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| said that most of the men who were eeiving any wages, thereby filling the ‘ee DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1931 75 PER CENT JOBLESS ON ONE WORKINGCLASS STREET IN NORWALK Young and Old, Skilled and Unskilled, White and Black, All Face Starvation | Bosses Spout Empty Phrases About “Relief”;| Workers Must Organize and Demand It (By a Worker Correspondent) NORWALK, Conn.—Seventy-five per cent of the workers | om my street, Bonton St., are u “My husband has been out an Italian woman as she hung o “T am not in good health and cannot do he fave been without a job for two and a half years,” declared @ man of forty on the back porch of a three-story wooden| tenement. “Yes, Iam a union man and I have been without work for | @ year,” stated his companion. that of the common laborers’ union® of the building trades. And then he added. “The bosses are paying two dollars a day.” I protested at the statement and working were getting $5 per day. A. F. of L. Helps Cut Pay “Try to get it,” is all he answered. ‘The utéon scale is $7 and there has never been an “official” wage cut. The wage-cuts have been put over, however, and the A. F. of L. offi- cials have stood by and winked while the scale was being slashed—they even helped the bosses put over the cuts. Every house that was visited yielded the same story. Seven months out of work, three and a half years, nine months, eight months, two years. Un- employment everywhere. Chroni¢ un~- employment. The recital was over- whelming. ‘We approached two women sitting in the dorway of an empty store, one @ young Italian woman with a baby in her arms, the other Scotch with her hand on a baby cariage. The latter spoke up. “Her man has not worked for a | memployed. of work for nine months,” said | ut her wash. | avy work. I} He showed me his union card, year; mine has not had a job in nine months. The same all down the street. We'ye been hit awful.” Young Workers Jobless Across the street was a grocery and candy store with a sign “No Trust” over the cash register. There were eight or ten young men loitering about. The same story. All but one unemployed. One had just been fired from the Norwalk Tire Company. “How come?” I asked, “they are working three shifts.” “Yes, but they’re firing all the time. The speed-up.” “The dirty crooks are only paying $9 a week, muttered another. “T’m broke,” said a third ,turning his pockets inside out, which were empty except for a few matches. “I’ve got some matches but no cigarettes to light with them.” Young and old, skilled and unskill- ed, native and foreign born, white and Negro, all are hit. The capitalist politicians have now suddenly begun to shout “relief,” but theher is no relief forthcoming. It is just hot air —the workers must organize and force the capitalists to give them re- lief. Stockton Welfare Agent Insults Aged Man (By a Worker Correspondent) STOCKTON, Cal—aAn aged, gray- headed man, a citizen of Stockton for many years, entered the Welfare Department headquarters in order to apply for some of the much-her- alded unemployment relief. Upon entering the office and ask- ing for Mr. Newton, this worker of twenty years’ faithful service in Stockton was greeted with a growl from Newton himself, who referred him to one of the female parasites, The following dialogue took place: Parasite—Where do you live? ‘Worker—On the waterfront. P.—Where is the waterfront? ‘W.—What, you've lived here all your life and don’t know where the Houston Mayor Threatens Jobless with Jail and Forced Labor (By a Worker Correspondent) HOUSTON, Texas—The Hoover unemployment plan has struck Hous- ton with full force, The mayor's un- employment committee met recently and decided to force all the jobless non-residents to slave 8 hours a day for their meals. They will receive no pay and if they refuse to work for their board and bed they will be thrown into jail as vagrants. The Houston Post Dispatch, in editorializing on this plan, says: “No work, no food,” is the edict of Mayor Monteith’s unemploy- ment committee after considering the problem of drifters who will come to Houston this winter. “Able-bodied men willing to work will be given three meals and a place to sleep in exchange for Pay Drops, Hours Rise in Campbell Soup Factory (By a Worker Correspondent.) CAMDEN, N. J.—The workers in the Campbell Soup Co. during the short-time tomato season are work- ing from 12 to 14 hours a day for 25 to 36 cents an hour. The conditions under which they are forced to work continually endanger the workers’ health and lives. The poor facilities render a terrific heat and workers are continually collapsing on the Job. Stood in Line for Weeks. ‘Thousands of workers stood in the line for weeks, to be pushed around by the police and to be trampled by the police horses and a few of them were finally greeted with these slave- @riving jobs, which offer them the most miserable working standards known to the history of this indus- try. Reign of Terror Launched Against Florida Unemployed By A Worker Correspondent ‘TAMPA, Fla.—A reign of terror has been launched on all the unemployed workers here in the South. Hendry, the country court judge, is beginning to deal out stiff sentences to all the unfortunate unemployed workers, ‘These workers are being put on the chain gang and are being forced to work on the state road without re- pockets of the contractors and the rich grafters. Ex-Servicemen Jailed Many of these jobless workers car- ried a gun in the late world slaughter to make the world safe for financial capital. New these same workers Jooked upon as criminals because | on the waterfront do you live? protet against the sentencing of un- waterfront is? P.—Don’t get funny. you said front street. I thought Whereabout W.—In a box car. P.—Oh, I'll see what I can do for you. The worker brightened up at this, thinking that he would get back some of the hard-earned dollars that he donated to the community chest in years gone by, when the boss still had some use for him. But the worker was soon doomed to disap- pointment. He is still wondering how he can get along through the winter on the 75 cents’ worth of cof- fee tickets that the parasite gave him. Maybe someone could suggest a@ budget for him. eight hours of useful work, the committee has decided, “Drifters who refuse to work will be booked as vagrants by the po- lice and all will be required to move on after three days of Hous- ton’s hospitality.” There has been much written in the capitalist press about forced la- bor in the Soviet Union. We know that the workers in Russia, all have jobs and their rate of pay is increas- ing and there is no unemployment. I have read many letters from work- ers in the Soviet Union exposing the lies of the capitalist press. The real forced labor exists in the United States—and it exists with all the trimmings, threats of jail mingled with honeyed words about Houston’s hospitality. = In the plant there is no relief. The workers must go on working like machines in order to keep up with the high-speed production. The product, which is food, is unclean. Drops of sweat fall from the work- ers into the pots of soup. “One hundred and fifty million dollars has been created by the work- ers for the deceased owners of this plant. This monéy is now in the hands of the children of the dead owners. Most of them never saw the inside of the plant. Must Organize. ‘We workers must get together in this plant and organize committees in all departments to demand better conditions, and more pay, to fight against the speed-up and the tranny of the bosses, ‘ icemen working on the roads dawn here with a ball and chain on their legs, Judge Hendry says that he will stop the ‘crime wave by giving all the un- employed stiff jail sentences. He did not say anything about the graft spen not say anything about the graft spent by the racketeers for protection to the city and county officials. ‘There has just been a new mayor elected here advertised far and wide as a grafter and’a thief who imported gunmen to be used atthe polls on election day to intimidate the work~- ers going to vote. The workers of Tampa are prepar- ing to hold a huge mass meeting to Frank Spector to Speak in 5 Cities During This Week Frank Spector, who has recently been freed by the mass pressure of | Californian workers from the Im- perial Valley prison and who has been touring the country under the auspices of the ILD speaking at mass meetings demanding the freedom of all class war prisoners will speak in the following cities: Erie, Pa., Sept. 15; in Cleveland, Slovanian Hall, 6417 St. Clair, Sept. 16; Youngstown, Sept. | 18; Akron, Sept. 18. He will then] go to Detroit where he will speak | at two meetings arranged for him for Sept. 21 at 1348 E. Terry Ave. and 3014 Yamand St., Hamtranck. Conn. Conference | Hits Boss Terror; Demands Amnesty Gives Rousing Wel-| come to Scottsboro Mother NEW BRITAIN, Conn., Sept., 15. | —A mass state defense conference was held here Sunday at the call of the International Leabor Defénse with 90 delegates representing 75 or- ganizations. ‘The conference formulated plans for a broad united fornt campaign for the release of Jackson, Foster and Landers arrested in the Putnam tex- tile strike. A delegation of 15 was elected to make demands on gov- ernor Cross of Connecticutt. The conference pledged full and militant support to the mass cam- paign to free the nine innocent Scott- sboro Nebro,boys and gave a rousing welcome t o Mrs. Ada Wright, mother of the two boys, who addressed the conference. Richard B. Moore, national Negro director of the I. L. D., representing the national office and gave an \ex- cellent analysis of the present stage of the class struggle in the United States, and the growing boss terror against the Negro and white workers. Resolutions were unanimously adopted for the defense and release of the Scottsboro boys, of the Har- lan, Kentucky, white and Negro min- ers, of Mooney and Billings, of the Putnam textile strikers and the fight for free speech in New Britain. The conference named September 27 for the state-wide amnesty dem- onstrations for the release of all class war prisoners, VOLUNTEERS WANTED | To help in the Election Work every day in the afternoon. UNEMPLOYED COMRADES ARE URGED TO COME 35 East 12th St., fifth floor WORKERS OF MANY CITIES PREPARE I L. D. AMNESTY DEMONSTRATIONS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE: deportation of foreign born workers, and demanding the right of political ylum for the workers Li, Serio, Ma- chado, Kermotsu, Dea and others who are threatene@ with deportation to fascist countries where certain death awaits them. LUMBER MILLS SLASH WAGES STILL FURTHER Disease Spreading in Grays Harbor Cities From Malnutrition By W. H. H. ABERDEEN, Wash., Sept. 15— Conditions are getting worse steadily. Every day brings more people to the County Charity Office. Undernour- ishment is written on the faces of hundreds. The hospitals are being filled by workers with diseases caused | by malnutrition. Here ds an example. A Mrs. McCoy, whose husband is a member of the Unemployed Council, coal operators. To Gov. Roland H. | was suddenly taken ill. A doctor was Hartley at Olympia, Wash., must be|called who pronouced ot a dicease sent demand to free the Centralia |of the gall bladder caused by under- prisoners. Telegrams must also be/|nourishment. He ordered the patient sent to Gov. Conley of West Virginia|to the hospital, saying this is the in behalf of the Wellsburgh mine | 12th case of this kind that had sent strike prisoners and to Secretary of | him there on this day. Labor Doak, at Washington, D. C.| Along with this starvation, along in protest against the persecution and | with the disease comes more wage cuts ‘more lay-offs which are sure signs of terrific suffering during the com- ing winter for the workers of the Grays Harbor cities. The Bay City Mill which had been closed for three weeks started up with a wage cut of 50 cents a day. This brings the minimum to $2 a day. This, with driving the workers at a break- neck speed is the only way that the employers can see to meet the ail- ing demand for lumber and still reap | profits. . At the Schafer Mill No. 4 one of the workers who had worked for this outfit for several years was told that he should take a physical test. This worker thought this would be allright as he was feeling physically fit. He went before the doctor and was ex- amined. The doctor found that his teth needed treatment before he could work any more. The real rea- son for his teeth needing to be fixed was that he was receiving over $3 per day and a man was put in his place at a greatly reduced wage. The Unemployed Council must ex- Pose all such cases as this. Many of our members are new and are afraid that it might hurt them if they show class struggle. But the question that they should ask themselves is: What | more can the boss class do to us than it already has? Let's fight, not | starve! ranged for the following speakers Mrs. Ada Wright, mother of two of the Scottsboro boys facing the elec- tric chair; Pat Toohey, district or- ganizer of the ILD in California; Frank Spector, released Imperial Val- ley syndicalist prisoner, and Sender Garlin, co-editor of the Labor De- fender. At these demonstrations and con- ferences workers must send protest telegrams to Gov. Flem. D. Sampson, in Frankfort, Ky., in behalf of the miners facing the death sentence in| Harlan, Ky.; Gov. James Rolph at} Sacramento, Calif, must be deluded with wired demands for the uncondi- tional release of Mooney, Billings, McNamara, Schmidt and the Imperial Valley Prisoners. To Gov. Miller at Montgomery, Ala., telegrams must be sent demanding that the eight Negro boys held in the death cells at Kirby Prison, Montgomery, be transferred from the death cells, and demand- ing their release and in behalf of the Camp Hill croppers a Other telegrams should be sent to Goy. Pinchot, Harrisburg, Pa., in be- half of the mine strike prisoners, the Woodlawn sedition prisoners, Zima and Reseter; Leo Thompson, Tom Myerscough, and other victoms of the Sign “Hoover Hotel” Sedition Says Mayor Cermak of Chicago CHICAGO, WilL—Mayor Cermak hates the truth. His instincts of patriotism were, outraged yester- day when it was called to his at tention that unemployed homeless workers frequenting the old Crimi- nal Courts Building and county jail, transformed into a shelter, had tacked a sign over the door read- ing: “Hoover Hotel.” The mayor apparently associated this legend with old campaign war eries of “Hoover for Prosperity” and considered it a backhanded slap. “I regard this as an insult to our president and an indication of dis- loyalty to our country,” he observed in a statement. “Such conduct, in my opinion, tends to promote se- dition and Communism. The city and organized charities are willing to feed and lodge the homeless who are orderly and gentlemanly, but we have jails for the unlawful and disrespectful.” ‘By which he means that those who will not fight will starve and those who do fight will be jailed. Slashes (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) plans for this terrible speed up as follows: “Owners wish to ‘rationalize’ their production by putting one worker in charge of six, eight, or even ten looms, instead of the four which is the traditional number in Lancaster, Experiments made in various mills have convinced the owners that a skilled worker can handie twice as many machines as he has been accustomed to.” The Post reports that, negotiations have already been started between the manufacturers and he reaction- ary union leaders concerning the terms of this speed up program. The union leaders are preparing to fol- low the lead of the MacDonald in the attack on the workers standards. While they are conducting negotia- tions “on the basis of offers made by mill owners,” they have thus far refused to reveal the nature of these offers to the workers. They fear the revolt of the textile workers if the terms are made public now. The Post reports some of the terms on which it is expected the negotia- tions are being conducted, These in- clude speed up and intensification of the work in one form or another, There is one “concession” that the owners are offering. They are will- ing to recognize the “principle of a minimum wage equal to the average wage for working four ordinary Lan- caster looms.” This is one of the “concessions” which the labor fakers British Sailors Resentful of Wage - ; Navy Ordered to Port The attack on the British workers thru cuts in the dole was one of the terms on which the American bank- ers granted further credits to the British government. ‘is is revealed in the statement of rge Lans- bury, laborite, and former Minister of Public Works in the Labor govern- ment, in the House of Commons, that “The American bankers said to us, ‘Your social services are at- tracting the notice of workers in the United States, who are going out with banners demanding un- | employment benefits as in your country.” The bankers and capit- alists said wages must come down.” The. capitalist class in the United States wanted a sharp attack on the dole in order to stifle the demands of the workers in his country for immediate relief and unemployment insurance. The British capitalist class wanted the attack on the dole to save its profits. MacDonald’s Price The British capitalist class is go- ing to reward MacDonald for his treachery to the workers by making him an Earl and probably by ap- pointing him ambassador to the Uni- ted States according to the capital- ist press. This is the reward for MacDonald Tariff to Increase Workers’ Living Costs will use as a means of selling out the workers to the bosses. This “‘con- cession” means simply that the man- ufacturers will make the weavers run six, eight, or ten looms in the place of the four at present and will pay the. workers the same miserable wages they now get for four, The workers will be speeded up fifty, a hundred and fifty per cent, thou- sands will be thrown on the streets in addition to those now unemployed and the profits of the cotton manu- facturers will increase at the ex- pense of increased hunger for the workers, This is the program of hun- ger. This is part of the MacDonald attack on the workers. No Cut in Armaments While this attack on the British workers sharpens day by day, the Nationalist government “has no in- tention of curtailing its present naval building program.” This was an- nounced by Sir Austern Chamberlain, First Lord of the Admiralty, in the House of Commons Monday. This is the other phase of the hunger program. No cut in armament ap- age Three — Worcorr Groups Are Forming in Chicago; Join Them at Once! CHICAGO, Ill.— Workers cor- respondence groups are arousing high enthusiasm among the com- rades of the city. It is planned to start a class immediately on the South Side, under the direction of Comrade Gertrude Brown. The exact time and place will be pu lished soon. All readers of the Dail Worker, members of Daily Worker clubs, Daily Worker agents, and any worker interested in getting some hints so he can write up the | experiences for our paper, is in- vited to attend. There will be in- teresting discussions, exchanges of opinions, mixed with lively social activities also. Get in touch with us at the Daily Worker office. Other groups throughout the city will be organized as soon as this | first one is well under way. All comrades,are urged, if they cannot attend classes, to get in touch with (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tile courts lynchers N.A.A.C.P. Deny Floor to Parents. Time and again the parents have denounced the disruptive tactics of Walter White, William Pickens and of the Southern boss the head of the N. A. A.C. P, On their part, the N.A.A.C.P. misleaders have attacked the parents and the boys as “ignorant’—too ignorant, in the estimation of these hifaluting up- lifters to be permitted to select their own defense and decide the defense policy. of the Scottsboro boys have been de- nied the floor at mass meetings held by the N. A. A. C. P. “in the name” of the Scottsboro boys. Mrs, Ada Wright, mother of Andy and Roy Wright, was refused the floor at a us personally. N. A. A. C. P, mass meeting in Har- |lem. Mrs, Ida Patterson, mother of | another of the 9 boys, was refused | permission to address the 2ist an- COAL MINERS | nual conference of the N A. A. C. P. | held a short time ago in Pittsburgh. P Ic KE T AS | NAACP, Working With Bosses. | Both the boys and their parents have plainly told the N. A. A. C, P. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | misleaders that if they really wished to help, they must co-operate with ; the I. L.D. This the N. A. A.C. P. traitors dare not do for fear of of- fending the big imperialists, whose corrupting contributions enable the officials of the N A. A. C. P. to col- lect big salaries for their service to the imperialist oppressors of the Ne- gro people. ‘The danger to the Scottsboro boys lies not in anything that the N. A. A. C, P, misleaders can do of them- selves toward ignoring the wishes of the boys and their parents. The danger lies in the fact that the N. fence is a deputy. A little while ago | he wore a coal and iron police badge | and was paid by the company, But | the “Coal and Iron” was abolished, | and the next morning he appeared | with a deupty sheriff's badge pinned | on the coal and iron uniform. Now he dresses like a civilian, save for | the badge and gun he swaggers at | his hip. These are the thugs who do the worst of the company’s work. The state policeman sits in the com- pany office, demonstratin his neu- NAAC Misleaders Resume Fight | On Defense Rights of Scottsboro Boys other Negro and white reformists at | On several occasions, mothers | A. A. C, P. reformists are doing the dirty work of the Alabama boss lynchers and are supported by the Jabama bosses and their courts, as was shown in the hearing at Scotts- boro on the I. L. D. motions for new trials for all nine boys, At that hear- ing, Judge Hawkins, the lynch ver- dict judge, deliberately ignored the authorization of the parents ap- pointing the I. L. D. to have sole charge of the case. Judge Hawkins refused to rule an the question of whether the I. L. D. or the NAACP was authorized by the parents and their boys. By his refusal to rule on this question, Judge Hawkins gave the NAACP misleaders the chance to pretend they were in the case. Alabama Bosses Supporting NAACP. The Alabama boss lynchers and their courts are frantically support- ing the NAACP traitors in their at- tempts to smash the mass defence movement and narrow down the struggle to free the boys to a mere | court room trial in the courts of the very boss class which ts seeking to crush aut the lives of these innocent working-class children. | The workers, Negro and white, must defeat this traitorous attempt of the murderous southern bosses and their Negro and white reform- |ist tools. Workers! Support the Scottsboro boys and their parents in their right to say who shall de- fend the boys! Support the mass defense campaign of the ILD! Build block and neighborhood committees! Tell your neighbors the facts in the case! Rally your fellow workers to | the mass fight to smash the legal |lynching frame-up against these | innocent children. Collect and rush |funds to the International Labor | Defense, 80 East 11th Street, New York City. trality, ready with his gas bombs to) help the deputies if they need it. Sometimes they, have needed help. | Tries to Buy Votes. | The Penn-Ohio-W. Va.-Ky. Strik- | ing Miners’ Relief Committee has} been sending in food to keep the | striking miners and their children | while they fought for better condi- The American Legion will be used tions. For months the government | by the capitalist class in the coming has refused to do anything in the | winter in order to suppress the mili- way of immediate relief. Now, with |tancy of the working masses. This the election campaign sweeping the | was openly stated by Commander state, Governor Pinchot has set up a | O’Neil of the Legion, Monday, at the milk station for ailing babies here. | opening of the American Legion con- The sickliest babies among the strik- | ers’ families get 30 gallons of milk | ington. The situation at the present a day divided among them. Before | time is similar to that in 1917, said this 20 gallons of skimmed milk, that | O'Neil, and in this present situation an enterprising relief group per-|—the war on the workers—the ‘Amer- suaded the dairy to donate, had been | ican Legion should be used by the distributed. But more is needed— | capitalist class. Mr. Pinchot’s milk, together with | what the relief has given so far, is not enough. Babies are ailing. « 200 in Old Barracks. Renton, five miles away, is in great difficulties. In the barracks | built during the 1927 strike 200 peo- pl elive. The barracks rooms are not over ten feet skuare. Whole famil- ies live in each. Thin board walls and tar-paper roofs are hot and miserable in the burning sun, damp AMERICAN LEGION “The power of the American Le- gion should be used in remedying the present conditions,” Command- er O'Neil said. “The unemployment situation presents an emergency comparable to that of 1917, and our membership will function again.” In the capitalist attack on the | workers the American Legion will be | used especially against the leading ference on unemployment in Wash- | PREPARES 10 ATTACK MILITANT WORKERS | are ready and willing to work—to save them from the stigma of pau- perism and the dole, and to save our government from the menace of the racketeer and the Commu- nist. While this fascist leader talks, like the rest of the Hoover crew, about finding work for the jobless he knows | that there will be millions more job- Jess this winter than at the present time and he wants to prepare to | smash with force the militant surge jof the masses. | Secretary of Labor Doak who is |one of the leaders in the attack on |the militant workers was represented |at the conference by John R. Alpine. This demagog went so far as to say | that “I am not going to let anybody |tell me there are no jobs. I know |there are and we are finding them every hour and every day.” This hyp- | ocritical lie was too stupid for even and dismal in cooler weather. Every- thing in them is burning hot on a organs of the working class, against that crew of wage cutters and one the Unemployed Councils, the revo-|0f them, Henry Savage, former com- lutionary unions and against the |™Mander of the Legion, told him he brutally attacking he living stand- propriations. Increased naval facil- ae Of Ci) workers. ities, Continuation of the prepara~ summer day. Everything is dripping ‘ wet when it rains or a fog settles in| Communist Party. The Legion will the valley. ‘Two hundred people in |**Y> by attacking these revolutionary organizations of the working class, ‘ is no sympathetic city | 7 3 Le ae ee pe al he to deprive the workers of leadership 2, in the struggles against wage cuts ittee sends i life to th pore ee ee <™ | and for immediate relief and unem- here. The green apples of nearby ; abandoned orchards are stripped ployment insurance in the coming from the trees, The kids are sadly | Winter. : undernourished, but no Pinchot sta-| This was stated openly by O'Neil tion is located there to give out free | as follows: milk. There is no voting population around Renton, except those in the company patch—in the company’s pocket. These “outsiders” must pay a tax to vote. The company co- operates with the tax collector and | takes out of the miners’ pay not only his own tax, but his wife’s, even though the whole family starves the rest of the month as a result. Children Sicken. “Unrest and fear are abroad in employed are fertile fields for the fallacies of communism. “Lawlessness and communism are a more direct threat to the integ- rity of the government which we are pledged to maintain than was the threat of autocracy in 1917. Work must be found for those who the land, and the ranks of the un- | ae a liar. | The American Federation of Labor | was represented by M. J. McDonough | who repeated the program of the | AFL, for the five day week and six |hour day Hoover stagger system. He |even went so far as to recommend |a three day week which means that |the A.F.L. will put all its forces be- hind the spreading of the Hoover stagger system. He then added the rest of the AF.L. program of mis- |leading the workers—the abolition of the prohibition amendment. The AFL. is trying to divert the strug- gle of the workers fom defense of their living conditions and demand for relief at the expense of the capi- talists to the struggle against the Volstead act. All the children are barefooted at Renton and winter is not far away. Most of them have a rash on their faces. Bad food? A local infection? Or what? There is no doctor to tell. ‘The only doctor is the company doc- tor. He would never go to the bar- racks. /~-d medicines cost money. Renton is relief and needs it badly. ) ene in Renton even owns a Ford t> 39 out for relief. Renton, like scores of other camps, needs re- lief sorely. Send all you can in food, money to buy food and clothing to the Penn-Ohio-W. Va,-Ky. Striking Miners’ Relief Committee, Room 205, 611 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa, Workers, Get Ready a Big Days | 8 x tions for the attack on the Soviet Union. Atack on he Briish workers and attack on the workers of the Soviet Union. 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