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NATIONAL CONVENTION OF LLD., OCT. 8-9 IN CLEVELAND TO MAP DEFENSE STRUGGLES Growing Terror and Fight for Freedom of Class War Prisoners Will Bring Hundreds of Worker-Delegates to Me Worker Correspondence Stewart Cafeterias Gyp Counter Men Out of Pay Get Buss Boys to “Practice” 0 Own Time (By a Worker NEW YORK.—Stewart’s Cafeteri: ef forcing their employes to work oy: the annals of gypology. All buss boys have been inform« counter after their day’s work is finished. Inspired by the idea of in- creasing their earning capacity if they become effictent counter men, the staves fall for the trap, and work four or five weeks at this game of break- ing in. on their own time. Correspondent) - ias, Inc., have inaugurated a system | ertime for nothing that is unique in | ed that they must break in on the When the “pupils” ask if they are yet competent, they are invariably | In*o: buss boy happevs to be promoted se of cd that they, are not, and they continue practicing for nothing. If his wages remain the same. When ks fer a raise he is informed that it takes three or four weeks for the raise to ro through the office. At the end of tha ttime seme excuse is fornd to fire him, and another bus: system, s boy is started on the “breaking in” 11 Hour 7 Day Week Grind Described by Waitress Too Tired to Do Anything After Work is Done) By S. F. * After trying hard. a good friend of mine rot me a job in a New York resteurant to be a waitress. I worked for three weeks without pay, and then the boss de to pay me weekly wages, Cnly those who do such work can realize bow herd it is for a young itl of 17 to work 11 hours a day and seven days a week. Spoecd-Up Sterting in the morning at 9 o'clock, I just have time to arab a cup of coffee. after which I start to make the bills of fare and specials. and at the same time take care of the counter and tables, make sand- wiches, teke cash, and give service. At lunch time I have to rush sround After chsosing the best that we are like mad. About 11:30 in the morning I can beve my Imeh, of what we fre allowed to have (we are forbidden to eat certain foods). I must go to the basement to eat. There I find stinking garbage cans, rats, files, cockroaches and other bugs. Supper Rush After eating, I again start working by polishing, washing, oiling and cleaning in general. Then the supper hour rush comes on, after which I must wash the ketchup bottle, clean the mustard bowls, fill the napkin holders and sugar cans, and when I Fur Workers Get $15 to $20 for 60 to 70 Hours of Work (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—The fur workers of Oldman F'ros. have been reduced to actual pejmage. Cutters are working 60 and hours a week earning not more than $15 to $20 at piece work. They also collect pay for the operat- ors and mailers and then pay them off. They jnust supply their own pins. The op@‘ators also work 60 and 70 hours a week for $12 to $15 a week. They murt supply their own cotton and needles. The same for the nail- ers, who must take off the coats from the boards without even getting paid for it. If the workers of this shop don't watch their step, they will soon have to buy. their machines, too. Leo Reiner is the slave driver who is responsible for most of these con- ditions. He holds conferences with the boss on how to cut wages. This bootlicker also had to accept a wage cut, from $60 to $35,’ working all kinds of hours into the night with no extra pay. This is a key shop in the fur in- dustry. It employs at present about 15 to 18 workers, with plenty of work being given out to bootleg contrac: tors. Workers in this shop are dis« contented and would fight immedi- ately for better conditions. We also work with locked doors, endangering the workers’ lives in case of a fire. Work 10-15 Hours a Day and Then Must Beg Red Cross Flour | (By a Worker Correspondent) MIDDLESBORO, Ky. — Here in Middleboro is en overa)l factory which has about 400 men and women work- ing from 10 to 15 hours’each day. I was talking to a woman recently who starts at’6 o’clock in the mor- ning and works till 9 o'clock at night, end she said she had made $2.25 and during this time they had changed bosses twice, And in this factory the speed up system wont allow these workers time enough to eat their lunch. The majoriy of these workers are married women whose husbands work in the mines and then they have to go to the Red Cross for what flour they use, for their husbands don't make as much as they do. Build a workers correspondence sronp in your factory, shop or neighborhood. Send regular Icters to the Dally Worker. VOTE COMMUNIST Hoover's wage-cntung policy. am through, the Big Shot comes over and gives me hell for something I did or didn’t do. When I come home I am too tired to go out. When I pick up a workers’ paper, I read how good it is in the Soviet Union. I go to a lecture, and the lecturer will again tell how in the Soviet Union the girls of about my age are compelled to work only four hours a day, and the rest of the time they put into studying. Exposes Spy System in Meat Packing House (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—I was speaking to a fellow who told me something I think is worth knowing. His sister, an unemployed stenographer, was sent by the Underwood Employment Agency to @ job on 11th Ave. near 18th St. with a gang who call them- selves the Butlet Better Business Corp. » When she got there she found two other girls also looking for the job. They were told they would have to pass a test, tach of them got a sec- tion of a report to type and arrange. Her part of the report consisted of six pages. It appears that these birds are union busters. The report was one made by one of their agents who is | working part time in a meat packing house on West 42nd St. The agent was described as A in the report. The report ‘consisted of what he |said to the men, how they answerod him, and what they had to say them- selves. He told the men he was a | married man with a family out of a job and willing to work for any- thing. He told the men he worked jin other places for $12 a week and | Was glad to get it. This bird told those men that the j union was arranging to start the | five-dayeweek. | ants. |born workers and against their de- et The International Labor Defense, | through Carl Hacker, acting general ; Secretary, has issued the following | call for the fifth national convention of the International Labor Defense, to be held in the Lithuanian Hall, Cleveland, Ohio, Oct. 8th and 9th. “To all organizations interested in the struggle against persecution, de- portations, lynching, terror: “On the 8th and 9th of October, | the International Labor Defense will j hold its Fifth National Convention at the Lithuanian Hall, Cleveland, O. The ILD is an organization of mass struggle for the defens2 of class war prisoners. Since 1925 it has carried on a relentless struggle against the| imprisonment and _ persecution of workers regardless of their race, na- tionality or color, their religion or their political belief, for carrying on | working class activities. It provides| material support for such workers when imprisoned for their depend-| It provides defense for foreign | | portations, against the national op-| pression of the Negro masses and for } their equal rights. It fights for free speech, freedom of the press and of assembly for the workers. Its aid to workers extends beyond the boun- daries of this country. Wins Many Victories Victorious mass defense campaigns led by the International Labor De- fense have forced the release of six ofethe eight Imperialist Valley pris- oners. Mass defense struggles have saved the lves of the Scdttsboro boys, the Atlanta victims, the Paterson wérkers and others, | The need for such an organization grows greater daily. Three years of crisis and the workers’ struggles| against unemployment and mass star- vation has brought a vicious wave of | terror against them. Must Prepare for Tasks Mighty tasks, such as the defense of the Scottsboro boys and the con~ tinuation of the mass struggle for the release of Mooney face us. The vigorous legal fight of the In- ternational Labor Defense supported by mass protest for Eue] Lee (Orphan | Jones) framed-up Maryland Negro| worker, resulted in a tramendous vic- tory for the working class. The sttuggle against deportation, |against the Doak, Dies alien-deporta- tion bill has been led by the Inter- national Labor Defense. Send Delegates Mobilize your entire membership, elect and send delegates to the Fifth | National Convention of the ILD. La- bor and fraternal organizations, | workers’ clubs and societies are in- jvited to send one or more delegates. | | Delegates other than those clected at the district conventions, of the ILD. Forward to the Vifth National In- ternational Labor Defense Conyen- | ton! | Build a mass defense movement of the Working Class! | Workers Lose Savings’ in Pueblo, Colo., Crash (By_a Worker Correspendent) PUEBLO, Col.—The Railway Sav- jings & Building Company, a $15,- 000,000 organization, closed closed its doors several weeks ago. Investiga- tion disclosed that nearly a million dollars was stolen by the five leading officials of the Company in a nine and one-half year period. Thousands of workers lost their entire life sav- ings in the crash. The Colorado Fuel & Iron Co. (coal and steel works) is shut down com- pletely, with the exception of a few departments operating a few days per week. The Family Service of the Pueblo |Community Chest reports that is providing “relief” for more than 900 families. This does not represent the The reason why this fellow men-|{otal number of destitute families |ter nor either of the other two girls | got any job. This bird Butler, you |see, is a real expert at his business. | tioned this is because neither his sis- | in Pueblo, as many families are de- |nied relief thru some technicality, | |and many workers do not like to| hvavany a acdarahdy DLO Urs wey & = Vage Lhvee Plays Golf as Japanese Planes Rain Death | In Manchuria In the picture Lord Lytton, the “nvestigation” ‘commission, is shown while Japanese troops and bombing Manchurian masses. The commission is attempting to conceal the role of the League as an oranizer of war Soviet Union, International Notes ZETKIN VIOBENCE BERLIN.—The fascist “Voelkischer Beabachter” in Munich and “Angriff” in Berlin report that Klara Zetkin will leave Moscow for Berlin to take her place in the chair as the oldest member at the opening of the new Reichstag. The fascist new such expressions in reference to the of the German working: women, and declare .categorically that the fascist fraction in the Reichstag will prevent the spectacle of “a Commu- nist envoy” opening the Reichstag. In other words, they continue their threats to do yiolence to a frail old lady whose name is honored and re- spected far@beyond the ranks of the Communist Party, ee papers again use S t hag” old leader MUNICIPAL WORKERS STRIKE IN POLAND WARSAW.—A strike of the muni- cipal employees is proceeding in Lemberg. An intense police terror against the strikers is being wages and the electricity, gas and wate works are occupied by the military The town has been turned into an armed camp and soldiers are being used for strike-breaking purposes. The playing golf at Dairen, Manchuria, chairman of the League of Nations planes were raining death on the | against the Chinese people and ee | street lamplighters are re- China Volunters Repulse: ms Japanese Attack on Tow of Kopeiyingtze, Jehol | Anti-Japanese Boycott Cina as Mass Ang: of New Canton General Admits That Most of Male ® Population of Kiangsi Province Have B The majority of the male inhabitants in Kiangsi Province, China, have joined the Chinese Red Army, according to the a of General Yu Han-mow, cf the Gen, Yu is reported to have just returned to Canton from the batt in Kiangsi Province, where the Red Army of the Chine: is now engaged in mopping up the in Kiangsi. Yu could hive added that the women and children are also fighting, with arms in their hands, against the Kuominta: % butchers, A Shanghai dispatch to the New further admission, that the populatio: the oppression of the Kuomintang, the corrupt! and the impositions of local bullies.” categories he describes, * A strong Japanese attack on the Jehol Province town of Kopetyingtze was repulsed yesterday by the Chi- nese volunteer forces which have rallied to the defense of Pehol Prov- ince In defiance of the traitorous non-resistance policy of the Nanking Government. Because of the upsurge of the national revolutionary war in Manchuria, the Japanese are finding it difficult to send reinforcements to Jehol, The anti-Japanese boycott has ;Sained tremendous impctus through- out China as a result of the raging massanger evoked by the new Japan- ese aggressions. The anti-boycott organizations yesterday began carry- ing out their threats of drastic action against the traitorous Chinese mer- chants who are attempting to bootleg Japanese merchandise. One Chinese store was bombed at Hankow, Cen- tral China, two others at Shanghai, A Japanese store in Shanghai was ordered to destroy its Japanese stock, So great is the thass anger against the Japanese and the determination of the masses behind the boycott movement that the Chinese Chamber of Commerce was forced to reverse its opposition to the boycott movement and advise Chinese merchants to stop “handling Japanese goods as a means of stopping the outburst.” In its attempts to smash the boy- | cott movement, the Nanking Govern- ment prohibited the holding of a |take the spleen and abuse of Mrs. | Agnes Hills, | The new industrial constructions Which are coaverting the Urals into (one of the most important industrial (Centers of the Soviet Uion, are devel- \eping with a rapidity surpassing all expectations. Their foundation con- sists of an abundance of natural wealth. This is quite different from the U. S. where the vast natural | Wealth is being destroyed by the cap- Stalist owners durng the present eco- | nomic crisis. Big Engineering Center Not far from Sverdlovsk, a town which in the near future is destined to become one of the biggest engin- eering centers in the Soviet Union, is springing up the Ural factory for the construction of big machines and close to it a factory for the construc- tion of escavators and a tool factory. An electro-machine is to be built there in the next year or so. The first to be completed will be theUral machine factory which ac- quires great importance as the sup- plier for the smelting industry, ‘The annual output of the Ural machine factory is estimated at four complete smelting furnaces and 20 Martin fur- naces, 9 rolling works, and plants for mining, ete. A part of the factory has already commenced working, in- cluding the departments for metal constructions, iron and steel casting, tool construction, ete. What Was a Piace of Banishment Of no less importance is the Ural factory for the manufacture of es- cavators of which the Soviet Union ds greatly in need.” The annual out- put is laid down at 3,000 escavators. ‘The factory will commence working ‘The Urals--A boycott conference in the Chinese city of Shanghai by the “National Nor the Technical and | Economic Independ- ence of the USSR ling combine, a zinc-smelting works }and other similar undertakings are in |construction at Cheliabinsk, which at: i Alex Betkin, former wage slave of the American sewing machine capitalist Singer, and now a free worker in the U.S.S.R. He lives with his family at apartment 13, House No, 9, Bolskaya Serpu- khovsky, Workers’ Town, Podolsk, U.S.S.R. He would like to hear New Centre of Socialist Construction the time of the Tzars was a notori- ous place of banishment. Forty thou- sand sixty horse power tractors are to be produced by the tractor factory at Cheliabinsk near which is already erected the huge scaffoldings of the steel casting works, the smith’s shop and fitting works, For the Mastering of Technique Very important is the factory al- ready existing for experimental pur- Poses, which is intended to be used) a school for the training of skilled workers, giving them a knowledg> of the technique of production. Less known among the general pub- lic is the electro-smelting combines in Cheliabinsk, The construction of this combinate is a means of securing the technical and economic independence of the Boviet Union. The combinate comprises: 1) A works for producing iron alloys, with an output capacity fo 12,000 tons of ferro-silicium, 2000 tons of chromite and 500 tons of Wolfram. The construction of thir avo! Was commenced in 1980 oud was completed in July, 1931. At pres- ent seven electric furnaces are at work, 2) An aluminum avd abrazite work with a productio» of 7,000 tons of aluminum and a. equal quantity of abrazite produg.s. This enterprize will work at fuli capacity in August. These are only some of the most important constrictions now under | | way or almost completed. The old! Urals are changing their appearance every day. In this transformation is reflected of the tremendous and rapid advance of the Soviet Union towards at the beginning of 1933. A tractor factory, an eleciro-smelye from you about conditions in the capitalist U.S. & i / \ & classless society, . * |placed by soldiers who go on the round under armed police protection. The trams are not running, and no eing made to send them on the streets with scab labor, as the police fear that their hands are al- tection, | The refo. ho did their best to prevent the strike, are now try to get its leadership in their hands in order to “achieve a settlement.” |, Members of the strike committee have alrendy been arrested. The trikers have elected several reserve mmittees. Immediately the I members of one committee are ar- the next committee automat- es its place, Movement Sweeps All er Grows As Resul Attacks and so o n. ign of incitement cal strike incited by against “1 ARREST MINE LEADER IN BELGIUM BRUSSELS.—The general secretar’ of the Minors’ International Cc tee, Comrade Sobottka, was a and omumit: d p ission Canton clique of the Kuomint: d while fulfill i duty in the Belgian imp revolutionary strike center ‘The Mine: ee, in a statement just issued, calls on the miners of the world to pro- against the arrest of Comrade remnants of the Ku ang forces y York Times quotes Gen. Yu in the n of Kiangsi “contd no tonser endure Yu | release of all Be | during the st The Belgian ja revolutionary stxikcrs. But the front of the strike in Belgium stands. un- | shaken, ‘ian miners arrested * Salvation Association.” ence opened yesterday in the Inter- {national Settlement, in of threats by the foreign pol it up. Hundreds of deleg: many parts of the country ar jpart in the conference, discus means of further tightening the anti- Japanese boycott. Chinese merchants, resisting the boycott, have organized an armed corps of mercenaries under the name of the Merchants Protective Corps. This corps, supported by the Nanking Government, is attempting to terror- ize the anti-imperialist fighters in the boycott movement. The confer spite to bre: 's from * “DAILY” FUND DISTRICT 2%, NEW YORK | MASPETH, b. L—N. Gladun NEW YORK cITy— H. Liberman 55 Two members of A. F. of L. Union 56 UCHIDA DEFENDS | & 2. MANCHURIA GRAB Says Other Powers Act. Similarly Br. 1 A Reader Unit’ 3, Section 6 Init 20, Section 6 HTON, N s A brazen defense of Janan’s robber war in Manchuria and Jehol Province and a threat of further invasion and seizure of Chinese territory v made yesterday by Count Uc ida, jready too full to offer adequate pro- The bourgeois press is conducting | ’ International Commit-| u t Sobottka and demand the immediate | ls are crowded with} CONTRIBUTIONS T0, MASS PRESSURE FORCES MINNESOTA FEDERATION TO ENDORSE INSURANCE “Without Contribution By the Werkers,” Reads the Resolution, After Jobless Demonstrate Leaders Sense Radicalization of Masses and Pose as “Lefts”; Olsen and Mahony Speak (By ST. PAUL, Minn., Au Federation ef Labor held 1a © Correspondent) vention of the Minnesota State da number of “radical sounding” resolutions, as a result of mass pressu of the rank and file membership. | Many of the rank and file of the American Federation of Labor. were rigidly excluded from the convention sessions by a provision that no dele- MARCH TO SPREAD fas * me oot CAROLINA STRIKE a Work munis the convention was adopt a resolution dernand- of heless, freedom the Scottsboro nd one de ding the release ‘ caer has of Mooney and Billings \Fight Wage Cut and Must Approve Insurance ition for unemployment in- thout contributions by the Spread Out System ey s adopted, but the off- CHARLOTTE, N 5 t on the decision 750 textile v ncouver convention of the Hannah Picket unemployment in- opposing | Tuesd: are 1 They also said nothing tes of the Enty the expulsion by the A.F.L. same town, to spr2ad Trades Department, of the The Hannah Iding Trades Coun- heard that the men w r y of unemploy- holding meet the ent insurance. |August, and on the i7th Demonstration rker |leaders.” The w |meet, elected a Tesolution cn insurance” WAS after a demonstration’ of red workers, led by the nuncil and endorsed by de Union Committee ployment Insurance and A scinding no more n one full hour fo ithe APL. for Rel The convention tried to take the o the AFL. for the success- zgle of the Minneapolis build- ing trades workers against a wage eut on the Post Office job. A reso- elution coneratulated the Building Labe Union and the unemploved k for the ficht, but ignored the that the strugcle was conducted nd file of the ARL, locels in spite of the and that + Committee of Ac. this fight was forms call of the Trade Union Learne and the Unemploved The United Front Commit- tee bed representation on it from the T.U.U.L. the Unemploved Comeil, and the membershin of the AFL, not of the AFL officials. Olsen Phraseclogy Governor Olsen of the Farmer La- Party addressed the convention varned it that if capitalism -is saved, it must adopt unem- nent insurance and “planned on” (which is impossible un- 1 Olsen has always for unemploy- on 15 cents a r stead of 30 cents. The 350 who strudk also on August s i cer mill in Spind ln fact peed-up return to the ing the mill. the tank ol trade of their officials the t FIGHT EVICTION Murphy’s Cons Open ' Reign of Terror | DETROIT, Mich. 3,000 d, 4 unions, last Friday falo Boulevard. Imm the eviction started. Committees of the Block | ment ins : od were | Mahoney, Benito’s Friend jnotified. These committees mobilized] Mayor Mahoney of St. Paul Iike= |thousands of workers. At the same /wise flung radical phrases about time the police force was increasing. |“changine the system” at the con- After sporadic fighting all night |the Anti-Eviction Committee elected by the workers forced the Ser in charge of the police de to sign an agreement gi | ti-Bv: |vention, but his record of supporting |the bosses’ hunger program, denial of «relief, etc. is pretty well known here, is a Farmer Labor Party man and on his inaugural day: at- d a banquet given him by. the pprove the hi into which the | n Fascists, and shock hands evicted family was to be moved. But | with Mussolini’s consul while thoue {immediately after this a sands of unemployed workers demons signed, the si nt ordere strated in the streets of St. Paul for relief. Fake “Lefts” all, the convention showed workers have nothing to ope for from the “left” leaders of A. F. of L. here. These lefts, the Musteites in the East, have ‘am which is disguised a little | fundamentally the same as that of Green and Woll. Five any more ‘ubbed. including children, Reports t one cop back brol re t ed for Trying to Collect Back Wages the wi they the evicted family. Minister, in his | Javanese Foreign ed out to be a chicken coup. The address to the Jar committee refused to accept such a anese House of Collection hot ing the emergency ses- | BROOKLYN—Phil Farber 50 | x Peers in opening the emergency ses- | BROOK CP lanseer tite ane ie beeht ate sion of the Diet. Concourse Workers Club 100|Last night over 2,000 workers at- He defended Japan, a robber war| serkowsky 100/tended ap meeting in the on the basis that the other-brigand| Rilger 1,00 5.00 Neighborhood, called by the Unem- 1.00 | ployed Council. The main demands 2.00/ were: 1. Stop illegal raid of i ave : | _ Sympathizer imperialist powers have carried on | STATEN ISLAND—J. & J, Karser similar robber wars against weaker | pponx—trw.o. schule No. 1 (By Worker Correspondent) | JEF CITY, N. J—I am writing this from jail, where two of us Were sentenced to 10 days for distributing literature to the employes of the Sup- |reme Laundry Co., of Hoboken, urging | workers to join the Laundry Workers’ people. “Japan’s action,” he declared,| Pinkus “ts essentially identical with what} Section 4, Unit 412 others have done in similar circum- ot stances.” He was hinting’especially| Spectal Drive Offer—Wm. 2. about to the rape of Nicaragua and | he oe Sov! ” other Latht American countries by | Foster's “Toward Soviet See the U. S. imperialists. with yearly subscription. He indulged in the usual im-| perialist hypocriscy of attempting to | present their looting of weaker coun- | tries, slaughter and oppression of | their populations, as undertaken in | the interest of establishing “settled conditions,” peace and prosperity. He also engaged in the pretense that the Japanese puppet state in Man- churia was set up by the Manchu- | 150 Japanese armies in Manchuria were merely supporting the Manchurian people in their “fight for self-deter- jmination es he spoke the Japanese troops kept up their fire against the partisan troops fighting to drive the Japanese imperialists out of Man- churia. ‘LL.D. Delegation to ATLANTA, Ga., Aug. 25.—Mrs. one of the Scottsboro Negro ers in the Daily Worker Emergency other things: “I am writing for 25 more Daily |for them the last of the week. I t | will go out today ang see how many Aug. 1 — eta- | Will Bt y aan ee cond Tie re [t-cabeigeh Wo iniectibe toe 4p. dally, | rian “ompetition, to send five Amer- | ! pL ie i ffore and you can send it to them as you lr workers from five different in- | cia mine, and X will collect the pric: ‘astries to the Soviet Union for two of the subscriptions and send it to months, October and November, as you. jSuests of the Soviet section of the) «r mean to do everything I can for International Red Aid (MOPR), was / this cause.” announced today by the Interna-| Negro workers throughout the tional Labor Defense. |country, as well as Mrs, Montgomery, This delegation will consist of ac- | are realizing more and more the im- paid functionaries, from the steel,|Plays in their struggles. A letter re- automobile, textile, mining and agri- | ceived from M. H. Hardy, a Los An- cultural groups. All five must bo | Seles Negro worker, states: workers. Two must le Negroes, tie “You have a from the Sotith and one ~from a >0¥S from being lynched. tter, Comrade Hardy en- Northern big city; there must be a Psi whan ies a fetes dbin eb i 8 Woman in the group and at least &/scription, saying that he will con- majority must be American born.|tinue to read the paper whenever he One must be a youth, has jhe money te buy it with, be- In “Daily” Sub Campaign rian people themselves and that the “Yoy Have Saved the Scottsboro Boys from. Being Lynched,” Writes Negro Worker from Los Angeles | In a recent letter to the Daily Worker, Mrs, Montgomery s' Visit: Soviet Union | workers and will send you the oe | tive I. L, D. workers who are not|portant role that the Daily Worker | saved the Scottsboro | mes. |Tndusrial Union and take measures -|for the collection of back wages | (about $4,000) to about 100 workers, | —Tom Scott {2. Withdrawal of a Stop the evictions. Unemployment and Social In- | surance at the expense of the state | and employers. ‘To the Readers of DAILY WORKER 1y Crechoslovak working ¢lies ewspaper U.S. am H i rly subscription $6, for 6 mo, $3. Write for free sample copy today is your neighbor at home, shop, mine or farm a Slovak or Czech worker? (f be Is, bave him subscribe to tl Daily Revnost Ludu Czechoslovak Org. of the O.P. U,8d, 1510 W. 18th St, Chicago, IL, Montgomery, mother of Glen | boys, is among the mosi Fund and Subscription D. cause—in his own word | Worker is the on for the. Negro race S“IBSCRIRE NOW! . THE CLASS STRUGGLE IN 1 NITED STATES AND ALL |f] ror News or TH OVER WORLD EVERY DAY! cet ae +.....8ub to the DAILY if] send me your list of premiums. |j] Name if] Address FREE Premiums with all sub: SUBSCRIPTION RAT One year, £6; six months, $8; two Boroughs of Mandatian and Bronx, New Yoi Ask for complete list!’ mine, $11 eteepting