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mo _Page Three “ TDAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1931 ON NOVEMBER 7th -- ceuesra rr i VICTORY OF NATIONAL BLOC INCREASES MENACE OF WAR {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ‘he real situation. The labor party barricaded the only way out for workers—the way of revolutionary class struggle. Te la- bor party carried out the capitalist policy and prevented the workers from adopting an anti-capitalist pol- icy. The masses of disappointed workers haye now gone over to the capitalist parties. The Communist Party alone put forward the policy 6f class against class as the only way out. The Communist poll was small since it has not yet succeeded in mobilizing the masses against the hunger government. The recent mass demonstrations show that the right policy is being pursued. ‘The elections are now past, but the struggle against wage-cuts, unem- ployment relief cuts, price increases and inflation continues. The millions 6f workers who now despairingly voted for the capitalist parties will fight against capitalism tomorrow. . . The elections in Great Britain show a consolidation of the bourgeois Na- tional Bloc as a part of the tremen- dous reailgnment of the class farees. The Liberal Party lost about 2,963,000 votes since 1929, while the Labor party lost 1,700,000 votes. The total loss of both amounted to 4,313,000 votes while the Conservatives gained only 3,240,000, indicating that 1,072,000 voters who participated in the elee- tions in 1929 did not vote in this eleotion. Despite the increase in the elec- torate between .929 and 1931 of about 4,430,000 eligible voters over one mil- lion less voters participated in the election. This means that actually that 5,500,000 deserted the election struggle. The “democracy” of the electoral system of capitalist England is glar- inngly shown in the faet that there is absolutely no relation between the votes cast by the voters for the vari- ous parties and the seats obtained in Parliament. The capitalist press in- cluding the Daily Herald, the organ of the Labor Party continues to howl about the “landslide” in favor of the National bloc without as yet paying any attention to the votes as ac- tually east. While the Parliamen- tary results will enable the National party. It will rise again, but only with new leaders who have vision and courage. But it must be based on citizens and not on a class out- look. This defeat of the Labor party will be for its ultimate good if the lessons are learned.” Snowden tells the Labor Party leaders that the Labor Party will be of the greatest importance to the capitalists in the coming giant strug- gle that the workers will enter upon against the capitalist class and its National government. The capitalist class of the United States, France and Germany al- ready state openly that the election results mean’ the intensification of the world imperialist struggle for markets. The French capitalist class realizes that the imposition of high tariffs, that the National government is preparing to-put into effect, will mean a sharp cut in the exports of France to England, its most impor- tant export market. England is also the greatest export market for Ger- man finished products and the New York Times correspondent from Ber- lin reports that thé German cap- italist class sees in the British elec- tion election a sharp worsening of its economic position. “Official quarters appear toview the Conservative victory in the British elections as implying a threat to the German export trade to England, which has been Ger- many’s biggest buyer of finished products. “Even if the British Government should not adopt all-around high protection but a system of recipro- eal preferential duties, it is held that Gernmiany’s position would not be materially eased, since until her financial position has improved her import possibilities must remain sharply limited, Moreoyer, in the event of the consummation of an Empire customs union Germany's export outlets would be blocked even worse.” In its analysis‘of the results of the election the Pravda, Moscow, points out that the tariff will mean a se- yere sharpening of the economic strrtgle between the United States and Great Britain. This was confirmed, while it was Som aware that no completely final set- tlement can be reached without di- rect reference to these political problems which are involved.” Lamont urges Germany te come to terms with France immediately on the reparations so that the imperial- ists can get a “solution” to the “po- litical questions of prime importance to the whole continent of Europe.” This is the attack on the Soviet Union, “SOCIALIST” MAYOR AVOIDS UNEMPLOYED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) held bt which workers will expose the capitalist corruptions and robbery. On Nov. 30 in Indianapolis a huge mass meeting will be held to send off the National delegates from Southern and Central Indiana to Congress. In the meantime the local struggles of the unemployed are increasing and on Saturday 200 workers gathered at the home of Paul Mitchell and forced ten police and constables to hold back their attempt to evict this worker and family. In Terre Haute, plans are being made to hold a huge public meeting around Nov. 20, to elect National del- egates. At the same time the move- ment is growing by leaps and bounds and will soon have a thousand mem- bers in the Unemployed Council, In Anderson the influence of the Unemployed Council has reached a point where the Park board head calls upon the leader of the Ander- son unemployed, Jim Wood and urges him to be “nice” and not attack him or the Mayor. The workers of An- derson are demanding the use of the Circuit Court room for Nov. 20 to elect their National delegates to Washington. Also in Kokomo and in other In- diang cities the struggle against evictions, for immediate relief and unemployment insurance is growing. |The unemployed will rally in tens | of thousands on Dec. 7 in many In- diana cities to demand unemploy- ment relief and social insurance. , Dec. 7 will shake the country and the workers of Indiana are preparing to do their bit in forcing the parasites being written, by the statement at bloc to put through its program without much hypocritical squab- bling by a large “opposition,” it is the actual vote which is the real indication of sharpening of the class strugle and the ways in which this is developing. Stanley Baldwin, leader of the Con- servatiyes, gave the keynote for the sharpened attack on the working- class. He sctated that the govern- ment must act “energetically, firmly and justly, bearing in mind that na- tienal interests must always come first.” The -interests of the capitalist class will new be pushed through with an intensified attack en the working- clas! Snowden, former member of the National government, who has shout- ed violently against the leaders of the Labor Party fer not openly taking the course that MacDonald and he took now comes out with the state- ment that the Labor Party is not completely defeated and can still he of the greatest service to the cap- italist class if they adopt other phrases to mislead the workers. He btated this in the following: “I do not rejoice at the disaster whieh has come to the Labor party. I regret it because the Labor lead- ers have brought this catastrophe upon themselves and their party by their folly, lack of courage in leadership and their misunder- standing of the popular spirit. They ‘hoped to exploit the unemployed for party advantage, “This is not the end of the Labor Thongs Lamont of J. P. Morgan & Co., in the Saturday Review of Lit- erature that Germany should imme- diately come to terms with the French imperialists as part of the realignment of the imperialist pow- ers, This realignment means the in- tensification of the attempt to thrust British imperialism into a secondary position. He’ states his quite openly in the following about the “complex” in which Germany and France now find themselves: “This complex accounts for the fact that the German authorities, when financial crisis recently eon- fronted them, turned not to their chief long-time creditor, France, but to Great Britain. This may have heen a natural, but it was not the most sensible Gourse. Obvious- ly, the French are the people to try to come to terms with, finan- cially as well as politically. There are signs that the Germans are waking up to this fact. It is the most important single element in the whole of. their foreign rela- tions. It can well spell success or ruin for the German economy.” The intensification of the struggle with the British imperialists is one part of the situation that Lamont warns of. The other is the attack on the Soviet Union and on the German working masses, * “We know full well that political questions of prime importance to the whole continent of Europe are waiting for solution, and when we speak of reparations alone we are WORKERS! DEFEND THE VICTORY OF 14 YEARS SOCIALIST CONSTRUCTION (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Stalingrad replicd, “We are ashamed to disappoint the Soviet working- class. Our answer will not be words ~ but deeds.” The production then in- creased to 41 tractors, with the Pledge of 95 daily. On October 24, the Stalingrad workers answered in an open letter to Pravda which appeared on the first page, “We have kept our word.” ‘They have promised to produce 114 tractors daily by November 7. Profiting by the Stalingrad experi- ence, the new twin works at Kharkov showed splendid results. One fifth of the Stalingrad workers, Commu- nist leading shock brigades in an open letter make a strong. appeal to the transport and collective toilers to fulfill their tasks and conclude, “We Russian workers know what we want and what we are fighting for and we will overtake and surpass the ad- vanced capitalist countries. We are building and shall fulfill the struc- ture of socialism.” . * . Hail the 14th anniversary of the Russian Revolution! Swell the No- vember 7th celebrations into a mighty demonstration against the capitalist war mongers; All out Nov. 7. Relief Fakers Discriminate in Duquesne (By a Worker Correspondent.) . DUQUESNE, Penna. — The social service fakers in Duquesne have a new “racket” to conserve their funds, Tt works like this: To get any of the miserable relief one must place an application through Mrs, L. Ba- con of the Day Nursery. If one is so fortunate as to meet with her ap- proval the next move is to get the approval of one Mr. Fenlon of the Carnegie Steel. This autocrat of the Steel Corporation keeps a record of the “good slaves” and the “trouble makers.” If one is on the latter list elief is arbitrarily refused and there is‘no appeal from the decision, Recently an vemployed worker was refused relief because he had been seen reading the Daily Worker, This, in the eyes of the Steel Corporation, is an unforgivable sin and the man’s family is left to starve, not because they were not entitled to relief, but to set an example to other workers, Some time past a worker was re- Ported as being the secretary of a Progressive organization, was laid off and now he is refused |to give heed the demands ef ihe unemployed. Cook County Hunger March CHICAGO, Ml.—Oct, 29.—In ‘con~ nection with the preparations for the Cook County Hunger March which ‘takes place here on Oct. 31, a plan ‘has been worked out to gain the maximum results from the organiza- tion ef this march. Besides detailed tasks for Unem- ployed Branches and Block Commit- tees, such as issuing leaflets linked up with neighborhood cenditions, there are shop tasks for workers em- ployed and for members of the Trade Union Unity League. "The organization of the Hunger March has been arranged as follows: All Unemployed Branches and Block Committees will come in an organized manner to the concentra tion points. All organizations south of Madison Street will be at the southern concentration point (Canal and Monroe), and all north of Madi- son Street at the northern point (Wicker Park Avenue, corner of Da- mon and Milwaukee.) Every organization should have ap- propriate signs and banners and in this way contribute to the discipline and militancy of the demonstration. | In each of the two columns, a spe- ‘cial youth and children’s section will be organized, each with their spe- cial signs and demands, At 2 p. m,, speakers will mobilize and organize the workers at the two concentration points, and after lining up the workers for the March, start the March towards Union Park. At 3 p. m,, the central demonstration in Union Park will start and endorse the mass delegation to the County | Board and City Council as well as the demands. By 4 the Committees must be at the County and City of- fices and present the demands. 'The following committees will be elected by all Branches and Block Committees so that the maximum organizational results can be had from the Hunger March. (Collection Committees, Literature Committees, and Recruiting Committees), ° 9 . . Resist Youngstown Evictions YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Oct, 29.— The Unemployed Council of Youngs- town scored a vietory Tuesday, when Mrs. MeCabe, (a widow with 10 chil- dren, one of whom was sick in bed) was evicted and the Council put the furniture back. Although the family was evicted at 9 o'clock and @ representative of the Allied Council was there twice, ’! nothing was done about it until the Unemployed Branch No, 4 of Poland Ave., was notified. Immediately the committee set about, notifying the neighbors and in 15 minutes the fur- niture was back in the house, Among the leaders in the Unem- Later he| Ployed Branch who put the furniture back were the Communist candidate relief because of this report, Many |f0r Mayor, Donato Piergiovanni and workers know it is useless to request |Communist candidate for Counoll- relief of the social service gang in|™man of the Second Ward, John Duquesne because of their connec-| Turek, in whose ward this eviction tions with the labor movement. The | took place. , Jabor unions are growing ite the methods that the Steel 4a useing through its flunkies, the | speaker social service fakers, (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ployed, The first point talks of “resump- tion of work,” taking up the old and discredited “buy now” campaign, while at the same time definitely leaving no doubt that the possibility of jobs is non-existent as the crisis grows worse. Under point 2, “Further Credit Re- lief,” the Hoover Unemployment Committee is concerned with “relief” to the big banks and not with any form of relief for the unemployed. It is part of the Hoover-Morgan- Mellon credit pool scheme in the in- terest of the big Wall Street banks. ‘The final eight points, dealing with @ new form of the stagger plan, the old fakery of “public works,” “white- collar relief.” “New Concept of ‘work, ” “Community Surveys,” and “Farm Labor Plans,” are all directed against both unemployed and em- SCHEME TO FOOL JOBLESS ployed, battering down the standard ef living of the whole working class by pitching them against each other. Especially vicious are the points on “New Concept of ‘Work,’” and “Farm Labor Plan.” Both are attempts at forced labor, speed-up to the highest degree under phrases about effi- ciency. An attempt is being made to force mass emigration to farms where forced labor will be the rul’ and where the workers will be drawn from the cities away from struggle to virtual farm stockades. The authors of the plan admit that the plan is “to restore the morale” of the work- ers, who, they fear, are now being driven along paths of class conscious- ness. ‘The answer of the workers to this new program of starvation and at- tack should be greater energy in the preparation for the National Hunger March. “UNITY OF - ALL STRIKERS WILL WIN!” (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) plans in bringing about an early settlement of the controversy.” The United Front Rank and File Strike Committee is now issuing 20 thousand leaflets in English, Italian, Polish and French in the form of a signed open letter to members of all unions and unorganized strikers pointing out the arbitration trickery to put over a ten per cent cut in the proposal and showing that the United Textile Union leaders have been working for settlement with a wage cut from the beginning. Unity of All orces The letter proposes unity of all the forces against the strike , breaking wage cutting proposal outlined above. ‘The letter proposes unity of all strik- ers on the picket lines under the lead- ership of the United Front Rank and File Strike Committee which is built up of representatives of all mills and departments elected without regard to union membership. The letter pro- poses a united campaign to spread the strike to all the mills, particularly those of the American Woolen Com- pany in this region. The letter proposes @ -Joint rank and ffle relief committee with. one campaign for relief and condemns the policy of the United Textile Workers’ Union and the American ‘Textile leaders who set up separate stations and feed their own mem- bers only, whereas United Front Rank and File Strike Committee relief is for all the needy strikers. The letter calls for one united front defense committee and scores police terror. ‘The letter makes a special point against arbitration and the fact that the proposal outlined by Ely and others leaves the ten per cent wage cut still standing. The letter demands negotiations to be in the hands of the elected United Front Rank and File Strike Committee and settlements to be voted on by the mass of strikers, The first meeting since the an- nouncement of the Goyernor's pro- posal was the spinners of the Wood Mill with seventy-five present and were unanimous in a condemnation of the Governor's proposal. There is every prospect that the masses of strikers will overwhelmingly reject the strikebreaking proposal and re- ject the United Textile Workers’ Union leadership, o 8 6 LAWRENCE, Mass, Oct. 29—A thousand workers heard Bill Dunne speak at Lincoln Court lot Wednes- day afternoon and marched directly to the Wood Mill picket line after- wards. The day was rather raw, rain that had lasted nearly all the morning had stopped and left the sky cloudy and threatening more storms. But the textile strikers wanted to hear the spokesman of the Trade Union Unity League. “There is a tradition of strugglein Lawrence,” said Dunne, “but this strike, for its solidarity and deter- mination, challenges the admiration But a passive refusal to accept a wage-cut must be turned into an offensive te build an industria] union that will make wage- impossible again. not depend any longer en @asual leadership,” said Dunne, if pee BS 4 a 3 4 5 2 of relief,” Dunne described how the police When the furniture was put bagk, | place. rporation}a meeting was held at which a from the Unemployed Branch, 'the Young Communist Lea- oot, Tummarn Una mplor ed jouncils are actively preparing for the National ‘Hunger March Dee. 7.: raid workers’ homes and trump up charges against their leaders. “It is no crime to belong to the National Textile Workers’ Union, no crime to strike, no crime to be born in Italy, Poland or Lithuania or some other country, no erime to belong to the Communist Party,” he ‘said, and called for building of mass defense organization, “All the industries of Lawrence were built out of the toil of the work- ers,” Dunne pointed out, “and it is the right of all the workers on strike or unemployed to go to the city and demand that it feed the starving.” Meaning of United Front, Dunne described the united front, all the strikers picketing together, all holding their rill meetings with- out regard to union membership and electing their delegates to the strike leadership, the United Front Rank and File Strike Committee. The united front means that all unite in defense of arrested strikers, and all co-operate in gathering relief for the strikers. The relief committee estab- lished through the activity of the United Front Rank and File Strike Committee does not make eating a matter of membership. All active strikers who need relief have a right to it, and food and money must be collected so that they can be fed. On the other hand, the United Textile Workers’ Union gives relief only to its own members. The United Textile Workers’ Union lJeadership, the speaker showed, has a record of betrayal. “In every mill town they have entered they have always tried, sometimes successfully and sometimes not, but have always made the attempt to sell out the strikers,” he shouted. On the other hand, Dunne pointed out, the Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union hag led every strike for real gain for the strikers since it has been formed. Scores “Arbitration.” Dunne scored the arbitration and investigating committee plans of the U, T. W. and the mill companies and the governor and citizen's alliance. He showed that the mill companies, whose owners are fat, fed by mil- lions of dollars of profits during the last ten years, dan well afford not only to get along without the 10 per cent cut, but can afford to give wage increases of 50 per cent or more. Dunne closed with the assurance to the strikers that they would not always have to fight these bitter bat- tles against the robber class. “A little more organization and you can take away the power of the bosses who starve you, and set up the power of the workers,” he declared. “The ex- ample of the workers of Russia shows that can be done.” ‘The crowd, despite the rather bad day, was attentive and-responsive. Dunne's speech was preceded by speeches by Lithuanian, Italian, La- bor Sports and other organizers, and by Pizer, the general picket captain. ‘ * * Raids and Terrorism, LAWRENCE, Mass., Oct. 29.—A worker's house, in which the police suspected Sam -Reed, arrested on the line Wednesday morning, had been living, was twice raided and ran- sacked on the day of Reed's arrest. The second time was a sheer attempt to terrorize strikers into having noth- ing to do with the organizers. The worker's home was absolutely smashed || and ruined. Mattresses were ripped up, the door broken, the furniture taken apart and a general mess made || of everything. DOAK AGENTS IN OSSINING RAIDS -— OSSINING, N. Y.—Two federal agents invaded private homes and boarding houses in Ossining, Pough- keepsie and surrounding sections and rounded up 50 foreign-born workers Wednesday. Later they released all but ten, whom they yesterday sent to Ellis Island for deportation. The raid was part of the drive against the foreign-born that hie been carried on by the notorious Secretary of Labor Doak in his effort to get rid of the most militant ele- ments of the working class. Here in Ossining the aim has been to de- stroy the local branch of the Inter- national labor Defense, which has been very active in defending the in- terests of the workers, native and foreign-born, Whe federal agents de- clared that the meeting of the LL.D. schediledyfor tonight will be broken Ps ante) Y Bae | Rep. Sirovich Tells of “Confidential Information” (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) thousands of unfinished factories under the Five-Year Plan, is in the Jeast favorable position to wage war, On the other hand it is real- ized that Japan may be counting upon just that fact any may be counting upon it too heavily.” Representative Sirovich, just back from Europe, gives the details of the plans for the attack by the capjtal- ists on the Soviet Union. The New York World-Telegram writes that Sirovich predicted that the Manchu- rian invasion is “A similar spark to that which kindled the World War in the Bankan states is smoldering in Manchuria and will eventually lead to another world conflagration which will destroy Russia and Communism and establish Japan as the firm mistress of the Pa- cific.” Sirovich states this not on thin air but on the basis of his “observations and confidential information obtain- ed abroad.” The struggles of the various Chinese generals are admit- ted to be instigated by the Japanese imperialists as part of the prepara- tions for the attack on the Soviet Union. Siroyich gives the plans for the attack in the fullest detail: “Chinese guerrillas are being sub- sidized today by Japan to start in- surrections all over Manchuria and one group does not know of the activities of the other, The result is there will always be trouble there to keep Japanese soldiers on hand.” “When the war flames up, Japan will immediately posses Russia’s only Asiatic seaport, Vladivostok, and seek to cut off entry to the port by the Trans-Siberian rail- road. Russia will be compelled to send soldiers from Leningrad, This will mark the signal for another ring, in which Poland and Rouma- nia are harboring grievances, to at- tack Russia from the west,” he de- clared. “Russia will be unable to hold off both attacks and when settle- ment is made, the Soyiet country will be cut up and divided, giving Japan the eastern seaport and a stronghold along the entire coast while Poland and Roumania will be enlarged.” Two Japanese ambassadors, one in Washington, the other in Paris, “dis- cussed” the Manchurian situation simultaneously today. According to capitalist press dispatches Kenkichi Yoshizawa, Japanese Ambassador, conferred today with Foreign Minis- ter Aristide Briand, “presumably” about the Manchurian situation. A New York Times dispatch from Washington admits that Katsuji De- buchi, Japanese Ambassador to the United States, “discussed the Man- churian situation with William R. Castle, Jr., Under Secretary of State.” The imperialists are planning to smash the Soviet power of the work- ers and peasants and to divide the Soviet Union, jike China, among the chief imperialists. This is war not only against the workers fatherland, but against the entire working class thruout the world. ‘The reply of the Soviet Assistant Commissar of Foreign Affairs, Kara- khan, to the Japanese “warning” note exposes the imperialist hypo- erisy behind it. The Soviet Minister denied completely the charges of the Japanese imperialists which have been broadcast in the capitalist press of the United States. Karakhan stated that the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics “Consider the policy of military oceupation under the pretext of so- called assistance, contradicts the peaceful policy of the Soviet Union and the interests of general peace.” “No support has been rendered by the Soviet Union to any fight- ing sides in Manchuria,” he said. Another Pennsylyania Bank Fails The North Branch Tile and Trust Co, of Sunbury, Pa. with deposits of $765,000 was closed by order of the board of directors. TE THE TRIUMPHANT MARCH OF SOCIALISM IN THE SOVIET UNION ON ITS 14th ANNIVERSARY HOOVER ISSUES NEW FAKE OXFORD, MISS. DAILY WORKER CLUB i HAS VITAL ISSUE FOR LOCAL DRIVE. ‘ We are happy. to report that letters from Daily Worker Clubs show an increase in the number of clubs and a tendency on the part of clubs already established to expand their activities. The Daily Worker Club of Oxford, Miss., for example, sends us a detailed analysis of the economic and political situation in the region which shows that the club is yery much alive to what is going on locally and so is laying a solidid basis for the political ac- tivity of the club. Such political activity is not only important for the immediate building up of the Party, hut it is a very effective way of selling subscriptions to the Daily Worker and thus laying a solid foundation for the future. The report of the Oxford Club deals with the efforts of the bosses and wealthy landlords to cut social services such as schools and public works down to a minimum so as to make sure to shift the burden of the erisison tothe backs of the workers. The role of the American Legion to divert the workers’ attention from the bosses’ wage cut and starvation drive by talking about defending the jobs of native-born Americans against foreign-born workers is also exposed in his report, The report also points out that it costs $5 to enter a child in school and $95 to keep it there for eight months, and thus exposes the bourgeois boast of a “free school system.” The Oxford Club thus has many vital local issues on which to rally workers to the cause of the Communist Party and on which to base a subscription campaign for the Daily Worker, When the report of the Oxford Club is printed in full in the news columns of the Daily, as we expect it soon will be, the club should use this report to get work- ers to subscribe by pointing out the Daily is the only paper that takes the workers’ side of such is- sues as taxation, schools and em- ployment, Incidentally the Oxford, Miss., club sends the Daily $4 for quarterly dues, Such dues have been voluntarily imposed on itself by the club, and while we don't expect every club to do likewise we are glad to acknowl- edge this bit of help. The club is not composed of wealthy members either. Comrade G, U. who sends us this report from the club, writes us that he has not made $200 since last November, which is about a year and he has a family of for to feed. The Cincinnati Red Builders Club is also active. .The club will hold a housewarming party on Saturday Night, Oct. 31, to celebrate its re- moval to its new headquarters at the Workers’ Center at 310 East 8th Street. Good speakers, a good mu- sical program and refreshments are planned, The club has also asked us to send | them a play to be performed on that night. There isn’t much time, but we are sending them the latest issue of the magazine of the Workers’ La- boratory Theatre, which contains a few plays from which they can choose, If they manage to get up @ performance, we should like to hear how it came out. Other clubs, by the way, might do well to subscribé to this magazine. | It comes out once a month and costs only 15 cents. It contains suggestions | for directing, acting and performance, and also one or two or more plays in each issue that are simple enough for any workers’ group. Greetings Coming Slowly We have been getting in greetings and orders for the November 7 spe- cial edition of the Daily Worker, but not fast enough, considering that the time of this edition is so near. This edition will contain greetings from American workers to the 14th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. The plot of the American imperialists against the Soviet Union grows clearer every day. The Hooyer-Laval con- versations, the increasing number of the Japanese troops in Manchu- | ria, the presence of military chief- tians at secret conferences of of- fieals of all the capitalist eoun- tries, show that the danger of a capitalist war against the Soviet Union is a reality. To combat this plot the workers of all capitalist countries must be prepared to de- fend the Soviet Union. The No- vember 7 edition is a step in that direction. The edition will contain articles by Soviet workers telling about their condition in the workers’ fatherland. Eyeny American worker must get this news. Get your orders in at once. The Far West issue must be ready Oct, 31. Fill out the order blank below and send it in with the cash. Also use the “Honor Roll Greet- ings” blank form at the bottom of this page to get greetings to be published in this edition. Greetings are 25 cent? and up for each in- dividual and $1 and up for each organization. Act at once, INDIAN THE PRICES WELL-PREPARED PROLETARIAN The Most Beautiful Time of the Year At CAMP NITGEDAIGET All the necessary improvements for the Fall and the coming Winter months have already been installed A WARM COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE Large Comfortable Rooms are Available in the Attractive To enjoy your vacation or week-end, go to Camp Nitgedaiget The Only Fall and Winter Resort HOTEL NITGEDAIGET SUMMER ARE THE SAME HEALTHY MEA ENTERTAINMENTS Leader in the Fight for READ! Read Kelle 50 KAST 13th STREET, Room 201 Leader in the Struggle Against Negro Oppression the Nine Scottsboro Boys Camp Hill Croppers—Willie Peterson Get Bebind the CIRCULATION For 10,000 NEW READERS BEGINNING NOVEMBER Ist DRIVE SUBSCRIBE! Rates—#1 per year, 60¢ six months, 30c three months, 3e per cop Order a bundle for your meetin g#—Ze each, Special rates for huni over 200 HONOR ROLL GREETINGS We, the undersigned through the 14th anniv ersary edition of the DAILY WORKER, greet the workers of th U.S,S.R. on the 14th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution. ‘The success of the Five-Year Plan and the advance in the economic and cultural fields have strengthened our determination to advance our own struggles against the growing attacks of the boss class. The DAILY WORKER, the Central Organ of the Communist Party, is the mass organizer of the American workers and farmers in this fight. NAME | ADDRESS AMOUNT Dollars Cents Cut this out, get busy, collect greetings from workers in your shop, or factory, mass organiza- tion, and everywhere, Twenty-five cents and up for individuals, $1 and up for organizations, Mail immediately to get into the November 7th edition of the Daily Work: DAILY WORKER 50 East 13th St., N. Y.