The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 29, 1931, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

“ Si a DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMB: aR 29, 193 LETTER TO STREETCAR | WORKERS IN U.S. FROM WOMEN IN LENINGRAD Call On.American Workers to Follow Example | | of Russian Workers Leningrad, U.S.S.R. Dear Comrades: | ni the name of the women workers of the car barn “Ka-| linin” we are sending you Bolshevist greetings. Ve wish to tell you something about the life of the work-| ers of the Soviet Union and their achievements. You surely know, that the Soviet nion with her great} construction plans occupies the first place in the world. Under the leadership of our Communist Party we are building every day new giants—factories. @ But now we wish to describe you| of the Soviet Union. At present our the life of the women workers of| public utilities are functioning very | our barn. Our car barn, where we) poorly, compared to the industrial de- | work, is a small one and the total | velopment and the needs of the city. | amount of workers is 1,900. Women| Unemployment is liquidated and we| workers 1,048 as car conductors, mo-| have a shortage of skilled and un- torwomen, mechanics, cleaners, ttc, | skilled workers. ‘We have a tool shop at the barn. The| The Soviet nion is developing its women workers leave their children|own qualified workers. We have in the day nurseries and kinder gar- | hroadened our “Ucheba” (education) dens at the carbarn, when they go|to such a degree that culturally we to work. Women, that nurse babies | are growing daily. work five hours and forty-five min- | Vacations utes with full pay. | Now a few words about our va- Time for Study |cations. A worker, who workers 5% | Women workers that study at uni- | months is entitled to three weeks va- versities, factories, schools and high-| cation. A pregnant woman is en-| er courses, for convenience sake, se-| titled to four months vacation: two| lect their own working hours, not to | months before birth and two months interfere with their studies. jafter, with full pay from their in- Equal Pay for Equal Work | surance treasury. The women work here as well as| Dear comrades, much more could at other enterprises seven_hours a|be written about our Soviet Union day, and at harder work six hours a|and the fighting examples of our day. | working men and women, You will Conductors receive 90 to 130 rubles | surely read it in the history of the | tricts,, the general character of the | and more a month. The men and women are getting the same pay for the same kind of work. Many Woman Leaders ‘The women in general are occupy- | ing high positions here. We have | women directors and leaders of great | enterprises and professional organ- izations, etc. We have 48 per cent at our car barn motorwomen, Our women work- ers are taking an active part in Udarnichestwo” and “socialist com- petition” in speeding the upbuilding Cops Club Jobless War Vetgin N. Y. Park New York, N. Y. Daily Worker: As an ex-serviceman who fought! for the bosses in the last war, I want | to protest against the clubbing of un- employed workers in the parks when | they attempt to sleep there for want | of a better place. I have seen cops} club a worker who protested that he was an ex-serviceman. That made no difference to the cops, they just kept on clubbing him. ‘Those who sleep in the parks cer- tainly do not do it for pleasure, but | because they have no jobs and no re- lief of any kind. I write this to the “Daily Worker” because I know it is Seattle Red Builder Jailed for Selling “Daily” (By a Worker Correspondent) SEATTLE, Wash.—A member of | the Unemployed Council while sell- ing the “Daily Worker” at 4th and) Pike in the heart of Seattle was | arrested by the cops on September 9 and taken to the police station. Af- ter waiting 45 minutes this worker was ushered into the sacred chamber of his august majesty, the chief. The police instructed the newsboy to not holler too loud and be care- ful about standing in front of stores. Also the chief said that the police were great friends of the workers. ‘The workers have seen police friendship in every town, hamlet, 25 to 50 Workers Fired Daily at Carnegie Plant in Duquesne ‘ (By a Worker Correspondent) DUQUESNE, Pa—The Carnegie Steel Company has had Mr. Hoover's stagger system in effect for some time. Every day we find from 25 to 50 workers laid off. Wawes have been cut and the speed-up is in full effect. Play Politics With Poverty ‘The number of unemployed is ra- pidly increasing and hunger and mis- ery are the order of the day. The local parasites and politicians are playing politics with poverty and in order to get a little starvation “re- lief” one must get on his knees with the social service fakers. Moore and Mansfield are the uncrowned kings of the social service here, while Mrs. Mary Sepalek, a miswife and her boy friend, William Saltis, a policeman, are the two principle fixers for the social service grafters. If by chance this lordly police bully or his snooping girl friend happen not to like ones looks or if one does not support the “right” politicians or if one is not a stool pigeon he gets no Textile Bosses Maneuver to Force 8-Loom } System on (By a Worker Correspondent) CLIFTON, N. J.—The National ‘Textile Workers’ Union, with head- quarters at 39 Monroe St., Passaic, issued a leaflet to the workers in the Dundee Textile Mill, calling upon them to organize and fight against the 6-8 loom system that the bosses there have introduced. ‘The leaflet pointed out that there were two workers, one from the day shift and one from the night shift, revolutionary movement. We are awaiting your reply and} hope that you, comrades, working | men and women, will follow our) fighting example for your liberation. | Comrades, working women, don’t | delay your reply to your class-com- | rades. With hearty fighting greetings of the street railway (car) working wom- | en of the car barn “Comrade Ka- | linin.” | Salomonova, Zibovskaya, Bogdan- oba Boshetova, Moonina. the only working man’s paper in New York, Editorial Note—The Workers Ex- servicemen’s League, 79 E. 19th St., New York City, is organizing the war vets to demand the immediate payment of the bonus, to fight for | unemployment insurance and also against imperialist war. If you are an.ex-serviceman and a worker you should be in the ranks of this mili- tant organization. About face, ex- servicemen! The American Legion is on the side of the bankers. Join the workers in their bitter struggle! Join the Workers Ex-servicemen’s League! city, and in every strike in the wide world. These friendly police club | and beat up the workers and even kill them, If a worker should in self- defense try to defend himself, he is railroaded to jail or to the electric | chair by these same police and their | bosses. Look inside our prison; filled with workers and the police put them there. We are going to sell the “Daily Worker” thruout Seattle and wake up the people to the real issues be- fore them. You can bet your last donut that the “Daily Worker” will be sold all over Seattle regardless of police or any other persecution or tommyrot. relief. Refuse to Give Relief Recently the social service refused to help the Jarsaley family. There wer six children in urgent need of milk, clothss, shoes, etc. They could not attend school. Relief was refused on the grounds that the father work- ed one and sometimes two days a week and was therefore able to sup- port his family. Another family by the name of Chi- coda were given relief even though the father works five days a week. This family was given relief on ac- count of their “correct” political stand —that is, they voted for the party that the social fakers wanted them to vote for. If one says annthing about the welfare administration is Dubuesne that the welfare does not like they are jailed and charged with distrib- uting the peace, speaking without a permit or some other charge trumped up by the municipal government in an attempt to crush the fighting spirit of the workers, Workers to turn it to their own advantage. ‘The next day the leaflet was posted in the bulletin case with a notice beneath it to the effect that all work- ers who think that six looms (which they are working now and against which the leaflet called for an or- ganized fight) is too much or who think that they can’t work the six looms, to go up to the office and give their reasons, In this way they want to weed out the militant workers and then, when they are ready to introduce the 8 looms, they will say to the workers, “You had no kick against the six looms; here take two more looms.” Steel Conference Lays Basis For Big Movement (CONTING FROM PAGE ONED | center of the industry, in the Pitts- burgh, Youngstown, Ohio Valley dis- new wage cuts plus the presence of | delegations from the Chicago, Phil- adelphia and Cleveland districts gave the Conference, from its first session, a national character. Plan Strike Tactics Following the adjournment of the conference at 7 o'clock Sunday night, the National Committee for the Building of the Steel Workers’ In- dustrial League, composed of 21 steel workers from mills in each important center of the country, met and ad- opted a program of strike tactics for the coming struggle. They also eledted a resident board of ten. John Meldon was elected secretary of the National Committee. Following the reports of John Mel- don, national secretary of the M.W. LL., and Bill Dunne, William Z. Fos- ter was introduced. Cheers and ap- | Plause rocked the hall as the leader of the great steel strike of 1919 and general secretary of the Trade Union Unity League rose to speak. Many of the steel workers present had struck in 1919. “This conference will go down in history as one of the big start- ing points of workers in struggle,” Foster said. “Our main purpose is to stop this wage cut. This wage cut represénts the beginning of a new world-wide cutting of wages. This wage cut must be met by strike all over the country.” “One Union of All Steel Workers” Speaking of the Amalgamated As- | sociation of Iron, Steel and Tin| Workers in 1919 and today, he said, | “now as then, it is controlled by U. | S. Steel and is an instrument to pre- yent the workers from accomplishing anything in the industry. A fight- ing leadership is necessary—and no} more craft unions! One union of all steel workers must be built!” Tremendous applause interrupted him here. During the adjourment for lunch, sectional conferences were held where plans were laid for establish- ing direct machinery at local con- ferences, ‘series of huge mass meet- ings for the next few days were plan- ned and local organizational prob- lems were settled. The district organizer of the Com- munist Party, Carl Price, was given a big ovation when he brought the Party's greeting and pledged its sup- port in the coming struggle. Espe- cially when the Daily Worker was mentioned, did the steel workers present show their approval by pro- longed applause. During the discussion that follow- ed, steel worker after steel worker told of the resentment that flared up following announcement of the wage cut in the department and mill where he worked. One delegate from Versailles told how out of the week's pay of $3.12, a fellow worker re- ceived only 12 cents — the $3 were substracted by the company for “in- surance,” What The Bosses Do In Clairton, another delegate re- ported, the cupboards in workers houses are searched for possible un- ion literature. Here the steel work- ers meet on nearby farms. In the Wheeling Steel Co's. mills in Wheel- ing and Benwood, West Va., reported another, the men were warned that anybody caught reading a N.W.I.L. leaflet would be immediately fired— and it didn’t matter whether he brought it into the mill or not. Cheers swept the hall when a tele- gram from the Friends of the Soviet Union was read, pointing out the recent 30-50 per cent rise in wages in the steel and mining industries in the land where the workers rule. Martin Crampo of Monnesseh, dele- gate to the Berlin International Con- vention of the Workers International Relief, was instructed by the con~- ference to represent the steel workers at the Friends of the Soviet Union convention in Moscow. Two resolutions were adopted by the conference—one containing the program of action against the wage cut and for the building of Indus- trial Union, and the other on work- ers defense in the steel struggle. The Conference sent telegrams of greetings to the Woodlawn prisoners in Blaw Knox, one of whom, Milan Ressetar, is now dangerously ill. Tom Zima and Ressetar, steel workers and Pete Muselin, barber, were rail~ roaded to 5-years in jail by the Jones and Laughlin Steel Company for their activities in organizing steel workers in the company town of Ala- quippa., Telegrams were also sent to Tom Mooney, Billings, the Scotts- boro boys and the heroic miners lay- ing in jail in Washington County (Pa.) and Harlan. Fifty-thousand copies of the Pro- gram of Action, which analyzes the situation in the industry and maps the program of organization and strike, will go into the mills imme- diately. Points In The Program “Steel and metal workers-face now the fiercest attack in the history of the industrys” the program declares in part. “It is a new attack—a new offensive of the steel capitalists for which extensive preparations have been made. A nation-wide cut of 10 per cent and more is being car- ried thru against the wages of the COVERDALE, Pa., Sept. 28—The, state will take away the babies from | every striker's wife, the state visit-| ing nurse threatens, unless floors are | |Jaid in all the tents in the tented | city here. Mrs, Fanny Brown, whose | three-year-old baby is in the hos-| pital, brought her ten-months-old baby into Pittsburgh to have the re- | lief doctor take care of the abscess | on her baby’s leg, and told of this | threat. “Every time this nurse comes she says that there’s too much sick ba- bies,” Mrs. Brown states. “She says there's too much sick on the com- pany patch, too. She always says that the government is going to send us milk for the babies, but the only milk we get is what our relief gives us and none comes from the govern- ment. Every time she comes she Says she’s so surprised that it hasn’t come yet. “Now she says that no floors in the tents is what's making these babies sick. And that if the relief don't put in floors, that the state is go- ing to take every baby away from us, because a generation of babies is being killed off. But she says ba- bies on the company patch is awful sick too. Company Kills Children “We think that it all comes down | to the same thing. No milk. If the company starves us out, that’s what's Killing off our babies. But giving them up to the state—I should say not! There's a better way—let the State Threatening to Take Mine Strikers’ Babes Away government give us milk to feed our babies, and let them give us places with floors to live in! Our relief committee is keeping us still breath- ing and living by giving us something to eat. Sure we need more, lots more. | The government is giving us noth- ing—guess we've got to get after them and make them feed our ba- bies!” “We aren't crazy about living in tents without floors. We'd much rather have warm houses now that it’s getting so bitter cold. But when the company threw us out of the houses on the patch, out on the road, the relief got us tents. We'd still be living in the rain if it weren't for the relief! “There are lots of families still needing tents. Instead of talking about throwing us out of our tents and taking. the babies away, why don't they help get something for a covering over the heads of these folks? Fight For Babies “Nobody is going to take my baby away! Our Women’s Auxiliary is on the job—we'll fight it! If the relief will only send us milk! And then we'll go after the government and make them do something!” Thousands of babies, and their older sisters and brothers, bare-leg- ged, skinny-bodied, need food. Their fathers, fighting against starvation, ask your help in keeping their chil- dren alive. Send what you can! The relief headquarters are at Room 205, 611 Penn Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. “Times” Staff Man Admits Hunger, Terror In Harlan (CONTE: | stores, or commissaries, as they are called. “While some operators earn a mod- erate profit, perhaps 5 per cent, on their commissaries, others are said to earn 25 per cent and more. Some jhave confided to friends that they earn more on their stores than on | coal.”” Stark tells of starving miners tak- |ing the food from a company store | last week, and of their seizing three machine guns from an armory last week. He phophesies “virtual civil war this winter unless relief is ade- |quate”, and on the same page ad- |mits that “a miners’ relief soup kitchen, supported by Communists, was blown to bits by an explosion and union sympathizers have been beaten up and driven from the coun- ty.” Send More Food! | This miners’ relief soup kitchen, was one of the Relief Stations of the | Pennsylvania - Ohio ~ West Virginia - | Kentucky Striking Miners Relief Committee and the Workers Inter- | national Relief. Whatever food these | starving Kentucky miners have ob- tained since their struggle started, has been through the Penn-Ohio Re- lief, and the question of continuing |to furnish this food is a matter of simple life or death for the Ken- tucky miners.and their families. Send food and money donations to the | Penn-Ohio-W. Va.-Kentucky Striking | Miners Relief Committee, Room 205, | Academy Building, 611 Penn Ave. ' Pittsburgh, Pa. gle. “The steel bosses dare to make this vicious attack upon the living stand- ard of millions of men, women and children of the working class, only because of the great mass of steel and metal workers are unorganized.” “For the steel workers there is only one way out of the pit of growing mass urlemployment, increasing speed-up and deepening misery into which they have been plunged by the steel barons, This is the way of organization and struggle — the way pointed out by the Metal Work- ers’ Industrial League.” “Poverty, slavery and actual starv- ation—or organization and struggle. This is the situation we face. The steel barons have put the issue to us in the trudest and most briftal form. We will fight!” “We shall encourage and organize departmental and local strikes and fight. to win departmental and local demands. At the same time we shall use every effort to spread and broad- en these struggles. into strike strug- gle ain: the decisive:mills thruout the entire district. We shall try with every resource at our command to organize a national counter-offensive of the steel and metal workers. We shall work in closest relationship with the National Miners Union and the Railway Workers Industrial League. We shall call upon all work- ers to consider our struggle their struggle, to support us and join with us, to defeat this new attack upon the working class.” When the demands about which the steel workers will be rallied to fight were proposed, the steel worker delegates present responded enthu- Siastically, frequently cheering. The demands about wages include: No wage cuts. Strike against the 10 per cent wage cut. Abolition of the “stagger” sys- tem method of reducing wages. No less than $5 per day for any worker in the mill. Equal pay for young workers, Full pay for all time spent in the mill. No less than four hours’ pay for each time called to work. General increases in wages for all steel workers. Higher percent- age of increases for lower paid workers, No attachment of pay for debt. pay. Right of all injured employees to remain home at full pay without / reporting until fully recovered. Some of the other demands in- clude: Abolition of all forms of speed- up. Full crews on all jobs. Enforcement of eight-hour day. No double turn, no overtime work. Recognition of mill and depart- ment committees elected by the workers, Abolition of the spy and black- list system, abolition of company police and guards, abolition of com- pany towns. No discrimniation against Negro workers, Abolition of all Jim Crow rulings. Abolition of finger printing and compulsory physical examination. Right of all employees to select their own doctors at company ex- pense. In addition special demands were adopted for fight against unemploy- ment. These include: No payment of rent by unem- ployed workers, Reduction of rent for part time workers, . No evictions for non-payment of rent of unemployed or part time workers, The last business of the conference was instructing the National Com- mittee to call the Convention that will establish thé Steel Workers In- dustrial Union no later than Decem- ber 15 and reiterated that it be call- workers thruout the industry, under the leadership of the United States Steel Corp. Steel and metal workers have now the task of organizing strikes to force the withdrawal of this cut. We call upon all steel and metal workers to launch thip strug- ed much sooner if the situation war- rants. Intense determination, readi- ness to fight, and jeagerness to go back to prepare fér strikes against the wage cut and build a mass in- | dustrial union of steel workers, mark- FINANCIAL CRISIS SPREADS AS GOLD STANDARD WEAKENS {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) bankers to the suspension of the gold standard by England was that it was a@-victory for the franc, they now feel that the suspension of the gold standard will have very serious ef- fects not only for France but for the entire capitalist world. In Ger- many there are “rumors” by the score of the near failure of many German banks, including many of the strong- | est. In Germany the Reichsbank | has already had control of domestic reserves and foreign exchanges, The Reichsbank Friday put into effect another regulation forbidding the transfer of German securities to for- eigners without permission of the Reichsbank. The German capitalist class has been using this in order to transfer its capital out of Ger- many for fear of the deepening of the crisis in the coming months, Tokyo Exchange Closed In Tokyo the Stock Exchange was closed again on Thursday because the brokers and the banks were un- able to put up $6,000,000 required by the Stock Exchange authorities to insure stock transactions. South Africa, the center of the world’s gold production, is considering the placing of an embargo on the export of gold in order to conserve its resources. The Athens, Greece, Stock Exchange has been closed until October 5. The brokers are unable to meet their obligations and many bankruptcies are expected to follow any further drop in the price of stocks. So seri- ous {s the financial crisis in Jugo- Slavia that the banks will pay out substantial deposits only after per- iods ranging from eight days to three months, The St. Thomas Savings Bank, one of the leading banks in the Virgin Islands, a United States colony in the Caribbean, closed its doors Friday. While the blows to the entire cap- italist economy resulting from the suspension of the gold standard in Great Britain are reported from every capitalist country thruout the world, the bankers of the United No deductions by company from ‘States are figuring out how great the gains are going to be for U. 8. finance capital. They realize that they must intensify the financial war against France for the spoils. The New York Times financial pages carry the following news about this war for the spoils. “Paris or New York. In all probability these two centres will divide the international financing business formerly done in London, but the lion’s share is likely to come to Wall Street, where the machinery of international finance has been developed far beyond that of Paris. Accordingly the great Wall Street banks have before them the prospects of immensely increased international business and of obtaining a major part of the $250,000,000 to $300,000,000 for- merly paid each year to London,” W. P. Simms, foreign editor of the Scripps-Howard papers, sees in the visit of Laval, premier of France, to Germany, one move in the attack of France on Great Britain, not only in | the financial oN but in the general ;economic struggle. Simms writes: “While storm clouds continue to pile up on Great Britain's horizon, a new peril is in the making for ‘her at Berlin, where French and German chieftains sit talking. “Premier Pierre Laval, of France, and Foreign Minister Aristide Bri- and have gone to Berlin to effect the economic understanding with the Reich. “Ohancellor Bruening and For- eign Minister Curtius, of Germany, favor the scheme, providing a basis of agreement can be reached. “Tottering as industrial Britain already is, a Franco-German bloc might bring about her fall.” France-German Attack on Britain 4 not the significant fact remains that France is carrying forward with full |force the attack on British capital- ism. italist world is figuring as to the best means to meet their budget deficits and to gain a favorable balance of trade. In Argentina almost complete suspension of imports is the aim. While the cutting of imports will tend to increase the country’s balance of trade, it is creating an even greater deficit in the national budget thus bringing the national finances nearer to collapse. Italy Increases Duties has put into effect a 15% duty on all imports except those included under the most-favored-nation treaties. The United States and Great Brit- ain, which are the two most im- the most. sharp cut in the exports of the U. S. and Great Britain to Italy and a sharpening of the economic crisis. The capitalist class already fears that there will be an_ intensified powers as a result of the financial crisis in Great Britain and as a re- sult of the immediate possibility of financial crisis in practically all of the capitalist powers. Whether this is accomplished or | Each of the countries in the cap- | The fascist government in Italy| portant countries not having such | treaties with Italy, will be affected | This duty will mean a) GET READERS FOR D.W. are lhree = PREMIUMS ACTIVE FORCE | Whenever workers are approd on any working issue, they should be approached with a view to their subscription to the Dé er. Only by this method w taking advantage of Possibilities for the D: act as the force which wil contacts and in the lon; great way toward keeping new | Premiums Offered With Subs. | Every Daily Worker Club should get as Many of its members ont a: subs as possible, Every worker and Party member should be activized. The Daily Worker is able to offer at this time a variety of premiums for one year and six months subscrip- |tions which will make the securing | of subs a great deal easier. Combined with the regular yearly and six | months subscriptions to the Daily Worker which are in themselves yery attractive to workers everywhere an offer of a double value which includes |an offer of a novel or labor book of | current interest to workers is made. With one year subs we can offer |“Brusski” which sells for $1.50 per copy. “Brusski” (The Soil Redeemed) is a novel by F. Panferoy. It not onl | Presents a new standard for bool out of present-day Russia, but is one of’ the modern outstanding transla- |tions to have been brought to this jcountry. Its theme is the collectiv zation of a Russian village: it is v | ten in a warm, simple style. And style }and content together are somehow reminiscent of stories of American pioneering, excepting that instead of | the success of an individual we are shown the trials and triumphs of a |whole group who function as one. | | But the simplicity and the struggle against weather and famine have the | |same deeply sympathetic and human | | quaiity. | | With a six months sub we can of- |fer “Red Villages” which sells for 50c i |® copy. “Red Villages” is a book} |about the revolution in Russian ag- riculture under the Five-Year Plan. Here we see the process by which | |the Soviet Union is replacing the | horse and wooden plow with tractors }and combines; and tiny, wastefully | |strip farms are welded into vast col- lectives to which the peasant brings his land, his cattle; his farm-machin- ery and his labor. Commissar Yakovlev writes too of | | the state farms, great grain factories with modern cities of workers grow- jing on the sites of straw-thatched |hovels. The very scope of his mate- | rial makes his book dramatic, as well | as’ a record of primary importance. | | American readers will find the au- | thor’s comparison between Soviet ag- jriculture and that in the United | | States of particular interest Instead of “Red Villages” on the six months sub we offer either one of the Labor and Industry series which sell at $1 a copy or, the La- | bor Fact Book which sells at 85c | a copy. The aim of the Labor and Indu try Series is to present a picture of |the development of the important | American industries in relation to the |workers employed in them. Other books dealing with American indus- have been written from the ched viewpoint of the empl FOR NEW SUBSCRIPTIONS ested in perpe tem of exploitation and in 1 corpor: udies American 1n- “Labor Fact Book” has just bee: issued by the International Publi g with social, eco- tical conditions affect- material in the book assembled and edited cooperat- by the 1s members of the Labor Re Association of this ne various topics treat- nce imperial- m, the economic cri: social insur- ice, war, ts, wages, unemploy- rnment la d po rch mergers s worker ‘and i member will find the task of soliciting subs made much easier as the books of fered as premiums are unusually desirable ones. Many Demonstra- tions for Release of Tom Mooney (CUNTINUED FROM PAGE ONED Scottsboro for St. Louis, Mo., Sept. 26. New Haven, Conn., Sept, 26. Detroit, Mich., at Grand Ci Park, at 7 ‘p.m, on Wednesday, Sept. 30. New Britain, Conn,, Oct. 2. Bridgeport, Conn., Oct. 3. Hartford, Conn., Oct. 3. Baltimore, Md., October 4. Philadelphia, Pa., 7:30 at Grand Fraternity Hall, 1626 Arch St., Oc- tober 8. Reading, Pa., campaign are scheduled at Forster Hall, | October 11. Boston, Mass., on the Commons, October 18, Demonstrations have already been held in New York, Cleveland, Cincin- nati, St. Paul and Minneapolis, Mar- quette, Mich., and other cities. Wire Protests Workers should send telegrams of protests to the following govern Governor B. M. Miller, Montgo- mery, Ala., demanding the rem from their death cells fo the Scotts- boro boys held on a framed murder charge; and the release of Jesse Canada, Camp Hill Negro share- croppers, held for defending himself against a sheriff's posse Governor James Rolph, Jr, Sacra- mento, Calif, demanding freedom for Mooney and Billings, the Im- perial Valley prisoners, McNamara Schmidt, and other class war vic- tims, Governor Flem Sampson, Frank fort, Ky., for the release of Negro and white miners held on framed charges of criminal syndicalism at the Mt Sterling, Winchester, and Harlan jails Govrenor Gifford chot at Har risbur , for the r of min ers jailed in the Pitt irgh coal strike City +. | The only youth paper fighti | of the young workers tariff struggle among the capitalist | International Youth Day Campaign | SPECIAL TRIAL OFFER Twenty-Five Cents for Two Months Subscription to the YOUNG WORKER (Published Weekly ng for the every day needs YOUNG 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 ($1.00) and get one of the following subscriptions free: 1 Mo. to the Daily Worker 1 Mo. to Morning Freiheit 3 Mos. to the Young Worker Daily Worker Mornin; Young Al Freiheit Worker | AA MADISON SQUARE GARDEN ed the eoference.

Other pages from this issue: