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=" Page Three JOBLES S IN MAN DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1931 Union Heads Take Lead in i Cut of Rail Workers Wages) Wages of 1,250,000 to Be Cut for “The Good of the Rail Road Workers” | NEW YORK.—Officials of the railroad | | palace will contain two theatres and | $4,000,000 Palace in Moscow to Hold Theatres and Clubs The latest undertaking in the Five- Year Plan to raise the cultural and iving standards of the Russian workers is the building of a $4,000,000 Palace of Culture in Moscow. ‘The | a club, Twelve thousand people will be able to use the building at the same time. The Palace of Culture, which © 500 CHI IN SCHOOLS IN DETROIT Public Hearing in Philadelphia Reveals Exten of Mass Suffering of Jobless LDREN, ADULTS DEMONSTRATE FOR AID CITIES PREPARE FOR NAT'L HUNGER MARCH Relief for Lawrence Rhode Island Relief Meet Sunday PROVIDENCE, R. I., Noy. 1— |mass meeting under the auspices of |the Workers International Relief jammed 250 into a hall at the Work- Strikers Progressing | A ‘Hoover Program for Business Recovery Aids Billionaire Banker- © ers Center intended for 100, and t | mary were turned away, Sunday. | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE From these unemployed textile work- — ers, $13.50 was raised to feed the | and juggling can the banks show that Lawrencs:triiare, | they are “solvent.” ‘The bosses’ gov- This meeting followed one of 600|°rment, through banking pools, is * Bosses, Robs Hungry Millions. bor. Private companies will not have | to pay union wages to the workers. ‘They can secure unemployed workers | through forced labor “for upkeep” without wages. brotherhoods at Washington took the lead in will be ready for use next ‘Tampa Police Arrest Organizer In Attempt to| putting over the wage cut program of the rail- May, is being put up on the site where once stood the Simonoy Mon- Cripple Fight for Relief road companies in a declaration made by 22 astery. at the steps of the City Hall Friday night. Sunday at the Workers’ Cen- | ter there will be a state wide confer- guaranteeing the big banks and the rich their wealth. But the masses of | ¥#m-Crowism—Dividing the Working Class. presidents of railway saying they were amendable to 1,250,000 workers. workers organizations a discussion on wage cuts for The declaration, demagogically enough, disguises the in- tention of the railway union heads to effe cut by saying that the wage cuts to be d “temporary” and that the subject ofé— wnemployment would be introduced. | The gist of the argument that the} railfay labor misleaders put forth cautiously is that such moves as they | contemplate would constitute “sta. hilization” of the industry. The slo- gan of the union heads is in essence a quiet wage | | cussed would be | material change in the conditions or | employment of the jobless railroad | men. The action of the railway union | chieftains recalls the maneuvers made | by the socialist officials of the Amer- isan Federation of Full Fashioned POWERS PUSH DIVISION OF CHINA BY WAR ONE) (CONTINUED FROM PAGE Stimson’s “profound concern” over the alleged Soviet troop movements indicates the leading role which | Hosiery Workers when their main “Wage cuts for the sake of rallway|piea for a voluntary wage cut was workers!” |that it would “stabilize” the indus- ‘The Weshineton corresnondent of | try and furnish work for many now| the New York Evening Post, while | unemployed. The aftermash of the | trying to bolster up the demagogy of | deep wage cut affected by the hosiery | the union misleaders says in regards | misleaders not only failed to make | to their attitude to the proposed wage | more employment but threw hundreds euts: | more out of the mills and reduced the “The, action, while by no means | living standards of the workers who conclusive evidence that the rail- | had their wages cut. road brotherhoods will agree to a | ‘The whole process of the united ware cut, was rerarded as a hone- ful sien indicatins A RATIONAL ATTITUDE toward present condi- tions and suggesting the possibility ef some compromise arrangements hv which the financial conditions | of Ft> railroad can be imoroved and servrity brourht to emoloyees.” Use Unemnloyment Threat to Effect Cut A trump card that the twenty-one union heads hold in their attempt to quickly effect a wage cut and force the workers to accept it, is their hypo- critical and demagogic talk about getting unemployed workers back into the shops and trains. The same or- ganizations that have done nothin« to halt the rapid discharge of nearly three quarter millions of railroad workers within the last year, will at- tempt to use the unemploymen is- sue as a sword over the heads of the employed to carry through the em- ployers’ program without making any |front of the leaders of the ‘railybad American imperialism is actually tak- ing in the division of China and the anti-Soviet campaign. ‘The Japanese army continues its | occupation of strategic points in Manchurja and its savage offensive on what the imperialists call “bands of bandits”, who are in reality Man- churian peasants and workers fight- ing against the imperialist attack. Japanese Extend Occupation. A capitalist despatch from Dairen, | protherhoods and the railway bosses | south Manchuria, admits that Japan to put over the wage cut is told by |is moving to tntrench her position in Roger Habson, capitalist statisticians | yanchuria and is planning further in an niterview with the “Babson | }ombardments of Ciinese towns and | school supplies. ers’ organizations were told to return on Wednesday when a meeting of the board will be held. A militant crowd listened to John Schmies, Communist candidate for mayor; Minne, a young Pioneer, a young Negro student and others. . mately 200 Negro and white workers attended the public hearing held at the Italian Progressive Institute, 1208 Tasker St., under the auspices of the Philadelphia Unemployed Councils, | Workers testifying at this hearing brought out the misery and starva- | tion existing among the unemployed workers in this city. ‘Woods acted as prosecuting attor- ney of the Unemployed Councils. Another hearing will take place on November 6 at the Garvey Hall, 2109 Columbia Ave. This will be followed by a main hearing to take place at Girard Manor Hall, Friday, Novem- ber 13, 8 p.m. Letters have been sent A committee of children and representatives from work- | PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — Approxi- | DETROIT, Mich.—Five hundred adult workers and chil- | ence for relief, called by the W.LR. |dren, Negro and white demonstrated Monday before |of Education for immediate relief, for food, clothing, shoes and | trom the T.U.U.L, unions and work- | TU? |Delegates from machinists’ locals >» Bo | the Board) wna other AFL. unions, as well as | ers’ fraternal orders will attend. A wholesale bakery here is going to ship truck loads of bread to the Lawrence strikers. The bakery work- |ers volunteer to bake it free, and |have demanded that the company jfurnish flour. The company agreed. | AMERICAN CABLE march. The following meetings have been arranged: Foston—every Monday and Fri- day at 2 p.m., at 751 Washington St. Roxbury — every Wednesday at 8 p.m., at 113 Dudley St. South Boston—Wednesday, Noy. 4, at 2 | pm. at 376 Broadway. Chelsea— Wednesday, Nov. 4, at 7 p.m., at 88 Hawthorne St. West End Beston | —Thursday, every week at 8 p.m. | at 93 Staniford St. | The executive committee of fhe Unemployed Councils decided to send |@ committee to city hall next week to be backed up by a demonstration | organized during the week at a se- | ries of meetings, to make demands | for relief and protest the arrest of | Unemployed Council speakers. | Two members of the Unemployed | Council were arrested last Saturday | at an open air meetings. They are | now out on bail. | Among the activities initiated by ) WORKERS STRIKE AT CUT IN WAGES Railroads Cut Wages of Salaried Workers; Prepare Further Ctus workers who had deposits have al- | ready been robbed of them by the | Thousands of banks with deposits have gone bank- In the Bank of U. 5S. in New York City alone more than 400,000 depositors, workers and small trades- | men have lost their hard-earned dol- | lars. | Covering Up Wholesale Robbery. | The whole campaign of propaganda as to the “soundness” of the capital- ist institutions and the “program of prosperity,” of “more faith,” “more buying,” is but a smoke-screen to cover up the robbery of the masses | and the placing of the whole burden of the crisis on the masses and the turning of the. crisis itself into a good business for bankers and the big cap- italists, The other points of the Hoover pro- gram are a direct attack on the em- | ployed workers, the complete refusal | to help the unemployed. It calls upon | the employed workers to share their | one or two days work with the unem- | ployed and thus further lower the liv- | banks. | workers’ A further feature of the program is the discrimination against foreign- born workers, Negro workers and young workers. This is to be carried out under the guise of “humanitar- ianism,” under the guise of helping married men first. Workers are to be asked to accept jobs on the farms for “upkeep.” But this the capitalists know to be sheer hypocrisy aside from the forced labor phase. The farmers are starving, they can not feed them- selves and their families. Many of them are drifting into the big citie’ in search of jobs. The Hoover government boast: that the American Federation o! Labor “can be expected to support this plan,” and they could have added that the socialist party and all its winglets (Muste) also “sap- port this plan.” Yes, the ecatire capitalist class, the Hoover govern- | ment and the republican and demo- cratic parties, the socialist party and the American Federation of Labor all support this program of Starvation, of placing the enttre burden of the crisis on the workers. NEW YORK.—The operators of | ing standards of the entire working | the All American Cables, Inc., 67| “188: Faced with 12,000,000 unem- Broad Street, struck Monday morn- ployed, with the deepening of the! ing against a 10 per cent wage-cut. | crisis causing more unemployment, with new speed-up schemes to en- ‘The workers must answer the plan of Hoover and all its supporters by @ program of struggle. They must Park” press printed on Oct. 30. Bab- | populations. ‘The despatch states: son said: | “Not only is a renewed bombard- ment probable at Chinchow, Mar- | to the labor unions, naturally asking | |for more reduction than they expect | to get. Then the bargaining will be- | |gin, ‘The unions probably will re- | | “Rail executives will propose a cut | fuse and each road must file peti- | |tions before the board of mediation. | All this will take time and it is im- | | probable that actual wage reductions ‘can be pyt into effect before next | ing. I believe the labor unions | } agree to some wage reduction | wi | without a strike. shal Chang Hsueh-liang’s tempo- rary capital, but the Japanese au- | thorities foresee the likelihood of what they term a ‘military neces- sity’ of sending strong forces to Chinchow with the avowed inten- tion of driving Marshal Chank’s military remnants south of the Great Wall into China proper.” Militarists Aid Occupation, As neither Marshal Chang nor Chiang Kai-shek and the Nanking “A reduction of ten per cent in| overnment have raised a finger in wage rates would still leave the | >,» osition to the Japanese seizure of workers ahead of the game and bet- | anchuria, it is clear that those ter off than almost any other group.” | against whom teh Jap forces are to be sent are the peasants, work- WAGES, TONNAGE INCREASE. | ON THE SOVIET RAILROADS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) peace tamed Se played by transport in the Five-Year Plan, adopted a detailed resolution for reconstruction of the transport system with special care for the heavy autumn and winter traffic. The most important measures, applying the six conditions of success as outlined by Stalin, are the elimination of the per- sonal irresponsibility for locomotives, a radical improvement in the hasten- ing of repairs, introduction of cost accounting and the strengthening of discipline. Wages Soar Upward At the same time wages were in- sreased an average of thirteen per tent and a new system of wages on the basis of productivity was advo- sated. Since then the improvements \n the transport system have still been insufficient because the new meas- ures have not been completely car- ers and disbanded soldiers who have united to oppose the advance of Jap- anese imperialism. ‘The Japanese imperialists have an- | the Chinese banks in Manchuria un- der the pretext of “stabilizing” the currency. The Japanese authorities nearly 12,000 below the program. | pian “to provide silver bars for coin- | | nounced plans to take over control of § Therefore, the Central Committee and the Council of Peoples Commissars took energetic measures on the 5th of October, replacing the former Com- missar of Transport with Andreyev, lage in Mukden beginning November las” 3 The only area from which there |has been any withdrawal of Japanese troops is in the Kirin section where formerly head of the Workers’ and | to Mayor Mackey, Lloyd Committee, | local councilmen and congressmen, and prominent liberals. Twenty-five | thousand leaflets are being issued in connection with these hearings. In line with the preparations for the National Hunger March, the Un- |employed Councils andthe W.LR. have arranged a joint Tag Day to be held on Saturday and Sunday, No- vember 14 and 15. On Saturday, November 21, a gala pageant and dance will be held at | lumbia Ave., 7:30 p.m., as 2 means of raising funds for the National Hun- ger March, On November 22 a general confer- ence, United Front Hunger March Com- mittee will be held at 929 Arch St. Calls for this conference have been issued to A-F.L. locals, Negro church- es, fraternal organizations, clubs, etc. This conference will make the final selection of the 200 delegates to be sent by the Philadelphia Unemployed Councils to Washington on Decem- ber 7. Also, as part of the prepara- tion for the hunger march, a series of local demonstrations will be held in front of the Lloyd Relief Commit- tee, City Hall, and homes of local congressmen and councilmen, the Boston Unemployed Councils is |From the temporary strike head- able the capitalists to compete in the oppose the whole system of forced Turngeminde Hall, Broad and Co- | under the auspices of the | that of forcing the authorities and re- lief agencies to provide lodgings for homeless unemployed workers. ‘The Unemployed Council succeeded | in getting lodgings for 40 homeless jobless last week. ae ar CHICAGO SENDS CORRECTION (Telegram to the Daily Worker) CHICAGO, Ill—Twelve thousand unemployed workers participated in the Cook County Hunger March as | many thousands greeted and cheered | the marchers from the sidewalk. This | | was not published in the Daily Work- | er, ary TAMPA, Fla.—Police arrested three | local leaders of the revolutionary | movement leading the fight against the eviction of an unemployed work- er. Jim Nino, NiloLima and Mike Comas, organizers of the Communist Party, the Young Communist League | and a Red Builder respectively, are now held under bond. The comrades were active in pre- | paring the unemployed here for the National Hunger March and despite | their arrest the work is going on with | redoubled efforts. | * eae Macomb County Hunger March. quarters set up by the workers at jthe St. George Hotel, Brooklyn, the | World market, the Hoover government labor and the stagger plan. They strikers announced that they had | Sees only the “stagger plan” as the | must unmask the whole flood of tied up the company’s lines to South America and the West Indies. The Office Workers Union of the Trade Union Unity League calls on the strikers to stand firm in their de- mands and urges the spreading of the strike to the Western Union Te- legraph and Cable Co., where the operators also received a 10 per cent |solution. Only the workers must | Propaganda as the “prosperity.” They | bear the price of teh mad capitalist | ™USt unmask the fakery of this plan | system with its crisis and suffering | 94 Tesist the attempt to solve the | for the masses. The capitalists must | isis at their expense. They must j continue to make huge profits and | organize and fight. Fight for tmme- t Fessive tiplainiaends | diate relief. Fight for an immediate | sum as winter relief. Fight for un- Attacks Low Paid Gov't Workers. employment insurance. Fight against A new feature of the Hoover pro- | discharges. Fight for 2 shorter work- | gram is an attack on the poorly paid | day without a reduction of wages slash sterdé ing. se yesterday ae ng. | Government employes. Their wages | Fight for a tax on the rich to relieve ese wage-cuts are only a part! are to be cut. Many of them are to| the unemployed. Fight against the of the systematic wage-cutting cam- | be laid off and the stagger plan to | Wage-cuts which the Hoover govern- paign that has been going on for) the past year in the cable companies. | the cover of aidin j ig the unemployed. | The New York Times reports that tn reality it is to be a wage-cut and | “other cable companies have reduced | speed-up for the poorly paid. gov- wages here and there in the past | ernment employes, so that the Hoo- year.’ ver government can continue te. spend billions for war without further. taxes |on the rich. But the government of- NEW YORK.—The New York Cen- | ficials, with their high salaries of tral Railroad, which is preparing ne- | tens of thousands of dollars per year, gotiations with the rail union heads | are not to be interfered with. This is | and the Brotherhood of Locomotive | the Hoover program. Engineers officials to put over @! yo, Lal ‘ wholesale wage-cut for all railroad | bor—Starvation Wages. be introduced. This is done under | . . Railroads Slash Pay ment now openly supports. The unemployed workers must organize into Unemployed Coun- cils. The workers in the A. F. of 1, unions must repudiate the A. F, of L. leaders and their stand against unemployment insurance adopted at the last convention at Vancouver. Employed workers must unite to beat back the Hoo- ver starvation program. The National Hunger March to Washington to present demands of the starving masses at the time of workers, slashed the wages Monday | of all the non-union salaried work- ers 10 per cent. This is the second | cut for the salaried workers, the first Public works, says the Hoover gov- | who | VAN DYKE, Mich.—The Macomb |one ranging from 10 to 20 per cent. | ernment, must be pushed. Yes, this | | has been said again and again. Ap-| | propriations have been made. But !few workers gained employment. Peasants’ Inspection. The earlier pro- | gram for transport reorganization has been reaffirmed and enlarged in the spirit of Bolshevik self criticism. Overcoming All Obstacles The freight car movements have increased to 56,000 cars daily which is still 10,000 below the program. The railroad workers and the whole Par- ty are determined, as emphasized at the last plenum of the Central Com- mittee, to overcome all obstacles and shortcomings and fully apply the con- ditions for the success and guarantee of the increased tempo in transport by the 14th Anniversary and complete and fulfil the program in the near future. ried out. Freight car movements are WAR THREAT IS CAUSE OF WHEAT RISE | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONED of the economic crisis. The Anna- | list index of business activity last week was-at the record low for the present crisis. Wheat. Buying For War Purposes The increase in the price is’ not the result of a turn in the economic crisis, but as the result of the ap- proaching war crisis, the intense preparations being made by the cap- italist class for the attack on the | Soviet Union. It is for this reason | that the speculators are buying wheat with the coopration of the Farm Board ‘and for the United States government. The purchases of Cutten were started, according to the capitalist press, as far back as | August—showing that the knwledge \\ of preparations for the attack on the Soviet Union were known to the {peculators as much as three months agro. 4 The anti-Soviet character of the rise in the price of wheat is openly stated by the British capitalist press ' in its attempts to win leadership over the anti-Soviet capitalist front. ‘The Daily Express of London, which is owned by Lord Beaverbrook, states that the price of wheat has risen “because the bottom has fallen out of the Five Yeer Plan,” Farmers and Workers Face War, In order to align the farmers of the United States in the war prepar- » ations, the capitalist press is talk-| her desperate financial condition, wheat prices. The millions of dol- lars increase in the wheat supply will go not to the farmers but to the speculators, The slight increase in jValue that the farmers may get will be paid for by them through the slaughter of millions of farmers and farmers’ sons in the attack of the capitalist class against the Soviet Union if the capitalist class is per- mitted by the working masses to go thru with the attack. Workers and farmers: against the attack of the capitalists and the speculators! The Soviet Union is the star of hope of the workers and farmers thruout the entire world! TALKS OF WAR WITH ENGLAND Cohalan Calls for Big Navy NEW YORK. — Justice Daniel F. Cohala, speaking before the Goy- ernment Club meeting at the Hotel Astor Monday night gave expression to the growing struggles between Am- erican and British imperialism in the fight for world markets and the British colonies, He called for huge expenditures in building up an Am- erican navy superior to that of the British imperialists and declared: “On every side in England the cry goes up that America is the enemy that must be overcome, by trade wars and tariffs, if possible, but by guile and force if necessary, Eng- Jand is stripped for the fray, Her navy remains today, in spite ot = ’ Defend the Soviet Union}Canton demand that he resign from | Ing of the millions that the farmers | by far the strongest in the world.” * Will gain because of the increase in For both the American and British a puppet government has been set up | which assures complete control to the |Japanese imperialists. The troops withdrawn from Kirin are being used to facilitate the conquest of other sections of Manchuria. Mass Resentment Grows. In the meantime, the anti-Japan- ese movement continues to gather headway among the workers and peasants. So complete is the boycott of Japanese goods that business is practically at a standstill. The New York Times correspondent reports that Soviet goods are being favored not only against Japanese products but against those of America and other imperialist countries. . 8 8 The so-called “peace conference” in |Changhai between the Canton and Nanking militarists has collapsed as a result of pressure brought by the British imperialists on their Canton tools to protect British holdings in China against the combined attack of Japanese, French and United States imperialism. Chiang Kai-shek, acting on in- structions of Japanese and American imperialists has turned down the his positions as president and head of the Nationalist armies, The confer- ence between the two sets of mili- tarist tools of the different impefial- isms was marked with the sharpest recrimination and abuse. The Canton delegates accused Chiang of aiding the Japanese occupation of Manchu- ria and Chiang retorted with similar accusations against the Canton gov- ernment. Both admitted that the Japanese occupation was of a per- manent nature, CAPITALISTS REJECT SOVIET TRADE PLAN GENEVA, Noy, 2—The further sharpening of the war danger against the Soviet Union was expressed here today when the Soviet proposals for a Dict of economic non-aggression was met with almost unanimous op- position by the representatives of the capitalist nations in a special com~ mittee to examine the proposals pre- sented by Comrade Litvinoff last May. Tn the course of the discussion the “dumping” scare-crow was trot- ted out by M. Ebel of France, imperialists, however, the workers’ Soviet, Union still remains the main enemy whose destruction they con- sider necessary in their attempt to saye decaying capitalism and the sys- | tem of imperialist robbery and op- pression of the colonial masses and oppressed nations a. fs La ep have refused to take a definite stand on the question of unemployment in- surance, . . Fight Evictions In Indiana, ANDERSON, Ind.—Quick action by the Unemployed Council here is ef- fectively fighting against evictions. The Bulletin, a capitalist sheet here, under the heading of “Radicals Move Furniture Back Within Hour,” prints the following news: “An hour after Constable Ray Schmitt, of Squire James Raisor’s court, had moved furniture of Ed- ward Hosier from a dwelling at 1720 Meridian St. on a disposses- sion suit, a group of men, alleged to be radical sympathizers, moved the furnishings back into the house.” ‘There is a very active unemployed council here that is growing daily. * e . Boston Prepares for National March. BOSTON, Mass.—Preparing to send 50 unemployed workers from here as the representatives of this district to the National Hunger March on Washington, December 7, the Unem- ployed Councils of Boston have are ranged for a series of meetings to take up the problems of struggle for local relief and for the national Win a Tnip TO SOVIET UNION for the MAY DAY CELEBRATION FIRST PRIZE IN The Liberator Official Organ of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights Campaign for 10,000 New Readers To be awarded to the worker obtaining the most ubscriptions, who will present an original bust of Nat Torner to the Revolutionary Museum, Moscow. ——See The Liberator for “Additional Prizes—— READ! Order a bundle for your union 50 East 13th St., Room 201 J Rates—$1 per year, 60c six months, 30c three months; 3c per copy. Special rates for bundles over 200 THE LIBERATOR County Hunger March to the county | seat, Mt. Clemens, will be held No- | vember 10, A meeting will be held at Clemens Park at 2 p.m. and from there the unemployed marchers will march on the Board of Supervisors and present their demands at 2:30 pm, Charities Advise Jobless to Leave Town (By a Worker Correspondent) | AKRON, Ohio.—An ex-serviceman, | who made applications to the chari- | ties here for relief, was told to go, back to Pittsburgh, where he came | from or starve. This man worked in the Goodrich | Rubber Co. for 7 years and paid his allotted amount to the community chest out of his wages each year. He left Akron to work in Pittsburgh, but | returned to Akron about 10 months | ago. The bosses forced him to pay a} sum out of his pay for seven years | and now they refuse to give him aid. | The Wellington St. Branch of the Unemployed Council, along with Branch No. 1, are taking this case up to the city authorities. We will bring | Mass pressure to bear and force re- lief for this worker, THE SUBSCRIBE! and fraternal meetings—2c each, The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad | Most of the money went to the graft- | the opening of Congress on Decem- ber 7th must become the rallying center of all unemployed and em- ployed workers, It must show to the bosses and the Hoover govern- also announced Saturday a 10 per cent cut for all salaried workers. | COVer of the public works th govern- | The Pennsylvania, Delaware and Hudson and other roads have made similar cuts. The Mobile and Northern Railroad states that there will be a 10 per cent cut in all contract wages. The Railroad Workers Industrial | League calls for the organization of | committees in all departments to, take organizational steps at once to| strike against the wage-cuts. | | MEETING IN ROCKFORD, ILL., | PLANNED. | ROCKFORD, Ill.—The 14th anni- | versary of the Russian Revolution will be celebrated here, November 7, at the Vega Hall, 15th Ave. and 9th St., at 7:30 p.m. Andrew Newhoff of Chicago will be the main speaker. A musical program has been ar- and unemployed free, | ers. But this is not all. Under the | mnt js helping to introduce forced la- ment that the starving millions wil! fight for their rights, will fight for unemployment insurance, THE WESTERN WORKER Comes Out January Ist A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West. SUBSCRIBE NOW! RAISE FUNDS! BUILD IT! 52 Issues $2 | 26 Issues $1 | 13 Issues 50c ranged. Admission will be 15 cents | | Western Worker Campaign Committee 14 FOURTH STREET, San Francisco, Calif. 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 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 Worker. New York, N. ¥. DAILY WORKER 50 East 13th St., N. Y, C,