The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 1, 1931, Page 3

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UNEMPLOYED COUNCILS GROW IN WASHINGTON LUMBER MILL REGION Gain Support of Workers in Mills; Two More Mills Close, Firing All Wilson Bros. Slash Pay Down to $1.75 Per Day; Bosses Fear Organization ee (By a Worker Correspondent) ABERDEEN, WASH—With the crisis growing more acute in this lumber;producing center, the bosses are growing frantic in their efforts to place all of the burden on the few workers who are left on the job. Congressman Albert Johnson said in a speech that he made at the laying of the corner-@ stone of the new post office. “The three weeks this last spasm. ‘The people of this harbor must not allow the Unemployed Council to gain a foothold here, they make too much trouble.” Jobless Council Grows Not to be out-done by Johnson, John Troup, County charity officer, is using all the methods that he has at hand to break up the Unemployed Council. He is trying a stunt to put the members of the Cauncil.to work in the mills where the wages are well below $3 per day, Even though the mill men have the members on the blacklist’ he sends them there and they are put to work, But the men that are displaced by this method are coming into the Council, while those that are sent to the mills are not dropping out. Two Mills Closing Two moré mills are closing down this week. The Hurlburt mill and the Bay City Mil. The Bay City mill has been running but about other has run for three or four months, $1.15 A Day The Wilson Bros. Lumber Co. started up their mill which had been down for the last 5 months. Here the wages were cut again; this brings the common labor down to $1.75 a day. Just how they can get anything out of these slaves for the charity fund is a puzzle to almost everyone. This mill has orders enough to keep it running for about two weeks, then why they keep closed no one knows. The Unemployed Council will con- tinue to grow in spite of the bosses efforts to destroy it. The workers show considerable militancy but are still confused. And it is the task of the Com- munist Party with all of the revo- lutionary groups to point the way out. Seneca Steel Fires 1,500; Drives Workers at Top Speed Buffalo, N. Y. Daily Worker: I want to tell you how in the Sene- ea Iron and Steel Mill of Buffalo, in which I am working, the bosses have been able to reduce our wages, throw many of us out of work and speed us up. New machinery and new speed up methods were introduced in our mill and the result was that 1,500 men were thrown out of work—3,000 used to work in that mill before. How was this done? Two men used to work on a mill splitting the earn- ings between the two (we work piece work). Recently the company decided to place a third man to work with the two, without extra work given us. This means that what two made be- fore has to be split among three. The overhead expenses, ete., are the same for the company, but our earnings are less. The company tries to make us believe that extra men are given work. But we know that this is a lle. What it really means is that they get more work done, and it costs the company less to do it, while we get less money and are out of work a longer time. Another scheme of speed up, which actually amounts to reducing our wages is to work the mill “three high”, this means to run three bars through the roller instead of two. No extra man is put on. ¥ ‘What we need in this mill is for the workers to get wise to the bosses’ scheme of working the life out of us and to understand the schemes to reduce wages and speed us up. We must get together into groups, or- ganize’ shop committees and bring other workers into the organization and fight for better conditions. —A Steel Worker. Cmaha Jobless Committee Passes the Buck Omaha, Neb. Dear Comrades:—Mayor Metcalfe’s unemployment “relief” campaign is being ridiculed not only by the work- ers, but it furnishes much amuse- ment in various quarters here. A statement by a local writer here says: “Lost, missing or mislead: The mayor's committee on unemployment. When last heard from its members were talking about organizing.” The latest statement from Metcalfe says; “We are not going to promise to put individuals on jobs. That is not our aim. We are going to make a sufvey, and locate all the available jobs that we can, and then let the state and private employment agen- cies take care of plaging the individ- uals.” It is just paving the way for a buck passing program. ‘The American Legion representa- tive on the mayor's relief committee is Sam W. Reynolds. This individual is nationally known for his recent agitation against further payment of the grave yard bonus. Reynolds has been one of the national committee- men of the Legion for some time. He has a “cushy”, yes-man job here with N. B. Updike, grain capitalist, and has acted as liaison between Wall St. and the Legion for over 10 years: Ne- braska and Iowa workers should know this gay ‘deceiver for what he vis. He is a personal friend of Ham Fish and an enemy of the workers and ex-servicemen. A Worker Correspondent. 1 Worker Does Work of 8 in Ford Plant: Detroit, Mich. Daily Worker: ‘The Detroit Times congratulates Henry Ford because he did not cut the wages of his workers, while over- looking the fact that the workers in the different departments of the Rouge plant are crying for their lost jobs and one man is doing the work ‘tof eight men now. 4 ‘The Chevrolet plant is shut tight yand no one knows when it is going to open up again. The Dodge plant Cal. Welfare Helps (By a Worker Correspondent) STOCKTON, Cal.—“Our” Welfare Board is out to do its bit in helping ‘the bosses as are all the other rotten relief and so-called charity organiza- tions. They are trying to use their office as a recruiting center for star- vation jobs. During the peach season they forced workers to work for a dollar a day (no board) on a veiled threat of discontinuing relief. Now that the cotton picking season is on they are again active recruiting ‘for this work. The regular wages for stopped production of the Dodge models and a few thousand men were placed on the streets. The produc- tion of the Plymouth plant is going down grade daily and work is very irregular, some weeks only one day and some two or three days. Speak- ing to the workers of these plants discloses them to be very restive and eager to know how things are run in the Soviet Union. Comradely yours, F. S. Bosses Slash Wages tion (the nearest field is 75 miles from here). In California the average adult cot- ton picker .under the most favorable headlines in the capitalist Forced labor in United State: not even enough money to buy food picking cotton is 75 gents a hundred (furnish your own grub and bed). ‘They are attempting to send men, yomen and children down at 50c a ct, The workers must furnish not only their own board but transporta- } J enosha, Wis.Workers ‘car Sikat Speak on Communist Program KENOSHA, Wisc—A Mass Elec- tion Campaign Rally was held Sep- tomber 26 at the Danish Brother- hood Hall, 63 and 22nd Avenue, at which more tan 200 workers parti- cipeted. Cor ade John Sikat, the Communist ¢ Adidate for congress oon Hie NAA Cost with in return is the true story. We are forcing some relief now. We will force more and more, keep organizing, fight for and get unem- ployment insurance. ‘Wisconsin spoke and the workers ap- plauded wildly as the comrade ex- plained. the program of the Com- munist Party in this election. Comrade Early of Chicago was the main speaker and explained the whole economic ‘background of the capitalist system and showing how the socialists the world over have betrayed the struggles of the work- ers and called upon the workers to DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, “THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1931 Bridgeport Workers Elect Delegate to Visit Soviet Union BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Sept. 28— This important New England indus- trial city has gotten the jump on many larger cities in the matter of electing a delegate to the American Workers’ Delegation to Russia. At @ conference of representatives of various workers’ organizations, called by the local Friends of the Soviet Union, a native-born worker employ- ed in a@ local plant as a die-maker was elected to the delegation. (The workers’ name is withheld in. order to protect his job). The delegate will be ratified at a mass meeting to be held Monday evening, September 28, at Red Men's Hall, 67 Madison Ave. at which Mar- cel Scherer, member of the National Committee o fthe F.8.U, will speak. ‘The American Workers Delegation, which will sail about the middle of October and attend the celebration of the 14th Anniversary of the Rus- sian Revolution, is being organized by the Friends of the Soviet Union, 80 East 11th Street, Room 221, New York City. There will be 15 dele- gates, elected by shops, trade unions and conferences of workers’ organ- izations throughout the country, ‘The delegates will take with them thousands of greetings from Amer- ican workers and friends of the U.S. SR. to the Soviet workers and pea- sants. Greeting lists are now being circulated by the F.8.U. throughout the country, the price per individual greeting being 25 cents (10 cents for unemployed). STORM JAIL T0 FREE 11 COMRADES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) presentation-of the unemployed pe- tition to Parliament. Repeated club- bing of foot and mounted police failed to clear Parliament Square. Twelve arrests were made and one worker was seriously injured. Three Police were sent to the hospital. De- Spite the prohibition, crowds march- ed through Whitehall to Hyde Park where @ meeting of forty thousand strong was held. Amazing scenes occured in the park when workers tore up wooden palings, using them @s weapons against the police. ea The British capitalist class ts de- termined to keep MacDonald in its government at this time. It has been almost made certain that there-wilt be no elections in the near future’ and that the MacDonald govern- ment will continue to govern by fas® cist decrees. The New York Times points out that “if an election is not held, Parliament probably will be ad- journed until Spring.” This means that MacDonald will put thru the attack on the working class thru the Orders in Council and without bene~ fit of the “democratic” capitalist Parliament, The Times reports that the Con- servative leaders, “now are willing to give him a free hand to appeal to the country to restore the present government to power with a mandate to solve the financial difficulties by the best means available.” The Conservatives who were the most vigorous in the demand for an election are willing to avoid one at the present time. They want Mac- Donald to use the “best means avail- able” to save the capitalist system in Great Britain# MacDonald has already shown what these measures are — clubbing the masses who are protesting against his hunger budget. ‘The attack on the Daily Worker of London and the establishment of a censorship over it are the MacDon- ald “measures” against the leader of the working class, the Communist Party of Great Britain. In order to make the introduction of fascism easier the British Labor Party has drawn up an election plat- form attacking the government pro- gram. This platform attacks the inflation, the tariff increase, and the hunger budget of MacDonald. This hunger program of the capitalist class which the Labor Party now at- tacks, in order to mislead the work- ing masses, was prepared in prac- tically all of its details and has been advocated by the leaders of the La- bor Party just prior to the time that the Labor government was taken out by the capitalist class in order to put in the National gov- ernment. The capitalist class real- ized very well the rising militancy of the masses and has saved the Labor Party for just the role it is now Playing — shouting militant in order to prevent the workers realizing the introduction of fascist rule and fighting it. ‘The Labor Party in its election platform comes out with the program of the British capitalist class for an international conference on the question of international financial stability. The British bankers are demanding this conference as part of their struggle against the bankers of France and the United States. The Labor Party brings forth this de- mand of the British bankers in order to fool the workers that they can ex- pect anything from such conferences. ‘The Labor Party realizes that the terrific increase in the number of Jobless brings with it @ threat to the entire British imperialist system. In the last week there has been an in- crease of 22,535 in the number of unemployed which has now reached a total of 2,811,615. Due to the sharp slump in the foreign trade, of Great Britain the longshoremen and the seamen have been hit particularly SERIES OF WAGE CUTS SPREADS TO MANY INDUSTRIES Wage Cuts Will Be Re-| peated, Says Times NEW YORK—Great response is meeting the call for organization in the steel industry to prepare for strike against wage cuts. Special re- ports to the Daily Worker from Pittsburgh tell of mass meetings of steel workers enthusiastically adopt- ing the program of cation in the Ohio Valley and in many Pennsylvania steel towns, Repeating the fact published be- fore in the Daily Worker, that the present drive is just the beginning of mass, open wage cuts, the New York Times of September 29 admits: “Another consequence of these important (wage) reductions is fore- seen inn further cats by manufac- turers who have already lowered their wages scales, These are the elements in every industry and business who apparently can in- troduce no economies except thru wage cutting.” That all industries have been in- volved in the general wage cutting drive and that the railroads are com- ing next is the statement made by @ leading Wall Street stockbroker. Theodore Prince, head of the Stock Exchange firm of Prince & Co., said that the wage cuts were a “solution” of the crisis, and that-“The only in- dustry today that still remains un- adjusted is the railroad industry.” This means that the railroad indus- try will be “adjusted” next, that is, wage cuts will soon be handed out to 1,200,000 railroad workers. Firestone Tire Cuts Pay AKRON, Ohio, Sept. 30—A ten per cent wage cut, besides another wage cut in the form of reduction of the working time from five and one- half days to five days, has been an- nounced by the Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. Another Steel Cut YOUNSTOWN, Ohio, Sept. 30— The Republic Steel Corporation will cut wages on October Ist. R.R, Union Officials “Discuss” MONTREAL, Sept. 30.—Railroad union officials are “discussing” with executives of the Canadian Pacific Railway and Canadian National Rail- fway the proposal of a 10 per cent wage cut. Utah Copper Pay Slash SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 30.— Ef- fective October 1, the Utah Copper Co., controlled by the Kennicott Copper Co., “will cut wages 10 per cent. Wages“ Were cut June, 1930. ‘The’ Aiierl¢ah Smelting will also re- duce wages at its: Garfield, Utah, smelter. Board of Trade Cut CHICAGO, Sept. 30—The Chi- cago Board of Trade ordered a pay cut for most of its office workers. SOUTH CAROLINA MILL CUTS PAY; . Is One of Series of Pay Slashes GRENVILLE, 8. C., Sept. 30.—The Brandon-Mill here, has just cut wa- ges 10 per cent. It is interesting that this cut comes soon after the Na- tional Textile Workers Union organ- izer, Clara Holden, was kidnapped by five men just as she was leaving the Brandon Mill village, where she had been talking to some workers. ‘This 10 per cent at Brandon is the latest fh a series of cuts that have taken place in the Greenville mills in the last three months—Woodside, Judson, Monaghan, Duncan and the Piedmont Plush Mills have all been cut from 5 per cent to 15 per cent. Further cuts will undobutedly take jlace in the next few months. The mill owners in collaboration with the A. F. of L. are trying to keep the workers fooled, and keep them from joining the National Tex- tile Workers Union, At the very time that National Textile Workers Union organizers are kidnapped and their lives threatened, A. F. of L. organiz- ers are conducting a campaign of speech-making at the different mills apparently with the consent of the mill owners. . The Rev. Paul Fuller, well-known for his famous.disappear- ing and sell-out acts, has even been brought in by the A. F. of L. So far they have had no success, as the workers are wise to them, from past experience. ‘The, mill workers of Greenville be- Heve in the policy of the National other mill workers of the south will come out on strike under the leader- Gastonia, Marion, Elizabethton, Greenville and Ware Shoals. South- ern workers are fighters. This time they will win! One way te help the Soviet Union is to spread among the |Miners Union locals are meeting. They GOVERNOR HANGS 85 MEN IN ONE MEXICAN TOWN Massacres Population For Resenting Rape SAN JUAN BAUTISTA Mexico, Sept. 30—Governor Tomas Garrido has hanged 85 residents of the town of Villa Guerro, state of Tobasco, be- cause the population there resented the raping and kidnapping of a young girl by Garrido’s henchmen, maycr Luis Chablas of Villa Guerro. ‘There is great indignation through- out the community at this massacre of practically the whole male popula- tion of the town by the governor's troops. Chables was an army lieutenant. He and his guards were taking the girl to a hideaway in the mountains, when she fainted from her horse and was killed. The townspeople organ- ized_to put a stop to any attempt by the mayor to replace her with ano- ther girl, and in the fighting, the mayor was captured and lynched. Governor Garrido then sent’mount- ted riflemen, and the whole popula- tion fled to the hills. They resisted in an improvised fortress until starv- ed out, when wounded and hungry, they were marched down the road called Camino Paraiso (Paradise Road) back toward Villa Guerro. Half way back, the column was halted, and 85 men were summarily hanged. New Strike Looms in Mines Near Straight Creek, Ky. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONT) it costs considerably less in stores | owned by anybody but the coal com- panies, ‘The company knows that National know that groups are actually meet- ing inside many camps. That is why they are clamping down now worse, than ever. Well equipped armed thugs are spreading their ac- tivities outside of Harlan County, raiding miners’ homes. From. Cawood, Ky., some distance away, where a strike is in progress, the secretary of local 11 writes to the Penn-Ohio-W. Va.-Ky. Striking Min- ers Relief Committee, “Am writing you in regard to our conditions here at Cawood. Our local has received very little aid except what we’ve gone out to collect. We can’t collect bread or meat—only greens. You can readily see that we've had a hard time of it. We would be very glad of you could send whatever you can spare. for Cawood to help us. But we assure you that we will do all in our power. to win this strike at any cost. “We have went for days here in Cawood without anything to eat at all, But the time has come when we have to have some help from somewhere, yet we are doing all in our power to help ourselves. Still we are striving to do all we can to organize, that is all there is for us to do.” ‘ To send food into Cawood, the re- lief committee needs funds. It calls upon all sympathetic workers to con- tribute what they can so that more bread can pe sent into Kentucky. Already five relief kitchens are feed- ing large number of flux-ridden children, men, women. \ But there are other ‘camps like Cawood that need help desperately. Go among your shopmates, among your friends—col- lect money and food and clothing and, together with every penny you yourself can spare, rush it to the Room 205, 611 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Miners on Strike at O'Gara No. 3, Illinois ELDORADO, Ill, Sept. 29.—A ne- gotiations committee of miners at O'Gara No. 3 mine at Harrisburg, Ti, was fired a few days ago when # went to the boss, The men struck, and have been out ever since. They are trying to get the O'Gara No. 1 and O'Gara No. 10 miners to join |Miners, Dock Workers, | jupon the workers to strike. son by the Germain Supreme Court. Kansas City Jobless Tag Day Permit Denied So Charity Can Graft KANSAS CITY, Sept. 30.—The city manager has refused a permit for a tag day to raise funds for the Mis- souri state hunger march. His grounds for denying the permit, as given to @ committee of the unem- ployed, are that it would “interfere with the Allied Charities Tag Day on October 28.” The chief mover of the Allied Charities is the chamber of commerce, which is made up of the very business men who are increas- ing unemployment by lay-offs and speed up practices for those who still work, The Allied Charity graft is also a wage cut for all workers have been informed they must donate a week’s wages to it. GERMAN BOSSES IN WAGE CUT DRIVE Postal Workers Hit (Cable by Inprecorr) BERLIN, Sept. 30.—The arbitration court appointed by the Emergency Decree to settle the Ruhr mining wage dispute yesterday ordered a/ seven per cent wage cut. The social- ist member of the court, Bergmann, voted in favor of the cuts. The} revolutionary Ruhr committee cailed | In part strikes have already begun. Spe- cial police forces have been drafted in the Ruhr district, The police | oppression is increasing against the miners and meetings are beng dis- | persed. The state railways gave notice of its intention to end the agreements in view of introducing wage cuts. Three hundred and ffty thousand men are affected. Postal authori- ties have also given notice that wage | agreements would be terminated, | 1000,000. A total of 500,000 state | employees are now threatened with | wage cuts. The Danzig dockers de- | cided, with an overwhelming ma- jority, to strike against the threat- Thursday. : Yesterday the Social Democratic Party expeled the leaders of the left wing opposition, Seydwitz and Rosen- feld. Today it expelled the Breslap | district committee which declared | solidarity with the left wingers. ‘The Communist leader, Walter Ul- bricht, was sentenced to two years in the fortress charged with high trea- | Comrade Ulbrich is a member of the Central Committee of the Commun- ist Party of Germany and a mem- ber of the Reichstag. The social- ists voted the withdrawal of immun- | ity, making the sentence possible. | The editor of the Comunist daily, “Ruhr Echo” was senteticed to a year in the fortress on the same charge. The police suppressed the Commun- ist Hamburger Daily Volkszeitung. Mother Forced to Abandon Four Day Old Infant in Cal. | (By a Worker Corfespondent) OAKLAND, Cal.—A 4-day old baby was abandoned by a mother in the driveway of a home on B Street. This mother was seen wheeling her baby carriage up and down the street | for several hours before leaving it. The baby was wrapped in a pink blanket and two worn coats, a man’s and a woman's. There was no fur- ther comment to this story in the | yellow capitalist sheet. But workers know why the baby was abandoned. Mother out of con- finement only 4 days, when she should have been in bed convales- cing. She was walking the streets, wheeling the carriage for hours be- fore she could tear herself away from | her baby. The baby was wrapped in worn coats. | Unemployment and _ starvation caused this — Hoover's “good-times and health” year — was responsible for this pitiful story. | Workers fight for relief and the lives | of your children. Prepare for the state | hunger march soon at the opening of the special session of legislature. | bs ce | Workers Correspondence is the | backbone of the revolutionary press. the strike. Further details are pro- mised. 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 Dally Worker 1 Mo. to Morning Freiheit 3 Mos. to the Young Worker workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor” . by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copyy-/ Build your press by writing for # about your day-to-day struggle. NEW YORK.—Japanese imperial- ism, as part of its war in Manchuria, is increasing activities for the “auton- jomy” of ths part of China, as the |first step for making Manchuria an outright colony of Japan, Three groups have been “organ- | ized,” cabled Hallet Abend, New Y Times correspondent from SI }hai. Among the “organizers” are the {most reactionary, parasitic force: jsuch as Mongolian and Manchu princes, as well as other lackeys of Japanese imperialism. jin the Soviet Union, in a secial ar- ticle entitled “The Second Stage of |the Japanese intervention,” gives the | details of Japanese constant en- croachment in Manchuria. Accord- ing to a report by Walter Duranty from Mosccow, to the New York Times, “Red Star” states: “Final consolidation of the South Manchuria Railway in Japanese hands. “Completion of the Kirin-Tunhua | Railroad over to Huinin, “The prolongation of the line from Changchun to Taonan to So- lun and further northeastward. “The construction of a branch line from Changchun into Inner Mongolia through Talun to Jehol and Chohar. “Control by Japan of all the Chi-? nese railroads in Manchuria, in- cluding the Taonan-Tsitsihar sec- | tor and the ports of Huluto and Yingkow, competing with the South Manchuria Railway and Dairen. “The removal of every obstacle to the export to Japan from Man- churia of coal, iron and other prod- ucts, with similar freedom for the SOVIET INVENTS BOOKKEEPING MACHINE The Soviet, Precision Instrument Trust has begun the construction of @ new machine which will mechan- ize many office operations, this ma- chine will also do manifolding. One machine is expected to do the work of tweny clerks. This holds no fear for the clerks, they will be immedi- ately absorbed in some other depart- ments, and as industry developes further in the Soviet Union such in- ventions will mean reduced working hours. In a capitalist country a new machine means less workers and | more profits for the bosses. Soviet “Forced Labor”—Bedacht’ serfes in pamphlet form at 10 cents Read it—Spread it! per copy. “Red Star,” organ of the Red Army | nc! importation of Japanese goods te Manchuria. | “The establishment of the right of unhampered immigration for the | Japanese and Koreans te Inner Mongolia, “The setablishment of the right of renting land to Koreans—who are Japanese citizens—in Manchuria | and Inner Mongolia.” * adds that as @ result alist antagonisms are being ly intensified. val seigure of Manchuria s the danger of imperialiet ttack ag the Soviet Univn, right on Manchuria. imp | sharr |\Cigar Workers Send | Tenth Weekly Check | to Starving Miners cigar factory workers, who have faithfully contributed for miners’ re- lief every week since the end of July, today sent their tenth weekly check, this time totalling $108.01. This time the collections came from the Sidelo Santaclla factory, the King Bee, Sama, Morgan, El Paraiso, Garcia y Vega, Philadelphia, Le Cir- ila, Berrimann, Gradiaz, Regens- burgh, Corral, Cuesta y Rey, Guerra Diaz. Altogether, ‘the cigar workers do- nated $835.05 to help feed the fam- ilies of striking miners. The Spanish Bakers Union of Tampa donated $25 through the local committee. During | this period, 400 tobacco workers were organized into the League. Bulletins sent out by the relief com- | mittee as well as letters from the coal | fields have been translated into Span- |ish and turned over to the “readers” jin each factory, who read them to ee workers, Other factories that have contrib- | uted ni former weeks include the | Santa Ella, Integridad, Arango y | Arango, and the Gra Diaz factory. | ' Workers in the cigar factories are facing conditions little better than. | workers in other industries. Women |are earning from $8 to $10 a week. |The men’s pay averages from $15 |to $17. Very few workers earn over |$20. Both men and women work |from 9 to 10 hours a day. In-addi- tion the workers have heard rumbl- ings of a coming ten per cent wage cut. The TUUL is calling upon the |cigar .workers to organize, build a | strong union, and strike against alt wage cuts! SPREAD THIS NEW PAMPHLET UNEMPLOYMENT RELIEF and SOCIAL INSURANCE —2 CENTS— THE COMMUNIST PROGRAM AGAINST THE CAPITALIST PROGRAM OF STARVATION Just the pamphlet that is needed for mass distribution in yment activities this fall and winter! in your neighborho at employment agenci houses! SEND IN YOUR shop, ui on the Regular discounts to district agents and organizations. ‘or individual worker dist’ ra postpaid, ORDER FROM unem- Rend it and spread it memployed branch, organization, bread lines and in the lodging ORDERS NOW! Special Tibutors: 60 for $1 or 125 for $2 WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS P. 0. Box 148, Station D New York City International You th Day Campaign SPECIAL TRIAL OFFER Twenty-Five Cents for Two Months Subscription to the ¥ YOUNG WORKER (Published Weekly Name .. The only youth paper fighting for the every day needs of the young workers YOUNG Post Office Box 28, Statio: WORKER n D, New York City, N. Y, Daily Worker Morning Freiheit Young Worker Al AA ONLY TWO MORE WEEKS LEFT TO THE a 8, 9, 10, 11 , 9, 10, 1 MADISON SQUARE GARDEN

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