Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
th * £50 went on strike. The bosses sens- DAILY W! ORKER, NEW Cops Use Alleged Bomb Plot to Push Attack on Workers (CONTINUED FROM PAGB ONED wide tampaign of terror against the rising militancy of the hungry masses, were obviously rejoiced yesterday upon the receipt of the news of the discovery of the bombs. The whole force of the capitalist bloodhounds from east to west at once bestirred themselves from their pocker games and pleasant slumbers in their res- pective headquarters and shouted in unison: “Communist.” Not only did they shout, but they began to act. The bomb squad of New York, notorious for its provoc- ative anti-workingclass activities, sent lists of names of Communists to the post office authorities as a prelude to an attempt to jail members of the have been organized by fascists agents police to use as a prétext for an attack Communist Party. The new bomb plot is typical of the methods of the Fascist government, and it may well in order to create sympathy for fas- cism at home and abroad, especially at this time when the crisis has hastened the radicalization of the proletarian mas: ‘The workers must come out in mili- tant mass protest against any at- tempt of the government and the on the Communist Party and the re- volutionary unions. The Communist Party and the ge- nuine proletarian anti-fascist groups have nothing to do with such stupid tactics as individual terrorism and bombing. Relief to the Striking Kentucky Miners— A Main Task of American Working Class (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) in Kentucky before the strike began. Now that the strike has started the starvation is more widespread, more agonizing than before. Immediate relief, plentiful relief must be shipped to the fighting coal miners of Kentucky if they are to wage a successful stzuggle against the slave and hunger system of the coal operators. The relief must come from every section of the country. ‘This struggle of the Kentucky miners has a direct effect on the lives of the American masses. If this strike against the most pow- erful lords of capitalism is won, it will be @ major victory for the work- ing class. It will be a blow against the wage cutting drive of the capi- talists that has sliced more than ten billion dollars from the wages of the American workers in the past year. It will be a blow to the hunger sys- tem of the capitalists that has sent 12,000,000 workers on the streets with- out jobs and kills 1,000 workers a day of starvation. The duty of supplying relief to the Kentucky miners must become one ef the main tasks of the American working class. The workers must go into every shop, every working class neighborhood, every working class meeting to collect relief for the min- ers. Solidarity between the miners and the rest of the working class must be built up in every section of the country. The medium through which this relief must be collected is the Work- crs: International Relief, ‘the only working class relief organization. In Kentucky the Red Cross has openly told the miners that it -will provide “gelief” only on condition that the muniers return to work. ‘The relief campaign for the Ken- tucky miners must be instituted on the broadest possible scale, A. F. of L. locals, fraternal organizations, workers’ clubs must be drawn into the collection of food, funds and clothing. A constant stream of re- lief must start flowing into the strike front immediately. A broad collection movement upon the basis of mobilizing masses of workers into the Kentucky Strike Relief Volun- teers must be established. ‘The Workers International Relief has already started its campaign— the Kentucky Striking Miners Re- lief Campaign—for relief. A mass demnostration in support of the strik- ing miners will be held on January 8th in the Star Casino. This demonstration must be @ rousing answer of solidarity to the striking miners. On January 17th the Workers International Relief is holding a relief confernece at Irving Plaza, 15th Street at Irving Place at One Task of the Daily Worker On Its Eighth Anniversary | Italian Workers Who | Bosses Liars Active With (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONED danger of total immersion in economic struggles, said: (in connection with these quotations it must be re- membered that social democrat and social demo- eracy #ere still revolutionary terms in the period in which they were written): “Sake the type of social democratic cir hay been most widespread during the past few and examine its work. It has ‘contact with the vorkers'; it issues leaflets in which abuses in the tactories, the partial attitude of the government towards the capitalists and the tyranny of the po- lice are strongly condemned, and contents itself with this. At meetings of workers the discussions usually do not extend beyond such subjects. Lec- tures and discussions on the history of the revolu- tionary movement, on questions of the home and foreign policy of our government, on questions of economic evolution . . . and the position of the various classes in modern society, etc., are extreme- ly rare... »” Unfortunately these words can still apply with con- siderable force to very many of our Party units. There is a mechanical connection between theory and prac- tice and an extremely formal application of the line of the Communist International and the Central Com- mittee of our Party. This reflects itself in innum- erable ways, but principally in the weakness of the mass work of our Party and its great shortcomings in building, leading and extending the mass organiza~- tions. This is especially true of the trade union work of our Party and a‘ter eight years of work and strug- gle the Daily Worker, as the official organ of our Central Committee, is still open to severe criticism in this respect. . . . It does not sufficiently make the necessary connection between the daily struggles and the broad revolutionary aims of our Party. Beginning its eighth year the Daily Worker must remedy this defect as the principal means of over- coming its weaknesses as “the collective organizer” of the Party and the working class. The Daily Worker and its entire staff must now take with the utmost le that seriousness the tasks of making the Daily Worker the teacher and organizer of the revolutionary trade union movement in the United States. It must become the teacher and trainer of the new leadership of the mass combat organs—the red trade rnions . . . that are now being built in the course of man militant struggles like those now in progress in Kentucky Daily Worker must become, in a much more definite and decisive manner, a paper to which the new young leadership of the mass struggles in the United St looks to for direction, guidance, for the correct sol tion of the thousand and one problems which it face ‘The Daily Worker in this tremendous period of cla The battles, when millions of the working class are ques- | tioning the right of capitalism to rob and oppress them, when the growing millions of unemployed are becoming more and more resentful of the terrible miseries they are forced to face, and when huge bat- talions of the working class are moving forward into struggle who must and will be organized into the revo- lutionary trade unions, the mass base of the fight for power, it is more than ever necessary that the Daily Worker should be able to train the new hun- dreds and thousands of young proletarian leaders to become the type of leader which Lenin defined as follows: “Tne ideal of .a social democrat should be, not merely to become a trade union secretary, but to be a tribune of the people, able to react to every manifestation of tyranny and oppression, no matter where it may take place, no matter what stratum or class of people it may affect; he must be able to group all these manifestations into a single picture of police violence and capitalist exploitation; he must be able to take advantage of every petty event in order to explain his socialistic convictions and his social-democratic demands to ALL, in order explain to ALL and to everyone the world histor- ical significance of the struggle for the emancipa- tion of the proletariat.” To carry out this major task, the Daily Worker will require the daily assistance of the Central Com- mittee and of the entire Party. TORR, SATURDAY, JANUARY 2, FEAR RED MOVEMENT IN CHINA (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONED of the Kuomintang to carry out Its demagogic promises to the masses. He says: “In China, even with the small 11 a, m., January 17th, to which all New York locals of the A. F. of L., all fraternal organizations, all shop committees and-all Unemployed Councils have been invited to send delegates. Every effort must be made to make this conference a success. Machin- ery must be set up at this conference that will insure the mobilization of hundreds of working class organiza- tions in the, task of collecting relief. The workers alone. can.defeat the starvation weapon of the coal oper- ators. ® EXPECT 18,000 MINERS OUT ON STRIKE BY MONDAY ROM PAGE ONE) ‘The strike started in a heavy, cold rainfall. The poorly clad miners, dropped their tools and walked out. Scattered reports from the mines give the following details: At Colman £0 struck; at Glendon, 150; at Cary, ; at Castro, 25; at Kettle Island, ing the solid backing of the strike, got out en injunction against three of the leading union members. At Davisburr, 150 came out on strike. ‘ie Banner Fork miners came out 100 per cent. The strike has already spread to Banner Fork, Tenn., where 68 miners struck, 50 joining on the picket lines. Fifty miners are out at the Black Joe mine. The Rex is out Solid. At Elcomb 68 came out. A mass meeting called by the Na- tional Miners Union in the Brush Creek section this morning was at. tended by 750 miners. At the Chevrolet mines, where the deputy gun thug Sizemore was killed when he attempted to murder the miner, Virgil Hutton, a mass meet- ing was held today and all the min- ers declared they would join the strike in a body tomorrow morning. ‘The mines did not work today on ac- count of the New Year's holiday. At Lena Rau 75 miners walked out. Theze is a complete shut down of the Reliance Coal Co., at Mingle Hallow. A strike committee of five was elected there. At Carnes, Davisburgh, 50 went out on the picket line this morning, The strikers elected a rank and file strike committee of 9. ‘The Long Ride Coal Co. at Lewel- len is shut down solid. Seven were citcted on the strike committee. Over 150 were on the picket line at the Virginia Harlan Coal Co. at Bal- keh, The Southern Mining Co. at MASS ORGS ———— [ADVERTISE Your meetings Your halls Your “affairs” Colmar was shut down solid, 150 miners striking. A strike committee of 16 was elected. This company of- fered a. concession to the miners, a checkweighman, but they refused to recognize the National Miners Union. The men struck, A mass picket line of 50 was formed at the Premier Coal Co. at Middles- boro. There are 100 still working at this mine, group which ousted General Chiang Kai-Shek’s regime, little cause is found for New Year‘s celebrations, for all the promises with which 1931 opened were disappointed, and 1932 designed with tragic prospects, among which Manchurla’s status is not the gravest cause of depres- sion.” if He briefly refers to the abandon- ment of the fake gesture for abolition by Jan. 1, of the extra-territoriality treaties. He admits that all of the unfair treaties forced upon China, with the co-operation of the Chinese militarists, are still in force: “These plans, except for the con- ditional treaty revisions, were frus- trated by internal deveyopments, beginning with the Cantonese re- bellion and secession, the abandon- ment of the anti-Communist Cam- paign without a definite conclusion, the Yangtze floods which ruined 50,000,000 homes, and now the gene- ral breakdown of governmental authority with an alarming revival of Communism, “The spread of Communism is facilitated by the poverty and mis- ery resulting from the floods.” Kuomintang Responsible for Flood Disaster ; As in the case of the sell-out in ‘The Commodore Jellicoe at Pinsley was shut down solid, The Negro pres- ident of the N.M.U. local is on the strike committee of five. At the Harlan Produce Coal Co., Ely, Ky., 149 went on strike. The company hired three new gun thugs. J. E. Payne, organizer for the N.M.U. was ordered off company property. At the J. B. mines, 55 men are on strike A strike committee of five was elected. The Bell Jellicoe is out solid. Seventy men struck at the Bean Branch Coal Co, and they are form- ing picket lines at the J. B. mines. At the Bean Branch Coal Co. at Magnet, 30 went out on strike, tying up the mine. At the Liberty Coal Co. at Straight Creek 12 men went to the mine but came out. One hun- dred and twenty-five are on strike. The Negro and white miners came out together. Mass meetings of the National Miners Union and the strike com- mittees were held all over the field this morning and others will be held tonight. Mass picket lines will be formed at the mines tomorrow morn- ing. Need Relief at Once! Relief has already been rushed to some of the strike areas, Many hundreds of families are already being taken care of, The first days of the strike are strategic. The miners have been working for star- vation wages, always on the verge of starvation. Funds, food and clothing must be rushed immedi- ately. Workers everywhere should not de- lay in sending relief. The Workers International Relief, which is con- ducting a nation-wide drive for strike relief, has set up a warehouse in Pineville at 145 Pine St. Every work- er who has food or clothing should ship these immediately to the Pine- ville, Ky., warehouse. Every day counts, Rally to the support of the Kentucky miners! Build » workers correspondence Your demonstrations in the Drily. cK orker stoup in your factory, shop or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker. Every shop, mine and fac'io-y a ferfile field for Daily Worker sub- scriptions, Manchuria, the Kuomintang is direc- tly responsible for the huge toll of ills and misery and impoverishment of the toiling masses by the flood dis- aster. It was the failure of the Kuomintang to repair the dykes and canals and to take other steps for flood control that caused the appal- ing loss of life and the destruction of the homes of tens of millions of peasants. Abend admits that even among the membership of the Kuomintang there is @ growing conviction that China was betrayed in the Manchurian seizure and that “the party has not performed even a small fraction of the program of regeneration asd re- construction confidently announced under Dr. Sun Yat-Sen’s three prin- ciples when the country was tempo- rary unified by force three and a half years ago with the capture of Peiping and Tientsin and the hoisting of the Nationalist flag over Manchuria.” Japan Admit Aim To Hold Manchuria In the same dispatch, Abend re- ports that Japanese official circles in Darien have openly admitted that Japan intends to hold Manchuria. This is in line with past admissions in the imperialist press that Man- churia was to be converted by the Japanese Into an armed base against the Soviet Union. It is on this basis that the United States, which ts the leader in the anti-Soviet front, is: actively and passively supporting the Japanese agressions in Manchuria. It js on this basis the the League of Nations Council has legalized the Japanese seizure and looting of Man- churia, Abend reports: “Official Japanese circles have Tong since abandoned any pretense that the military campaign in Man- churia is derected merely at the ell- mination of banditry. An altogether open attitude reveals a complete de- termination to eliminate from Man- churla the last vestiges of any Chi- nese authority except that set up under Japanese auspices.” With mass anger surging through- Eviction of |New Haven Council Fights Negro Jobless NEW HAVEN, Conn, (By Mall)—, this section on Monday, Jan. 4, at Six weeks ago in canvassing a Ne- gro section the Unemployed Council found a family of Negro workers with ten children that were threat- ened with eviction. There was no food, coal, clothing or shoes in the house. The Unemployed Council appointed a committee to go to the Community Chest and succeeded in stopping the eviction and securing $4 s week relief, which is not sufii- cient for a family of this size. D. Brisbane moved into another house three weeks ago and has been served with the eviction notices, Mr. and Mrs. Brisbane and family came to New Haven five months ago, An Official from the state visited him a short while ago and said he would hhave to go back to the state of North Carolina to get relief. A trunk was sent around to pack up their things and be ready to be shipped back. ‘The state law says a worker must Teside in this state far years be- fore he can get relief, (Meanwhile while waiting he can starve.) The children have not attended school since the term started in Septem- ber, because of lack of clothes, and the Board of Educatoin is doing nothing to give clothes in order to send the children to school. The Brisbane family will fight rather than go back to starvation in North Carolina. The sheriff was there to evict them on Tuesday, but this was postponed until Wednesday at 4 pm. The Unemployed Com- mittee visited the Community Chest and the Family Aid Society om'Tues- day, Jan, 29, and the latter prom- ised to stop the eviction. Call Mass Meeting. A mass meeting has been called in ably the United States. Partisans Continue Stiff Resistance The Japanese advance on Chinchow is still meeting stiff resistance from the Chinese partisans and Red troops. A Peiping dispatch reports: “Serious fighting was reported at Painchuipu, on the Peiping-Mukden Railway. There a force of 2,000 to 3,000 Chinese was said to be resist- ing successfully the Japanese drive southward from Sinmin.” ‘The population of Chinchow fs re- ported in panic as the Japanese ad- vance guard nears the city Kaopang- tze, forty mileg from Chinchow, was captured by tHe Japanese yesterday who it is reported “continued to pour into Kaopangtze until there were nearly 15,000 of them.” This is the first uncensored dispatch giving an idea of the huge army the Japanese now have in Manchuria, ate the undersigned workers of the United States, greet the DAILY WORKER on its 8th Anniver | if "We pledge to continue to use the DAILY WORKER to organize the workers to fight against the Hoover hunger program; against wage cuts and bosgterror; for Unemployment Insurance and relief and, the Masonic Hall, Webster St. The Unemployed Council will fight the deportation of this worker, who is being discriminated against because he is a Negro. The Negro church even refused to give help, or the use of its hall for the meeting. On Monday, Dec. 228, a member of the Unemployed Council was passing through the Negro section of New Haven on Webster St. and he saw the furniture of a Negro worker thrown upon the sidewalk. Upon in- vestigation by & committee from the Unemployed Council, George Lon- don, _65,. the evicted worker, was found. to be paralyzed on one sidé of the body. He has been earning his living by odd jobs and hiring rooms. In this way he was trying to make a living. He had been re- ceiving $2 2 week for groceries and some medical attention from the ¢ity doctor. He said the city wanted His 0 S78 Ui por house, known as “Springside.” ‘This ‘he refused to do, preferring his home on Webster St. The Unemployed Council mob- ilized the neighborhood and with the help of the neighbors put the furni- ture and London back in his home. Mr, Pashal, the owner, is now threat- ening another eviction and arrest of this worker. Charities Know. of Case, A committee from the block vis- ited Mr. Dawson of the Community Chest and stated the case, Upon looking over thé files, Mr. Dawson prodiiced the file with the record of London, thus proving that the city new about the case of London. The committee was referred back to Mr. Mayhew of the Family Aid Society The Society admitted that London had been investigated on Monday, and he was given the choice “Spring- side” or no. relief and eviction. Otherwise the city and the Family Aid Society washes their hands of the situation. The Committee main- tained that Mr. London should get better quarters, but not in Spring- side, Mr. Mayhéw stated that the city , maintained the institution of Spring- ' side as the place for poor people and that is the place London would have | to go to, ».“We are pronouncing in good faith the words ‘the dictatorship of the proletariat’ and we shall make them @ reality.” LENIN, | Workers Correspondenve is the beckbone of the revolationary press. Baild your press by writing for it in the defense of the Soviet Union against Imperialist War. NAME ADDRESS AMOUNT 1932 old Huager Protest rired On By Fascists | Inprecorr) | | PARIS, Dec. 31 cold proach of in unem unem- | have taken of It cist militia f place | parts d on} 2 Fa were ‘arrested? | workers who were demonstrating | | becausé they shouted |_ “Give us bread!. Down, with Fascism!” One worker was killed and thirty others more or less jured. Many of the demo! LOOMS; GHANDI IN ROLE OF ‘MARTYR’ Masses of f the ¢ ‘Lower Castes” Demand Bread NEW YORK.—While the British nobility and bourgeoisie were cele- brating with song, dance and wine the dawning of the new year, talk of civil war hovered over India today according to an Associated Press dis- patch. The rising tide of militancy of the Indian masses, and especially of the “untochuables” and “lower castes”, which recently crystallized itself in & great mass demonstration against Mahatma Gandhi upon his return from the court of St. James in Eng- land, is mounting ‘hourly and, ac~ cording to observers, is likely to sweep on over entire India, drawing in all the masses in a gigantic strug- gle against British imperialism and native capitalism. Gandhi, however, is working with feverish speed in an attempt to side- track the great mounting movement of the masses of toilers. Calling on the Indian people to manufacture their own salt and break the unmoral laws, Gandhi proposes once more to go to jail and become a “martyr”, as @ means of preventing the masses from taking up a real revolutionary anti-imperialist struggle. The masses in the meantime, starving by the mil- lions, are raising the cry for bread. Bread—not salt! This is the slogan under which the hungry millions of Indian workers are marching. Down with British imperialism! Down with Gandhi! These slogans are echoing up and down the streets of ‘Calcutta bier Bombay today. oa LAGE ay bakiad ‘to ‘Greet tae! Pioneer ' Conferences NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Janu- ary 1—A, dance and entertainment is being» helt by< the *'Yoting Com- munist League of New Brunswick to greet the Pioneer Leaders. Confer- ence of District No. 2. This affair will be held in the La- dies Aid Hall at 52 New St., Saturday January 2nd and is to begin at 8 p.m. This will be one of the largest pro- letarian youth affairs of the season. A play by the Pioneers of New Bruswick will be given and “Wex” staff artist of the New Pioneer Mag- azine will draw cartoons, “ = ~ When the Winter Winds Begin to Blow You will find it warm and cozy —in— Camp Nitgedaiget You enn rest in the proletarian comradely atmosphere — provided in the Hotel—you will also find it well heated with stenm heat, hot water and many other Im- }/ provements. and fresh prepared, The food and ix clean especially yell RATES FOR WHEK- Thursday before Christ. mas ear leaves 2 pum. and 7 pam. For further information call the— COOPERATIVE OF RICE 2800 Bronx Park Wnast out China as a result of the with- drawal of the Nanking troops from Aoreregl the new ‘counter-revolu- lonary government is pre! that the withdrawal was eetaatty thane Huseh-liang in violation of orders m Nankiny, Chang a few days ago lec'o-oc' thas the wiildrawal was “ad vio by a certain country, presum- This organization Hi8 virrtrens members, We are building the workers’ offensive against the in pou. 1}. ER, Our donations are an added push on the rood to mass «i Tel.—Hsterbrook &-1400 Dollars Cents | promises, ly, In Bar-| } (CONTINUED? FROM PAGE ONE) lackey Lamont to do the soothsaying. But Lamont has a record of lying too. For example in 1930, the same Lamont who promises pros- perity in 1932—though he is afraid to come out opehly? with’ the asual tripe +said: “The nattire of” the ‘economic development -in the UnitedStates is such that one may confidently pre- dict, in the long run, a continuous and progress.” Instead has been a continuous growth the unemployed *tanks and @ steady progress of wage cuts. Lamont became a little bolder on because the workers more than a New Year, 1931 had already suffered year of hunger.,He elements of ‘recessio: most of their force.” Yet the fact remains the “elements of recession” were strong enough to drive the whole capitalist structure to | the lowest level ever recorded: One big capitalist spokesman | bromises the workers in 1932 about | the same “prosperity” they had in 1931, Gerard Swope, president of the Call Striking Seamen | Mutineers; Get Long Hard Labor Sentences (Cable by Inprecorr) BERLIN, Dec. 19, — Twenty-three German seamen were tried yesterday in Emden in. connection with. the strike which took place in the harbor of Odessa, during which an assault was made on the German Consul by a number of the seamen. The seamen chiefly implicated preferred not to return to Germany, but to stand their trial for the assault in Odessa. The events which followed proved that this decision was exceedingly wise. Yesterday in Emden te chief ac- cused, although by no means the leading spirit of the affair, was sen- tenced to two years hard labor, Three other seamen were sentenced to one year and one month’s ‘hard: labor each. Nineteen other accused were sentenced to shorter terms, none of them under two months. These nine~ teen, who were accused of mutiny, had done nothing more than go oh strike, and the accusation specified nothing more. This is German bougeois Class just- ie Years of hard labor is:the penalty ‘or what was nothing more than @ common assault on a representative of the bourgeoisie by workers who had lost control of themselves because of scandalous treatment. Workers are expected to accept that without a murmur. Bender to Speak at Phila. ILD Concert PHILADELPHIA, Pa—The Karl Marx Branch of the International Labor Defense has arranged a Con- cert and Lecture ‘for the benefit. of political prisoners and for the de- fense of workers who have fallen vic- tints to capitalist class Justice in the Philadelphia District, to take place on Sunday January 3, 8 p. m. in the Workers Center, at 801 Ritner 8t. Comrade, Bender the newly elected District. Organizer. of. the Interna- tional Labor Defense will speak. WORKERS ORGANIZATION! BUY MOSSELPROM CANDY Imported from SOVIET UNION. Send for $5.00 Initial order ¢on- taining all kinds, or for list price and information, A. ALPER DISTRIBUTORS 318 Marey Avenue Brooklyn, New York Electrie“@#"n New ’ Year, 11932, stated: “We think that condi- tions in our country in 1932 should be at least as good as in 1931,” “At least as good as in 1931!” Swope con- siders si ation for 40,000,000 to be “good.” When he says that conditions will bé at least ab €opd, he means of course, that profits Will be at least as good, and with further. wage cuts, further speed-up, more unemploy- ment, may even be slightly better for the capitalists. The year 193) wag,a, frightful one for the American workers. Twelve million were out of work, and at least that many on part-time work. Wage slashes and unemployment cut $20,- 000,000,000 from the workers pay. ac- cording to thésatimigsion * of the American Federation of Labor. The Industrial Conference Board, a capi- talist statistical institution, declares that 85 per cent of the American workers are either unemployed or on part-time work. ‘The basic industries are at a vir- tual stand-still. Steel production ts at 22 per cent. Automobile production is near zero, Wage cuts ‘aré!édming for the rail-' toad and building trades workers. No worker should believe the lies of the capitalists, The workers “way out” is to struggle against starva- tion, against wage cuts and for the overthrow of capitalism. The year 193: iq see the de- velopment of a ic, nation-wide fight for unem} insurance at the expense of thé bosses and their government. The first step in the new year should be a sweeping demon- stration on February 4, National Un- employment Insuranee Day, PROLET MIMO SERVICE (Near Union Square) ————S MEMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES Colored, White and Bond Paper Typewriters, Mimeo-Machines Cleaning and: Repairing Stencils arid Ink at Reduced Prites 36° 108 EAST 14th STREET, NEW YORI. Bargains # Combination offer THE NEW LABOR UNITY ee ees official monthly ergan of the Trade Union--Unity League 10 cents a copys $I: 00 a year and the DAILY WORKER ieee. ae Central Organ of the COMMUNIST PARTY, USA ‘The only English working class daily newspaper in the U. 8. A. BOTH FOR $6.00 for one year mma $8 in Manhattan ‘and Bronx I want the LABOR UNITY and the DAILY“ WORKER Name ..cscesesserccases Street ....6 2H bie City and State 7... eee THE. ROAD.ought to be in the hands of Cver HORDE By GEOR( 13th Street 50 Wai ‘Name City and State ..c.ccssevseeseees man and woman in the country—Carl Brodsky. . Filled with historic facts, exposing capitalism and fascism —simply told, making interesting reading—Wm. Gropper. THE ROAD A Romance of the Proletarian Revolution E MARLEN (Spiro) 623 pp. $2.00 Workers Book Shop|,’ |. OF, Station D, Red Star Press ha hi want io get the DAILY WORKER every day! * by it hening the DAILY For one year $6.00 ($800 in Manhattan For six months $3.00 ($4.50 in Manhattan For three months $1.50 (§2.25 in Manhattan and Bronx) For-one month $0.50 ($0.75 in Manhatten and Bronx) and and OR aes, LE F