The Daily Worker Newspaper, August 12, 1932, Page 3

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MACHADO ASKED TQ MAKE PEACE WITH OPPOSITION Fate of Grau, Union Leader, Hidden by Censorship NEW YORK.—A letter published in the Spanish press discloses an attempt to forge an agreement be- tween the Machado government and the National Opposition Party which has been playing the role of “revo- lutionary”. The letter, signed by Colonel Menocal, leader of last year's revolt, Mengita, Gomez and Penate, offers a plan of agreement. This is, for Machado to resign and appoint someone who has not heen connecte? with the calling of congressional elections and the establishment of 2 temporary coalition cabinet. The letter is answered by Ferrara, former Cuban ambassador to Wash- i-vten and at present Mze* nein" anne Sy tary. He says thot svo-l4 be earried on secretly in the hi Opposition Party that has Foen throwing: the bombs in an at- tempt to force concessions and po- iors in the rovernment from Ma- ‘240, The leaders have been taking ntave of the rreat dissatisfaction sith the Machado terror regime in crder to gain their ends, Menocal f'et_the country Iest year leaving 2.001 of ux and file followers in dungeons. Yeeterd-y the canitalist press re- ported thet the Soe) porss of Havana presented a petition to Machado ash *, Sotolongo, who has been held without charges since June 11, evidently a member of the "p, has argued in the Sigh Chae 18 ign of the Meno- d by Ma- y the ten against Commrnist, Party and revolu- ers in general. revarding bourgeois Joneses tan “Machado hes turned his itutiors leaks through oc- the fate of the recently ry woetkxers remains . All mail coming into ing is cens* The anti-war demonstration of Ju ‘ich was shot up by thg “loody tools of American imperialism eas been the starting point of the mest recent outrages against the Cuban revolutionary movement. Al- ready workers’ organizations throughout the United States have started to flood Machado with pro- test resolutions. The wave of protest must be intensified. Anti-Labor Group Backs Waters “Key Men” Finance Tour to Defeat Bonus (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) orta and Icay long and notorious record of strike breaking and spying activities. It was first organized in 1923, with the advent of Fred R. Marvin, a news- paperman formerly with the “Moun- tain States Banker” of Denver. Mar- vin ran a column in the “New York Commercial” (later merged with the “Journal of Commerce”) attacking all movements of the working class, at the same time selling a “daily sheet service” to manufacturers ad- vising them how to smash up labor organization in their factories. All those who read Marvin's col- umn were invited to’ become “Key Men of America” who agreed to pre- serve and file all developments in the labor movement with the aim of using this information to break strikes and any form of working class political organization. Aim to Defeat Communism Mr. Marvin claimed that the chief aim of the Key Men was to “de- feat Communism and Socialism in America.” It is into this vcious anti-labor or- ganization that. “General” Waters has b2en welcomed with open arms. DOCTOR HOOVER af PnoaPeRity ime0 Bays” an Quick! 3* o9¢sN'r woax-we® DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1932 WE RESISTS orf what wow? Ihave rl! Tes raser® eae By Quirt BULLETIN NEW YORK.—Word was received from Washington, this afternoon by the National Office of the In- ternational Labor Defense, that William Patterson, well-known Ne- gro labor-leader, and member of the executive committee of the I. L. D., who went down to Washing- ton yesterday afternoon, had dis- appeared. It is feared that he has been arrested. Patterson went to Washington to represent the: IL. D. in arranging for the defense of j; the eleven Negro workers held there on frame-up charges of mur- der. WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 11.— Fourteen Negroes have bsen arrested here, and a.score more arrests are predicted by th police, in a prepara- tion for frame-up charges for the death of Policeman M, J. Kennedy, who cied last Sunday of a fractured skull after attacking a group of Ne- gro workers on the street. One ar- rest was made near Hamilton, Va., Police, to lay th2 basis for a frame-up, claim that a Negro, Irving Murray, had Kennedy’s gun in his posession, Brigadier-General Pelham Glassford, who engineered the eviction of the veterans, and the army attack on them for President Hoover, has ap- parently ordered a reign of terror against the Negroes, and a terrori- sation frame-up at all costs. hae NEW YORK, Aug. 11—William Patterson, prominent Negro labor leader, and a member of the na- tional executive committee of the International Labor Defense, left for Washington Wednesday night to take of the defense of the fourteen Ne- groes held there in the death of Policeman M. J. Kennedy. Kennedy died last Sunday, and his death has been made the excuse for unleashing of a veritable reign of terror against the Negroes in the ‘capital. District officials, and the police department, it is understood, are preparing to frame these fourteen on murder charges. With Patterson will be associated in the Washington defense, Bernard Ades, I. L. D. attorney, and C. Lippa, Philadelphia organizer of the ILD. Kennedy died as a result of a blow from his own night stick when he charged on a group of Negroes on the street and attacked them trying to take one of them to jail on charges trumped up on the spur of the mo- ment, The Negroes, smarting under this and previous similar attacks, tried to rescue their gomrade. In the scuffle, someone took Kennedy's club from him and hit him over Detroit Workers Fight Evictions Block Committee Lead Continuous Struggle DETROIT, Mich, Aug. 11.—A sharp struggle is ‘going on between block committees of the Unzmployed Council in the north end of Detroit and Hamtramck, Mich. over evic- Not only is he welcomed, but he is subsidized from the coffers of the or- ganization to defeat the ex-service- men’s fight for the bonus. Standing behind Waters these “Key Men” are aiming not only to smash the fight for the bonus but to form the vets into a fascist organ- ization to be utilized against the struggle of the workers for unem- ployment insurance and against war, Waters thus stands doubly ex- posed as an enemy of the bonus and unemployment insurance and an upholder of the imperizlist war preparations now being made by the U. S. Government. ‘Waters further revealed his reac- tionary role in a statement whe he made to newspanermen admitting that he knew of Hoover's pians to use troops agaitist the veterans, but did not disclose the information to the ex-servicemen. FORD MAY HAVE ANOTHER SHUT-DOWN DETROIT, Aug. 9—The much her- alded revival in the production of automobiles hag received a jolt with Ford considering the closing of his plants supposedly for inventory, The veal meaning of this closing is seen in the 50 per cent drop in Ford Au- gust shipping releases. In the entire auto industry a 25 per cent drop is expected for the past month, evictions. A concentrated atttempt to evict is going on. Three home owners in this district of small, wage earning and now unemployed work- ers who have their own small houses, have been arrested. In one instance a worker helping to put furniture back into a house where an eyiction had taken place was slugged by police and without even the formality of a trial was sentenced to 30 days by the police court. In every attempted eviction, a riot call govs in any police try to disperse the thousands who gather in the street to denounce and prevent the jloss of the workers’ home. Gas has been used, Guns are frequently cies played by the cops. The struggle centers around ‘the Cassmere Holmes, Eldridge, Howard, Prescott, Connor and Talbot strike committees. Capitalist papers -here featitre the story of Mrs. Anna Chamura unem- ployed mother of five childron, who knocked out a constable with a broom when he tried to put her furniture out. The furniture was put out when the constable got reinforcements and a block committee put it right back. Workers in this neighborhood are for the Communist Party platform demand for unemployment insur- ance, and for the Unemployed Coun- cil’s demand, “no evictions,” Washington Pillice Arrest 14 Negroes in Attempt to Frame Them for Cop Death International Labor Defense Sends Patterson To Take Charge of Defense ‘Dead Cop Had Attacked Negro Workers In Wave of Terror Following Bonus Battle the head. Ever since the eviction of the bonus marchers, the police of Wash- ington had been terrorizing the Ne- groes in Washington, driving them off.the streets, and clubbing, beating and dispersing them whenever two of three stood together. Since the death of Kennedy, this terror had ben intensified, and Negroes have been thrown into jail indiscrimin- ately, as police sought to find a group on whom they could in any way fas- ten a murder charge. The Washington papers have been publishing scare headlines, stories about “Negro hoodlums,” and other obvious preparations for an attack on the Negro workers here, who, form- ing 80 per cent of the working-class population, are in desperate circum- sances as a result of the crisis. The whole affair is an attempt to ter- rorize the starving Negroes, who would undoubtedly be forced into militant action during the coming winter to obtain food and shelter, and to smash the growing unity of Ne- gro and white workers which in- creased tremendously during the stay of the bonus marchers here, and as a result of their eviction. “It is to be expected,” a statement by Carl Hacker, acting national sec- retary of the LL.D., yesterday said, “That following the attack on the bonus marchers, and the wave of mass resentment which swept the country as a result of it, the Hoover administration and the Washington police should seek by attacking the most oppressed section of the pop- ulation to promote discord among the workers. Since the Negroes con- stitute this oppressed section, being deprived of all political, social, and economic rights, the drive has been especially directed against them.” Camp Gretna Food Rotten, Hours Long, for Nat’l Guardsmen (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—The follow- ing letter is from a national guards- man at Camp Gretna where the gov- ernment is training the young work- ers for a new imperialist war, to use these Guardsman in case of “trouble” (read workers’ demonstrations or strikes) : “When meal time comes we sit down to a meal that is not o nly dis- tastful but actually repulsive to one who is accustomed to eating decent food. Why only yesterday I had a terrific pain in the gut from the dinner we had. My pal here was so sick that he threw up and had to get some pills from the medicals. Sev- eral other complained of improving. It makes a fellow sore when he thinks of what the officers are get- ting and what slop he is fed. With all this going on the officers do not even broach the subject of food with their men. They are contented and they leave us holding the bag. “On this sickening food we are forced to toil incessantly under a burning sun day in and out, Very little regard is given to the health of the men. “In speaking to some of the Na- tional Guardsmen last week they told me, that the only reason they join the National Guards is to make a dollar a week.” The way for these National Guards- men to stop this rotten food and dirty handling is to‘organize inte ‘regimental committees of rank and file gurdsmen, Demand decent food. Demand use of uniforms or parts of uniforms for unemployed Guardsmen when not drilling, BRITISH PLAN FOR INDIAN MINORITIES TO BE PUBLISHED SIMLA, India.—The British “Com- munal Award will be published in India and in England on August 17, the Indian Government announced. The Communal Award is the “im- posed plan” of the British Govern- ment for settling the issue of “rights” of Indian minorities under the pro- posed new Indian Constitution. SEPT. 3D FOR ‘DAILY’ AFFAIR The Bath Beach Workers Club, which is arranging an affair for the Daily Worker on September 3, re- quests all workers’ organizations not to arrange any conflicting affairs for this date. All proceeds of the event will be given to aid the $40,000 Emergency Fund Drive of the Daily Worker, What Is Your Section Doing for the Daily Worker's Circulation Drive? FIFTH VETERAN VICTIM DIES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) number of three war veterans and two children on bloody Thursday, refused yesterday to see a group of writers led by Sherwood Anderson who came here under the auspices of the Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners to protest the armed attack against the ex-service- men, Hoover, fearing to face the au- thors, too busy. The group read their state- ment to Theodore Joslin, Hoover's press relations secretary. The statement of the writers, which Mr. Anderson was not permitted to finish reading said in part: when you stand up to ask the Am- erican people to reelect you to the high office you hold, large masses of American citizens will listen to you with one feeling in their hearts. “That feeling, we must report to you, as honest editors and writers whose job it is to be sensitive to human feelings and to record them truly, is one of bitterness against your conduct of your office; and Ysely uray} 04 auIoO NOX Nod ysuyEse from an official act which they wit- nessed and read about with the deepest horror and _ indignation During the past week destitute, un- armed men were shot down by the armed men were shot down by the police, and by your personal order defenseless men and women were harried through thé streets of Wash- ington by soldiers, with bayonet, saber and gas, smoked out of their hovels, and driven forcibly out of the capital to roam and starve on the bare hibhways of America, “Two veterans were killed and usleI Y “pepuNoM Ajy1y UBYyy sJOUT of terror was instituted in Washing- ton, in which these destitute men, who had performed the most exact- ing duty the State demands from its citizens, found themselves strip- ped of their rights as citizens, and at the mercy of every indignity and brutally the military and. the police could subject them to. Numbers of these men were ar- rested and held in jail as criminals ang Communists, while you, and your subordinates, tried to shift the responsibility of the government’c ruthlessness to them. Decent work- ing men were libelled by the Presi- dent as criminals. The words Com- munist and criminal were dema- gogically coupled. Granted some of the veterans were Communists; “1. Do you accept the full re- Sponsibility for your offical act of Thursday, July 28? “2, Do you still stand by the ex- planation you made of your extraor- dinary act, and by the defenses made by your Sectetary of War and his subordinates of their action? “3. Do you inteng to pursue the policy of rule by the use of lawless violence and military force? “4, While millions of people are starving, and bands of destitute and homeless men and women roam the country, will you persist in refusing to provide measures for adequate relief? Will you continue to deny these men and women, whose misery ‘has afforded and still affords the pretext for official violence in Washington and elsewhere, their ele- mentary rights to food and shelter, and justice?” sent word out that he was} Mother in Penna. Is Jailed for Killing Bird to Feed Family UNIONTOWN, Pa., Aug. 11—In this coal domain where thousands of miners and their families are starving, Mrs. Anna Chess, of Fair- chance, is now serving a 20-day jail sentence because she was hungry. Because she killed a flicker, a spectes of woodpecker, to feed her large family, Mrs, Chess was ar- rested and sent to jail. Since the statute books of Andrew Mellon's state do not yet specify that hun- ger is punishable by prison terms, Mrs, Chess was convicted on the charge that she was violating the state game laws. STEEL WORKERS CONVENTION SAT. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) al Workers Industrial Union, which thousands of workers have been con- sistently struggling to build in the face of the terror of the bosses and the deportation policy of the Govern- ment, will be born from this historic convention and will go forward to lead the coming strikes of the steel and metal workers in all important centers. Doubles Membership The M.W.LL. in its pre-convention campaign has made excellent prog- ress especially in the Mahoning Val- ley in the strategic mills of the Re- public Steel Corporations, taking in several thousand new workers, the majority American born, and many high-skilled workers who are also now receiving the savage attacks of the bosses. The national member- ship of the MWIL has doubled dur- ing the past six months, with strong organization growing up in part of the Calumet steel section and in the Mahoning Valley, one of the largest steel territories in the country. The recent Hunger March of the MWIL and the Unemployed Council of 8s. Chicago involved 5,000 steel workers in the march with and additional 12,000 participating. The first National Convention will have the task of founding the new union on the basis of a sharp turn away from the past weaknesses of the MWIL and with an immediate view towards organizing and leading the strikes and struggles of the em- ployed and jobless steel workers, against wage cuts, part-time work, unemployment, deportation, and the war program of the Steel Trust and the metal manufacturers and the government, The Convention will start at noon Saturday and continue to Monday evening. Food and housing have been arranged by the convention preparations committee, and at least 100 elected delegates are expected from all parts of the country. 8 8 NEW YORK.—The following tele- gram was sent today to the conven- tion of steel and metal workers to be held in Pittsburgh: “National Office International La- bor Defense grects national conyen- tiona) metal workers, creator of the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union. In this period of desperate crisis and mass starvation, the re- sistance of the workers meets in- creasing terror. Bosses seck to smash La the will of the workers to struggle Two in Hospital and the growin gsolidarity Negro and DETROIT, Mich. Aug. 11.—Two| White workers. Only mass defense members of the bonus army who were driven from the capital collapsed here and had to be taken to the Re- ceiving Hospital. The veterans are Frank Cooney of Detroit and John Gray of Port Huton. They are both suffering from injurles received from troops who drove them from Camp Anacostia. 100 Delegates Attend Minneanolis Meeting for “Daily” Campaign —— MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Aug. 11.— One hundred and sixty-eight dollars was raised for the $40,000 Save the “Daily” drive at an emergency con- ference held here last night. More than 100 delegates from re- volutionary workingclass organiza- tions in Minneapolis, St. Paul, Du- luth and Superior pledged to raise their full quotas for the Daily Work- er drive and for the national election campaign fund of the Communist Party. Mass, meetings, neighborhood col- lections, picnics and concerts are be- ing planned in District nine to sup- port the $40,000 appeal of the Daily Worker, “The straggl- against militarism fs an extreme form of the class struggle against war and against the political power of # —LIEBKNECHT. and organization*breaks boss terror. Only the ILD leads the defense of the working class. Steel workers must organize a steel band of de- fense for the impending struggles. (Signed) CARL HACKER, Acting Natl. Secretary. PICKET HOOVER'S PAY CUTTING JOb Tie Up "Minneapolis Post Office Work MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Aug. 11.— A hundred pickets stopped all work on the government post office job here today when 30 men hired at 40 cents an hour answered the ap- peal of the United Front Commit- tee of Action. The Committee called on these at cut the wages of Minneapolis hyild- ing workers. is 65 cents an. hour. ‘The contractors appealed for po- still holds firmly. Communist Party election platform which calls for fight against Hoover's wage cutti7 policy. jand |have stolen the tally |showing the vote against the - Page Three LEWIS ORDERS WAGE CUT IN ILLINOIS ALTHOUGH MINERS VOTED AGAINST IT Officials Had Tally Sheets Stolen to Hide Hugh Majority Against $1.10 Slash, Then Use Theft As Reason ‘for Defying Vote SPRINGFIELD, Ill., Aug. 11 —Officials of the United Mine Workers district office here sheets proposed wage cut in over 200 locals of the Illinois district, International President Lewis has thereupon simply ordered the wage cut into ef- fect. ‘Three weeks ago the Illinois min- ers, by a huge majority voted down the cut of $1.10 a day basic rate. This week the officials tried again to | put over the wage cut by taking an- other ballot. Unofficial information from large numbers of the 240 lo- cals in Illinois showed another over- whelming defeat of the cut, in spite of every attempt to miscount the votes. Hi-Jacked! Yesterday, the tally sheets, from which the official announcement of the result of the voting must be made, were just hi-jacked by thugs riding in an automobile, while the sheets were being taken by the union tellers from the Ridgely Farmers State Bank tothe United Mine Workers district headquarters. Both the bank and the UMWA headquar- ters are in Springfield. District officials then announced that no official announcement of the vote could be given until the sheets were recovered. Immediately afterwards, I. Giles, vice-president of Local 4069 of the UMWA made a sworn statement that he read the license plates of the car in which the thugs rode, and that it was Illinois License No. 3165. The state auto records show that this car belongs to Vice-President Fox Hughes of the Mlinois district of the U.M.W.A. And within a few hours after the tally sheets were stolen International President Lewis of the UMWA is- sued a formal statement declaring the stealing of the ballot tallies con- stituted an emergency, and an- nounced that he and the district of- ficials of Illinois had just signed an agreement for the whole district for the wage cut. The $5 scale was to go into effect at midnight last night, and there is widespread denuncia- tion already among the Illinois min- ers, President Lewis, District President John H. Walker, Vice President Fox Hughes, Secretary Walter Nesbit and Chairman John Moulin of the wage scale committee signed the contract for the officialdom of the U.M.w., and Mr. Jenkins and Fred S. Wilkey, secretary, for the operators We Predicted It. ‘The Daily Worker yesterday car- ried news of the voting down of the wage cut and predicting that the "| officials would try to find some way to violate the clear will of the mem- bership of the union, The fight against the wage cut was led by the organized Rank and File Opposition which demands also that the lockout now going on in Illinois mines be changed by militant action of the miners into a real strike, led by strike committees of the miners themselves. The National Miners Union sup- ports the demands of the Rank and File Opposition. Mass Meetings, Latest news from the Illinois fields is that the Rank and File Opposi- tion has already called a number of mass meetings, and that spontaneous crowds of miners are already meeting and demanding that the district of- ficials be kicked out at once for stealing the ballots. The Rank and File Opposition calls on the Illinois miners to elect strike committees in every mine to declare a strike and to unite the struggle against official betrayal, against the wage cut thus choked down their throats, with the struggle of the unemployed miners here for jobless relief. CONTRIBUTIONS TO “DAILY” FUND DISTRICT 2—NEW YORK CITY : Diamond, Bronx 60 Benson, Bronx 1.00 A Friend, Bronx 25 JB, Bronx 1.00 IWO Schule East Flatbush, Bkiyn 3.60 Mapleton Workers Club, Bklyn 4.00 Berger, Bronx 50 H WK, City 5.00 L J Joseleyn, City 1.00 DISTRICT 4—BUFFALO W G Martin, N Tonowanda 2.00 Al De Grandis, Rochester 25 DISTRICT 7—DETROIT Urrelntan, Womens due. Asem, Detrott 1.00 E Share, Detroit C Dempsey, Brown City, Mich. A W, Kalamazoo DISTRICT &—CHICAGO Chicago work on this government job not to] unit 511 The official scale here | unit 503 lice to break the picket line but it} ba" +1 Rickreall, re. Hundreds of pickets and those who|c P District 18 gathered to watch the picketing ae 207 signed petitions to place Communist at ‘08 candidates on the ballot, after they] Fretheit Singing Society had been shown that plank in the] 6). i, ake rs International Notes GREET CLASS WAR PRISONE BENALTO ALTA. for the Alberta District of t Section of the Farmers Unit held here in the last days of Ju sent its greetings to the munist leaders in sangeion, and all class war pri * 500 ARRESTS IN BULGARIA VIENNA. ve hundred were arested when the pol up @ demonstration caled to n ize the workers for the Augu Anti-war protest, reperts from indicate. Rumors that the Communists were preparing an insurrection in B for August 1st are reported to ha’ been spread to create a progrom tendency against the Commun’ Se, Se CALGARY, Alta—The Gove ment of the Alberta District Canada is planning to draft harvest workers. If a “shortage” of harvesters will result in the district, it is announ ed, married men without children may be drafted. This announcement comes right at a time when the cry is being ra by the Canadian Federal ment against Soviet “forced Is New Minneapolis Plan MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.; Aug. The militant struggle cf the w ployed here, demanding immediate relief, is now facing another enemy. To police clubs has been added a whole organization of misleaders. The capitalist papers carry the announce- ment of appointing of ward captains, ward committees, warehouse com tees, etc, (for which somebo paying) of an outfit which calls its self “The Organized Unemployed.” The program of this organization combines all the worst featur forced labor, absence of strv wage cutting, and new une! ment. The organization ri jobless workers, solicits wo them anywhere, not for wag for food. The farmers are begged to supply the food, and food is all the organization gives in return for work. ‘The public meetings of “The Or- ganizéq Unemployed” are held in a church. Bungalows and Rooms to Rent for Summer Season Several very nice rooms and bungalows for rent for the summer season. Beauti- ful farm in Eastern Pennsylvania, 50 miles from Philadelphis. Running water, electricity, swimming, fishing, ete. Rea- sonable rates. Communicate with Tom Jessor, April Farm, Coopersburg, Pa. a) || LEBANON MAYOR | BARS MEETINGS TO DRAFT HARVEST workers || + | sia. to Work Jobless with| No Wages, , Only Food| | hours, but ie Simply Abolishes the Right of Assemblage | LEB. NON, Pa., Aug. no Soviet Union, Communist, or any other meetings will ed in the city of Lebanon. Legal action or no legal ned) Mayor John K. R. 11.—“Posi- is is a telegram sent August 6 r of this steel town as ttempts of the Friends loviet Union to hold meetings ll here The mayor thus off- lishes the ed consti- ech, free= for the nd at | tutional dom of workers, the FS.U. had advertised by pills and in the press a speech an Tallentire, its national to be held in Redmen’s 3. Chief Locks Hall. The chief of police had the hall locked on the day of the meeting. Tallentire and two members of the nmittee preparing the meet- saw the chief, who said that the people here don’t to hear anything about Rus- He refused to open the hall. The chief said the mayor was in a near- summer resort, but even if the mayor should grant permission for the meeting, that wouldn't mean a chief of police. Citizen Apologizes. The chief then took a swarm of and a choice assortment’ of ms with blackjacks and drove from the hall all workers who came to hear Tallentire. The F.S.U. speaker and committee stood his ground in front of the hall for two but the cops kept the crowd | | local ing “better glass of is the town of Charlie b, One angered citizen of Leb- anon has written a letter apologiz- ing for the shame the police have on the town, and declaring le the police protect and en- bootlegging and vice, they |prohibit public meetings of workers. Rei of The DAILY WORKER | Phe only Czechoslovak working class ewspaper in the U, S. and It stands for the very same principle as THE DAILY WORKE Yearly subscription $6, for 6 mo. §3. Write for free sample copy today {x your neighbor at home, shop, mine or farm a Slovak or Czech worker? lf he is, have him subscribe to the Daily Rovnost Ludu Czechoslovak Org. of the C.P., U.S.A. 1510 W. 18th St., Chicago, TIL s fo Read the Daily Worker! — Bring the DAILY to the Shops, Factories, Mills and Farms, to Jobless Workers and Bonus Marchers! FIND OUT WHAT IS HAPPENING TO THE WORKING CLASS OF THE UNITED STATES AND ALL OVER THE WORLD News of the Class Struggle Every Day! UNTIL NOVEMBER FIRST! FREE With One-Year Subs ‘MPLOYMENT”—Soviet Pictorial. “LABOR FACT BOOK"—NEMONIES OF LENIN—“SOVIET PLANNED ECONOMY” OTHER PREMIUMS WITH ALL SHORT-TERM RURSE SPECIAL OFFER—YEARLY SUB TO THE SATURDAY FEATURE DAILY WORKER—52 ISSUES—FOR $1.00 M Millinary 50 plea that. 1300 |f] “TOWARD SOVIET AMERICA,” by Willlam. Z. Foster. Unit 503 1.35 Sale Pries Unit $08 1.00 VIET WORKER,” by Joseph Freems 18.00 ND WITHOUT UN: Unit, 604 10.09 Usual Sale Price M Kemps Cea ag 1.00 SCULPTURED HEAD OF LENIN—FRAMED— a nes > FREE With Six-Month Subs, Milwaukee ; 4.00 or SCULPTURED HEAD OF LENIN— 1.08 nit 202 f 2100 : 2.00 3.50 SUBSCRIPTION RATE: So. Slay Fraction 5.00 Ale Meeting 30th and Mitchell 1,05 DISTRICT 19—DENVER 1g | District 19, © P Office, Denver 1.00 Foreign workers aboatd Bremen en- Tonta ta Enrone 2.00 ~ Cloth Bound. 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