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NI ‘ py 26 per cent and unemployment “<‘pailding of socialism through Five- __ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 1932, Page Three TUUL Unions to Soviet Trade Union Meet | Five unions affiliated to the Trade ‘Union Unity League have sent greet- ings to the Ninth All Russian Trade Union Congress now meeting in Mos- cow. Both of these central bodies are members of the Red Internationa of Labor Unions. The Russian section thas over sixteen and a half million members. A report at the congress stated that Soviet wages have risen thas been finally eliminated since the last congress met in 1929, Heartiest revolutionary greetings from National Textile Worker's Union | to Ninth All Russian Trade Union | Congress. At time when American | working class is being further en- glaved by bourgeoisie which is again | Preparing to send millions of toilers into new world war, we wecome and Pledge support of thousands Amer- ican textile workers to successful | Year Plan. National Textile Workers Union ‘The shoe and leather workers or- ®anized into the revolutionary Shoe and Leather Workers Union, sent revolutionary greetings to Ninth Congress of Russian Trade Unions. Successful carrying out of the Five-Year Plan inspires the workers of the capitalist countries. We pledge to denend the socialist fatherland against attacks of the im-| * perialist powers. Shoe & Leather Workers Ind. Union In the name of Automobile Work- ers Industrial Union the Executive Committee sends revolutionray greet- ings to the Ninth All Russian Trade Union Congress and pledge our ac- tive cooperation in the successful building of socialism in the USSR. The Executive Committee further pledges itself to organize the masses of automobile workers for support and defense of fatherland of world working class. Auto Workers Industrial Union We members of Militant Building and Construction Workers Industrial League, fighting against dying capi- teaism and its agents, are inspiréd by your splendid successes to greater efforts than ever and send our reyo- lutionary greetings wishing you ut- most success in second Five-Year Unemployed Council to Ask Senator His Stand on Insurance LAWRENCE, Mass.—The local un- employed council which is partici- dating in the State Hunger March has sent a letter to Senator Warren an dRepresentative Lane of Law- rence asking them for an interview and their stand on Unemployment Msurance. Lane has not. answered yet. State Senator Warren replied as follows: “Your letter of April 16, 1932 re- velved, I would be glad to meet your committee at any time. IT am in Boston every day from 9 a. m. to 5 5 p.m. T belive some kind of un- employment insurance will have to come if. conditions do not improve, Very truly yours, James BE. Warren.” The local committee is going down to see the senator and it will ask him Industrial | Send Greetings Plan, the hope of world’s workers. Building and Construction Work ers Industrial League Food Workers Industrial League sends its fraternal greetings to open~- ing of Ninth All Russian Trade Union Congress. We look with pride at ac- complishments our Russian comrades and feel sure Congress will be mile- stone forward to establishment So- cialism and inspiration to all of us while we are facing here decay cap- italism, Long live international sol- idarity. Long live Socialist Father- land USSR. We stand ready defend it at all times against capitalist at- tacks, Food Workers Industrial Union ICARAGUAN FIGHTERS KILL 3 AMERICANS | “Skirmish” Part of Drive by Sandino’s Men, It Is Said MANAGUA, Nicaragua, April 22—/ | | Three officers of the American Ma- | rine Corps, stationed in Nicaragua | ostensibly to “protest American lives,” were killed in a battle with| Nicaraguan insurgents which lasted four hours. Eight of the Nicaraguan soldiers, | to whom the Americans acted as of- ficers, were also killed in the battle | and three of them wounded. Many | of the “insurgents” were slain. | The battle occurred yesterday after | several months of apparent quiet en- | forced through increased terror. Al- though the names of the “insurgent” | leadérs are not known, it is suggested here that they might be Sandinistas, who are determined to end the American “supervision” in Nicaragua. Dr. Pedro Jose Zepeda, acting as foreign agent for General Sandino, stated that the battle is the first phase of an intense drive against the American marines “to avenge the killing of General Miguel Angel or, tez on May 5, 1931. According to Zepeda, Sandino warned the Ameri- can marines to leave Nicaragua, since it “is useless for them to re- main to sponsor elections, as candi- dates elected in marine-supervised elections would be overthrqwn with- out delay and chased from the coun- try.” Tt is significant, however, that the battle occurred after an early with- drawal of the American marine corps from Nicaragua was announced. This circumstance warrants the sug+ gestion that the battle was provoked by the American marines in order to “justify” their staying, On May Ist the Ameri- | the Fight for the 8- Hour Day! On May Ist Demonstrate Against point blank to state his view and take such @ stand in the State Sen. Wage Cuts and Unem- Anti-Soviet WASHINGTON, D. C., April 24.— The uncomprising adversaries of the recognition of the Soviet Union are mobilizing their forces by putting forward as always the bogey of Soviet propaganda. The State De- partment is activelf participating in by the report presentéd by the East- er Eunropean Division of the State Department headed by Robert Kelly. Mr. Kelly rolds it necetsary to dig out obscure “reports” received by him about the Communist activities In Latin American counntries. To utilize this kind of material based on lies and falsehoods is an old trick. The Baltimore Sun gives the fol- this campaign, at least through a/| part of its offocials, This is proven | aganda are believed by some State Department officials, These re- ports divide Russia's campaign of Propaganda in Latin America into two parts. Division 7, which takes in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru, Bolivia, Uraguay and Paraguay, and | Division 8 which takes in Central | America and the northern coun- | tries in South America, The latter area is supposed to be controlled chiefly through New York and Mexico City, while the southern area has its headquarters in Mon- tivideo. “The reent examination of tele- graphi messages by the Uraguayan | Sovernment in its apijtol, is reported Forces In Washington Trot Out Propaganda Bogey to the State Department's report. Argentine police report they discov- ered a list of Soviet agitators, iden- | tical with some of the lists discovered | by British police when they raided | the Soviet Arcos House in London. “Following the raid, the Argentina headquarters of Iuyangtorg was transferred from Buenos Aires to Montivideo. State Department dis- Patches purpose to show that Rus- Sian propaganda is spread through Latin America by traveling salesman, many of them Czechs, or of other | central or southeastern European | nationality, These agents were re- ported to be especially active during the latest uprisings in Guatemala ahd Salvador, the latter revolution Daily Worker Wants! To Hear From Gen.! Electric Workers «.A few days ago, we published | the names of a few of the indus- tries that made huge profits in the manufacture of war materials during the last imperialist war. We ask the workers working in these plants to write and tell us what these plants were doing in the line of producing war materi- | als at the present time. A worker from the Diston Co. of Philadelphia, sent us word that| this plant is again busy producing gun shields, | We want to hear more about | the production of wat material. In 1917 the General Electric | was one of the largest producers of gun cotton, trinitrotoluel and manufacture of high explosive | tervention Again BULLETIN, | The United States government | yesterday continued its active in- teryention against the revolution- Chinese Soviet Power Wins Most of Kiangsi Province; New Soviets Are Set Up in Fukien Kuomintang Party in Alarm Warns Imperial- ists In Bid for Extension of Armed In- st Revolutionary Masses |Bourgeois Press Dispatches Admit That Gen. Sun’s Army in Fukien Province Is Part of Chinese Red Army Forces Chanchun ann scores of smaller towns in Fukien Province. Statistics released yesterday by the Canton wing of the Kuomintang lowing information: | to have dislosed a large number of “Since 1927 when the State De- | | ode messages reelved by Soviet agents shells.. We will print all the let-| | jcausing the United States to send] | ters giving authentic accounts of | | ary struggles of the worker-peas- ant masses in Fukien Province, Party admits that of the seventy dis- | tricts in Kiangsi Province, 34 are can Workers Started | ate. —s. W. ployment! partment was accused of inspiring & newspaper account of a “Bol- shevik hegemony in Central Am- erica’ the Department has been careful to give no publicity to these reports, “But these reports of Soviet prop- | from Mosow and Paris and the send- | three warships and the British and explosives being produced today | ing of many ode messages tb Sovict | agents in other South American cap- | itols. Part of the Soviet activities in | Latin America are alleged to be car- ried on through the Russian com- mercial agency, Iuyantorg, according | Canadian governments three.” ‘The Sun adds that: “Many of the other officials of | the Department, however, do not entirely agree with Kelly regarding the accuracy of these reports,” by the General Electric, General Electric workers, write to the Daily Worker, | Y.CL. TO EXPOSE BRITISH TARIFF _ RISE INTENSIFIES MARKET BATTLE Move Direct Blow -at U.S. Exports to England government that beginning next week | the tariff of 10 per cent, which that country introduced for the first time in its history last fall, will be in- creased to 20 per cent, is evidence of increased tension between the im- perialist powers in the struggle for world markets. Besides a tariff of 331-3 per cent is to be put on steel and iron. ‘The new tarifsf will hit U.S. busi- ness the hardest, with a great amount of manufactured articles being ex- cluded by the large tariffs. In 1930 more than a third of the American exports to Great Britain was made up of such articles as come under the new high tariffs. This amounted to over two hundred million dollars. It has been estimated that half of this will now be lopped off. Besides being a weapon in the bat- tle against American imperialism in the home market the new tariffs are to act as @ bargaining point with the various dominions of the empire at the imperial conference during July. This, for preferential treatment of British exports against those of other countri¢s and as a threat to Ireland, New Zealand and Indian workers, who are revolting ageinst their home and foreign exploiters. Charity “Relief” Not Fit for Swine (By 2 Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Ill—The Starvatii Army of this place feeds the unem- ployed workers three times @ week Last Call for May Day ‘Daily’ __Every day the Daily Worker rallies the workers of the United States in the fight against the bosses’ program of terror, starvation and war. The demonstrations led by the Unem- ployed Councils for relief, the demonstrations led by the Inter- national Labor Defense for the release of class war prisoners, the demonstrations against war, the mass strikes against wage cuts, have been whole-heartedly backed by the workers’ paper, the Daily Worker. On May Day the Daily Worker plays a particularly im- portant part in the workers’ struggles. The mighty May Day demonstrations against imperialist butchery, for the defense of the Soviet Union, and for the release of the Scottsboro boys, of Tom Mooney and of all class war prisoners, must be accom- panied by another mighty demonstration, the demonstration of the workers’ solidarity as shown in their efforts to spread throughout the land more than ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND copies of the eight-page May Day Daily Worker. May Day will register big gains in the revolutionary strug- with rotten beans and black coffee, without sugar. Looks as though it is made out of soal dust. are not fit to be fed to Every worker is treat At the Newberry brought forth a meal of pork chops, but for one night only. The next night we were back-at beans. Or- ganization is power, and every little improvement wet get is by demon- stration and in no other way. The announcement of the British | \ | | | America and the Soviet Union, and | | send in increased orders by wire or Attention-District Organizers The May issue of The Communist will caintain material on the | cecent Plenum of the Central Committee including the final draft of | the resolution of the E.C.C.1. on Lessons of the Strike Struggles in the | |U. S. A, and extracts of the speech of Comrade Browder on Japan, ; on the Election Campaign. This issue of The Communist must be widely | utilized (together with the April issue which contains the resolution for | the Plenum on The Tasks of the Communist Party, U. S. A.) in popu- larizing and deepening the decisions of the Plenum. The May issuc will be mailed on May 2 and all District Organivers are urged to at once an adequate number may be printed and mailed. NAACP STAND ON SCOTTSBORO CASE Negro Misleaders| Challenged to Defend Stand | || DETROIT, Mich. — The Young | Communist League, Detroit District, | | is calling a mass debate and protest meeting at the Brewster ,Center, | | Brewster near Hastings, April 26 at Ee ics0ep. me Mecting is called of the report of Comrade Hathaway | air mail in order to guarantee that The foreshadowing of the bank- Tuptey of another huge world wide trust is seen in the whinning cry of Sir Henry Deterding, the head of the Royal Dutch Oil group. Deterd- ing, who formerly had a lease on the Russian oil fields at Baku and who has since the revolution been ® consistent backer of the white guardists yesterday released a state- ment in which he says that his So- viet enemies are forcing the stock of ‘his compariy down. The an- nouncement came after a partiou- larly disastrous selling wave with a Joss of $48,000,000 onthe London ex- change in the value of thé stock. The same selling wave was recorded in the Dutch, Paris and Wall st. stock exchanges, But the attempt to hide the con- dition of the company with the in- troduction of the old favorite "red herring” falls flat with even the cap- italist press tacking on to Deterding’s statement the bad situation in which the Royal Dutch Shell finds itself. ‘The oil king of the world, whose War; resentatives, faced with a mounting treasury deficit which already totals over $2,000,000,000, in setting out to “curtail” the enormous costs of op- erating the state machinery, voted Saturday to increase the war ex- penditures by $14,000,000. This sum was voted for the modernization of three large battleships within the next year. ' Meanwhile foes of the soldiers’ bonus bill were given favorable ear (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) of demonstration—on which the peoples of the world will take to the streets and demonstrate against the increasing terror of the white ruling class against the Negro peoples and to fight against frame-ups which represent all the unexampled brutal- ities of the capitalist system upon gle. These gains will be formed into a solid mass base for fu- ture struggles, through the mass distribution of the May Day Daily Worker. The slogans that you shout in the May Day demonstrations, the slogans that you bear on your banners, these slogans you can spread most effectively through the Daily Worker. Send in your bundle orders, pair in advance, at once for the May Day eight-page Daily Worker. And send in your May Day contribution at once so that we can print enough copies to satisfy the demand. Send in your contribution now and get in on the May Day Honor Roll that the Daily Worker prints in yo ng Day issue as a special demonstration af workers’ sol- idarity. Fight boss war! Fight boss terror! Fight the boss hun- ger program! Support the May Day Daily Worker! the May Day Daily Worker! Spread the Negro people, It is to fight to break down the courts taken by conect them up fense movement role of the Negro misleaders such as in the NAACP. These Negro mis- leaders and white liberals have con- sistently cooperated with the South- ern lynchers by slandering the build- ing up of the mass defense move- ment, by the use of lying and deceit- MAY 7th—International Day of Mass Protest to Free Scottsboro Boys The fight for the freedom of these children of working class parents is not only limited to mere legal ac- tion but it is dependent upon the building up of @ pewreful defense making all preparations to carry the case before the United States Sup- reme Court. F af B a5 a burning duty! Every man, woman and child, club, | lodges, and fraternal organizations, Negro and white, native and foreign born, throughout the entire country, must give every assistance to the Cry Foreshadows Bankruptcy, company in 1930 produced 168,000,000European steel, rubber and also sugar Deterding’s “Blame the Recs” i've be Se | boro; and to expose the treacherous acts of the N. A. A. C. P. Senator Roxborough, Reverend | Bradley, Reverend Peck, and Mrs. barrels of oil, 38,000,000 barrels more | MCG? eR rinks we bsg than did the Soviet Union, sounds! ‘nd the Prt Sibel danke den ridiculous with his cries. The “short | °f the nine Scottsboro boys and the selling of Russia” is driving the stock | Negro masses. Z down he says. But meanwhile it is) ‘The Young Communist League re- rumored that the company will pass | Solves that the program of the ILD up the hext dividend. Already, the | iS the only program by which the 9 jprincipal subsidiary of the world| Scottsboro boys will be saved and | trust, the American Shell Union Oj}; bY which the Negro masses will gain | which used to supply twenty million | self determination in the Black Belt dollars a year profits to the big boss | and social, political and economic has passed its dividend. And. its} euality in the North stock is at less than three dollars a| Workers, only by share. mass demonstrations, jof telegrams to .the rich. bosses of One after another the huge world | Alabama can we open -the doors. of cartels, monopolies, and trusts, the {dream of the capitalist system and the socialists who saw in such huge combinations the way out of capi-| }talist anarchy of production with the mass protest, | cheidren of the working class. Women suffer more from war States and the recent admission by | |U. S. governmetn officials that the| can be interpreted only in one way the immediate possibility of bank-} tuptey for him. | Kilby Prison and set free the nine} and war preparations than the resultant crises are crashing to the | men. Read about it in “Women | ground under the shock of a crisis.| gym cents, , | ‘The bankruptey of the billion dollar} Kreuger Match Trust, followed by|cartels were worthless are clear ex- the receivership of the three billion amples of the drift of world capi-| Gollar Insull Utilities-in the ‘United talism. Now Deterding’s whining NEW YORK.--The House of Rep-| House Votes 14 Million Dollars for Tear Gas for Unemployed <niinesilneahcinsesiini memereattieadia Mountain Valley Water, 10 cases of 31,000 A Month Spent on Mineral Water for Senators in the chamber of the Ways and Means Committee. James A. Emory, @ millionaire merchant from the Manufacturers’ Association; three high officials of the government~— Veterans’ Administrator Frank Hines, | Governor Eugene Meyer of the Fed-| eral Reserve Board, and Secretary! of the Treasury Ogdn B. Mills—will also add thir voices to the long list of representatives of big business who are against unemployment insurance for the hungry millions and the pay- ment of teh back wages of the vet- erans in the form of a bonus. All this so-called ruthless economy on the part of the government, the tax bills, etc, which are now being! re-written, aim at extracting more| pennies from the poor and wil) greatly increase the cost of living of the working masses of the popula tion, Among the chief proposals before Congress at the present time is the Hoover plan to stagger the federal employees from 6 to 5 days a week with five days’ day. This is not con- sidered a wage-cut by the Hoover! forces. The other camp, the demo- cratic group, proposes a sharp reduc- tion in the wages of the federal work- ers, @ direct cut of 11 per cent. And as the “hot” battle continues the congressmen continue to wallow in luxury in the cloakrooms and the senate barber shops at the expense of the masses of workers. In the senate barber shops, accord- ing to Raymond Clapper, the sen- ators can still get free haircuts, shampoos, shaves and massages. “Every senator,” says Clapper, “has a shaving mug—furnished at the ex- pense of the government, of course. “The government pays between $700 and $1,000 a month for the sen- building up of a powerful defense ‘The need for funds today isa ma- together for the tag-days. jor nectssity! All out for the lag mr ceases dreary voy | Sypgucne A , | days, May 6, 7, and 8! m ators’ drinking water. For six months last year the senate spent $637.50 on 51 cases of Appolinaris water alone, though it was only in session one} | movement and a successful rallying | month of that time. “The typical month's order for} bottled water shows 20 cases of White | Rg ( Capon Spring Water and 10 cases of Kalak Water. “Five bottle-openers for cloakrooms were nickelplaied at 50 cents each. “In 1930 the senate ushered in Christmas season by, ordering, on Dec. 16, from the Lake Erie Chem-} ical Co., two gas riot pistols at $50 each, and two dozen gas riot pistol shells at $40 a dozen, presumably to be used on any groups of unemployed who became too persistent in their appeals for help to congress.” Tear gas for the hungry unem-/ ployed, more funds for war prepara-| tions, not a cent for the destitute! veterans of the world war, wage-cuts and the stagger system for the work-| ers, along with taxation to increase the cost of living—this is the policy of the Wall Street government down in Washington. And meanwhile the congressmen roll in the utmést lux- ury. This is enough to arouse the ire of any worker. This should make workers understand that they must organize under the revolutionary leadership of the Communist Party and through militant mass action force the fat congressmen to pass the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill and pay the coldiers’ bonus at once. Demand all war funds for the un- employed. Demand that the rich be taxed to feed the hungry workers. Demand that the money spent on luxuries for congressmen be turned over to the jobless, HARLAN MINERS SPEAK The whole story of terrorism in the Kentucky coal fields, vated the miners themselves, byTheo- | Governor Rolfe, South China. A Washington dis- | Patch to the New York World- telegram reports| that the Wall Street hunger government has dis- patched instructions to its legation at Peking to demnad that the Nan- king (Kuomintang) government send additional troops against the victorious Chinese Red Army ap- Proaching the seaport of Amoy. The United States government has Several warships at the port, threat- ening to open fire on the town. British and Japanese warships are also present with decks cleared for action against the revolutionary masses and their armed forces. The Kuomintang Party of the Chinese militarists and big landowners yesterday warned their imperialist masters that the Chinese Red Army in Ki- angsi Province was-extending its control over the entire pro- vinee. This admission was by way of a call for the extension of armed intervention by the imperialists against the revolutionary worker-peasant masses of Kiangsi and Fukien Provinces. The Central Chinese Soviet Government is based on Kiangsi Province, and controls most of that province and parts of the adjoining province of Fukien. The Chinese Red Army in Kiangsi Province was reported to be taking} full advantage of the fact that the} Canton “Red Suppression” troops | have been withdrawn for service in| Fukien Province where a Chinese Red Army under Genera) Sun Lien-| chung has engaged in a shattering | advance during the past two weeks. | » and thousands |It was this force which captured | Red Army. the important industrial city of to Gov. Rolph completely controlled by the revelu- tionary worker-peasant masses and | their Red Armies; 22 “are widély af- | fected by Communist influence and | elght Partly controlled” by the Chin- | ese Soviet Power. | A Hongkong dispatch to the New | York Times reports the capture last | week of the town of Maanho, on | Hainan Island, by Chinese Red Army forces. Hainan Island is off the Lui- hau Peninsula on the coast of Kwangtung Province, South China jand several hundred miles, south of | Canton, the seat of government of ; the Canton wing of the Kuomintang | This news, if correct, would be of the greatest significance as showing @ steady advance of the Chinese Red Armies toward the coast. In Fykien Province, the Red Army commanded | by Gen, Sun is now only a few miles from the seaport of Amoy. A Mukden dispatch to the New |York Times reports that a Soviet | Provincial Goyernment has been pro- | claimed in Fukien Province. It says that Mao Tsetung has been elected as Chairman, and that Lin Pio-o ha: been named field commander of the Chinese Red Armies in Fukien Prov- ince. The dispatch speaks of both of these leaders as Communists. It further reports that “Communists | were cooperating with General Sun ) Lien-chung in his drive on Amoy. With the publication of this ditpate! the New York Times apparently abandons its claim that Gen. Sun's Army is not a Red Army, but an in- dependent army. All Associated Press dispatches from China refer t6 Sun's Army as a Red Army. Their earlier dispatches also reported that Sun was a former Kuomintang off- cer who had joined his men in a wholesale desertion to the Chinese Over 20,000 troops were said to be involved in this desertion. Foster Sends Vigorous Protest and Solidarity Greetings to Tom Mooney |Trade Union Unity League Head Pledges Unions to Militant Nation-Wide Fight for Release NEW YORK.—William Z. Poster,) General Secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, yesterday sent the following telegrams to Governor Rolfe, in the name of the National Executive Board, protesting the de- Cision of Governor Rolfe in the case of Toth Mooney, and the second tele- gram to Tom Mooney, expressing} solidarity and pledging to carry on| the fight for his release: San Francisco. The National Executive Board of the Trade Union Unity League, in session in New York City, learned of your outrageous decision regard- ing the freedom of Tom Mooney. We protest your action as the tool of the bankers, capitalists, all ex- Ploiters, We demand the imme- diate release of Tom Mooney in the name of the militant workers | of the U.S.A. organized in eleven | national unions affiliated to the | Trade Union Unity League and the | militant workers of the American | Federation of Labor, who, inside the A. F. of 1. fight against the | Green-Woll leadership, which is working jointly with you to keep | Mooney imprisoned. We will or- ganize the protest of the workers the country over, The organized Tight of the workers will force the freedom of Moonoy, WILLIAN Z. FOSTER, General Secretary, T.U.U.L. | The National Executive Board of the Trade Union Unity League, in session in New York City, hearing RAISE FUNDS! 52 Issues $2 BUILD dore Dreiser, John Dos Passos, Anna Rochester, Melvin Levy, Sherwood Andersonandothers. All profits from the sale of this hook will be turned over by the publishers for relief of miners and their famili $2.00 MAY 4. THE WESTERN WORKER A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West 26 Issues $1 Western Worker Campaign Committee 116f MARKET STREET, San Francisco, Calif. . of Mooney “ee of the decision of Governor Rolfe, adopted strong protest sent to Rolfe. Boari pledges solidarity in your fight to achieve freedom, rec- ornizing your fight as the symbol of the struggle of teh exploited and oppressed masses against the ex- Ploiters, against the A. F. of L. leadership, the bosses’ agents. The Board decided to take initiative im- mediately to organize jointly with other workers’ organizations a na- tion-wide protest to be carried into every A. F. of L. union, into every workers’ organization and of thou- sands of Mooney mass meetings nationally in preparation of huge May Day meetings. We will not rest until we secure your freedom. WILLIAM Z. FOSTER, General Secretary, T.U.U.L. Have you sent in your Half-Dollar? ORDER YOUR sovisrT DAY 3 Buttons Through your District Office Send Money With Order $20.00 Per Thousand COMMUNIST PARTY, U. 8. A P. 0. BOX 87, STATION D, NEW YORK, N. Y. Iv! SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c +» Street