The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 9, 1932, Page 3

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f ‘ i | | f sat a * cago, iy t i { | | | Le ' | GARNER BILL SMOKESCREEN, SAYS FOSTER (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Labor party intends to do anything except try to fool them into remain- ing quiet until they are starved too} weak to do anything anyway. Trip Westward - Today Foster will speak in Duluth, and then begins his trip to the Pacific Coast, stopping in Frederick, South | Dakota, on June 1, for a meeting at 2 pm., in Savo Hall. The next day, June 11, Foster will have two meet- ings, the first at 1 p.m. in Bismark, N. D., and the next at 8 pm. Calvary Temple, Minot, North Da-| kota. On the 12th he speaks at Brush Lake, Mont.; on the 13th at Great Falls, on the 15th at Butte. Three meetings are advertised for Foster in ‘Washington; Spokane, June 17; Se- attle, June 19, and Tacoma, June 20. For Jobless Insurance Campaigning on a platform which makes its central issue “Unemploy- ment and Social Insurance at the Expense of the State and the Em- ployers,” Foster in the course of his tour will pick up and show up the fake relief plans now coming out of the national capitol. After consultation with Republican Party bosses, President Hoover yes- terday announced his latest plan ‘The “great engineer, who operated his mines with slave labor in Burma, China and Siberia, can not now see any use for the unemployed except to make them a smoke screen be-/ hind which he gives billions of dollars from the U. S. treasury, of money to be raised by taxing the poor, to the biggest corporations and bankers. Three Billion Loot The central point of Hoover's plan is a gift of three billion dollars to the Reconstruction Finance Corpora- tion, which will be re-loaned to open- shop mining companies, etc. Banks in rural communities which want to mortgage more farm lands can borrow from this three billion fund. |is ‘The idea is to get the farmer's land now, when it is cheap. And the Federal Farm Board, which has al- ready tied up much farm land and crops, will have some of the funds. ‘The unemployed get nothing, except a dribble of wages—whatever is left over after the corporations get their profit. CHICAGO, Ill—June 8—The City Committee of the Unemployed Coun- cil of Chicago decided today to or- ganize an anti-Hoover demonstration at the time of the opening of the National Nominating Convention of the Republican Party, which will take place on June 14. The Unemployed Council calls upon all workers in Chi- employed and unemployed, Negro and white, women and youth, to rally to the anti-Hoover demon- stration in front of the Convention Hall, the Chicago Stadium, 1840 Mad- ison Street, Tuesday, June 14, 11 a.m. Other working class organizations, such as the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League, I. L. D., Y. C. L., T. U. U. L. and Communist Party are issuing leaflets, mobilizing the working class in support of the demonstration, under the auspices of the Unem- ployed Council. The demonstration is arranged to demonstrate against the Hoover Hunger and war govern- ment,’ against attempt to crush the revolutionary movement by deporta- tion of foreign-born Communists, a law recently passed in the House of Representatives, against war against the Soviet Union, for immediate re- lief, for unemployment and social in- surance and for the soldiers’ bonus. ‘The demonstration will take place despite the announcement of the Chi- cago police department, which de- Clared that during the Republican and Democratic Party conyentions “parades will be forbidden.” Even more than that, the police depart- ment, also announced “Those who have no business in the neighborhood of the Stadium, avoid that district.” _ Pinchot, Republican Bosses Meet to Plan NewTaxes onWorkers HARRISBURG, Pa., June 7.—Gov- ernor Pinchot, and the bosses of the Republican Party (Mellon controlled) state organization met at the capitol to consider whether they will call an extra session of the legislature to consider what they term “relief plans for the unemployed”, Pinchot has made so many pro- mises to the jobless which has not been carried out, and resentment of the unemployed is rising so high, with Philadelphia, especially cutting off relief wholesale, that something has to be done. The proposals before the confer- ce today however, are more in the of saving state and city than . They include: extending tax- | powers of cities and counties, a Eee amendment to permit state to accept federal aid (if should be any!), authorizing Subdivisions to borrow on delinquent taxes and a of emergency sales taxes everything the worker buy. jth) in| -|the Soviet factories. This innovation | International — Notes | White Guard in Fascist Plot PRAGUE, Czecho-Slovakia. — For- mer General Gajda, who achieved military “distinction” in White Rus- |sian armies fighting against the, So- viet. Union, is reported implicated in a fascist plot here. He was arrested on a charge of “conspiring against ithe State” and released “pending his | prosecution.” | Gajda was invited by Russian White | | Guardists here to become their leader} in Manchuria, according to a report} |cireulating here, | | toe Seer | The Crisis Deepens in Austria =| VIENNA, Austria—Following upon} |the extinction of Austria's last blast) furnace, which increased the number | | of unemploy' ed workers, all employees | of the surface mines on Austria’s famous iron mountain, Erzberg, were} notified that the mining operation would be suspended on July Ist. At the same time the last 130 workers of the Alpine Montan, the only re- maining heavy industrial corporation, were likewise informed of their -dis- missal on September 30th. As a consequence of the economic crisis, Austria’s financial situation is growing worse. Financial bankruptcy | is expected to be unavoidable very | soon, Over 5,600,000 Million Unemployed in Germany BERLIN.—According to the official report of the Reich's Institute for Unemployment Insurance there were 5,675,000 unemployed workers regis- ltered at the labour exchanges | throughout Germany on May 15. De- spite the seasonal improvement, this was only 64,000 less than at the end) of. April. ‘ Since the middle of March unem- ployment has declined by 454,000, as compared with 780,000 in the same period of last year, when unemploy- ment figures were in any case con- siderably lower. The number of so-called welfare- supported unemployed workers, that to say those workers who have ex- hausted the normal unemployment support and the subsequent “crisis” support and are at the mercy of the public authorities, is steadily increas- ing. At the end of April there were 1,464,358 such unemployed workers in Prussia alone. All these men had been unemployed for over a year. This represented an increase |of 49,768, as compared with the previous month. i a Spanish Police Shoot Down Workers MADRID, May 22.—A sympathy strike with the miners has been pro- ceeding in Ferrol for three days. Yesterday evening the police arrested a number of strikers. The masses tried to release the prisoners, but the police fired, killing a young Commu-| nist named Saturnino Ariat and wounding a number of other workers. soe Ss Political Day in the Soviet Factories MOSCOW, May 30—A “Political Day,” has now been introduced into is very interesting and valuable. The aim of the Political Day is to provide the workers with an exhaus- tive political answer to any questions they may wish to put, and in this way to draw the workers closer to the party, and at the same time to give them a thorough practical polit- ical training. The Political Day is carried out in the form of questions and answers and is held in all departments of the big. factories. Careful and thorough preparations for the day are made, propaganda, placards in the workshop, etc., draw the attention of the workers to the arrangement, and question boxes are hung up to receive the workers’ | queries. | In the meantime, the most active workers and officials get busy among the workers in order to encourage them to put forward questions or secure the clearing up of doubts, etc. ‘The Political Day will be held in the factories once # month and bids to bring @ great improvement of the mass work of the party in the fac- tories. Maer teary Building Workers’ Strikes in Germany BERLIN, May 25.—The attempt of the master builders to cut wages anew has caused strikes in various parts of Germany, Twelve hundred build- ing workers are on strike on the Saidenbach Valley dam near Chem- hitz. ‘The strike is under the leadership of the revolutionary trade union op- postion, while the leaders of the reformist Building Workers Union have called on the men to stay at work. ‘The union men in the strike lead- ership are to be expelled. The build- ing workers in Baden are also on strike, as are 500 building workers on the Rockenau dam. Seven hun- dred building workers on the Albruck power station are also on strike under the leadership of a united front com- mittee. In Munich jand Augsburg 1,700 building woikers are on strike against ‘Nacional Fight Urged | dations of | throughout DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1932 WORKERS: FLOOD SENATE WITH PROTEST AGAINST DIES BILL! DEMONSTRATE AGAINST THE NEW ATTACKS ON FOREIGN BORN [REVEAL BACKERS OF “DIES” ACT; AGAINST ALIENS to Defeat Bill {OUNTINUED OS PAGE THREEY a for the bonus. The bill, if passed, will be used against the thousands of foreign-born ex-servicemen and mil- lions of unemployed workers who are starving as a result of the capitalist crisis. According to its. statement, the “American Alliance” was incorporated in Washington “to act as a national clearing house in combatting revolu- tionary propaganda and activities of the Communists through educational and legislative measures.” Linked closely with the backers of the bill, which comes up for consid- eration in the Senate room, is H. A- Jung, for years chief of a labor spy outfit in Chicago and now head of the American Vigilant International Federation. For several years Jung was ganeral manager of the National Clay Products Industries Association, in reality an industrial spy agency for the open shop bosses in the brick and clay industry. The Vigilant In- ternational Federation Jung describes in his official literature as a “clear- ing house of patriotic information on radical movements.” Jung was in charge of witnesses at the Fish Committee hearings, formed for just such purposes as putting over legislation. The original recommen- the committee called (1) “for strengthening the immigra- tion laws to prevent the admission of Communists to the United States and providing for immediate deportation of all alien Communists; (2) provide for additional appropriations to the bureau of immigration for vigorous handling of deportation cases; (3) amendment of national Jaws so as to forbid the naturalization of Com- munists.” Millions for Deportations. The rules were suspended in the House in order to push the bill through, and it is likely that unless the widest possible protest develops throughout the country that the bill will be passed by the senate and be- come law. That the bill, if passed, will be signed by President Hoover is @ foregone conclusion. ‘This is seen by the recommenda- tions contained in his message to Congress. Despite the fact that his strike-breaking secretary of labor, Doak, had expended $2,000,000 appro- priated by the government exclusively for deportation work for the fiscal year ending in June, Hoover recom- mended that Congress appropriate $2,000,000 more for “continuation of the very large program of undesir- able and destitute aliens,” while an additional sum of $126,000 was to be diverted from other sources for the purpose. All this in the face of the starvation of millions of unemployed. Congressman Dickstein, Tammany member from New York, seconded the Dies bill, it is learned. It is thissame Dickstein who has been posing as a friend of the foreign-born workers. That the whole campaign of de-| portation is aimed at militant for-| eign-born workers is clear from offi- cial statistics. Of the 18,000 workers deported in 1931, 9% per cent were foreign-born militant workers or workers made destitute by the Hoo- ver-Doak starvation government- Only 3 per cent of the 18,000 were classed officially as criminals. Spurred on by the campaigns or- ganized by the International Labor Defense and the Committee for the Protection of the Foreign born, pro-| test against the bill is developing) the country. Labor unions, workers’ fraternal organiza- | tions and individual organizations are urged to flood the United States Sen- ate with telegrains of protest against the bill, It is pointed out that an energetic campaign is jmperative if the bill is to be prevented from be~- coming law. Tom Mooney Hails The, Metal Worker, First Printed Issue in N. Y. ‘Tom Mooney yrites es from his cell in San Quentin prison: “From my prison of steel and con- crete I send my revolutionary greet- ings to the first printed issue of the New York Metal Worker, organ of the Metal Workers Industrial League, 1 heartily endorse your efforts to or- ganize the unorganized, and to fight against wage cuts, unemployment and starvation for the workers in the steel industry. I am well aware of th efact that in no industry have the workers been more ruthlessly and brutally exploited than in the steel industry, Steel and iron have al- ways been stained with the blood of the workers.” Mooney then goes on to cvll on metal workers for mass support of the campaign for his release, ‘The Metal Worker is an eight page tabloid size, crammed full of news. of the struggle in New York state the will of the reformist trade union leaders. A number of firms have agreed to pay out the old wages. and nearby mills and shops, 1b is the “Dies bill and other ajti-labor} When a woman leads in a dem- onstration of the jobless, Photo- graph of police attacking and arrest- graph of police attacking and arrest- ing Mrs. Jessie Negoitza, 25 years old, i n the front ranks of the Briggs Hunger March demonstra- tion in Detroit. Notice the police- man who hides his face is swinging a blackjack at her, Similar scenes took place when Edith Berkman was arrested last year leading the Lawrence strike. After that the U. S. government kept her in a detention. station eight months and gave her tuberculosis. Police Brutalities Against Women Leaders of the Working Cl NEW COMMITTEE TO TILLINGHAST Famous Writers De-! mand Bevkman’s itclease neiiameinisel hana Mat WEST ALLIS BATTLE EI ‘VETS DEMAND POLICE ATTACKS SHALL CEASE Parade | Has Placards| Against Hunger, War Who W. {rent for « force was called out but the high that they were afraid to One stool pigeon, editor of A striking contrast was offered be- tween the leadership of the parade and the masses of marchers. ‘The parade was headed by five small units of the Portland delegation and two 4 5 American Legion bands. Then came | @ fight by accusing a |the Utah delegation and other small | was beaten up and thrown out. | units. Then came solid ranks. |ed council took the Working Class Character | the starvation policies of The Chicago delegation, Negro and | ™@nagement. When the police tried |white, was followed by big delega- to eject them, the workers fought so tions of war veterans from the other |D@rd that the meeting continued. lindustrial cities of the middle west | The relief attendants tried to close and east, This section made up 75|UP the place at 5 o'clock, but there per cent of the parade and showed | Were many workers who had waited the working class character of the | im lne for hours for relief, that the movement with the main bulk of the| employed committee forced the marchers coming from the industrial | Station to be kept open for over an centers. | hour unti: all were taken care of. | The worker who needed rent was & fae hee few fiags in this section | 1 mised it the next day. Next day the sank ad ‘Sle-6f the reed BL) workers mounted guard at his made clear their purpose. They were marching against hunger and | war! | “Millions for war—not a cent for the hungry veterans!” These words | : |were blazoned forth on a banner| _ ‘BY @ Worker Correspondent) carried by @ contingent of tattered| CHICAGO, Ill—Between 700 and jand lean-faced veterans from Gam-|000. unemployed went on record \den. against the forced labor plan at the | Newberry Street flop house. Last “Food and clothing now—not a| Thursday night at the flop house the the relief « cialist Al Benson, would come with Yes, the veterans were marching against starvation. The reactionary slogans were overshadowed by de- jmands for food and calls for strug- | |gle against imperialist war. A Brooklyn delegation carried a! |banner which said, “Heroes of 1917, ae of 1932.” One carried by an Indiana contingent said, “In mem- ory of Private John Brown, Wound- ed in action, June 2, 1918; died in 2 » the poor house, June 2, 1932. i bea uawike Ghose (By a Worker Correspondent) BIRMINGHAM, Ala—The Edge- water Coal Co., thirteen miles, west of here, and the Docena mines, four miles from the Edgewater mines, have closed down completely. Over two thousand men were laid off. SOR AAD ets to 25 of the men at the flop house. | MINERS EAT GRASS (By a Worker Correspondent) BRIDGEPORT, Ohio—Believe or not, miners’ families are eating grass with the cows here and calling it greens. My next door neighbor told me that her children were hun- | gry. Her man had not eaten for two days. erat: * Department of Justice agents were |busy throughout the day snooping and smelling about the veterans camps, attempting to terrorize the men with threats of jail and deport~- ation, despite the obvious fact that service in the military forces auto- matically makes one a. citizen. 20 Jailed CHILD (By 2 Worker Correspondent.) ‘yorker who was fac floor inside the relief home in case the riot-gun sheriff, so- | | Workers Denounce Forced Labor in Chicago jcoffin later!” said another placard. | superintendent handed out work tick- | it SOCIALIST DRUGGIST EXPLOITS | Page Three WORKERS >OLICE IN REE RENT FIGHT Force Relief Station to Pay Rent of Worker to Be Be Evicted D FROM PAGE ONE) iy.n Worker Garrescondent) héard remarks about the iiliions of WEST ALLIS, Wis. — One hundred and fifty workers |wnemployed, no work and so forth. (fought for four hours at the West Allis relief station to win ing eviction. The entire police spirit of the workers was so. attack them. a local paper, tried to provoke, worker of trying to pull a knife, but he Speakers from the unemploy- tation and ope his deputies to throw out the si niture. Another 75 stayed at the relief station until the rent was paid. | Meetings were held at the house and | the relief station. Three more fami« | lies were found who face eviction, }and these too will be taken care of by the unemployed council. All Allis-Chalmers ex-workers were {called upon to join in the prepara= |tions for the Allis-Chamlers Hunger | March to take place next month. | Over 5,000 former workers in the Allis-Chamlers plant are out of work | and 500 more were laid off last week. This ticket entitled the holder tq work for 5 hours for 25 cents cash, and $3 worth of lodging amd food) at the flop house. This is supposed to last 12 days. A meeting was immediately called in the flop hotise at which a discus- sion was held on the plan. The men got up and expressed themselves in {no uncertain terms about this latest plan to enslave the unemployed. The superintendent was called down to defend himself. He made a tearful speech, saying that he had to give out these tickets, to save his own job, but that he would take it on | himself, not to put the men out, as he was ordered to by the Joint Emergency Relief Committee. There was much heated discussion and a vote was taken on the plan. It was voted down 100 per cent and the men said that they would fight every at- tempt to put them out and to en- force this plan. So determined are they to resist the plan that when the trucks called to take the men to work on Friday morning they re-{ j fused to go- ‘ Another special meeting is being | REVOLT GROWS Previous to the parade 20 members of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League were arrested and taken to the police station where they were BROOKLYN, N. Y.—Bernard Kul- | called in the flop house at which a ler, pharmacist and socialist, located |large delegation will be elected to go, at Eastern Parkway and Ralph Ave., |, employed -@ worker's child in his | to the Joint Emergency Relief Com- | AGAINST DAVILA Spreading More Demagogy of the revolutionary movement a- gainst the new fascist-military dic- tatorship in Chine, the Davile gov- promises of “ending unemployment,” “removing the burdens on workers and the unemployed.” Taking a leaf | from the demagogy of Hoover. Davila promised an end to unemployment “within one month.” The military clique proposed a) plan for the establishment of three State companies which it wants the | workers to believe will solve unem~- pieyment, furnish jobs for the large ruined peasantry. At the same time ig assured the foreign capitali practically control the country that their loot will not be molested by tie “Socialist” government. Forced to admit the responsibility Lavile yesto.day cannot revive under capitalism. With this was coupled the shameless de- | magogy about “progressive State so- clalism.” Labor organizations controlled by jthe socialists and. other reformists are supporting the fascist dictator- ship. Several such groups have held | mass meetings in public squares pledging loyalty to the government. In Santiago, students have called a general student strike. The dic- tatorship is threatening to reorgan- ize the universities to provide stricter control of unde:graduates. A group of school teachers at San~ tiago have raised a demand that something be done immediately to provide food and clothing for th school children who are among the worst sufferers in the crisis. ONE OF HOAN’S VICTIMS, MILWAUKEE, Wis., June 7. Saturday, the day before Foster spoke at German Hall, Milwaukee Papers carried the story of an un- employed sailor, Paul Chiezk, smash- ing a window in a photo material company store in order to be are rested and get some food. VorE ( COMMUNIST FOR: 5, Against capitalist terror; against published at 6 ast 19th St, New York. ie all forma of suppression of the Political rights of workers. . Chilean Diet ator Is: With the further growth yesterday | ernment resorted to more demagogic | army of unemployed and lieip the} of the capitalist system for the ter-| rible misery of the toiling masses, | steted that Chile | EDITH BERKMAN | BOSTON, Mass., June 8—A dele- | | gation organized by the New England | Committee for the Defense of Polit- | ical Prisoners will visit Commissioner lof Immigration Tillinghast on Mon- |day, June 13, and will demand the jrelease of Edith Berkman.’ This | young textile strike leader is held a federal prisoner at Central New Eng- |Jand Sanitorium, 60 miles from Bos- ton. The delegation will include fessor H. W. L. Dana, John Brooks | Wheelwright; the poet; James Shei- |don Humphrey, well-known author- ity on international law; Mrs. Jes-| Henderson, Harold Hickerson, bl wright; Kenneth Porter, poet, ! and a number of other prominent people: They will point out to’ Tillinghast | | that Berkman is not, deportable and | |that for the immigration authorities |to hold her is a plain attempt to ter- | | rorize strike leaders and to illegally |imprison this particular workers’ }leader. ‘They will remind Tillinghast | that Dr. Zigfryd Englisch of the New | York office of the Polish Consul Gen- jeral states Berkman will not be ad~ |mitetd to Poland, the country to which the U. 8. government claims ib is trying to send her. The delegation will demand of 'Til- linghast what she intends to do with Edith Berkman. It will point out that her forcible removal from Bos- ton to this isolated sanitarium is| |greatly aggravating Edith Berkman’s | tubercular condition, a condition that came about as a result of her+con- finement in the immigration deten- tion station in Boston for months. PREACHER WAS JOB-SHARK MINEOLA, N. Y., June 5.—Major Devine, a preacher who maintained @ church he called ‘“Heayen” in Mineola hag been sentenced to a year | itt jail as a public nuisance, on com- |plaint of neighbors, Devine had a |number of univegsity students and |best families in his fold. His appa- |tently “divine” sources of income | were found to depend on taking away the wages of men for whom he found " | police terror. | Pro-| | playing down the bonus struggle and questioned and searched by federal | police agents. They were prohibited to go to Anacostia field and told to leave town within 12 hours. A delegation of rank and file mem- bers of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League will meet Glassford today and demand that persecution of vet- erans cease. The committee issued @ statement to the press denouncing | drug store. The child had to work | from 9 a. m. until 10 at night. After | working 7 days in the store washing, | | cleaning, running errands and making | himself generally useful the socialist paid him 50 cents. AMERICA RANKS FIRST IN MISERY (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—1I have recently re-| turned from Australia and New Zealand, where conditions are very | bed. It seems that America is try-| ing to beat all capitalist countries in | starvation and misery. Although | America has the most highly devel- | oped industries and machinery of | production, the American capitalists | tyranny of the camp leadership| are also holding first place in the| mounts. Demands. were made to-/|race to kill off the greatest number | day for mass meetings, free speech |0f workers and create the biggest | Press Repeats Lies The press repeated the lies about reds and planned bloodshed. The local press stated that the police were mobilized to protect the vets and abort @ red plot. Rank and file resentment against the police methods and the fascist and abolition of the press system of | army of unemployed. D. ©. | provocation. | — A permit for a mass demonstration | INTERNATIONAL UNIONBE lon the Capitol grounds was revoked FITS BOSS today. (By a Worker Correspondent) New elections are taking place to-| CHICAGO, Ill.—Conditions are get- day in the top comnilttee-of the|ting worse in my line—carpentry bonus marchers. The movement has |The small shops are all going bank- the name of the “Bonus Expedition- | Tupt and are being absorbed by the | lary Forces.” Demands are being | big ones, One international labor | made by the rank and file for mass | faker, Berry, put over a fake relief | elections, | measure to benefit the bosses and on | top of this our union has abolished the out of work benefit Socialists Ape Hearst The Socialist Party issued a leaflet BLADDER WEAKNESS? fea, errs” ag ‘sng coe | Prewribed by doctors tor rer a} apeing the Hearst program, And as the cry for rank and file leadership and against police super- vision and jimcrowism becomes more audible in Anacostia Camp and the ranks of the marchers grow, the at~ titude of the government becomes clearer to the vets. The government is against the bonus, is against re~ lieving the hungry millions. Senator Borah, speaking for the mittee, to demand cash relief and nd! | discrimination against those who re- | |fuse to work on the forced labor Plante, They will demand union wages fer ! all work done and the pay to start | from the time the men leave the flop } houst. These demands will be backed | up by militant demonstrations, for ; the flop house unemployed are deter- , |mined to keep the flop’ houses open | and to carry on the fight for relief | by organizing under the leadership:| of the Unemployed Council, in ever | larger numbers, Vote Communist BUTTONS Are Ready for MASS SALE and Distribution Order Now—$20 a Thousent Send Check With Order— Or Will Send C. O. D, Order from your District or from Communist Party, U.S.A. P. O. Box 87 Station D, New York, N.Y. owners of factories and the Wall St. bankers, said, “Not a dollar for the veterans.” General Harbord, in a statement issued for the press last night, declared that the veterans marched to the Capitol with “oval in their hearts.” MEETING TO GREET KEMENO- VICH, PITTSBURGH, Pa., June 8. — A gigant mass meeting in Walton Hall, here, tomorrow, under International Labor Defense auspices, will greet Vincent Kemenovich, national orge- niger of the National Miners Union, and just released from _Wheeling jail on $10,000 bonds. He was a leader in the strike of 40.000 miners last year, | and was held 102 days in jail in the Kentucky strike this year, Kemeno- vich, Borich and Patterson will ad- dress the meeting, which is in bead RAISE FUNDS! 52 Issues $2 Name BUILD CUY .covececeeercegeerressacssccces work, test against attempts to deport the first two. THE WESTERN WORKER A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West 26 Issues $1 Western Worker Campaign Committee 1166 MARKET STREET, Sen Francisco, Catt, IT! SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c. Street .ssemteserensccone State , reer} 4 5

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