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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY NOVE) MBER 2, , 1931 Page Three VOTE COMMUNIST -- VOTE AGAINST HUNGER, TERROR AND WAR! ALMOST “FREE LABOR” GETS 1242 CENTS PER HOUR IN ARKANSAS Pick and Shovel Laborors Paid 60 Cents for A Full Day’ 8 Work in Little Rock Missouri Pacific Pays 10 Cents An Hour for Heavy Labor on Terminal Job (By A Worker Correspondent) NORTH LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Oct. 29 -That the “Eman- cipation” Proclamation has gone into effect is conspicuously evident by a glimpse at labor conditions in Little Rock, Ark. A United States Post Office is now under construction. Laborers are paid 20 cents an hour, and structural iron helpers (steel carriers) receive 25 cents an hour. There is no cinch about this Federal job. Straw-bosses are plentifully present and.to top it all on top of the elevated driveway—now the highest point—stands a lookout with holster and gun- approached the excavation the gunmen commanded us to retreat. Very prob- ®- ably he feared that we might observe the speed-up system that the em- ployed freemen are subject to, 60 Cents a Day A young white worker got a pick and shovel job on the twenty-first of this month. He did not hit the speed | limit and got fired the next day at noon. He received 60 cents for a full day's Work, as $1 was deducted for medical examination. This was just 60 cents too much to be the sure enough ‘free labor” the bosses spout about. ‘The Missouri Pacific new railway terminal job pays 10 cents an hour for husky and heavy laborers. Lest, some scab might think this is an advertisement, we wish to state that vacancies are being filled as rapidly as they appear, The foregoing are the two big jobs that are intended to, or supposed to, alleviate unemployment and poverty in Little Rock. They are not in any way exceptional in the treatment of workers or wages paid. 12% Cents an Hour For an example of a good old home industry just peep in at the Southern Cotton Oil Company’s mill. In the press room the maximum wages paid are 12%c an hour. This rete applies to panshover, form-runner, and cake- stripper who are exposed to intense heat. Less skilled and less heated workers get eight and one third cents an hour. It is no longer necessary for the boss to provide for his slaves; labor is almost “free” in Little Rock, ) As we lew a whistle and | Correspondence Briefs NEW YEAR’S DANCE PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—The Com- munist Party has arranged a dance to take place on New Year's Eve. All workers’ organizations are asked to take note of this date and not to ar- range any affair for the same night. ° JOBLESS ELECTRICIAN IS SUICIDE CHICAGO, Ill.—Despondent be- cause of unemployment Christopher Lang, 48, of 9544 S. Blair Ave., hung himself from a branch of a tree in his yard. Lang was an electrician. FOURTH EVANSVILLE BANK FAILS EVANSVILLE, Ind. — The North Side bank failed, being the fourth Evansville bank to close in two weeks. There is wide discontent among the workers and small trades people. WINDOW CLEANER KILLED IN FALL NEW YORK.—A window cleaner was killed when he fell from the sixth floor of a building at 35th St. and Fifth Ave. A worker cleaning windows in New York or in any big city is in constant danger as he works high above the streets. Daily he risks his life for a measly wage while his boss sits in his office collecting fat checks for “window cleanin.” Jobless Eat Garbage on Syracuse Dumps Syracuse, N. Y. Daily Worker: We don’t have to go to the mine fielés of Pennsylvania or into the South to find workers living in the utmost misery, We can find them right here in New York State and particularly in this town. The other day I happen to pass by one of the dumps here and saw young and old workers dressed in rags, all of them half starved, digging into the refuse. As soon as @ truck came n, they rll gathered around waiting for it to unload, They all jumped in and picked scraps from the putrid gar- bage filling their bags, which they took to their shacks which they had built right on the dump out of old lumber and tin. Now the election campaign is on and the Republican and Democratic candidates blurt about there being no needy families in the town of Syra- cuse. They state that everybody is taken care of. Of the 10,000 that are out of jobs only a few are given work by the city. These few work about 20 hours a week. This little bit of work, which is merely a drop in the bucket, we can rest assured will only last until around election day. We will have to unite the jobless workers here in a powerful Unem- ployed Council to demand immediate relief from the city and to prepare for the march of the unemployed in ‘Washington. Lawrence Strikers Join Communist Party (By a Worker Correspondent) LAWRENCE, Mass.—Our strike is ‘ getting stronger every day. It is clear to us all now that the A. F. of L. is trying to sell the workers out.We have been busy preparing our relief station, the National Textile Workers ‘Union having rented a store for our relief headquarters. ‘The bosses, it is alleged, in order to get the workers back into the mill, hires policemen and pays the mayor, the aldermen, etc., a great sum of | money to bring the workers back into the mills at a wage-cut. The news- papers are also working with the hgoses by stating that the mills will be open to any worker who cares to go back on the basis of arbitration, which means a wage-cut. Governor Ely, another agent of the mill owners, urges the wérkers to go back to the mills. He says that while the work- ers are working they (the bosses and A. F. of L, fakers) will discuss the problem. This means that the work- ers who will go back, will get a slash in their pay. Many of the young workers here haye joined the Young Communist League which is fighting for the de- mands of the young strikers. Many of the older strikers are joining the Communist Party. Negro Workers Slave All Week for $2.00 (By a Farmer Correspondent.) CHICAGO, Ill.—We want eyery one to knowhow the boss of Sopkin’s shop ~ treatS*his workers. The boss is mean ~ and ipays you what he wants you to have—$2 and $5 a week, It was bad enough when we made $10 a week. But lately we had our wages cut so often that all the girls are saying if they put any further, we will have to pay the boss to let us work for him. But anyhow none of us can * make enough to keep and soul together, We all say that something |must be done about it. The boss ys nothing but we have to work x hours and faster than we're alle to. \For example: An operation that ~, used to play 10c a bundle now pays ws * {ess than 5¢ (a bundle of six dozen) and we have to work desperately hard to get enough work out to earn about 6c a day. On top of that our fore- edy Esther cheats us on the tickets. {f we are not careful, we don’t even » bet paid for the work we do. ‘There are fifteen hundred of us yorking in five shops all owned by Mr. Sopkins and the girls tell me shat every shop has its Msther ind the same miserable conditions, = iS change our rotten conditions, ‘There has been a lot of talk about the Red union organizing us to fight for bet~ ter conditions. Well I'm for the union and T know most of the girls feel like I do! CHAIN GANGS FOR JOBLESS BERKELEY, Cal.—Many Califor- nia cities have announced that “beg- gars” and “hoboes,” that is, the un- employed who do not starve quietly and decently, will be put into chain gangs and set to work breaking rock for their “board.” JL. SLUGGERS BULLDOZE SEAMEN NEW YORK —The Seamen's Church titute in New York main- tains a special squad of police who carry deadly weapons in their pock- ets. This squad is used to beat up and bulldoze the jobless and hungry sailors who come into the Institute to get some shelter from the cold. They have sora of a secluded room, surrounded by other rooms, an inner room, where they put seamen through what they call an “educating process”—that is, they beat them up with blackjacks for falling to sleep something must be done and were | in the recoding room or some other _ eady and willing to do anything to ' similar crime. A SEAMAN, AFL Workers Take Up the Fight Against the Vancouver Deci sion manded that an open vote be taken and not secret ballot to railroad through this maneuver. A rising vote was then taken, in which every man in the hall stood up except the labor fakers, and voted down the wage-cut. The response of these workers against the wage-cut and the en~- thusiasm with which the T.U.U.L. leaflet was received is proof of how the workers will organize to resist this attack. The T.U.U.L. will use this occasion here to build up groups in the building trades and mobilize these workers for the National Hun- ger March to Washington on Ney. 6 and 7, Want to End Strike Thru Terrorism (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) for the patriotic bodies of the city to get to- |gether and do some- thing besides talk and make pretty speeches about what they are willing to do. _ “In 1917 the talk was inot about what they) were willing to do— they just went ahead and did it. The time has come to weed out that element and in-| vite it to leave the city. It is eas yto find it. Names of its members appear almost daily in the local press for hav- ing violated laws. The police can only arrest.) The courts can only penalize within the dic- tates of the statutes. “When recognized law and order was un- able to cope with a se- rious situation in the West some years agzo— the citizenry succeeded in cleaning the place out—firing shot for Shot.” The Lawrence Sun- day News and the Lawrence Sunday Sun, the two other Sunday papers here, all devote editorial articles in large type urging the strikers to accept the wage cut and go back to work. They do not even argue much over the “justice” of the) wage cut, but simply declare the strike has! failed and the workers} should not pay union) dues. The News de- votes the main articles) to the demand for the Australian ballot on the question of return- ing to work with the 10 per cent wage cut. The Sunday papers: do not raise the ques- tion of arbitration or compromise. The News and Leader feature a big front page state- ment of “public men against the right of the strikers to picket which appeared first in the Boston Herald, and later in the Law- rence Telegram. _ There are not 100 strikebreakers in the Lawrence mills after 4 weeks: of strike by 23,000 workers against a 10 per cent wage cut! The plot of the A. F. of L, and United Tex- tile officials and Governor Ely to force the acceptance of a 5 per cent cut, get the workers back, and send the whole wage scale to arbi- tration was exposed by the National Textile Workers’ Union and the Datly Worker, and defeated by the unbroken solidarity of the 23,000 strikers. ‘The murdereus call for lynching a MILLIONS SOVIET PEASANTS ATTAIN HIGHER STANDARDS, (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) grain “by the .4th Anniverasry.” The quota for each collective is determined by the district commis- sion including the local Soviet Col- lective Union members, also repre- sentatives from the tractor stations jon the basis of credits, seed and use The Collewtives | of the tractors, etc. promise to deliver a certain amount of grain at a fixed price to the sttae organizations. American farmers will quickly see the advantages in the economic security of such economic planning versus the chaos of the old order under which they work. ‘The reasons for the insufficient tempo of the grain collection is due | to the local Party Soviet organ which | depended on the spontaneity of the collectives in making deliveries. Other dangerous opportunistic tendencies meanwhile affected the kulak agita- tion, This unclarity lead some col- lective to put aside large amounts of ' grain beyond what was allowed,for cattle feed and the reserve id, Such precautions were entirely un- justified as the past year’s experi- ence proved. Hit Oportunism The Party exposed these dangerous tendencies, both right and “left.” The right tendencies were expressed by certain functionaries lacking suffi- cient in carrying through the general plan and put forward their own “plan” to supplement it. The “left” deviation manifested itself in some collective ignoring the state, credit in- stitutions and machinery for collec- tion and distribution of the grain suply, attempting to make direct ex- changes between the collectives and | coperatives. This was a tendency to’ Prepare to Attack USSR From Poland (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Rumania for the attack on the So- viet Union has been made under the direction of the French military staff together with the chief of staff of the United States Army, Douglas MacArthur, who conferred with the army chiefs of France, Rumania, and Jugoslavia. The further steps that have been taken by the French imperialists to prepare the attack on the Soviet Union are revealed in a special dis- patch to the Soviet Union Army pa- per, “Red Army,” from Warsaw. The correspondent to the “Red Army” points out that a complete change in the diplomatic relations of Poland to Germany occurred ten days after the new Bruening government took office. This change occurred in the period between the conference of Morgan with Laval, bfore Laval left for the United States, and Laval’s conference with Hoover. The change occurred at the joint command of Morgan and Laval. The change took place through the visit of the Polish Vice Minister of Finance, Colonel Kos, to Paris. The correspondent of the Red Army points out that the “miraculous metamor- phosis” which the Polish official news papers noted, resulted from the attempt of Colonel Kos, part of the inner circle of the Pilsudski govern- ment, to get French credits. The Polish delegate was ordered by the French imperialists to prepare for political agreements with Germany. This is the reason for the changed attitude of the Polish press. The speech of Thomas Lamont, of | J. P. Morgan and Co. urging the Ger- man government to come to some agreement with the French imperial- ists on the reparations question, the cy of Pilsudski to Rumania, and the changed attitude of the Polish diplomats to Germany are all part of the preparations for the military at- tack on the Soviet Union in which | Germany will be a most important military factor. ‘The proposals for the sale of wheat by the Farm Board to France is part of the economic preparations for the attack on the Soviet Union. Parker Willis, writing in the New York World-Telegram, points out that the sale of wheat by the United States to France on credit means that France will not buy from Australia or Canada, the sources of wheat in the British empire. 'The decision to buy wheat in the United States is ”|part of the attack on the British empire by France and the United States. It is, moreover, part of the economic preparations for the attack on the Soviet Union. Willis refers to this when he asks why the United States should grant credit to France for such a transaction when France has no need of credit facilities at the present time. “Is there something about the paper that is to come out of these Jast named transactions that makes the Bank of France prefer that our reserve system carry it?” This proposed sale of wheat is not of the strike leadership singles out the Communists, reveals the weak- ness of the bosses and U. T. W. of- ficials and is a desperate attempt to smash the strike by depriving it of its militant leadership, which is the greatest single obstacle to the starvation program of the mill owners. jump over certain necessary stages in the dvelopment of socialist society. ‘The proletariat is now on guard against both deviations from the cor- rect path. Extensive correcting has been in the reecnt instance of the |Sugar trust. This was an extreme case and not typical of the situation jon the state farms of trusts as the bourgeois press boundlessly misre- presents. ‘The inexcusable opportunism on the | part of the trust officials lead them to deliver less than one third of the sixteen million bushels of grain due from its farms raising wheat and| sugar beets and falsified reports on the amount of grain harvested. The trust helt! wheat back not for per- | sonal gain and speculation, but “in| case an emergency arose.” Beside | holding grain for the reserve fund, the trust planned to exchange wheat | for lumbr’ bricks with the building | trust with the idea of speeding con- struction of new canning factories on | the sugar trust farms. In reality, hindering socialist construction and | going contrary to the general plan | in the best interests of the working- | class. | Comrade Adamovich, president of the trust, has been removed from his | | post and is prohibited from holding | any responsible post for two years. Similar measures have been taker against the vice-president and others. } The majority of the state farms| and collectives act according to the | general plan of sending to the cities and town grain depots “red grain) caravans.” Lead by the Party, grain collection is proceeding at a quick- ened tempo in order to achieve the} goal of seventy-five percen by the} 14th Anniversary, an ordinary transaction but a war | preparation and the French imper- | ialists insist that the United States carry this part of the burden. | ‘The British imperialists ‘SOVIET TRAININ Mass Arrests of Workers in Warsaw WARSAW. — During the last few} | mass arrests of revolutionary work- | About 300 arrests have been car- | days the police in Warsaw have made ers. ried out. Working class reading rooms and clubs were raided. The bourgeois press reports that the ar- rests were made because the workers in question were engaged in electing delegates to proceed to the Soviet Union to take part in the revolution- | ary anniversary celebrations. NEW TECHNICIANS ‘AMONG WORKERS Technical Sechools on the Increase (Cable by Inprecorr) MOSCOW, Oct. 31—Under the slo- | gan put forward by Stalin of master- | ing technique, one of the six condi- | tions for speeding the realization of | socialism, the working class in the Soviet Union is developing its own productive technicians, engineers and Specialists in all fields to meet the demands of expanding socialist econ- omy. Compared with 22 higher scientific | institutes for training engineers and directors last year, there are now | 106. There are 584 technological schools where the best shock brigad- ers were trained as assistant engin- eers. In 1932 there will be 420,000 students in the technological schools; 350,000 will study in special workers’ schools known as Rabfacs, while one | million youths will be trained in the schools and will be paid | factory while learning. Every working boy and girl is sure of learning a good trade and devel- oping himself to the limits of his or | her ability and interest, a chance Are| THOUANDS IN COOK CO. HUNGER MARCH DESPITE: BITTER COLD Poland Ave., Unemp! |at Struthers and city bell. ‘The demands are: (1) $150 cash immediately for nec- essities of life to tide over winter. (2) $15 cash relief wekly for each | family and $3 for each dep t limits of Camp- | of the unemployed | (3) $10 per week for si and | young workers (4) No discrimination against the | Negro and young workers in passing jout relief. (5) Two tons of coal immediately before the cold weather set 6) No evictions for non- payment es by the unemployed and tially employed S in par- | () Free water, gas and light for unemployed and partially employed (8) Free car fares for the un (9) Free lunches, shoes and clot jing for the children of the unen ployed. ployed workers. 10) Immediate cash payment of the ee to the ex-servicemen. | Milwaukee Preparations | MILWAUKEE, Wis., Oct. 30.—As jpart of the preparations for the Na- tional Hunger March the following public hearings will be held in Mil- waukee: 2 public hearing are to be held during the first week of No- vember and one in West Allis the same week. Racine is holding hear- ings on the eleventh and sixteenth of November. On Ni 3, Milwaukee County is sending a delegation to the County Board of Supervisors to present de- mands for more and better relief for jall workers and relief for single m- workers, Today Racine is sending a |delegation to the Racine Common Council. Conferences are being held in Mil- realize | Which America promised its youth, | waukee and Racine, of working-class | that out of the Hoover-Laval con- | but has not fulfilled. Here it is real- | organizations to prepare the National ferences came the joint determina-| tion to relegate the British Empire to a position of secondary import- | ance. The counter attack of the British imperialists is gathering mo- mentum. Sir Walter Layton, editor of The Economist of London, ad- dressing the American Chamber of | Commerce Saturday in London, made | a sharp attack on the reparations | section of the Hoover-Laval agree- ment. The New York Times correspond- ent in Tokio reports the “rumors” that are being spread about the re- sistance of Great Britain to the Uni- | ted States—Japanese plans for the redivision of China. ‘These “rumors” “allege that Sir Miles W. Lampso, British Minister to China, has reached an under- standing with General Chiang whereby Nanking will protect Brit- ish commercial interests along the Yangstse River, while Great Brit- ain will support China in the Man- churia dispute.” The British imperialists realize that | the other imperialists plan to reduce | the British Empire in accordance | with the lessened power of British imperialism in the world struggle. The imperialists are preparing the attack on the Soviet Union while a redoubling-of the peace phrases and conferences takes place. Thus far 21 countries have accepted the pro- posal for a one year armament build- ing truce proposed by the Council of | | the League of Nations. The only na-| tion which has agreed to this one year's arms truce sincerely is the oviet Union. The remainder of the | powers are accepting this truce in order to prepare under cover of it for war. The United Press in a, dispatch ) from Geneya states openly that the peace forms of the League of Nations | and of the Kellogg Pact will be used by Japan as a preparatory step in| the military attack. 1 “It was emphasized that if the | danger of oviet intervention actu- ally exists, Japna would be obliged to seek a Pacific settlement by ap- peal to the League and invoking the Kellogg Anti-War Pact before taking military measures.” | ‘The Times correspondent from | Washington points out that despite the “acceptance” by the Japanese of the Soviet denial that it was send- ing additional troops toward Man- considers the situation as a near-war situation. “Notwithstanding denials from Moscow that Russia is aiding the Chinese in Manchuria and expres- sions from Tokyo that Japan is satisfied with these assurances, the | situation is considered here as deli- cate,” Influence Of German Communist Party on Peasants Growing BERLIN.—The influence of the Communist Party on the masses of the peasants is steadily growing. A new proof of this fact was the con- churia the Hooyer government still | ized for the first time. Development in the natural and so- cial sciences based on Marxism-Len- inism is proceeding. There are 120 | scientific research institutes in addi- | tion to 47 agricultural research sta- | tions on the state collective farms; 10 transport; 44 peoples’ education, 34 protection of health laboratories while thousands more at the facto- ries show the energy and great po- tentialities of the working class to develop its own intellectuals and to build up socialism at the same time. All honest elements and all intellec- |tuals are being drawn closer to so- cialist construction. VETS PUT DEMA {NTO WHITEHOUSE Hoover See’ y Stalls} Along WASHINGTON, Nov. ..—A delega- | tion of worker ex-servicemen carried their demands to the white house when a committee of ex-servicemen | on Friday demanded thatt hey be allowed to present their demands to | President Hoover. Josslin, one of Hoover’s pack of secretaries, refused | to alow the demands to go diretcly to the president but said he would |“take care of them.” This is the usual buck-passing that the capitalists have followed in handling the demands of the ex- servicemen. SPRINGFIELD, Ohio— The In- ternational Truck workers got their | wages slashed 15 per cent on No- vember 1, The Central Brass gave the workers a 10 per cent cut. This is their third cut.—J. A. R. Hunger March. Milwaukee confer- lence will be held Nov. 15, 2 p. m., at Labor Tmpl Hall, 808 W. Walnut St |Th place of the Racine conference on | the twenty-fifth of November has not j been turned in. Racine is staging a City Hunger March on Nov. 17 to prsent demands |to the Comon Council. A delegation is being sent to the | special session of the state legislature which will last for one month, open: Da on Noy. 17. This delegation will | be elected from branches of the Un- | lemployed Council throughout the state and will expose the demagogy | Ke the “Progressive,” “Socialist” and | her politicians who are using this | Esoee session as a stage from which | fe broadcast their “remedies” for | employment. "ites ratifications and endorse- | | ments of the delegate elected for the | Hunger March will also be held cur- | ing the last wek of November in at} jleast Racine and Milwaukee. | Paar sae | Boston Unemployed Mass For Reliet | BOSTON, Mass., Nov. 1—At a) meeting of the Unemployed Council | |of Boston held on Friday the work- | ers decided to arrange a mass meet- inngnn, Noy. 2, at 751 Washington St., and in mass to proceed before an institution in Boston o demand | free lodging for the unemployed of | | Boston. This is a continuous fight. Only a} week ago more than 200 unemployed | | workers of Boston made a demand upon th ealvation Army of this city | for free lodging and through the |fight put up by them were they able |to secure lodgings for 40 workers. | But there are still thousands of | workers who are homeless, spending | their nights in the parks, subways | and on the streets. The workers | |Tealize that only through fight and | | struggle will they be able to sceure | and unemploy- activities are in preparation National Hunger March at ashington. Preparations are now |being made for a public hearing to |be held on Nov. 20, as well as for a Broad City Conference on Noy. 22. Lawrence » Workers Pack Hall to Hear Party Candidates Sam Bramhall Points Out Role of Gov't LAWRENCE, Mass., Noy. 1 An enthusiastic crowd packed and over- flowed campaign headquarters hall of the Sam Bramhall for Mayor Campaign Committee at 89 Union St. here Thursday night, as many were turned away for lack of room The main speakers were Bramhall n Reed, secretary of the campagn committee, and Nat Kaplan, district organizer of the Communist Party. ‘The Daily Worker reporter in Law- rence brought greetings and pledged the support of the paper, not only in the strike but in the campaign to elect Bramhall and others endorsed by the Communist Party and the Na- tional Textile Workers Union. Bramhall pointed out the active strikebreaking of the city administra- tion, the harrying and persecution of all active strikers, the denial of free speech on the reets on Lawrence Common and active interference with renting of halls for strikers’ meeting places, Bramhall dug into the graft which is something unique for a city of this size and helps the mills to control the city. The money spent through contractors yearly is a mil- lion more now than it was ten years ago, though the city has not grown, and there is little to show for the expenditure. The city’s debt is $7,- 500,00 and the tax rate on house- holders and small storekeeprs, etc., has been raised fifty per cent in the last few years, while at the same time, the taxes collected from the mills have been reduced by $125,000 @ year. Speakers charged that Peter Carr, alderman and police commissioner is ‘king of the bottleggers.” It is charged that it-costs $600 to get a job in the |school department, and city work costs $50 for a job for the winter and $100 for a job for the whole year. Lawrence elections are “non-par- tisan,” which means that instead of running as the nominee of a par- Sa | ticular political party, each candidate | runs as an individual and announces | that he is endorsed by his party. The preliminary election, Nov. 17, is im- | portant. Only the two candidates with | the highest vote will be put on the ballot at the final elections, in De- cember. Kaplan's speecn on the principles of the party was well received and even these poverty stricken strikers |put their pennies and nickels in the collection for campaign expenses. Workers Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day-to-day struggle. AGENTS WANTED TO SELL SOVIET PICTORIAL And OTHER PUBLICATIONS Communicate With FSU—80 E, 11th St., N. Y. C, HONOR ROLL GREETINGS We, the undersigned through the 14th anniversary 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 gress of northwest German working peasants which took place on Sunday | |in Kirchweyhe near Bremen, ‘Two | ‘hundred elected peasant delegates were present. Over 600 spectators | ‘including hundreds of workers were in the congress hall. The congress | adopted all its decisions unanimously | and sent a telegram of greetings to Comrade Thaelman, the leader of the German Communist, Part Soviet “Forced Labor”—Bedchat’s series in pamphlet form at 10 cents per copy, Read it—Spread it! ' os | ADDRESS AMOUNT Dollars Cents Cut this out, get busy, collect greetings from ‘Twenty-five cents and up immediately to get into the November 7th edition tion, and everywhere, DAILY WORKER workers in your s! for individuals, $1 of the Daily Worker, hop, or fnctory, mass organina- and up for organizations, Mail 50 Bast 13th St, N.Y. C,