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ae Page Luree WILLARD BATTERY CO. | DRIVES WORKERS IN .GAS FILLED ROOMS Force Them to Toil in perature; Poison Gas Fills Air Unhealthy High Tem- Bosses Sit in Cool Offices and Issue Orders for More Speed-up (By a Worker Correspondent) LOS ANGELES, Cal.—Have you ever seem the advertise- | ment of the Willard Battery Company in the Saturday Eye-| ning Post and other capitalist vather hungry looking worker papers? It is a picture of a standing ready to serve some) parasite who does not know enough to look aftet a battery | after he has got it. the advertisement. Take, for instance, the factory op- erated by this company in Los An- geles. In the first place, the adver- tisements referred to say that the Willard Battery is “Tread Rubber Insulated.” In Coos Bay, Oregon, there is a sweatshop run by a firm called the “Evans Battery Loading Company,” which makes cedar’ sep- arators for batteries. This was the form of “Thread Rubber Insulation” | which was being incorporated in the) Willard Batteries when the writer visited the plant. last September, In the Sanctum Sanctorum But to proceed with the conditions | in the factory. On a corner lot, sur- | rounded by well-irrigated grass plots, | stands the “office.” Entering it we find cool, spacious quarters, good- looking switchboard girl, mahogany furniture galore, carpets, linoleum, water coolers and electric fans. The temperature is 76 and some white- eollar workers are struggling to hold up a telephone receiver in one hand and a cigaret in the other. Being in working clothes, we are swiftly re- ferred by the girl to the shipping de- partment, so, having noted tige con- ditions in the office building, we pro- eed to the factory and shipping de- Partment. Where the Work Is Done. ‘The factory stands on a dusty lot in the rear of the office. The floors are dusty cement. No linoleum which might prevent the dust from getting into the lungs of the men who MAKE the batteries. No electric fans. No sun shades on the wih- dows—and the temperature is 81. In fs the office there are Behind that advertising, which, by the| way, costs millions of dollars every year, there are | teresting conditions which needless to say are not included in | | 1 wate me in veral r coolers. In the factory there is one. Negro Worker Sells Hundred Liberators Jobn Barnes, encmployed Negro worker of New York Clty who, @ few weeks ago started out with 2 bundle of 20 Liberators, weekly | organ of the League of Struggle | For Negro Rights, now takes a | regular bundle of 100 and sells ‘hem. House-to-house canvassing ‘or carrier route is mainly respon- sible for his steady sales. Unemployed workers! Make sys- | ematic canvassing of every Negro ind white working-class neighbor- rood, first with sample coples, then with current issuss The Liberator leads the fight against | |lynching, and for Negro rights. Spread it! Write for a bundle today {1c for 10 or more) to Room 201, 50 East 13th St, New York City. 500, TRICKED Despite the strict censorship es- | tablished by the Belgian imperialists, | news of the spread of the Negro} revolt in the Belgian Congo has | reached here. Military operations are | already proceeding against the new centres of revolt. In the Duma dis- trict, the Belgian troops are deliber- ately destroying the villages, crops | and chattels of the natives. Many | natives are homeless and starving as | @ result. i} The Belgian Colonial Minister | Crockaert announces that the Army of Occupation is to be increased. | Four thousand five hundred troops have already left for the Congo to strengthen the garrison situated in the stragetic points over the country. An equal number are to be sent over for use as flying columns at all |Belgians Destroy Homes of African Natives. Send New ‘Army to Crush Revolt in Congo State Against Imperialist Oppression ing Crops, gaged in the various government, of fices and other public institutions in the Congo as a “reserve’ against emergencies The Congo revolt of the world which is a part wide revolutionary | struggle against imperialism, is caus- ing great alarm to the imperialist bandits who have partitioned Africa and looted her native populations. France, England and Portugal are re- ported to be considering increasing their armed forces in Africa. The workers of the entire world must rally to the defense of the re- volutionary African masses! Demand the withdrawal of all imperialist troops from Africa! Demand the right [Hillman Puts Over Wage Cuts On Boston BOSTON, Mass.—Officials of Amalgamated Clothing Workers ef- | fected an average wage cut of 8| : NOT A (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) [CONGRESS ENDS SESSION; Members of the A.C.W. | CENT FOR RELIEF Pramed, in House committee, first deficiency appropriation bill, which per cent for the 2,500 members of will be reported the day following re- the union here at the behest ef the|™men in the cut, but that can be! convening of Congress clothing bosses. Unemployment among | amended In 1925 salarles.of con-| Gonfirmed, in the Senate, various the clothing workers is exceedingly |Stessmen was raised from $7,500 @/ precutive appointments and intiated litt ‘hare | year to $10,000 a year, | peverais cow tacdeiea ua vt it re-as es. pss will . Sidney Hillman, president of the | By irae faatnsaiers absent y of | The “Reconstruction Finance nroj- | A. C, W. after his work on behalf of |2°¢ 0" the proposals of Secretary OF 0; is the Mellon-Hoover program | the manufacturers has left for To- | ronto to help the employers slash | wages there, } MASS PROTESTS _ AGAINST POLISH | Labor Doak for fingerprinting and registering of all foreign-born work ers, and for easier methods of portation of those who take part in strikes of the organized movement of the unemployed for insurance and re~ lief. Congress will also have before it bills introduced by Fish, of Ne York, for big appropriation for department of justice spy service to operate against workers’ organization “Hard to Beat” the for a $500,000,000 fund to be given to bankers to prolong the Iffe of banks which the Wall Street interests think | it would be inadvisable to have smash | just now, and for cheap loans to big corporations which are not making their regular profits in spite of all |their wage cutting and rationalization. ‘TWO CENTRALIA FASCIST TERROR of self-determination for the African | peoples and the Negro majorities in | the Southern “Black Belt” of the| BY FASCIST, As the boiling pitch is poured into! the battery cases the fumes rise from | sulphuric acid with which the batter- {t and-mingle with the fumes of the | APPLAUD RED ies are filled. The mixture is bad for lungs and eyes. We walk around the line belt and see a group of workers complete the making of a battery. A foreman, noticing our curiosity, informs us that visitors are not allowed to go through the plant (we don’t need to be told why). ‘The battery we have come for does not fit the box it is supposed to go inside of. The manager appears to settle the matter. He proudly wears @ medallion informing. the world at large that he has been a slave to the Willard Battery Co. for twelve years. Yes, fellow-workers, that manager flaunts his twelve-year medal in the face of men who are hired by the hour and fired by the minute. What do these observations boil down to? Simply that the men who make the batteries, the men who ac- tually produce the goods we need, aré working in unhealthy conditions, with poisoned air to breathe and with spine injuring cement floors to walk and stand on all day long, in an ex- cessive temperature—while the “white collar” bosses and their immediate hirelings are paid several times what the laborers are paid, work in a com- fortable temperature and in clean air. Well, fellow-workers, next time you see that Willard ad just remember the other side of the story. Daily to Report on Workers’ Sports. Brooklyn, N. ¥. Dear Comrades: ‘We young workers are very proud of the Daily Worker. For the first time in the history of the Metropo- litan Workers Soccer League players and young workers can look into the Daily and find their team’s result and standing. We young workers had to buy the capitalist paper every morning to see the results of our teams. Now we can look into our own paper for the re- sults. We sure hope you will continue reporting workers’ sports news. The membership of our League consists of 42 teams and each team has a good following. A Group of Workers, os hig at (Editorial Note—The editorial department will continue to run reports of results’ of workers’ games and sports, Payt Cut 10 Per Cent in New York Shoe Shop New York Fellow Workers: IT am working 5 years in Martin & Weinstein’s factory and such misery and slavery cannot be expressed in words. It was never so painful as it is now. Who, but the workers them- selves know the conditions in their own shop, The average salary is $20 @ week and many workers do not average more than $10 per week. So with the cutters and fitters; the Same condition exists. How can we exist? Is $10 enough for bread? Is the boss satisfied even with this wage? Oh, No! A new slash deep in the flesh, less milk and bread for the children. 10 per cent of the miserable wages. Then I say again, pity from the boss. will not help you, neither can angels help you. But what can we do? Join the Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union, 5 E. 19 St., New York. We will then not only be able to resist the next wage cut, but we will be able to demand more milk and bread for the children, A Worker, Seabury Tries to Deodorize Capitalism (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—Why are they ex- posing Mr. Hoover? Why is Mr. Sea- bury exposing Mr. Walker and the sewer grafters? They are doing this to put the cover on the garbage can of both the capitalist parties more firmly so hat the stench will not be so discernable to tender nostrils. ‘The bosses are not trying to destroy these parties, they are merely trying to deodorize them a bit, Both these parties, including their | little brother, the self-righteous so- cialist party, are tools of the Wall Street boys. What difference does it make whether Mayor Walker, or Hoover, or the socialist Hoan, mayor of Milwaukee, is in office. The gov- ernment still remains in the hands of the capitalists and grafters. To cure the desease of capitalism the workers must join the Communist Party which fights all grafters and capitalists and their defenders, the socialists, Workers Protest Portland Bank Failure By a Worker Correspondent) PORTLAND, Ore—The Hibernia Gavings Bangk closed its doors Dec. 19. Over 1000 depositors milled around the door all during the day. A group of depositors had a speaker talk at noon. The streets were jam- med ‘The police pulled the speaker, Paul Munter off the box, but to let him continue -when the depositors de- manded that he speak. A volunteer committee tried to force the officials to inform of just where the bank stood. They were refused any word. A meeting has been called at the Workers’ Hall for Sunday to elect a depositors’ committee, The TLD has its funds in the bank and so did the workers who are raising funds for their voluntary departure. One wom- an worker lost her $2,700 life savings. Another worker lost $4,400. ORGS ADVERTISE ‘Your meetings Your halls Your “affairs” . Your demonstrations a in the Youth Labor Subject at Boston Forum BOSTON, Mass.—“The Socialist Reorganization of Youth Labor” will be the subject of the third session of the Workers Forum here, Sunday, January 8, 1923, 3 p.m., at the Cairo Hall, 158 W. Springfield St., with Irving Keith, district organizer of the oe Communist League as the lec- urer, ‘The topic will, deal with the role of youth labor in a capitalist society and in the Soviet Union and the con- trast im conditions of young workers .4n a dying capitalist system and a ris- ing socialist order in the U.S.8.R. * Eugene Gordon, noted Negro writer Es ‘Led to Republican | Meeting by Fake | Offer Of Jobs | CLEVELAND, Ohio, Dec. 24 In jorder to provide an audience for | Morgan, candidate of the Republican party, a Hungarian fascist leader named appropriately, “Babits” had an | article inserted in the paper, Szabad- |zag, offering “several hundred jobs” |to workers assembling at a certain place and hour, the address being St. | Istvan’s hall on the east side, where Morgan was to speak, and the time being that of Morgan’s appearance. Five hundred assembled. When Babits came forward and announced that there would be “six jobs” for those who would “get the endorse- ment of their priest”, but that they were all invited to stay and hear Morgan, the audience grabbed up the chairs and made a rush for him. He jumped out through the window to avoid them, and a policeman shoved his way in to rescue his hat and coat and take ‘them out to him. The audience positively refused to hear Morgan, and the cop declared |the meeting adjourned: “No jobs and | no speaches.” g | In spite of this, and the continued efforts of the police to drive the |angry jobless workers from the hall, |two Communist sympathizers stood up on chairs and called on them to come to Hungarian Workers Home, to hold an election meeting and hear the platform of the Communist Party, and its candidate for mayor,” 1. Ford. : These 500, none of them eyer hav- ing been in a militant workers’ meet- ing before, went in a body to the hall, and listened with enthusiasm to the program for continued struggle against capitalism, for fight for un- employment relief and insurance. Many of them joined the unem- ployed council. ‘They even took up a collection for the expenses of the Communist campaign. Fight Cancellation Citizenship Papers Phoenix Communist Cancellation Is First Step to Deportation | Says the I. L. D. PHOENIX, Arizonia.—The Inter- national Labor Defense will fight the attempt of the federal courts here to cancel the citizenship of Paul Peter Ortner, a barber, because he is a Communist. Ortner was naturalized in St. Louis in 1915. The government now claims that he obtained citizenship under false pretenses, because he “adheres to the principles of the Communist | International,” and is “a disheliever in and opposed to organized govern- | ment.” ' Cancellation will be first step to- ward deporting this worker. John ©. Gungel, U. 5. district attorney for Arizona, says that this is the first case of the sort ever reported in Arizona, but he intends to start simi- lar cancellation and deportation proceedings against other militant workers. Ortner’s son writes the I. L. D.: “My father has been, a militant worker here and elsewhere. He was given 20 days to answer the court cancellation order. He can't get @ lawyer because he is financially unable. He has @ large family; and T being the oldest at home and also unemployed, he has had the burden to carry all alone.” J. Louis Engdahl, secretary of the I. L. D. calls upon workers to protect this action of Doak’s strikebreaking, anti-labor agents on Arizona. “Never before have there been so many. de- portation cases of militant foreign- born workers,” says Engdahl. “The bos courts in their fear of the up- surge of protesting workers, are even trying to revoke citizenship granted years ago to get rid of these class conscious workers of whom they are most afraid.” sion, his topic being “Lynch Laws in the United States.” The Workers Forum weekly threatened points. ‘These flying col- ‘umns, when not engaged in massacr- ing the natives, wih parade at various points to intimidate the discontented tribes. In addition, 500 reservists, both officers and men, are to be en- | United States, and in the West Indies! Defend the Chinese Soviet Govern- ment and the Chinese Red Army! Defend the Soviet Union, the citadel of the world revolution against im- perialism! POWERS FEAR RED UPSURGE IN CHINA (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tions had been that the United States felt no new effort for peace would be practical until the Jap- anese drive had matured.” Realizing their bargaining power within the agreement for war on the Soviet Union and the partition of China, the Japanese have met the dits by practically demanding a “hands off” policy. A Mukden dis- patch to the New York Graphic re- ports the Japanese government “was greatly displeased by the attitude of the three powers, and considers their. representations are impertinent and unwarranted.” ‘The Japanese war office reminded the powers that they had sonctioned, through the League Council, the Jap- anese policy in Manchuria. The Soviet press yesterday placed responsibility for the Manchurian war, with its increasing threat of a new world slaughter, squarely on the shoulders of the Wall Street imper- jalists.- Walter Duranty, Moscow correspondent of the New York Times ‘reports the publication by the news- papers ‘Tavestia and Pravda of an article from the New Republic on the Manchurian situation. Pravda commented on the article: “The viewpoint expressed by the New Republic deserves general atten- tion, although it must be said it clearly underestimates the economic power of Japanese imperialism. “Tt is doubtless true that Amer- jean imperialism showed no decisive opposition to the Japanese aggres- sors, But here, too, the New Repub- lie’s position is correct only in part. ‘The recent sharp outburst of Stim- son against attempts by the Japanese aggressors to take Chinchow ‘on the fly’, and the dissatisfaction of the American Senate with the insuffi- ciently decided tactics of Stimson, bear witness to the fact that ‘direct support of the Japanese occupation’ has definite limits. “In any event, Stimson did render great service to Japanese imperial- ism, and from this angle it should be clear that the occupation of Man- churia became possible to a marked degree, thanks to the, provocative schemes of the American State De- i. ‘That is why it can be said that responsibility for the oc- cupation of Manchuria lies principal- ly with the United States.” ‘Under cover of pacifist phrases and preparations for the fake “disarm- ament” conference in aJnuary, the imperialists continue to rush their war preparations, pushing their plans for armed intervention against the Soviet Union, against the proletarian revolutionary government in Ger- many, for the partition of Chins and for war against the revolutionary struggles of the starving unemployed and part-time workers and the col- onial masses. ‘The French government {s negott- ating for the purchase of 200,000 tons of nitrates from Germany. This is in addition, to huge supplies of ni- trates being in Chile. n ‘The imperialists and their Kuo- mintang lackeys are showing increas- ing uneasiness over the growing left- ward swing of the Chinese masses ag represented in the recent anti-im- = representations of their fellow ban- |, pretense of setting up “a more demo- cratic government’ and have come out openly for another and more blody dioctatorship against the Chi- Nese masses. The executive commit- tee of the Kuomintang which is now meeting in Nanking yesterday tele- graphed Chiang Kai-shek requesting his return to Nanking. Under the leadership of the United States, a definite movement is under way to return Chiang and Soong as dictators. Evidently American gold has won away from their “allegiance” to Japan, some of the Canton scoun- drels formerly acting the role of tools for Japanese imperialism. Nanking Leaders in Bootlicking Cables to U. S. Leaders of the Nanking clique yes- terday sent a series of boot-licking cables to the Wall Street govern- ment wishing “prosperity for the coming year” for their imperialists masters, whose very existence is to- day menaced by the world economic crisis and the revolutionary upsurge of the working class and colonial masses. Typical of this boot-licking, is the cable of Lin Sen, “acting pres- ident of China”: “In behalf of the Chinese people T etxend to our friends in Am- erican sincere wishes for a happy Christmas and a prosperous New Year. “We renew our pledge of co- operation in the case of peace on earth and good-will among men,” Partisan Troops Burn Japanese Barracks ‘The savage attacks of the Japanese against the Manchurian masses are meeting with increasing resistance as more thousands of workers and pea- sants turn to guerrilla warfare against the invaders. A Tokyo dispatch re- ports four battles yesterday between the Japanese and Chinese partisan troops. The dispatch admits there are other battles in prospect. In one of the engagements, 500 partisan troops were involved. Another par- tisan force defeated the Japanese at Chuliuho and burned their bar- racks. Chuliuho is 30 miles southwest of Mukden. A concentration of 8,000 partisans is reported at Tienchuang- tai. Most of the partisan troops have, split up into small bands of 100x however, split up into small bands of 100 or so to carry on guerrila tactics against the superior armed Japanese forces, In line with their support of the Japanese aggressions in Manchuria, the other imperialist powers are ap- parently abandoning the pretense of an “investigation” in Manchuria through the commission proposed by the League of Nations Council. A dispatch from London states that the formation of the League Commission “is taking an embar- rasing turn.” It states that no one can be found to act, as chairman. “The last person approached, the Earl of Lytton, is said to have re- fused, saying he would lose well- pald positions on several company boards if he were absent on a year’s pleasure trip.in Manchuria, It ts admitted here that there is a possibility the commission may be delayed indefinitely. ‘ TO ——See The Liberator READ! Order a bundle for your union Special rates for THE 50 East 13th 8t., Room Win a Tnp SOVIET UNION ' MAY DAY CELEBRATION FIRST PRIZE IN Rekha 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 ibscriptions, who will present an original bast of Nat Turner to the Revolutionary Museum, Moscow. Rates—SI per year, 600 six months, 30c three months; Se per copy. LIBERATOR wm, Language Orgs. Will | Hold Special Meets for This Purpose Workers of New York are called | upon by the New York District, In- ternational Labor Defense to demon- strate before the Polish Consulate at. 12 o'clock noon at 151 E. 67th St., January 2, ‘The demonstration will be held as a protest against the reign of terror of Polish fascism against, the workers of that country for many years. Tens of thousands of worfers have been jailed in Poland in the last decade for their activities against wage-cuts, against the general persecutions being waged against the workers in the general struggle against the dictatorship of Pilsudski. Only recently, when workers in all parts of Poland demonstrated against the war preparations of that govern- ment against the Soviet Union, hun- dreds of workers were brutally beaten by police, hundreds more were jailed, and seven railroad workers were hanged by the agents of the Fascist government, In another city of that country two more workers, Malazky and Sakrzewsky were court martialed and sentenced to death. ie ae NEW YORK.—Mass meetings In various languages to rally the workers of all nationalities particularly the Ukrainains, Polish and Lithuanian workers in support of the campaign of the International Labor Defense against the Polish fascist terror will be held in all parts of the city. On that night the Polish organiza- tions will hold a mass meeting at 257 East 10th St, at which the Polish workers will explain the need for a concentrated campaign against the terror which today has in its grip more than 10,000 workers: who: are suffering the tortures of prison life and agony. Priest Mocks Jobless With Parody March to ‘Soften Hoover Heart” PITTSBURGH, Pa. Deo. %— Fearful that the unemployed are becoming too radical in their de- mand for relief, and in an effort to sidetrack the hungry from a real struggle, a Catholic priest named Cox of this city declares he is preparing for a “non-radical hunger march to Washington, D. C., January 5. Last Sunday the religious opium vendor held a mass meeting of unemployed in the baseemnt of St. Patrick's Church. trucks. Patriotic speeches were made and Cox was praised as a “friend of the laboring man.” Father Cox urged the unemployed, many. of whom fought in the last imperialist war, to ‘pray at the tomb of the soften the heart of Hooyer for the Meanwhile, in spite of this fake march, the unemployed of this city, having heard the report of their own delegates sent on the National Hun- ger March to Washington Dee, 7, are proceeding to rush plans for a big part in the nation wide demonstra- tions for unemployment insurance Feb. 4, and are continuing their de- mands on the city for immediate re- ver's heart may be as hard as that. of the Paroah of the legend. THE the for Additional Prizes— SUBSCRIBE! and fraternal meetings—2c each, bundles over 200 New York, W. ¥. PRISONERS OUT Paroled; Fight Must Speaker Garner, announced after adjournment that the record so far was “hard to beat,” by which evidently meant that this cong Many business men are donating || Unknown Soldier in Washington to |; unemployed.’ I lief. They have a feeling that Hoo- |. isn't going to do anything that other congresses did not do—for the unem-~ ployed. Congress did practically nothing, in fact, so. far, Even recognition of the moratorium was a mere face saving gesture. The president, acting through the dictatorial treaty power allowed under the constitution, had already put the moratorium tn f , to save capitalism in Germany, and as a move to bind Germany to an anti- Soviet front. There was no backing out, even if there was any desire on the part of the majority in the senate Johnson of California and Macad- den of Pennsylvania might blurt out some of the facts about the mu torium, notably that it will merely saddle the burden of the German war debts on the American public, but they did so knowing: the hypocrisy of their arguments; they no more than the administration having any inten- tion of interfering. “Their talk was for home consumption in their struggle with their political rivals here. “Several New Inquiries” Congress total activities in the first two weeks are listed as follows: Ratified the moratorium resolution. Passed a $200,000,000 appropriation | for the Veterans’ Bureau and $128,000 for the employment service in the Department of Labor. Passed in the House a bill to make $100,000,000 available for new capital in the Federal Land Banks. Held hearings and reached prelim- inary favorable decisions in commit- tees on Reconstruction Finance Cor- poration project. The DAILY WORKER worker? aye him subscribe to the Daily Rovnost Ludu Czechoslovak Org. of the ©.P., U.S.A. 1510 W. 18th St., Chicago, Tl. The only Czechoslovak working clasw daily newspaper in the U. S. and Canada, It stands for the very same principle as THE DAILY WORKER Yearly subscription $6, for 6 mo. $3. Write for free sample copy today Free Four More SEATTLE, Dec. 24.—After years of campaigning for the release jof the Centralia martyrs, Governor | Hartley has been forced to extend | parole to two of them, Eugene Bar- | nett and O. C. Biand. There are still four held in Walla Walla prison serv- ing “25 to 40 years”, because four | American Legion members were killed | when they formed a lynch mob and | attacked the Lumber Workers’ Indus- | trial Union Hall in Centralia, Novern= | ber 11, 1919 | One of the workers in the hall was brutally mutilated by the gang of Le- gionnaires after resistance had been overcome, and was lynched at night | from the Ghehalis River bridge. That | was Wesley Everest. Thereafter, not | the lynch mob, but a group of work- | ers, some of whom were in the hall and some not, were placed on trial. | Fight were convicted, of whom one | Loren Roberts, was declared insane | However, he was kept in prison like the rest. The trial was so notoriously unfair that nine of the jurors have since signed statements admitting | that the men were not fairly convict- ed, and some of the jurors admit they were terrorized by the concentration of legionnaires and militia in the court house and did not dare to ac- quit, Their verdict of “second degree ””-was accompanied by a plea Ww for mercy, and was only rendered after the judge had let it be under- | stood that a very light sentence would be passed. The judge then disregard- ed his tacit bargain and gave the limit the law allows. ‘The campaign for release of the prisoners was badly mishandled by the’ T.W:W. defense committee, which at times split into two warring fac- tions and was always fluctuating be- tween a popular mass struggle and publicity campaign, and purely per- sonal and legalistic appeals to the governor, After the International La- bor Defense began to camaign, some results were achieved. ‘Two years ago, Roberts, who was illegally held anyway, was released. About a year ago, Barnett was let out on @ limited parole to see his sick wife, Hartley now frees two of them. One prisoner, MacIntire, has died of tuberculosis. The fight must go on to free the rest. Workers’ Correspondence is the _ backbone of the revolationary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day-to-day struggle. ee Fight for the 5,000 Subs Campaign I want to get the DAILY WORKER every der & ‘Name ... Street .. \City and State . For one year 36.00 (3800 in Manhattan and For six months $3.00 ($4.50 For three months $1.50 ($2.25 in Manhatise and For ene month $0.50 (0.75 in Manhattan and in Manhattan and Cut Out This Conpon and Use [ee ‘Get DAILY WOR “Red Villages,” which sells for and Industry series, which sells which sells GEY A TOTAL OF 12 MONTHS In your shop, in your factory, in your mass organization SUBSCRIBE ‘NOW! Put the drive for 5,000 Daily Worker 12-month subs over the top PREMIUMS GIVEN FREE WITH ONE YEAK SUBSCRIPTION “Brus” CThe- Soll Redeemed), By Panferoy. Solls fer $1.0 Or any £1.50 oF $1.00 book put ont by Intemstions! Pubitehers, WITH SIX MONTHS SUBSCRIPTION WIN ANY PREMIUM FRER, KER Subscriptions 50 cents. Or any of the Labor for $1, or the Labor Fact Book, for 85 cents SUBS IN |, 2, 3 MONTHS SUB6.