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v. ~ 2,100 WORKER INVENTORS SPEED WORK AT SOVIET ELECTRIC MACHINE PLANT ~ . \ | 12,400 at “Eletrosila” Make, Equipment for Factories and Mines Factory-Kitchen Now Supplies 20,000 Meals in 24 Hours Dear Comrade: We read your letter to the work- ers of all the departments and pub- lished it in our factory paper, The picture of your bad conditions, des- cribed in the letter, which are in- evitable in the capitalist system, un- derline more strongly the advant- ages of the socialist system over the capitalist. ‘We have many rank and file work- ers in our plant who worked here at the lathe when the undertaking be~ longed to a German capitalist, Sim- ons-Shuckert. Simons Shuckert would not have recognized this place now. The plant is named “Electrosila.” Fifteen years ago the undertaking consisted of a few shops for assem- bling dynamo machines of low valt- age; the parts were imported from Germany. In these shops 1,800 people were working. They assembled machinery to the value of 7 to 8 million roub- les a year. In 1914 the value of ma- chines assembled in these shops am- ounted to 8,730,000 roubles. During the civil war, when the cap. italists, who had been chased out of our country, made an attempt with the aid of imperialist powers to come back and -organized war against us, our plant stood still, covered with mould and rust. In 1922, the work- ers, who returned from the front, be- gan reconstruction the half ruined remains of Simons Shuckert’s shops. The interventionists had destroyed most ewerything here. We recon- structed our ruined economy under the leadership of the Leninist party, and now we are developing with a tempo unparalleled in capitalist countries. Instead of 1,800 workers in 1914, we have now 12,400 workers employed in our plant. We are mastering the production of new and complex giant electric machines. The buildings of Simons Shuckerts former assembling shops look like shabby shanties be- sides the newly erected buildings of “Elestrosila.” Every year we produce hundreds and thousands of small and large electric machines for the new fac- tories and plants, which open nearly every day. We produce machines for the pits and mines, also for the most powerful electric stations. ‘We have mastered the production of new large and complex turbines jand hydro-generators. We are catch- ing up to the best foreign makes. The generators we produced for Dnieprostroi, Svir and other electric ‘stations of 50 to 77 thousands kilo- wats are not inferior to the Amer- ican Generators. ‘ The first 62 thousand kilowat gen- erator for Dnieprostroi we already completed 75 per cent, and in June we will have it completely finished. ‘The powerful electric transformer for the first Soviet blooming we have ‘produced in three and a half months, The American General Electric Com- pany which has many years of ex- perience in producing these machines, constructs such electric transformers in six months. “Electrosila” fully mastered production of powerful tur- bogenerators. We have already pro- duced 18 generators of 24,000 kilowatts and four of 50,000. Such powerful machines have never been produced in our country before. In our plant 7,000 workers are en- gaged in socialist competition. In our department 1722 shock-brigades are competing with one another, showing examples of heroism and self-sacri- fices in their work. One time our plant, due to bad lead- y ership, did not fulfil its plan and found itself among the backward un- dertakings. We recognized our fac- tory committee, we elected as mem- bers of the committee our best udar- niks (shock workers). ‘The new leaders of our plant brought “Electrosila” to the wide path of victories. The program of the first’) three months was fulfilled 101.3 per cent. The whole workers’ collective ac- tively participates in improving pro- duction. Thousands of suggestions from shock workers promote higher productivity and better quality of pro- duction, “Electrosila” has 2,100 in- ventors, Their suggestions give @ sav- ing of millions of roubles yearly. In 1929 to 1930, our plant produced machinery to the value of 34 million frouble3; in 1930-31, 76 mlilion roubles, ‘his year, according to the plan, our production will amount to 100 million. ‘These are obvious examples of our successes. * Our administration assigns tens of housands of roubles for premiums or workers, Besides, many workers eceive as premiums vacations in san- itariums, resorts, rest homes. In the first three months of 1982 we sent to resorts 150 udarniks and to rest homes 110. Workers who are tired or sick are sent to sanitariums or rest homes free of charge and receive their reg- ular pay. The expense for sanitar- ium resort service for our workers will be one million roubles for this lyear. Our plant promoted to lead- ing posts in production hundreds of udarniks, Hundreds of workers of our ‘slant occupy leading positions in the port, kolkhoses and sovkhoses. Our plant has patronage over the Leningrad Consumers Association (Lepo). By checking up daily on its activities, we help in the fight for better supply of necessities for the workers, In their free hours after work, 130 udarniks of our plant do leading work in Lepo as representa- tives of the workers of our undet- takings, The social and living conditions of our workers are continually improv- ing. The average wage of the work- ers of our plant in 1931 was 138 rou- bles, in 1932 it is 159 roubles a month. ‘The workers of all three shifts get het dinners in the factory dining rooms. The other 20 per cent either eat home or in other dining rooms. A new factory-kitchen is already being constructed, it will supply 20,000 meals in 24 hours. By the 15th an- niversary of the October Revolution, the factory-kitchen will be completed and in the 16th year of proletarian dictatorship we expect to have 100 per cent of social feeding. “Electrosila” has a large garden, a piggery, a milk-cattle raising sovkhos, All the products of thes economies go for the improvement of supply for the workers of our plant, For improving our technical knowl- edge and preparing new cadres of qualified workers we have an edu- cational combinat, which functions the second year already. About 6,000 workers study there after work. The combinat prepares qualified workers of 28 aspecialties, also engin- eers and technicians. The conditions of our children also improved greatly. This year a new kindergarden is be- ing organized. At present we send the Pioneers )450 children) to the country. We are solving the problem of shortage in living quarters, which is @ result of the rapid increase in pop- ulation in Leningrad. Only in 1931 the population of Leningrad increased by 400,000. At our plant a new settle- | ment is being built for the workers who need living quarters. WORKERS ELECTROSILA. COURT IN FINAL RULE ON BEBRITZ Worker Is Ordered to Fascist Rumania (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) of Appeals by Irving Schwab, Inter- national Labor Defense attorney, The ILD. is demanding that Bebritz be permitted to depart voluntarily to whatsoever country he may desire to enter, instead of being forced into the hands of the fascist executioners of Rumania. é When he came to the United States on Oct. 15, 1923, he was truly @ political exile, He had twice been arrested in Rumania. On the first oceasion he was arrested because he was a member of the Communist Party, charged with being an “enemy of the state,” a charge, if it brought conviction, which would result in a sentence of from five years to life at hard labor in the salt mines. While this charge was pending against Bebritz, he spoke at the funeral of a comrade, and in his speech he at- tacked the church as an instrument of capitalism. He was immediately arrested a second time, charged this time with “blasphemy.” Faces Fascist Terror, In Rumania, from which country he legally entered the United States in 1923, Bebritz faces- charges of “sedition.” He was arrested Jan. 21, 1931, while editing the Hungarian daily paper, “Uj Elore,” shortly after he had been subpoenaed and testifieq before the Fish Committee about a year and a half ago, and courageously ..itacked the capitalist system and the Fish Committee in his statements as to the purposes of Communism, His arrest by immigration officers was based on information furnished of course by the very officials who had requested the courtesy of his testi- mony, Since his arrest the I. L. D. hag steadily fought against the efofrt to deport him. Bebritz was scheduled to bedeported on June 29, but the I. L. D,, through his attorney, Irving Schwab, prevented this by a writ of habeas corpus. The I. L. D, is now making a last stand to secure for him the right to at least choose the country to which he wishes to go, and in the meantime to get bail for him while the case is pending. U.S.S.R Would Admit Him. “This is a clear case of a political exile legally in the country and charged with a political crime in. his own land,” the I. L. D. declares. “The Soviet Union will admit him. The effort of the Doak authorities to ship him to Rumania exposes their anti- working-class intentions—to beat down and kill off any and all mili- tant opposition to the starvation pol- Soviet Government apparatus, trans-! icy of capitalism.” VETERANS! SMASH THE DRILL ORDERS DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1932 | | i \ Here is Walter W. Waters, self imposed commander of the B.E.F., giving orders to the vets to drill, Groups of veterans have refused to obey these orders, even though Waters threatened them with the cutting off of their miserable food rations if they refused. Note Negro and white veterans side by side. The Jim-Crow barriers were broken down by the militant members of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League. The W.E.S.L. is ndw fighting the Waters drill edict. VETS VOTE FOR RANK AND FILE DEMONSTRATION W.ES.L. Calls Meet In Camp Anacostia Tomorrow (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE: mittee representing all sections of the B..E, F. will present the veterans’ demands to Congress during the Friday demonstration. The veterans will demand: 1—That Congress appropriate funds at once to supply adequate | food for the bonus army. 2.—That Congress does not ad- journ until the bonus is paid. How the government fs spreading a spy system, throughout the Bonus Expeditionary Forces to intimidate the veterans into giving up a mili- tant fight for the bonus was dis- closed today by a veteran in Camp Anacbstia. Spy System. This veteran reported that a de- tective came to him and asked if he wanted a soft job. The detec- tiveintroduced the veteran to a sec- ond man who took him to a third man who urged him to get into con- versations with worker veterans in the camp and help “ferret out reds.” The vet told the detective that he would be nobody’s stoll pigeon. Threats were again made by the “High Command” not to give food rations to the 14th Regiment, which is commanded by George Pace, leader of the Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League. The rank and file of the 14th Regiment, however, forced the Waters gang to send their share of the miserable raticns, CHOOSE NOMINEES IN CONNECTICUT 178 Delegates Attend State Convention BRIDGEPORT, Conn., July 6—Un- animously endorsing the chief na- tional demands of the Communist Party, and putting forward in addi- tion a number of important state de- mands, 178 Negro and white dele- gates representing 77 workers’ organ- izations, picked state candidates at the Connecticut nominating conven- tion which just ended here. State Demands The state demands adoption in- clude: 1. For a special session of the state assembly to enact Unem- ployment Insurance at the expense of the state and the employers. 2. For an immediate state appropriation of ten million dollars for immediate cash relief to the unemployed. 3. Against evictions and shutting off of gas, elec- tricity and water of the jobless and part-time workers. 4. For immediate payment of all savings lost by work- ers and poor farmers in numerous bank crashes in the state. Resolutions were at the same time adopted calling upon Gov. Gross and state’s attorney Alcorn to release Jackson and Powers, two young work- ers arrested for leading the unem- ployed to New Britain; for the re- lease of Mooney, Billings, Berkman and the Scottsboro boys, and against the enactment of the Dies Bill. State Ticket The state candidates nominated are: Governor—Isidor Wofsy. Lieutenant-Governor—R. Baker, Secretary of State—Olaf Ellison, Treasurer—Emma Davis, \ Attorney-General—John T. Fort, Comptroller— Miriam Ash Schul- man. United States Senator—Robert Ss. Kling. Congressman-at-Large—Konrad a-- sky. Congressman—Third Congressional District—William Secker. The rallying cry, “Defense of the Soviet Union” is rallying thou- sands and millions of workers. Why? Because the Soviet Union is making every effort to maintain peace in the world. Read Litvinov’s speech at Geneva: “The Soviet Union Stands for Peace” (one cent). I.W.W. Sabotages Fight for Mooney | Intimate Glimpses of Thompson and Alliance | With Duluth Socialists and Ministers DULUTH, Minn., July 6.—Duluth is the headquarters of the remains of the I. W. W. Here they publish a daily newspaper in the Finnish lang- uage, also have a school and maintain a meeting hall. The I. W. W., about two months ago, called a general mass meeting | 4; to make plans “for freeing Tom Mooney.” by the name of Thompson, who is one of the I. W. W. chiefs, a Unita- rian minister named Adlard and a Farmer-Laborite lawyer named Slo- nim, and several others of the same calibre. “Not A Farmer” The size of Thompson can be gauged by an incident during the St, Louis County Farmers’ Hunger March, As the farmers and workers were lining up to march, Thompson was asked by workers to join the parade. Thompson replied that he was not a farmer. When the worker replied, “I am a worker, and there are hundreds of thers in the parade,” Thompson was trying to get out of earshot, but not before the worker had addressed the marchers, and pointing out Thompson, announced “That’s the man that is the head of the I. W. W. the organization that Bill Haywood helped to build up. Imagine Bill Haywood refusing to march with us?” Rev, Adlard somewhat of a re- putation as a “liberal” was asked to use his pulpit to aid the Kentucky miners when they were on strike, but he, and two other ministers who were asked to do the same by the Workers International Relief, refused because “it might meet with disfavor,” from the wealthy of Duluth. In fact, the ministers went as far as to consult with a fake Mayor’s Unemployment Committee of bankers and business men before giving their decision. Who Is Slonim? Slonim who is active in the county Farmer-Labor party, publicly refused to buy a ticket to attend the mass meeting at which Mother Mooney was to appear, because the Interna- tional Labor Defense was behind it. Slonim, in the past thought that the International Labor Defense was godd enough to take money from defending workers but now denoun- ces the International Labor Defense as “a Communist organization.” This same Slonim was once active in the Socialist Party. The three fakers mentioned and others were in charge of the mass meeting to “help to free Tom Moo- ney.” A representative of the Trade Union Unity League who was at the meeting denounced the fakers. A fight ensued and he was ejected from the hall, The treatment accorded him engraged the workers, and more three fourths of those present left the hall. “Help” For Mooney, ‘The Wobblies organized from this meeting a “Mooney Defense Commit- tee” and at the next meeting of this committee the International Labor Defense had representative and again exposed the leaders of this move- ment. A third meeting was called by the Wobblies and at this meeting the floundering Wobblies breathed their last as far as the Mooney de- fense is concerned. One of the Moo- ney executive defense committee sug- gested a boycott of California fruit to free Mooney, another suggested a general strike, but the committee de- cided that more practical would be ® picnic for Mooney’s freedom to be held some time in September. And until September, the Farmer-Labor- ite Slonim proposed that “no more public meetings” be held. That the I, W. W. and the A, F, of L. leaders were discredited was seen fro mthe response given by the rank and file of the A. F. of L, to the call for a united front for the Mooney-Scottsboro cases. The Long- shoremen’s Union selected a repre- sentative to attend the United Front meeting, contributed $10 to the I, L. D., and had a representative speak at the meeting, by Richard B, Moore and mother Mooney., The rank and file o fthe Carpenters Union failed by only one vote to have a majority for the proposal to send delegates and funds to the Mooney Scottsboro United Front, but the minority group neverthless, sent a delegate to the meeting. Auxiliaries of the Carpen- ters Union and of the Locomotive Engineers also sent delegates to the United Front. I¢ is significant that the unions who were addressed by representatives of the International Labor Defense, “one exce sent delegates. 200 At Moore Meet, support the I, L. D. in its fight for the freeing of ‘Mooney, the Scotts- boro boys and other class-war pri- soners, Many who signed the pledges were rang and file members of the American Federation of Labor. The fact that the Wobblies and jassociate fakers reached the unions | under a smoke screen of freeing Tom Mooney shows the danger in this section of the country from not being constantly alert to activities of the once militant organization, who are living o nthe once militant record of the I. W. W. POWERS BAR ARMS CUT; TO ADJOURN Will Draft Cover Up Statement on Results The Geneva “disarmament” confer- ence prepared to adjourn with the imperialist powers continuing their ever in the heavy armament burdens they have piled on the backs of the toiling masses. The conference prepared, however, to continue its deception of the mass- es. It assigned Sir John Simon, Brit- ish Foreign Minister, to draw up a de- to “pay respects to the Hoover plan.” The hypocritical nature of the Hoo- ver “arms cut” proposal was further exposed when the United States Gov- ernment supported and “welcoms]” the adjournment. The Hoover plan aims at strengthening Wall Street im- perialism at the expense of its rivals by gaining equality with the British Fleet and forcing a reduction in the Japanese fleet. The plan aims fur- ther to reduce the French Army while at the same time increasing the strength of the United States Army. ‘The Hoover proposals were rejected outright by the Japanese and opposed by the British and French. The Brit- ish offered a counter proposal for “arms reduction.” Early in its sessions, the “disarm- ament” conference rejected the pro- posals of the Soviet Union delega- tion for complete disarmament. An- other Soviet proposal for a real cut in armaments was similarly rejected my the war mongers. Why Should the workers vote Communist—read it in the Elec- tion Platform of thé Communist Party, one cent. i AVANTA FARM ULSTER PARK, NEW YORK WORKERS KECREATION PLACE Located one-half mile from station Fresh milk, improved bathing, 700 spring chickens and all kinds of vegetables growing for guests, DIRECTIONS:—West Shore’ train. For week-en: }75 round trip. By mot Albany Route, By bus: Capit Greyhound Bus Terminal. to Kingston to Ulster Park 220 by train. KIDNEY AGONY? eg tt yuick Bas from (orture oF pa oy burn ine aus | aa doctors, Bold by drugeisis throughoet a A MIDY oR STAC orn cATAR AU refusal to make and reduction what-| Nlaration of “accomplishments” and) By steamboat: |! | huge new building under construction. | vanced The speakers included a man © yo Talk with a National Guardsman By S. R. was riding on the Albany Post Road | through Peekskill and picked up a young American worker who turned) out to be a member of the National) Guard. | As we rode along we came upon a! “That's are new armory,” the Na-| onal Guardsman told me. | they are preparing for the] with one exception | hungry workers,” I said. | i wail 25. pe: pion |"“The guardsman knew what it means |ffered to hire a waiter for $25 per | Why? , tain the small boss parasites when | they come to ‘recuperate.’ For this,| Lista, Anti-Fascist, Is Page Three Slavelike Conditions in Catskill Playyard of Small Bosses Boss Offers Waiters 80 Cents a Day at Swell Furst Employment Agency from Unemploy By KAY Hotel Sharks Reap Harvest ed Job Seeksrs MATHEWS A trip to the Catskill Mountains is a valuable lesson in class struggle. It helps the clz s-conscious worker to see furs ther the rottenness, the corruption of the system in which we, live. opener. ers correspondence, etc., tell u in the Catskills. Let us take Fleishman’s, one of the jlargest resorts in Catskills. The waiters must be students. care is taken that they be handsome, well built, and excellent dancer: They are required to enter- besides their work as waiters, they get the magnificent sum of one dol- lar for the whole summer! If they complete the season, they get a $25 bonus, If they quit, they get no- thing! When the season is far ad- conditions become so un- bearable that they are usually forced to quit. Eighty Cents a Day. Or take the Furst Hotel. The boss |to b2 a hungry worker. He told me|™onth, That's bad enough! But the Over 1,200 attended the meeting |he had addressed by “Mother” Mooney and |@"d ¥ Moore and 158 signed pledges to | along. been unemployed for some time vas having a hard pull to get “Suppose,” I asked him, “this win- ter or even before, you were called ‘experienced workers know that he will not keep a worker for the whole |season but wanted him for July 4th |week-end. Therefore the worker he |had hired was to get 80 cents a day jout with your guns by your officers, and what a day vent the fight of the hungry ers for food, what would you do? The guardsman answered without hesitation: In the whole of the Catskills, there are four well-known emploment |agencies, Agencies are known among 'workers to be craoked. There are “Tq shoot the rich in-|f0Ur agencies, Elkin Scheineman in | see, or hear of, such slavery that the hotel wo For the worker who is not class-conscious, and for the student who is far from the wor’ king-class struggle, it is an eyee We read often of the misery and slavery through which the working-class must go under pitalism. Resolutions, work- But seldom does one} kers go through; TRY TO FRAME ITALIAN WORKER s much. Special | | Held by Cops Clemente Lis an anti-faselst nter living in Guttemburg, New sey, was held without bail the day e yestert on a framed-up charge of murder. He was accused of having shot and killed Salvatore Arena at the Terminal of Staten Is- id Rapid Transit Railroad on Mone y afternoon, after a stormy come memoration of Garibaldi in Rose bank. Yesterday the Daily Worker des- cribed Arena as an anti-fascist work- er. It developed, however, that he was a fascist, belonging to the Ho- bok ection of the Fascist Feder- ation. Members of this organization |participated in the Garfbaldi com- memoration organized by the Sons | it is reported. ) of Ital; The bloody collisions at Rosebank, | stead. We were having a talk in my| Woodridge, Meadoff in Monticello, |in front of the Garibaldi house, de- company the other night,” he went on. “We were talking about Wash- jand Feldman in So, Fallsburgh. -I will take Feldman’s since I spent | veloped when sincere and well-mean- ing anti-fascist workers called to par- ington, and the boys down there who|™Uuch of life time theze. They have | ticipate in an “anti-fascist” comme- can’t get their’ bonus. There’s talk/@ Small ramshackle store in which | moration of the Italian General, were | of using us against the boys, because | they sell candy, cigarettes, etc. The | stirred into action by the provoking | they're expecting trouble. Well, the fellows in my company all said that if they send us down there to fight against them, instead of fighting against them we would join right in and fight with them against the White House,” “Shake on that bud,” I said. We clasped hands, and I could feel he meant what he said, he knew what side of the battle ground he was on. The boss was training him to fight against his own class, but the guards- man knew who his yeal enemy is. Correspondence Briefs place is equipped with a kitchen and meals are served. Up above the store are rooms which are let out to those who are seeking jobs. Now, here jis the racket, They do all they can to get the unemployed to hang a- round so that they will eat (if they have the money) and sleep in the rooms. for the July 4th week-end, but their Place was full. Everyone is ‘darling’ |‘sonny’ ‘gentleman, In this way she squeezes the last dime out of the unemployed. What are some of the jobs that the Feldman’s had? One worker, ap- parently a Russian, about six feet tall, weighing about 180 pounds, strong, ; healthy, was offered a job as handy DULUTH MARCH A FINE THING |™an (general slave) for $10 a month. Duluth, Minn. Dear Comrades: ‘The Farmers’ Hunger March here} recently was a fine thing. It is al means of preparing the masses for feeding their families in such a way that the upholders of this system will be helpless. In addition he had to know gasoline engines and how to drive a truck. He didn’t fill the requirements. He didn’t get the job! Maids, $20 Per Month Another job for a girl... a cham- ber maid to care for 24 rooms (a good day’s work) at $20 per month, I don’t think they had ten jobs | In| | appearance of members of the Fase jcist Federation with their black standards. The anti-fascist workers who did |not forget the bloody and murder- jous deeds of the fascists in Italy, |where hundreds of proletarian fight- ers and communists were murdered, resented the appearance of the fase cists as a challenge. They had been called to participate jin an alleged “anti-fascist” comme- moration of Garibaldi, by Carlo |Tresca and other social-fascists, A | Worker who was present at the de- monstration reports the following ex- }ample of the adventurous nature of | Tresca. The Police Inspector detailed to | protect the Sons of Italy during their commemoration, with hundreds of juniformed policemen and plain- clothes men, told Tresca that he would held him responsible for any thing that might happen. With his | habitual anarchist courage, Tresca re- |torted: “No, I am an individualist; }I am responsible only for myself.” It is reported that a united front I suggest we have more of them! ®ddition she was informed by the boss’ movement is on foot to smash the soon. Worker, DOPE PEDDLERS AGAINST BONUS if Hammond, Ind. Dear Comrades: This Judge Rutherford who at- tacked the veterans in Washington is hea dof the International Bible Students’ Association, a grand bunch of fakers and dope peddlers. They | sell their books for profit and not for “Jehovah” as they claim. Keep on exposing him and his ilk. Worker. BOSS BROTHER WOULDN’T HELP New York City. Dear Comrades: Charles E, Efner, 57-year-old worker and unemployed, committed suicide here recently because, as he put in a letter to his brother, “I am tired of working for nothing every day and not eating or resting.” His brother is an owner of a fur com- pany. Capitalism is a great believer in the “family” helping each other at all times, Worker, Vote Communist || BUTTONS Are Ready for MASS SALE and Distribution Order Ni ow—$20 a Thousand 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. that she would have to help in the | kitchen, He wanted to make her as- sistant cook or something like that. ‘Typical Hotel I want to describe a typical hotel. Take Nemerson Hotel at So. Falls- burgh. The sixteen waitresses sleap in rooms under the social hall. There is one toilet and two wash sinks for about 40 people that are quartered there. The noise from the social hall |keeps them awake till about one | warren s o'clock, By that time they are so on edge that they can’t sleep. Their work starts at 6:45 a.m. They work for about 17 hours with scarcely time to change uniforms and wash. Bosses Fear Workers ‘The bosses fear the fighting mood of the workers. When a Hotel Work- ers Club was organized, they were scared out of their wits. The diffi- culties are great but can be overcome with proper methods. There are many revolutionary workers, employed and unemployed. Mary are sympathetic workers who have at one time or an- other participated in or belonged to revolutionary organizations and ac~- tions. “Towards Soviet America” by Wm, Z, Foster—$1.25—an eiabora- tion of the platform of the Com- munist Party in its election cam- paign, police attempt to railroad the anti- fascist worker Lista on a framed-up je All workers are urged to support this movement. \Demand Terror | Commissioner Quit DULUTH, Minn., July 6.—The re« |signation of Safety Commissioner | . Moore was demanded manimously by more than 700 work- Jers at a public trial held in Court |House Square under the auspices of |the International Labor Defense and the Unemployed Councils. A jury of thirteen workers found the safety {commissioner guilty of intimidating jand terrorizing the St. Louis Farms lers Hunger March on June 21 by |mobilizing the Duluth police force, |and by open display of tear gas and |riot guns, of squad cars and an ar- | mored mechine gun car, and patrot wagon. The workers at the mass trial who acted as pudges concurred unanimously in the verdict of the jury. The workers and farmers at the trial were urged to attend the next meeting of the Duluth city council when the ousting of Commissioner Moore an dother officials who had a part in the intimidation of the par- ticipants in the Farmers’ Hunger March will be demanded, RAISE FUNDS! 52 Issues $2 BUILD CHY cosesecececesceccceenseesccees New York, N. Y. 26 Issues $1 THE WESTERN WORKER A fighter to organize and lead our struggles in the West IT! SUBSCRIBE NOW! 13 Issues 50c NAME sesseosereceescccrreceereseeseases SUCCE cesar teccesescnsceeees eee Western Worker Campaign Committee 1164 MARKET STREET, San Francisco, Calif,