The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 2, 1932, Page 3

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DAILY WORKEK, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1932 Edith Berkman Hospital by Stolen from Doak’s Agents BOSTON, Mass. — Edith Berkman, leader in the Lawrence textile strike hhas been spirited away from the Car- ney Hospital, where she has been ly- ing seriously ill. Her kidnapping was carried out by the police on instructions of Immi- gration Commissioner Anna. C. ‘Tillinghas who is trying to frustrate the mass demands for Berkman’s re- lease. The immigration office has refused to give the International Labor De- fense any information of her where- abouts, and there is a grave fear for Comrade Berkman’s safety. Yesterday a delegation of textile workers from Rhode Island and Mas- sachusetts who visited the East Bos- ton Immigration station to demand Edith Berkman’s release were met by @ squad of police equipped with shot M. | guns, tear gas etc. The bosses want to end Berkman’s case by killing her. Rush protests to the East Boston Immigration Station demanding that Edith Berkman be produced immedi- ately that the immigration office will be held responsible for her safety. WAR VET TELLS HOW WALL STREET HELPED WHITE GUARD GENERAL Helped Kolchak Murder Russian Workers In Siberia In 1919 By AN EX-SERVICEMAN, (Member of U. 8. Expeditionary Forces in Vladivostok.) When we arriyed in Vladivostok the city was quiet and subdued as though every body had gone fishing. Stores were closed and iron shut- tered. Business was gone. The Red Cross warehouse over- flowed with clothes, mouldy and rot- ting. Clothes, given by small chap- ters throughout the U. S., stayed in the warehouse or was given to sol- diers. One way these clothes got to those who needed them was by the soldiers stealing them, but as the guard was only a squad of 7 men and a cor- poral you couldn’t expect a wide dis- tribution immediately. One man could only carry off a dozen sweat- ers, socks or drawers, size 46, wom- en's wollen, from Terra Haute chap- ter, Iowa, or Duluth, and Montana, One man put on 17 sweaters anda green mackinaw once but he was a small man and they didn’t show beneath his sheep skin overcoat, We soldiers had warm clothes. On armistice day, 1918 we paraded Svetlanskia in Vladivostok dressed in fur hats and sheep hides which brought out the sweat, for the cold weaiher had not yet set in. In the spring of 1919 we moved out to the country. Theré was a strike of coal miners at the Suchan mines and some of the 31st Infantry went up to Schkotova to help Kol- chak draft his army. Helping Kol- chak meant going into the small set- tlements in the hills, disarming the workers and telling them we were their friends. Then Kolchak came and drafted them. He never had the same support in his own land that the capitalist press in America gave recruits from going over the hill to the Bolsheviks and taking their arms with them. Often we failed, One day a Kolchak rookie said his food was rotten, He was shot the next morning. So then the train from Vladivostok was stopped by the workers, 5 miles across the plain where the railroad made a turn to cross a bridge. A Kolchak colonel was taken off and shot by the work- ers, The Reds said to Kolchak, “For every private you shoot we will get an officer.” So Kolchak killed no more prisoners. Corporal Executes Workers, One morning we got orders to en- train for a small settlement. When we got to Romanovka, upon orders from the officers, we rounded up the males and held 11 or 13 as prisoners or hostages. But a corporal and an- other volunteered to execute two of them as an example or a lesson or whatever it is you do to terrorize people. The remainer were sent tc Schkotova for trial and when Kol- chak turned them all loose we felt pretty cheap. But the people were all used to being terrorized ‘and said we were not to blame, it was the capitalist syystem which was at fault. Finally we were withdrawn. We will always remember Siberia and the Russian people as our friends. We did not understand what it was all about in those days, but today we know why we were sent to Rus- sia. Soldiers and workers must learn who their real enemies are. When the bosses of Wall Street send us to fight against the Soviet Union or other countries we will know what to do next time. We will refuse to fight against our fellow workers and him. Naturally we had to guard his turn tthe guns against the bosses, Negro Soldiers in War on ‘ Jim Crowed ‘Democracy” New York, N. Y. Daily Worker:— During the latter part of 1917 and the first of 1918 therfe was much grumbling and muttering amongst the American Troops stationed in the various cantonements and in the trenches, especially amongst the rank and file of the 92nd, and 93rd, Divisions (Negro troops) after that famous General and misleader and a.ch murderer General Belleau had issued his famous segregation order “Tnat no Negro officers or enlisted men were to associate with the. French civilians.” The Colonel from New York and the Major from Oregon, Roosevelt ard D’Olier, got their heads together vith the high command to form thc so-called veterans’ association. Its object to the outsider was to “cement U.at comradely spirit that was formed in the trenches, hospitals and vantonements” in France. From the this organization segregated egro veterans from the white vevs:an, At the first caucus of the American Legion the Negro service- men and officers to the first Conven- tion were set back so far in the hall | that they could not hear one word. | Next back to the U. S. A. the posts | throughout the country voted that a Negro could belong to the American Legion but must have a separate post. After the passage of the beer bill and the defeat of the bonus bill, I came to New York and one day while listening to speaker after speaker in Union Square telling that there was no segregation in the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League 1 finally came over to their headquar- ters, 79 East 10th Street, to see if it was another fake organization. Af- ter attending one or two of their | meetings found that the W. E. S. L. to be one of the most democratic |rank and file organization composed of es-servicemen in the U.S.A. today. All ex-servicemen will find that this is the truth especially Negro veter- |ans. This is from a former Regular Army Sgt., and veteran of the World War. A, A, Androzzo, D.S.C., Cde. G.M.M. General Electric Delesate to Get | A Mass Send Off | Workers Show Great) Interest In Soviet; Police Interfere SCHNECTADY, N. Y.—A_ final mass meeting for the send-off of Alexandor Trainor the elected work- ers ‘delegates from the General Elec- tric plant to go to hte Soviet Union in answer to an invitation of the Metal Workers Union ofthe Electro- zoved in Moscow will be held Friday. April 8th, at 269 State Street. Trainor is a machinist from the toolroom in shop 17 and was elected by 200 workers, 90 per cent of whom were General Electric workers, at a mass meeting on March 18, when the invitation of the Soviet workers wa: accepted. Many more workers anxi- ous to attend were prevented by | Police intimidation and the fear of being blacklisted. The police are doing everything possible to prevent the workers from rallying to the campaign. Workers ave being continally arrested fo distributing leaflets. A reign of ir workers arrested and framed on vagrancy charges. The fear of the bosses of the intense interest shown by the workers in the Soviet Union was further evidenced by the slander against Trainor inthe capitalist press They have tried to make him ap- pear in the light of a sinster “red’ agitator quite. The General Electric workers are interested in the Electrozovod be- cause while there are mass layoffs | and drastic wage cuts in the General Electric, there is no unemploymen. \in the Soviet Union where wages are | rising. “Why are the city and police so | interested in keeping us away from |the meetings” while the General | Electric can send their engineers and products to the Soviet Union without question the workers are asking, A campaign is now going on in- volving all departments to secure |financial support for Trainor’s trip. Leaflets are being broadcast through- out the plant explaining the pur- pose of the delegation and exposing the actions of the Press, also in- viting all workers to send in ques- tions for the delegate to secure first hand answers from the Russian workers. Do you want to know what Is be- hind all the wer mancuvres in Amidation was instituted wits: acuive Bitar China-—'ew Javan is '* oking Ctee Fem tM 458 Read vicn ah Vay” beak woennide Worker Correspondents Attention! We again call on our worker cor- respondents to send material to the Daily Worker to expose the war preparations that are now being made in the factories and mills throughout the U. S. A. Especially do we want to hear from the metal workers, chemical workers, arsenal workers, seamen, longshoremen, railwaymen, post and telegraph workers. Watch for shipments of arms and munitions. Write about this Phase of war preparations. Urge your friends to write about the schemes of the bosses to drag the workers into a new war. Tell us what the socialists are doing to aid the bosses in their war plans, What is the attitude of the workers in your shop or neigh- borhood on war? What are the workers saying about the Soviet Union? What do the workers think about Lityinoff’s speech in Geneva? These and many other important questions on war should be dealt with by our worker correspondents, Now, workers, get busy. Fight against war by exposing the bosses’ war plans in the columns of the Daily Worker. STUDENTS EXPOSE TERROR IN KY. MINE FIELDS Tell of Leftward Swing Ey On Students WASHINGTON, D. C., April 1. —The committee of eleven stud- ents who remained in Washington, while the rest of the National Student League delegation to the Kentucky coal fields returned to New York, presented a list of charges against the officials of Kentucky and Tennessee yesterday to Senators Costigan, Copeland and Logan of Kentucky. The student committee, in a re- port lasting for more than an hour, outlined the manner in which they had been stopped on the road by. an armed band of coal thugs, sher- iffs and armed business men and forced to turn back. The students charged that nel- ther the state governments of Ken- tucky and Tennessee, nor the Fed- eral governmen at Washington took any steps to guarantee their safety’ from possible lynching while on theri trip. They further claimed that the armed attack on the student dele- gation was carried out because of the fear of the coal operators that the students would see the actual conditions of starvation and terror that the Kentucky miners live on- der, Demand for immediate action for an investigation of conditions in | the Harlan and Bell Counties was | put forward by the committee. Throughout the charges, the stud- ents emphasized the fascist nature of the acts committed against them and protested against the solid line-up of the state and Federal governments with the Kentucky coal operators. NEW YORK.—The delegation of 90 college students and instructors |which has returned from the trip to Kentucky conducted under the auspices of the [National Student League will give the first official re- port of their experiences at a mass meeting to be held Sunday evening, April 2, at 8:15, at the Plymouth Theatre, 236 West 45th St. Donald Henderson, instructor in economics at Columbia University nd executive secretary of the Na- tional Student League will act as chairman, Among the speakers will be Homre Barton, filed organizer for the Student League, Robert Hall, editor of the “Student Review,” Mar- |garet Bailey, daughter of Forest Bai-| ley, director of the Civil Liberties | Union, and Curley (Robert E.) Lee, one of the bus drivers. . Ce In his speech before the three Sen- ators, Robert Hall of Columbia Uni- versity, said: d “The students are awakening to the social injustice and conditions among the working class such as characterize the universities of Eu- rope. The reasons are to be found first in the fact that since the war | more workingmen’s sons and daughters are going to college, and second, in’ the crisis that brings suffering into sharper relief. “f students engaged in a peace- ful mission of investigation are abused, beaten and intimidated, what is happening to the strikers? “The outside world cannot but assume that the charges of a reign of terror in these counties are all too true.” In the meantime, six students from Smith, Wellesly and Vassar Colleges sought an appointment with Senator Costigan and others to present the demands for the freedom of the nine Scottsboro boys scheduled to be leg- ally lynched April 6. Stop the robber war against the Chinese neople. Demenstrate on APRIL, th against im- ‘ot wa Be 4 GREET Your Fellow Workers in the May Day Issue AY DAY is the the of solidarity for the work- ers of the world. Greet your fellow workers in the pages of the Daily Worker May Day issue. Rally to fight police terror. Send your contribution now to the perialist war. Rally to fight im- Daily Worker and be enrolled in the list of those who support the workers’ paper that leads the workers’ struggles. Those who have in the past, and those who will now contribute to the present Save the Daily Worker campaign will have their names listed in the Daily Worker May Day issue. Clip out the coupon on page three. Mail it to the Daily Worker, 50 East 13th St., with your half dollar. Get your fellow workers and your mass organizations to send in their half dollars and their greetings. And spread the Daily Worker to your fellow workers in your neighborhood and in your shops to carry the May Day message of solidarity and to rally them behind the workers’ paper that fights every day to unite the workers against the bosses’ terror and starvation. Imperialists Concoct New Plan to Save Face of Chiang ‘The League of National, directing the robber war against China, and the Kuomintang tools of the imperi- alists have concocted a plan to re- habilitate the shattered influence of the Kuomintang betrayers of China. According to a Shanghai dispatch to the New York Times, this plan calls for the recognition by Japan of the puppet “Manchouque govern- ment” in Manchuria, Japan would then negotiate with it a treaty recog- nizing all Japanese claims in Man- churia, Thereupon Chiang-Kai-shek, head of the Nanking government, would make a gesture of “attacking” the Japanese puppet government.. He would gather a large force on the borders of Manchuria. On this pre- arranged signal, the puppet dictator Henry Pu Yi would take to flight. Chiang and Japan would then agree that Manchuria should be returned to China, and Chiang would recog- nize the Pu Yi treaties with Japan, thus leaving Japan in practical con- trol of Manchuria while surrounding himself with a halo of “heroism” as the “redeemer” of Manchuria and the “defender” of ‘China. By this means, Chiang and his im- perialist masters hope to again de- ceive the Chinese masses, behead the national revolutionary struggle, and stem the rapid trend of the Chinese masses toward support of the Chi- nese Communist Party as the only forte capable of leading the libera- tion struggle. In the meantime, the League of Nations Commission has been forced, by the growing power of the Chinese Soviet districts and the Chinese Red Army, to abandon temporarily its pretenses of “investigating” Japa- nese activities in Manchuria. The Commission is now in Hankow, in- vestigating the internal conditions of China as represented in the growth of the Chinese Soviet districts and the failure of the Nanking “Red Suppression” campaign. Wall St. Pressure Put on House for Sales Tax Vote WASHINGTON.—With the new tax bill providing for $999,000,000 in taxes up for final vote in the House of Representatives, the Democratic and Republican Party leaders are once again lining up the “insurgents” | did in an effort to obtain a reversal on fi the vote which defeated the robber sales tax last week. The same Wall St. pressure which forced the “insurgent” Representa- tives into hard and fast party lines form. ‘The majority by means of which the sales tax was defeated was such that a shift of 36 votes and an even split among the Representatives who not vote last week would be suf- cient to finally pass the sales tax. ‘The collapse of the “opposition” to the sales tax after the midnight meeting of the Wall St. bankers three days ago makes it extremely Possible that the ground is now being Page Three —— ‘MacDonald Police | \Fire on Bombay Dock | Strikers; Kill One BOMBAY, India.—MacDonald’s Indian police opened fire on strik- |ing Bombay .dockworkers .while |firemen turned high powered blasts of water upon them during | & fight between the strikers and | scabs protected by the MacDonald | | police. | In line with their policy of \plyaing caste against caste andj} section against eviction in the | | effort to split the Indian working- | jelass, the British had imported | Pathan (Afghan) _strikebreakers | |to scab on the dockworkers, | The strikers barred the trucks carrying th escabs and were sa- vagely attacked by the police. In the firece fighting that fol- lowed as the dockworkers defended | | themselves against the armed| | police, many houses were set on| | fire. One worker is reported) | killed, twelve seriously injured and more than twenty slight hurt. UMWA HEADS CALL POLICE: END STRIKE Miner Calls for Rank and File Strike Committee “Prepare New Strike” i\Is Not Allowed to Put Program Completely POOTSVILLE, Pa., April 1. —The miners’ strike in the Anthracite District 9 collapsed. Last night the General Mine Board of the United Mine Workers met in special session, Re- ports came from basic locals in the Shenandoath and Shamokin sec- tions, the backbone of the strike. They voted to go back to work. The General Mine Board officials are blaming district officials for the loss of this strike, saying that Martin Brenan, President of the UMWA District 9, called state troopers in to break the strike. The General Mine Board went on record for govern- ment investigation on necessary wages and working conditions in the mines. Herman, a miner and delegate to the General Mine Board, exposed the fake strike leadership and the gov- ernment invstigation as a political bluff. H pointed out the danger of placing confidence in the capitalist Politicians who would do the “in- vestigation.” In order to prepare for a success- ful strike, he offered the proposal to elect a broad rank and file com- mittee of not less than 25, and five from each local to compose a central strike committee. He also proposed @ clear cut program based on the | | War is already on in China Call o n Working Women to Rally Against War April 6 April 6th will be fifteen years since | gle to smash Jim Crowism and the the United Stat War. On this di entered the World {come out in demons | another imperialist prepared by the U jother imperialist governments. Negro \and white working Ss women must |demonstrate with deiremniation to- |gether with the men against a repe- tition of another April 6th. | Fifteen years after the World War we are now closer to another war than be have ever been. Recall the | horror of the World War of 1914- 1918; the 13 million dead soldiers, |the 13 million dead civilians, 5 mil- |lion widows, the 20 million cripples, {and the nine million war orphans, : Jap- }anese imperialism {is at the present \time waging a robber war against jthe Chinese people. ‘Thousands of | Working class women and children are being murdered with the full support of the League of Nati and the Second International, io are conspiring together for a war of in- |tervention against the Soviet Union with open acts of provocation, as |the seizure of Manchuria, and the {massing of White Guards for an at- ee on the Soviet Union. | tration against war that is being d States and The imperialist powers, headed by the United States, hated the Soviet Union, because it is an inspiration to | |the workers of the world, because it |Kas shown the workers how to do j away with misery and exploitation. |It has proven the superiority of a |country ruled by workers, as exem- |plified by the successful through of the Five-Year Plan. Socialists Betray Workers This is the reason why the capi- talist government of the United States, with the assistance of the | socialists, Thomas, Hillquit, Rose |Schneidermann, and the pacifists, Mrs. Catt and Dr. Wooley, are doing their utmost to hide the military war | Preparations by endorsing and put- | workers all over | the U. 8, in cities and towns will| carrying | lynch terror of the bosses! Be on your guard! Don’t fool yourselves with the idea that the war in China is far away and will not reach you! The war in the East is the beginning of a war in the West. Protest together with the men! Close your ranks! Demand “Hands Off China!” Demand the immediate release of the 9 inocent Scottsboro boys sentenced to die on May 13th by the lynch courts of Alabama! The United States government spends three billion dollars a year, two million dollars a day for war expenditures. It is feverishly prepar- ing for a war which will kill mil- lions of workers, refusing at the same time to grant one cent for Unem- ployment Insurance. For the rich, war means making fresh billions of Profits; for the workers, war means fresh monstrous sacrifices,! poverty, starvation and death, The coming war will drive your sons, husbands, and brothers into the trenches, while the capitalists will send you, the women, into the fac- tories to produce munitions bombs, poison gas—all to be used for the killing of your fellow workers. The sons of the rich will “dig themselves in” in the headquarters and offices while your sons and daughters serve @s cannon fodder. The capitalist: manufacturers give you women jobs in places of dis- charged men because they pay you less wages. The rich increase their profits at the erpense of the health and life of your children. When you have no money with which to pay the rent, you are thrown out into the streets, Many of youare forced to jfind shelter in tents, dugouts, mis- jerable shanty houses—are forced to j Work without pay for the privilege }of having a roof over your heads. | Thousands o daughters of the work- jing class are forced to sell their bodies to war off starvation! Working class women! It depends ting faith in the disarmament farce|0N you, on your struggle, on the of the Leaguet of Nations, which is; strength of your resistance, whether now being staged in Geneva. Work-| war is to be, or not to be, whether ing class women! The socialists and|the flames of another World War, the pacifists have promised you a|compared with which the hofrors of better life under capitalism. Remem-|the last bloody world slaughter will ber how in 1914 they endorsed the|pale into significance, will! spread robber war against the workers, how they mobilized the working class women to work for a war in the in- terest of the capitalists under the slogans “A war to end all war” and “To make the world safe for democ- racy!” Today the Japanese socialists have endorsed the robber war against |the Chinese masses, The socialists |and pacifists have always betrayed you and will do so in the future. Working women, don’t trust these jservants of capitalism—no matter what names they bear. The bosses’ government will never disarm. They rob the workers, snatch the last crust of bread from the mouths of children, but squander billions of dollars for further armaments. The Soviet Union alone is carrying on a ¢onsist- ent and determined struggle or peace and for complete disarmament. Negro and white women workers, | working class housewives, farm wom- jen, mothers, wives, sisters, your hus- | bands, brothers and sons will be con- Fight Against Negro Discrimination | for the passage of an item-by-item disguised manufacturers sales tax is now being applied to maneuvre for the passage of the manufacturers sales tax. Although the sales tax was de- feated in the House of Representa- tives sitting as a Committee of the Whole, it will be brought up for Tevote again when the House votes on the new tax bill in its completed prepared for a possible retreat of the La Guardia group when the sales tax comes up again. Representative Rainey has already announced that he will deman a sep- arate vote on the Doughton amend- ment to the revenue act, This amendment struck out the first Paragraph of the sales tax thereby killing it, HALF DOLLAR CAMPAIGN All Hands On Deck for Final Spurt in Half Dollar Socialist Competition to Precede May Day List Today’s Daily Worker exposing the war preparations of the bosses was paid for with half dollars from the workers all over the country. The half dollars are pouring in in this socialist competition to reach quotas in the next two weeks. Half dollars are coming in by the bag- ful, and yet they are not enough to warrant 100 per cent in quotas. ‘Thsi should be @ real revolutionary campaign, and all districts must mobilize all workers to fight to SAVE THE DAILY WORKER. There must be an increased fight put up on all fronts, in every and each dis- trict. Some of the backward districts still have 99 per cent to go! All hands on deck to save the Daily Worker for sure before May Ist! The May Day issue will list all contributors to the Daily Worker since January Ist, and every workers’ club should be approached to add its name to the list! Don’t give any workers’ club the chance to be left out! Finish this fight away ahead of time! Fight to get half dollars! Fight to get your district up on this daily report! loz O4an DOO Oro # t % g . 5 : S. Wy 4 i Hy Hii oe eK eae ei is gs $ 689.91 1. Boston 1,851 243 1,808 13.1 12,353.75 2, New York 18,808 6.795 12.998 345 890.60 3. Philadelphia «6,437 218 6,221 33 220.44 © 4, Buffalo 2.819 122 2,698 43 27643 5. Pittsburgh 2,057 108 1,948 52 1,170.49 6. Cleveland 6,275 613 5,630 98 1,355.97 7. Detroit 6.221 932 5,289 14.9 1,402.44 8. Chicago pany 1,034 10,198 9.2 407.89 9. Minneapolis 3,273 87 3,186 2.6 | 407.89 10. Kansas City 1,495 33 1,453 2.2 12.51 11. N. & 8. Dakota 279 4 215 1.4) 240.79 12. Seattle , 2,351 32 2,319 13 662.21 12. San Francisco 2,708 32 2,676 11} 444.32 15, Connecticut 1,896 284 1,612 14.9 15.90 16. N. & S. Carolina 269 1 288 1} 90.25 17. South 125 5 120 4, 65.50 18. Butte 292 3 270 18 164.75 19, Denver 492 a1 4m 4.2 $20,583.32 68.225 (146,51 Miscellaneous $3,058.03 LULAL re-establishment of previous working | verted into cannon fodder by Amer- conditions and scale of wages in the |ican capitalism. Negro mothers do} mines as specified in the agreement. | yoy remember how your sons were | mn pone apatite the Aap of |treated in the World War. Segre-| & week from coal operators for re- | gated, discriminated against, used as lief of the unemployed miners, to be | shock bridages, as the cheapest can- | paid by the mine where th meN/non fodder! Today the terror is veata oe man had a charice Pel ckeaund in the South, Mass lynch-| ore Her se eg lings are the order of the day. All outline the program completely, Bé | gress are methods of the bosses to was barred from the floor. The Gen-| break down the revolutionary senti- eral Mine Board would not permit a! ment of the Negro masses and make miner to present the truth of the | them submissive in the face of the} situation. | next imperialist slaughter, Negro and A OES |white workers, unite in the strug-~ Has your club sent in $5.00 worth of | ts a | hajf-dollars? | Mosselprom Candy IMPORTED FROM SOVIET RUSSIA 5 Ib. Can Golden Fruit Filled Mixture $1.25 Plus Postage | Many Other Varieties in Stock RED STAR IMPORTING CO, | 41 St. Nicolas Terrace, N.Y.C. in the Sovie When the Winter Winds Begin to Blow You will find it warm and cory | The Needle | throughout the world. Fight) against | the new imperialist war, nad thilitary jintervention against the Gjviet Union! Prevent the whol mur- jwer of the Chinese masses! || Mothers! Don’s permit chil- jdren to become cannon foi for |Capitalist war! Train them ‘to be- come fighters in the class struggle! Working class women! By staying away from the class struggle of the workers, and by your inactivity you |make it easier for the capitalists to |rob and oppres sthe workers. Spread | this call! Mobilize the women in | your shop and neighborhood to dem- jOnstrate against imperialist war on April 6th! Join the united front of the workers! Fight against imper- |jalist war in defense of the Soviet Union for a better future for your- | self, your children, and all humanity! Stop the robber war aeginst the | Chinese people! Defend the Chinese Soviets! | Free the 9 Scottsboro boys! (Signed) Trades Workers In- dustrial Union, The National Textile Workers Union. Women’s Auxiliaries of the Ne- tional Mniers Union. United Council of Working Class Women. Finnish Women’s Organizations. Ukrainian United Toilers of Amrr- ica (Women’s Branches) Lithuanian Working Women’s Al- liances. International Workers Order (Women’s Branches), MAY FIRST DNIEPROSTROY 12 THRILLING DAYS 12 t Union Itinerary including Leningrad, Moscow, Ivanovo Vosnesensh- Collective Farm and May Ist Celebrations in Moscow. this torr $2OD uy one wey S269 ., \ Camp Nitgedaiget | You can rest im the proletarian comradely provided Hinerary including Leningrad-Moscow-Kharkoy-Viey and May Ist Celebrations at Dnieprostroy. Tris ow $2276 one way SIEC ay Shorter Tours as Low as @ X * Sailings on SS BREMEN—MAURETANIA—NEW o ORK *World Tourist tours are in the U.8.8.H.; with round trip. 1 Day 2 Days 8 Days For further information call the COOPHHATIVE OFFICE 2509 Becox Park East Tal.—Esterbrook 8-1400 175 Fifth Ave., New York embarkation to term! mship tieket from France on WORLD TOURISTS, Inc, Phone AL. 4-6656-8797 DAILY WORKER! VY RAP THIS COUPON WITH YOUR 50 CE | Send to 50 EAST lath Sil. Pa Cow oh | Name ... vee . | ACUPCRR i's vis (aise e ucaeeg4 CMe sc eeedeceece | “°° Half Dollors by April YOUR FIFTY CENTS WILL HELP SAVE THE coe State, ccocccvcce ’ NEW YORK CITY Ist

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