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~~ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1 ae Page ‘Three — MOSCOW TYPIST TELLS OF NEW CONDITIONS OF WORK Letter Refutes Slanderous Lies of U.S. Capital- , ists on Forced Labor Asks Workers to Establish Correspondence Relations with U.S.S. R. Comrade Freda and Ernest: I received your letter through the workers’ correspond- | ents bureau. I am also a typis IN U.S.S.R. Moscow, USSR. t and gladly accept your chal- lenge for an interesting contact through correspondence. | First of all, I should like to say something about myself. I am 25 years old. My name is Maria Solomina. My husband | is an electrical engineer, a scientific worker at the Communist Academy. I am living in Moscow since October, and since birth I lived in the citye of Saratov, which is situated on the Volga. The city of Saratov and a number of adjacent small towns are called the lower Volga district. Socialist Giants. In Tsarist Russia Saratov was a small state capital, poorly developed industrially. Saratov is now a large district center. Before, small, pri- vately-owned factories were puffing away around the suburbs of Saratov, now giants of gpcialist industry are growing up in its suburbs. Thus, be- fore my very eyes, the following fac- tories have grown up for the last three or four years; a combine plant, a large lumber factory, a silicate brick plant and a cracking plant is being built, etc. I am telling you about Saratov be- cause I have not been very long in Moscow and therefore cannot say very much about it. You probably know ‘about Moscow from the news- papers, from conversations with com- rades who have been in our Soviet Union. Seething With Activity. ‘That Moscow is surging with ac- tivity is easily understood. Moscow is the center, the capitel of the U.S.S.R. But here, in the U.S.S.R., you will at present not find a single corner, no matter how remote, where there is quiet and stagnation. Our entire country is seething with con- struction. You write that you have a child, a daughter. This is very good. I have regard for people who want to hhave children. I shall also soon be a mother. This summer, in the month of July, I shall have a little visitor. Here in the U.S.S.R. expectant mothers are given from three to four months’ leave of absence with full pay. Now I am working and do social work in the Young Communist League, but I shall soon leave for the decreed four months’ leave. There is something else I would like to tell you about. When my co-workers learned that I am estab- lishing contact with a comrade in “Rebel” Clergymen Bow to Duluth Fascists DULUTH, Minn—Two ministers and a rabbi who described themselves as “rebels” didn’t have the guts to either endorse or assist the Workers International Relief in their tag day tor the striking Kentucky miners. Their excuse was that times in Duluth are hard and that they would be “criticized” if they helped the Kentucky miners, whose families are starving. They went instead to the Mayor's so-called unemployment jommittee, which is conducting a Beok Exposing Ford Plant eppiesaed Detroit, Mich, March 20, year Comrades: Some two years ago I happened to valk into a book stand on Woodward Ave. Then the state of Michigan hap- pened to be under the regime of Fred Green as governor, the same Green that took part in witnessing the massacre of the Ford workers March ‘th in Dearborn. And the same Green that made his millions out of prison labor in this state. At this book store my eyes had been struck by two piles of books with orange-colored covers. The title was “J—8,” and the name of the writer was W. Cunningham, who, ac- cording to the book's foreword, has spent eight years in the Ford service that bears that title, J—8. It looked so interesting that I could not help but look inside the book. ‘There still is in my memory one pass- age of that book's contents: “Everybody at the Ford's must be a producer, even the operatives (read stool pigeons). And they produce something like this: if one of them hates someone, he only has to go to the office (the stool pigeons’ hive) and report that so and so has a lot of stolen Ford's goods in his base- ment. The victim forthwith is called to the operative’s office and is forced to sign a voluntary search warrant. ‘The victim is surprised, he does not care for anyone to search his home; but, with the threat of losing his job and being prosecuted afterward by the outside authorities, he signs the search warrant. The operatives take their pockets full of different todls, nails, bolts and go on breaking into that man’s home. They proceed right to the base- ment, each one of them emptics his pockets there; while one of them keeps the victim scared to death in the rear, and as soon as the victim reaches his basement he is confronted with the justification for the raid. The operatives’ pay is raised; the man loses His job, and has to keep his mouth shut, because he is threat- 1931. Before that | the same trade, they asked me to | request you to describe the work- ing conditions of typists under a capitalist regime. What technical 4 innovations have you in equipping and organizing of a typists’ office. We want to know this, because we are building a new, large combine of the “Pravda” and we could ap- ply useful improvements in our conditions, At present our typists’ office is equipped as follows: We occupy two rooms, the walls of which are coy- ered with canvass. There is plenty of light in the rooms. The typists hhave special tables and chairs. There are soft pads under the typewriters (silencers). Each table has a specially adjusted lamp for evening work. In all we have 22 typists and we work in shifts—from 10 o’colck in the morning to 5:o’clock in the evening and from 5 o'clock in the evening until midnight. Rest Periods. After each hour of work we have a five-minute rest period. Then we havea half-hour rest period for lunch, The shifts change every five days. Our wages range from 100 to 145 rubles per month. Our group of 22 women get along very well. We work on the principle of socialist com- petition. ~ Vacations. Soon our regular vacations will be- gin. We get a month's vacation and many of my comrades go to rest homes and sanatoriums—in Moscow, on the, Volga, in the Crimea or in the Caucauses. My comrades have asked me to send you warm, comradely, greetings. They will await your reply. I am closing my letter. do for’the first time. Please tell us what interests you. Write more about the working condi- tions and the struggle of the work- ers and about yourself. Regards to the little Becker. With comradely greetings, MARIA SOLOMINA, Iverskaia 48, Room 15, Moscow, This will USSR, campaign to “Give Your Neighbor a Job,” a huge farce, and asked advice about helping in the tag day for the Kentucky miners, “We'll resign if you endorse that,” was the answer of the Mayor's Un- employment Committee, which con- sists of American Legion fascists and bankers. And so of course, they ex- Plained, it wouldn’t be “policy” to do anything “publicly” for the Kentucky miners.” ened with prosecution by the outside authorities, There were hundreds of other cases presented in that book, but unfortu- nately the man asked one dollar per copy and I had only sixty-five cents in my pocket that night. But when I came back the following day the man told me that the state (Green's) police together with Ford's operatives confiscated every copy of it. And, while I have searched for that book since, none can be found. PS. Calls All Workers to Send Pennies to Save Daily Worker (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK—The “Daily Wor ker” which fights and exposes the Fords and bosses without a quiver is the only workers‘ paper printed in english in the United States that is genuine in leading the sur- pressed workers of all nationalities and races for a brighter tomorrow. Now, the “Daily Worker” is ser- iously being threatened with ex- tinction unless immediate financial help is forthcoming. Workers, it is up to you to save our “Daily” from financial disaster. Do not grant your enemies their wishes to see our paper die, Kush your pennies in; do not delay; save the “Daily Worker” so it may serve ~ you in your battles against the giant octopus, capitalism, in the future as it has done in the past. Rush your donations in today, for tomorrow may be too late. ————————— IRE OF WORKERS AROUSED OVER FORD MASSACRE Worker Says ‘ays Time Has} Come for a Practical Fight Los Angeles, Cal. Dear Comrade:— ‘The crimes against the workers of Detroit, Michigan perpetrated by the Ford Secret Service organization in conjunction with the other stupid agents of the class who rob and ex- ploit the workers has aroused the ire and resentment of thousands of per- sons who did not heretofore realize the audacity and the extreme enmity of the privileged claoss in dealing with the downtrodden, hungry mas- ses of unemployed workers. The time has come when we must intensify our organization activities and commence the application of those practical methods through which we may gain results and hasten the day when we can be freed from the curse of wage slavery. ‘The Ford plant at Detroit could easily afford to put the workers on a six hour—four shift plan making pos- sible the employment of hundreds of additional workers. So much can be said about the subject that time and space interfere. Yours for the emancipation of the workers. DOCTOR DENIES TREATMENT TO UNION MEMBERS Dear Sir: Bryson, Tenn. In reply to the free medical treat- ment that the Knoxville Journal is writing so much about, I want to say | that I was arrested on the fourth day of February and put in jail, charged with criminal syndicalism. A thug reported to my wife that I had been taken out for a ride. She got so worried it drove her insane. Some of the National Miners’ Union members came to my house with some food for my family, When they saw how sick my wife was, they sent for the doctor, but he wouldn’t come. They sent after him again and he refused to come. They told him: “If it's money you want, we'll pay you, don’t worry about that. He refused to come, even if he was paid. He said that I was a union member and active in the union and he had orders from the com- pany not to take care of union mem- bers, If he had come, he might have saved her. Because she did not get any medical attention, she was taken away to an insane asylum. They thought by throwing me in jail they would turn me against the National Miners’ Union, but instead of that I’m a union man from the top of my head to four foot under ground. JESS SMITH. Bryson, Tenn. 110 DELEGATES IN DETROIT PLEDGE FIGHT DEFENSE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) i his col 8 f & © the defense of the Soviet Union ana {ne fist ees ane Pisa gs Pe a : Sz jo strike fund, | the Chinese masses. at 1 pm. at Ferry Hall. 58 2 38 4 A 38 ‘The union urges all painters and | 1, To declare the week of March ~ zis z 33 ii ie §_ |Paperhangers to join the union and | 31 to April 6 as anti-war week. Com. Mishoff, member of the Fun-| Fea a oe LJ AS &%_|to support the united front movement 2,To organize an Anti-War De-|eral Committee of the four workers §: bets ae i de ah in the fight for better conditions Be monstration on April 6 at Grand ‘ i 91 1, Boston , 6 Ja higher wage. Everyone is invite Circus Park at 7 p.m. and a parade amet ai ay aout He ohacter a A Ao 18,803 3,993 21.2 |to attend its meetings, 8 p. m. on prior to the Demonstration in Grand 824.02 3. Philadelphia 6,437 85 1.3 | Thursdays at 610 S. 5th Street, Circus Park. The parade will start |#"4 expenditures. “He also announ-| 193.74 “4. Buffalo 2,181 69 at 6 p.m. from Ferry Hall at Ferry |Ced that on March 25, at Cass Tech 256.18 5. Pittsburgh 2,057 69 and Russel and praeeed on Rivard | School, Second Blvd and! Vernor| 1,093.54 6. Cleveland 6,273 459 to Montcalm, then to Witherel and | Highway, a Mass Trial will be held} 1,080.63 _—7. Detroit 6,221 382 YOUR FIFTY to the Park. at which a workers’ jury will listen 1,217.19 8. Chicago 11,232 666 3. All organizations are urged to|to the testimony of the witnesses of 382.09 9. Minneapolis 3,273 36 call special meetings to adopt anti-|the killing of the four workers. That 60.02 10. Kansas City 1,485 5 war resolutions and endorse the de-|% Monument will be built on the 10.51 11. N.& §. Dakota 279 cisions of this conference. grave of the four murdered workers. 226.79 12, Seattle 2,351 4, Sunday, April 3, was set aside |The cornerstone will be laid on May 6146 13, San Francisco 2,708 for special house to house canvass- | First. 4188 15. Connecticut 1,896 1 50 EAST 13th ST. ing with literature and to secure 15.40 16. N.&S.Carolina 269 ¢ signautres for the Unemployment] suGGESTS NAMES FoR Vv 0.75 17. South 125 4 Insurance Bill, FORD 6.19 18. Butte 292 92 Ame Spiers |, y's! Workee, Gorrespondensy © || AEN, We Denver eM ‘ Name 6. A committee was named to pre: DETROIT, Mich.—I suggesg the | 986,500.57 68,225 6.219 62,008 Address pare for distribution of May Day| folowing names for the new Ford 145.01 Miscollaneous literature. cars: “The bloody four and Uae alay-) —-- A committce of 15 has been e. ery: eight.” PAG C65.0e 4 s * = ere > AGAINST WAR, OF SOVIET UNION ted to guide and direct this work. Make Political Football ot Robber General Sales Tax WASHINGTON. — With the La Guardia-Doughton “insurgent group” of Democrats and Republicans break- ing all party lines in what is clearly an attempt to use the sales tax as a presidential election football, the House of Representatives passed the fourth amendment yesterday to the new revenue act, This amendment increases the es- tate tax rates to 65 per cent for es- tates more than $10,000,000. In line with the other three amendments it in no way lessens the burden which the masses will be forced to pay in order to cover up the bank- ruptey of the American treasury. The continuation of the “opposi- tion” to the sales tax on the part of the Republicans and Democrats who have crossed party lines is mainly due to the tremendous mass resentment against the sales tax and the pressure brought to bear on the politicians by the anger of the mas- ses, Taking advantage of the bankrupt- | |cy o the American treasury and the whip which this situation holds over the Republican and Democratic party leaders in orcing them, des- pite the coming presidential elec- tions, t opush a bill which, with the most brutal callousness, places the entire burden o the treasury crisis on the shoulders of the masses, the “insurgents” are making a desperate effort to cash in politically with a hypocritical opposition. Behind the scenes, it is an open secret that the various amendments are being passed in order to lay the basis for a retreat from the opposi- tion to the tax bill at the last min- utes when the final vote is taken. It is hoped under cover of the care- fully staged mock battle to throw up a smoke screen so that the sales tax will be mysteriously adopted when the “fight” is over. This sales tax by levying tribute from the workers on every article that he buys in the store will be an additional crushing burden placed on his shoulders by the capitalist class whose Wall Street government is admittedly bankrupt. ‘The class character of the sales tax stands out |unmistakeably when it is remember- ed that only a few weeks ago, over “to the railroads and corpora- tions, Canton Forces Attack Chinese Soviet Districts Kuomintang Traitors Maneuver at Shanghai to Deceive Masses on Nature of Japanese Terms British Foreign Secretary Defends Japanese | Hold on Manchuria, Sponsors Division of China Faced by the rising fury of the Chinese masses, the Kuo- mintang traitors were forced yesterday to postpone the sign- ing of the Japanese terms for the ‘settltement’ of the Shang- hai problem evoked by the Jap- anese invasion in South China. A Shanghai dispatch to the New York Times reports that Gen. Chiang Kwang-nai by a “last minute refusal” to attend a parley with the Japanese “disrupted” the “peace” move. The parley was en- gineered by United States, British, French and Italian diplomats. The Kuomintang leaders were instructed by their imperialist masters to sign the Japanese terms. The dispatch admits that Gen. Chiang Kwang-nai was afraid “to acecpt responsibility for agreeing to terms which were likely to be unpopular.” The delay in signing merely means that the Kuomintang leaders are seeking more time to cary out their manouvers before the masses in the atempt to deceive them as to the Teal intent and purpose of the Jap- anese terms, which seek to set up @ so-called “international” state in the Shanghai area which in reality would be used as a military base against the Chinese Revolution. Start Attack On Chinese Soviet Districts. Although delayed for the moment in their sell-out of Shanghai, the Kuomintang are continuing to ren- der valuable services to their im- perialist masters. The new cam- paign of “Communist extermination” against the growing Chinese Soviet districts already has been begun. A Cantonese army is attacking the Soviet districts in Kiangsi and Fukien provinces at the same time that Chiang Kai-shek is sending troops against the Chinese Red Armies in Hupeh and Honan pro- vinces. The Canton clique of the Kuomintang yesterday assured the imperialists of “great successes” of the Canton armies ni Kiangsi and Fukien provinces. Shanghai press dispatches indicate that the imperi- alists are taking these latest Kuo- mintang “victories” with a grain of salt, in view both of their own pri- vate reports and the knowledge that in the previous three “Communist suppression” campaigns the Kuom- intang troops were being licked at the very time that Chiang Kai-shek was peddling paper victories. victories, the imperialists admit that so far there has been no real fight- ing between the Chinese Red Armies in Fukien and Kiangsi and the in- vading Canton troops. In the British Parliament, Sir John Simon, British Foreign Secretary yesterday defneded the Japanese ag- gressions in Manchuria and came out openly for the looting and dis- memberment of China. He declared that “nobody had the right to as- sume without an inquiry that the new Manchurian State, as a matter of fact, had been set up by Japan” and added: “At the same time there is no law and no common sense in say- ing that in no conceivable cireum- stances can there ever be a sub- division of an enormous area like China,” HALF DOLLAR CAMPAIGN Denver Jumps Up—Detroit Is Raising Its Head—Boston Barely Moving Comrades, send in your challenges in the half-dollar socialist compe- tition! The pace of the half-dollars rolling in has not increased appreciably since yesterday, although all our machinery has not had time to hit on all cylinders, Since the first announcement of the half-dollar campaign a week ago, only 6,222 half dollars have come in—less than 1,000 a day. To reach the quota of 70,000 by April first, we must get 3,000 a day! However, yesterday’s returns showed Denver increasing from 1.9 per cent to 42 per cent of its quota. Detroit jumped from 297 to 382 half dollars overnight, while Boston sent in only 38 in the same day. New York is still in the lead. The drive must be intensified on all fronts NOW! Watch this daily report! |through the various Emergency Re- | {construction Acts and banking bills | a cool two billion dollars was handed | While Canton reports its paper) ation, and the boss stevedores told Socialists? | Reports from Madrid to London | state that the Spanish capitalists, fearing the advances of Commu- | nist influence among the masses, | and the great loss of Socialist | ability to mislead the wor | acting now to exclude the | from the coalition as they nave | | | | faithfully performed their task and | their help does not seem to be so desirable at this time, The So- cialists prepared the grounc the fa: jon of the Spanish government. The Associated Press story London states: “It was reported that the Pres that the for present | | from | dent was of the belief Socialists should be excluded from | power and that a new coalition cabinet should be formed with Alejandro Lerroux, radical Repub- | lican, as Premier. ‘he Pre: | was understood to feel that the | continuation of Socialist represen- tation would mean the loss of the | | support of organized labor, since | | Syndicalists, Communists and| | jother extremists were winning| | many followers. The President | | | was reported as believing that if| | the Socialists left the government | | they would be in a better position | to regain their lost labor strength PHILA. DOCKERS REJECT PAY-CUT PLAN OF LL. A.) Marine Workers Union| Arouses Dockers to Vote Against It PHILADELPHIA, Pa. — At a gen- eral membership meeting of the In- ternational Longshoremen’s Associ- ation held at Front and South Street here Tuesday, the longshoremen un- animously rejected the proposal pre~ } sented by the officials that the dock- | ers accept a wage cut Polly Baker, head of the associ- the men that the ship owners were losing money and that a wage cut would mean more work, Rank and file longshoremen ‘took the floor and denounced the argu- ment as a proposal in favor of the ship owners. When a vote was taken all the workers voted against the cut. This action of the Philadelphia longshoremen is the result of an in- tensive mass campaign being car- ried out on the waterfront by the Marine Workers Industrial Union. Prior to the meeting where the work- ers rejected the cut the Marine Workers Industrial Union held a ser- ies of mass meetings of longshore- men warning them against the wage cut and calling upon the men to vote it down. Thousands of leaflets exposing the fact that Baker and other leaders of he I. L. A. were working for the benefit of the shipowners and advis- ing’ the dockers to take the situation in their own hands and fight the cut were distributed to the longshoremen by the Marine Workers Industrial Union Branch of een PHILA. PANTERS STOP WAGE-CUT Active in Building| Strong United Front (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—The united front movement among painters and paperhangers, started at the initiative of the Painters and Paperhangers Union affiliated to the TUUL, is re- ceiving the full support of that or- ganization. In the first strike called by the United Front Committee to stop a wage cut of a dollar a day the union members were very active on the picket line and in giving guid- ance to the strikers. The strike was a complete success. The union does not fail to spread the united front mevement in any of its work. It has held several open | the campaign is over. Up till April 5, COLUMBUS, Ohio.—In an ie 6,000 striking miners and th Gov. White has tl into the district. against a new a ton for loa reatened to wage scale of The governor's threat was issued after trestle leading to a mine which was to be operated with scab: was blown up, and jafter militant picketing had prevented the strike- breakers from getting to work State Threatens Violence. | “This violence, this disgraceful lawlessness can no longer be tol- erated,” Obio's “liberal” governor | declared. “It will be put down by force of arms, if necessary, and those found guilty will be summar- ily punished.” The armed forces to be dispatched to’ the district in- clude infantry and machine gun units, well-equipped with gas bomb: Gov. White, however, has nothing to of the hunger and misery | which drove the miners to strike. | Relief workers in the district have admitted that less than 5 per cent of the miners had any money at the beginning of March. All stored up | fruits and vegetables have been used | up and few of the families have ade- | quate clothing. | Old miners say that the situation | is as bad now as it was in 1884 and very much worse than in 192 | It has even got to the point where | mothers, from | almost collapsing Hocking Valley Miners Revolt Against Mass Starvation, Wage-Cuts Gov. White Threatens Violence Against Hungry Miners; Mobilizes Nat'l Guard By H. MacTAVI H. Ff & effort to crush the militanep families in Hocking Valley send the Ohio National Guara e miners have been on strike since Feb. 1 $3. a di y for laborers and 35 cents hunger themselves, have gone out to the highways and flagged-motorists to beg money with whith to feed their chmildren. Although this rank-and-file mili- tancy is not pleasant to the United Mine Workers’ Officialdom, Pres. Lee Hall of the Ohio district of the U. M. W. has admited that wages of Hocking Yalley miners have been cut 60 percent since thr 1927 strike~-which was betrayed by the U. M. W. The last cut was 25 percent and brought about the strike. The operators have refused to recognize the U. M. W., althongh the jabor superintendent of the | Sundya Creek Coal Co. was for- merly president of the Hocking Valley sub-district of the U. M. W. But of all the suffering the gov- ernor has nothing to say. ‘Inét@ad, he promises protection for scabs. |“Those who wish to work have the right to do so, and I shall afford them the protection which is their | due,” he said, He characterized the | strikers as a |“minority practising “lawlessness, violence, intimidation, jand terrorism,” and as “professional agitators who have neither the good of the community nor of the state at heart.” (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) existence for only a short time, shows the growth of our Party’s influence. The vote for our aldermanic can- didate in general has been lower than for Mayor, “In contrast with the showing of the candidates put up by our Party, the Socialist Party came forward with an impressive showing as th third party of capitalism. Hoan got a huge primary vote of 75,000, while the So- cialist candidate for aldermen polled over 38,000 votes, securing the nom- | ination in 20 out of 27 wards. The Socialist Party also pollgd very high in W. Allis and Racine. In Saboygen where we had no candidates, 1 So- cialist secured the nomination for aldermen, and 5 for supervisor. The vote for the social-fascists was es- pecially high in territories where at one time real struggle of the unem- ployed were led under our leadership (8. Side, Racine, etc.). The high vote is due to their capitalizing on the workers’ discontent with the clever use of demagogic phrases which we were unable to expose before the masses, and to hte open or covered support of the capitalist press, their unanimous endorsement of Hoan, who continually campaigned for a Social- ist majrity in the Common Council. t- Olecdni9gtcalleOveseethe ‘The end of the primary through which none of the candidates get on the final ballot, does not mean that we must keep on holding meetings, going to capitalist rallies, sell our platform, and convince the workers to write in the name of our candi- dates on the ballot, Especial stress must be laid on personal canvass of those workers who signed our nom- ination papers, selling them our plat- form, Daily Worker, and other litera- ture. The main point is, however, to coordinate this work with the major campaign of our Party for the coming | period: for the March 3!—April 6th Anti-War Week, and the May Ist} demonstration, which must lead to| the mobilization of thousands of | MILWAUKEE COMMUNIST VOTE IN- CREASES THREE-FOLD OVER 1930 workers behind our demands, intro- ducing a note of militancy both into the demonstration and the work be- fore shop-gates, relief stations and neighborhoods proceeding it.” RECITES TERROR OF TAMPA JAIL A.. McBride Writes of Brutality County Jail, Tampa, Fla, Dear Comrades: It is now over two months since you have heard from me, It is not because I have nothing to write. I have plenty to write about, but it is hard to get news out of this bastile. I have been here in jail over 75 days, framed up without either a trial or hearing. I have been suffering agony from my broken ribs, which were kicked in by the Tampa police. A worker in the next cell to me cut his throat and wrists and the jailers let him bleed almost to death before he got aid. The hospital attendants suggested that I hang myself. They say the law down here does not love Come munists. ‘There has been no pass issued for over six weeks for someone to come and see me. In the jailers’ eyes I am supposed to be violently insane and menace to the public. The workers here in Tampa are fed up with the starvation system. A. McBRIDE. BACKACHE? yassages, gett nights, backsches— Pirbed by'@antal httay, Teese 9 Ridney trouble oh jocks the cause, Sold air meetings where workers of this trade assemble and has made an ef- | fort to involve the AFL locals in this work. In general, the union is car- | rying on active work, in contradis- | tinction to the AFL, whose locals are | expelling unemployed members fro | non-payment of dues. | At its last meeting the union in-/| structed its finance committee to work | jointly with a similar committee of the united front for the creation of | THE WESTERN WORKER A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West RAISE FUNDS! 52 Issues $2 BUILD City 26 Issues $1 T! SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c Street .3.. seeedoccccrecccescccsccecccceccsoscccs SIMIC .rccecccresccccocecs Western Worker Campaign Committee 1164 MARKET STREET, San Francisco, Calif. DAILY WORKER! Send to Dailyatlork CENTS WILL HELP SAVE THE WRAP THIS COUPON WITH YOUR 50 CENTS NEW YORK CITY