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AGAINST HUNGER AND DAI LY WORKER, NEW YORK, Join the Unemployed Editor, Daily Worker: I want to let you know a : vegular investigation as if t! and snoop around the rooms. satisfied with this, they even inquire | bf one’s neighbors all sorts of infor- | mation about the family. This person is a typical bureaucrat and faker of the worst sort. He but bull-dozing’ the unemployed day hfter day, giving themefake prom-/ |ses, ete. He has as his helpers about | half dozen girls who also draw) ‘ice salaries and do -nothing for the | jobless, All of-them are middle class elements and got their jobs through | drag.” Wait in Cold | At 9a, m, the doors open each day for the unemployed to come into the building and to register. ‘Though the jweather may be severely cold, this jcoundrel Polin and his bureaucratic butfit refuse to have the doors opened for the unemployed to, enter. When | jhe doors finally are opened, about | |50 to 250 rush in and register daily. | These unemployed are made to wait) yround in rooms yntil their names re called. Often no names are called + all yntil the jobless get disgusted | rad gradually leave. When names| are called, most of the time without} further ado, the unemployed worker s told there is nothing doing, and} o “come next week.” Sometimes, they eall up one small firm, and vhen they get the usual answer that no help is wanted,” they try to tell he unemployed worker, that they have done all they can for him.” It is well known that the Jewish Free Employment Bureau informs the various small business men in the vicinity, that they will supply him with very cheap help whenever the needs same. I have been here after time, week after week, know that most of the time have no jobs to give out. When time and they This outfit conducts a Jewish Free | ‘Employment Bureau in the same lo-| ration headed bya man named Polin. | Hraws a nice salary doing nothing | Chicago Jewish Charities |Lay-Ofts, Job Bureau a Wage Cutting Cuts Rage in Outfit;BulldozeUnemployed Mansfield, O. Jewish Jobless Haunt Office While Petty Tyrant Lords it Over Them Councils to Fight For Cash Relief From thé Bosses! Chicago, Tl. bout one of the cheap charity outfits in Chicago, the Jewish Charities at Wood St. and Selden Ave. Every day many workers and their wives come to this place to ask for food, clothing, coal in order to keep from starv- talk of putting in a lot of automatic ing. Most of them are turned down cold and women can be, machines so we will still have more seen here daily.crying and begging for help. ucky enough to get a few crumbs of charity have to go through Those who are hey were criminals: Well fed, job, week, and is a job that someone previously had been paid about $25 or $30 a week. Many have been here week after week for over six months and never been handed a job yet. Most of the fellows here are young work Besides the 150 to 250 unemployed men that come here daily at 9 a. m. there are 50 to 150 unemployed girls also coming | daily at 1 p. m. seeking work. | If Polin comes across a militant worker who reads the Daily Worker,}| he refuses to register him on his list. | This bureaucrat also has a way of acting hard boiled to the unemployed workers, refusing to register an un-| employed worker because he comes to the office a few minutes after 9 a. m. Each day, it is a common sight to see hungry unemployed workers who did not have carfare to ride to the unem- ployment office and who therefore had to walk the distance from their homes, thus arriving a few minutes after 9 a, m., begging Polin to be registered. He, however, refuses to do so without exception. This unemployment bureau seems to be conducted for the purpose of keeping the unemployed off the streets as the business men are afraid of hungry, desperate work- | ers turning to “crime” in order to exist, So the policy of the bureau is to make a bluff at registration and to just leave you hang around in the office until about noon time when you are told to go home. It is high time that these unem- ployed be organized into Unem- ployed Councils. A demonstration of the local Unemployed Council outside the unemployment bureau would have a very good effect and would result in thoroughly expos- ing Polin’s outfit for the miserable boss crew that they are. I am sure if this were done, many of us would join the Unemployed Council. they do send soneone down for a (By a Worker Correspondent) OAKLAND, Cal.—Matthew Ban- on, 55, of 1834 San Pablo Ave., died of starvation. He went several ‘times to the Associated Charities for aid. All the red tape and wait- ing was too much for him—when starvation portion was finally allot- him and he received an order for groceries, he could net reach jome in time, dying at 19th and ranklin Sts.,.with.the order in his pocket. Slavery in Washing New York. jo the Editor: Comrade--After yeading in the jaily Worker of the ban on Soviet ber in this country by the capi- list United States government on he ground that the lumber is worked y “forced labor” I would like to see ublished in the Daily Worker about e conditions in the U. S. lumber “imps in the West, in the State of ‘ashington, ° I worked there a couple of years fo. I believe that slaves never ht harder than the free workers a | + work in the lumber camps, { Slave Driving \After working @ eouple of days in of these Jumber camps I under- nd why niost of the workers in \ i itor Daily Worker:— in an editorial of the Detroit News other day @ worker's wife makes charge that this worker who is To the Daily Worker:— This section here is the Coeur *Alene mining district of northern o. There are a great many jines shut down and those that are Allentown, Pa. ily Worker: The Family Welfare gives relief to 4 a few suckers, who really do need help. The vast majority the 12,000 workers who are on verge of starvation, who really Dies of Starvation in Oakland, Cal. Buy Car or Get Fired Say Auto Bosses Detroit, Mich. | to stimulate business or get fired from the job and that inclysed all the rest of the workers in this plant. part time was told that he would these boss parasites will go to rob the to buy a car from the. company | workers coming and going. Lead Mines in Idako Closing Down Gem, Idaho | 12,000 Allentown Families Are Starving —Worcorr. Frank Linton, 80, 722 Washington St. succumbed to exposure, result- ing from his suicidal leap into the bay from the ferry boat. He was rescued by the crew after being in the water 20 minutes. He told the officials that he was ill from hunger and despondent. Workers, stick together. Don’t starve—fight for relief. Demon- strate February 25th with the Un- employed Councils. —A. ‘ton Lumber Camps these camps are Communists; for the work is very hard and the pay for the work is too small and the com- pany agents treat the workers just | like slaves. I never heard a true friendly word spoken from a com- pany agent to a worker. One of the lumber workers told me that a couple of months before } came to that lumber camp three | Russian generals of the ezarist army worked there but when they saw how hard the workers work in capitalist United States lumber camps they be- came Communists also. And after they worked three months the hard | Slaving work to make just enough for their expenses to return to Soviet Russia, they left this country and returned. —™M. S. Which all shows to what extent —FS. working have cut the pay and run two and five days a week. The Union Pacific R. R. only al- lows their section men to put in 20 days a month and the Northern Pacific R: R.’s entire bridge crews were laid off two weeks ago.—A. J. ‘The workers of Allentown have to actually starve and freeze to death, then they may help us once or twice. ‘The unemployed realize that the only way out is by joining the Un- employed Council and fight for social | that the judge thought best to “file” | of the reformist leaders to prevent Wage Mansfield, Ohio. Dear comrades: Every day we have more men out ot jobs in this 100 per cent typical city. Recently the Cleveland South- western Electric Railway quit the lines for good, throwing hundreds of men on the streets. Lots of the men worked as long as 20 years, one of them 34 years. In a local rubber plant they are _| placing all girls on men’s jobs; that | is in the tube department. More Wage Cuts In the Empire Steel Corp. there is men out of jobs. Every factory cuts the wages (the Westinghouse local plant just recent- ly), some men received two cuts in charity workers come around to the unemployed worker’s home | three months. -—_——-______________- | aid it is usually for $10 to $15 a There is not one plant working more than three days. The watch workers, the American Cigar Co. and others quit altogether. The bosses’ idea is to give just enough work so you have no right to ask for charity. Bosses’ “Relief” Our city relief here is boasting of helping 400 needy families, but here is the way they did it and of course, they don’t print this. For two months they gave the men with large families every other week three days work, spent a total of $9,000 and now they ran out of funds. Less relief, and more un- employment is the order of the | day. Many small home owners are losing their homes. The only place which is very much | lively is the Ohio State Reformatory | which is located here in Mansfield. It | was built for 1,200, but no it houses | 3,400 prisoners. | bt sds on | bids it.” Here the A. F. of L. execu- tive council holds its meetings. Fooled Too Long. The jobless have been fooied long —0. D. PICKETS BREAK INTO MILLS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) by the American Co., was feared to- day (Saturday)” against the speed- up, which here takes the form of the | 9 comb system, driving by efficiency | | experts. The strikers demand time and a half for overtime, and recog- nition of the National Textile Work- | ers Union, ‘The strike started in the combing} department of the Washington mill, | and other departments and mills have been joining in Thursday, Friday and Saturday. A broad strike committee fs in charge, elected from among the Friday morning the strikers forced the. American Woolen Company to} agree to meet the joint strike com-| mittee of all the mills, instead of, | as the employers’ had been insisting, | meeting the stikers mill by mill and | dividing their forces. Voice Demands ‘The committee was accompanied by | hundreds of pickets, led by the union organizers, the young workers sing- | ing and all shouting, “Demand time and a half overtime, recognition of the union, no speed-up”! Police threats were ignored. ‘The employers tried to compromise on part of the demands, but the strik- ers are determined to hold out for all. | ‘The strikers are joining the. N. T.| W., and more halls have been obtained | for the large. strike meetings. The| police have been used in a futile ef-! fort to keep the pickets away, and pickets and the N, T. W., organizer, Edith Berkman were arrested the sec- | ond day of the strike. Berkman was | framed for “disorderly conduct,” but | the miitancy of the strikers was such the case, Charlotte Workers Support A telegram has been received from Charlotte, N. C., near the scene of the Gastonia strike in 1929, saying that the Charlotte mill workers send | greetings, pledge solidarity, and that the National Textile Workers Union | district there is arranging mass meet- | ings in Charlotte and Greenville, to support the strike in Lawrence, Belgium Furniture Workers Strike to Stop Wage Cutting BRUSSELS.—The ranks of the striking furniture workers in Mecheln have now grown to 500. The workers organized in the christian, liberal and social democratic unions are taking part in the strike. The reformist leaders of the three unions involved did their best to prevent the workers from striking. The revolutionary trade union opposition is fighting to secure the leadershiv of the strike. ‘The employers announced a wage- cut of.5 per cent in the Bronzeworks Roussel-Servais in Brussels, to come inté operation on February 14th. A section of the workers under revolu- tionary leadership ignored the efforts the strike and decided to go on strike. These workers were threatened with dismissal by the employers, where- upon all the workers in the factory came out this morning. A proposal of the reformist trade union leaders insurance. |i workers decided to go to arbitration was rejected by to eeutinue P) Ne | cations against the workers’ coun- EVICTI NDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1931 ONS! ALL Page Three OUT | | | |. NEW DRESSMAKERS’ Y O'R K ie Zi SOLIDARITY in support of the and This is t0 certify that donated the sum of Tex Dowra: as a token of Solidarity with strikes of 1931, and for the building of the Nervis Trapes Workers INpusrriat Union Issued Support THe Dasss Srrixe Commitree oF Labor AND FraTernat OaGanizations H COLODNY Natpie Tapes Workers Ixpusraiat Usion or USA LOUIS HYMAN, Prades for benefit of dressmakers’ strike fund. 0 STRIKE PHILADELPHIA the Dressmakers in the y OAKLAND, CAL. Oakland, Cal. is strengthening the 60,000 circulation drive in its employment and the strug! workers in this country le of the over their experiences. “Every incident of our lives in the shops (if we are lucky enough to be still employed) ; news of the bosses’ offensive; all the news of working class interest; all the facts should be sent by us to the Daily Worker Ny Specimen certificate, in denominations of from $10 and $25, being sold to workers and workers’ clubs "WORLD WIDE JOBLESS DEMONSTRATIONS WEDNESDAY (CUNTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) and silly arguments about the “de- ¢rading dole.” Under cover of the} Hoover-Green agreement, the em- ployed workers have been forced to} aceept wage-cuts and speed-up. might hurt the rich bankers’ bond market.” Not a cent fs really being given by the government to feed the hungry, but millions are spent for the next | war. Every day there are war provo- try, the Soviet Union—the only coun- ery where there is prosperity for the workers, World Demonstration. ‘The unemployed councils lead dem- onstrations in every city Wednesday for the demands of the Workers’ Un- employment Insurance Bill, for $15 a | week additional for every dependent of a jobless worker. They demand no evictions, no vagrancy sentences, no cutting off of light, gas or water from the homes of the jobless work- ers. They demand free meals and clothing for the school children of the jobless and free fare on the street cars for them. This world demon- stration was called by the Commu- nist Parties and militant unions in every capitalist country. The jobless have demonstrated on city-wide, state-wide and nation- wide scale. They have sent their elected representatives to city halls, state houses and to the national cap- itol at Washington. The elected gov- ernment officials, representing big business, have answered in effect, “You must starve so that profits, prices of the bonds, the wealth of the rich, shall not be lessened.” The workers, facing wage-cuts and | speed-up while employed, and star- | ving by millions when forced out of | jobs, nannot take that for an an-| swer. All out on Wednesday, Feb. | 25, International Fighting Day, to! get relief! Build the unemployed councils, organize the militant unions and stop the onward sweep of star- yation and wage-cuts! Boston Jobless Prepare. BOSTON, Mass., Feb. 22.—Demon- strate Wednesday at noon at Park- man Bandstand, Boston Common! is the word of the thousands of hungry unemployed workers here. The call of the Unemployed Councils is ad- dressed to employed and unemployed workers and to world war veterans. | “Tell your rich exploiters to ‘stop their flow of bluff! Join hands with the workers of every land! You can get it if you fight!” says the call. Special leaflets are issued to the young workers, of whom 20,000 are jobless in Boston, urging them to join in the demonstration Feb. 25, and also to come to a preliminary mass meeting for young workers, Tuesday, at 3 p. m., at 22 Harrison Ave, The call to young workers 1s issued by the Youth Committee of the Unemployed Councils. The Women’s Committee of the Unemployed Councils addresses a special call to working class women, employed and unemployed, remind- ing them that while the family in- come dwindles, rents, grocery bills and the public utility prices are as high as ever. “Our fathers are out of work, we have nothing to eat,” begins a leaflet, of the Unemployed Councils to work- ing-class children, featuring the de- mand for free food and clothing for children of the unemployed. Children are urged to come to a mass meeting, preliminary to the Feb. 25 demonstration. The mass meeting is today. ; Pia kana Cleveland At 5:30. CLEVELAND, Ohio, Feb. 22-—In- ternational Unemployment Day, Feb. 25, will be marked in Cleveland by a mass demonstration on the public square at 5:30 p, m, The Uneme | ployed Councils of the Trade Union Unity League and the Communist | Party are organizing jobless and em- | demo! ployed alike to march from all parts | of the city to concentration points | at 30th St. and St. Clair, 30th St. |enough with public work promises| and Central, and 25th St. and Lo- rain. “On to the Public Square!” will then be the slogan, and Cleve- land is expected to see one of its most impressive working-class dem- The | onstrations, as the three lines of | | war veterans have been told: “You| march from these points converge on | | cant get the cash bonus hecause it) the square. Cleveland's unemployed delegates | who presented the Workers’ Unem- ployment Insurance Bill to congress on Feb. 10 will report to the dem- onstration on its reception. They and other speakers will rally the workers to fightfor genuine unem- ployment insurance and for immedi- ate local relief. Thousands of work- ers from the shops and the bread- line will turn out to demonstrate the unity of employed and unemployed in the struggle against the hunger policy and the wage campaigns of the bosses and their government. ee 3 Gary at 2:30 GARY, Ind., Feb. 22—The Febru- ary 25 unemployment demonstration in Gary, Indiana, will take place at Eighteenth Ave. and Adams Street, at 2:30 p.m. In Gary the police have smashed every recent demonstration, not even permitting the workers to stand within two blocks of the point where the demonstration was to take place. This time the workers are making every effort to be fully organized so as to resist the police terror and succeed in holding their demonstra- tion against hunger. ‘There are at \Jeast 15,000 fully unemployed in Gary, and almost all those employed work only three days a week. While the Steel Trust boasts that production is increasing, every day new speed-up methods and new machinery is being introduced, driv- ing the workers to kill themselves. The workers now see that they must fight to live. Fosters Speaks March 4. William Z. Foster, leader of the 1919 Steel Strike, will speak in the steel city, Gary, on March 4, at Turner Hall, 14th and Washington Street. He will call upon the stéel workers to organize and prepare to strike against wage-cuts, speed-up and lay-offs. A wage-cut of 7 per cent, the second in four months, has just been made at Inland Steel, In- diana Harbor. More cuts are com- ing! The meeting starts at 8 p.m. Ad- mission 10¢c and unemployed free. 8 March In St. Louis ST, LOUIS, Mo. Feb. 22.—-The Trade Union Unity League, and the unemployed councils of St. Louis, are preparing for large demonstrations in this section of the country. In St. Louis, the demonstration will take place in front of city hall on February 25, at 2 p.m. The work- ers will march at 1:30 p.m. from 2033 Washington Avenue, and from Fourth and Chouteau and will reach the city hall at 2 p.m., where the mass demonstration will be heid. There will also be held demon- strations in East St. Louis, at Lin- coln Park, at 6 p.m. and a demon- stration is being arranged in Gra- nite City to be held in Triangle Park at 3 p.m, Leaflets in preparation for the de- monstration are being distributed and the unemployed councils aré being activized in mobilizing the workers for the demonstrations. ‘Two active workers in the Unem- ployed Councils of St. Louis were arrested while organizing the work- ers to fight against evictions. The courts continue to issue eviction no- tices in the hundreds. A Negro wo- man with four children were evicted and Unemployed Council No, 1 or- ganized the workers in the neigh- borhood to fight against the evic- tion. As soon as the first speaker, Sonia Mason, started to speak, she was arrested and the rest of the crowd was broken up. All these arrests enrage t ers and they are determined to in- | tensify the preparations for the mass ation on February 25. . Defy San Jose Police. SAN JOSE, Cal. Feb. 22.—De- manding $1,000,000 from the city treasury as an unemployment relief fund, demanding free gas and elec- tricity, no evictions, and no vagrancy arrests for the jobléss, the unem- ployed and employed workers of San Jose are getting ready for a demon- stration February 25. Chief of po- lice Black has issued instructions: “Any attempt to parade by Reds, radicals, or unemployed will be brok- en up. Demonstrations here February 10 were also threatened by police, but they were held. just the same, with Earl Holden and Carl Howe making the main speeches, and announcing the February 25 demonstrations. BUILD FAST SHIPS FOR COMING WAR Anti-War Paper Sup- pressed in School The French imperialists have launched what is called the fastest ship. The Aigle-was launched Wed- nesday at Dunkirk, as part of the speed-up naval building program of France. Italy threatens increased armaments, and this sets off a whole wave of naval building in the United states and Britain. While dozens of bills for increased naval building are pending in Con- gress, the Navy Department is or- dering the construction of new large submarines. This is just part of the $1,000,000,000 naval building program that Admiral Pratt said was immed- iately necesary. Stressing the fact that war was just as imminent today as it was in 1914, Admiral Reginald R, Belknap, of the United States Navy, in a speech before the New York Exchange Club on Thursday said peace talk was just as prominent in 1914 as it is today and “things are hardly as peaceful now as they were then.” As part of the militarization cam- paign, the authorities of the College of the City of New York have con- fiscated the first issye of a magazine gotten out by the Social Problems Club of the university, entitled “Frontiers.” This issue dealt with the war danger and exposed the rapid militarization of the youth in prep- aration for the coming war. WOMEN RALLY * ‘. weet FOR MARCH 8TH ‘Throughout the world the working class will celebrate March 8th as the International Women’s Day, and mo- bilize the working class women to fight side by side with the men work- ers for better shop and living con- ditions. There is no industry in which the women are more exploited than in the shoe, slipper and leather indus- try. Every day we witness more and more women and young girls enter- re the shops and factories to take place of men workers, doing the Women’s Day March 8th. | Our paper!” Mugianis s ited for her commendable Oakland district. Despite C persecution and the fact tt land receives its papers one later, there has been a ste in circulation, and_ bill paid promptly and regularly. Conference is an important step bringing still closer to the “Dail workers and sympa develop into permaner the labor movement. Id be cred- work in the we dy growtl | | WALK 5 MILES TO SAVE FOR “DAILY” “Enclosed find $1 Worker sub, 2 months for E. F | Comrade F, saved this dollar for the Daily by walking about 5 miles to and from work instead of paying carfare."—A. A, St. Paul, Minn. for Daily NO FISHES CAN STOP THE DAILY” E. Grossenbacher of Philadelphia, Pa. encloses $6 for a year’s renewal, writing: HIT LIES ABOU “FORCED LABOR” Work in Soviet Union and Know Facts MOSCOW.—At present there are Canadian loggers at work in the So- viet Union. They are operating in the Matorssk and Pryashinsk dis- tricts in Carelia. A correspondent of the telegraph agency “Rosta” has sopken with these men concerning the allegations of “forced labor” in the Soviet logging camps. A Can- adian lumber jack named Harvey, answered the correspondent in the name of all the Canadian loggers at work in the district: “We have been working here for a Tong time, but we have seen no signs of any forced labor. The conten- tions of Senator Fish and other capi- talist politicians concerning the al- leged use of forced labor in the Soviet logging camps are nothing but in- Solent. However, in the United States and in Finland, where I and my fellow workers have been, ft bor is actually used.” | A second Canadian lumberjack named Lachde, described how he had stood bail for political prisoners em- ployed on lumber work in the United | States. In the United States, he de- | clared, very much prison labor was | used for the production of agricul- tural machinery. Lachde also de- scribed how he had worked in South | American lumber camps where many prisoners, mostly political, had been compelled to work. They were very | badly treated and their quota was placed much higher than that of the normal workers. When they failed to produce the quota they were beat- | en up. | | | ‘orced la- ORGANIZE TO END STARVATION; DEMAND RELIEF! same work for considerably less wages ‘When we consider that the wages of the men are already on a starvation level, it can be readily understood how much worse the women are ex- ploited. There are shops employing many women and young girls with practically no sanitary provisions for | the health of the workers, It is the duty of every woman worker to take part in the demon-| ‘stration and meeting on International FEBRUARY 25! have been This BUNDLES UP 's who wil contacts for CANADA LOGGERS, ‘Oakland, Cal., Takes Steps to Push Campaign; Hold Daily |Worker Confer ence, March 4 Have been trying ani send d will continue to a small contribution to the tae by Holding’ a Dally’ Wol snd | Daily ‘for the unemployed’ so they Workers Correspondence Conference | CaM read in their ‘leisure’ and ‘ample ‘Wednesday, March 4 at the Workers ; TeHef~ the Daily till H.... | Center, 1013 Franklin S land, | freezes over, for the Daily will live at 8 p.m. We learn this from a very | forever no amount of fishes, Jattractive leaflet sent Cc. Mu- or other natural acci- lenis Dally Work -esentative, | dents or accidents of nature can stop | which begins with the statement it | “If you want the real of un-| t : CAL. POST OFFICE DELAYS BUNDLES the world—Read the I hrough the fault of the local posi The tea c the readers of the Daily lies of the V missed seven issues,” writes facts given in the Daily Worker, | C. of San Diego, Cal., explaining calls upon the workers to write of | that O. , Daily Worker representa- tive rece changed his mail ad- to General Delivery. y day he called for the bun- dies, but was told they were not there. Then finally he was handed seven bundles (60 papers in each bundic) with the excuse that the ‘O’ and ‘E’ of his name ran to- gether. But this excuse doesn’t stand up, as you can see from the enclosed label taken from oné of the bundles.” «| This explains why some bundles are 1| not delivered on time, dre cos 6 FOR DISCUSSION We quote extracts from a letter of S. Wood, Buffalo, N. Y. in reply o the article on Buffalo in the Feb. 13 issue: | “At a membership meeting a red hot comrade arose, stating that he | had got over 50 Daily subs with pros- pects of getting 150 in a few days. Orders to increase the bundle to 150 was immediately given and before the order was received this comrade drop- |ped to 10 per day. K. Imoni (new | D. W. rep) had adopted him as a pri- | vate student. The excuse was he had | to study.” | Wood continues, explaining that the comrades finally convinced him that in order to be a good Bolshe- vik, he had to work a little along | with his studies, and was just about to leave for canvassing, when Il- moni “quickly seized his protege stating he wanted to instruct him how to draw up a feaflet.” We understand P. Chaunt, District Organizer of Buffalo has done much to establish some machinery for | Daily Worker sales, calling a meeting of Daily Worker vendors and laying | plans of work. . “COPS CAN'T BLUFF | AGENT,” KANSAS CITY “The cops of Kansas City tried to throw a scare into our Daily Worker agent selling the paper on the streets,” writes E. J. Evrard of Kan- sas City, “but they learned that neither the Daily Worker or its agents can be bluffed.” Evrard continues, reporting that a policeman stopped the agent, looked the paper over, then had him ques- tioned at the station before releasing him. “Our comrade showed them that the Daily Worker is not only a legal paper but that it is supported by the working class,” a ee re CALGARY, CAN, CUTS BUNDLE “It has been necessary to cut down the order from 15 to 5 copies per day If the demand for the Dailies shoyld increase we shall be only too glad to let you know.”"—L, L., Calgary Branch, Communist Party, Canada. oe A Red Builders News Club would have prevented this cut in bundles. Comrades of the Calgary unit should draw in jobless workers to sell the Daily Worker on the streets, frem house to house and before factery gates. Edmonton, Vancoyver and several several other Canadian cities are selling the Daily Worker apd getting subscriptions. We look to Calgary for a rapid increase. . ie TO SELL IN SAN JOSE, CAL, HOMES “I think that I would like to sel: the Daily Worker to people in the homes. Please advise me if you have @ sub-station here, and also one in Los Angeles.”—D.S. NITGEDAIGET CAMP AND HOTEL PROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $17 A WEEK CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, ¥.¥ PHONE 731 ‘ CUT THIS OUT AND MAIL IMMEDIATELY TO THE DAILY WORKER, 50 E. 13th ST., NEW YORE CITy $30,000 DAILY WORKER EMERGEN Enclosed find RED SHOCK TROOPS For SY FUND sees Cents We pledge to build RED SHOCK TROOPS for the successful completion of the $30,000 DAILY WORKER EMERGENCY FUND Se eee Oee ee eeee ener aren eeeeeeeeeneas sen seeeas esse sennneeeeeass essen eee senses eeeeeeeee® ADDRESS cseseessoesreerscsssescssecsessseeaesseseonscones