The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 30, 1931, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3 CHINESE RED ARMY ADVANCES; °°" | 30, 198) ee le FIRST CHINESE SOVIET CONGRESS ISSUES A MANIFESTO CALL FOR FIGHT AGAINST “Hands Off” Scotts- boro Boys Tell the NAACP Misleaders HOOVER HUNGER PROGRAM (CONTINUED FROM ly announced his intention «to starve additional millions by de- elering that he is opposed to “any rect or indirect government aid” for the unemployed proved clearly that he most multiply the organ- ‘teed power of the masses and in- tensify our struggle as the only means of winning the right to live. ‘The policy of the multi-millionaire ruling class, of the servile lackeys of big business in the White House and Congress, of the traitorous gents of the bosses who are at the head of the American Federation of Labor, of all those who stand openly or behind a smokescreen of “pro- gressive” and “radical” phrases for the preservation of the decaying cap- italist system, is a policy of mass starvation and mass murder. ‘The ruling class is determined to preserve its profits and immense wealth even though millions of us must: starve—or be murdered in an- other imperialist world war. Only by united, determined strug- gle against every manifestation of this policy, only by sustained’ strug- gle against hunger, evictions, wage cuts, mass lay-offs, against the stag- ger plan against the charity racket- eers, against forced labor, against discrimination and terror, can we defend our own lives amd the lives ofour wives and children. Form a powerful united front in every city and town to lead the fight against hunger! Let these united front conferences organize in the process of daily struggles the most gigantic and militant mass demon- stration that ever took place on the streets of this country. Build committees in every block, in every neighborhood, in every shop, in every local union, in every fra- ternal society, at all bread lines, flop houses and employment offices. ‘Wherever workers are gathered to- gether, committees should be created to lead their struggle. In the course of preparations for National Unemployment Insurance Day, millions of signatures and thousands of collective endorsements GE ONED must be secured for the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill. Every block, union, factory and institu- tion; every organization with work- ing class membership must be en- rolled behind those who have en- dorsed the demands raised by the historic National Hunger March. Organize preliminary demonstra- tions before city-halls, county-court- houses, state capitols and in front of the homes of individual councilmen, county commissioners, asemblymen, congressmen and senators to demand that they push the Workers’ Unem-~ ployment Insurance Bill. ‘The demonstrations on Feb. 4th— National Unemployment Insurance Day must serve to make clear to the master class that they cannot con- tinue to treat with contempt our demand for the right to live. Come in mighty organized bodies from the factories, from the working class neighborhoods, from the bread- lines and flop-houses, from the un- ion halls and lodge rooms, Let the mighty voice of united toiling masses thunder the demand for unemployment insurance eqi to full wages—at the expense of the bosses and governmeni—to all work- ers regardless of race, nationality, age, sex — who are unemployed through no fault of their own! Against mass Jay-offs—wage cuts and stagger hunger plan! For the 7-hour day without reduc- tion in pay! Against evictions, foreclosures, re- posessions! With additional aid for dependants! Against imperialist war! All war funds for unemployment insurance! For defense of the land where there is no unemployment—the re- public of the workers—the Soviet Union! Down with hunger—war—boss ter- ror and oppression! Organize! Fight! Mobilize! onstrate! All out unto the streets on Feb. 4th, National Unemployment Insur- ance Day! NATIONAL COMMITTEE UNEMPLOYED COUNCILS OF U.S. Dem- Negro Miners Refuse to Give Up Cards In National Miners Union (CONTINUED FRUM PAGE ONES coal company thug who tried to stop Hutton from distribut- ing leaflets calling for the strike on January 1st. Wit- nesses for the commonwealth took the stand. Kyle Hall, who was distributing leaflets together with Hutton and Farmer, father-in-law of Hutton, are out under five thou- sand dollar bond each. Hutton was placed under ten thousand dollars and will be out in two days. Dixon, the main witness for the commonwealth, claimed that when he approached, Button was standing with Hall who is 82 years old. Hut- ton, he said, handed out leaflets with his left hand to the sheriffs. While Dixon was engaged with Hall, he turned around and saw Hutton’s arm in back of Sizemore’s head firing the fatal shot. He admitted he saw Sizemore beating Button on the head but would not admit he beat him with a gun. He said Hall had no li- terature. He alleged that neither of Sizemore’s two guns had been fired. In view of Sizemore’s reputation, this is an obviously questionable state- ment. Hutton is held for trial March 1st on a charge of murder. Hall and Farmer are held as his accomplices. Diron claimed that Hall told him that Farmer loaned him his gun. The N. M. U. will issue a statement on the frame-up and the right to self defense. ‘The District Board meeting of the N, M. U. held last night arranged for 2 mass meeting in Harlan County to take place at the swimming pool on Friday, 10 a.m. Other meetings have een arranged in Brush Creek sec- tion, Warren, Kentucky, Wednesday, Te'clock, LaFollette, Tennessee Sun- day at 1 o'clock, Middlesboro, Sunday at 1 o'clock. . first of the year. In Kitts Field where the N. M. U. has not entered, the men came look- ing for the N. M. U. organizers in preparation for the strike on January 1st. At Mary Helen mine, consisting mostly of Negro workers, 2 machine gun has been placed on top of the commissary. The Negro miners took application cards to sign up the whole camp. At Davidsburg where the scale house has been blown up, the operators are attempting to frame up the miners. Board members from each section report an overwhelming sentiment for strike. A member from Colmar reports that the sentiment is to come out 100 percent and the miners will live on a minimum of food, but they are looking to the working class to supply that. A sympathizer near the Colmar mines offered the use of his farm for meetings and a kitchen for the miners. Many sympathizers are being rallied for the strike prepara~ tions. ' The necessity tor immediate re- Nef is stressed by each board mem- bers, In Robbins, Tennessee, farm- ers, railroad workers and section hands wanted to join the National Miners Union and promise relief and support to the strikers. A ware- house is being set up in Pineville, Kentucky. This strike against starvation and terror must not be broken by hunger. Send funds, food and clothing at once. German Police Raid Hamburg Office of the Negro Workers BERLIN, Dec. 29.—Following a raid by Berlin police against the headquarters of the League Against Imperialism, the police today raided the offices of the International Ne- gro Workers’ Committee in Ham- burg. Propaganda material expos- ing the oppression and wholesale murder of African natives by British and other imperialists were confis- cated. The police action was un- doubtedly the result of secret foreign intervention, probably British. Cotton Mills Running Nights in Spite of the Lower Output Move Just as ljberals and social workers were engaged in lauding the Cotton Textile Institute, employers’ organi- vation, for doing away with night work in the interest of curtailed pro- duction and bigger profits, reports from South Carolina show that the night work abolition movement has collapsed. Night work is reported recently in tthe following mills: Jud- son, Woodside, Poe, Dunean Bran- don Pacific (southern mills), Mar. tel, Spartan, Arcadia, Victor-Mon+ aghan, Caperton. 4 ‘This night work, although said by the mill men to be conducted only with male workers over 18 years of age, means more over-production, More wage cutting, more cut-throat competition and more irregular em- ployment, And the laws against em- ploying women and children at night are also being violated in the South- ern states. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) juvenile he was sentenced to death by @ court which has no jurisdiction over him. The I. L. D. attorneys are also preparing a show-down in the case of 14-year old Roy Wright in whose case there was a mistrial, Roy is still held in jail. Force State Recognize 1. ©. D. At- torneys. ‘This was the first time since the boys have been in the death cell that they have been permitted to have a private conference with the attorneys of their own choosing. The Attorney General of Alabama was forced to recognize the I. L. D. attorneys as the official attorneys in the case, fol- lowing the signing of a special re- tainer by all eight of the boys and their parents and other relatives. ‘The boys and their parents at the same time denounced the N.A.A.C.P. for its persistent efforts to disrupt the defense and the mass fight to free them. For the sixth time they have asked the white and Negro re- formists to keep their hands off the case, Hays Challenged to Prove Right to Meddle. Arthur Garfield Hays is challenged by Irving Schwab, in an open letter to prove that he has the right to re- present the boys, Schwab charges the NAAC.P. with using the names of Hays and Darrow as a smoke screen to exploit the plight of the boys and of the world-wide attention which has been aroused in the case by the International Laber Defense. Schwab will be one of the chief speakers at a monster mass meeting on the Scottsboro case on Jan, 10 at the Star Casino, 107th and Park Ave., New York City. Tonawanda Cops Attack Jobless At City Hall Protest (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) through the back door, suspending the meeting to give way to the slaughter. Especially brutal was the attack on Chester Grentzback and Joseph Sgo- vio, slugging them with blackjacks and revolvers, the rest of the thugs pulling revolvers to keep back ‘the anery workers. Eight thugs were beating Grentz- back and slugging him while he was already lying in blood unconscious on the floor. Meanwhile two dozen other police and thugs were attacking the work- -ers who were defendnig their lead- ers, As Grentzback’s bedly was being hauled through the city hall cor- ridor, policemen and Mayor Pullen kicked his body while Grentzback’s blood was paniting the city hall floors red. Womne and children of the unem- ployed wer pounced upon and kicked by orders of the mayor and Police Chief Hoefstaeter. Grentzback, local delegate in the National Hunger March and Sgovio, district organizer of the Trade Union Unity League and member of the Un- employed Councils in the delegation, are those who had been taken to the hospital, Workers Arrested Wilbur Parhill, local secretary of the Unemployed Council and dele- gate in the National Hunger March, Bertha Rudd, another Hunger March delegate and Ethel Stevens, district Young Communist League organizer, are the additiona] arrested workers. The charges against the defendants were changed this morning from dis- orderly conduct to felony and incit- ing to riot. They are all held without bail. Peter Wolsky, local member of the Unemployed Committee, was ar- rested this morning and is held in- communicado» The workers jammed the court room, with more coming and crowding the vicinity. The hear- ing is being held this afternoon. Workers Enraged at Attack The mass violation of the city or- dinance and determined struggle for unemployment relief was the talk of the hundreds of workers who refused to leave City Hall for several hours, listening to Stevens and the other speakers who assailed the brutal at- tack on the workers untii after, they, too, were arrested. The arrested were originally held on open charges under five hundred dollars bail each. The police claim that the chief and two other police- men were also injured. The claim is false and foreshadows néw frame-up charges against the arrested workers. Twelve hundred families of North Tonowanda are registered for unem- ployed relief requests, but only three hundred get two days work at 40c an hour. The police chief and the mayor attended the meeting of the Unemployed Council last Sunday when a delegation was elected and demands were drafted by workers at @ mass meeting. New Ordinance a Precedent ‘The new city ordinance just passed is a precedent in the state to outlaw the militant organizations of the workers. The District Committee of the Communist Party, the Trade Union Unity League, the Unemployed Councils, and the International Labor Defense appeal to the workers ¢f the state to mobilize mass protest meet- ings against the North Tonawanda city ordinance and terror. Call mass meetings, send telegrams to the Com- mon Council North Tonawanda, send- copies to the International Labor Defense district office. Send tele- grams to Governor Roosevelt in Al- bany. Mass protest pee will be SOE ssters> «eld on thestiiagara frontier. & NINE REGIMENTS DESERT ? NANKING AND JOIN REDS, With the Manchurian masses putting up the most heroic | resistance against the Japanese invaders, the imperialists and | their Kuomintang lackeys are further menaced by the surging anger of the masses in Inner Communist movement. The strike movement in Shanghai and other Chinese ports is spreading ra-@- pidly. Yesterday 11,500 laborers in Shanghal joined the strike in that city. Bus lines and other facilities are crippled. The strike movement is under the leadership of the revolu- tionary unions. Chinese Red Army Advances ‘The Chinese Red Army in Kiangsi Province is reported ni a smashing advance on Nanchang, the provincial capital. Nine regiments of Nanking troops have mutinied and joined the Red Army. A Shanghai dispatch to the New York Times reports: “Communist forces are choosing this time of foreign aggression and domestic division to advance from Southern Kiangsi Province are re- ported to have mutinied and joined Hupeh Communists, who now con- trol sixty of hte seventy hsien, or countries, within the province and have drawn a narrowing circle around Hankow and Wuchang.” Partisans Slow Up Japanese Drive ‘The Japanese advance toward Chin- chow continues, although consider- ably slowed up by the resistance of partisan troops of Chinese and Ko- rean workers, peasants and disband- ed soldiers. Sharp fighting occurred yesterday at Hsintun, one mile north of Tienchangtal, at Taichipao, ten miles west and at Changiatun, about four miles northward. The Japnaese yesterday captured four towns, includ- ing Sanchiatze and Tawa. The Japanese advance is parti- cipated in by every arm of the mili- tary—cavalry, airplanes, infantry and artillery. The airplanes pre- cede the advance with bombing at- tacks against the partisan troops and the Chinese inhabitants of the towns in the path of the advance. The partisan troops have split into small bands to avoid the airplanes, but many hundreds of Chinese women and children have been killed by the bombing planes. The Japanese advance has involved in the fighting some of the troops of Chang Hsueh-liang’s Chinchow army. A Tokyo dispatch reports that Chang is still promising to accede to the Japanese demands to withdraw his troops within the Great Wall. U. S. “Gratified” A Washington dispatch reports that ‘the Wall Street government is gratified by the Japanese assurance that foreign investments would be welcome in Manchuria, Premier In- ukal of Japan in a conference with representatives of American business. interests in Manchuria promised that the scope for foreign nivestments and economic activities in Manchuria would be widened. The Washington dispatch reports that the United States is not considering any steps in connection with the Japanese plan to seize Chinchow, but “would con- tinue to exert diplomatic pressure on Japan.” With most of the-top leaders of the Nanking and Canton cliques discre- dited before the masses, the Kuomin- tang conference meeting in Nanking is attempting a further deception of the masses by putting forward Sun Fo, son of Sun Yat Sen, and a number of minor Kuomintang misleaders in the new fascist government being organized. Lin Sen has been made titular pres- ident of the Nanking government, with Sun Fo {holding the central power as president of the Executive Yuan, of which Gen. Chen Ming-shu, commander.of the Nanking forces in the Shanghai-Nanking area, is named vice president. The post held by Sun Fo is equivalent to that of premier. Other offices were filled as follows: President of Legislative Yuan-Yuen Changchf. Vice President, Chen Cheng. President of Examination Yuan—, Tai Chi-Tao. President of Control Yuan-Cu Yu- Jen. Vice President Ling Wei-¥’eng. President of Judicial Yunn-Wang Chung-Hui. Vice-President Chu Cheng. ‘The new Cabinet includes, Eugene Chen, Foreign Minister; Huang Han China and the growth of the Liang, Finance; Gen. Chen Ming Shu, Communications; Yeh .Kung Cho, Ratlways; Ho Ying Ching, War; Chen Shao Kuan, Navy; Chi Chia Hua, Education; Lo Wen Kan, Justice; Li Wen Fan, Home Affairs; Chen King Po, Industry. The first four are members of the Canton clique, the next three of the Nanking clique, and the last three of the Canton clique. A dispatch from Nanking to the| ‘New York Post states that Chen Kung Po, the new minister of industry, is | a Communist. This is a lie, Chen} and all of the others are enemies of the toiling masses. Three of the Canton militarists were also given high military carina] } sepomouanie 5 ie U. 8. Tells Ex-Army Officers To Be Ready In line with the imperialist war plots against the Soviet Union and the Chinese Revolution, the United States is holding a huge joint navy and army manouver in the Pacific next spring. “All ships in the navy not in reserve or under reconstruc- tion” have been mobilized for the purpose. Ex-marines are being re- cruited. Ex-Army officers are being told to hold themselves in readiness. A worker writes to the Daily Worker: “An acquiantance of mine in Brooklyn, 2 regular army captain on the retired list, received his pension check by mail on Noy. 1. In the same envelope was a slip requesting him to notify the War Department whether he could be ready for active service within 48 hours after a call is issued. “This captain has been on the retired list for two years. This is the first time such a request has | been made of him. | “Workers, on your guard! Resist the war mongers! No war against the Chinese People! No war against the Soviet Union!” Fears Communism Will Sweep China, In the meantime, the imperialists and their Kuomintang running dogs | are displaying frantic alarm at the} tremendous growth of the influence of the Chinese Communist Party and the power of the Chinese Central Sov- iet government and the Red Army. A Peiping dispatch to the New York Times predicts a revolutionary up- surge in Kuomintang China by spring with the Chinese Red Army playing a leading role in the war on the im- perialists and the Kuomintang be- trayers of the Chinese masses. George E, Sokolsky, writing in yes- terday’s Sunday New York Times, ex- presses alarm that Communism will sweep all China by spring. He says: “The Communists have united with hungry peasants and bandits and have created a force which has withstood Nanking’s armies during three wars. Their army, according to a report of the Nanking Ministry of war, is 300,000 strong, owns 120,~ 000 rifles and is divided into seven armies, This army, whatever its actual size, was never defeated in toto by Chiang Kei-shek’s forces, and the Soviet, organization in Chi- na holds much of Kiangsi, Hupeh, Hunan and Kwangsi and is to con- trol in Nanking as soon as oppor- tunity offers, probably during the | month of May, when China has a | large number of humiliation days.” Small New Jersey and NewYork Banks Crash, Close Doors The Matawan Bank of Matawan, N. J. near Trenton, with deposits of over a million dollars was closed by the State Department of Banking at the request of its vice-president be- cause of the state of its affairs. ‘The Bank of North Hempstead, Port Washington, L. I, near New York was closed by Broderick, state sueprintendent of manking of New | colonial countries by |ing class as polluted and unclean, | York. Deposits at the time of the closing of the bank stood at $2,000,000. Manifesto of thé Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China, “To the Toilers and Governments of the Whole World: For the first time the Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China is formally set up in Kiangsi Province on November 7, 1931, anniversary of the October Revolution of the Soviet Union. It ts @ governing machinery entirely in the hands of the workers, peasants,’ soldiers and all toilers of China, replacing as it does the imperialist-Kuomintang-land- lord-bourgeois regime in the territory where it comes to power. The Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China will continue its efforts in calling and organ- izing the toilers of the whole country to smash said regime in its entirety. It foymaly declares its heartiest friendship to, and aliance with, the Soviet Union, the sole country in the world where the work- ers and peasants have formed a government of their own. It aims at crushing the rule of world tmperial- ism by fighting hand in hand with the oppressed masses of the whole world. It will fight bitterly against the exploitation of the colonial and semi- imperialism, but strong! in favor of thorough-going national self-determination. Abrogation of Unequal Treaties. To toilers and governments throughout the world the provisional government of the Soviet Republic of China deems it necessary to declare its stand in fol- lowing matters: The immediate abrogation of all unequal treaties concluded between the imperialist countries and the landlord-bourgeoisie government of China, the repu- diation of all foreign debts contracted by the ruling class of China for the suppression of the mass move- ment and the massacre of the masses, the uncondi- tional rendition of al foreign settlements, concessions and leased territories now under control of the im- perialists, the immediate withdrawal of all imperialist land, air and naval forces from Chinese soil, last but most important of all, the confiscation of all imper- jalist banks, factories, mines and communication- transportation enterprises located in China as the most effective measure to destroy the imperialist domination, root and branch. Furthermore, the’ Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China declares that it will, under no condition, remain content with the overthrow of imperialism in China but, on the contrary, will aid as its ultimate objective in waging a war against world | veillance and with the support of imperialism until the latter is all biown up. But for the time being the Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China raises no objection to the conclusion of treaties with imperialist countries on the basis of complete equality. The nationals of such countries domiciled in the Soviet territory may enjoy liberty and freedom in carrying on trade, com- merece and industry, provided they do not run counter to the Soviet laws. The Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China, however, makes it very clear that actions on the part of foreign nationals in violation of the Soviet laws, whatever be the forms they assume, wil positively ead to forfeiture of all liberty accorded to them and of all property.in their possession In view of the fact that the object of secret diplo- Macy as practiced by the imperialist countries in their relation to the colonial and semi-colonial landlord- bourgeois states has been and is merely to deceive the proletariat in the capitalist countries and to ex- ploit the masses of the colonies and semi-colonies, the Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China takes strong exception to the conduct of ne- gotiations behind closed doors and will insist on the principle of open diplomacy It will carry on its foreign relations under the sur- e toilers in China as well as in other parts of the world. It will expose all the secret agreements signed by the landlord- bourgeois governments of China with the imperialist | countries. The Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China, now calls upon the toilers of the whole world to defend the only revolutionary worker-peas- ant-soldier government of China, to smash the ex- ploiting world-capitalism on a united front with their brothers and sisters, to set out on the socialist path opened to us by the workers and peasants of the Soviet Union The Provisional Government of the Soviet Republic of China emphatically declares that it vigorously op- poses a new world war and militarist wars in China. This Provisional Government recognizes that if the rule of imperialism and Kuomintang is not over- thrown the real peace never will succeed, and, there- fore, calls upon the toilers of the whole world to rise: Utilize the revolutionary civil war to extinguish the reactionary ones and fight for the world peace! THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF THE SOVIET REPUBLIC OF CHINA. November 7, 1631.” BOMBAY MASSES HIT GANDHI IN DEMONSTRATION at the betrayer Gandhi. After looking with obvious turbance at the aroused Gandhi patted the backs of » few of his friends and said: “If a fight becomes inevitable I invite you to be ready for it.” The fight which Gandhi was re-| ferring to was the fight of the “up-| trampling upon Indian progress.” per class’ Indians against the masses of toilers. Prime Minister MacDonald, ir commenting on the Gandhi recep- tion and demonstrations, reflected the uneasiness of British imperial- ism by stating that the demonstra- tion was a “mischievous movement dis- | masses, NEW YORK, Dec. 26.—Mahatma Gandhi's arrival in Bombay today was met by a militant demonstration of “untouchables,” who had been parading the streets since the early hours in the morning, pulling down the Gandhi banners and beating the all-India Congress members and members of the “higher casts” with clubs, bottles and bags of stinging curry powder. Simultaneous with the demonsira- tions in Bombay, the anti-British Red Shirt volunteers clashed with the troops in Gonda. Four of the Red Shirts are reported to have been killed and 28 wounded in the dem- onstrations. Gandhi, who for the past few months has been in England hob- nobbing with royalty and the fascist MacDonald clique in the court of St. James, at the same time posing as the savior of the Indian masses, had a large number, of his forces drawn Lng up at the pier to greet him—‘high : cast” Hindus, well-dressed members a of the Indian bourgeoisie and Con- gress volunteers. Overshadowing Mr. Gandhi's wel- coming party, however, were masses of workers, the starving “lower cast” people, who are shunned by the rul- | waving flags as tokens of bitterness When the Winter Winds Begin 1 Otticial Organ of the League of Struggle for Negro Righto Campaign for 10,000 New Readers “ . ‘To be awarded to the worker obtaining the most subscriptions, who will present an original bust of Nat Turner to the Revolutionary Museum, Moscow. ——See The Liberator for Additional Prizes—— ~ READ! Rates—$1 per year, 60c six months, S6c three months; Be per copy. Special dates to Unemployed Workers, Fraternal Organtration:, One Cent for ten or more. Order 2 bunille today. 50 East 13th St. Room 201 Win alTnp _ TO THE SOVIET UNION for the MAY DAY CELEBRATION FIRST PRIZE IN Balhae » SUBSCRIBE! Workers’ Clubs, Trade Unions THE LIBERATOR i New York, N. ¥. to Blow You will find it warm and cory —in—— Camp Nitgedaiget You can rest in the proletarian THE WESTERN WORKER Comes Out January Ist Tare comradely atmosphere ovided In the Hotel—you will also find it well heated with steam heat, hot water and many other tm- provements, The food i» clean and fresh and especially well RAISE FUNDS! prepared. SPECIAL RATES FOR WEEK- ENDS 1 Day ... 3 Dave 52 Issues $2 3 Days « antomobile e Colony for everyday nt 10 a, m. for the price of 31.50, Thursday before Christ- mas car leaves 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. For further information call the— COOPERATIVE OFFICE City We, the undersigned workers of the United States, greet the DAILY WORKER on its 8th Anniver- | Ty: 4 We pledge to continue to use the DAILY WORKER to organize the workers to fight against the Hoover hunger program; against wage cuts and boss terror; for Unemployment Insurance and relief and HONOR ROLL GREETINGS © in the defense of the Soviet Union against Imperialist War. NAME This organization has . We are building the workers’ offensive against the boss government by strengthening the DAILY WORKER. Our donations are ap added push on the road to nosso clressotion fer the DAILY, WORKERS , » members, Name ..cccvcvess- A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West BUILD IT! 26 Issues $1 SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c Street ...tWscccecesoeveseve Western Worker Campaign Committee 15 FOURTH STREET, San Francisco, Calif. Name | City, and State 01s. rcccvvevcevvsccccscccseeveuse Fight for the ‘5,000 Subs Campaign (WITH CASH ONLY) Date... .cosicsesccsccscwceccece@ I want to get the DAILY WORKER every day! & reer eee eter eee Peer ererer riers Teri rrr try TT | DATO gage cevicn deen ccopsosvccsonecsteceesces chad aanne ean No. For one year 36.00 ($8.00 in Manhattan and Brona) For six months $3.00 ($4.50 in Manhattan and Brons)' For three months $1.50 ($2.25 in Manhattan and Bronx) For one month $0.50 ($0.75 in Manhattan and Brows)

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