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| | ) 1 ‘ t 1 t } | 1 1 1 od a by ai i { } { ‘ ee 1 { DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY NOV EMBER 5 5, 931 _ Page Three RHODE ISLAND, OHIO, WISCONSIN JOBLESS PREPARE FOR DEC. 7 _ WORKERS RALLY 10 DEFEAT OPEN SCABBERY OF GOVERNOR ELY, (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) jority should control and for the purpose of determining what the will of the majority is a ballot should be | taken and the result thereof be re- | spected and honored by all.” * UTW Leaders In Scab Pact. The Committee's resolution and a| long statement was issued simulta neously and featured big in the| morning paper. The statement, says that the employers and the tnion | (UTW) Teaders are being consulted as | to the details of the balloting pach | will come in a few days. Strike Committee Exposes “Ballot”. | The United Front Rank and File Strike Committee Executive is pre-| paring a leaflet denouncing the fake | votes with the ballots counted by boss agents as a scheme to divide the | workers and announce their fake fig- ures to try to start a back to work | movement. The slogans of the Unit- ed Front Rank and File Strike | Committee denounced Governor Ely’s | and the United Textile Workers | Union's plot which was exposed here | yesterday, and made plans for a| systematic distribution of leaflets hereafter. | Picketing Is Militant. | Picketing was unusually good for} this time of the week. Seven hun- dred strikers were in formation on Union St. before the Wood mill and agitating among the through a special crew of “suck and Monda nd Tue meetings of strikers, thousand on strike. The temper of these meetings, however, was so heat- jed against the return to work under Ja 10 per cent wage cut, but with a | minimum wage of $18 for men and men on strike | a sliding scale for women, that no ote was taken. The company is call- |ing another meeting for Tuesday | night. At any rate, the Lawrence | Evening Tribune Tuesday night runs an enormous headline: “Ballots By | Two Mills.” Some person not named made an announcement over the radio Mon- day night that militia was to be sent into the Lawrence strike. “All these events are piling up on a | foundation of the sell out agreement arrived at by the A. F. L, and U.T.W. | chiefs in the Copely-Plaza hotel in Boston with Governor Ely last Thurs- day, which~has been exposed Tues- day by front page display in the Daily Workers and by distribution of thousands of mimeographed leaflets. The terror side of it comes along after the lynching editorial in the Sunday Leader's last issue. As an answer to all this, the picket lines Tuesday morning were unusu- ally large for Tuesday. Without scabs, the Lawrence workers have fallen 2,000 without formation on Merrimac4 into the habit of picketing in thou- St. Five hundred picketed the Washington mill. One thousand pick- eted the Arlington mill. | UTW Disruptured Tactics. | At Shawsheen where the United Textile concentrates, there were only 20 pickets. This morning “Red Mike” took a small group of UTW mem- bers and tried to disrupt the picket- ing of the Arlington Mill. A. F, of L. organizers with police protection placed themselves at the head of the line. “Red” Mike told Martha Stone, “Get off the line or we will wrap you around a post.” Stone continued picketing with the | full support of the pickets. Mike then sent members of his group to start lights with United Front Rank and | File Strike Committee captains. The | pickets argued with Mike’s followers | and said, “We are Arlington strikers and we are picketing, if you want to fight, why don’t you fight the scabs?” ‘The line continued in a united fash- ion. Previously Mike threatened a girl organizer of the United Front Rank and File Strike Committee at Shawsheen. The Citizens Committee announces that Governor Ely will come here to speak to the strikers before they vote. . LAWRENCE, Mass, Nov. 3.— Events have moved rapidly in Law- rence on both sides. The employers, Governor Ely, the United Textile Workers and American Federation of | Labor officials, and the mill owners’ } city government show that they are rushing into high gear their com- bined trickery and terror. strike- breaking program. The textile strikers have given un- mistakable signs of determination to resist both terror and trickery and to win the strike. First, for the bosses’ movements. The Lawrence Eagle came out Tuesday morning with a screaming headline that hundreds of letters had been received by the district attorney, Huhg A. Cregg, asking him to provide them with police protection if they went back to work under the wage cut. Cregg went to City Marshal O’Brien and State Officer Richard Griffin, and planned with them the methods to be used to smash the picket lines. The strikers are vigorously indig- nant at the whole story, which they recognize is just a smoke screen tor attacks by city and state police on the picket lines. Strikers of the Monomac Spinning Company, which runs the Monomac | mill in a southern suburb of Law- | rence, with nearly a thousand on strike, are coming to the officers of the United Front Rank and File Strike Committee with letters sent. them at their homes, The letters were signed by the agent of the mill, Walter M. Hastings, and contained both cajolery and threats. The letter said, “If our employes wish to return to work we assume that they will have ample police pro- tection either furnished by the city of Lawrence or the governor of the Commonwealth.” The return envelope is addressed to what the ecompany calls “a representative committee who will count the ballots and be un- prejudiced.” The head of this committee of ee to count the ballots is none ther than the Catholic priest Mc- onald, who led the strike breaking int the February strike! Of the other iyo members on the committee, one is a mill lawyer and one a business man, Tuesday morning the Arlington petty bosses, and the highly skilled loom fixers, were called to a meeting with the superintendent right in the mill, A couple of hundred went in, and were told to popularize the idea of a secret, ballot on going back to work, and to come back themselves at once, The vote was qenenimons against both propositions. ‘The Stevens mill in North Ando- ver, suburb of Lawrence, has been sands Monday morning, just to start the week right, and then letting the ines dwindle rapidly to a few hun- | dreds the rest of the week. This Tues- | day, the lines were almost as large as on Monday, and picketing was just as militant. The exposure of the Copley-Plaza strike-breaking plot is making a sensation on the streets and wher- ever the strikers gather. The meet- ing at Lincoln Court lot Tuesday was exceptionally large, although these meetings have been growing in size steadily for the last several days. Fully 2,000 massed on the lot to cheer approval of Strike Leaders Biedenkapp, Anna Burlak and Con- roy of the national board of the National Textile Workers. Conroy told of the shutting down Biedenkapp scored the common practice in Lawrence of charging those arrested on the picket line with vagrancy. The parks of Lawrence were full of starving unemployed, even before the strike, and the police just 1ét them starve. Burlak received a great ovation. Lawrence strikers know her. of old. “The policy of the National Textile Workers Union is to unite all the 23,000 Lawrence strikers under their own elected Rank and File Strike Committee,” she declared. “If you were fighting with a man, you wouldn’t just poke him with one fin- ger. Organize those fingers, all to- gether into one iron fist, and carry on the fight to a victory!” “Arbitration is a knife to cut your wages,” said Burlak. “It isn’t any better for you because it comes with a pretty ribbon tied around it.” e 8 100 Strike In Woonsocket. WOONSOCKET, R. I., Nov. 3—One hundred are striking at the Bermon Worsted Co, mill here because of a 10 per cent wage cut, They walked out Monday. President James P. Reid of the National Textile Workers Union has gone from the national headquarters of the union at Provi- dence, to organize and spread the strike, Railroad Organizer Capuani. LAWRENCE, Mass., Nov. 3—When Organizer Capuani, arrested at the demonstration before the city coun- cil meeting last week, came in court Tuesday, he was railroaded to a sen- tence of 30 days, the highest sentence so far for “vagrancy.” They wanted to know why Capuani refused to give an address. He told how others giving addresses had their homes ransacked, and how, in the 1919 strike here, an organizer was saught at home and beaten up by the police. The judge slammed: the desk, declared he didn’t want to hear about the 1919 strike, and found Capuani guilty. 700 PROTEST ATT HOLD-UP SCHEME Harvester Workers Re- sist Company Steal CHICAGO, Ill. Nov. 7,—Seven hun- dred here today demonstrated before the Deering Works, a branch of the International Harvester, and many joined the Communist Party. The demonstrations was a result of an attempt on the part of the Deer- ing bosses to rob the workers of 45c to 50¢'a week in an insurance racket, The men were laid off previous to October 18 and told to report for work on that date. They came, but were not rehired and told to come again on Noy. 2. When they appeared, they were told to come back after the first of the year, This was done in order to keep the workers paying in- surance to the company. jay held small | out of the} HOPE TO DESTROY CONFERENCE TO VOTE 3,000 KENOSHA SOVIET BEORE THE DELEGATES TO HUNGER JOBLESS CALL UTW AND LAWRENC E OFFICIALS 5-YEAR PL AN ENDS MARCH ON WASHINGTON Final Public Hearings Philadelphia on November 6 (CONTINE FROM PAGE ONE) tack on the Workers’ Socialist Re- | public, Yesterday, League of Nations offi- cials sounded the tocsin for the armed | attack against the Soviet Union on the western front. patch states that these imperialist vultnres “feared” that Poland and Rumania would become involved as of the armed clash which the Jap jalists are now bent on precipitating with the Red Army. A Geneva dis- The League officials admitted that | the situation in Manchuria “had be- | come worse during the last week.” As part of the imperialist apparatus, they | openly visualized the attack on the Soviet Union, and are already using | the rapidly developing war situation | to excuse their failure to stop the seizure of Manchuria by the Japanese imperialists. Knowing that the work- ers and peasants of the Soviet Union will defend themselves against at- tack, the League officials declare that “Soviet participation in the Far Eastern troubles” will “make it hard to bring about any concerted move | against the Japanese.” Capitalist press dispatches from Manchuria report large troop move- ments by Japan and the further tightening of its economic grip on Manchuria. A dispatch to the New York Times states: “One critical for- eign comment declares that the Jap- anese now have ‘their feet in every trough.’” Japan is setting up Jap- anese-owned monopolies all over the occupied territory. In several cities, Chinese-owned power houses have been shut down and Japanese-owned power houses set up in their place. In many cases foreign commercial interests face tremendous losses as a result of the Japanese economic Moves. It is significant that while British imperialist agents are per- turbed and disturbed over this situ- ation, the agents of American impe- rialism are showing no signs of con- n, although “the obliterated Chi- nese administration of Antung still ewes $100,000 to an American firm for electrical machinery, which ap- parently is uncollectable unless the Japanese pay.” Several stiff battles have occurred between Manchurian peasant forces and the Japanese invaders. In a clash between a Japanese battalion and 500 peasants nearToutaokou on Monday, 80 Chinese were killed and 100 wounded. The Japanese did not report their losses. The battle lasted more than six hours “and was in- tensely fought.” Toutaokou is about 75 miles from Mukden. A peasant force estimated at be- tween 5,000 and 6,000 attack a Jap- anese train on the Peiping-Mukden Railroad on Tuesday. | LOW PAY FOR NEWSBOYS. (By a Worker Correspondent) A 12-year old Cleveland school-boy was found a few days ago peddling 400 Shopping News papers. He said j his salary was nine cents. That means that he would have to distribute 44 or 45 papers for a penny. Cleveland workers, how long are you going to stand for this? Join the Unemployed | Councils, not only in Cleveland but | everywhere! E. J. R. on Mass Suffering In | Starvation Charity Relief for the Unemployed PROVIDENCE, R. I.—At lowing plan of work in prepar: March was adopted: one in Pawtucket and Central Falls, between now and the Hunger March and for this the following steps to be taken: Open air meeting to be held on Wednesday night at Federal Hill. Indoon mass meeting of Unem- ployed on Thursday at 71 Rich- mond St. Leaflet to be issued for that. Open air meeting to be held on Friday evening at Hopkins Park Branch Avenue and Chas. St. Open air demonstration in front of City Hall on Saturday, Novem- ber 7, at 3 pm. Jim Reed, Anna Burlack and Conroy speakers, This mass demonstration to be widely | advertised by leaflets, etc., and at this demonstration a committee to be elected to go before the City Administration on Monday evening protesting against the action of the City Administration in refus- ing to give any relief to the thou- ands of Unemployed in Provid- ence. At this meeting, a committee to issue the call for the Conference, a Publicity Committee and a Finance Committee were elected. These com- mittees to meet the following day. In the course of this month, in Preparation for the Hunger March, there will be at least one public hear- ing held in Providence, date to be announced later, there will also be @ mass meeting to welcome the 40 delegates that will pass here on the way to New Haven. There will be a similar meeting of the workers of Pawtucket Central Falls and Coonsocket to plan the work for the Hunger March there. 2,000 Youngstown Jobless March YOUNGSTOWN, O.—Although the day was dreary, 2,000 unemployed workers demonstrated November 2 in front of the courthouse here and made their demands, which were presented by the Unemployed Coun- cil, Although the committee of 15 was elected by the different branches, the County Commissioners allowed After giving the committee the us- ual line that they had no solution for the unemployment problem, they told the committee that they will send a letter to the governor; and although a letter was drawn up and send, the unemployed workers knew that it would not do any good. There- upon the unemployed committee de- manded that the County Commis- (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Harlem, but the police and gangsters objected to the presence of Commu- nist watchers who were Negroes. “We don’t want niggers‘ round here,” said the Tammany thugs in one in- stance in Harlem where Negro watchers were ejetced. In two in- stances, however, where Negro watch- ers were forced from the polls they were returned to their positions by delegations of revwimtionary workers. These were splendid demonstrations of the fighting solidarity of the white and Negro workers, demonstrating that only the Communist Party fights for the rights of the Negro workers. Wholesale Vote Stealing Wholesale stealing of Communist votes took place throughout the city. The voting machines “accidentally did not work” in Harlem. Browns- ville and lower Manhattan. It stuck on the Communist row, and the only advice that the chairman of the elec- tion board could give was “to vote for somebody else.” In one district in Harlem the Communist candidates were purposely left off the machine, which is a fraudulent method of the election authorities. That the Tammany machine was returned to power with such a victory indicates that the workers of New York have not yet awakened to the real situation, The vote for the Com- munist Party indicates clearly that not only were votes stolen, that many workers were denied the right to vote, but also that many supporters of the Communist Party either did not vote jor cast their protest votes for an- other party in the belief that it would be more effective. The effect of this the workers will learn in @ short time when the Tammany machine really GANGSTERS, POLICE TERRORIZE WORKERS AT NEW YORK POLLS gets down to business putting over {ts starvation program. Must Intensify Struggle As was pointed out by the Com- munist candidates during the cam- paign, the struggle against the hun- ger programs of the bosses is not merely an election issue. Wage-cuts can only be stopped, unemployment insurance can only be won, by or- ganized mass action of the working- class in the factories and on the streets. The struggle for Negro rights, the fight against evictions, the mass strugle against war and for the defense of the Soviet Union, the fight for the release of the political pris- oners, the war against capitalism goes on under the firm leadership of the Communist Party. The workers who voted Communist, the thousands whose votes were stolen, the thous- ands who were denied the right to vote and tens of thousands more who are awakening to the role of the cap- italist parties will march during the coming month in every _ state, exposing the fake relief pro- gram of the capitalist parties, de- manding real relief for the millions of jobless. Answer the Tammany vote stealers by giving your support to the National Hunger March to Washington on December 7. Aer ae HARTFORD RED VOTE GAINS HARTFORD, Conn.—The Commu- nist Party received a total of 233 votes in Hartford, an increase over last year, winning a permanent place on the ballot. NEW HAVEN, “Conn.—167 votes were cast for the Communist candi- dates in the oe Mak ‘Tuesday. BRIDGEPORT, ‘conn. —The Com- munist Party polled 78 votes in the city elections which hea Place here Workers in Portland, Oregon A call for the United Front Conference, to be held Nov |22 at 71 Richmond St., to be issued at once, committees to visit jall organizations, particularly A. F. of L. locals, between now and the 22nd, for the mobilization for the Hunger March and | the election of delegates to the Conference. We set upon ourselves the task to build at least one Un-| employed Council in Providence and® only 5 of the committee to go in. | | d Front | a meeting of the Unite: ation for the National Hunger sionefs resign and that the workevs, | who will be able to deal with this situation, take their places, ie wee Jobless Form Council ‘While the committee was in, a | group of speakers from the Unem- ployed Council], Metal Workers In- | dustrial League, Young Communist League and Communist Party, spoke | to the masses outside. When the committee was in for | about an hour, then a vote was taken that the committee come out in 15 | minutes and report. After the com-| mittee came out and reported, the | Sroups organized in lines and march- | \ed over to the Unemployed Council | headquarters, 334 E. Federal St., where another meeting was held and 70 new members were taken into the | Unemployed Council. o 8 Wisconsin Jobless Prepare Marches MILWAUKEE, Wis.— The Unem- ployed Councils of Wisconsin are be- ginning to show signs of intensified activities — preparation for the Na- tional Hunger March to Washington, | and the special session of the State | Legislature. All means of social de- magogy is being employed by the La | Follettes and “socialists” mayors | Hoan and Swaboda. The “socialists” | are organizing in Milwaukee a “La- | bor Unemployed Action Council,” | they are taking over all our issues and demands. Lafollette is calling a special session of the legislature to start on November 17, and to last for about a month, on unemployment and banking. All this, of course, is | empty talk which will give nothing to the unemployed workers. As against these fakers, steps are! being taken by the Unemployed! Councils to mobilize workers and | their organizations for the National Hunger March and for a mass de- legation to Madison to the Legislat- ure. Call Many Conferences ‘The Milwaukee County Conference on Unemployment Insurance will be held November 15, Labor Temple, 808 Walnut Street; Racine, County, Mon- day, November 16, Winthers Hall, 408 6th Street; Kenosha, Nov. 22, at 2 pm., at Workers Center, 5433 16th | Avenue. These conferences will be| proceeded by public hearings in Mil- waukee: N. Side, Friday, Nov. 6, Workers Center, 7:30 p.m.; So. Side, Weber Hall, 2:30 p.m., Nov. 6. Ra- cine, Nov. 9, 214 State St., and Nov. 11, Hungarian Hall, 2132 Racine St. ‘These conferences and public hear~ ings will prepare for Hunger Marches on a county scale to be held in Ra- cine, Noy. 17, and same date in Mil- waukee. These activities are con- nected with concrete work amongst the unemployed with the taking down. of dozens of workers to the various relief agencies. It is through the fight for immediate relief that these | fake socialists and progressive poli- ticians are being exposed, and work- ers mobilized for struggle. The Racine Unemployed Branches | within one week investigation found over 100 cases of actual starvation, many of whom have been taken down to the Central Association and relief gotten for them. The same is being done in Milwaukee, West Allis, Ken- osha. Three Marches by Grand Rapids Jobless Planned GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.—A Pro- visional Hunger March Committee of eleven has been elected here to pre- pare for participation of the city’s jobless in the local and National Hunger March. The committee has arranged for two conferences to elect, delegates to the National Hunger March, to be called November 15 and | 22, ‘The committee has also made plans for three local hunger marches. One will be held in Muskegon, one in| Wyoming Township and embracing Calewood, Urbandale and Homeacres, and one in Grand Rapids. A list of demands for unemployed workers, part time workers and school chil- dren is being circulated in the form of a petition to secure signatures which will be used to force the City | Commission to grant permits for the parade and hunger march, A big mass meeting 1s being ar- | ranged for November 5 at 1057 Ham- | jlton Ave., at 8 p.m. where the basis | for building block committees of un- employed as well as preparations for the hunger march, OM PAGE ONE) (CONTINUE ers’ Center, with an overflow ex- pected. A defense corps has been formed and leaflets have ben issued by the Communist Party, the Unem- | ployed Council and the International Labor Defense demanding criminal action against those responsible ‘Sail breaking up the demonstration. Hunger March Committee, held on Monday evening, the fol-| Leaflets are also being distributed the | ex-servicemen against the fascist American Legion. A mass delegation went to the city manager protesting and demanding a permit for a meeting at the same place and action on the demands. Resolutions are being passed and workers mobilized for the conference to be held on Nov. 22, The spirit of | the workers is militant and they are determined to break the terror. Protest at “Relief” Station Five hundred demonstrated Mon- day morning at the Racine relief station for which a permit had been granted, which the “socialist” police chief had several times refused. After presenting their demands for relief, over one hundred marched through Main Street to the Workers’ Center | where a meeting was held and com- | mittees elected. | | PORTLAND, Ore.—Over four hun- dred workers attended @ demon- | strations outside the Benson Hotel here, October 27, demanding that the third annual Western governors’ con- ference, release class-war prisoners and give immediate unemployment relief. The demonstration was called by the Comunist Party, Unemployed Council and International Labor De- fense. Five delegates from each or- | ganization received the unanimous | approval of the workers, assembled |to go in as a committee presenting the demands. , Present Demands ‘The governors’ representatives met the delegation and told them that there was no room for them. Then, when he heard the speaker outside receiving loud approval from the workers, he said that three workers would be admitted. The delegation came back and reported this. The workers voted to send all the del- egates back, Then the governors al- | lowed five workers of the delegation to come in. Fred Walker, spokesman for the delegation, laid down the demands approved by the workers. The gov- ernors listened and then tabled the demands. The delegation, seeing that the governors, had no intention of answering the workers, came out and reported. The Evening Journal re- ported that the “governors invited the delegation.” Four hundred work- ers know beiter! The governors, after Walker had spoken, started a tirade about “IWW’'s,” invading their conference. Outside, the workers, who had waited over two hours, roared approval of the appeal to join the revolutionary organizations. Over a hvwdred marched back to the Workers’ Hall and several joined the ILD and one worker made application for the Party. ee . Turn Down Children’s Demands (Telegram to the Daily Worker) DETROIT, Mich., Nov. 4—Six | hundred children and adults returned | | Tuesday to the Board of Education | for answer to the demands for free | | food, clothing and supplies to chil- | dren of unemployed and part time | workers that were presented Mon- | day at a demonstration. | Anna Yonik, Aaron Cramer and | Sophie Kishner, the latter of the} Young Pioneers of America, went into the Board meeting for the answer to | the demands. They were told to go| s 8 | | | (DAILY WORKER CLUBS, RED BUILDERS, AGENTS, READERS; INTENSIFY YOUR FOR CASH AID ACTIVITIES DURING HUNGER MARCH This week marks the first phase of the National Hunger March, pub- lic hearings are now being held in| the principal cities of the United States to expose the starvation con- ditions among the workers. This week the foundations fre being laid for the march of the workers ‘all over the United States that will finally | converge on Washington Dec. 7th and present the demands of the workers | for unemployment insurance, immed- jate winter relief, and measures. other vital Daily Worker Clubs, Red Build- ers’ Clubs, and Daily Worker repre- sentatives and agents, now is the time when every effort will count a hundredfold. The big wave of | class solidarity caused by the Hun- ger March will bring thousands of new workerstinto the revolutionary struggle. Activize these new mem- bers at once in your Daily Worker social and political activities and in your work of selling the Daily. And do your share in drawing the mass- es of workers into this national mass demonstration. Unemployed Councils all over the} country have already drawn in thou- sands of workers. Trade Union Unity League unions and shop nuclei with- in A. F. of L. unions or in open shops will also play an important part in| the Hunger March. But there are big | masses of workers that cannot be| reached by Unemployed Councils or | by union or shop activities. Such | workers to a great extent can be/ reached by Daily Worker agents and | through Daily Worker clubs, | Agents and readers of the Daily Worker! The National Hunger March is an important phase in the | history of the Communist Party of the United tSates and in the his- tory of the world revolutionary struggle. A vital role is set for you in that march. | Draw every contact into this work of preparation for the Hunger March. Mobilize the activities of your Daily Worker Clubs and Red Builders’ Clubs to awaken the masses in your towns to the significance of the Hunger March and to make them participate in the movement according to the | The Soviet Union spends billions on social insurance. The Wall Street Government spends billions on war, Attend the Noyember 7 to the Welfare Department and that the board could do nothing. Militant crowds listened to the re- Port of the delegation. ghy children forced their way into | the building demanding food. More Promises were made. The Young Pioneers will continue to organize and lead the struggle of the children for immediate relief in the schools. Fifty hun- | plans laid out by Councils committee. The First Step Find out exactly what you can do to help. Study the organization plan of the National Hunger March ag set out in the Daily Worker issue of Oct. 14. Get in touch with the local Unemployed Council and through them with the local committee and find out what part your town or city is to play in the march. These local committees are made up of TUUL and WIR members, and of members of AFL unions and other workers’ or- ganizations, and function under the general auspices of the local Unem- ployed Council Attend the Election Conference Attend the general conference, to be called by your local Unemployed Councils not later than Nov. 22, of members of all workers’ organizations. the Unemploye? | Marchers will be elected at these con- ferences, Help organize and attend neighborhood and general mass meet- ings to ratify the election of the marchers. Mobilize the workers for th- send-off demonstrations. Get all | Daily Worker readers and all workers you come in contact with to greet the marchers at cities where they stop over. At cities that the meeeh- ers pass through without stopping over, organize mass meetings at the main square or anywhere along the road of march within the city ltuits. Get Lodgings for the Marchats Mobilize the workers of your tswn to stage demonstrations to force the city authorities to provide lodgings for the marchers if your town is one in which the marchers stop for the night. Get your Daily Worker Club headquarters and all available space ready to accomodate the marchers if that is necessary. Build Daily Worker Clubs And use the march to distribute leaflets, to sell the Daily Worker, and to BUILD UP DAILY WORKER CLUBS among the thousands of workers whose class consciousness will be awakened by this mighty na- tional mass demonstration in which the workers of America show their class solidarity. Work is now going on to lay the foundations for the march. See the local Unemployed Council and the lo- |cal National Hunger March Commit- | tee at once. ‘Santal Midy | prescribed for wae +a ‘Kidneys @ and Bladder “= | Back aches, night rising, burning pas- | sages should be corrected before they become dangerous. Neglect may be | serious Goatoncetoyour ist for | the original Santal Midy, usedthrough- | out the world for half a century. THE WESTERN WORKER Comes Out January Ist A fighter to organize and lea RAISE FUNDS! BUILD Name ON Aisha nitars de seceed is teseh ics 52 Issues $2 | 26 Issues $1} 13 Issues 50c 2d our struggles in the West. SUBSCRIBE NOW! IT! stern Worker Campaign Committee 14 FOURTH STREET, San Francisco, Calif, boss class. NAME One way to help the Soviet Union is to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor’,” by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. HONOR ROLL GREETINGS ‘We, the undersigned through the I4th 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 ADDRESS The DAILY WORKER, the Central Organ of the Communist Party, is the mass organizer of the American workers and farmers in this fight. 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. DAILY WORKER 50 East 13th St, N. ¥. €