The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 25, 1932, Page 3

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cig eg AD ALLY WORKER, NEW Y NEW YORK, MONDA Page Three 2,500 Negro, White Demand, Relief from New Haven Mayor NEW HAVEN, Conn., April 22.—Twenty-five hundred unemPloyed and part time workers demonstrated today on the . Central Green in one of the biggest and most enthusiastic dem- onstrations held in a long time here. For two and a half hours the workers massed together in a circle around the speakers’ nee listened attentively to the speakers| . ‘All evictions of unemployed | allies of the workers — the oppressed Negro outlining the program of action as} planned by the Unemployed Coun- cil. The speakers were John Weber, district secretary of the Unemployed Council; Harry Kapan, organizer of the Unemployed Council; Rips Tor- man and William Taylor. A cheer of approval was given by the crowd as the demands were raised. Five open-air meetings were held in as many sections of the city, from which the workers marched to the Central Green, which is situated about a hundred feet from the city hall. A committee of nine was se- lected by the Unemployed Council and was approved enthusiastically by | the workers and were sent to the city hall to present the demands of the unemployed to Mayor John W. Murphy. Included in this committee were two Negro workers, one woman and one young worker. The committee was met at the entrance to the city hall by a cor-| don of police and was told by the sergeant in charge that only four | would be allowed to go in. The dele- gation thereupon decided that either | they all go in or none, When the} sergeant was informed of the de- cision he tried to compromise, but the delegation refused to be sen- arated and’ sent one of the delegation to the chairman of the demoimud tion for advice and instructions, but \ workers to stop. . Free rent, gas and electricity to unemployed workers. 6. Segregation and Jim-Crowism of Negro workers on city and park department jobs to be immediately abolished, 7. No discrimination against single men and youth in giving out relief or jobs, 8. That the mayor recommend to the aldermanic chamber the en- dorsement of teh demand for cash payment of the veterans’ bonus, 9. That the mayor recommend to the aldermanic chamber the en- dorsement of the Workers’ Unem- ployment Insurance Bill, The secretary wanted to know where the money for all the demands was to come from and the delega-| tion replied that if Yale College was taxed only for a fraction of what it should be taxed (it is exempt from all taxation now, though it owns more than half of the city), the city would have more than enough = cover all the demands. The delegation then demanded an| answer and were refused, whereupon | the delegation told the mayor's secre- | tary that this is not the first time the unemployed presented their de-| mands to the city administration and | were ignored, but they were tired of | this and demanded action. The sec- | retary wanted to know if this was a AWAY WITH DIL DILLETANTISM IN THE ELECTION CAMPAIGN Polish and Rumanian By C. A, HATHAWAY eee pescriox slogans are designed to express in the clearest and most concise form the elec- tion platform of any political party. The Com- munist Party is a Party of the workingclass. Its slogans, theréfore, must—in the most con- cise and clear form—put forward the most burn- ing needs of the workers, and of the natural masses and the poor farmers. This was done by the Central Committee of the Communist Party in its call for the Na- tional Nominating Convention to be held in Chicago, Ill, May 28 and 29, Six main national) slogans were carefully formulated after giving most serious consideration to the needs of the workers, Negro and white, and of the poor farmers in this period of extremely acute crisis. These slogans were made short and simple. Care was taken, however, in each case to state exact- ly what our position was within the limits, of course, of short slogans. { before he returned word was sent/ threat. “No, a fact,” was the an-| down from the mayor's office that | Swer- | the whole delegation could come up. The delegation returned to the | Met by the mayor's secretary, the| Central Green and reported. The) delegation was told to take seats| Chairman called upon the eworkers| and oars asked what they wanted.| Present to march to Fraternal Hall, | ‘The delegation told the secretary|19 Elm St. Several hundred workers that they were sent to present the | responded and an indoor meeting was demands of the unemployed to Mayor | held, at which many workers were Murphy. ‘The secretary replied that | ealled upon to speak and told about | the mayor was not in and that he| their conditions and determination to represented the mayor in his ab-| | follow the leadership of the Unem- | sence, | ployed Council. Thirty-three workers | ill be or- ‘The delegation then presented the | save their names and wi following Se anai: ¥ | ganized in their respective blocks. 1, That the city immediately | One outstanding fact to be noted appropriate $1,500,000 in a lump | about this City Hunger March is that. sum for imemdiate cash relief, | this is the first time in the history . 2. An indefinite moratorium to |of New Haven that Negro workers| be declared on taxes and mortgage | who are segregated and live for from interest on homes owned by unem- | the center of the city participated in ployed or part-time workers. large numbers. Class War Prisoner Tells of Class Justice in Baltimore Jail Banker ‘Prisoner’ Lives in Luxt in Luxury While Work- ers Are Treated Like Cattle : Dentist Refuses toTreat Prisoners Who Cannot Afford to Pay Editorial Note:—M. Black, who was ail. sentenced to serve 10 | in jail by a judge and jury in Baltimore for protesting against the bedridden women from her home at 1852 Pennsylvania that politics and class distinctions play an important ter sent to thh Daily Worker by Comrade Black in jail: ‘\ “Several of the inmates in the Baltimore City Jail would not be in jail if they had not been forced to steal to keep from starving because their savines in the Baltimore Chesapeake Bank were lost in the closing of this bank. Yet their treatment is far different to the treatment given to Mr. Delcher, former vice-president who Palped the workers to lose their savings.” The Correct Slogans To avoid any distortion of these slogans which could possibly confuse the workers, the instruc- | tions to the lower Party committees empha- sized that these slogans were “to be used un- changed.” At the same time, we emphasized the need, while using the slogans themselves unchanged, to widely explain and popularize | these slogans in our speeches and leaflets. These | main slogans, as sent to the District Commit- tees and as previously published in the Daily Worker, were:— | 1, UNEMPLOYMENT AND SOCIAL IN- SURANCE AT THE EXPENSE OF THE STATE AND EMPLOYERS, 2 Against Hoover's wage-cutting policy. 3. Emergency relief, without restrictions by the government and banks, for the poor farmers; exemption of poor farmers from taxes, and no forced collection of debts. 4, Equal rights for the Negroes, and self- determination for the Black Belt, 5. Against capitalist terror; against all forms of suppression of the political rights of the workers. 6, Against imperialist war; for the defense of the/Chinese people and of the Soviet Union. We, of the Central Committee, think that these are good slogans. We think they say exactly what Communists should say in this year’s elec- tion. These slogans, we think, clearly state the most urgent needs of the toiling masses and pro- vide them with a. fighting platform with which to resist the attacks of the capitalists, and with which they can begin their victorious march forward to the workers’ revolutionary goal—the Workers’ and Farmers’ Government. But the comrades in the Kansas District thought otherwise. They, it appears, thought the slogans were insufficiently simple. We judge this from the character of the changes made in the slogans as published there. Quite clearly their aim was greater simplicity—certainly a virtuous aim! The Incorrect Slogans. ‘This healthy desire for simplicity, however, cannot be permitted to lead us toward an oppor- tunist distortion of our revolutionary position. ‘This would destroy the confidence of the work- ers and poor farmers in our Party, making it impossible to distinguish between the demands of the Communist Party and of the treacherous. socialists. And, unfortunately, the comrades in. Kansas City are guilty of such a distortion as can be seen by comparing the slogans of the Central Committee with the following new and, lon the Ghiestion of Our Election Slogans fixed, the whole slogan is weakened. Slogan number three is hopelessly distorted. The first half of the Central Commitee slogan reads:—“Emergency relief, without restriction by the government and banks, for the poor farm- as we shall see, wrong slogans of the Kansas District: “1, Unemployment insurance and relief, to be paid for by the government out of war funds and taxation of the rich. “2, Against the Hoover policy of wage-cut- ting and speed-up, 3. For emergency relief (without restriction) by the government and banks for the poor farmers, Exemption of the farmers from forced collection of debts, “4. Equal rights for the Negroes and against Jim Crowism, race discrimination and lynch- ing. “5. Against boss terror, for the right of workers t free speech, free press and assem- dlage. “6. Against war, for defense of the Chinese People and the Soviet Union.” These changes might appear as quite unim- portant to some comrades, But let us examine them one by one. Unemployment and Social Insurance. Slogan number one is wrong from three angles. Firstly, it completely omits “social insurance”— (old age pensions, federal sickness and accident insurance, maternity insurance, etc)—which is an absolutely necessary demand if we wish to reflect the needs of the unemployed workers, the old workers displaced in industry, the women workers, etc. It is necessary if we are to suc- cessfully fight the demagogs of the old parties and the socialists. Secondly, it puts unemploy- ment insurance on a par with relief. The burn- ing needs of the workers in the national elec- tions is unemployment and social insurance; this demand has the greatest political vitality; this slogan provides the opportunity for us to de- liver the heaviest blows on the most vulnerable spot of American capitalism. Practically all countries have been forced to grant some lim- ited form of social insurance; the United States alone among the big nations, with 12,000,000 unemployed and starving, categorically refuses | insurance. Demands for relief can be put for- ward in local platforms, but even there it can- not be a substitute for insurance and must be- come a means of broadening the mass struggle for unemployment and social insurance. Finally, the Kansas formulation is wrong when it changes “at the expense of the state and employers.” By changing this, as it does, the whole question to one of taxation and war funds, when to raise the necessary funds more drastic measures are not excluded. It destroys the effectiveness of the slogan as an instrument for definitely fixing the responsibility of the employers as well as the state through such great demonstrations directly at the factories, as have recently taken place at the Ford factory and the Chicago packing houses. From this the correctness of the Central Committee slogan— “unemployment and social insurance at the ex- pense of the state and employers”—can be seen. This is the chief slogan of the Party. For Exactness of Formulations. Slogan number two, as reformulated, also loses its sharpness, The Hoover administration is directly responsible for instituting the wage- cutting campaign. The Lamont letter and other ects of Hoover clearly prove this. But when the phrase, “speed up,” is aided, for which the direct responsibility of Hoover cannot be so easily it narrows down | ers.” The Kansas slogan reads:—"For emer- gency relief (without restrictions) by the gov- ernment and banks for the poor farmers.” By leaving out @ couple of commas and by adding @ set of parentheses, our Kansas comrades have the Communists demanding that the banks pro- vide relief to the farmers. Ridiculous! ‘The farmers have enough of such relief. But even more important, the Central Committee de- mands, taxes and no forced collection of debts.” Our Kansas comrades apparently feel that the poor farmers should pay ta&es. They leave out all referenges to taxes and even weaken the for- mulation on debts. This is a “carelessness,” at least, which would prevent us from winning the farmers, Impermissible Opportunism. Slogan number four reflects the most imper- missible opportunism on the one question—the Negro question—where, above all, clarity is of major importance. The Central Committee clearly demands “Equal Rights for the Negroes.” By this we demand unconditional political, econ- omic and socal equality; we are stubbornly against lynching, Jim Crowism, political dis- franchisement and discrimination in any form. But the Central Committee goes much farther; we demand “Self determination for the Black Belt.” We know that in the South all talk of “equality” is only talk, unless the Negro masses win the right'to rule in the Black Belt, where they constitute the majority of the population. | By winning the right to rule in the Black Belt | they win equality there and at the same time give a powerful impetus to the struggle for equality throughout the entire country. Yet our Kansas comrades, with half of their District territory in the South, omit completely the de- | mand—“Self determination for the Black Belt.” | The errors made on the other slogans can easily be attributed to carelessness, but this omission on the Negro question is a serious and apparently conscious opportunist error. On this, we think we are justified in categorically d®manding a complete and immediate coreretion in the form of an explanatory statement by the District Committee. Slogan number five, we will not dwell on at length, This has been converted into a beautiful, | liberal slogan A Pacifist Slogan. Slogan number six has been transformed into @ pacifist slo entirely suitable for a Sunday school society. We ate again st imperialist war, as the Central Comunittee states, but we are not pacifists as the Kansas comrades would make us | When they omit this one word “imperialist,” We | are for the class war, for the revolutionary war of the workers against the capitalists. We can- not in our slogans preach pacifism and expect to mobilize the workers to overthrow capitalism. This, comrades, shows the danger of playing with slogans. We hope the instructions which insist these slogans are “to be used unchanged” will now be sped by all comrades, by all local and district organizations in the mass mobiliza- tion for the Chicago convention. As for the Kansas District,’ we think that the District Committee owes an explanation, both to the Party and to the toiling masses of its terri- tory. ELECTION RALLY IN OKLAHOMA TO hhoma, spoke cher. the state. J. I. Whidden, veteran fighter in the class struggle in Okla- Similar meetings have been ar- ranged in Blackwell, Tulsa, and Pit~ In order to offset the campaign of at the meeting. Wall St. Congress Ready to Pass Wage Cut EconomyBill (CONTINUED FROM PAGE 0! | try for war. Armies ‘Placed Under Pilsudski for Attack on the Soviet Union Vassal States of F ‘rench Imperialism Push Move for Huge Anti-Soviet Bloc In Western and Eastern Europe “the exemption of poor farmérs from | mania, twe of the vassal st | Western frontiers of the Soviet Union Under the agreement, Josef Pilsud- | ski, fascist dictator and butcher of the Polish masses, will assume joint nian armies for the attack on the Soviet Union. The agreement was dictated | French imperialism and signed by | cation in Egypt. The agreement presages an early The criminal plans of the impe tion against the Soviet Union and its struction have been further advanced with the conclusions of a supplementary military agreement between Poland and Ru- comamnd of the Polish and Ruma-| ¥4S ts for armed interven- iccessful Socialist con- n on the ac n the Soviet on tern frontiers. The military alliance cently prolonged for five years. Japanese troops are already concef- trated on the Manchurian and Ko- rean borders of the Soviet Unioh. Poli ish-Rumanian Japanese warships have been sent | two vassal states during Pilsu 5 into Soviet waters of Kamchatka, | recent visit to Bucharest on hi: Northeastern Siberia. The stage is back to Poland from a six weeks’ va- Set for a new and bloodier world slaughter of the toiling masses of the | attack on the Soviet Union. Its re- eois newspapers | actionary, anti-Soviet character is the Japanese are | clearly exposed in the admission in| Waiting the signel from the United | &@ Warsaw dispatch to the New York | Times that Pilsudski discussed with the Rumanian government the pro- States government to attack the Say- fet Un Japan panese newspapers have lar admissions. The Japa- | posed Danubian Union, sponsored by | nese militarists are reported closély | French imperialism, bitetrest enemy | Watching the visit of U. S. Secretary of the Soviet Union, and directed of State mson to Geneva. Bour- against the Soviet Union. The Times geois ss dispatches from both dispatch also reports that the sub- ject was broached of “a larger pro- posed union from the Mediterranean |to the Baltic Sea, including all the neighbors of Russia, which Poland jconsidered the best guarantee of peace in Europe, and the Soviet-Ru- manian non-aggression pact.” The Rumanian government, clearly act- ing on the orders of the French | imperialists, has refused to ratify the | non-aggression pact with the Soviet Union. Thus, while the imperialists are hypocritically talking of “peace” | they are actually preparing for war The bourgeois press during the past two months have carried fre- | quent admissions that French im- Washington and Tokio have operily implied that should Stimson fulfill rumors in the bourgeois press that he would confer with Soviet Foreign Commissar Litvinoff while at Gen- eva, the Japanese will conclude that the United States government is con- tinuing its anti-Soviet policy in dé- fiance of the growing protests of the American people. The Japanese will interpret this as active support by the Wall Street government for th war rovocations against the Soviet Union and as a pledge of Américain participation in the war of inter- vention against the glorious achieve- mets of the Soviet masses in the suc- cessful building of Socialism in the perialism and its vassal states in Eu-| Soviet Union. The United States | rope plan to attack the Soviet Union| government will be directly respon- on its western frontiers at the same/ sible for any attack on the Soviet | time that the Japanese begin their! Union SCORES BUSINESS FOR BOYCOTTING. : | SOVIET TRADE Woe: Cattle Expert, Lamont, Ready To Work for USSR Very enthusiastic after a tour of the cattie farms of the Soviet Union. the American expert cattle raiser, Robert P. Lamont Jr. declared in Moscow that American business men ja “cutting off their noses to spite | their faces.” This was in reference The second measure | to their refusal to grant credit facil- | him As the agricultural program of the | First Five-Year Plan laid stress on collective wheat farms, the second Five-Year Plan lays stress on the development of huge cattle-rai collectives. This is because of t) Soviet government's desire to supply the country with enough meat prod- ucts. Answering the stupid charges “dumping” raised by Anti-Soviet ele- ments throughout the world, Lamont said that the Soviet Union would be a vast market for foreign goods for some time and the faster it developed the more goods it would need. Tron River Workers te Demonstrate, IRON RIVER, Mich.—At the Unit- ed Front Conference held here oi April 10 it was decided to parade from the Bruno Hall, which is to be Peonker Lives In State “Mr. Delcher wears his own cloth- es, eats with the prison officials, has mever been seen in the prisoners’ mess room; holds a responsible po- sition; receives his visitors daily while seated at his polished office- desk in the enclosure; sleeps in a specially prepared, clean cell and be- tween snow-white linen bed sheets, and in general lives like a king. Others Treated Different “Compare this with the lot of other prisoflers. We are not permitted vis- itors until after an initial thirty-day period, and then can receive visitors only once a week. We must stand and shout through two sets of iron) bars when talking to visitors, and can only /talk for fifteen minutes, not all-day like Delcher can. We must eat slops in the prisoners mess room; must wear prison clothes; must sleep in a filthy, bed infested with bugs and cooties, and with only one dark, cotton sheet and one blanket; and in general must live a life made as wretched as possible for us, “We are not permitted knives and forks, and eat with the aid of a spoon only. For breakfast we are served a watery bean or pea soup, with watery coffee and dry white bread. For dinner we get tasteless meat, potatoes, and some green grass which I have never eaten or seen outside jail. The meat is either too tough or stringy, and always has the », strength steamed out of it so that it tastes like dishcloth and is about |’ ag nourishing. I could never eat the meat or grass so filled up on the watery soup, which is also served at dinner time and for supper with dry bread, Usually a thin solution of Mollasses and water is served with all meals, On Sunday, when the rich eat better than during the week, we got only dry bread and the so- lution of mollasses with weak coffee for supper, but up to this last Sun- only two meals were served on |. Saturdays and Sundays, | Shop where they can earn fifty or } Ol es the morning soup is Me, A on cease ton +, 40 ap Beironeas, ee ‘and sickly looking, show obvious signs that the diet is unsuitable for | the maintenance of health, but the officials don’t care about that. Many of the prisoners complain of back- | ache and lassitude, and a few have shown me large boils and carbuncles, sometimes under both armpits. They told me that ten days would not be long enough to affect me that way, the boils and other complications ap- | pearing after a few months of the rotten diet. Forced Labor “Prisoners sentenced to more than | thrity days are put to work in the more cents @ week, whiclt they have to fight to get. If they earn more than their quota of fifty cents a week, the prisoners find all kinds of stoppages and deductions against | them, so that they are not finally credited with more. A prisoner has | 28. to sew-up 1,400 fly-swatters daily to earn fifty cents a week, which is go- ing some. Despite their low earn- ings, prisoners must pay for their own supplies, such as soap, tooth- paste, stationery, etc. One prisoner complained to me that the dentist had demanded $4 for filling one tooth. “When sick the prisoners are treat- ed by a physician who is apparent- ly so expert that he knows all about their ailment without touching or examining them, he invariably pres- cribes pills. “I am ready to support the above statements of the treatment and con- ditions in the Baltimore City Jail. M. Black, Recent Inmate 1200 East Baltimore Street.” Hoover calls May Ist Child Health Day. Demonstrate on May City May Day Edition to Be | Daily Worker will be off the Press Philadelphia to protest the action of the Communist in the coming elec- tions, the ruling class politicians are | planning to “let” the “socialists,” | headed by the arch-faker and embaz- | ler, Oscar Ameringer and his son, Siegfried, get on the ballot wthout, the collection of signatures. All of the best elements of the old socialist party which polled 76,000 votes in 1916 | are supporting the Communist Par- | ty’s platform and program. WIND UP DRIVE (5,000 Sienatures For April 80 Needed To Put Party on Ballot OKLAHOMA CITY, Okls., April 22 -On Thursday night, April 21st, at the County Court, the workers of Oklahoma City had a Communist Party election rally. The politicians in an attempt to keep the Party off the ballot, have set the date ‘for filing 5,000 signatures at April 30th. At the meeting Thurs- | day night the workers organized squads for the collection of signa- tures and spreading the program of the Party throughout the city and In order to defend the Soviet Union you mast defend it also against the propaganda attacks of the capitalists. For “ammuni'ion,” read “Anti-Soviet Lies,” by Max Bedacht, ten cents. Has your club sent in $5.00 worth of half-dollars? Ready Next Wednesday Night The city edition of the May Day 3,000 black and white workers in Wednesday night for distribtion | the city in cutting off all relief was ‘Thursday and up until May Day | Savagely attacked by the police gang- throughout New York City, southern | sters with 17 workers injured and New York State, Long Island, and arrested, and with severe beatings northern New Jersey. The city edi- of members of the Workers’ Interna- tion will be dated Thursday, April tional Relief. In New York City @ ers was attacked by the biggest gang demonstration by over 10,000 work- of cossack and foot police ever gath- ered together in that city. State and Again the contents of the May Day Daily Worker for New York City will contain the eight-page tabloid that already with is on its way to the Pacific Coast in the Far West edi- tion—an eight-page tabloid with greetings from workers and workers’ organizations, and features and ar- ticles of importance to the working class for May Day. The latest news of Tom Mooney, the Scottsboro boys, and the vital issues in the class struggle will be presented in this issue for special circulation among the workers in every working class | ‘alist murder. neighborhood, in every factory, in| We must spread the May Day | every mine, in every shop, in every | Daily Worker on a far wider scale | farming district. It is the duty of than ever before. We must make the every class-conscious reader to get the May Day Daily Worker into the hands of the workers, May Day Greetings. Greetings are pouring in from all over the country from thousands of workers and their organizations. Ev- ery one of their names will appear in the May Day edition for the sec- tion from which it comes, have been giving up to now. Day Daily Worker the workers will, present a solid united front in the fight against starvation and impe- & L Ist for Unemployment Insurance, for food for mith com your children 2. Answer the Bosses’ Cinbs. | promotions or salary increases; of | ‘The workers’ demand for bread is met by the clubs of the bosses’ | Saturday half holiday, calculated to Save $10,000,000, is aimed at the rank and file workers, since the higher paid bureaucrats do not punch a} time clock. It means that the workers will be| forced to put in an extra half day’s| work each week without pay. A further savings of $5,000,000 is) called for by the abolition of all pay | for extra. work or overtime; of $2,000,- 000 by suspension of provisions for | $3,000,000 by the mass firing of all| Federal employees who have worked for longer than a specified time and) an unestimated sum for non-fulfill- ment of vacancies. The last provision opens the road for the most intense speed-up of all Federal workers who will be forced to do the work of more than one man because the vacancies | will be left open, An amendment to the eteran’s Bu- reau legislation will chop $59,627,000 from the appropriations for world war veterans in the form of medical, hos- pitalization and compensation pay- ments. ‘The economy program of the House | Committee, with Hoover's own pro-| posal of the stagger system for civil service workers to be presented for! vote as a minority report, is a clear) expression of the whole Hoover wage cutting policy. It merely gives legis- lative sanction to what has been go- ing on for years with the full ap- proval of the Hoover government. In addition to the wage cutting provisions of the economy bill, there are two measures for increasing more rapidly the fascisation of the state apparatus and for furghering the war plans of American imperialism. ‘These two sections call for the con- solidation of the War and Navy de- partments into a single highly cen- tralized Department of National De-| fense. Although presented as an econ- omy measure this move is definitely in the direction of making easier the mobilization of the entire coun- | the Scottsboro boys, of Tom Mooney and of all class war prisoners. | Forward in the fight for Unem-— ployment Insurance. Forward, under the banner of the/ Daily Worker, the workers’ only pa- per. | Spread the May Day issue of the | workers’ paper. Get subscriptions, In- crease your bundle orders. Organize into Friends of the Daily Worker Groups. A mass workers’ paper is a daily | | demonstration that marches victori- | ‘ous through every possible form of } | rank and file civil service workers to grants the president power to con- | solidate government bureaus or de- | partments and to make other changes | american Secretary of Commer by simple executive order. This is clearly a fascist move im the direc- tion of increasing and centralizing the arbitrary power of the executive | branch. Against the Hoover program of wage cuts which have been dupli- cated by the local governments, the Communist Party calls upon the rally to the election program of the the concentration point, to the Twit Park through the residential districis and through the main streets. Another demonstration will be held in Hancock and all workers’ organ- izations are urged to do their utmost |to make these two anti-war May 4 | demonstrations really successful. | ities to Soviet trade. Lamont, who is the son of the was invited by the Soviet govern- ment to inspect the cattle herds, give \Tecommendations as to how these | could be improved and possibly ac- cept a position in the Soviet Union. Although Lamont has not declared | whether he will accept the position Set quotas, start revolution- jot adviser to the Soviet cattle trust | 2FY competition, in fight to he intimated that this would please! save Daily Worker, MAY Wa. Communist Party. One of the six central demands of the Communist Party in the coming election cam- paign is: Against Hoover's wage cut- ting policy. The rank and file civil service worker should take up the fight and support the fight of the Communist Party against the Hoover wage cut- ting policy. When the Winter Winds Begin to Blew You will tind it warm and cozy | | Camp Nitgedaiget | Dail For further information cali the COOPERATIVE OFFICE 2800 Bronx Park East Tel—Esterbrook 8-1400 WILL ORDER YOUR ay DAY Buttons lhrough your District Office Send Money With Order $20.00 Per Thousand COMMUNIST PARTY, U. 8S. A. Pr. 0. BOX 8%, STATION D, NEW YORK, N., ¥. $0 EAST TH ST. RALLY THE WORKERS TO FIGHT BOSSES WAR AND TO DEFEND U.$.$.Re AND THE CHINESE MASSES WITH GREETINGS IN THE MAY DAY ALL THOSE CONTRIB- 4 UTING SINCE JAN-+ 17 BE THERE! WILL YOUR NAME anbD THE NAME OF YOUR ORGANIZATION BE LISTED IN THIS MOST IM- PORTANT ISSUE OF THE YEART SEND IN YOUR GREETINGS NOW TO THE Daily, qhorker orker Bere USA Es N.Y. Ge

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