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7 Vaid WORAGK, Naw LURK, ImMUKSDAY, DC ol, o me Lares JRKERS WILL RALLY BEHIND DEMANDS ON FEBRUARY 4th (CONTINUED WROM PAGE ONE) the unemployed for relief, Benjamin declared that the unem- ployed, following the enthusiastic National Hunger March, were pre- paring for nation-wide demonstre~ tions on February 4th, National Un- employment Insurance Day, to rally @ still greater fight for unemploy- ment insurance; that they were de- termined to organize and carry on a struggle of millions until unemploy- ment Insurance js wor, for the 12 million victims of the capitalist hunger system. He denounced the capitalist ef- forts to smash the hunger march. ‘He said the reason they falled to smash the march was because they knew of the mass support behind it, James Watson, a Negro member of the committee, took the floor de- Mending that the committee be heard. The Senate Committee is con- aidering an appropriation of $250,- 000,000 for so-called “unemploy~ ment relief.” As against this Ben- Jamin put forward the demand for immedinte cash winter relief of $150 for every unemployed. worker; the adoption of the Workers Un- omployment Insurance Rill, the fands for which should come out of the war budget and through taxation of the rich exploiters, and te be administered by representa- tives of the unemployed and the ‘workers. ‘The American Federation of Labor officials were called in, through the |. person of Edward G. McGrady in an effort to stave off the growing fight for unemployment insurance. The A. F. of L. at its last national con~ yention came out definitely against any form of unemployment insur- ance. They urged the workers to de- pend on charity. McGrady admitted that there was growing maas hunger, trying however to cover this by say~ ing there were only 7,500,000 unem~ ployed when the fact is over 12,000,- 000 are without work. MeGrady said that “if states and communities are unable to provide relief,” then there should be a “fed- eral appropraition in order that, hu- man lives might be saved and hin- ger, misery and want alleviated.” in this slimy way he wants it to appear thet the A. F. of L. is for some form of Federal relief, although McGrady didn’t commit himself or the A. F. of L. to anything more definite than these few empty phrases. This new mask of the 4. F. of L. was pyt on in order to counter-act the growing struggle led by the Unemployed Councils for unemployment insur- ance, equal to full wages, to come out of the government treasury, from the war funds, and from the swollen fortunes of the big bosses. ‘The capitalist press here and throughout the United States, help-~ ing the A. F. of L. out of its tight hole in the fight against unemploy- ment insurance, characterizes Mcr Grady’s staternent as a “plea for federal aid.” The new twist of the A. I. of L. leadership is just another phase of its fight to protect the fortunes of the big bosses and to tnsure starvar tion. It is an attempt to keep the unemployed from taking up 2 real fight for ynemployment insurance under the militant leadership of the Nationa] Unemployed Councils. Me- Grady made no concrete proposals of immediate relief or unemployment imsurance. He merely advised the bosses to go ahead with their fake charity schemes, and if these broke down, end thousands starved to death, maybe a few charity crumbs could be thrown the unemployed by ‘he federal government. McGrady admitted, however, that the American workers during 1931 through wage cuts and unemploy- Ment lost between $18,000,000,000 and $20;000,000,000. But McGrady care- fully hide the fact that the wage suts were put over with the deliberr ate cooperation and in many in-r through the direct initiative of 4, F. of L. leadership, action of the Senate Comimit- Ree Sci ait ala aoa From Ashby, Mass., comes another report of socialist competition in the campaign for 5,000 12-month subscrip- tions to the Daily Worker. “The members of the Ashby Young Communist Teague have begun a drive to see who can get most sub- seribers to the Daily Work- ey,” says the report. Units, sections, districts, mass organizations, spread socialist competition, set quotas, get into the Daily Worker sub campaign. MAS: ORGS ADVERTISE Your meetings Your halls Your “affairs” Your demonstrations tn the tee in attempting to gage Benjamin and the spokesmen for the $12,000,~ 000 unemployed, in playing up the fake program of the A. F. of L. shows more clearly than ever the necessity for driving forward to greater mass demonstrations for unemployment insurance on February 4-—National Unemployment Insurance Day. CHANG HANDS CHINCHOW TO JAPANESE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONED maintain their deception of the Chinese masses while brazenly help-~ jing the imperialists in their plans to partition China and crush the Chin- ese Revolution, Chang “explained” that the withdrawal was ordered “so the invading Japanese military forces would have no pretext for extending | thelr warfare in Manchuria into North China, especially into. the ‘Tientsin-Peiping area.’ A Washington dispatch to the New York Times yesterday declared the Wall Street government has informa~ tion that the Japanese will continue their advance towards the Chinchow gates to Inner China, The dispatch states: “Official advices received earlier from the American officials in the Far Fast were that if Chang with- drew his forces the Japanese would continue their advance to stamp out banditry.” William Philip Simms, Foreign Edi- tor of the Scripps-Howard news- paper chain declared yesterday he is “reliably informed that Japan will not stop the war until] China is| completely crushed,” Chang Holding Chinchow for Japanese Against Partisans | While evacuating Chinchow, Chang is leaving a small garrison to hold the city arainst the Chinese partisan troops until the Japanese take pos- session. The partisan troops, sup- ported by the workers and peasants, have made the only resistance to the Javanese invaders. ‘These troops are putting up @ heroie resistance. A dispatch to the New York Times from its Tokyo cor- resonndent reports: “Chinese irregulars, cavalry and infantry with machine guns, ap- parently under able military lead- ers, yesterday showed signs of ob- stracting the Japanese advance on Panshan but their resistance was half-hearted.” Partisans Attack Japanese Rear Guard Sharp clashes occured yesterday at Panshan, Tatienchiawan and other points in South Manchuria. At Ta- tienchianawan a regular battle oc- curred, when partisan troops cut in behind the Japanese advance and threatened its rear-guard. Both the partisens and the Japanese troops suffered heavy casualties. At Chang- chiatu, 1,50 partisan troops held out for hours against superior numbers and arms, holding up the Japanese advance, They were four times driven from their positions, but each | time returned to the attack. ‘The growing unrest of the Jap- anese masses is finding reflection in the Japanese army, according to a disvatch which reports the mutiny of a detachment of 300 Japanese soldiers in Shangtung Province, North China. Picked Japanese troops are sald to have been dispatched to suppress the mutiny, In the town of Fushun, Manenuriz, ten Japanese soldiers are reported to have been executed on charges of membership in the Japanese Com- munist Party and of carrying on propaganda calling for solidarity of the workers and peasants in the Japanese army with the Chinese masses. Japanese Financial Crisis Sharpens A Washington dispatch reports @ tremendous sharpening in the econo- mic and financial crisis in Japan. General commodity prices, partic- ularly of food stuffs, showed marked advance during the past week, with a consequent increase in the robbery and misery of the toiling masses. The dispatch says further: “The immediate outlook indicates that yen exchange will weaken. The Department of Finance has issued exchequer notes to the amount of 80,000,000 yen at 6.2 per cent on Jan, 18.” The outward flow of gold continues in spite of the embargo placed on gold shipments by the new Japanese government, The Yokohama specie bank shipped 20,000,000 yen in gold to the United States on Dec. 24, making the total gold shipments since the gold embargo of 50,000,000 yen. The extent to which inflation of the cur- rency is proceeding is shown by the fact on Dec. 22 the Bank of Japan's note issue was 1,184,621,000 yen and its specie reserve was 489,495,000 yen. Japanese Enterprises in China Face Ruin Japanese enterprises in Inner China are facing ruin as a result of the boycott. of Japanese goods by the asses. William Phillip Simms, Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor, re~ ports that “the Kso Maru, a Japanese vessel, entered ‘Shangha! with only 180 tons of Japanese goods, and these were consigned to Japanese mer- chants whose business has been shot to pieces by the boycott. ‘This, it is said, is typical. “Half the Japanese shops ti Shanghai, it is stated, are unable te moot their payrolls and the “God damn it, don’t you try to stop my Daily Work- er,”> writes a worker from Chicago. “T paid, for this month, 50 cents to the local Daily Worker agent. I pay every time that it is due} even if 1 would have to steal the money. Will try to get new subscribers.” This eagerness to get the Daily Worker is spreading among thousands of work ers, Go out and get sub- scriptions, Set a quota and fill it in the campaign for 5,000 12-month subs. others have closed their doors and gone home. Japanese cotton mills in China are closing down and the commercial department of the Shanshai municipality has been forced to order yarn and cloth from England to make up the shortage.” The new counter-revolutionary Nanking government is using its troops and police in an attempt te crush the strike of 30,000 workers in the cotton mills at Hankow, ‘The strike movement is spreading in Shanghai and other Chinese cities. Nanking in New Sell-out Move The Far Kastern Press Bervice re- ports that the new Nanking govern- ment, in which Japanese tools play an important role, is preparing to negotiate a treaty with the Japanese, practically turning over Manchuria to Japar. M. Wilden, the French minister to Nanking, is understood to have been entrusted with the task | of making all arrangements with the Nanking government for direct ne-~ sotiations with Japan, This is Jn line with the plan announced by Eugene Chan some weeks ago for an “in+ dependent’ Manchuria. Measures for intensification of the war against the Chinese Soviet gov- ernment and Red Army were the chief consideration at the Fourth Ne~ tonal Congress of the Kuomintang which closed at Nanking a few weeks ago. Plans for provaction which will enable the Nanking running dogs of imperialism to take drastic action against the Communist Party and the mass anti-imperialist, anti-Kuo- mintang movement have been sent in motion and the stage is set for a new and bloodier terror against the Chinese Rev6lution. Canton Bankers Eliminates Soong A Nanking dispatch reports 2 fur- ther agreement by the Canton and Nanking factions in their efforts to achieve a united front against the mases and the growing power of the Chinese Soviet Government. Ten Cabinet positions were filled yester- day, only three going to the Nanking clique and the rest to the Canton gang. The Nanking group got the Ministries of Wer, Navy and Educay tion, Eugene Chen, of the Canton group, has been appointed Foreign Minister. T. V. Soong has been elimy inated as Finance Minister. The new Finance Minister is a crony of Sun Fo, whi, is head of the Executive Yuan. Sun Fo is described by George B. Sokolsky in the New York Times as “undoubtedly the most solid indtvi- duality in the new government.” Sun represents the bourgeoisie of South China, He was ones engaged in | Honolulu. The elimination of Soong jas Finance Minister is evidently a victory for the Canton benkers against the bankers of North Chine. Chen Kung-po, the new Minister of Industry, whom the imperialist press lyingly describes as a Communist, is @ banker, and manager of the Shan- shai Commercial Savings Bank Chen is not now nor ever has been a Communist. Like the others in the new government he is an enemy of the Chinese masses. E. Berkman Writes ‘of Brutal Treatment Accorded Donegian (CONTINUED FROM PAG UNH) job back, he should report to Immi- gration Inspector Chase on every- thing that is going on in the union ofice, He was given his job in the mill, (Notice that Mr. Boss and the Immigration Department work hand in glove). But Donegian refused to be @ spy. He remained a member of the Union. During the last Lawrence strike, which was against a 10 per cent wage cut, Donegian was picked up by the police while walking from a meeting, He was not kept in jail, There were no charges against him. He was taken to the Danvers State Hospital for the Insane. He was forced to undergo a dangerous op erating, puncture of the spinal cole umn, The Internationa] Labor De- fense went to his defense, The strike was still on and Doak’s strikebreak- ers produced a warrant for Done~ gian’s deportation. Donegian, | sick from the beating by the police, spinal punctures and a diet not fit for dogs, was brought to East Boston to be kept away from the strike area. William T, Murdoch and Edith Berkman have been kept at East Boston for deportation since Oct. 9, the second day of the strike. Is Now Very It Donegian’s treatment while at the Danvers institution, has kept him 11 ever since. From the immigration station he had to be taken to a hospital. Now he is back in East Boston, With him are Comrades Kraycevich, Paul, Murdoch and Berk- man. Donegian camiot ‘be deported to Soviet Russia and the Immigration Commissioner, Mrs, Tillinghast, who was congratulated by Ham Fish for being # good strikebreaker, knows Fotaining Gaenge ©, ‘Yow to Dacenbay Jom, 0f Alations,ae ws 424 1 our Strort SD) agec ements in reference tharate, We desire that 021 »- te thle anes, imtenied toy the ap: 0 Br,Chamlee,es our ebtorney. te befors as dey of Ness, Puniic, Neatemery Greaty, avers Seis sf8h, 1a. ios \ Scottsboro Boys Rete Solidarity With the I. L. D. "ey the andere lared Heywood Pettere0’,Sugene "12 1iame Charite Seem: ,Slerence Dorrie, dete Pows11,0len Bopte one: "ill ie Rodartecm, Bass tetere im apeti 1931, sandy wre, "7, ont -— omede @ written contract) = Chaniee, ef Chattanooss ang Joseph R.Brodeky and sencelaten,ae cuy ettormeze to make motions for @ new trier, smh $e oppenl cer onsen fren We Chromtt court te the Suprite Court st Mentgemry Alsbens 5D other agze pent satlfying the tives contrast. at Seostebore S1eham Smt to May 1951 ,ve mate 6 Reveby renew ouy oontrect with a 2h suthorise then to ppeay foe ue in the 9) ‘9 npreme Court ef the State Othes agecemat.end to make the beet Able, be get our cone zeversed and to We anthovines cer parents ant maxt of Chamlae ant bis occootates ant we hereby retity a» Get us 8 new tris?, Mia 0 employ xr, 32 the le setions 000,004 812 sormamiogtions veletive pellante, of theiy Sownsel de given We denive & private centerenes with Ma, Hight Lads in Kilby Prison Death Cells Take Decisive Action to Block N. A. A. ©. P. Misleaders in Their Attempts to Disrupt Defense Se Hunger Marcher Orders ‘Liberator’ C. H, M. of Bloomington, TM, writes: “Just returned from the Hunger March and from the solidarity of the Negro and white workers, we are advancing in Decatur, Spring- field, Peoria and Danville to the organization of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, The Unemployed Council is growing and will stop the first eviction of @ worker and spread the fight to all. In this organization we want @ bundle of five Liberators to begin with for sale on the streets and shops.” . Hunger Marchers! Build the wnity of black and white workers by spreading the Liberator. Order % bundle (1c for 10 or more) by writing into The Liberator, Room 201, 50 East 13th St., New York, IL. D. IN NEW ACTION FOR ® ROY WRIGHT {CONTINUED FROM PAGR ONE) with Judge Hawkins a sworn peti- tion protesting any connection whatsoever of the N.A.A.C.P, with the defense. “Althouzh T have many clates, Including my son George | Chamlee, Jr. Irving Schwab, Jos- | eph Brodsky, and Allan Taub, ¥ | SALISBURY, Md. Dec. 29.—Three poor whites will be used as goats for the sham “investigation” into the lynching of Matthew Williams, Ne- gto worker, here December 4, while the officials and business men of the city who. engineered the lynching will go scot free. This information was sent today to the International Lebor Defense by an investigator who has been ‘haking 2 study of the lynch terror launched against Negro workers on the eastern shore of Maryland. ‘The three whites, all brothers, have been arrested and will face the grand jury appointed to whitewesh the chief lynchers. Some of these grand jury members are reported to he Jeaders of the lynch gang which threw the wounded Negro worker out of a hospite! window, hanged him, dragged him through town, and burned his body in forty gallons of gasoline. ‘Williams, according to the 1. &. D. PLAN WORK IN FILTH FOR JOB- LESS The local bosses in Oyster Bay have discovered a new method of re- Ueving the unemployment situation. A committee is considering putting filling the Sammis Creek, one of the filthiest beds of stagnant water on Long Island, and for years regarded as a health menace. Undoubtedly if some of the workers should happen to die of malaria the unemployed situation would be just so much less difficult to handle, Sprlsiesdiartartdseuseaciseiioalonia scatter, that she has no right to keep him. The International Labor Defense will start proceedings for his immediate release. Workers and workers’ organizations should at once send telegrams de- manding his release to the Commis- sioner at Hast Boston, to Secretary of Labor Doak at Washington, D. ©., and to the press, Murdoch and Berkman have been in the Imigration Station since Oct. 9. Only mass protest will force their release. Protest! Demand the right to strike and organize! unemployed to work draining and | Department, investigator, demanded the increase in pay promised him by his boss. When this was refused, an argument began and Williams was wounded by his employer. Defending himself, he accidentally killed the manufac- turer. On his cot in the hospital, before he was lynched, he said: “For nine years I was working for 15 cents an hour. I was promised 2 raise. Then my boss refused it. I might just as well be dead as go on working all my life for 15 cents an hour.” Other facts unearthed by the Lb. D. investigator are: ‘That the rope with which Williams was hanged came from the Fire House of Salisbury. That 20 feet from the tres on which the lynch gang hanged Wil- Hams was a poster with a picture of Jesus, asking “help for the peor for Christmas.” ‘That no preacher in Salisbury even mentioned the ghastly lynching in his sermon on Sunday, two days later. That on December 5 the Salisbury Times udmitted leading Salisbury citizens took part in the lynching when it stated: “The paper today is omitting the details of the demon- stration here last night for the ob- vious reason that every reader of our paper has had an opportunity to learn of them first hand by eye wit- nesses.” That A. Murray Phillip, Wicomico County sheriff, witnessed the hang- ing, feebly suggested that the body be turned over to him, but took no action when it was dragged to the Negro section of the town and burn- ed. Later he failed to remember a single person whom he had seen or talked to that night. That while the chief of police merely argued with the lynchers at the front door, a small group of them entered the side door of the hospital unhindered, and were told by the head nurse: “If you must take the Negro, take him quietly.” ‘That merchants in Salisbury are still bent on suppressing Negroes who demand more pay by further lynch- ings: “This isn’t the first lynching or the last,” said a merchant. I.L.D. Exposes New Whitewash Attempt of Maryland Lynchers Investigators Find Repe Used in Lynching of | Matthew Williams Came from Fire would welcome entrapee of any re Dutable attorney on the basis of | complete co-operation. ¥ feel, how ever, that T can not break faith | with my clients to the extent of from any- inviting co-operati is in keep the boys, their parents and other kin.” The southern cap’ carries the following sta’ Lowell Wal southern district organizer of the 1. L. D. “We have» no interest greater than saying from the electric chair | and FREEING these eight inno- | cent boys. The ¥. L. D., the de- fendants and their parents there- fore cannot consider entrance into the case of any organization such as the N.AA.C.P. whose leaders have contributed solely to obstruct- ing the defense and not assistance. With regard te Darrow and Hays, we asked them, in line with the wired request of the defendants, to sever their connections with the NAACP, in this case and to work with us in a united effort to tree the hoys. “We regret that after a long con- ference no agreement was reached with Darrow and Hays.” Attorneys Chamlee and Schwab will visit 14-year old Roy Wright to- day to arrange for habeas corpus proceedings to force his immediate release or a new trial. Roy was the only one of the nine boys not rail- Toaded to the electric chair in the original “trial” at Scottsboro. There was a mistrail in his case. Darrow did not visit the eight boys in the death cells at Gilby Prison, Montgomery, nor did he visit Roy Wright in Birmingham jail. He re~ fused to see Montgomery McLercy and Lowell Wakefield because he was “afraid they will ask me to come in to help the I. L. D. save the boys.” Roy Wright yesterday declared “We have Chamlee and the I. L. D. Tf they cans save us Darrow and the NAACP. sure can’t. I don't want Darrow. I am innocent. I don't want Beddow either. He’s with the NAACP.” Mass pressure and the firm stand of the boys and their parents finally forced Gov. Miller of Alabama to is- sue a public statement today in- structing that there be no further hindrance to the LL.D. attorneys in seeing and consulting with the de- fendants. ‘These victories must be folowed up by the greatest mass demonstrations throughout the entire country be- tween now-and Jan. 21 when the ap- peal comes up in the Alabama Sup- reme Court, Money is immediately needed for the defense and the extensive investiga~ tions being carried on by the LL.D. Rush funds immediately to the Na- tional Office of the I.L.D., 80 East Mth Street, New York, N. Y. OR ROLL GREETINGS We, the undersigned workers of the United States, greet the DAILY WORKER on its 8th Anniver- ry. 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 in the defense of the Soviet Union against Imperialist War. This organization has + members. Dollars Cents No. We are building the workers’ offensive against the boss government by strengthening the DAILT WORKER. Our donations are an added push om the road to maas circulation for the DAILY. WORKER: ete | SUMMARY OF asso- | Daily Worker Campaign 10 pe on Way to Goal; Schedule Demands 10pe More This Week Up to last Friday. the campaign for 5,000 12-month subscriptions to| the Daily Worker had brought in 439 | years of subs, or 6.7 per cent of the | goal. On Saturday we received 720 | months of subs or 60 years, making | the total 489 years, or almost ten | per cent of our goal. Two weeks | ago we were 3 per cent on the way to the goal, one week ago we were six per cent on our way, and now| we have reached ten per cent A| steady progress, as you can see, but still very little INCREASE in the| PACE of the campaign | This week we must speed up the pace. By is week we must hav: cent of | the 5,000 33. | ‘This ‘week 's the final weck of | preparation for the big Kentucky | | strike of 18,000 miners led by the ational Miners Union ‘This week is the last week r all the worker: Ny behind biggest and the| ¥ t fight put up by the work- | e the bos: se cut and etion program was let 10032. This the big : tor sub scriptions and unite all workers. Below is the table for last week ap to Friday. The New York District, you will notice, is in the lead with 42 years of subs (12.9 per cent of ite quota) Chicago is next with 22 yeare‘ef subs, or 9.4 per cent of ita quota. Detroit follows with 18 years of subs or 14.2 per cent of its quota. Then comes Cleveland with 9 years of subs. Some of the other districts have so ; far been dead weight in the teil of the procession, More was to have been expected from California, the and Billings, which in two years of subs so of Mooney sent has far. More was to have been expected from many other discricts. Th ik, the week before the big Kentucky strike, must be the recerd week of the drive. Organize more is of the Daily Worker groups, ch group was added last More action on the section district readers’ conferences, nd speed the challenges of the units d districts and mass organizations, Here Is the table. Stady it amd see JBSCRIPTION DRIVE and A 3 tr et H a at 8 BP “2 e ag 15150 380 5 5 823,00 875 ” > 168.0050 Ww 15.50 100 8 162.00 ae 4 > 198.50 400 9 2 34L0e 400 “ 2 439.00 «775 m 2 «148500380 7 z 22.50 © 200 8 25.50 50 1 : 58.00 150 1 4 7.00 400 af 1 so50 | (108 5 8 13.50 156 ® ‘ 22.5000 Se ® 2 15.50 50 i 1 43.50 100 2 45 3639.50 8000135 ADMIT KENTUCKY. OFFICIALS RULE THROUGH GUNMEN CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) bond, and kept there for days and weeks before being given..an ex amining trial. ae “The Taw as it is known tn Har- lan County, is Sheriff John Henry Blair and his more than 200 depu~- ties, the report states. Mr. Blatr himself did not participate in any of the clubbings administered by the deputies, but in a statement to the commission he takes full responsi- bility for their acts.” “Here is a typical case “Mrs, Viole Grace, 37-year-old wife of J. M. Grace, told of the kidnap. ing end beating of her husband. “He wes taken out of the jail at Neon, Ky. turned over to the Jen- kins bunch, who turned him over to the Harlan County bunch,’ she said. “*They took him to Lynch, took him up on the mountain on the Vir- ginia side, and beat him over the head with a pistol till his head was t as black as your suit. His cheek- bones were busted, both his eyes were bruised up where they hit him with @ blackjack or something. They kicked him across the back, over the kidneys, until he spit blood three days. “‘He finally got away and fifty shots were fired at him as he ran. He went to Middleboro, Ky., and joined the National Miners’ Union. ‘They sent him to New York to get aid.’ “Mrs. Grace also described the sur- rounding of het boarding house at Wallins Creek by deputies. “‘John Henry Blair sent out fifty or sixty gunmen who surrounded my house with machine guns,’ she said. ‘They had a tripod planted right over my window. All the men had from one, two, three to four guns on them; had ammunition in their belts buckled around them; had breast plates om front and back.’ “*You saw the breast plates?’ she was asked, * ‘Sure, you could see them. George Lee had one on; it looked Uke a baseball outfit. This little three-foot gangster—nobody in Harlan County ever saw him before; they say he is from Chicago~he was plated until he creaked.’ “George Lee is chief peace officer at Black Mountain Camp. The man referred to as ‘three-foot gangster.’ “Henry Thornton, 48-yesr-old Ne- gro miner, sadi one night & party of eleven deputies headed by Blair came to, his house. Jerked Out of Bed. Q What were you doing? (Signed) .—Denver Unempieyed Council and Denver FOUL. ‘The National Miners Union greets the Denver Unemployed Council end ‘TUUL in the name of the miners who will be a most determined right to live like hi their right to organize the brutal terror of the and their government. Miners Union appeals to organizations to follow ot the Denver comredes. support of all clasecemsclous, the | i fz ft ail i I ! i THE WESTERN WORKER Comes Out January 1st A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West RAISE FUNDS! BUILD Iv! SUBSCRIBE NOW! 52 Issues $2 26 Issues $1 13 Issnes_50c NOME srovcepoeecvecnsersniesseeeee City ., Western 16 FOURTH STREET, Work y or! ones Ca sosee SETCCE .cccdmoseeccecooeoane soseeee State .. Sen y © \