The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 6, 1931, Page 3

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/ __ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1931 fe NAACP Leadarst: Trying to D rey a arahn at | Pe } Still © pt Defense of Boys 7 Walter White In Chattanooga Working Hand In Hand With Faithless Lawyer, Police Agents and Two Preachers Denounced | By Boys As Traitors CHATTANOOGA, May 5.—Contin- ting the policy of the top leadership of the NAACP of attempting to ham- string the defense approved and en- dorsed by the nine Scottsboro Negro victims and their parents, Walter White, secretary of the NAACP yes- | terday tried to trick Mrs. Mamie Williams, mother of 14-year-old Eu- gene, into signing a statement turn- ever, for Mr. York was so drunk he | }ecould not sign the statement. | Attempt to Bribe ILD Lawyer | | Failing with the parents and rela-| tives of the boys, White and the local | preachers then rushed’ to General Chamlee, the local attorney engaged by the International Labor Defense, and tried to bribe him into giving up the case. Mr. Chamlee told them SCOTTSBORO CONFERENCES IN EIGHT CTS NewCuts To Defend Nine Negro, Boys | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) with as few as three or four persons | wnetohone apagn w zovat AFL DENIES OWN BUILDING STRIKE the mpvement to save the boys. The members of the committees will be drawn into the work of visiting their neighbors, explaining the frame-up nature of the case and rallying sup- Many Strikes Over -Workers Desperate, Revolt STRIKE AGAINST 75 PERCENT CUT Gene Tunny Admits Soviets Go Strong. Interviewed by a United Press || correspondent in Moscow on his | impressions of the Soviet Union, Gene Tunney, former heavyweight prize-fight champion, said: “I am a sportsman and not an economist, but the Soviet Union is @ going concern, right or wrong.” Tunney said he marvelled at the tremendous advance of construc- tion in the Soviet Union. He was on his way to Leningrad from Moscow. Tunney said he didn’t understand how so much could be done in such a short time with the elimination of “personal initiative.” (Tunney meant capitalism.) |parts @f the Soyiet Union. | construeted in Kuznetzk MOSCOW.—New socia In 73 days whereby were used. The cementing was {heating apparatus and the American record was beaten. the United States cementing is nevere~ ‘SOCIALIST CONSTRUCTION RAPIDLY "ADVANCING IN SOVIET UNION; BEAT "AMER. RECORD IN DAM CONSTRUCTION | Siberia Developing Into Modern Industrialized Country; Vote Milli suce PIDLY ( on to Explore Urals- Waterway es are reported from all Magnitogorsk a dam has been 30,000 cubic metres of cement carried out without any special In carried out under a temperature of | decided to build 30 flax and 9 hemp 32 degrees Celsius. On April 12 the | factories. Up to the present there first. iodine -factory was opened up| are only five flax and one hemp fac- Ruthless “Sell Out In ing complete control of the case over to the NAACP and the Chattanooga he was engaged by the ILD and the port for the Scottsboro victims. The parents and would have nothing to |committees will also help in circulat- US, State, Rushing to TRIES TO STOP Ministers Alliance, whose attorney is Stephen R. Roddy, denounced by the nine boys as a traitor to their cause. Negro Workers Enraged by Trickery White had induced Mrs. Williams to attend a meeting of a committee of the Ministers Alliance. There she was asked to sign a statement, not one word of which was read to her. do with anybody else. They then asked him what he would do if Roddy | quit. Chamlee told them that so far) jas the defense was concerned Roddy | had quit long ago, as neither the} | boys nor their parents had retained | | him or wanted him to have anything | | to do with the case since his shame- | less betrayal of the boys at the “trial” | jing the Liberator as part of the cam- Indianapolis paign to rouse and mobilize the mas- ses against the plans of the southern | wee Lay phn Payers pul a bosses to legally massacre the nine/ ing trades union struck May 1, hoya: | against a 20 percent wage cut. The LL.D. Collecting Funds for Defense! officials of these unions are most of In New York City this coming Sat-| them eagerly denying that they ever urday and Sunday, the I. L. D, will) heard of a strike. : carry on a house to house collection) Secretary Hall of the employers’ or- Berak Motor Strike WILLIAMSPORT, Pa., May 5. —~ Last Thursday 160 men walked out of the Lycoming Motor Co. plant here against a new 25 per cent wage cut | which makes a total of 75 per cent cut during the year. The men also are fighting the 12- | hour day. They used to get $13.69 | EVICTION; BEATEN, Slug Mexican Worker | Aiding Negro on the island of Kildino, in the Arc- | tory in operation. All these new fac- tic Ocean, | In Leningrad:the Engineering In- stitute had drafted a project for the | building of the first bagger machines | in the Soviet Union, capacity. with 30 tons | The Votkino engineering | works will produce these baggers. In | May a start will be made with the CHESTER, Pa, May 5.—Frank! puilding of an electric power sta- tories will be in operation by Oct. 1, 1931, A million roubles has been voted for the exploration of the waterway from the Urals to the Kuznetzk Ba- sin, Work is at present being con- ducted in the bed of the River Tomi, where 16 locks and 16 power stations, ; Uocenta Galant TA Mariany arcthe| dan Pan a eeet Gomes each having a capacity of 60,000 kilo- Suspecting trickery, Mrs, Williams | 2 Scottsboro. |for Scottsboro and Paterson Defense.| Sanization announces that the elec-| for 100 pieces, then they got $5.16. | eds, Aegreded RA GhatIIy | gation spend i I : 0 po | Watts, are to be built. The Tatar signed the statement but kept it in| Chamlee Advises White to Cooperate) 1 Gieveiand, the Junior Section of| ‘iians and hod carriers have al-) When the company cut the wages|¢™ was black) ; : : ne ‘Tehelymbiansk district.| Republic has decided to build two | White then tried to turn Chamlee | a | her possession until she could consult ready accepted bigger wage cuts — last week to $3.85, the men quit. beaten up by three constables, when i |the I. L. D. will hold a tag day on u 7 pe hove ttali cane tea Siberia is developing into a mod-| power stations, one on the Kama with the other parents of the Chat-| {tom the ILD with the statement | scay is oer ‘At aievecial snesting| naturally not the rank and file, just} The federal government immedi-| he a - sO | id oat of ern Industrialized country. The ex-| River at Tchistopol and the other tanooga boys. that “they are connected with the | 5° Ehbee sonia ooMnedba: &amaceion | the officials aecepted these cuts for | ately Tushed department of labor | McMurray, a Negro worker. P Was | ecutive committee of one district hason the Volga at Kosmodemyan, i | Communist Party.” Chamlee replied: | bs e 1? | the men, “conciliators” to help break the strike} then placed under arrest together |————-—_______ e aes lees When her husband came home|“ wrat has nothing to do with the | “5 wanimously adopted denouncing) “jai announces also that “all the| and the state of Pennsylvania did| with four Negro workers who also| from the May Day demonstration | |the Scottsboro legal lynchings and ; case. They’ve hired me to fight this jcalling for a special children’s tag | workers will benefit by these cuts.” and read the statement he was furi- | Eminem yea rante ny | fending these boys, the only ones ae . laa Laer Ree oe | spending any money on their behalf. Several Of the preachers involved. | 411 vou fellows are doing is attack- case, They are the only people de-| | The workers’ only hope to smash day on those days. ‘The children will] this jie and conspiracy of employers meet in their headquarters at 14102) anq 4. F. L, officials is by spreading Kinsman Road at 9 a. m. Saturday) their strike, making it complete, ‘The entire Negro workers’ district | where the family lives is enraged at the latest attempt to help Roddy and the boss courts railroad the boys to ing the ILD, knowing that if the ILD were to withdraw from this case, jand me with them, these boys would and Sunday to get supplies and dir-| electing their own strike committees, ectives for the tag days. They are) and presenting their demands in their issuing a leaflet appealing to the| own name. workers to donate to the defense ot} the nine boys. | likewise. ‘The Lycoming Motor Co. has been making big money during the depres- sion. It is part of the Cord Automo- bile Co., which also owns the Auburn Company, and makes engines and parts of cars for the International ‘Truck and Gardner companies. The eviction was ortginally sched- uled for Wednesday. ized the neighborhood and had 150 workers on the scene fully prepared to stop the eviction. When the con- came to the aid of the evicted work- | er. | The Unem-| Meetings In South In Spite of White Terror May Day ployed Council immediately organ- | ATLANTA, Ga., of the terroristic tactics of police May 5.—In spite} to report | for work May 1 or lose their “Job: ” In spite of this. 4 Peat eae! sae ‘ és and mill owners, two successful} 1,200 demonstrated at City Hall the electric chair. cubby, burn. Poe only ine yen ean | 350 Miners Strike. stable peep the size en erieny | meetings were held here. One was! Plaza, Many of them were Veer Libs ‘Boubey te Rucward eta Lite ee enh a Howes then), Mass Meeting in Cleveland May 8 | PRINCETON, Ind., May 5. — ‘Three YOUTH PREP. ARE te dooatea ent they Amme-| on April 30, by the League of | who were notified as above and who The same trick wa stried on Claude| all the financial support you can,| 4 mass meeting has been called | hundred and fifty miners of the Deep ieee + prt, | Stustle for Negro Rights, and the | nevertheless refused to work and Patterson, father of Haywood, who| and stop attacking them.” ”|by the Cleveland I. L. D. for May 8,| Vein Coal Co. are on strike against These “stalwart” defenders of pri-| other on May Day, called by the! came out on the Plaza May 1 was called to the phone several blocks away and told that the minis- ters committee wanted to speak with Parents of Boys Indignant ~ When General Chamlee was shown | the statement Walter White had just i " " | the placing of men to work on the at Spiro Hall, 3804 Scoville Avenue. Open air meetings are being held) isht shift and not on the meet daily in all parts of the city. Chur-| They are also striking against the FOR MAY 30TH vate property then resorted to a ruse in order work, They returned the next day, to carry out their dirty | | Communist Party, The distributions of leaflets made | by the workers at night forced the The police tried to start trouvle by dragging the first speaker from a balustrdde. The crowd peered the ; |ches and organizations are being vis-| te!tible speed-up and wage cuts. “Not one cent for militarism, all| When there were no workers around city authorities to place a reserve! police, Several hundred marched him. He was told they would send @| had Mrs. Williams sign, a statement ited. Support for the United Front| funds for the unemployed,” is the | #nd immediately proceeded to throw | squad of motorcycle police to patrol singing from the city hall to the car for him. Patterson returned to| barring Chamlee from the case, he |. | ‘ ‘ 7 : McMurray’s furniture into the street.| the city in an attempt to stop the Con st Party head S e My cotts fense hi: rallyin; call of youn; workers for (cMurray’s niture e i. ommunis arty headquarters his home and went to sleep. After-|caid, “1 would rather have a man |Scots2%0 Defense has already been! Seattle Workers in ying young wards he said, “as soon as hey told me it was the Ministers Alliance I knew it was some kind of trap.” Disappointed at not trapping Mr. Patterson, the police spy James got hold of York Maddox, brother-in- law of Andy and Roy Wright, got him drunk and took him to the min- isters committee and presented him to Walter White as Mr. Patterson. James overstepped his mark, how- | spit in my face.” ‘The parents of the boys and the Negro masses generally are indig- nant at the continued attempts of the NAACP leadership and some lo- cal preachers to betray the defense | Of the nine boys. Rank and file members here of the NAACP are denouncing the treach- erous tactics of the national leaders of the organization, “FAMILY SHOULD LIVE ON 50 CENTS A DAY. SAYS WASH. WELFARE Family Lived On $5 A Week; Faces Eviction; No Relief from Seattle “Charity” Board. | | {obtained from a number of these, | | The workers of Canton, O., have ar- | Jail Send Greetings ranged for a Scottsboro Defense week’ Qn the First of May |to start May 9 to 16, | —_—_ Erie Bosses Trying to Stifle Protest | SEATTLE, Wash, May 5.—Four In Erie, Pa., the authorities have | workers held in jail here have sent |come out openly in co-operation’ May Day greetings to the working with the southern boss lynchers and | Class. They are M. Sagagansky, John |have denied the workers their right | McGinley, Ralph Burrows and Man- |to protest this outrage. The work-| uel Flores. They say: \ers of Erie, however, are going ahead| “From behind the prison bars, with their plans for a big mass dem-| thrown in because we dared to raise onstration on Perry Square on May | our voices against the damnable sys- 8 and will resist all efforts of the|tem which oppresses the working northern bosses and their police | class, we send our proletarian greet- the murderous Scottsboro frame-up | and of the world on the day of Inter- and planned massacre of nine work-| national solidarity—First of May. ing class children. The demonstra- tion will begin at 8 p.m. |the fight for the emancipation of Atlanta Workers Join Protest | the working class from the yoke of In Atlanta, Georgia, four organiza- Capitalism. Prison bars or any other tions yesterday sent telegrams to| Persecution cannot stop us from Governor B. M, Miller of Alabama, | ‘@frying on the fight for the World “We pledge ourselves to carry on! National Youth Day, to be held on the bosses’ Decoration Day, May 30. The Auto Workers’ Union of De- | troit issued a statement calling upon | all young auto workers to support National Youth Day. The statement reads, in part: “Millions of dollars are spent every | year to prepare the youth for war, | but not one cent is given the job- | | less youth for relief. Many young | | workers are forced to join the army, | beg, or even steal in order to live. | | “The auto workers’ union calls | upon all young auto workers, all | jobless, to support the preparations | for National Youth Day. This day | (Decoration Day—May 30th) will be | an answer of the young workers to | the present campaign of wage-cuts | and speed-up. It must be an answer | to the growing unemployment, and | must demand, ‘all war funds for the | unemployed.” A members of the Unemployed Coun- | cil, passing by noticed what was tak- | ing place. He hurriedly departed to; mobilize other members of the coun- cil to stop the eviction. The first one reached was Rodgers. When Rodgers arrived at the scene of the eviction one of the constables remarked: “Don’t come near here or | you'll get yours.” Rodgers answered | by picking up one of the pieces of furniture and attempting to Sarry | it back to the house. He was im-/| mediately set upon by the constable, = As , owe | However, Rodgers succeeded in de- | agents to stifle their protest against! ings to the working class of America | P0YS and girls, whether working or | fending himself ably and threw this | landlord’s lackey to the ground. He | | began to shout for assistance and | Rodgers soon found himself fighting | | against three men, Rodgers was severely injured. A wide campsign is planned around the issues involved in this case. The arrested workers were released on | meetings. leaflet. distributions for May Day. Several workers of the Atlanta Woolen Mili were intimidated by the owners of the mill and grilled as to whether they were going to attend the meetings and where they were to be held. Despite this, however, the meetings were held and called together by word of mouth. The workers were exceptionally enthusiastic and at| each meeting they roared approval to sending telegrams to the Governor of Alabama, demanding.:the..imme- diate release of the nine Negra boy Much literature was sold and sev- | eral workers joined’ the L. S. N. R.| and the Party, Doran spoke at,both | Speakers were Edward Gail, chair- man; Jacob Lehman and Joseph Wiesniewski, both candidates on the Communist Party ticket for city com- missioner. Lehman and Wiesniewski are fifth and sixth on the ballot and run under the slogan: “Against Hun- ger—For Real Unemployment Re- | lief.” The election is May 12. ae Defeat Disturbers. NEW BRITAIN, Conn., May 5.—A | thousand came out in an open-air demonstration here May 1. A few | gangsters and a group of boys of high-school age tried to start trouble, bue the speaker, Sadie Van Veen, knew how to rally and solidify the crowd against them, and the dis- \ | BIRMINGHAM, Ala., May Meet In Birmingham, i ——Col- | ored and white workers united in a} demonstration here which had been | declared illegal by the police. The | turbers failed to accomplish any- | thing. After the open-air meeting, at the call of the speaker, 300 fell in line to march to the Ukrainian Hall to continue at an indoor meeting. New t Socialist Soviet Republic,” % hiintcatfael ai 1 meeting enthusiastically epdotsed the | Britain is a factory town with five SEATTLE, Wash.-The Seattle Social Welfare goes tho Scombore cuttoee and nema atne | cose aookon, tow bom dca | eee | Commuhist Pat} andthe, ‘Trade | planis producing tools and comestic limit in asking questions to check on the workers who ask for new ‘trial for the nine boys with a/L. 5. N. R, and another by the At-/ ate against these young jobless, Re. Use your Red ‘Shock Troop List| Ome Unity Lesle program. A utensils. All the workers are on part 5 (oh se ie | | | telegram was sent to the governor} time and make less than $13 a week. help, some of them with no apparent purpose than to humiliate ‘ury of workers, at least half Negroes. |lanta I. L. D. branch. A resolution | fuse them relief, Instead they use | a ji i I % : Liew | every day vn your job. The worker | denouncing the frame-up of the nine | The factories run less than half the worker and make him realize “his place.” I went there a TW telegrams were also sent by mass| was forwarded to the governor by the| the youth for war preparations. Negro boys at Scottsborc TT tt vd b y husband. hi . tia to eat -q meetings under the leadership of the | Negro Masons protesting against the | Forward to the youth day of strug-| Bext to you will help save the Daily | Nes! ee eee | capacity. ‘The ay relief to the un- few days ago because my husband has been unable to get more communist Party: one by the Atlanta, legal lynching in no untertain tones, glecNational ‘Youth Day.” Worker. : j,cciployed given. by wie city % © pade= than a few days of work for a long time and I have been sick, Despite Police Orders. _——_| age of food a week per family. The and threatened with eviction b e can’t th "3 —_ ST. LOUIS, Mo, May 5.—Five| package has lard, flour, cabbage and bess es eallae secon on was Wee eahe ne Me aed i \ as hundred workers took part in the) canned food—insufficient to live on rent. e following are the questions the ‘‘welfare” worker | May Day demonstration here. In| for a week. she ne Individual Bundle Order of 5 Per Day trom iit sie sat es at Where I was born. Why my father brought our family i oe eee ae HIE Ae Cy Ree to this country. Why I left home, a . “ . ” . . striad pear potret i i a Salad Ca and did I quarrel with my folks. Who | She said, “I don't see why you can’t RST eae joined the Party| First In Years At Collinsvitle, my brothers and sisters were, where | buy milk on that—a family of three ea Z YS i NC ve. aSe a Z y 17vC a Z rarely pi F aka re na y | COLLINSVILLE, Tl, May 5.—An they live, how many children, what| should live on 50c a day.” (Fifty eae iteen joined at other onthusiastic May Day meeting held their occupations are. Why I got cents is the relief allowance from So- | co ee - — —~-_—_— sh Peer cana here at Miners Temple was the first married. How long after I was mar- | cial Welfare.) I wanted to ask her if Daily Worker circulation tables for last week Summary By Cities in years. ried before my child was born. Why | she did, but then she asked me if my | showed a total circulation of 31,329 which, when if T. Gaeta Sree i thous ‘The workers applauded the speak- rt only have one child and my rela- husband had had any work at all, | special orders of 50 were deducted, left a solid - sand attende: d the Re door meeting ers’ attack on the A. F. of L. fakers tions have big families. and I said that he worked a day and | circulation of 31,279. This week's tables show Poe aa i Readers! Get a bun- held here on May 1. The speakers who are selling out the dress strike ‘Then she wanted to know every|a half the week before. She imme-| 4 total circulation of 31,441, and with special a, Ip #3 H dle of 5 a day and were McLeod for the International | ©f 500 women workers. The strikers place we had lived and every con-| diately shut up the book and said.) orders of 13 taken off, a solid circulation of Be 8s es i Labor Defense, McNeil for the Com- | fight wage-cuts and call all to help tractor my husband had worked for. | “O, well—your husband is working!” | 31.498, or an increase of 149 over last week. : help build the Daily, munist Party, B : ae th ae | them mass picket against the in- If my husband couldn't get work,| She wanted to know why we didn’t Philadelphia Responsible For Gain. - 40 93 131 2] eaeianG Main erie for the | Junction. why didn’t I try to go to work, as| pay bad rent from that! Then she} ‘This gain was due to a large extent to the in- a ohd feed fe Working Class Women and Huddart | Le cats 1 Women are frequently preferred to| said, “They can't put you out any-! crease in orders in Dist. 3, Philadelphia) which a aide: Hack | for the Unemployed Council. | PONTIAC, Mich., May 5.—Com- men because they work cheaper.! way, as it costs too much to get the) put on 184 after Philadelphia (city) boosted its te ae —1} The workers were attentive, but| Mencing with a parade of several (And then they complain about mar- | papers to evict you. bundle by 200. Dist. 12, Seattle, jumped by 72, 321 1071 1198 194 not as enthusiastic as in previous | hundred on Saginaw St., over a thou- ried women going to work and break| But this we know to be the bunk, | following Spokane’s addition of 50. Dist. 9, $1 421499 3{ meetings. The comrades here be-| satid workers demonstrated May Day - Up the spa at T told her why 1| because the bosses all during the) Minneapolis, increased 52, helped by an increase 43° 133176 lieve that it is because oppression | near the court house, Speakers were *y was brie ie work.) x crisis have been throwing families of | o¢ 95 in Superior, and 20 in Shawano, Wis. 6L 98154 is so bad, everybody is in a mood to | Billips of Detroit and Holder of Bon- sie she on $5 a Weel unemployed workers into the streets Dist. 8, Chicago, shows the greatest loss of 42107149 | do something instead of listening. _ | tiac. inally she wanted to know how | for failure to pay rent, 88 for the week, due to a temporary order of 25 M4 172286 | | ‘ | ; a : we had been living, and I told her| We must organize into tenant | being dropped, and a cut of In ty Ching, wen Se Se learnt sen culewensepeneaeune «that we got $5 a week from my hus- | leagues and stop these evictions and| nist 19, Denver, comes next with a decrease of a ae bid ae) : 1,500 In Albany. Mi a slayer reenter ne band’s union and I could manage to| force the bosses to give us real re-| 44 resulting from a drop of 50 in Denver bundles eon -o Ps | ALBANY, .N,..¥,5 May, 5:—-Fifteen | plications for the Unemployt set everything for that but the milk,| lef in the form of unemployment! Dist. 13, Calif, took off 38 after @ cut of $0 in ee into. eats | ~ hundred aiken the open-| Are. tie eovtahers, ‘Secnaniyems + and I couldn't pay rent or buy clothes | insurance. Weanciacs and i Oak 5 sh | air meeting here May 1. Speakers | scoring the Scottsboro frame-up J a Prose bane Jans caine aS ay ae bey 1 were: Johnson, chairman; Taylor for | adopted. fs Boss Fires Painter Who Refuses to Slave | ,,Pvowins are the number of papers run oft 1 ses ase tots Be AE eat atass crest hee | oe Nelponee Wa Tromtese A e press ng four May Day editions: : y Day Overtime Friday, April 24 (Pacific Coast. edition) 50,200; 1 «3% 881 —%6 Jer for the United Front May Day | IRONWOOD, Mich, May 5— Monday, April 27 (Midwest edition) 63,400; a ie Committee, Pell for the Unemployed | 4... go workers demonstrated at ‘ p New York City. | to be able to place my ladder near Wednesday, April 29 (Bastern edition) 94000: “on & bad Council and Brand for the Commu- Daily Worker: the wall. One must be able to bal- ‘Thuraday, “april 30 (New York Oity) pepe 28 Wl Ot f nist Party of U.S, A. Farmers Market Square here against In the five boroughs of New York| ance himself well. While on this , ses Pe Se ia ‘Two ‘hundred demonstrated in| the steel trust speed-up and wage- These figures include May Day orders, regular 35. 100 144 there are approximately 52,000 pain-| job I was forced to hurry up and Troy at. the city -hall, it t. They de- orders, foreign, miscellaneous, id 243 277 | 506 4 cuts and unemployment, ey id about 40,000 of these hc RAG Meposs : ters and about 40,000 o: sre} the boss got me so excited that I! Here are the tables: 295° 198 41 33 There. Weei en Ayphing! mepling At! 44 unemployment Teliee —_ part seh ba ee ae T can | almost. pet tn balance. Well, when z 7% 515 602 591 —I1 the Sons of, Italy Hall in Schenec- peas eine secorua’ the call any small jol e. I told thi that I would leave x 16 100 1150116 1 tady, io Workers Tel ‘The union grafters demand $300| at 5 o'colck he told me to quit, with Summary By Districts Re Aaah made eae as antattne anes aa atte Cant | cee for the meeting was so strong that for a membership card. I would like|the following words: “You're just cape | eT a to veudl fh. And individual bundies of five, theres | Vote Red May 12! the police aot up whatever idea they | babes nile MA ey APA healed bape bien yee pe eR Eas lo AM 14 190 100 1¢1 4) fore, should eather no.dust. So order yours now | PASSAIC, N. J., May 5—The May| Bits pak aR ee Well, I looked: for a job and was| stay off.” 5 3 & GE Se HF # 3 ? ny t oe nan a pe ie 8 (eae cor Day demonstration was held at Hud-| 0, Salo, Irma Martin. They repre- ; forced to take a small job for a few| Not only are we subject to wage- | © SA Oa Laie’ 5-A-Day Will Boost Circulation. Mabe etroulatian ae the Deity ene eyhtnale. | son and Market Sts., with more than| sented the Communist Party and the a % : : t Die dF beeees : wa tore Ware mt eye Agi Hi concuee aes ihe tee stan ak us ais sore seus '4| Because, unlike the capitalist newspapers, we | a stronger paper, a more powerful revolutionary | 1.800 participating. Five speakers, in Young Communist League a 2 Be we, 1B iT ‘i -A-! worked on planks near the skylight. | worker sooner or later, Painters dis-|% Phil, .., 822 1015 841 1810 2467 2651 184| haven't thousands of dollars at our disposal to | Movement. Get in line for Five-A-Day, readers! foi og et ee Aide chen ey t No forced fe tend see! he bn gets us all in the end, but, we'll oe sid set “ bo 2 bot —14/ build up circulation; because, unlike capitalist Subscriptions: Foundation of D. W. Communist in the city elections on i yn on the teps i! ‘ed . new _! | iu . morgen’ fight before that. “A Painter, | 7 Cleveland ..., 741 1578 759 1562 gae2 ager —1| NeWSPADErs, we do not receive thousands of dol~ Daily Worker bundle orders to acquaint work- |May 12. 4 | NITGED AIGET h P. A ic 1 eee coy S04 2481 807 2466 S285 9273 —12| lars from advertising to cover costs of printing, | ers with the paper, to make contacts, to in- ; A Letcepel wis a ‘orn hen lead. | a Rai leago ... 1237 4134 1243 4100 5431 584K RR depe: crease circulation, and subscriptions to keep con- | ing, carr! plagards and -banners y Hi Sout ern ac fi i road Cuts Wages ? Mnpls, 420° 604 ARB 708 1098 1146 52 Res ve hers ta pet ae sah bucobbiahioadl tacts, to establish a solid Tpabalet Rehndatinn: to | demanding unconditional release of | CAMP AND HOTEL Oakland, Calif. |in these shops have been gradually |!®Wans.Cty... 251 Gos ent gos it a5 1 | Class sanders to ea us ll Paani MOPS | ony for! coats of incredand circulation, and to | the five’ textile workers the silk| bade ese a ” Daily Worker: 5 1 Agrie, 3600-58 8G kB. sary for us id ue. is reason, every u . | RD EES apn 1 or thereabouts for the work- Tse titer for Nate halt of the | {enti aie ie 246 aa 1027 tape 72] reader should order a bundle of 5 Daily Workers | ell, wine out the ak hf itephbearibel watch cidaera chair ig. Bateraon ie Beautify) Rooms Heated y ioshas Mest Years Some wens Gaetine erty (2 edt: 3% 1690 651 1639 2223 2290 23) a day for sale among shop mates, friends, neigh- | °F Aden Mon bean es deathly thtie Wheinand tebe Hart 1A the ta. | Modernly Equiped evs in the Southern Pacific shops dene : 1B ONIY | 15, Conn, 207 442 208 487 619 645 —4] hors, fraternal members, and wherever workers | CUt the advantages of receiving the paper by | ata Keni ted bi 3 pa ft otiee mean wage-cuts of 5 per cent and several days per week since, # 18 South CC a ee Ge a gather, mail in the home where every member of the | Td which led to the scene of a Sport and Cultaral Activity Pi The company union of the railway | 17 Girming a3 116-88 «108148 49 , family can read it, Tell him of the certainty | Successful mass meeting. Proletarian Atmosphere more, ae ee departments | workers is doing nothing to fight. this,| 14 Mutte ..... 72oaw oe 35 107 107 ‘This year, May Day demonstrations surpassed | of not missing an issue on account of bad weath- bee eh #17 A WEEK and Jabor performed, because not} Workers must do so thomselyes over | iv Denver ,., 120 249 121 204 260 ARs ana those of any other. Hundreds of thousands of | er, sickness, etc. And: above. all, that paid-in- ‘TRENTON, N. J., Mi | e : " 5 a all, |, N. J, May 5.—All fac~ , only direct cut, but doubling up, will| the heads of the “rotten labor” lead- wer 107 AE 107 Bt 1901914) workers’, who were reached through the Daily | advance subscriptions will put the Daily Worker | tories here for months of part time | ie abi ieee ogee bie “ be forced on us. The working force | ership. —5. P. Worker, ‘W817 23558 7704 29687 81990 3144k aia Worker, came out and demonstrated on May 1. | on a rock-bottom financial basis! oe gave orders to all workers on their t

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