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€ All Along Route of Ohio SBA OO! NRT: | Marchers Delegations Join Tramp In From “All Sides On Capital City; | Cleveland, Youngstown Demonstrations | On May 1 Are Send Off for Delegates | Details of March Following are the latest details of arrangements made for the hunger march in different, cities, In Cleveland the march will start at 1 p.m. from the Public Square, following the May Day demonstra~ ons which begin there at 12 noon. ‘The 75 jobless delegates, elected by the Unemployed Councils and other workers’ organizations throughout the city, will, h eaccompanied by the May Day demobstrators along St, Clair Ave, as far as 55th St., where a send- off demonstration will be held. Fol- lowing that, the marchers will pro- ceed south on East 55th to Broadway and then to city limits along Broad- way, More jobless delegates will join the march at Bedford and Northfield where the first stopover will be made; | At Akron where the marchers will stop over for the night on May 2 a mass reception wil] be held in Perk- ins Square. Twenty-five Akron and Barberton delegates will poin theh unnger march the next morning and sympathizers will accompany, the marchers to the city limits. In Youngstown, the march will start after the May Day demonstra- tion on the square. The 50 unem- ployed delegates, drawn from Warren, East Liverpool, Niles, Struthers and Campbejl as well as Youngstown. will he joined by five more at Salem where their first stopover will be made, and by another five at Alli- ance, on May 2. Twenty delegates drawn frem Canton, Uhrichsville, Dover and New Philadelphia will join the march in Canton. There will thus be 183 hunger marchers in all when the lines of march merge in Massillon on May 3, here Harvey (‘Coxey”) Shrock will reopen his Free Food Kitchen for one day to food the marchers, and he will also give them the welcome address. Mas- sillon city authorities will| provide shelter for the marchers in the city auditorium. Five more unemployed delegates will join the march from | Massillo: At Wooster which the | {marchers will reach on May 4, the \eity fair grounds will be used to| shelter the delegates and for indoor meetings. Aft Ashland the céy au- | thorities are providing both food and shelter for the marchers when they reach there May 5. Five more march- ers will join up at Ashland, 10 more | at Mansfield (several of whom will be from Shelby and Cresiline) and fiye at Galion (including representa- tives trom Bucyrus). At Galion, Mayor Hartman, Bishop Broyn and other citizens are making arrange- ments to feed and lodge the march- ers on May 7. Toledo Start May 4 From Toledo, 25 hunger marchers will start off on May 4, stopping at Bowling Green the same evening. Here the city council has granted the | use of the city park buildings ,for | shelter but has refused to provide} food. Three jobless delegates will | join the march at Bowling Green; two at Findlay, May 5; two at Carey, | May 6; two at Upper Sandusky, May | 7. The Toledo line of march will | merge with that from Cleveland and Youngstown on May 8 at Marion. Here the fair grounds will be used for shelter. Ten more.. delegates (drawn also from Lima and Kanton) will join the march at Marion, and three more at Delaware which the hunger march will reach on May 9, being greeted by a mass demonstra- tion on the City Square. The num- ber of marchers on this route will have reached 255 by the time they reach Columbus on May 10. In addition there will be the 30 jobless delegates who will leave Cin- cinnati on May 5, augmented by 5 from Middletown, 20 from Dayton, 5 from Springfield and three from London, making a total’ of 68 from this direction. There will also be 50 jobless miners from which the marchers starting on May 3 at Bridgeport will reach Co- lumbus on May 10. 3 NMU DISTRICT CONVENTIONS Fo Oragnize the Metal Miners — PITTSBURGH, Pa., April 24.-The Metal Mining District of the Na- tional Miners Union will hold its convention on Mey 10. The coal min: ers of Ohio District will hold their convention on May 17, and the Penn- iris Districi and the These conventions are to prepare i 3 prevailing be the Rag ned of struggle bil the of the Howat as ‘as of the Lewis type. These con- ventions will lish definite dis- i Extensive preparations are being carried out in all the three districts, In Metal Mining District two full-time organizers are working for the convention, including many ac~- tive rank and file members. In Ohio extensive preparations also are being made. In the Pennsylvania District, Sectional Conferences are being held. Some 50 mass meetings and as many organizational meetings will be held prior to the conventions, All the locals will hold special meetings to discuss the problems confronting the union, United-front meetings will be held wherever possible in order to elect delegates. Tens of thousands of leaflets will be printed and dis- tributed. Unemployed councils are being or- ganizéd and will be represented at the conyentions. Stone Shoe Workers Put in 70 Hours and Take Work Home NEW YORK.--Cor an Ham | Fish, who lies about rect labor in the Soviet Union, should take a trip SALLY ENSIGN BEATS UP COOK |Send Jobless to Rustle Furniture for “Army” swwrweeh NEW YORK.—Joe MacPierson, cook at the Salvation Army “Social Service Department,” was brutally beatén up by “Ensign” R. E. Baggs, the district commander-in-chief of the department. Failing to answer orders promptly enough, Baggs struck the cook to the floor, carried him to the basement, from which cries for help could be heard. Wit- nesses state that two employes of the Sallies held him while the “Ensign” rained blows on him with a black- jack and a stick. They say he was then kicked under a table and left lying among the garbage. The cook was later treated in Bellevue Hos- pital for a broken collar-bone and other injuries of the head and body. It is also declared by other wit~ nesses that the “Ensign” sought out his victim afterwards ‘and offered him a bribe to say nothing. The “Social Service” department of the Sallies is a place where job- less, if they are lucky, can get a Place to sleep, oatmeal and coffee in the morning (without sugar) and a few slices of stale and at times mouldy bread. They get rotten vege- table soup and a tiny hamburger with rotten onions on it at noon and the same at night. The officials then line the men up and make them wait for bed tickets. Sneering remarks like this are com- mon from the officials to the ‘job- less: “If you would get that chew of tobacco out of your mouth and clean up you could hear better.” “Don’t go in that door, only gen- tlemen are allowed through there.” In return for the poor fare and flop the jobless must work every other day panhandling furniture for the Salvation Army. There are lice in many of the beds on the seventh floor. e ie bunk about “the high level of ” After getting through with a day's work, the workers go with additional bundles of finished with the assist- children i i Steve Katovis I L D Branch Continues to Set Example; 10 Join NEW YORK.—Steve Katovis branch of the International Labor Defense continues to set other branches a DAILY WEDNESDAY, APRIL 29, 1931 Page Three Philadelphia Hunger Mar A. hewn NEW YORK, ers Ready to Start for Harrisbure Part of great crowd of 4,000 which met early in the forenoon, May 17, with the 105 hunger marchers from Philadelphia, ready for the long parade to the state capitol to demand unemployment insurance. A still larger delegation marched from the western end of the state and joined them at Harrisburg. NEW UPRISING IN INDO-CHINA Troops Arrest 50, Who Face Execution A United Press dispatch from Paris tells of the outbreak of Communist agitation in North Annam, Indo- China, particularly in the province of Winh, The Frencli imperialists who have a tight grip on Indo-Chnia have been carrying out a campaign of wholesale executions of Indo-Chi- nese workers and peasants. The Indo- Chinese masses, despite the execu- tions, have put up a determined. fight to drive the French imperialists out. ‘The latest report shows that no amount of terror can crush the rey- olutionary, nationalist moyement, Clashes were reported between “Communists” and troops in the province of Hatinh. “Many were killed. Fifty revolutionists..were ar- rested by the French sojdiers and now face the death penalty. HOD CARRIERS STRIKE GREENWICH, , Conn... April-21.— Laborers and hod carriers are on strike here against the lowering of wages below the scale agreed on last year. Three hundred came out yes-/ terday, demanding that the $6.50 a day for laborers and $9 for hod car~ riers be maintained. The employers | were just paying less, quietly and! pene announcement. More Fake-Ads | to Fool Jobless NEW YORK.—Another case of fake ads appeared in the Bronx. Thirty-five boys answered an adyer- tisement for a boy in a barber shop | at $8 a week, at 1471 Wilkins Ave. | The ad was in the American. There | is no barber shop there, and the pro- prietor of the nearest called the po- | lice to drive the boys away. The po- lice told them that the unemployed | council puts these fake ads in the | paper. | Rosenthal, a member of thé coun- | cil exposed this slander, and the boys | were invited up to the council’s head- | quarters. Three of them, and will | become members of the Red Build- ers’ Club, which gives them some fi- | nancial aid. RED-MOVEMENT ‘GROWSINHANKOW The revolutionary moyement in China is growing in the leading cities suet’ as.*.Shanghai, Hankow, Wu- | cba bc A, cable zeport to the NewYork ‘Times, by Hallett Abend, correspondent in Shanghai tells of the “fears of a Communist upris- ing and attempt to seize the Wu- chang cities.” Martial law has been declared in Hankow and Chiang Kai- shek troops are being rushed there. Imperialist. gunboats, also, are being sent there to aid the Nationalist ‘55,000 WORKERS ‘Fight Against Wage Slashes | OSLO, Norway.-rAs already repor- ter, 43,000 workers of various indus- tries and trades were locked out on |the 10th of Apri]. Together with the | 12,000 striking paper-workers, there |are thus 55,000 workers out. On the day of the lock-out the transport workers of a number of towns went jout on sympathy strikes, The prin- |ters are also threatening with sym- |pathy strikes. In most of the pro- vincial towns the bourgeois press is no longer appearing as a result of printers’ strikes. In the industrial town of Sarpsborg the locked-out workers demonstrated in front, of the | printing works of the two local bour- | geois dailies and demanded that they be closed down during the struggle. The printing employers were com- pelled to agree, as otherwise the prin- ters would have gone on strike ale together. murderers hold on to power against @ mass uprising of the Hankow workers, The Chiang Kai-shek gov- ernment has offered a reward of $24,- 000 for the capture of Ho Chung, Communist leader, dead or alive, This is not the first time thet the Na- tionalist government has made such offers, but without results, _ OUT IN NORWAY, Lumber Town By LOUIS HINES. Due to a considerable drop in traf- fic, the Atlantic Coast Line was com- | pelled to take off several trains from | | its lines in South Carolina, To reach the little town of Manning from | Sumter, I was obliged to avail my- | self of the invitation of a kindly in- | | stallment man makes his daily rounds | ‘Poverty Stalks MANY LENINGRAD PLANTS CARRY OUT "In Carolina YEAR PLAN IN TWO AND ONE-HALF YEARS; CELEBRATE ACHIEVEMENTS | Electric Industry Makes Remarkable Showing; Workers Cut Cost of LENINGRAD.—The labor “Svetlana” electrical works ng out the £ the ca | years. |in the farms and villages between | | the two towns. | The paver road at the outskirts |the fifth year of the plan, but this | | of Sumter is lined on both sides with | | dark old shabby looking wooden | | houses standing above the level, in- | habited by Negroes, and some, I | am informed, poor whites. Emaciated, | poorly dressed children are seen run- | ning around their “homes,” and look- | | ing at strangers with appealing eyes. | About two or three miles from the | city the road was in the hands of repairmen, mostly Negro workers. “What do they get for their work?” | Lasked my companion. “Oh,” he r plied, “between $1.25 and $1.50. Oth- ers get $1.75. “Then, how do they do it?” I asked again, remarking that most of the workers have small chil- | dren and they spend at least from $1.50 to $2.00 a week for milk, “The installment man laughed, | around here; that is, among these | colored and poor whites, They grow rice in the little plots around the} season it with canned milk. Rice is their chief dish and they live on it.” A few miles further lies a small | ploying several hundred men. Ap- | proaching the mill, I was painfully surprised to see several white boys going to school barefoot in a nasty cold morning. “Don’t be surprised, friend,” re- marked the driver, “their fathers can't afford to buy them shoes, they | work twelve hours a day and they | hardly make more than $1.50 a day | on the average.” And while I observed the barefoot boys shivering from cold my atten- tion was attracted to a large black sign on the wall in the entrance in the mill-office, reading: “My spirit rejoices in the holy Jesus, my Sav- jour.” Poverty, misery, starvation, inhu- | man exploitation of Negro and white workers and religious dope seems to go hand in hand openly in this no- torious lumber town. | A few competent. TUUL organizers | could organize these. lumber workers and make an end to these miserable conditions existing in this feudal lum- ber town, Alcolu. Only the organized power of the | working class can save the political prisoners! Tables for last week show a total -0f 31,992 which, when special orders deducted, leaves a solid circulation Negro and White Workers Interest in Scottsboro Frame- Up Promises Increase in circulation of 640 are of 31,352. Summary By Districts ers; show Tables for this week show a total circulation of an) Ree Pe j Sport and 31,329, and with special orders of 50 deducted, a 9s ot = Hy ii Defender, solid circulation of 31,279. ge 3k éc Bak & i Specia} orders of 640 plus @ drop of 500 fry | rrr rirrrrtte trees Lugerne, Pa., order after the coal strike brings | ‘ Pd oe fe, rr tet 08 the total drop to 1,140, so that a decrease of only ee he te en ee ee 670 shown in this week’s tables the gain in cir- B16 147 406 676 18.88 culation is 470. (Of these specia lorders, 325 384 27728516 BOE 1S should have been taken off a week ago.) 1544 «744 «1578 2323 2922 1 Highest Gain in Detroit, henge ss. 1360 dooe tsar 184 5300 BEnt a The highest gain for the week is in Dist. 7, [9 Mnpis. 447 666 «430 «664 «1113 1094 19 Detroit, principally due to putting on the dis- |10Kens.Cty..,, 261 583 251 603 844 854 10 trict page for the first time, This is quite an |! Agri, .., 38 55 36 52 98 88 —5 achievement for Detroit which has been one |! Seattle , pl ie poss ae 1098 1027 —61 of the latest to join the string of district pages. y wid TTS 24230 146 Next comes Dist. 13, Calif., with an increase a ee ae ent re eeacaben of 145, aideg largely by an addition of 117 in |17 Birming, Sai tet. Sk ase gate cae San Francisco, Dist. 8 Chicago, goes up 81, @ [1 Butte 12 38 (12. 35 10% 107 slight improvement over last week's boost of | 19 Denver 128 249 «120 249 «357 369 8 2%. Unors. 107 = 83107 8B 19190 The biggest drop of 604 is shown Phila., due to 500 coming off special orders to Lugerne during the mine strike, and of 100 in Chester, these tables. Dist, }, Boston, drops off last week’s special orders of 204. Dist, 5, Pittsburgh, takes off 114, also due to temporary orders being dropped. Dist, 4, Buffal 63 from drops in Rochester and Buffalo, Dist. 12, Seattle, drops 61, resulting from a the Portland bundle. Some Hints on Building a Route, Salty Dick, one of the N. Y. Red B sellers, gives a few points on building a per- manent route. good example which they are all too slow in following, Last night the branch held an open air meeting at Seventh St. and Aye. B, Wednesday gerous,” and therefore has no place in the shop; “This is not a union hop.” At the end of an endless week of terrific speed-up, about 70 hours, the workers receive pay en- elopes with wages all the way from $25 per week down to $10. Work: Join the Ghee.and Leather - gt Bb a < eared will be one at 14th St. and Univer- sity. All these meetings are mob- defense for the 9 Negro boys at Seottskoro, and for the five workers the silk mill owners*are trying Paterson, Speakers are from the branch and the Young Defenders. Last week at signed to join the I. L, D,}. 25 pamph- fie and 48 Labor were sold, distributions made of other Labor “Map out your territory, distribute bers of the Daily Worker marked ‘sample copy’ to every family in your district. Place as many copies as possible into the hands of the prospec- tive customers, mentioning that it's a working it Sean Ave. Teen unt tne | SSS Dever! Have a cheery, nay tame 1p case no one is at home, push the sample copy under the door or behind the knob, Do not ilizations for May First, and rally clutter up hallways with sample copies and do not put them in mail boxes. Two comrades should distribute 5,000 copies in three days, after which they are ready to solicit frame into the electric ehair at| for subscriptions. The section and units should give as much assistance as possible teers for house-to-house canyassing. ing the prospect, remind him of the sample copy these open air meetings, 10 workers| You left, asking what he thought about it, A good time to call on workers is during rainy weather, also evenings and Sunday mornings arg apt ta be home, Be aure to place the paper where the cus- New gains of 200 in Phila- deiphia and 8 in Trenton do not yet show in in Dist, 3, a decrease Summary 201, taking Jo, took off * 35 Hd 43° 283 decrease in apehed 37a 699 6325 45 juilders best 328 816 78 421 43° 133 oF 2 back num- 45 132 Us eee BL 163 3888 ee aeo with volun- In greet- when they Beading os Saale By Cities interest in their problems, and you will lay the basis for permanent, growing route. Utilize back numbers of radical literature; Play, Solidarity, Labor Unity, Labor Young Worker, etc. Route carriers should carry’ as much free literature as pos- sible for distribution. tance in obtaining new readers for the Daily It breaks down resis- ‘You will lose some customers from your routes, and should therefore maintain a constant cam- paign for new readers. Avoid the police as much as possible; they will do you no good. Become a Worker Correspondent; send in working class news picked up from your daily rounds. Initia- tive, good judgment and a cheerful disposition will build successful carrier routes, and the fu- ture circulation of the Daily should show a de- cided increase by the end of the year. Always when talking to your customers, to ask them to assist you in getting new readers and holding the old ones.” Use Dailies for Scottsboro Campaign. Added circulation of the Daily Worker is seen in the near future arising from the campaign it is conducting to free the nine Scottsboro, Ala., Negro youths from electrocution. Indication of stimulated sales is revealed in Kansas City where a Negro worker who never sold the Dailies be- 2m 2 3% fore, disposed of 50 copies the first day he went, ba 4 ii i out. With mass protest meetings being ar- Hy ¢ Se a «| Tanged throughout the country, and the need for’ the widest possible popularization of one of the : $1 296 481 175) most brazen framecup cases, the necessity for ttre ae cau] Dally Worker masa circulation of the Daily 699 6325 v0ss rosa | Worker is imperative. Tables for the next few 46 “a 46 1} Weeks will reflect these increases, and will re- 82 876 1204 1198 —6| Sult in new recruits among Negro and white 78 421 499 499 | | workers for selling the Daily Worker. 43° «193° «2176196 61 2 o1 63 28 42107) 107 4 — 88 ut um at ae —2| Workers! Join the Party of 49 163 214 212 —2 ! 82 88 116 115 Your Class! 62 225 «287 | 287 #30 408 ©—22/ Communist Party 0. 8. A. a1ez 2208 = 206) P.O. Box 87 D. uy Me 8 ‘ eee | New York Polit § “Ti _ Please sand me more information on the Com- 326 921 =n | MUR Party. ) 158 «(150 _ 6 18217 o2| Name .. eM a6 5 |derous frame-up, with gigantic dem- | tinuing their treacherous alliance with ‘Daily’ Circulation year the production totalled 71,585,000 | |roubles. The productive costs were | reduced by 43.5 per cent, whereas the! | Five Year Plan provided for a reduc-| | tion of 32.8 per cent only. The qual- |ity of production has also been jm-~- |proved in accordance with the plan ‘The Leningrad acetyline welding | | works “Elektrik” has also joined the ranks of those factories and works | which have carried out the Five-Year | Plan in two years and six months. | By April 1931 the works had exceeded |the production figures of the last) year of the 5-year plan by 20 percent and had lowered the costs of produc- tion by 15 percent, |, The “Elektrik” is the largest. fac- | tory in the world for the production | Of oxo-acetyline welding machinery | and has ultra-modern equipment. | | tion of 55 million rubles, Seven Thousand workers of the | Leningrad telephane w Krass- | Ye: - Plan in their factory in two and | @ half years. The plan provided for an annual production to the value of town called Alcolu, where one of the | 32 million rubles in 1933, but this | ‘WO week: largest lumber mills is located, em- | y ar the annual production will be about 45 million rubles in value. The! costs of production have been re. duced threefold the percentage laid | down in the plan. The factory has | | now begun to produce telephone au- | | tomatic apparatuses and other equip- | ment never before produced in the} Soviet Union. | | FIGHT T0 FREE 9 CONTINUING Boss Paper in Attack) On Negroes (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) serve on the jury of workers deman- | ded by the I. L. D. and the American | working class as part of the demands for a new trial for these youths. White and Negro workers, in the} South and throughout the country must answer these threats of the bosses with renewed determination to save these innocent boys, with inten- sified activities to smash this mur- onstrations on May First. Ministers Helping Boss. Yesterday, some preachers in the | Chattanooga Ministers Alliance con the southern boss lynchers went to Mrs. Williams, mother of 14-year old Eugene Williams, one of the boys sen- tenced to burn, and tried to get her to renounce the I, L. D. But no threats could shake Mrs. Williams. She says: “I guess they just thought I was the weakest one but I told them to get right out of my house. They said they were afraid to go near the Pattersons or Wrights.” Arrest Marine Worker. As a direct result of the Scottsboro legal lynching, freight trains all over the South which before the “‘trial” were loaded with Negro workers look- ing for jobs now have only whites riding on them. It has just been reported to the Southern district of the I. L. D. here that Harold Harvey, an organizer of the Marine Workers Industrial Union was taken off a freight train at Cleveland, Tenn., while on his way to New York an dis being railroaded to the chain gang. Wage Cuts, Lay- Offs at Union Pacifie The Union Pacific has fired single track workers and replaced them with married men at reduced wages to “aid” the unemploymdnt situation. They fired married women and ‘gave’ their jobs to single women. A series of lay-offs and wage-cuts is going on at the Union Pacifie Albina shops. Eighteen boilermakers have been fired and wages of those working Have been slashed, both directly and by Production, Improve Product, Advance Socialist Upbuilding enthusiasm of the workers of in Leningrad has succeeded in Year Plan for the factory in two and a half According to the plan the works were to have a production | to the value of 71,044,000 roubles bye—— SPRING BRINGS WAGE-CUTS, LAY’ OFFS IN STEEL Steel Plants Fight Unions, Deport Foreign-Born Baltimore, Md. ; Daily Worker: ry steel baron here is trying te increase his profits by installing new technical developments, and driving the workers on a murderous speed- up system. In many deparkpents “Why,” he said, “I do not believe | Next year the works will be enlarged | the wages have been cut to almost: Jone child in a hundred gets milk | @Nd will have a total annual produe- | 60 per cent The tin mill workers had a 4 to ® per cent cut the last time. The al- mighty hand of Charlie Schwab houses and out of the rice they make | naya Sarya” (formerly Erikson) cel-|eached the other departments by | all kinds of soups; sometimes they | ebrated the carrying out of the Five | °utting from 114 to 2 per cent from the wages of the sheet mill workers, and cutting just as much from open- , who e making $10-$15 every Murderous Speed Up Spring is back, and because of this murderous speed-up system, the workers are not showing up steadily to work, and the bosses are going after young boys, who have more blood to give. Lay-offs are going on in every de- partment but the Tin mill, where they are now installing the hand- | lovers on the shears where 50. work- ers will be thrown out soon, After this the shearers will be forced te do the work alone, slaving from t2-15 hours a day. 3 Bad Steel In the Sheet mill” de t, where they are working 5-6 days & week because of some order, many are working 8 hours a day, burging their faces and chest on the new. mills, and getting pay of four hours only due to the bad steel, of which 50 per cent is scrapped. They are working on the piece-work system. Every pay dey all piece-work work- ors must wait in the ling, not ing how much their psy will be. After looking at their pay ef Jess than $25 for two weeks, they have angry faces, and awear dga |. steel bosses. The Weta hh the smallest pay. Fire Negrogs. Not having a chance to leap trade, the Negroes have been! and replaced by whites. many of them live in Sparrows t in company camps, they have to show up every day. If there is any chance to work, they do; if not, they have to go back. ~ The workers tried last summer to’ fight these conditions, but bec they had no organization, they were defeated. The bosses were better ¢t~ ganized, but after the stroay fies. reorganized their forces better. They put in better small slave driv- ers and many steol pigeons, Even this was not got Mr. Doak to arrest deportation. Foreign born have been arrested at the Tin department because two months go they were preparing to go on strike. Steel workers, fight these by joining the Meta! Workers - trial League. Show your solidgrity tr demonstrating May 1 at Qity Wall Plaza. * it 40 they for r,s. VACATION ; — Beautiful Mogntsin Views, quiet resting place, good fed. $13.50 weekly—Avants Farm, Ulster Park, New York. NITGEDAIGET CAMP AND HOTEL _ PROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIBE YEAR CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, 8,T. making them do the work of those laid off. PHONE 181 “YOUTH IN worker will want a copy of— Ten Cents Per Copy is the story of Tom, a young American who dreamed of becoming am aylator, but instead had to take a job in a silk mill at $7 2 week, & job that begun early in the morning and lasted until late at ni “4h same kind of a job that you have, if you are “lucky” enough te have Read about the conditions of the young workers in the facterieg, on the picket lines, in the Soviet Union. For the first time we have a pamphlet on the life of the Amerigap young workers, on their conditions at work. This pamphlet tells the young. workers how to organize and fight for better conditions. Every YOUTU IN INDUSTRY—By GRACE HUTCHINS vowRush Your Orders To THE YOUNG WORKEB—Box 25, Ste. D. New Tork Cig INDUSTRY” Seven Cents Per Bundles