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___DAILY WORKER, _NEW NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1982 Fage Thr Taree May Ist Is the Workers’ Day of Struggle Against Hunger, War, Wage Cu Cuts, J im-Crowism, Capitalism! International Red Aid NEW YORK, N. Y.—Millions of workers all over the world will march on May 7th, the date that has been set as International Scottsboro Day by the International Red Aid, with which the International Labor De- fense is affiliated. On that day, world-wide mass demands will be made for the release of the nine in- nocent Scottsboro Negro boys, the International Labor Defense declared today. The International mass pro- test of workers against the lynch verdicts against these Negro boys, which resulted in the recent request on the part of the United States State Department for “information” from Governor Miller about the Scottsboro case, is only just begun, Large committee under Interna- tional Labor Defense and Interna- tional Red Aid direction are to be immediately formed, and* urgent mass agitation developed. The entire gig- antic resources of international working-class solidarity are being mobilized in a supreme, determined World Wide Demonstrations on May 7 to Push Mass Fight , for the Seven Scottsboro Boys Calls On Workers of | 4155 alfonso Given Fi- Whole World to Support Fight for Framed-Up Negro Lads these innocent Negro workers, whom the capitalist courts of Alabama seek to railroad to death o nthe false charges of “raping” two white girl— prostitutes, A cable was received by the In- ternational Labor Defense at 799 Broadway, New York City with a contribution of over $21 given for the defnse of the Scottsboro boys by the American tractor mechanics now en route to the Soviet Union. The cable was signed by Sam Gerber, Labor Defender delegate to the Soviet Union and by Philip Giambatista, a Penn- sylvania coal miner and strike leader of the National Miners Union, whose deportation to Italy was fought by the International Labor Defense. The International Labor Defense secured for Giambatista the right to go to| the Soviet Union instead of to fascist Italy. The action of the tractor mechanics delegation, with whom Giambatista was traveling, in sending a defense fund to the International Labor De- fense, shows a keen realization of the immediate need for financial sup- mass effort to force the release of prt to save the Scottsboro boys. Prepare to Spread th the tories, Mines, for the FAR WEST will be off the press this Friday night, dated for Saturday, April 23, with greetings and ads from workers and sympa- thetic businessmen of the Far West- ern districts, including the important centers along the Pacific Coast. This edition also will contain stories, ar- ticles and workers’ correspondence about teh basic industries of vital importance to the working-class struggle against war which is being celebrated with mass demonstrations this year on May Day. The fight against hunger, unem- ployment, evictions and the drive to war—the angry roar of the workers of the world against the frame-up at Scottsboro, all will be reflected ac- curately in the MAL DAY DAILY WORKER. It is the solemn duty of every worker with the necessary class-consciousness to get this issue of the workers’ newspaper into every locality and situation where there are (By a Worker Correspondent) GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.—The food barrels placed in all the stores by the Welfare are not being filled by generous donors as City Manager Welsh planned. So a new scheme was put into practice, to hang a milk bottle on the barrel to catch the pennies and nickels the store patrons can spare, since they cannot afford to give groceries any more. This is just a racket to get every last cent out of the workers’ pocketbooks to save the rich from doing their share of relief work. The morning paper telsl of ten The MAY DAY DAILY WORKER | May Day “Daily” Goes to Far West Fri. Night May Day Issue to Fac- Ships, Farms workers! Without the DAILY WORKER it is impossible to imagine the chaos among the workers, fighting without their newspaper. To fight for his class paper is the first and most im- portant duty of every revolutionary worker. There is no better nor more significant way of doing so than to help the May Day issue! SPREAD THE MAY DAY DAILY WORKER! Get greetings from workers, see that your organization has sent in a greeting, get ads from local business- men, order a bundle—these are ways to help the May Day issue. SEE THAT YOU ARE PREPARED TO GET THE MAY DAY DAILY WORKER ABOARD SHIPS, INTO FACTORIES AND MINES, INTO THE FARMING AREAS. IN THIS WAY SOW THE SEED FOR A BIGGER AND BETTER DAILY WORKER TO FIGHT AGAINST THE BOSSES’ WAR ang the HOOVER HUNGER PLAN! New “Relief” Racket in Grand Rapids evictions taking place and calls on the public to give furniture, food, clothing and so forth to help these people. The paper also states that only two of these families have fur- niture. Workers, when are you going to stop the welfare stripping you of your belongings before giving you aid, then asking others more fortu- nate to give you some of their fur- niture. The welfare has become very vicious and we must get more signa- tures to the unemployed insurance bill is we want to put an end to the poverty and misery that abounds. Shut Off Electricity on Bronx Workers (By a Worker Correspondent.) NEW YORK—Don’t think that this letetr comes from a part of the world where there is no other light but candle light. It comes from the Bronx. And this writer is not the only one in this apartment house who had to step back to candle light. Electric light fixtures adorn the walls and ceilings, but there is no light. And, no doubt, you guessed it right. The light bills are not paid. } ¢ Even teh rent out here at 754 Cauldwell Ave. is not paid. Nor is the butcher bill. The grocer refuses to extend trust and the milkman knocks at the door no more. Astronomers measure the distance between stars by year lights or the reverse. Are we to measure the life of the capitalist system by candle- light. It has not very long to live. %. Y, Landlord Confiscates Miners’ Relief (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA—Mr. Albert M. Greenfield, one of the richest real estate dealers in Philadelphia and who claims that he is helping the poor, confiscated and sold, through his agents and constables, clothing that was donated by workers to the ragged and hungry Kentucky miners and their families. Mr. Greenfield had some difficul- ties with the tenants where the Workers’ International Relief had its storeroom and levied everything in the building. The W. I. R. notified (By a Worker Correspondent) FRANKFORD, Pa.—Conditions in Frankford, which is notorious for it day. Workers are thrown out of jobs and are forced into the bread line. Wages are being cut tremendously. anes the Disston Saw Mill, which pera Leagaeeh during the last war Mr. Greenfield by mail and through @ committee that the clothing in the storeroom was donated to the miners, The agent of Mr. Greenfield prom- ised the committee that the clothing would not be touched and that after the constables sale we would be able to remove it from the building. At the sale, whic occurred on April 13, Mr. Greenfields agents and the constable maneuvered so that the W. I. R. committee could not come in, and they sold the clothing, so they claim, per auction. This is an- other example of how the bosses “help the poor.” Sword Manufacturing Plant Cuts Pay decided to quit working because they could not stand the bosses wage-cuts. ‘These workers used to get $30 a week. Now they are lucky to get $14. Some are only working two and three days a week, The only remedy for this is for the workers to get united and join the unions of their trade and fight these starvation conditions under SUICIDE KREUGER G@ AVE MILLIONS TO HITLERITES nancial Aid By Swedish Swindler (Cable by Inprecorr) BERLIN, April 18,— Examination of the papers of the suicide-swind- led Kreuger reveals a receipt signed | by Hitler for one hundred thousand marks and a receipt signed by Al- fonso, former king of Spain, for 5 million pesetas. Documents show that Kreuger financed Hitler with huge sums directly or indirectly through his German undertakings. Alfonso’s money was used to finance @ monarchist putsch against the Spanish republic, Worker Killea oe Fascist FLOERSHEIM. — At a collision near here between fascists and Com- munists, a Communist worker, Noep- pel, was stabbed to death. A severe collision took place at Duesseldorf in which three-Communists and two fascists were pent, to Daa hospital. Poison Gas Tank Teake While Be- ing Shipped. BERLIN. — Great nervousness was felt by the population of Hamburg | because of distinct traces of poison gas noticeable in the harbor. Pas- sengers and the crew of the vessel “Kurier” were Barticularly affected with palpitation of the heart, dif- ficult breathing, coughing and sneez- ing. The brass and copper parts of the vessel were discolored with a whitish layer. Police are investigating the mat- ter. Dockers declare that poison gas was being loaded and that a con- tainer spring a leak. This incident recalls the Hamburg poison-gas catastrophe when many people lost their lives owing to the accidental release of a cloud of poi- son gas. GERMAN POLICE R AID WORKERS’ SPORT GROUPS Seek Pretext to Ban Mass Organizations of Workers (Cable By Inprecorr.) BERLIN, April 19.— Today Sever- ing (Minister of the Interior) car- tied out a big police action against the revolutionary sport organizations, the Anti-Fascist League and other revolutionary mass organizations. The headquarters in Berlin as well as forty branch offices were occu- pied. The search was conducted thruout the day and all persons met with were detained. The authorities announced that after an examina- tion of the material confiscated they ill decide whether to suppress these organizations, The police pretend that there are the prohibited Red Front Fighters League. Regarding the sport organ- izations the contention is grotesque, because many have existed for thirty years, Actually the authorities are seeking a pretext to suppress the sport organizations in order to clear the way for a state “non-party” all inclusive sport organization which has been proposed by Groener (min- ister of defense), The bourgeois evening press reports that nothing important was discovered either in Berlin or in the provinces. Today was National Unemploy- ment Day in Germany. At the crowded mass meeting in the Lust- garten there were speeches from thirty platforms. There were no col- lisions ond few arrests. Collisions oc- curred in Bremen when police bat- oned the demonstration. Early in the morning the Hamburg police arrest~ ed all officials of the unemployed movement who could be found hop- ing by this action to prevent any de- monstrations, Press Lies About Jobs in Alaska (By a Worker Correspondent) SEATTLE, Wash—The Seattle Times stated in a rectnt news ar- ticle that 100,000 workers will be put to work in the Alaska canner- ies. The truth of the matter, how- ever, is that the warehouses of the canneries are overstocked. There will be 6,000 less workers employed in the canneries this year than last year, ‘The same paper also said that Ford is going to hire hundreds of more workers. But a check-up on the factory shows thaf only 200 men are employed there, Help Build the Central Comm. Library Comrades can help a great deal in building up the reference Ubrary of the Central Committee by bringing pamphlets and books and hack numbers of periodicals, particularly the Inprecorr and the Communist International, to Room 903, Work- ers Center, Pamphlets and books which are out of print are partic- ularly needed, With Stock S WASHINGTON.—The interwining of high government officials with Wall St. speculators was revealed at the investigation conducted by the Senate Banking and Currency Com- mittee yesterday, So damaging were some of the dis- coveries made on the subject that the Committee refused to publish the names brought out in the investiga- tion because as one of them stated: “It would be playing with dynamite.” The New York American admits the close connection between the White House and Wall St. gamblers: “The impression prevailing there was uneasiness, if not alarm, in Administration circles over the names of some of the “short sel- lers.” One committee attace ad- mitted a cursory examination IST MEETING TO UNITE MUTUAL AID MOVEMENT HELD, Plan for “Amalgamat- ion with IWO Adopted NEW YORK.—On Monday, April llth, the first joint meeting of the National Executive Committee of the Hungarian Sick Benevolent and Educational Association, the Slovak Workers Society, the Russian Mutal Aid Association and the Interna- tional Workers Order, was held. At this meeting the plans for carrying through the Amalgamation which has already been adopted at the referendum of the above men- tioned organizations, were taken up. The joint meeting made the fol- lowing decisions: 1. To immediately establish a Temporary United National Execu~- tive Committee which will consist of | three members from the Hungarian, | Russian, Slovak and International Workers Orders, 2. That the United Executive srounds of suspicion that the organ- | izations represent a continuation of | Committee shall immediately call joint membership meetings through- out the country for the purpose of taking up the problems which con~- front the united organizations and to coordinate the work among the va- rious language sections. 3. That in those places where membership meetings cannot be held, the United National Executive Com- mitt shall call joint meetings of the executives of all the branches from all sections in order to take up those problems, referred to in the above paragraph. 4. That we shall immediately es- tablish City Central Committees in all those cities where their exist va- rious language branches and those city committees will decide upon ali problems of the entire United Order in these particular cities, 5. That we organize District Committees wherever the United National Executive Committee will find it necessary. 6. That all City Central Commit- tees, District Committees and the United National Executive Commit~ tee shall immediately take up the campaign for Social Insurance among all sections and to extend this cam~- paign outside of the sections of the International Workers Order. 7. In those centers where the In- ternational Workers Order has al- ready organized medical depart- ments, we shall see to it that the Hungarian, Slovak and Russian branches shall immediately join this department, 8. In those places where we have not as yet organized medical de- partments, we shall recommend to the Central City Committee that they establish joint medical commit- tees in order to organize medical de-~ partments in their cities. 9. The joint meeting also decided that the United National Exechtive Committee shall take np the problem of brilding a Preventorium which shall serve all sections of the Order. 10. That all the sections shall make arrangeemnts for moving to the headquarters of the International Workers Order as soon as possible. The Teniporary United National Executive Committee will have as its task the carrying through of the unification in full and then a Na- tional Executive Committee will be established, represented by all the united sections on a basis of propor- tional representation. ‘This meeting was the first one to make the neecssary steps in order to bring together more than 30,000 members and begin the further work of carrying on a tremendous cam- paign for unification in the fraternal movement, Within the next few days, the first meeting of the Temporary United National Executive Committee of the International Workers Order will be held and begin to lay plans as to how to bring these decisions into action. Hoover calls May 1st Child Health Day. Tie-Up of Gov’t Officials Demonstrate on May 1st for Unemployment Insurance, for food for 4 your children } windlers Bared showed several national figures were included, but said he saw no one close to Hoover.” The role of American finance cap- ital in helping to grind down the German masses was revealed by the testimony of Whitney, leading Wall St. speculator. He brought out the fact that the firm of J. P. Morgan had artificially “pegged” the price of German bonds to prevent them from crashing and dragging with them the rest of the bankrupt Ger- man financial structure. The whole investigation is a farce based on the assumption that the stock market crash of 1929 was a re- sult of “bear raids” instead of a re- flection of the economic crisis of American capitalism which had at that time reached its breaking point. VICIOUS POLICE TERROR AGAINST PHILA. WORKERS | meetings are also anti-war meetings |THE PHILOSOPHY OF HU GER AND WAR OR THE PHILOSOPHY OF SOCIAL- ISM AND PEACE PREPARE LARGE DETROIT MAY Ist DEMONSTRATION | Ford Instead of Hiring | is Laying Off Men DETROIT, Mich—In preparation for the huge May Day demonstration the Party units and other organiza- tions are arranging tens of open air meetings and factory gate gatherings. In the week between April 11 and 16 six open air meetings and two factory gate meetings were held. The work- ers attending these meetings and lis- tened eagerly to the speakers. These Said Mr. Wilbur, Secretary of the Interior of the Hoover-Wall Street administration: “One of the great people of the earth is deliberately trying to work out Jarge social and economic pro- blems for the mastery of its vast territory along new and untried lines. Our economic, social and political philosophy must wage a gigantic and fundamental strug- gle with theirs.” Workers, which philosophy you prefer, the philosophy of Wall Street, the philosophy of hunger, unemployment, wa; cuts, war terror, or the philoso- phy of the Soviet Union which is building socialism, has liquidated unemployment, and is raising the Standard of living of the masses. and proteses against the Ford mas- sacre and against the attempt to lynch the seven Negro boys in Scottsboro, Ala. The auto factories here are laying off more workers every day. The} capitalist press announced that 80,000 | LEADERS OF MASS. wor re working at present at River Rouge Ford plant and that! Ford will take on more workers, The | |HUNGER M: ARCH TO fact is that instead of taking on} more workers hundreds of those| ‘SERVE JAIL TERM working have been fired. Although | la month has pa since the new Ford model was put on the market |none of them can be seen on the] NEW BEDFORD, Mass., April 18 Workers Jailed for Distributing May Ist Leaflets By TOM HOLMES. PHILADELPHIA, Pa.— As the workers of Philadelphia are increas- ing their activity to secure the un- | conditional release of innocent Wil- | lie Brown, who has been framed on} @ murder charge and sentenced to the electric chair after a farce trial | in a court filled with race hatred and | prejudice and without a single Negro | on the jury, the police intens! y | their campaign of vicious terror. Workers have been jailed, while carrying on their activity for the re- | lease of Willie Brown, for possession of Daily Workers, for speaking at open-air meetings, for distribution of leaflets, for being in working class centers and offices, for being in a crowd listening to speakers. Last Friday the police advanced a step further in their terrorism against the working class. In the morning 7 workers were driving a horse and buggy; on the buggy were posters announcing the coming May Day demonstrations and urging the Philadelphia workers to support the | same. These 7 workers were also| distributing leaflets, which also called upon the workers to demon- strate on May Day. They were ar- rested and charged with “Distribu- tion of leaflets intended to incite to riot,” and held for court under high bail. The cops made themsélves ridicu- lous by holding the horse under $300 bail, In the evening the Young Com- munist League, units 1 and 2 of No. Philadelphia, held an open-air meet- ing at Girard and Marshall Streets. In spite of the fact that there was a permit for the meeting the cops tried to break it up by harrassing the crowd. An indoor meeting was schceduled immediately after the open-air meet- ing. The locality of the indoor meet- ing was six blocks from the outdoor. The chairman announced that the | Supt. of Police, Mills, had forbidden the march to the hall but the young workers were going to go down in a body. The workers started going down to the hall together, the cops tried to split them up, the workers refused to separate, the police arr rested two of their number and charged them with “disorderly con- duct.” These two young workers, Sid Greene of the Young Communist League, and Tom Holmes, of the In- | ternational Labor Defense, were sen- | tenced to 10 days by the labor-hating ; Magistrate Conners, who was the | one that held the aforementioned 7/| workers for court. Magistrate Conners said, after sen- tencing Holmes and Greene, that he | “would get rid of Communist agita- | tion in his section.” (This section is the North Philadelphia section where Willie Brown was framed for mur- der.) Conners has sentenced dozens of workers to jail terms because ot their activity in the Willie Brown case, Conners’ statement is a direct cheallenge to the working class of Philadelphia. The workers, adult and young, must answer him by or- ganization. ‘The’ International Labor Defense calls upon th eworking class to in- tensify its activity in behalf of Willie Brown, Scottsboro boys, Tom Mooney and all other class war prisoners. Every shop, mine and factory > fertile field for Daily Worker sub- scriptions, HARLAN MINERS SPEAK ‘The whole story of terrorism in the Kentuck: eh (Pad a by the miners themuel dove Dreaer, Jabs Doe Pastce, Anna Rochester, Melvin Levy, Sherwood Andersonandothers. giheration ym the sale of this will be turned aver by the publishers for relief of miners | demonstration which will be held and their families. $2.00 Harcourt, Brace * Baa Medioos Aves WX" —R. Armstrong and Walter Peters were framed up last Friday. Arm- | strong, who is captain of Column | No. 1 of the Massachusetts State | Hunger March, was charged with “idling disorderly” and “disturbing the peace” when he attempted to | Speak to the workers who came to see the home of an unemployed | worker being auctioned off. | The cops took him into jail and gave him such a beating that he| could hardly walk. Then they came to the Unemployed Council's head- quarters, under the leadership of Mendoca, the big bullying cop on the streets, Some of the dealers are com- | piasining opnly that they did not sell-| one car of the new model. The great unemployment and the constant cutting off of the little re- lief which was given to some of the unemployed workers is operating a very tense situation among the hun- | dreds of thousands unemployed | workers and they are ready to fight against this present situation. They are realizing that only unemployment insurance can bring to them some relief. This indicates that the May Day Sunday, May Ist at Grand Circus} Welfare Department who terrorizes Park at 3 p. m. will be the greatest | @ll the workers applying for “city demo! aid,” and arrested Walter Peters, TO PREPARE HUGE INDIANA HUNGER MARCH IN JUNE Meetings In As Several Indianapolis First Steps INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., April 16.— As preparatory steps toward a State Hunger March, to take place some time in June, several mass meetings will be held here in the near future. On Monday, April 25, at 11 am. @ mass meeting called by the Interna- Labor Defense will be held to demand the release of Theodore Leuse, jailed leader of the Indiana | unemployed, now serving in the penal farm since last May. The mass pressure of teh workers of Indiap- |olis has forced a keen and state- in this case and the go on until this young | leader is released. On May Day, at 2 p.m,, the work- of Indianapolis will gather by the ds to celebrate the Interna- tional Day of Struggle at Military Park. From there they will parade downtown and rally at the Workers’ Center, 932% S. Meridian St., at 3 p.m. J. Louis Engdah] will be the main speaker at this rally. Nat Ross, section organizer of the Communist Party, will be the chairman. A state conference will be held at the Workers’ Center on May 8, thou | called by the Unemployed Councils of Indiana. The purpose of the con- ference is to speed up the prepara- tions for the State Hunger March and formulate the demands to be pre- sented to the State Legislature in the interest of the unemployed workers. ‘The Unemployed Councils are invit- ing to the conference the Interna- tional Labor Defense and the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, in or- der to arrange for a mass demon- stration against the death sentence hanging of the Scottsboro boys, to be held on May 11. On May 15 a united front confer- | ence of mass organizations will be held to elect delegates to the his- toric National Nominating Conven- tion of the Communist Party sched- uled to take place in Chicago on May 28 and 29. All these activities will be utilized for building up a mighty revolution- | ary movement among the Negro and white workers in the “no men’s city” of the Hoosier state, in which, as the bosses themselves admit, 10,000 chil- dren go without milk. “History of May Day,” by A. Trachtenberg will help you agitate and mobilize the workers for in- ternational solidarity, Ten cent pamphlet. ‘ation ever held in Detroit. ——__ youth organizer of the Unemployed | e Council. After beating him up they | INTERN ATION AL |tok him to the Central Police Jail. - o The next morning in the court- | |room R. Armstrong defended him- | LABOR OFFICE | Self and exposed the frame-up, but 4 the judge who represents the mill- | owners of New Bedford gave him 30, is M E E tk | N Gi days in the “Correction” House andj @ $10 fine. The same judge did not | allow Walter Peters to tell his story > and when our comrade, in spite of Its Purpose se Is to Hel | Serving, exnames sensocs the | Starvation Pr ‘OQTAMS | judge sentenced him also to 30 days | |in the same house on a trumped up GENEVA, April 17—The Interna-| charge of “vagrancy.” tional Labor office of the League of| Both cases will be appealed to a Nations, in its sixteenth annual con-| higher court. Armstrong is out on ference here, is busy furnishing lying | $500 bail and Peters on $300 bail. statistics for the imperialist powers|They are busy organizing the unem- | of the world in an effort to minimize | Ployed workers for the State Hunger the ravages of unemployment, Its} March to Boston on May 1. main topic of discussion is to be “how to reduce the world army of 20,000,000 idle.” Help Starvation Programs ‘The actual number of unemployea in the world is undoubtedly not less than 50,000,000—besides the count- less millions of part-time workers existing on hunger wages. The Labor office of the imperialist League of Nations belittles the actual figures on unemployment as an aid to the | capitalist governments and the inter- | national bankers, who hold govern- | ment bonds, in their hunger drives against the unemployed masses. Social-democrats of the world participate prominently in the Inter- national Labor Office, where they aid their warmongering governments in further attacks against the work- ing-class and in forwarding war con- spiracies as a capitalist way out of the crisis. In order to defend the Soviet Union you must defend it also against the propaganda attacks of the capitalists. For “ammunition,” read “Anti-Soviet Lies,” by Max Bedacht, ten cents. realized by every worker. of the Daily Worker. to Blow ‘You will find it warm and cosy Camp Nitgedaiget You ean rest in the proletarian comrade! ordered from only four or The food is clean and = and especially well prepared. SPECIAL RATES ENDS neighborhood, factory, shop, mine, FOR WEEK. For further information eal) the— COOPERATIVE OFFICE Bronx Park East Tel.—Esterbrook $8-1400 ORDER YOUR MAY has not received some, in for the May Day edition. GHT war WORKERS! ERS’ NEWSPAPER! Buttons Through your District Office Send Money With Order 320.00 Per Thousand COMMUNIST PARTY, U. S.A. P, © BOX 8, STATION DP, NEW YORK, WN, Y. WORKER! ONLY WORKERS CAN ACT ACOORDINGLY! INTO THE STREETS ON MAY DAY! With the MAY DAY Doily.qlorker The May Day Daily Worker, with its eight pages of important news, greetings, cartoons, and working class information, is assuming an importance that must be Only half of the $50,000 Fighting Fund has been collected by various means for the workers’ newspaper. Daily Workers will be an important stage in the financial history (er on ony, REET Already 100,000 copies of the May Day Daily Worker has been five districts—but these are pro- visional orders not accompanied with cash. The Daily Worker must have the cash with the actual bundle orders. of workers everywhere there is no reason why more than 100,000 copies, paid for in advance, cannot be circulated into every workers’ Blanks for greetings are all out and are on the way to every branch of every mass organization in the country. If your branch let the National office know immediately. In fact, greetings and some commercial ads have started to come More than 30 Finnish branches have contributed. More than 20 TUUL unions! branches! More than 25 Ukrainian clubs! But the language organ- izations are not doing as well as they should, particularly the Jewish! SEE THAT YOU ARE DOING YOUR DUTY, INDIVIDUALLY AND IN YOUR ORGANIZA- TIONS, FOR THE MAY DAY ISSUE OF THE WORK- ONLY THE WORKERS CAN SAVE THE DAILY ANCE OF THE ROLE OF THE DAILY WORKER, AND The sale of May Day With the assistance ship, farm! More than 25 IWO REALIZE THE IMPORT-