford Ave.; all at 8 p.m. PRINCIPLES AND PROBLEMS OF PARTY ORGANIZATION. L. Litt. Every Tuesday 7:30 p.m. » PRINCIPLES OF MARXISM-LENINISM. E. Gardos: Every Tuesday at pam. |. COURSE FOR TRADE UNION FUNCTIONARIES, Instructor: Phil. Frankfeld. Every Wednesday 8:30. WORKERS CORRESPONDENCE 1, COURSE, Instructor: Foreign Engineers [Technical Experts f and Hungary Den open letter to the press roundly cor the ; concerning. forced. labor—in | viet Union. | Barbara Rand. Every Friday 8 p.m. Besides these courses of 12 sessions each, there will be lecture courses, every Saturday at 3 p.m., dealing with the following subjects: History of the Communist Party of U.S.A—Instructor, B. K. Gebert. History of the American Labor Mi | MOSCOW.—A group of foreign en- | thing gineers and other technical experts | forced labor. |in the Soviet Union have issued an| In Soviet Union Issue Letter Scoring Lies About Forced Labor In the Soviet Union rom America, y Forced Labor Y Ger many ‘arn In Capitalist Press even remotely resembling On the contrary they had observed n-| that the working masses were taking demning the slanderous allegations | voluntary part in the general con- 1 So-| structive work and enthusiastically in | support of the plans. The signatories The letter declares that the under-/ appeal to all other foreign engineers, signed are in the employment of | technical workers, etc., to join in the various Soviet institutions, that they | have worked all over the country and | that they have never observed ove protest and to demand in their home countries that the unscrupulous cam~- paign against the Soviet Union in to death inside the roaring furnace. The correspondent of the two Chi- nese papers gave details of the pa-| Eugene Bechtold, jovement—Instructor, D. 1» Earley. History of the Ist, 2nd, and Communist International—Instructor, but the usual “return to prosperity” | fully belongs to you. yunk. In spite of their lying predic- —A Worker. 4,000 Out of 11,000 Left In McCormick Works Chicago, Tl Two years ago 11,000 worked in the McCormach Co. Today there are less than 4,000. What became of the other 7,000? They're probably starving somewhere in the bread lines, or at home if they are lucky enough to have one. And the com- Pany uses these unemployed as a means of cutting our wages. The boss says “if you don’t like the rates, you can go home. There's thousands of men to take your place.” So we got to take it or leave | it as long as we are unorganized. I see in the Chicago Tribune that the company has “given” $100,000 to the Red Cross Drive. The Red Cross wants to use the money to give crumbs of charity to the far- mers to try to keep them from or- ganizing and fighting. The com- pany is very generous with our money. Now they'll cut the wages in all their plants and get back the | money 10 times over. —McCormack Slave. McKeesport Jobless Forced to Sleep In Jail McKeesport, Pa. Comrade Editor:— ‘We unemployed workers in Mc Keesport are chased from one place to another just like dogs when they are not wanted, I went one night to the police station to sleep. They told me to sleep one night only then beat it. | this work? While entering I saw the cells full , of unemployed workers sleeping on bare boards. Became Sick. I got sick at this and tried to get another place to sleep. I went into a box car and tried to sleep. I laid in a corner till four o'clock in ti. morning and heard a voice. A r: road bull told me to beat it. I did and walked the streets all morning. It was 10 o'clock and I decided to go to’the Salvation Army to get something to eat. They gave me this so-called soup snd asked me if I wanted to work. Daily Worker, Gentlemen: I've been reading the Worker and | Brooklyn, N. Y. my vote against the “system.” there is something wrong with me, that I can’t get a permanent job. Recently I worked a week for a | publisher of a pocket joke book. He; ‘told me if things “went well” the job ‘would last. It didn’t last because he Milwaukee, Wisc. | Editor Daily Worker: | Thave tried to get work all over | the country last fall and this win- | ter, but I was unable to find any _ work to do, My buddy and I have been offered work for 25 cents a | day, and to feed and room ourselves on this amount, but even this offer was turned down, they told us that LAWRENCE, Mass.—While the un- »mployed march the streets day af- ver day and are at all times tossed round like animals and not like hu- ae beings they are very much sur- brised and also disgusted to pick a ocal daily and to be greeted by a we item announcing that the newly fata? alderman of the Health and harities Dept. the department that tives the small sum of a couple of ollars a week to the poor unfor- unates as they call them when they \pply for afd or rather ask for some- hing that rightfully belongs to them, hoves into the city home and then ‘ppoints himself as superintendent nd his wife as matron at a salary Whole Family Profits Being the father of 10 children ! the city, thereby saving the Budke $30,000 DAILY WORKER carne pani FUND Enclosed find ... We pledge to build RED SHOCK TROOPS for the successful eigen of the $30,000 DAILY WORKER EMERGENCY FUND I and three others said yes. The captain took us down the cellar and told us to peel potatoes. It was two days’ work there and we said, what shall we get for doing The captain said: ll rive you two bowls of soup instead of one.” Did we take that job? Eell, no. We Must Fight. Workers, how much longer are we going to stand for this rotten capitalist system. Are we going to put our hands in our pockets and starve? No. Let's put a finishix, touch to this rotten system so ou: “dren won't have to sufic when they grow up. Let’s have our children say this “look what our fathers gave us by fighting in an organized mannc. a workers’ and farmers’ govern- | ment.” put into effect in this department {when men are hired for two weeks and then laid off and walk the streets for another indefinite period. If they are lucky they may be able to secure & couple of days work while the rush lasts. Join the Unemployed Council at 1134 Lacust Street. —F. H. Office Workers Now Ready to Fight couldn’t get me drunk enough to Took the door and make “things go well. Another job I had for two months seldom see anything by an office with a music house. worker and am registering herewith | branch offices closed, due to the gen- I’m eral slump and my job was given to & stenographer and have been out) a woman who had worked in the | of work a year. When I tell a pros-| branch office for 20 years. pective employer that I’ve only had just about finished paying the agency | temporary jobs they seem to think | for the position. One of their I had Am I ready to fight? I am! hope you of the Daily Worker can tell me some way I can personally do my bit. I’m ready to do anything from selling “Dailies” to soapboxing. Searched All Over Wisconsin for Work Lawrence, Mass., Alderman Piles Up Money While Jobless Roam Streets Hungry family a very tidy sum that enable him to possibly retire for life. In ad- dition to this the writer who ts a mill employee and a citizen of this city feels that it is unnecessary to add insult to injury by employing his sons in a municipal job making three members of the new alder- man’s femily working and drawing good pays while many walk the Streets. @ person feel different about things is only natural that the children| and when the time comes many a o along with their father and moth- | mill worker will remember this in- |; and also be fed- by the taxpayers| sulting move. Clara C. they had no work for themselves. We were in the following towns looking for work: Green Valley, Leona, Tipler. They said that they had plenty men working for them for their board and tobacco, and told us to go somewhere where we can ¢arn a couple of nickels. They didn’t tell us where to go, though. There ain’t no such place. —A. G. ‘The so-called stagger system is also It is things like this that makes ae in Orders Now NEW YORK.—Wednesday, Feb. 25, is International Fighting Day Against | | Unemployment. ;and unemployed, throughout the | world, will demonstrate, Mass dem-| | onstrations will be held all over the | United States. New York will wit- | ness one of the largest mass demon- | strations against unemployment ever | held in this city. ‘The Trade Union Unity League, the | organizer of these demonstrations | throughout the United States, is making all efforts to mobilize the | employed and the unemployed work- fers, and for this reason the oficial organ, Labor Unity, will come out in 100,000 copies. | assigned a quota of 25,000. The Trade Union Unity Council is | | calling on all unions, T. U. U. L.! Leagues, Unemployed Councils, Workers’ Clubs and other workers’ | organizations to order their bundles immediately and give the Labor | Unity the widest distribution possible. This special issue sells in bundle or- | ders at 11-2 cents per copy. This issue will be off the press | Wednesday, Feb. 18. Order your ‘wndle at once from Labor Unity, 16 W. 2st St. “ET. COPS. PRO- ACT JOB SCRE Attack Protest Meet at Agency BALTIMORE, Md., Feb. 17. — The unemployed covncils of Baltimore mobilized at the Maryland Help As- seciation on 108 Clay Street to pro- ost against the robbing of workers vho apply there for a job. Ethel Kennedy, a young Negro irl worker, had been given a maid | job through that agency and a charge | of $3.20 was taken out of her first pay. The job turned out to be a | regular slave job instead of the type | of job promised. She was supposed | to get $8 a week, but for nine days’ work she received only $5.60. After ouitting her job, she went back to *he employment agency to demand *ne $3.20, but was refused by the ‘job sharks’, A committee was sent down to the agency with Ethel Kennedy, but the demand was ignored, so a special | leaflet was issued and workers were mobilized there. The police came out in Jarge numbers to protect the “job sharks”, When the speaker of the Unemployed Council, Rothwell, be- gan to speak, he was dragged off the box, and a fight ensued. Riot squads were called in from all parts who were laying in waiting. The most brutal methods were used | against the workers. A young Negro worker, who was arrested was treated so roughly, that even some “south- ern ladies” were horror-struck at, the police treatment. Five workers were arrested including a girl worker. $75 a Week Officials of AFL Union Oust Man for 2 Month Dues PASSAIO, N. J., Feb. 16, —Officers | of the Bricklayers, Masons and Plas- terers International Union of Amer- ica (AFL) get $75 a week. Out of 450 members in Local 12, Passaic, only 30 are working, and 20 of these are on a job in Passaic. They are mostly henchmen of the officials. But Louls Rabinowitz, a member of the union since 1905, always paid up | until last November, since which he | has got behind two months in the $2.50 @ month dues because he has been out of work for a year, was ex- | pelled by these officials with sudden ruthlessness for “non-payment.” ‘The reason is that he has been a militant rank and filer, and the of- | i} Not a Red Yet, But... | CUT THIS OUT AND MAIL IMMEDIATELY TO THE DAILY WORKER, 50 E. 13th ST., NEW YORK CITY | \ ! RED SHOCK TROOPS For seeeyes Collars. eer rere reer i eer errr Tre erer rrr Terre Ty seabedeeeeseevectedescaptestuebeevevessesetens ficials didn’t like him. , | the New York has been | three councilmen were deferred until a later date. thetic scenes at the pithead when) relatives begged that the mines be thrown open so that the miners be given a chance for their lives, But imperialist masters, to save) | money, refused to let the mines be} Workers, employed | open, insuring the death of the Chi- | nese miners, At the same time, the Takung Pao | recalls that 1,000 miners perished un- der similar circumstances in 1917 at these very same mines, The imperialist masters feel that | | human flesh is very cheap and much | less valuable than their dollars, and ccld-bloodly burn 3,000 workers to} death, /OBLESS COUNCIL ices DEMANDS : Yorkers of C Collinwood | Demand Relief (By a Worker Correspondent) CLEVELAND, O., Feb. 17. — The her Body Collinwood Unemployed | souncil organized a demonstration cday at the Community Fund at Collinwood. The council elected a | | committee of five members to go to | the Community Fund Office and de- mand adequate,relief for the unem- ployed workers. Many cases have been brought to | the ‘nemployed courictl in regard to | way ‘the fund treats unemployed workers. ‘When a worker was s7> Thursday, the reply was “let him A week before a w id that, three-and-a-half dollars a week was enough for any worker with {a few childrén. Discrimination is racticed against the Negro workers cd they are given no relief, When the committee accompanied | by 100 members of the council and | yout three-hundred other workers ched the fund office, they found | 5 police squad cars and about 50 cops mobilized there. The police refused | to allow more than 3 to enter. In| he meantime the workers waited | outside the building for the report of the Committee. The head of the Community Fund | office tried to split the ranks of the committee by telling them “why lo thirty of you march around like his?” He was quickly shut up when a worker asked him “why did you get 50 cops, there is only 30 of us.” This was the biggest mobilization of police that Collinwood has ever seen. The Unemployed Council will use the reply of the Community Fund ‘o prove to the workers that no re- lef is forthcoming without. struggle. | In the meantime every case that the | council forced on the Community | Fund the council managed to win| some better conditions for the work-| ers. Next Friday night the council will hold a mass meeting for both the | | Fisher Body Workers and the unem- | ployed workers of Collinwood to mo- | bilize the workers for the Interna- | tional Unemployment Day and} against the terrific wage cut drive initiated by the Fisher Body Corp- oration. Already workers quit in large numbers in every department and there is great possibility for a mil- itant strike against the wage cuts. The workers of Collinwood, employed and unemployed, will not starve, w ‘Communists Plan to Put Ticket In Field In_ Columbus (By a Worker Correspondent) COLUMBUS, Ohio, Feb, 17—The Communist Party has nominated a worker candidate for mayor in this city. Petitions are now being circu- lated to place the name of W. F. Haycock on the ballot for the fall | election on Nov. 3. It will be necessary to secure 2,000 | Signatures of registered voters, All| workers are urged to aid in this work. Ratification meetings will be held in the near future. Nominations for city clerk and for NITGEDAIGET CAMP AND HOTEL PROLUTARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $17 A WEEK CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, §.¥ PHOND 131 500; Dist. 9, Minn, 340; Albany, 150; Erle, 100, a tin ae i hche an ste oe Admission to each course is 15e. SEND TROOPS TO PERU OIL STRIKE Cerro Repays British for Support Another strike has broken out in the oil fields of Peru in the Talara oil region. Associated Press reports | state that troops have been sent against the strikers. | dispatch to the New York Times. “True to its real function, the San-| “Peiping legation circles learn,” chez Cerro government, which is afd- | says this cable “that Sun Li-Chiang’s ing American and British imperial-| troops (a part of the Nationalist m, has issued an order against the| army sent against the Red forces), strikers reading: on the eve of their departure for an “ i | anti-bandit campaign in Kiangs!, mu- The govenment is taking steps to} ®™ | put an end rapidly and easily to such tinied near Tsining on Wednesday, a state of affairs.” | cutting railways and telegraph lines. ‘ th ti i f The Talara oil fields are worked | , ae nae alieiasyed Lie largely by British and Series ee | workers on the Peiping-Tientsin sec- | a va aires Bact ad the Hon of the Pelblog-Mukden allway ¥ . Fri which . Sanchez Cerro government wants to etinre dion pork Dae saeantee show his royal nibs that it is not| sttiement of their grievances” and eset ei of the aid British imper- | blocked the traffic until they got a ta eeete aeaparaee ee promise of action on their demands. Peru fascist dictatorship will repay che oil magnates by shooting down strikers, ANTI-RED TROOPS © MUTINY IN CHINA) 300 Railwaymen Go Out On Strike Significant news of more mutineys | in Chiang Kai Shek’s troops that were sent against the Communist forces is contained in a special cable USE PORCHES FOR KINDLING. MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Unemployed workers here are tearing down the porches of their homes for kindling wood. One Negro worker was fined 10 and 30 days on the chain gang on charges brought against him by his landlord. FARM CHILDREN DIE FAST Denver, Colo—A recent inves- tigation of 386 families of beet su- var workers shows that 187 of the ‘amilies lost 443 children by death, 30 terrible are the conditions on the sugar beet lands. The average death rate for children in this section is over 28 per cent of all children born, Stop the raids on foreign born in the factories. Elect delegates to the Conference for Protection of Foreign Born in your city. this day all over the world | ers. WINONA JOBLESS iV ity Rackets (By a Worker Correspondent) WINONA, Minn., Feb, 15.—Near!, | three thousand unemployed in this | little city of twenty thousand are facing starvation under the hunger- rationing charity fakers’ scheme. Explained by the cheating racke ts | of the bourgeois, workers had to sell | honey, apples, coupons, etc., in order | to get a few pennies to save thei families from starvation, while th Poor Commissioner paid the few be longing to her clique $10, while most of the workers (with whom the com. missioner is not interested) are lef! to starve on the streets. An unemployed ‘stabilization’ com. mittee was formed under the aus- Eagles, and Trades and Labor Assembly (an AFL | outfit) to fool the unemployed with promises for jobs (jobs, where no jobs | pices of the War Vets, could be created). This committee did not function | | very long because the workers re- | volted against such a silly lot of nonsense. Comrade Gangh went to Winona has a large Dafly; Feb. 5 and now Worker circulai‘on among the work. He has suggesi relief. Workers in Winona should dem- onstrate February 25 along with the countless billions who will take part | ants who are joining the insurzents in the demonstrations scheduled for | MUST ORGANIZE, ictims of B Boss Char- organize under the auspices of the TUUL and its Unemployed Councils to present | their demands to the city for an Unemployment Relief Fund to be | created by taxation upon the bosses of the city. He is urging with the | workers to “unite” and fight for real | | connection with the forced labor | scare be stopped immediately. Amongst the signers are, the fa- mous German architect, Professor Ernst May (Frankfurt am Main), the | Dessau architect Scheper, the Amer- | ican engineer Falk, the American en- | gineer Roerup-Oelsen (Detroit), the German engineer, Dr. Otto Kroll (Hanover), the German engineer G. Vetter, the German engineer, Dr, | Gustav Luetgen and the Hungarian |engineer, Dr. Georg Balog (Buda- | pest). r | ‘REBELS CAPTURE RADIO STATION - Overpower ° G wards ‘and Capture Gracias y | t | Reports from Nicaragua to the army headquarters at Colon, Canal Zone, state that Nicaraguan insurg- | ents fighting against the Wall Street marines in Nicaragua overpowered a detachment of Nicaraguan National Guardsmen in the town of Gracias a Dios and captured the place. Gra- | cias a Dios has a powerful radio sta- tion which is now in the hands of | the Nicaraguan insurgents. The close connection between the large imperialist corporations and the armed forces was strikingly |shown in this instance when the | United Fruit steamship Nicaro was | ordered to the scene of the fighting to aid in recapturing the city. In recent months there has been @ great increase in the armed strug- |gles against United States imperial- ism in Nicaragua. Eleven marines were killed in an encounter with Ni- caraguan insurgents. The economic crisis in Latin America has impover- | ished thousands of Nicaraguan peas- and militantly fighting against Wall Strc & domination. Jobless Councils, News Clubs Keep Up the Tempo of Circulation Campaign; Gain 456 Excluding extra bundles, tables for this week show a solid increase of 432. With special or- ders boosting the Daily Worker circulation by Summary By Districts ing the Feb. 9 edition, totalled 8,605, Other special orders for the week, not includ- coming mainly from the following cities: Hartford, 200; ek, 200; New Castle, Ind., 150; South Chicago ordered 8,000 copies of the Feb. 13 issue, this being their first district page which they are utilizing for the Feb. 25th mob- 273 NEW SUBS AND RENEWALS FOR WEEK One hundred forty-five new subscriptions and Is were received last week. Fifty-three were dropped from the list. The average daily press run last week was lusive of all special editions and spe- DISTRICT PAGES TO BOOST FIGURES NEXT WEEK Battle Cre another 3,000, some of which will remain next i a fo 2 3S 0 8 i Bend, 50. week, With Chicago and Philadelphia retain- : 36 ie ad ie ag Gs 5 ing their special district pages once a week, the ee eee eee SS | drive for circulation is maintaining its pace. Old | 1. Boston 556 428 «509 «428984997 13| ilization, figures are used for District 2, New York since |% N. ¥. 1803 7683 1814 7083 9486 9497 the latest, which would probably show an in- | 8. Phila. 898 1065 904 1093 1963 1997 crease, have been difficult to obtain. The solid . piel ai sia on ne Bon ies ie gain last week reflects a strong movement on | > <s is pa! igual Hie sd ahh peared hod salipad Oca 8 Chicago 1ro4 3464 anes 602 S188 sst0 42] BE BUR he WO Wi > Inemployed ~ | 9 Mt S71 583 678 «G88 «1154 1266 112} cils are energetically pushing the circulation in | 10 Kans.cty 322 662 3824 662884886 2] Baltimore, Allentown, Salt Lake City, Portland, (11 Agric, 57 «43° «60 BB 100118 is} Stockton, Milwaukee, Akron, Erie, 12 Seattle 370 «748 «878 «828 «11s 37,900 excl 18 Calit, 869 1260 875 1102 2129 cial orders. STANDING INCREASE IN 15. Conn, 262 633 «373649895 OU’ 16 Sonth ci samen: ai Fea 17 Birming. 2 eae! DISTRICT 8, CHICAGO 18 Butte. ne Heh oi a 271 60} 19 Denver 113246119246 363 s| District 8, Chicago, shows the highest sol¥i.|Gnorg, sees Ales ae aby ee gain for last week, 142, This is largely due to a raise of 60 for Indianapolis and to the in- creased membership in the Chicago Red Build- ers whose order jumped from 300 to 500 within | ten days. District 9, Minneapolis, helped by the | Milwaukee Red Builders just organized, comes | second with a solid increase of 112. District 12, Seattle, put on a gain of 88, stimulated by the new order for the Portland Unemployed Coun- cil, District 5, Pittsburgh, has shown consid- erable activity recently, and has now put on a solid gain of 78 assisted, principally, by the 11038 21368 1112 foreign and special editions. for the past week exclusive of 37,900, Note:—These tables do not Summary By Cities 0 432 21649 32406 32838 Include miscellaneous, The average press run f all special editions was week, will Feb. 20. District pages will boost the solid circulation next week, delphia, who now receive district pages once a and tables for Chicago and Phila- show considerable increases. Sacra- mento received its special page for February 16 and Connecticut expects a special ba on We want to hear from such districts as Cali- fornia, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Cleveland and Seat- tle, immediately. None of these districts should allow another week to go by without preparing eps . a district page of worker correspondence, local bundle order of 100 daily of the Herminie Un- n 36 ant bey ‘4 s, j news, district campaigns, etc. The offer is for employed Council. In District 4, Buffalo, the i 34 4 44 if ie ii 2 | four columns of space on the second page at Phesathae errentsy ctasielrd vepatd ran a ° oh Re am Ri Leas $8 per 1,000 for not less than 2,000 copies of the lay, whic! largely responsil bu! 's eae ty particular issue to be paid in advance, Send increase to 72, Butte, Mont, (District 18) went apesies ae your orders in! Push the national and distrid up 60. 6 4 1 Circulation figures to the top! 1052 6850 ‘ 2 SAN FRANCISCO SHOWS on ef | TEMPORARY DECREASE 75 879 Wash., D. © 69 7 any —1 The largest drop for the week is shown in | Buffalo oi 203 270 | District 13, California, which fell down to 152 | Rochoster.. sot 122 1| after a cut in bundles in San Francisco, This SAG i408 aye By: is due to the fact that twice as many were Bet ao ordered than could be sold. Now, actual sales ee ere g are going up, A Red Builders News Club has ie. ae vega" been formed, the district is paying bills every 298 1560 2404 1 week, and increases are promised on @ solid |Grand Rapid: 69 100 159 ’ basis. District 6, Cleveland, took a tumble of | mnw: 119 398 520 6 67 this week. St Leu! us 220 338 | Chicege .. 1004 2150 3254 = 100 Minneapolis aT 249 38549 SPECIAL ORDERS ra, | 8 oo 7 Superior 88 99 1 FOR THE WEEK Reomeciy SS a ONE OF He wae 13 35 427 Following are the principal special orders re- | rath Pri a a WZ Me kKED SHOCK ceived for the February 9th edition. Extra Teo0P Mong orders amounted to 22,740, District 3, Phila- LATS TO Day, i) delphia, 12,000; National Office Daily Worker, Le Ye. 3,000; Dist. 7, Detrott, 2,500; Dist. 5, Pittsburgh, Oe, Lio all 2,750; Dist. 8, Chicago, 1,000; Dist. 6, Cleveland, ae tl