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‘ } 1 1 ‘ / i] ' DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTE MBER Page Three aaa RED CROSS REFUSES TO ACCEPT SHIPMENTS 0: FOOD TO FEED HUNGR Kentucky Miner Calls On Workers To Bui Workers International Relief Mine Operators Charge Miners Double Pric: For Food in Company Stores (By a Worker Correspondent) HUEYSVILLE, Ky.—Let us make a few deductions and see just where and whence capitalism is headed. Let us see things as they really are. Does capitalism wish to ward off poverty among the millions of workers and small wage earners? Emphatically no. It has destroyed the demand of physical labor 50 per cent. Therefore, in order to maintain a greater margin of profit capitalism must reduce man-power 50 per cent, either by a war against the workers of another country, or by direct starvation and disease. (For ain’t capi-| Errand Boy Given Death, His Employer Life For Her Crime MERIDIAN, Miss., Sept. 21. (CNA) —Irving Pruitt, errand boy for Mrs. Louella Williamson, a wealthy white woman of this city, was sentenced to ‘ve hung yesterday. His crime was that he obeyed the orders of the voman for whom he worked and se- cured poison for her which she ad- ministered to her baby. The infant died. Mrs. Williamson was sentenced to life imprisonment which owing to her social position will probably be reduced to a term of a few years. , The boss class in its reign of terror against the cruelly exploited Negro masses are utilizing every pretext to carry forward their campaign of legal lynching. The court which sentenced an er- rand boy to death for performing the errand demanded by his employer, is the same court in which the lead- ership ef the NAACP contends the Negro masses can secure justice, HOOVER BIDS AMERICAN LEGION TO SAVE CAPITALISM FOR BOSSES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ment through daily work of every Seecro wines taehen S) man. It is for us to observe these conditions (of crisis). And in times of necessity our first duty is to the people (capitalists) of the United States. Nothing will give a greater confidence to our coun- try (capitalists) today than your who work in the field and at the desk must carry the additional expense.” Further emphasizing the attitude of the bosses in refusing to tax the rich for unemployment relief to the starving, destitute millions of unem- ployed workers, Hoover said: We must know that the rich can be taxed only to the point of diminishing their returns and still | nemployment relief) on your fov- would not fill our economic needs.” | .nment from whatever sources He invited the war veterans to} they may come.” enlist in the fight to maintain Am-| Yegion officials prior to the open- erican capitalism with its starvation | in¢ of the convention admitted a program against the unemployed | | vast mass meeting sentiment among workers, its wage cut and speed-up | the rank and file for the immediate of employed workers. He said: 3 | payment of the cash bonus. The - . I invite yom i Lee s | New York Times correspondent, after that fight. The coun’ asta need of | an interview with Legion heads, tele- this service is second only to war. graphed his paper: port you are capable to bring to bring to prevent any additional burden (payment of the bonus and enlistment and the vigorous sup- | talism in all other countries con-% fronted with the same problem—that | of preserving a huge profit for the capitalist class). Now, we find the American (rich-man) Red Cross re- fusing prepaid shipments of -fruits ranches of the Northwest into the drouth stricken areas last year, and why? Simply because it would de- a speculative venture—a part of the robbery that capitalism pulls off the | | workers with the complete sanction | of this Government. For instance: Coal is mined by a production com- | | Pany, sold to or through a broker, which in turn is sold to a selling I invite you to support the govern- POUND’S FALL = SPURS FIGHT FOR MARKETS the gold standard by Great Britain | means that the dollar will assume | the leading role in the world’s money markets for at least the immediate future and that, the struggle between British and American capitalism wilt press that retail merchant trade in| those stricken states. In ortler to Company and in nearly every in-| bolster up the retail and wholesale | Stance the whole network .of com- | standard of enormous profits, the | Panies is owned by an individual or be sharpened greatly, Since most of the world’s financing of the movement of commodities on (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Red Cross issued orders on the mer-|#t most two or three men. That is | chants in the respective communities; WY coal is mined at the starvation | at that high price that capitalism | Wage of 27¢ and 30c per ton and| wishes so hard to maintain. Now, retailed at from $5 to as high as the highest capitalist eircles there was a meeting of President Hoover, | an international scale has been done by means of sterling exchange, it is expected that the slump in the prices “While the national leadership of the Legion seems as anxious as the Hoover administration to ef- fect a compromise on the bonus, the rank and file of the legion- naires seem bent on _ forcing through a resolution favoring im- mediate cash payment of adjusted compensation certificates.” The same correspondent admit- ted that there is great resentment among the rank and file over the fact that they are forced to pay 4 Songs! More of | Them! Many workers, both young and | |old, have sent in songs, but many more are needed for the new song | book that is now being prepared. | Let us hear from the workers in | | the South, particularly the Negro | | workers who are struggling for Negro rights. What song have you | to offer? Send it in immediately to the Workers Library Publish- | ers, P.O. Box 148, Station D, New | | York City. | NANKING ASKS U.S.A. TO LEAD "WAR ON JAPAN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) much when he issued the following | statement: “Appropriate steps are being taken to apprise the League of | Nations and the powers signatory to | the Kellogg pact of the unwarranted |actions of Japanese troops.” | Neither the Washington govern- | ment or the League of Nations have | indicated as yet the steps they intend |to take in answer to the appeal of |the Nanking government. The Chin- lese delegation of the League of Na- |tions is still awaiting definite word on what action they will urge upon the League Assembly. CHAMLEE WARNS NAACP TACTICS MENACE SCOTTSBORO DEFENSE Chief of Counsel Points Out That Parents and Boys Have Chosen Mass Defense Policy of I. L. D. PAGE QNE) | Mr. White did all these things after I had informed him of my contract with the parents and the boys in writing. Now at this stage these discredited elements of the N. A. A. C. P. try again to play « role in this world-famous trial by hid- ing behind the name and prestige of Mr. Darrow. (Sgd.) GEO. W. CHAMLER,” FUNDS NECESSARY TO GIRD DEFENSE (CONTINUED FROM class and of the entire population. In the early part of the case Mr. Darrow was approached by the In- ternational Labor Defense, but at that time did not seem to realize the importance of the case, While I weclome his entrance into the | case at this time, particularly be- | cause of his high standing in the legal profession as a result of his defense of a long series of working~- class and civil liberties cases, still I must point out that his econnec- tion with the case through the N. A. A. C. P. must be regarded as an { | | | | | | | per cent interest when borrowing their own money, The govern- Japanese Entrenched with Secretaries Stimson, Mellon, | and Lamont. Sunday night Flandin,|o¢ the world’s chief commodities ment, they peint out, pays only 2 In the meantime, Japanese troops ‘We are aware that in nearly every community today there is cut-rate cash stores, but in no ease to our} Ikmowledge did the Red Cross take advantage of them. But on the con- trary, used the stores where the prices were the highest. Build W. 1 Members of the American Red Cross should follow the actions of thousands of their Kentucky breth- ern—forsake such a tool of Hoover) capitalism. Get out of it and into one thet is being built for the work- ers and ctieelly the workers alone. ion with capitalistic contre’ is enly a tool of that des- force cf capitalism. Henee ss cf the Selvation Army icon Red Cross, The tional Relief is the 's Red Cross, the on relief orrenization within the borde: of the U. 8. designed for the wor' ing-man alone. It is his salvation and he should bend every energy to make it a shining example to the Internationel working-class. I am listing the production prices of a number ef articles below also the rctail prices. The marginal dif- ference in thes2 two prices is sueked into the pocl of a combination of capi ¢ ‘enterprises commonly known as selling companies, broker- age firms and holding companies, all of which scciety ean do without. They cre a nuisance to society as a whole. They are only intended as $12 per ton within a radius of 300 miles to the mines. The writer visits the great onion | producing states every year, and he saw onion farmers get an average of | le per Ib for a whole season’s erop, | while at the same time the retail | trade were receiving 10c per pound | for the same onions. They too went through the same combination of agencies as brother coal. Miners Charged Extra Today the many coal company | commissaries of eastern Kentucky are ! retailing: Lard at lic to 20c perj pound, the Great A. & P. sells at 1€c retail; bacon at 20e to 25c per pound; the Great A. & P. sells bacon | as low as 10c same grade; coffee at | 2c to 60c per pound; the Great A. & | P. sells coffee 10c to 40c same grade; | butter 50c to 60c per pound; the Great A. & P. sells butter at 23¢ same grade, The main staples that miners must e are always outrageously priced. | west milk is usually 80c per galion. gure that beside the. price the} | fermer gets. A visit to the respective | stoves will convince the most skep- tical that today human slavery is an | established fact—tight in the lap of | the “goddess of liberty.” The gov~/| ernment is energetically protecting | | these interests, which by the way | ‘and @ very small minority of Am-| ,ericans, against 40,000,000 American | laborers—and we stend by awaiting, for what? Arise from thy sleep: Workers. Build Rank and File Committees in the White Goods Dress Strike (By a Worker Correspondent.) NEW YORK.—Local 62 of the White Goods Workers Union of the American Federation of Labor is a company union, a union for the bosses and not for the workers, They are calling out a fake strike to collect and rob the hard-earned money from the workers—$11,35 per union book and 35 cents for dues— in order to have on their payroll money to pay for their gangsters and thugs. The whole union is built on racketeering. ‘The workers are working long hours and their pay has been cut More than half in a so-called union shop by the order of Mr, Schneider, Shaw, Goff and the rest of the backeteers. $10 to $15 a Week. The girls in the underwear shops are getting from $10 to $15 a week for 50 long hours of work. What is Mr. Schneider doing to betteh the conditions of the workers? He is telling the bosses to cut the wages Thugs Attack Worker For Selling “Daily” Cincinnati, Ohio Dear Comrades: A former dick and stool pigeon of the Cineinnati police department weighing about 190 pounds attempted to attack me while I was selling Daily, Workers in Washington Park, ‘This attempted attack is another in- cident of the general terror going on in Cincinnati. Four hoodlums stopped me and threatened to bump me off if I came back to Washington Park to sell the Daily Workers. The bosses of Cin- cinnati know that the Daily Worker is fighting for the unemployed and organizing the workers generally all Arrest Workers For Banker Free (By a Worker Correspondent) GOODLOE, Ky.—Great stirrup around here, Quite a number of - people have been ordering the neces- sities of life, giving “bogus” checks ete., for same. The postal inspectors have made the rounds, scores have been put under bond for their ap- pearance in federal court. ‘The pecular thing about this in- cident is: That the local postmaster is a wealthy land owner, merchant, feoker and he knew many of these parties were ordering parcels under In fact, he | and lengthen the hours, | is being well rewarded for his ser- vice to the bosses. Shaw Took Bribe. Mr. Shaw took a bribe from a boss, B. Obtaker of $1,500, in order to sell out the workers in that shop. Mr. Greken, a member of the execu- tive board, came out with the story of the $1,500 bribe and exposed him. | Now the same racketeer is defending | him and helping him to do the dirty work again. Workers, expose the fakers and their fake strike, Make the fake strike into a real strike by electing your shop committees. Demand the return of the wage-cut, equal divi- sion of work, no discrimination be- tween races, Don't believe the fak- ers of Local 62, They are not there to better conditions, but te make them worse. They are there to pro- tect the bosses and collect more graft. Workers, don't be fooled, Join the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, 131 W. 28th St. over the city and so they mobilize hoodjums and thugs in order to pre- vent the sale of our fighting work- ing-class paper. The fear of the Cincinnati bosses about the coming struggles for relief this winter is the main reason for this attack, But, thugs or gangsters, hoodlums or cops will not stop the sale of the Daily Worker in Cincinnati. I'm back in the park selling our paper to the workers, The workers of Cincinnati should know about the general terror and the bosses’ solution for the present crisis. That is the reason I’m writing to you. Sam Macdonald Bogus Checks; Guilty assumed names, But we find that he was the biggest buyer of the “swindled” merchandise, The fact is the guilty parties were a very ignorant bunch, or poverty drove them to it. But watch the capitalist courts now, They will say that ignorance is no excuse before the law, The poor citizens will “make time” in Atlante, The rich mer- chant-banker will “make time” mak- ing money—the usual way, Such are the roads of capitalism, French Minister of Finance, met with the officers of the Bank of England te discuss the financial crisis. Leading bankers in London are el- ready admitting that Great Britain will remain off of the gold standard for at least six months “if within that peried the country manages to which has been very sharp thus far in the crisis, will decline even more precipiously, In addition the decline on securities thruout the world will ave very serious effects on the en- tire banking structure of the United States. British securities outstanding in the balance its international trade as well as its budget.” From Basle in Switzerland, the lo- cation of the Bank for International Settlements, it has been reported that the pound will fall at least a third of its value. This has caused “surprise bordering on consternation” , among the bankers in Paris. The New York Times reports that Berlin bankers “incline to the view that the United States total about $150,000,000. There are in addition the $4,600,000,- 000 of war debts to the United States, $125,000,000 credits granted to the Bank of England by the Federal Re~ serve Bank on August 1, and $200,- 000,000 credits granted by the private bankers, headed by J. P. Morgan & Co. on August 28 to the Bank of Eng- land. The interest and principal on all of these are payable in dollars. per cent on money it berrows for | are enthenching themselves along the Bank of England’s action was an ‘This means that if the pound declines S OS te all capitalistic countries,|y one-third, as capitalist sources warning them that the existing cur-| expect it to do, it will mean that rency system was in imminent dan- Great Britain will have to pay one- ger and that the present dislocation third more in-interest and other pay- of the world’s gold categorically de-| ments te the United States. Pay- manded readjustment.” ments to Great-Britain on its foreign So serious is the situation that the , loans, however, where they are made Daily Mail of London writes that will be in the same inflated currency England “is rid of the gold standard, !as that of Great Britain. Since most rid of it for good and all.” This view | of the British loans are to colonial is agreed to by many American and semi-colonial -eountries which bankers who are preparing to take cannot pay their debts now under up the struggle against British im-/ any cireumstanees, it is possible that these Ioans, but foree the men to Pay 4 per cent. The men claim also that the government makes a Profit of $10,000,000 or more an- nually on veterans’ loans. mander, boasts that the legion has become “the most powerful organi- zation that eur country has ever known,” and calls upon the war vet- erans to save the bosses’ government from the menace of Communism. SOVIET PRINTING PRESS BUILT built in July at the “Yagoda” factory in Rybinsk, Ivanov Industrial Region. The work turned out by the machine was of excellent quality. Two more presses were in the process of con- | struction and were expected to be ready early in August. result of the abondonment of th- In his report to the convention | Ralph T. O'Neil, the retiring com-| The first Soviet printing press was | |southern Manchurian front. Fight- jing in many sections has taken on \@ sanguinary character, Casualties jeontinue to mount as Manchurian |troops at different points put up a semblance of resistance. The New | York Herald-Tribune dispatch re- |ports the following Japanese casual- ties: Japanese casualties in the fight- ing in Manchuria are sixty-five killed and 137 wounded. In the fighting at Mukden two Japanese were killed and eighteen woynded, while in the fighting near Chang- chun, which had centers at three points, the Japanese easualties | were: Nanling, forty killed and fifty wounded; Kwangchengtse, twenty- three killed and sixty-nine wound- ded. No reports of Japanese easu- alties have been received here from Peiling, the third point. Manchurian casualties are much greater. Anti-Japanese demonstrations have perialism under the new conditions of world exchange. It has been re- ported from Washington that “Great Britain would be compelled in the end to go on an ‘adjusted gold. basis’ which would in effect mean a stabil- ization of the pound at a lower level.” The British capitalist class itself is so fearful of the outcome that they have been transferring their funds into franes and dollars. All of the continental “countries were sharply affected by the German crisis in July, Their funds became “frozen” in Germany and they were forced to draw on their capital in) England, This occurred especially in! | Holland, Switzerland and Sweden. | the additional deficit resulting from This sharpened the crisis in the Bri- | tish economic situation which has been developing over a period of years, The immediate effect of the sus- pension of the British pound will be a sharp contraction of the world markets, and general and wide- spread attacks on the living stand- ards of the workers throughout the world for the struggle on the world markets, Through the suspension of the gold standard the prices of all goods to Great Britain, particularly from the only gold atsndard coun- tries, Franee and the United States, will rise sharply, This will on the one hand eut imports and on the other will mean a tremendous rise in the cost of living for the British working class. The British working the payments to Great Britain will be hit tremendously. The gap be- tween payments and receipts will be widened greatly. It is likely that the United States will not receive the payments due on the war debts for Great Britain will not be able to continue them in the present situation. This will mean that the present tremendous deficit in the United States budget will be inereased greatly, The United States government is already making pre- parations to increase taxes in one way or another by tremendous levies on the working masses. This attack on the workers will be sharpened by the lapse of payments from England. mis Sar 4 The suspension of the gold stand- ard means that practically all cur- rencies in the world except those of France and the United States will be cheapened greatly in relation to these two, The struggle on the world markets will be accentuated. The capitalist program for this intensified strugele will be wage cutting on an unprecedented scale. This is the prospect that faces the American workers. Wage cuts are planned tor the steel and railroad industries. All other industries are expected to fol- low them in the coming weeks. This was planned before the British crists had reached its present state. The attack on the wages of the American workers will be sharpened many fold. class will be faced with the prospect of hunger wages due to the rise in prices as well as to British capitalist class to prevent any rise account of the rise Not only will imports be curbed and the cost of living rise as the re- sult of the suspension of the gold standard, but this will be intensified by the erection of high tariff walls by the British capitajist ‘class in or- der to obtain a favorable balance of trade. Not only is England faced with in- flation as the result of the suspen- sion of the gold standard but this ts Ukely to be the next step taken by the weakest of the debtor powers, This is admitted by Pertinax, one of the leading financial writers in Paris. He writes as follows: “The greatest creditor nation in the world allows its money to weak- en and that example is dangerous. Countries which are now hesitat- ing on the verge of monetary in- flation may not be able to resist the attraction of paper money. The pound sterling note was the me- dium of all world commerce and the pound note has received a severe blow. “The economic international fs in full retreat. England has with- drawn to her resources and the other countries which preceded her in this policy will not be long sur- passing her. As concerns the gen- eral total of exchanges, the slowing ‘up of commerce seems inevitable.” It has. been estimated that sixty per cent of the world’s business 1s done in sterling, The suspension of ‘The capitalist class will try to put thru sharper wage cuts, while the Hoover government attempts to press more taxes out of the working class. ‘The capitalist class in the United States in the present crisis trying by all means in its power to replace the pound by the dollar. The ca- pitalist class in the United States is carrying on the greatest struggle in the history of the world’s finance against British imperialism. The granting of credits by France and the United States in August were part of that struggle against British imper- ialism, They constituted a direct blow at British imperialism which was forced to accept the credits due to the shaking of its entire financial structure, Yesterday Sir George Paish sta- ted that; “The consequences may be very grave, dependent primarily upon the attitude of France and the United States,” Sir George contin- ued. “If they do not become alarmed it fs unlikely that the pound will depreciate much. Con- trarily, if the United States and France try to sell sterling at any cost, due to alarm and lack of con- fidence in Britain, the Itkely result is that the pound will depreciate considerably, While Wall Street is determined to take every last bit of advantage out of the collapse of the British pound, nevertheless it fears that the collapse of the British structure will ‘be a severe blow at the entire capi- talist system and that the entire eco- gold standard by the British bankers. | been reported fromm many centers In In one of the very few interviews |South Manchuria as Harbin, Tsits!- granted to reporters, J. P. Morgan|har, Anda, Manchuli and others. today stated in London that the sus- | Japanese troops have been ordered pension of the gold standard by | to suppress tre demonstrations. % Great Britain “seems to me a hope- | The fact that the situation 1s ful and not a discouraging event and | broadening out in a world imperial- one brings the great work of the| government much nearer to accom- plishment.” He attempted in this to hide the tremendous effect of the | suspension on the entire capitalist economy. What he fears now is that the U. 8. banking structure will be shaken severely as a result of this blow, The pound fell at one time to $3.75 cents on Monday and closed at $4.30. The Bank of England had used up practically all of the $650,000,000 | cedits they had received from the} United States and France prior to| the present crisis. It is now revealed that the $200,- 000,000’ which was the last portion of these credits raised in the United States is being brought together only through the greatest difficulty on the part of many of the 120 banks in the U. S, which participated in granting the credits. This is revealed in the New York Evening Post in the fol- lowing: “But there was some trouble foreseen in America of calling up the full amount by the 120 banks which stood behind the American share of that credit. More difficulty than had been expected was en- countered in arranging this first ‘credit and it was deemed impossi- ble to arrange another one.” The Pott points out further that the prohibition of short selling on the the New York Stock Exchange Monday was dictated principally by the fear of the collapse of the U.S. stock markets. “The policy of the American authorities is seen to be not with- out common sense, in view of America’s own difficulties, but it is also appreciated as helping to bring sterling to a workable and steady ist conflict is seen in the statement of the Japanese imperialist govern- |. ment that Nanking intervention makes “the problem too big to be localized.” Howeyer, the pretense that the occupation of Manrhuria is a “military inlident” and dould be settled is still being maintained by the Japanese. Struggle Sharpens William Simms, foreign, editor of the Scripps-Howard papers in saying that Japan will not relinquish occu- pied sectors of Manchuria withoht a struggle, tells of the effect of the im- perialist outbreak: “In so doing (the Japanese oc- cupation of Manchuria) it has trampled upon the toothless Kel- | logg pact and scrapped the nine- power treaty signed at Washington “to respect the sovereignty, the in- dependence and the territorial ad- ministrative integrity of China.” In describing the rich resources of | Manchuria that Japan has now seized and that British and American {m- | perialists look to with jealous eyes | the New York World-Telegram writes: Manchuria has 370,000 square miles Its population is 30,000,000, It is larger than New York, Penn- sylvania, Maryland, Ohio, Alabama, Indiana and Tennessee put together. In climate it is like Iowa, the Dako- tas and Montana, It is a grain country, rich in min- | erals, | Japan owns the South Manchurian Railway, from Dairen (Port Arthur) to Changchun. Japan owns several branch lines, and is constantly pushing out new “feelers,” along which she accumul- ates “concessions” and acquires mil- attempt on the part of those in charge of the N. A. A. ©. P. to keep up their own criminal sab- otage of this case to date. “As chief counsel in this case I have had considerable experience with the maneuvers of the N. A. A. ©, P. to utilize this case for their own ends, to the detriment of worked with the Ministers’ Alli- ance, which employed Mr. Stephen H, Roddy, who is charged by the boys and their parents with be- traying the interests of the defen- dants by urging them toplead guilty te this atrocious frame-up and putting up no defense for them in court, Press reports stated that the N. A. A. ©. P. employed Mr. Bed- dow, who filed formal notice of his withdrawal from the case after Mr, White had informed the pa- rents that Mr. Beddow was in their (N, A. A. C. P.) employ and had been persuaded t oremain. Incon- nection with the employment of these lawyers the N, A. A. C.P. en- deavored by deceptive letters to the parents and relatives of these im~- prisoned boys te induce them to take the case out of the hands of the International Labor Defense and myseif as chief counsel, an act which, if eonsummated, would have left them without any ade- quate defense, This series of acts, combined with other reprehensible actions on the part of the N. A. A. C. P., has completely diseredited them with the defendants and their parents. “All the parents and next of kin of the boys, all of whom are min - ors, haye signed contracts employ- ing me in these cases, and that they had employed no one else and would not do so without my con- sent. The boys say that Walter White and other representatives of the N. A. A. C. P. have visited the prison in company with various lawyers, trying to induce and ter- rorize them in order to get them to sign statements that the N, A. A. C. P, had some connection with the eases. Under this pressure ap- Plied te the boys in the shadow of the electric chair, press reports quote Mr. White as saying that some of the boys signed for him. Since that time the boys have talked and written, begging me and the I. L. D. to keep Mr. White and the N, A. A. C, P. away from them. OF CANADA C. P. Struggle “Against the | Bennett Gov't of Mass Starvation the defendants. The N. A. A. C. P. | TORONTO, Can.—The mass pro- test and demonstrations of the workers and poor farmers of Canada against the attack of the “starvation | government” upon the militant or- | anizations of the working-class, | zation of a mass defense fund, The | must be followed with the organi- Canadian Labor Defense League is | preparing for the greatest defense | battle in the history of the Canadian | working-class. It will cost thous- ands of dollars to defend the nine comrades singled out by the auth- orities in this attack. It costs thous- | ands of dollars to carry on the mass | agitation and propaganda necessary |for the defense and to supply the dependents of our arrested and per- secuted comrades with maintenance. | The Canadian Labor Defense League will fight this battle to the finish, leaving no stone unturned in any phase of the struggle for the pro- tection of working-class rights. The very existence of the whole working-class movement in Cenada is |at stake in this great political trial |now facing the courts. Every re- source of the militant working-class | must be mobilized to fight baek ypen the revolutionary working-class which jis eceasioned by the fact that the | Communist Party and the militant | unions mass organizations have been | leading the workers and poor farmers |in the struggle against hunger and | poverty. Your dollars will be our fighting ammunition. Send all yeu can. Give! Give! Give! In the interests of your ewn elass! Send all dona- tions and collections to the national office of the Canadian Labor De- fense League, Room 308-331 Bay Street. Do not delay. Send in your donation today One way to help the Soviet Union is to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor,” by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. Twenty-Five Cents for Address City .. The only youth paper figh YOUNG basis in the quickest possible time.” itary control. International Youth Day Campaign SPECIAL TRIAL OFFER Two Months Subscription to the YOUNG WORKER (Published Weekly ting for the every day. needs of the young workers WORKER Post Office Box 28, Station D, New York City, N. Y. Let us know at once what you have already done, or what you are planning to do for the Bazaar. Buy a combination ticket (31.00) and get one of the following subscriptions free: 1 Mo. to the Dally Worker 1 Mo, to Morning Fretheit 3 Mos. to the Young Worker nomic and financial situation of the United States will also shake as a ONLY THREE MORE WEEKS LEFT TO THE Daily Worker Morning Young Al Freiheit Worker AA MADISON SQUARE GARDEN