The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 19, 1932, Page 3

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/ Se DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1932 _~ ae oa WASHINGTON REPORTS JAPAN | Daily Worker wil ||MUST UNLOAD CINDER ||schmies, very m, —||‘LIBERATOR’ TEMPORARILY STOPPED; PLANS ATTACK ON THE SOVIET UNION BY COMING SPRING (CONTINVED FROM PAGE ONE) the world proletariat and the colonial | masses. | The Japanese seizure of Manchuria has been supported by the United States and oiher imperialist powers | precisely to enable Japan to organ- | ize Manchuria as a military base for the planned armed _ intervention against workers’ Russia. The fight against imperialist war, the fight for the defense of the Chinese Revelution and the Soviet Union, is a basic part of the fight of the world working class against the capitalist program of starvation tor the unemployed millions and their dependents. Nanchang, capital of Kiangsi Pro- yinee, Central China, was surrounded yesterday by the Chinese Red Army as the imperialists were frantically | pushing their plans for the dismem- | berment of China and war against | the Soviet Union. | Sharp fighting occurred before the| city gates. Imperialist press dis- patches admit that the fall of the city is momentarily expected. Nan- chang is situated to the southeast of the important industrial city of Hankow, towards which Red Army detachments have been advancing for several days past. The latest dis- patches from Hankow admitted that the Chinese Red Army was within ten miles of the city at one point and had captured three towns near- by. In each case, the Nanking troops had deserted to the Red Army. Over two-thirds of the province of Kiangs! is now included in the Chin- ese Soviet Republic, which has it’s capital in that province. Threat Against Chinese Eastern Railway. Chinese militarists, armed and sup- ported by the Japanese, are threat- ening to seize the Chinese Eastern Railway, jointly operated by China and the Soviet Union. The militar- ists have launched a drive against Pinhsien in preparation for an attack on Harbin, Raid Offices of Kuomintarig Papers. Students nad workers in Peiping staged a huge anti-Japanese demon- stration yesterday to enforce the boy- cott against Japanese goods. The headquarters of several Kuomintang papers were raided in search of Japanese-manufactured newsprint. In one office where Japanese newsprint was found, the Kuomintang editor was clamped into a wooden cage and put on public exhibition for several hours, The Kuomintang officials retaliated by declaring martial law and the prohibition of all anti- Japanese demonstrations. Japanese official communiques is- | sued yesterday at Mukden contain the arrogant boast that “hundreds of Chinese have paid with their lives for the victories they won last week, when Japanese casualties ran high.” ‘The Japanese are pushing their ven- geance drive against the Red Par- tisan troops in the Province of Jehol. The partisans are still giving a good account of themsleves, Several sharp battles are occurring. i 9M) Meet Despite Terror; Spread Strike; | Rally fer Miles for Mass Picketing ‘CONTINUED KHOM PAGE ONED as to select delegates to the “Spread the Strike” Conference scheduled for January 24. No trace of Joe Weber and Bill Duncan has been found. It is feared that they were fowlly murdered =| the hands of the Kentucky coal op- erators. Boih the strike leaders were “arrested” on a bus in Tennessee, 20 | miles from the Kentucky border on aj} “warrant” issued in Kentucky. ‘They | have ot been heerd from since Fri- | day night when they were led hand- cuffed presumably to the Harlan County jail. Telephone calis to jails in three Kentucky counties and to in noncommittal answers. from the ‘Tennessee authorities have resulted Jail officials, » Searching parties are being tormed to srour the hills for 2 trace of these two strike leaders. Despite Sheriff Blair's declarations that ““no National Miners Union strike meetings would be held Sun- day’, meetings were held in Wallins Creek with 500 attending. The mass meeting had been called by the Sec- tlon Strike Committee. Two hundred thugs with several machine guns ar- rived on the scene. Previously Sheriff Henry Blair had warned the miners to leave their women and children home, if they tried to hold 2 meeting as he would shoot them down “like an invading army.” The theatre own- er owner who had rented his place for the meeting backed down at the jast minute. A warehouse was used for a meeting place. Meetings to spread the strike, to form greater picket lines, and to elect delegates to the “Spread the Strike” conference, were also held in Straight Creek, Greasy Creek, Morgan Hollow and other piaces. A recent Strike Bulletin of the aif a 3 5 FF i straight’ Creek Mines to smash the fev*al injunction issued against 92 ‘ leagz-s, . ors irom miles around will Con.2 tO Straight Creek to picket, strike area today. Fifteen hundred to two thousand miners will march on Middiesboro, Ky., today in demonstration against the lies spread by the American | |munist Party remain outside the Carry “Question and | Answer Column” | Many workers who take a very |part in furthering the struggles that are led daily by the Com- |Party because they are unclear on various Aspects of the attitude of the Communist Party to the burn- jing questions of the day both at| |home and internationally. | The Recuiting Drive which the ‘Communist Party is now conduct- ing makes it more necessary than | lever that these questions be | |answered systematically in order | | |to remove any possible barriers | | |that may be in the way of the | workers .joining .the .Party .on grounds of unclarity and uncer- tainty. || The Daily Worker, therefore, | | will carry once more as a special feature a “Question and Answer Column” to which workers are urged to address their queries. Although it will be impossible in many cases to answer all questions fully, references will be given to) books and pamphlets which work- ers should read for complete answers. RELIEF WORK HIT IN PINEVILLE; URGE WIDER AID Wagenknecht Scores | Jailings, Threats | {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) miners and their famished families. In spite of all the terror, injunctions, brutal beatings, kidnappings and ar- rests, we will support this strike to the very end. “Our relief committes are contin- uing to function. They will continue {to build and rebuild the apparatus United States. labor. this work fof thirty-seven cénts an hour, but with the development of unemployment “the company is help- ing out the situation” by firing the workers and creating forced labor. Work to Get Some Fuel For the privilege of doing this forced labor, the company allows them to grovel through the cinders to pick out little pieces of coke that happens to be in the cinders. The people are compelled to get fuel in this manner because of unemploy- ment, their gas has been turned off in the company houses. We workers must organize together on Sparrows Point in the different residence blocks. We must demand free gas, electricity, rent and fuel. ‘We must demand jobs at living wages or unemployment insurance that amounts to our full wages, If the bosses and the government cannot give us jobs at living wages, we de- mand that they shall provide us with the means of livelihood through a sys- tem of unemployment insurance at the expense of the bosses and gov- ernment, . Coke and coal pickers, forced labor- ers unemployed and employed workers of Sparrows Point... all together \tor distribution of relief. We call upon the workers of the entire coun- try to guarantee that these relief committees, operating as they do CARS FOR “PRIVILEGE” | Workers Formerly Paid 37 Cents an Hour for This Privilege ; Must Do It Gratis Now ‘By a Worker Correspondent) SPARROWS POINT, Md.—The capitalism that is now} standing on its last legs is attempting to stem the tide of |rising workers by filling the press with lies of forced labor in the Soviet Union. The bosses think they can make the work-| ers think forced labor is in the Soviet Union and not in the Well, there is forced labor right in Sparrows Point, Md. Negro workers, mothers and children unload cars of cinders }and spread the cinders around and fill up places where the company wants the cinders placed. No money is paid for this Formerly workers used to do¢- with the children and mothers .. . or- ganize block branches in Sparrows Point and go to the main office of the company to demand work or wages. Don’t Starve and FYeeze! .For further information write or call the Unemployed Council of Baltimore at 9 South Greene St., Baltimore. Md. Ky. Miners Look to Communist Party (By a Worker Correspondent) HUEYSVILLE, Ky.—There was a time when the miners of the Big Sahdy Coal Fields were very ignorant. | But this is not true today. Planned economy, Communism is upermost in the minds of the miners here. Those that I speak to understand the cap-| italist system of robbery very well. They know what the American Legion stands for. For every one in favor of the Legion two can be found in favor of the program of the Work- ers Ex-servicemen’s League. Defend the Soviet Union against the attack of the bosses! PLAN NEW ATTACKS ON WORKERS e | = © x hy os ce i | Pruden, Tennessee. under the most vicious terror, are} provided with adequate funds. | “In your shops, mines, mills, or-) ganizations, trade unions and neigh- borhoods—form groups of Kentucky- Tennessee Striking Miners’ Legion against the N.M.U. and to demand the release of the nine strike leaders held in jail. Section strike conferences and mass meetings are to be held in Wallins Creek, Greasy Creek, Four Mile, Brush Creek, Middlesboro and port to the W. J. R. immediately for instructions and collection lists. All organizations are caHed upon to tm- Mass Evictions. ‘Thitty Wallins Creek striking | miners were given eviction notices and several have already been|the striking Kentucky - Tennessee evicted. From 30 to 60 deputies with | miners and their families. Rush thachine guns are present at every |funds at once immediately to the eviction. Kentucky-Tennessee Striking Miners’ ‘The Harlan miners report great | Relief Campaign of the W. IL. R., 16 loyalty to the National Miners | West 2ist Street, New York City.” FREE PRISONERS efforts are being made to bring out a larger number of Harlan County miners. The miners say they will come out despite the renewed wave | of terror led by the old experienced killer, Sheriff Blair. Strikers’ Ranks Solid. | ‘The ranks of the strikers remain | sieged the jail in Bilbao, Spain, today, solid. Only 67 miners are working (defying the artillerymen who stood in all Knox County, and the major-| with drawn sabers and ready guns, ity of them are boy strikebreakers | and forced the prison officiels to re- from 12 to 13 years old. leas two Communist prisoners. The ‘The Pineville “Sun,” capitalist press reports that ‘the Com- owned and AT “ANTI-COMMUNIST” MEET In Need of Medical | A t te ntion Comrade John Schmies, one of our old Party members and a leading fighter in the trade union struggles in Detroit and elsewhere has been injured very seriously in| | an automobile accident, and is now in the Harper Hospital, De- troit, Michigan. } His situation is extremely ser-| | lious and his recovery depends) | upon the ability to get expert | |medical and surgical attention | | which means a great expense. Our Party and the Trade Union Unity | | League cannot afford to lose the| | services of Comrade Schmies. We hope that this brief mention | of the seriousness of his condition | will prompt the unions of the T.| U. U. L. and individual members who are able, to restore Comrade Schmies to the ranks of the mili- tant working class, COMRADE LARI OLD BOLSHEVIK, DEAD IN MOSCOW |\Was Member of C. C.| of Communist Party; |Workers Mourn Death Cable by Inprecorr | MOSCOW.—Comrade Larin, an old Bolshevist member of the Central Executive Committee of the Soviet Union, member of the Supreme Eco- nomic Council and member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, died in Moscow, January 18, Comrade Larin’s service to the work- ing class was the introduction of the five day week. The workers all over thé Soviet Union mourn the death of the great Bolshevik and working class leader. | * e 8 ROTE FAHNE SUPPRESSED BERLIN.—The socialist. Grzesinski, minister of the interior, suppressed the Rote Fahn for three days com- mencing January 16 because the pa~ per referred to Noske as the murder~ DISTRICTS, L.S.N.R, GROUPS MUST RUSH The Liberator, weekly organ of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, which has just published a special | Scottsoboro issue, did so under the most try financial conditioné Some came from the d tricts, t, sufficient to insure a steady fund for the regular printing of the paper. Before a base can be established and systematic printin; it will be necessary to stop publishing The Liberator for a short while until suf- ficient funds are gathe ment of the next issue when ready. L. 8. N. R. groups will largely de- pend the next issue of The Liberator. As has been pointed out before, the districts have not only not paid for their bundles, but have not yet sent Districts must accept these respon in money raised through affa Districts must accept these respon- sibilities. Raise Funds in Mass Organizations, Trade Unions In addition, they must now mass organizations and trade unions, pring before them the critical situa- tion of The Liberator and ask for donations and weekly funds as subsidies, no matter how small the amount. The sooner these funds are raised and rushed into The Liberator, the sooner the paper will be printed. The national office is straining every. nerve to meet the situation, but any delay in the is- suing of the paper will lie directly in the failure of the districts and L. 8S. N. R. groups to act quickly in paying at least part of their bills and in raising funds from mass organi- Announce- will be made visit Upon the districts and | sustaining | | FUNDS FOR REGULAR ISSUE OF PAPER ) zations " | Liberator Builds Solidarity of Negro and White Workers the Liberator, although its chief function is the fight for the rights of masses, is a paper for egro and white workers. Without nity of both, we cannot win the iggles of the entire working-class against starvation, wage-cuts and evictions; and without a unity of both we cannot win the fights against special persecution of the Negro lynch law, Jimcrowism, debt chain gangs; for Negro rights and the right of self-determination ot the Negro masses in the Black Belt of the south. Whether it is in an eviction struggle, a fight for un- employment relief, or in a strike, only | the solidarity of the Negro and white workers, fighting side by side, will win for them their demands. the L 0 the best and most s for building this making provisions for T correspondence, more les. live news of working- poems, book reviews ays. The Liberator in the forefront to expose always every act of discrimination and per secution against the Negro masses, must be spread throughout every working-class section in the country Districts, L. S. N. R. groups: Raise funds immediately to enable The Liberator to continue. Rush dona- tions in without delay. If the amount is small, don't wait. Send it in im- mediately and raise more! Upon YOU depends the next issue of The Lib ‘erator. Show your solidarity by lrushing funds into The Liberator, Room 201, 50 East 13th St. New York. POLICE LIARS EXPOSE SELVES “ IN TAMPA FRAMEUP TRIAL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) {| The clumstness of the whole frame- lup is rousing the workers more ev- guns of the type one of the workers, Lezama, is supposed to have been ery day. In spite of the efforts of the police to keep them out, they are Relief | Volunteers! These groups must re-| then enactment of legislation for the | mediately mobilize for the relief of | ‘Three thousand Communists be- | edited by the coal operators’ paid agent, Herndon Evans, carries lying and vicious statements attackig the Natioal Miners’ Union and Com-~ munism right next to an adyertise- ment of patent medicines which guarantees to cure pellagra, a star- vation disease, in its last stages. Miners in the Ely Mines, Knox County, have been violating the in- junction since last Monday. Five tons of fodd arrives today from the Cincinnati Workers’ Inter- national Relief. The activities of the N. M. U, Women’s Auxiliaries is in- creasing. There are 125 women in the Wallins Creek Auxiliary. No bond has yet been fixed for the nine leaders in jail, namely, Vern Smith, John Harvey, Vincent Kame- novich, Clarina Michaelson, Julia Parker, Dorothy Weber, Ann Bar- ton, Norma Martin and Margarct Fontaine. Arrest Charles W. Peters. Charles W. Peters, in charge of re- lief in Pfheville and chairman of the Central Relief Committee, was ar- rested yesterday in Wallins Creek while getting delegations of ‘miners to go North to help raise relief. Sheriff Blair of Harlan, just be- fore the arrest, and at the time he issued his murderous orders against section strike meetings, declared: “I have no objection to the presence of the United Mine Workers of Amer- ica in Harlan County, as that or- ganiaztion is regularly affiliated with the thoroughly recognized American Federation of Labor.” This coal op- erators’ gun thug seys he favors the A. F, of L., but will kill the leaders of the N.M.U. Mass Demonstration Tuesday. On Tuesday afternoon a delega- tion of miners will leave for Frank- fort, the capitol of Kentucky, to put the demands of the miners, employed and unemployed, to Governor Laf- foon, and to protest the kidnapping of Weber and Duncan and demand the end of the terror reign in the coal fields as well as the release of the arrested strike leaders. Thirteen miners, their wives and children are leaving today for New York and Philadelphia to help col- lect retlef and to expose the terror conditions in Kentucky, as well as to get support for the growing strike struggles. munists marched away with the freed prisoners, waving the Red Flag and singing the Internationale”. A general strike has been declared, with reports coming through that it has spread to nearby mining dis- tricts. Superb militant action of the work- ers was reported from the town of Sagunta where striking metal work- ers disarmed the custom guards and forced the civil guards to retreat beaten to their barracks. Wide- spread unrest and mass movement against the church and the present reactionary government which is sup- ported by the socialists, is indicated from other parts of Spain. In the |town of Oncado, Alfara del Patri- |archo and Marrocho attempts were | made to burn down the churches, | Expose Renegades in | Pittsburgh Meeting | (By a Worker Correspondent) PITTSBURGH, Pa.—Swabeck, a ‘Trotzkyite, was scheduled to speak in a Greek coffee house in this city. His intentions were to confuse the Greek workers and propagandize in favor of counter revolution. Leaflets were issued and distributed among the workers in Greek and English. The Greek comrades went to the place and before the renegade real- ized what happened Comrade Kara- vas took the floor and opened the meeting in the name of the Com-~- munist Party, exposing the program of the renegades, The renegade tried repeatedly through the owner of the place to stop Karavas, but was unsuccessful. The workers were so enthused over Karavas's speech that they demanded that he go on, with the result that Karavas spoke for over an hour and a half. At the conclusion of his speech Karavas appealed to join the Com- munist Party and contribute to the Greek paper Empros with satisfactory results. The sentiment of the workers was such that when Swabeck finally took the floor, instead of attacking the Communist Party openly he decided to speak in favor of the Party and the Soviet Union. He did not do | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ORB) {deportation of militant foreign born workers, for dental of the right of press t6 a0 ‘militant working class publications, for the revocation of all mafling rights from Communist pa- pers and magazines for the amend- to prevent the passage from one state to another.of anything or any body which the hunger government of ‘Hoo- ver may interpret as revolutionary, for the .creation of = special State | Department to “investigate and keep track of Communist activity,” and finally for the complete outlawing of the Communist Party, Young Com- ;™munist League and the Young Pio- neers of America. The first three speakers, Littleton, | secretary of Secretary of Labor Doak, rehashed the stale attacks about Communism “destroying the home, family, marriage and happiness.” Un- derlying all their speeches, however, was the call for violence against any attempt on the part of the working class to organize real resistance to the Hoover hunger program. ‘This incitement to open violence against militant workers was clearly expressed by Representative Eslick of Tennessee who said: “As soon as 2 Communist puts his head up, we should throw him in jafl and then find a law to justify it. If we can’t find the law we should make one.” Even this talk of legal action against Communists was thrown over- board as this Southern bourbon, a member of the Fish Committee, ad- vanced along his harangue against the Communist Party. Calling the Communist Party a “mad dog,” Ee- lick told his audience of well-dressed and well fed listeners that in his | State they shot mad dogs without any mercy. This was an open call to extra-legal violence against all mik- tant workers. In addition he asked for federal laws prohibiting the appearance of candi- dates of the Communist Party on any ballot, county, city, state or na- tional, ing of the Interstate Commerce Act | ‘The “star performer” of the eve- ning, Hamilton Fish, began his tirade against the Communist. Party with the reading of @ letter from William Green, President -of the American Federation of Labor to the Convention. The praise which Fish heaped upon the A, F. of L. for tts attacks upon the Com- munist Party andthe revolutionary trade unions were-enough to-con~ vince any worker; if by any -wild chance he should have been pres- ent, of the fascist nature of that, organization. Calling it the ad- vanee guard of the fight against Communism, Fish asked the capi American Federation of Labor heads for their faithful services to the American capitalist class. vention” closed with the appoint. ment of a committee of five mem- jbers, Your from patriotic organiza- tions and one from the American Federation of Labor to give organiza- tional expression to the drive against | | the Communist Party outlined by the fascists who spoke at the Conven- tion. Throughout the entire convention rang the note of a rabid attack against the Soviet Union. Unable to teconcile “‘democracy” with starva~ tion and terror, the fascists resorted to the worst form of lies and slander against the workers’ fatherland. Their fear of the success of the Five Year Plan turned itself into an at- tack upon the Soviet Union for hay- ing “undermined” the standard of living of American workers. They were very careful to conceal the fact tha tit was not the success of the Five Year Plan that was undermin- ing the living conditions of Amer- ican workers but the failure, break- down and bankruptcy of capitalism that was responsible. Fish called upon all reactionary organizations to flood Congress with a demand that his bills for suppression of the work- ing class organization be passed. The working class must answer the reactionaries and fascists represented at the Convention by strengthening their organizations, by struggling more determinedly than ever for Un- employment Insurance and imme- diate relief and by supporting and joining the Communist Party. Against the anti-Soviet provocation and slander the working class must rally in millions to the defense of the Soviet Union. Answer the Anti- Communist Convention by intensify- ing the fight against starvation and terror! Join and build the Commu- nist Party! LYNCHERS IN VICIOUS ATTACKS AS SCOTTSBORO HEARING NEARS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) people, forced by mass pressure and gomery, mother of 17-year old Olin | the boys and their parents and other Montgomery, one of the Scottsboro | *in to drop their pretense of “defend- boys, Paul Stifon, playwright, ing” the boys, are carrying on a vici- Gordon, young Negro writer, Lowell | US back-stage attack attack against Wakefield, former Southern organizer | the fight to save and free the boys. of the I. L. D. and Irving Schwab,| In Chattanooga, an attempt to dis- one of the I. L. D. attorneys in the | bar George W. Chamlee, chief of staff case, of the defense, is led by Stephen talists of America to reward the | | | | The second “Anti-Communist Con. this because he was in favor of the “In one word, you reproach ms |Party, but in order to save his necl: with intending to do away with |and mislead the workers. Finally Mass meetings and section strike con- ferences are being held all ever ihe Jeor property. Preciscly so: that ts | the meeting was disolved and ae Jest whet we inton’.”—Marx, beck left very much disappointed. In the meantime, the southern Roddy, Klan attorney of the N. A.) lynch bosses and their Negro and|4.C. P. In New York, Walter White | white reformists tools have sharpencd |i5 busy visiting the officers of “liberal” their attecks against the defense. ‘The | Publications and flooding the Negro misleaders of the, TWational Associa. | Press with lies in an attempt to mo- \ i er of Liebknecht, Luxemburg and other revolutionary workers. Noske is at present the president of Hannover as a reward for his treachery during the German. revolution. : ‘The editor of the Communist pa- per, the Daily Rote Arbeiterzeitung, | published in Tangermund was sen- tenced to imprisonment in the fort- ress on the usual charge of prepar- ing treason, MAGAZINE OUT \“Soviet Russia Today” Banqueted The first issue of the magazine, SOVIET RUSSIA TODAY,” was greeted at a birthsday party held at |the Stuyvesant Casino, Friday, Jan. 15, with 500 workers present. Amid enthusiastic cheering, the first copy of the press was eagerly bought for $65 by 2 sympathizer. Marcel Sherer, national secretary, gave the pledge of the membership of the FSU for 50,000 paid circulation by May Ist and 100,000 by Nov. 7 15th anniversary. As the Soviet workers enter the fourth year of the final year of the Five-Year Plan, we join with them to build up a weapon thru “SOVIET RUSSIA TODAY” to | found with. Contradicting each other and fril- ing completely in most cases to iden- tify the 16 workers, the police wit- nesses concentrated their fire on Felix Marrera, Lezama and Eugene Cabrerra, a 21-year-old cigar worker, in @ desperate effort to railroad them to jail. Under cross examination, Of- ficer Walker admitted that Marrero was beaten up by a gang of police till his clothes were soaked in blood. After all the police had testified that the shot came from an upstairs window in the Temple, Officer Waters stated that he saw the flash coms from 2 downsteirs window “about two feet above a man’s head.” In flat contradiction to the tesii- mony of Officer McWilliams that he saw @ parade being formed inside the Labor Temple through the door, it ‘was proved that it is impossible to see through the door from the out-- Side because of a wooden screen which blocks the sidewalk from the inside of the hall. packing the courtroom tm solidarity with the framed workers. At a mass meeting in the Labor Temple, a workers jury was elected which re- ports to the workers every night ex- posing every step in the frame-up. Not having been mentioned im the testimony Fred Crawford was releas- ed Saturday. ‘With the placing of Lopes on she witness stand, another attempt wa* made to play on the race prejudice of the jury of backward white farin- ers by introducing the “Lfberator’ organ of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. ‘This was also brought ont in the testimony of Mayor Chancey who stated that a committes of workers elected by the United Front Confer ence for the celebration of November | 7 had visited him a number of times asking for a parade permit. Chancey |said thet he refused the permit be {cause “Negro and white would be | marching through = Negro neighbor | hood and this constituted a copy and it is issued monthly. Every | Defense funds are vital for the and friend of the Soviet Union will| smashing of the frameup. All work- want to secure this magazine and/|ers organizations must rush money should immediately get in touch with | immediately to the International Le- the local branch of the FSU or the| bor Defense and the Cigar Workers National Office, FSU, 30 E. 11th St., Industrial Union. Only support by answer the lies and attacks of the enemies of Soviet Russia and to reach the millions of American workers with the truth about conditions of their working class brothers in the USSR. “The first issue is just of the press and we expect to build up this illus- trated magazine as the foremost working class publication in the United States. “The first issue carries an article |by K. Radek, on “How Intervention |is Prepared,” which tells us about the treacherous role played by American | Imperialism in Siberia. Other articles ate by: A. A. Heller, “Two Systems”; Scott Nearing, “Building the New World”; “Visit to the Red Army”; “History of Dneiperstroy”; “Is the Five-Day Week Given UP?” Letters from the mill workers of Red Putilov and the Don Basin miners to the American Workers. The magazine is well illustrated and popularly written with the most interesting news and reports on the Soviet Union including letters from the American Workers Delegation. The magazine sells for 10 cents a Workers! Do the places where you spend your money advertise in the Worker? ASK THEM TO DO Mm SEND US THEIR NAMES! bee Bate OSA 50 E. 13th St. N. ¥. ST New York City. Red Builders, help get subscriptions. | the entire working class will free the | workers who are faced with 20 year sentences each. THE WESTERN WORKER Comes Out January Ist - A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West RAISE FUNDS! 52 Issues $2 Name City . BUILD IT! 26 Issues $1 SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c - Street vite State tees Western Worker Campaign Committee 18 FOURTH STREET, San Francisco, Calif. For ome year $5.00 ($8.00 For six months 33.00 ($4.10 in Manhattan and Brom Tor three months $1.50 ($7.84 m Manhatian and Fisar)” Fight for the Subs Campaign (WITH CASH ONLY) DAO... cescsvescesvesssascestione 'T want to get the DAILY WORKBR every dey! in Munhatian and For one month 99.50 (99.75 im Manhattan and Brome) See

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