The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 3, 1931, Page 3

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W YORK, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1931 British Fight for Leadership In War Front Against The Soviet Union ‘The British imperialists are de- termined ta fight to the bitter end against the. attempt of the United States, France and Japan to force Great Britain into a position of sec- ondary importance in the imperial~ ist struggle. ‘The most important step of the British in this direction is the attempt.to-win for itself a leading role in the anti-Soviet front which has been taken over by France on the western frontiers, by Japan on the eastern frontier of the Soviet Union, withthe United States in a military front with both, con- aolidating the imperialist attack. The British imperialists are bitterly at- tempting to drive between both im- perialists. ‘This is reported by & Universal Press from London: “That Britain intends quickly to resume its traditiorial strong atti- tude in foreign politics is already evidented. “With a definite home policy assured, the stellar roles now per- formed by the statesmen of France are likely soon to be chalienged. “It is now-certain that Britain’s delegation will take a more vigor- ous stand on the Oriental situa- tion at the. next League of Na- tions meeting and will also insist on the maintenance of the date of the February. disarmament confer- ence—whether Arthur Henderson, the defeated Labor leader, or an- other presides.” The French. and the United States imperialists are, however, determined on pushing thru the new alignment of imperialist powers. Laval, on board the Isie de France, stated that further “conversations” between the ‘United States and France will prob- ably take place in the near future at Biarritz, France. In addition, there will be 2 conference at that city of all the powers, concerning the re- parations question. This conference which is being planned supposedly around the questions connected with the reparations will in reality be a war conference for the attack on the Soviet Union. ‘The conference will prepare for the attack on the German masses by the German capitalist class, in an attempt to save the German capit- alist system and as a necessary step prior to the attack on the Soviet ‘Union. This is stated by Marcel Ray, special correspondent of the Petit \ Journal, who is returning to France with Laval. Ray, in a statement to his newspaper, wrote: “Mr. Laval knows, too, that France in some measure halt Ger- many’s progress toward disintegra- tion. For that reason he will seize the first opportunity on his return to declare publicly what he intends to do and demand the help of pub- Me opinion and all parties in ac- cepting in advance all the risks en- tailed in stch® action. The whole question is: Is Frace with him and an she do what he will ask in the time at her disposal?” One of the first conferences that Laval will “have: on returning to France will be With the German am~- bassador, von Hoetsch. The Times correspondent from Paris states that Laval will demand’that the German eapitalists ctush""the revolutionary movement among the masses. This 4g the aim of ‘thé German capitalists thru the establishment of an open fascist dictatorship which would have the fullest support of the French and United States-imperialists. “It is believed Ambassador von “only ask what France “Mr, Laval’s. condi- tions will be ‘péthaps severe. They prefaced by a demand that ‘its house in order 4s held here that immed she can make to France and Setaius of: wisdom on hi : on her @® which something solid may be emyatructed.” =" Avother cable-dispatch to the ‘Times states openly that fascism must be established in Germany as “soon as possible'in order to save the Gennan capitalist system and that enty on, this basis can the German capitalists hope for the support of PREPARE HUNGER MARCH FROM N. ¥. Mass Confarence of Organizations Nov. 22 line iwth,,the plan of the Na- ee cation he toe. building ip. be the ayenkt saineer Marc. the Unemployed Councils of Deroit ere wheeling into action with some geal ‘enthusiasm. Branch 17 of North Detroit steged a hun- @er march to the Welfare Depart- | ment,at 2 P.M. on Friday. ‘Thhe btanches will hold 1, of Hamtramck; Branch 7, of Oakland “Avenue; Branch 8 |of Hall; “Branch 10, of |Greek “east Branch 3 march on protest of thé ‘ard part-time workers. on which to attacks of the bosses this of Imperialists the other imperialists. “Financial people here are now convinced that it is possible for Germany to pull through on her own resources; but it is also be- lieved that a necessary preliminary would be for all Germans to be firmly determined on such indivi- dual action and for political events in Germany’ to follow the same course, in the way of indicating conservative action, as they did in England this week and in France in 1926. The feeling here is that no outside help could be granted Germany until the poli- tical agitation at home, which has. been a primary cause of her dif- ficulties, shall have ceased.” The imperialists demand that the Bruening government should imme- diately take the most decisive steps in order to crush the Communist Party of Germany, the leader of the German masses against the hunger program of Bruening and the im- perialists, the leader of the German masses in the defense of the Soviet Union, “JOBLESS COUNCIL’ OF SOCIALISTS PROVES A FLOP Jobless Know How the ‘Socialists’ Stand On Relief in Milwaukee MILAWUKEE, Wis., Nov, 1.—The much advertised free meeting of the “Labor Unemployed Action Council held in the Auditorium Saturday night, completely exposed the social fascists. Despite the tremendous publicity and the radio announce- ment during the day, the socialists’ expectation to have an overflow hall, besides the 8,000 seats in the Audi- torium, lead to a.2,000 overwhelm- ingly majority of business men and socialist party sympathizers strolling in. The meeting started at 8.30. Members of the Unemployed Coun- cil were present and heckled the “so- clalist” Sheriff Benson, who was chairman, demanding the’ rescinding of evictions and not the use of guns. They exposed Mayor Hoan’s cutting jthe tax rate, the forced labor of the Socialist Party and its endorsement of the stagger system. There was cheering for the Soviet Union. There were police and detectives running around the hall surrounding the best known comrades, but could not stop the heckling, and the dis- tribution of a special leaflet exposing the fake council. Arest Jobless Worker Tadway, Rev-esentative from Wis- consin, presented a fascist emergency power bill to the state board. Sheriff Benson as the capitalist press re- ported, shouted e Bassett to sit down and ordered his men to grab him. Joseph Schneider, member of the Y. C. L. was arrested on the order of the socialists and is still in jail. A resolution of ten demands were passed, several of them being de- jmands of the Unemployed Council, but also endorsing the Hearst pros- verity proposal, only raising Hearst’s figure to ten billion dollars for public works. Very few workers registered to join the organization and only half were present with many opposing resclu- tions when it was put to a vote. RR. MEN REFUSE 10 BE MULCTED Pullman Workers Hit Bosses’ Scheme CHICAGO, Tll—On October 21 the workers in the Pennsylvania Yards of the Pullman Company were notified that one day's pay would be deducted from each semi-monthly pay che¢k, for Governor Emmerson’s “Emergen- cy Relief Fund,” $6,000,000 of which is being taken in this manner from the pay envelopes of those who still have full or part-time jobs. ‘The men, who receive only $3.25 for an eight-hour day, were angered at this further wage slash, and de- termined to put up a militant resis- tance. At noon they went in a body, white and colored, to the office of the company, where they announced that they could not live on such a wage, and would refuse the forced “donation.” The answer of the offi- clals was that nothing could be done without instructions from the higher- ups in the company. Before the men quit work that night, however, a sign was posted recalling the previous order, and stating that the day’s wage would be deducted only from the next two pay-checks, after which a fifty cent deduction would be made, as was done last winter. INDIANS IN PERU SLAUGHTERED FOR TAXES LIMA, Peru—Seven Indians pea- sants were killed and twenty wound- ed by police in a clash that develop- ed around the attempt of govern- ment tax collectors to extort taxes sub-prefect of police wes arrested pending a fake investigation of the slaughter he directed. 'List of Meetings for the November 7th Anniversary DISTRICT 1 Boston, Mass—Bill Dunne. DISTRICT 4 Buffalo, N. ¥.—Speakers: Nash, Johnson, Rochester, N. ¥.—S peakers: Chaunt, Harvey. Syracuse, N, ¥.—Speakers: Do- roff, Essman, . Utica, N. ¥.—Speaker: Katz, Jamestown, N, ¥.—Speaker: Mofris, Spencer, N. ¥.—Speaker: Welsh. Binghamton, N, Y¥.—Speaker: Stevens, Lackawanna, N, Y¥.—Speakers: Thornton, Sgovio, Niagara Falls, N. ¥.—Speakers: Hill, Bronson, N. Tonawanda, N.Y.—Speakers: Simmons, Elvi, DISTRICT § Pittsburgh, Pa—Speaker: Minor, K, DISTRICT ¢ Cleveland, Ohio—Slovenian Au- ditorium, 6417 St. Clate Ave. Speaker: Tom Johnson, Toledo, Ohio—Swiss Hall, 735 South St. Clair. Erla, Pa.—315 Plum St. Canton, Ohio—Polish Hall, lth St, NE. Cincinnati, Ohio—310 E. 8th St., Workers’ Center, DISTRICT 3 Philade!phia, Pa.—Speaker: Wm. %. Foster. Reading, Pa.—Nov. 8. Baltimore, Md.—Speaker: Harry Haywood, DISTRICT 7 Detroit, Mich.—Arena, Gardens. freaker: R. Baker, “Grand Ran'ds, Mich. Muskegon, Mich. DISTRICT 8 Chicayo—Coliseum, 15th and Wabash, 8 p.m. Sneakers: Wein- stone, Newton, Williamson. Indianarclis, Ind—Workers’ | Center, £2714 §. Meridian St. Speaker: K‘ar, Terre Hente, ¥nd—Workers’ Center, 29 N. Fourth St. Speaker: Poindexter, Anderson, Ind.—Mad'son County Conrt Room. Speaker: Ayers, Kokomo, Ind.—Speaker: Ross, Casey, 1.—Snerker: Allen, St. Loris—Droids Holl, 9th,and Market. Sneaker: FB. Stevens, Fast St. Lonis, HL Madison, Mi. Collinsvitte, YH. Liberty Hal), 8th and Wainut: Sovth Stde—Polonie Fatt, 8th antl Burnhom. Speakers: Gebert, Gar- ! dos and others, Sorineficld, —Carpenters Fall, 503 E. Monroe, Speaker: Toven, Peoria, ¥W.—Sneaker: Thomas, Decatur, .—Sreaker: E, Reide? heft, Evansville, Ind.—Speaker: K''ng. Gery, Ind—Torner Foil, 14th and Washixgton, 8 p.m. Spea er: Motes, ‘ Irttena Barbor, Ind.—Yawant Fall, Broadway and Deodar, .3 pm, i South Rend, Ind. Elmw-ed Park, 1 —Yank Fail, Corner of Harlem and Grand—8 pm, Peselond, 1 Trener ojl, 165 Fest 115th St. Speaker: Kather- ine Friich, Chicnen Hetvhis, 1H.—Masony Foil, 1590 Otto Brita'ne, Serth Chicavo, Ind —Croation FN, 9618 Commerrtal Ave, Feeewich, ¥" —13430 Ave, N. Darenroert, WL, e Pock Island, Iil—Speaker, Taher, r Mo thesville, Fivher, Milwankee. Wis.—North Side— Kenecha, Wis.—Woerkers’ Cen- ter, 54°3 16th Ave.. 7:30 p.m. - Crévhy, Wis.—Mezzaros Hall, 1229 Packard, 7:30 p.m. Shebovren, Wis.—Croation Hall. 8th and Broadway, Nov. 8th, 7:30 p.m: West Allis, 2:30 p.m. Red Granite, Wis —Finnish Hall, 730 nm. Sneaker: Grace Brown. Racine, Wis. Wankesha. DISTRICT it White Forth, N. Da’ —Comma- nity Holl, 8 n.m., Nov. 6. Williston, N. Dak.—County Court Hense, 8 p.m. J. I.—S peaker: Wis—Labor Hall, U.T.W:ELY } PACT BASIS OF LYNCH CALL' | (CONTINUE! FROM PAGE ONE) Workers’ Union and the Elected Rank | and File Strike Committee have ex- posed the treachery of the A. F. of L. and UTW officials darity of the workers, have defeated the drive to break the strike and put over the wage cut. The Lawrence mills have juicy emergency contracts for U. S. army khaki. The mill owners are frantic, but not too upset to plan, together with the governor and the city authorities of Lawrence, a campaign of lynching, beatings, jailings and deportations by the American Legion and other fas- cist “patriotic” organizations—a cam- paign which has as its object |the destruction of*the militant strike leadership by any means necessary. The Lawrence mill owners and their thugs, backed by the police powers of the {Massachusetts state government, through the Lawrence press, notably the Lawrence Leader, are calling for a campaign of mur- der on a wholesale scale. ‘They are whipping up the Lawrence under- world, the young scions of the middle | class, and the whole |collection of mill owners’ hanzers-on, to launch the terror drive to coincide with the propavanda offensive, led by Gover- nor Ely and the UTW offirials, to drive the strikers back to work, It has been made clvar in the last two weeks that thé UTW sell-out cannot be put across as long as the Communist textile workers and the National Textile Workers’ Union’ leaders retain some freedom of moye- ment, Therefore the demand {for their deaths or deportation from Lawrence. Faced by the macnificent solidar- ity of the strikers, the mill owners, the local nod state government and their advisors—the A. F. of L. and UTW off'cials—decided to gamble all on a d'rect challenge to the ele- mentary richts of organizing, strik- ing and p'cketing. This is the real meaning of the call for the blood of militant or- ganizers and strikers published in the Lawrence Leader's Sunday issue supported by the two other (10,000 PICKET | mill-owners sheets, ‘The part played thus far in the strike by the UTW officials and the local and state A, F. of L. lecdors is ® ‘Classic of ‘anti-working — class treachery: ‘ From the first moment of the strike they have been in secret consultation with the.mill-owners and the gover- nor. They have made just as much | pretence of organizing and picketing Rockford, il.—Speaker: A. New-| | as was necessary to present some kind of:a strike front to the workers. They | have worked with the police as blood | brothers, they have turned over for- |eign born organizers and strikers to the U. S. immigration authroities. One of these officials is on recérd with a letter promising the federal agents to act as a stool pigeon. Last Wednesday Gorman and Riviere of the UTW, Mor'-rity, “Watt ard others of the State Fed- eration of Labor, had a secret meet- ing with the governor and mill owners. At this mecting they agrecd to try to put the st:ikers cut after which the whele wage question was to go to arbitrat‘on. The Boston Post, evidently trying to. boost the fortunes of the governor as a. settler of strikes and. friend of the. working man, released this story spilled the beans; Historic Background for Traitors. Everything was supposed to be in camera until the Benedict Arnolds, operating in their historic New Eng- land setting, had laid the basis for a stampede back to the mills. While the “independent” mills had agreed to this arrangement, the American Woolen company, employing between 13,000 and 14,000 of the total number of workers in Lawrence, was very skeptical as to the ability of the U.T.W. and A. F, of L. officials to deliver, This created additional difficulties and accounts for the denials by the governor and U.T.W. officials car- ried by the Lawrence and Boston af- ternoon papers to the effect that no such conference had taken place and Felten, N. Dak.—Community Hall, Nov. 8, 8 pm. (Sreskers for above meetings: Ombolt, Floor, Ingerson, Husa, Mrttieketnen,) Frederick, S. Dak.—Savo Wall. Speekers: Charles E. Taylor, Os- car Entto, Plentywood, Mont.—Farmer-La- hor Temple, Sneskers: Rodney no agreement for ending the strike arrived at. Exposed Before the Strikers. ‘The United Front Rank and File Strike Committee and the National ‘Textile Workers Union promptly is- sued 20,000 leaflets exposing the sell- out conspiracy and putting forward six points—unity against the wage cut, unity against the sell-out, unity Salsbury, Mabel Husa, Jimmie Hansen, Hans Pasmussen. DISTRICT 15 Bridzenort, C o n n.—Workers’ Center, 117 Middle St. Dorhrry, Conn.—Workers’ Cen- ter, 8 Bank St. Hertford. Conn.—64 Pratt St. Stemferd. Comn.—Workers’ Cen- ter, 48 Pacific St. Portchester, Conn.—Finnish Workers’ Club, 42 N. Water St. Esct Portchester. Sorinefield, Cown.—Ruesian Mu- tus! AIA Poll, 75 Dwicht St. Waterbury, Conn.—Venta Hall, 10% Green St. Westerly, R. 7.—Finnish Hall, Chase Fi" (near Westerly). on the picket lines, unity in the elec- tion of a central rank and file strike committee, unity in relief, unity for defense—as the basis for a fighting united front of the 23,000 strikers. ‘The mass of the strikers respond- ed and 10,000 workers on the picket lines yesterday is the answer of the Lawrence proletariat to the U.T.W. and A, F. of L. traitors, to the mill owners and their governor, to the police, to the whole lynching cam- paign against Communists and mil- itant strikers, and, in an unmistak- able manner to the Hoover-Wall Street program of wage cutting, starvation and legal and extra- legal suppression, New Haven, Conn.—Labor Ly- cerm, 38 Flowe St, New Britoin, Conn.—Ukrainian Fen, 11 Frwin Place, Noy. 8. Plaintold, Conn, Norwalk, Conn. The Daily Worker is proud to say that it has been able to give deci- sive assistance to the heroie Law- rence strikers by exposing the strike- breaking conspiracy and terror drive, end by mobiliing masses of workers throughout the country in supert ot back to work at a 5 per cent wage | in its Thursday morning edition—and | IN REPLY TO LYNCH THREAT ONE) < PAGE (CONTINUED teh picket lines and arrested: Rubin | Pier, general picket captain; Kurese~ |vitch, Lithuanian organier; Joe Cal- shown up the|a, member of the Lawrence Strikers’ | strikebreaking activities of Governor| Defense Committee; Cavallaro and | Ely and, backed by the unbroken soli-|Chulada, picket captains, All were } |immediately railroaded to trial with- jout jury and no“witnesses this morn- ing and a sentence on charges ot | disorderly conduct and violation of |the city ordinance deferred to No- jvember 9 to give the officials a | chance to investigate for deportation. | Pier is now out on $400 bail and | Kuresevitch is out on $300. The oth- |ers were held on $300 bail. | The Lawrence Daily Eagle, the only | local morning paper, carries a big {streamer on its front page on the |statement by Peter Carr, who is the | police commissioner, alderman and |Member of the Citiens Committee. |This statement was made yesterday Jat the Carr campaign rally and says that a strike settlement is near be- jcause a dfinit program is bing drawn jup which will open the way to an |agreement. The statement also says that one side has already agreed upon the plan, but that the second side was | yet to be heard! from and that he is |unable to divulge further details, Today when William White, for- |mer Maror and candidate for Mayor |now spoke before the meeting ofthe City Council and proposed a meet- }ing in the armory of the Counc’l, {mill employers, A. F. of L. and citi- |zens committee to plan the strike settlement, Carr took the floor and repeated his statment of" yesterd-y, and added that the plan which he cannot divulge now is of such nature ‘0 force the workers to accept and |thherefore White's plan cannot be | considered. Cee, hie | LAWRENCE, Mess, Oct. 30—The United Textile Workers Union lead- ers, the American Federation of Labor central body leaders here, and the police came down in full force Thursday morning to try and take over control of the 200 men and women who were picketing the Ar- tington mill, in the midst of a heavy vain, President Watt of the Lawrence Central Lalor Union (A. F. L.) called | the U, T. W. picket captain out of the line as soon as the pickets booed and jeered at one scab who went in. Watt led the captain to the police officer present, the three held a con- | ference, and the captain came back | shame faced and calling the pickets together, notified them that they | could sing if they wanted to, but | ;must not “Boo.” The pickets yelled | back, “Go to hell! We're here to stop | the -scabs!” Then a crowd of detectives came down on Martha Stone, the United Front Rank and File Strike Com- | Mittee picket captain at the Arling- jton, and one of them pointed his | finger at her and made a loud speech |denouncing her as “The National | Textile Workers Union girl.” The A F. UL, leaders then told Stone, “You |can stay here if you don't make any trouble.” The crowd of pickets laughed. Stone usuclly leads the line and al- | ways leads the sinving, she is always there, and the big cheeses of the U. T. W. sc!dom get up early enough to picket at the Arlington. “What do we care, she pickets!” a | couple of U. T. W. girls e~swered the detective and left him talking to vimself. Maynard Workers Resent Being Put on Lawrence Work MAYNARD, Mass Nov. 1—There is great dissatisfaction here at the at- tempt to force employes of the Assa- bett Mills of the American Woolen Co. to finish work sent here from the struck mills in Lawrence. They | have been shipping warps cut out | of the looms in Lawrence. Wednes- day the loom fixers simply refused to put them in and let the warps lie on the floor, The “drawing in” girls refused to draw in scab warps, and 19 were fired, That is the situation at present, with the National Textile Workers Union and the United Front Rank and File Strike Committee preparing to hold a meeting in May- nard soon. SINGH FACES JAIL FOR INDIA FIGHT SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Nov. 1— Imprisonment of Indian revolu- tionists has spread to the United States. N. D. Singh, president of the Hindustan Gadar Party (All India Revolutionary Party) which has car- ried on, agitation and organization for the independence of India from British rule, has been arrested and faces deportation, The chief accusa- ation against N. D. Singh is that he is in sympathy with the “reds.” De- portation to India would mean im- prisonment for many years under the most brutal conditions. There is no eviconce against him whatsoever, except a book of essays by Kropot- | kin that was found in the ljbrary of the Hindustant Gadar Party, the strikers and organiers picked as the targets of fascist terror. It is necessary now to carry through a still stronger mobiliation against the next move of the strike- breakers and terrorists headed by (Terrible Conditions | of Negroes Revealed li. 2a Sta tis tires Vital statistics for the city of Bal- | timore in 1928 reveal in their figures how terrible is the condition of the Negroes. The comparison with the} figures on the death of the white / population show to what degree the | Negroes suffer more than the white workers, The population of Baltimore was | 841,728. The death rate for the white | | 23.1. Almost twice as many Negroes | died as whites during the same/ period. Tuberculosis deaths tell an | unmistakable story. Whites 79 per | 100,00; Negro 318. This doesn’t tell of the thousands who are slowly| wasting away from tuberculosis | among the working-class of both races The results of an examination of 1,000° Negro workers in this city is startling. Nine hundred were found to have ‘serjous physical defects and “all but three,” said the report, “could profit by early care,” U. S. SENDS “OBSERVER” TO WAR ZONE | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) reports that the United States gov- ernment is taking the closest interest in the advance of the Japanese troors into Manchuria. “The American government aiso was reported to be interetsed itself in the conflicting reports of Russian mobDiliation along the S'berian- Manchurian borders and to have sent Georze Hansen, its Consul General at Harbin to Northern Manchuria to investigate.” The trip of the United States Con- sul General George Hansen, to Man- churia is part of the joint action of the United States with the Japanese to the redivision of Ch'va and in the preparations for the military at- tack on the Soviet Union. The Japanese imperialists have bombed another Manchurian city, Tungliao, in their advance toward the Soviet border. Four Japanese armored trains bombarded this city while airplanes raked the city with machine gun fire. This was reported in dispatches from northern Man- churia to the capitalist press. The Japanese are in addition mov- ing more and more troops into the northern Manchuria area. This is reported by the Rengo News Agency from Changchun which announced that the Japanese were moving troops from there to an unannounced trops from there “to an umnan- nounced destination.” Whiie these troop movements of the Japanese are taking place they are preparing to take further steps in the attaok on the Soviet Union. Yesterday # very important confer- ence was’ scheduled between Prince Kimmochi Saionji, an {mportant statesman, with the Japanese Em- peror, Hirohito. The New York Times correspondent from ‘Tokio reports that this visit “indicates that im- portant decisions on policy are about to be taken.” These important de- cisions on policy are on the war policy of the imperialists against the Soviet Union, The United States is cooperating | to the fullest possible extent with | the Japanese in these preparations. | The position of the United States has been clearly stated by Herbert Bayward Swope, formerly editor of the New York World, in a letter to the New York Times. In the last war Swope was an assistant chair- man of the United States War In- dustries Board. His letter concludes with ‘the following open statement of the United States policy: “Perhaps an enlightened self- interest In matters such is these, after all, is the best policy to pur- sue internationally. That belief was the motivation that kept Am- | erica out of the League of Nations, | let’s play the game consistently. “It looks now as if Japan may DENVER 10 SET A RECORD: ¥ LAWRENCE AND TWIN LAKES BUILD A CLUB IN EVERY TOWN From Denver, Colorado, comes 4 real challenge. A Red Build-.s’ Club has been organied there and they send in $5.10. They expect to build Denver up higher in the bundle cir- culation than any city of its size in population was 12.2; for the Negro! the United States. ‘They say: “Here’s | a challenge to the other Red Build- ers’ Clubs!” If the Red Bullders’ Club of Den- ver broadens their club into @ Daily Worker Readers’ Club by drawing in all the workers whom they come in contact with, they can get all the workers who are mem- bers out after subs. It will then be much easier to outdo other cit- jes! The contacts which are drawn in to function around the Daily Worker are much surer contacts for the movement than if a sale of the Daily is made to a worker who sits and reads his paper at home, The club members can build up a social life of their own which will more successfully combat the boss ideology of movies and other forms of capitalist entertainment. The workers can start corre- spondence groups to tell about the conditions in Denver, and these let- ters can be published in the Daily Worker. If the workers in the club want to have a short play that any worker club can put on, that does not re- quire much material for scenery, etc., they can write to us and we will send | them short skits or plays about the | class struggle. Draw In Kids, Too! Also it is important for workers and farmers to try to counteract the | boss inflzence upon their children in the public schools, etc. start Pioneer groups of kids, who also can help sell the Daily Worker, and have hikes, etc. The Pioneer Maga~ zine will give many more suggestions for them. We have received another valu- able suggestion about building Daily Worker Clubs. This statement reads: “Without the help of non-Party members we will never succeed in building the circulation of the Daily Worker. The Section and Unit Daily Worker agents should organize such clubs, ‘The names and addresses of have to establish in Asia that “cor- don sanitaire” againct the Bolshe- vik which Foch wantet to erect in. Eurcpe.” The “cordon sanitaire” in Man- churia is the united front of the Japanese and United States impe- rialists to destroy the Soviet Union and to repartition China. The “cor- don sanitaire” is the attack of the imperialist against the fatherland of the workers and peasants throughout the world. The “bandits” and ‘brigands” that the Japanese are slaughtering in Manchuria are part of the great mass movement for a counter offensive against the imperialists that is toing on among the Chinese workers and masants. It is this mass movement that the Japanese and the other im- perialists are determined to crush so that they may exploit the Chinese masses more severely and attack the Soviet Union. They can} Daily Worker subs rs can be ob- | tained at the District Office.” A Club In Every Town! | We want a Daily Worker Club in every town and city of the United States, This is the best way of drawing workers to our side. A s0~ cial life without any party discip- | line! In these clubs the workers | ¢an learn more about the Party and | eventually be drawn into it. The | Daily Worker agents should make it pari of their job to start work on s club right awzy, We received a letter from Lawe rence, Mass., enclosing $5 for the papers sold there. They are start- ing house-to-house sales there. Especially today in Lawrence, where 25,000 workers are out on strike against a 10 per cent wage-cut and unbearable conditions, can house-to-house sales yleld enviable results, Here is a fine example of | how sales of the Daily Worker can | be built up, because all the workers of Lawrence realie that the Daily Worker and the Commun'st Party are back of them en masse. With the Daily printing stories of the Lawrence strike, the sale of the paper should be very easy, Bu'ld Tw'n Lakes Club, From Twin Lakes, Mich., comes godd news. P. A. writes to renew his sub and says: “The Daily Worker, Long May It Live! It sure is a truth paper and shall always go ahead of the other papers which are capitalis sheets. Sympathy for Communism is met all over the country up here in Michigan and glad to see that every- one here speaks in those terms.” If this is the case it should be very easy for this comrade to build up Daily Worker Clubs in no time. They should flock into the Clubs in record numbers. We have sent this com- rade information on how to build up & Club social life for the workers and hope.to hear from him soon that ac- tivity along this line has been started. Daily Worker Bulletin. ‘When we sent out the last bulletin about Daily Worker Clubs we asked the workers who received it to let us know what they thought about it and whether they used it or not. We re- ceived this advice from a worker in Davenport, Iowa: “You sent out a bulletin the other day asking for our ideas and whether it would be a good idea to send {t out all the time.‘ I would say there is no use sending the bulletin to people you never hear from, because it goes to show that it is doing no good and you might just as well save the postage and keep down overhead expense.” We wovli like to hear from any | worker how they use the bulletin and any suggestions they have to make. If any worker would like to get the bulletin. and.is not getting it now we should be glad to send it to him. It can be used in connection with building Daily Worker Clubs. | AGENTS WANTED TO SELL SOVIET PICTORIAL And OTHER PUBVICATIONS Communicate With FSU—80 E. 11th St., N. Y. € | 4 THE WESTERN WORKER Comes Out January Ist A fighter to organ’ze and lead our struggles in the West. SUBSCRIBE NOW! 52 Issues $2 | 26 Issues $1 | 13 Issues 59c RAISE FUNDS! BUILD IT! CHEY wc sccescerseeescscrcsneocevce Western Worker Campaign Committee 14 FOURTH STREET, San Francisco, Calif, this out, get busy, everywhere, to get into the DAILY WORKER Cut and Governor Ely, 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. AMOUNT Dollars Cente collect greetings from workers in your shop, or factory, mass organiza- Twenty-five cents and up for individuals, $1 and up for organizations. Mail November 7th edition of the Daily Worker. 50 East 13th St., N.Y. CG.

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