The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 7, 1932, Page 3

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THE REP By BILL DUNNE , ‘HE successful 3-day strike organized and led by the Steel and Metal Workers’ Industrial Union, and an elected Rank and File Strike Committee, against the Republic Steel Company’s Trumbull plant in ‘Warren, Ohio, shows conclusively that it is entirely possible to defeat wage-cuts in the steel industry by resolute action backed by militant or- ganization in conformity with the strike strategy and tactics of the Trade Union Unity League and the Red International of Labor Unions. Main Objectives Reached. There were serious weaknesses in the application of these methods of struggle by the S. M. W. I. U.. There were and still are great or- ganizational weaknesses, and the strengthening of the leadership by in- clusion of militant rank and file workers now becomes a burning ques- tion, but it would be a basic error to minimize the fundamental im- portance of this short, sharp struggle on such grounds—or on any grounds for that matter. The fact remains that the Steel and Meta) Workers’ Industrial Union was able, in the face of the power of the third largest steel corporation in America, backed by the city, county and state authorities, and receiv- ing the wholehearted support of the officials of the Amalgamated Asso- ciation of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, was able to rally masses of work~ ers in a plant employing 5,500 workers on the stagger plan, both skilled and unskilled, foreign born and native born, Negro and white, employed and unemployed, in determined strike action which forced the company to withdraw the impending wage-cut of 6 to 8 per cent. Some of the Difficulties, This achievement appears in a still more impcrtant aspect when it is remembered that the wage-cut was in accord with the sliding scale agree- ment of the A. A. with the Republic Steel Company; that it affected immediately only the mill Workers who produce on a tonnage basis and who are a small minority of the total number of workers—although highly A Class Battle of Outstanding Significance DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1932 ‘Page Three UBLIC STEEL STRIKE I skilled and decisive so Furthermore, it x ns are concerned. to consideration that t h the Warren working clas: The Warren workers did not even go o action’ in the of 1919-20, led by Comrade William Foster. The plant at longed to the Trumbull Co. and then, as now, the A. A. engaged. general strike that time be- | ad a sliding In addition, the offici cials of the A. A.,-are clo: fh the workers and have up until now maintained the vicious pretense of “neighborliness” and common interest as “fellow townsmen” with the workers. Even workers from the plants of the Republic Co. in towns like Niles, Youngs- town, etc. (a few minutes’ ride from Warren) are termed “outsiders.” Warren, while not a company town in the same sense that Carnegie, Braddock, McKeesport, Cambria, etc., are, with no pretense of anything but company rule, is nevertheless a little Republic Co. principality which | was considered impregnable to militant unionism. The company, depending upon its royal guard of A. A. officials, com- placently belisved that revolutionary unionism and Communism were anathema to Warren workers. It went ahead blithely cutting wages, speeding up workers beyond the limit of enduranc> (the day of the strike 16 hot mill workers had to be carried to the hospital) and by the stagger system reducing the living standard until many Republic mill workers, employed under one of the most vicious stagger systems in the country, are forced to eke out starvation wages by relief from the city. Native Born Workers Take Lead. Especially did the Republic Steel Co. put its faith in the conserva- tsm of the American born workers—most of whom are, or have been, | N WARREN, OHIO s influence. But it was precisely a sec- ‘kers, most of the highly skilled hot mill , who took the lead in the struggle against d who accepted the leadership (and be- d Metal Workers’ Industrial Union and its members of the A. A., or under tion of these Ameri workers (rollers, hi the wage-cut and spe came part of it) of the Steel program of mi: This is the first time since the world war that a wage-cut in the steel industry has been defeated. This is the first time that the Amalgamated Association has been prevented from enforcing the wage-cut provision of its sliding scale contract. This is the first time that masses of steel workers have gone into battle organized and led by a revolutionary union of the T. U. U. L. The Basic Difference. The Warren strike conse a historic struggle. It will show to thousands of steel orkers, sons are widely made known to steel workers, as Yy must be, the kt difference btween the company controlled A. A., affiliated to the A, F. of L., and the rank and file con- trolled Steel and Metal Workers’, Industrial Union, affiliated to the Trade Union Unity League, and win them for its program. This basic difference is that, based on its class struggle, the strategy and tactics of the S. M. W. I. U., and its resolute mass action, win de- mands for ‘kers and check the capitalist offensive, while the A. A, committed to the maintenance of capitalism at the expense of the work- ing class, bases its strategy and tactics always on the necessity of de-. feating the workers, (Other articles will deal with the almost unbelievable economic con- ditions of the Republic Steel Co. workers, the role of the A. A. officials in the strike, the weaknesses and m'stakes of the S. M. W. I. U leader- ship of the struggle—especially in the question of the united front—and the immediate tasks of the S. M. W. I. U., the T. U. U. L. and the Communist Party in organizing and leading the struggles of the steel workers from the standpoint of the concrete experiences in the Warren strike.) Worker Correspondence UNEMPLOYED COUNCIL IN SO. CALIF. GROWING (By a Worker Correspondent) HAYWARD, Cal.—We have organ- ized an Unemployed Council in De- coto, a few miles south of here, and we have contacts in several other towns. Our biggest difficulty is mo- ney for gasolene to get to the towns and keep the comrades there in- formed. The county gives American citizens one week's work every month or so on the county road at $4 a day. I got my first week’s work in several Months recently only to have the county treasurer commit suicide, and, no county checks are being issued until they check up on the graft he got away with. The workers who have had jobs have not been able to make expenses. Wages have fallen so low that 10 cents an hour for picking pears is about the average. Some places it is as low as 6 cents. The apricots were no better. Unemployed Council. We have about 200 applicants for the Unemployed Council and twice that number have been to meetings. ou meetings are in English andj Spe h. Our organizer talks in En- glish and it has to be translated, as most of the workers do not under- stand English. Our biggest weakness is that we have not gotten enough cannery workers, and almost no American workers, but most of the working class in these small towns are Span- ish, Porto Rican, Portugese or Mexi- can, ang the farther south one gets in California the more Spanish speaking people one meets. In fact the English speaking people in the south-west are in a minority in many localities except for the big cities. Spanish Speakers Needed. The Party should have a Spanish fraction or something here, as these workers are by fxr the most ready for organizaticn and for the revolu- tion, In Los éngeles the Party could easily recruit 1,000 Mexican workers if it had Spanish speaking units. If these workers could not be drawn into the Party itself then surely they could be drawn into the T. U. U. Mexican workers who want to join the Party have been told “Learn English.” Why should they learn En- glish? They are really a national minority arid ‘have a ‘splendid na- tional culture of their own. Another thing. We have a Spanish paper out here that is very much like the New York Forward. This paper, “La Opinion,” has been very friendly to the Soviet Union until recently when it began to attack the Soviets..by printing articles about terrible housing conditions, etc. Many Spanish workers read this paper and because of its socialistic phrases, be- lieve it. We need a Spanish paper in the south-west every bit as badly as we do an English paper. Why couldn't the Western Worker have a Spanish page? Norman Thomas Is A ‘Sane, Safe, Sound Man’ Says Bosses Newspaper By a Worker Correspondent ST, LOUIS, Mo—I am sending you a clipping from the St. Louis Post Dispatch showing how the capitalist press is boosting Norman Thomas. .The “Star” on the same day had a full page article on the “socialist” party platform. This article significantly says, “Thomas offers virtually an ideal candidate—a sane, safe, sound man.” means safe for capitalist profits. Of course, this “Nobody need be afraid of him, nor of the nation under his leader- ship,” says the article. ‘Two years ago, when I learned about.the Communist Party I had thought that there was not much difference between the Socialist and Communist Parties. But now I can see that the Social’st Party is no more a party for the workers than are the two old parties. 7 Siceaey Lured by Prosperity Lies to Father Cox Hunger Camp PITTSBURGH, Pa.—After reading in the capitalist press about the nereasing activity in the mines and steel mills, I left New York for Pitts- burgh, only to find all my illusions completely false. As a matter of fact, the workers here told me that conditions were getting worse, and the re- lief has been discontinued. handed out to stem their militancy, The workers should realize that the capitalist lies of the return of prosperity areo- I asked for something to eat at] Workers Suggets Nine the Shantytown run by Father Cox, as I hadn't eaten for 36 hours. One Immediate Tasks for of Father Cox’ flunkies told us only|Units to Save “Daily” those who worked could eat, and you had to be a Pittsburgh resident to work, This forced labor Shantytown is located back of the railroad yards on an empty: lot. About 65 shanties on this iot house about 300 unemployed workers. Conditions are very. unsa- nitary. More and more workers in Pitts- burgh are realizing the role of Father Cox and are joining the Unemployed Council. MEDICAL PUZZLE =" N. J—John Ra- jauski, 17, was drowned here yester- day at Greenlouch Park Lake. Physicians were puzzled by the case because for a long time after the pulse beats had completely stopped, the body showed all other signs of life, the temperature re- maining normal and the “The struggle against militarism must not be postponed until the moment when war breaks out. Then it will be too late. The struggle against war must be car- vied gn now, daily, hourly.” 1 New York City. Dear Comrades: In order to do all that we can to save the Daily Worker, I should like to propose the following immediate tasks for all units throughout the country; each unit should: 1—Order a bundle of Daily’s, no matter how small. 2—Constantly raise the amount of papers in this bundle, 3—Agit prop should check up on comrades who fail to call for bundles. 4—Sell the Daily Worker in its own territory, shops, street meetings, etc. 5—Agitprop should check up on canvassing and results. 6—Try to build up a “Friends of the | age, Daily "group. 1—Get at least one sub each week. 8—Hold an affair for the benefit of the Dally. 9—Challenge another unit to revo- lutionary competition in raising funds and getting subs. If these nine points are conscien- tiously followed by all of our units, much would be done toward getting L. | stagger DOAK CALLS FOR MORE TERROR 10 PUSH WAGE CUTS Boasts of Leadership In Putting Over Stagger Plan SYRACUSE, N. Y., Sept. 6.—Secre- tary of Labor Doak in his Labor Day speech here yesterday poured out en- thusiastic praise for President Hoo- ver and- his wage cutting stagger system. Doak boasted that the De- partment of Labor has already in- stalled the system, in the shape of a five-day week (with corresponding wage cuts) for 6,000 employes. But he avoided mentioning the wage cuts. Doak described with glee how on the morning after the recent Hoover conference of business chiefs had voted for widespread use of the system, their committees were at work, with Doak in attend- ance, lining up the big corporations for the stagger plan. Praises Meekness of Workers Doak was pleased to report that the starving and wage cut workers were not in open revolt, yet, but he made no reference to the successful strikes of the militant unions, or the many demonstrations of the jobless. He added to this a threat, by say- ing that the Federal government con- tinues “its watchful care over the men and women of labor” and that “this watchfulness has been {ntensi- fied during this period of depression.” Even as Doak spoke, his victim, Edith Berkman lay a prisoner in the adjoining state or Massachusetts, in- fected with tuberculosis in Doak’s detention stations, and slated for the torture rooms of the Polish fascist government. Doak said that wage cuts have been stopped—while a 20 per cent cut in the Anthracite and a cut of unknown magnitude for all railroad workers are being plotted. CHICAGO JOBLESS PREVENT EVICTION 300 Workers Defy Cops with Machine Guns CHICAGO, Ill, Sept. 6—More than 800 workers here led by the Unem- ployed Council, prevented an unem- ployed worker anq his family from being evicted despite a large force of armed police with machine guns who tried to push the eviction through. When a member of the Unemployed Council, his wife and three children were threatened with eviction, the Block Committee on the street he lived on mobilized more than 800 workers in the neighborhood, defied police armed with machine guns to protect the worker and his family from being thrown into the street, The workers in the neighborhood are now more firmly organized than ever into the Block Committees, VOTE COMMUNIST Against Imperialist War; for the defense of the Chinese people and of the Soviet Union. Farmers holding big strike meeti strike that has swept the middle west. The truce called by the Farmers’ Holliday Association leaders cannot for the crops so that they may live. Leaders of Holiday A: SIOUX CITY, Iowa, Sept. 6—A regular battle took place last night on one of the roads into Sioux City between guards on a fleet of trucks running farm produce through the farmers’ picket line, and the farm- ers. Four truck drivers were injured. One truck was wrecked. Part of the convoy got through, The capitalist press and merchants here are spreading the story that live stock shipments into the city are about normal. This seems to be exaggerated, although it is true that the picket lines were relaxed quring the Sunday and Labor Day holiday. The Farm Holiday ‘Association leaders are meeting today in Des Moines, in closed session. These leaders are now cursed by the strik- ing farmers for having betrayed the strike by attempting a few days ago to call off the picketing. Small groups of pickets cover near- USSR in Second Place Among Nations for Its Mileage of Airlines MOSCOW.—The Soviet Union is second only to the United States in the mileage of regularly operated airlines, figures gatherd by the Tass News Agency indicate. The mileage of Soviet airlines act- ively operated in 1932 is placed at 55,000 kilometers or about 35,000 miles. The existing lines enable the Soviet Union to solve the problem of con- necting centers which are far apart from one another. Lines extend also into Germany, Persia and Afgha- nistan- ‘ings in Huron, S- Dak. to discuss the stop the farmers’ drive to get enough Farm Strikers Battle Drivers at Sioux City Hot Fight; Four Scab Drivers Injured; One Truck Wrecked; Picketing On Many Roads ssociation, Who Try to End Picketing, In Secret Session ly all the roads in Iowa and Nebraska ltadit¥s to the big markets. Any word that trucks are approaching brings reinforcements to the picket lines. I. W. 0. MOVES TO SAVE TRE DAILY Branch Organizers to Hear Wicks Speaking before an enthusiastic meeting of New York branch organ- izers of the International Workers Order on Saturday, H. M. Wicks, of the Daily Worker staff, described the present financial crisis that has the Daily in its grip and showed what ill effects this condition has had upon the paper. The response was overwhelming. The meeting pledged to organize ev- ery branch to collect all outstanding Daily Worker lists and to issue new lists for further collections The evening before, members of the Daily Worker editorial staff had | spoken before individual branches of the LW.O. The response at these meetings was also unanimously fa- vorable. Branch 3 decided to run a special Daily Worker affair; Branch 71 to call a special meeting to take up the problem of raising funds for the paper; Branches 6 and 7 decided to systematize their collections, The machinery for mass collection for the Daily Worker has already set in motion by these I-W.O. branches. Harvest Diffi ‘The capitalist newspapers are seiz- ing upon the difficulties encountered in the sowing and harvesting activity of the Soviet peasants in order to show that hunger looms also among the Soviet workers and that the “so- cialist experiment” as they call the | Five-Year Plan is after all resulting in_a failure. Walter Duranty sends in one dis- patch after another to his “New York Times” which then prints the reports with misleading headlines such as “Soviet near crisis over food short- Capitalist Distortions In one of his dispatches Duranty so distorts the unfulfillment of the spring-sowing campaign as to presage the spreading of hunger among the Soviet workers. Undoubtedly, the spring-sowing campaign was unsatisfactory. Com- rade Molotov at the Third Ukrainian Party Conference said’ with frank the Daily Worker out of the crisis in | self-criticism: which it is now in. Comradely, —. wn “The sowing campaign this year was not fulfilled and in numerous districts, owing to mistakes which ‘were committed in the bringing in of 4 ‘ ‘Capitalist Seize Upon U. S. S. R. culties to Spread Lies the harvest, difficulties arouse re- garding the food supply.” Leninist Self-Criticism The mistake committed especially in the Ukraine mercilessly criticized by Comrade M@lotov and other Co-m munist leaders, Comrade Kagono- vitch forinstance declared at the above mentioned conference that one of these mistakes consists in a faulty drawing up of the grain-procuring plan which was too rigid and‘did not take into consideration the specific conditions in each district, In some districts, he pointed out, the plan was too easy, in others it was ex- cessively high. As Comrade Molotov pointed out at the Ukrainian Party Conference, the class enemies within the country (kulaks, speculators, sabotagers, etc.) are endeavoring to take advantage of the mistakes committed in the rural districts in order to disintegrate the collective farms and to demoralize their members. “The class enemy on the other side of the Soviet frontier’—he said— “sets his hopes on taking advantage of the mistakes and faults for his own purpose, before all for the pur- pose of accelerating and commencing imperialist intervention.” Walter Du- ranty’s dispatches prove that Molotov ‘FIVE NEGROES” FACE LYNCHING Workers Defended Themselves BULLETIN. LEBANON, Tenn. Sept. 6.—A lynch gang invaded the Lebanon | jail today and seized the two wom- en among the four Negro workers arrested yesterday. The women were taken to the public square to be lynched by the mob which, how- ever, was persuaded by the police chief to return them to the jail on the assurance that they would be legally lynched pust as surely and with less disrepute to the white bosses. * * LEBANON, Tenh., Sept. 6—Five Negro workers, two of them women, one a youth, are threatened with |lynching following a gun battle be- tween a Negro family and a cheriff's posse. The battle occurred when the Sherif’s posse went to the cabin of the workers to wreak vengeance on them following a fight between the | Negro youth and a white boy in | which the latter was licked. | When the sheriff's posse opened | fire on the workers’ cabin, the work- ers defended themselves, killing two | of the possemen and wounding a | third. The workers were finally sub- dued by gas bombs thrown into the |cabin following the arrival of heavy | Teinforcements for the sheriff's posse. | Tryon Oldham, one of the Negro | workers, managed to escape. He is now being hunted by a sherif's posse with bloodhounds. The other four Negro workers were locked up charged with the kelling of | Constable Ben Northern and Special | Deputy Brown. Two Chinese Youths Kill Former War Lord of | Shantung Chang ‘Tsung-chang, imperialist tool and former war lord of Shan- jtung Province, North China, was as- |Sassinated Saturday by two Chinese youths as he was boarding a train for Peiping. Now that Chang is dead and can no longer be useful to the imperialist plunderers of China, the imperialist | Press is willing to admit that Chang |Was one of the greatest scoundrels | and “the most disreputable of all Chi- | nese masses “that he brought famine |even in years of good harvest, and it |was his tyranny that forced more Japan Lsihe Chinese Puppets Officers of Marshal Chang in Sham “Inde- pendence” Move in Tientsin Area, Plan “Alliance” With Japan Backers of New Partition Drive Say Nanking Government Will Not Put Up Any Resistance “independence” Chang Hsueh-liang and haf =D 4 of the Tientsin area by the Japanese imperialists, already progressed beyond the pre-® subsequ=tly bring the territory un- kuo,” the Japanese puppet state in} Bolivia to Openly De-« ported to be satisfied that there partition move by the Nanking |/the war now raging between {mra~- Soviet Districts in Central and | Monday night to rush a bill threugh section of China under Japanese |declaration of war against Paraguay control of the Nanking forces in the| The Paraguayan government gov- Japanese in Jehol Province just as|in the negotiations between the two supported by Chiang Kai-shek and | showdown. Both governments con- disposal to crush the rising mass | the troops are instructed to act only ment is part of the openly announced while hypocritically pretending to China, including Tientsin. Its effect seize the Gran Chaco district. The China and open the way for Jaapn’s|imperialisms to decide which will Geclares to be a part of the Man-|poivia is chiefly dominated by Wall formation that the much-heralded | guayan bourgeoisie are being secretly pan's seizure of Manchuria but|to grab the Gran Chaco. China of treaties into which she has PEE eT ONAL: eRe tEre jthan 5,000,000 to emigrate from | Shantung to Manchuria.” | i Japanese tools among the corrupt Chinese war lords are organizing = sham “independence” movement in North China to facilitate the seizure ‘he Japenese newspaper “Asahi” reports that the movement is headed by officrs of Marshal liminary stages. The plan is for| these puppets of Japanese imperial-| ARMED CLASH ism to set up an “independent” gov- ernment in the Tientsin area, and GROWS IN CHACO | der the control of Japan through “an | alliance with Japan and Manchou- | Seay Manchuria. Marshal Chang's officers are re- clare War will be no resistance to this new | While continuing the pretensa/ that government, which, they declare, is |uay and Bolivia is not a war. too busy attacking the Chinese | Bolivian government moved fend -South China to offer any resistance |the Chamber of Deputies authorizi: to the plan to bring another huge |the government roby spk a eee control, |in the dispute over the Gran Chaco Marshal Chang is practically in | district. Peiping-Tientsin area. He has re-/ernment at th i | ie same ti ported. fused to resist the aggressions of the |that an impasse had been Theres he refused to resist the Japanese in- governms A ents and i vasion of Manchuria. In this, he is/the time had sectvea fare cniltary the whole Kuomintang gang which is|tinue to 2 ‘ e e Tush new troops int using every terroristic means at its | disputed district, Wille Galeria. that resistance to the Japanese invaders. | for defense. The sham “independence” move-| The United States imperialists Plans of Japanese imperialism to| . ‘ pan ; seek a peaceful soli - would be to further strengthen the| 4 is { ity seizure of all North China as well as|).., ‘ min of Jehol Province, which she already | nay° jr Tight to exploit the Chack, choukuo puppet state. soca, a, |Street and the Guggenheim and Japanese circles report inside in-| Standard Oil interests The Para- report of the League of Nations supported by the British in th Bis f support yy eir Commission does not challenge Ja-/ resistance to the attempt of Bolivia, rather offers “extenuating circum-| stances” in the alleged violation by been coerced to “justify” Japanese| The first two bound volumes of the aggressions in Manchuria, International Pamphlets, which have | Just been issued, form a valuable PITTSBURGH, Pa., Sept. took up the question of A. F. of L. poll out calling it a stagger plan. will convince the millions of joblesse- “ Jobless Insurance” Plan of A.F.L. Makes Workers Pay for It | @ 6.—William Green, president of the A. F. of L-,| ers Day speech here. He proposed the stagger plan, but in careful words, with- | But Green himself, apparently, has some doubts as to whether this | {and reference library for organizers, speakers, students in the workers’ schools, workers training and study circles, Pamphlets number 1 to 20 are con= tained in these first two uniform volumes, Future volumes will appear as soon as a sufficient numeber of pamphleta |have been issued to make uniform volumes, | ‘The bound volumes, which sell af |$1.50 each, be obtained at all work book shops or direct from Works Library Publishers, Box 148, Sta, |D., New York, icy on the unemployed, in his Labo that the ywill live through the winter. So he declared: “The Am- rican Federation of Labor will draft and support an unemployment in- surance measure which we will en- deavor to have enacted into law.” nee, endorsement of unemploy- ment insurance comes after the AF. L. heads, clear up to the Vancouver convention last wihter, firmly op- was correct. Collectives Are Strong » But the Soviet farms and the col- lective farms, in spite of all the dif- | ficulties encountered as a result of | |mistakes committed. are safer and) |more firmly established than the| most highly developed industries of | Europe and America, Kagonovitch | said in dealing with all those who) rejoice over every difficulty in the | sphere of the socialist transformation of agriculture. Misery or U. S, Farmers Agriculture in the United States is under the continuous and crushing weight of the agrarian crisis which is extremely aggravated by the cynical | economic crisis, Starvation and mass misery are rampant throughout the farming states. Foreclosures on mortgaged farms reached such a high point that it was expedient for the capitalists and their government to enforce a short moratorium on them in order to prevent the open revolt of the starving and debt-ridden farmers, posed unemployment insurance. It comes after the A. F. L, heads, in- cluding Green, denounced all de- monstrations and hunger marches, including the march on Washington last winter of jobless and other work- ers demanding unemployment insur- anec. It tomes after the Building Trades Department of the A. F L. expelled early this year the building trades locals of Minneapolis for de- manding unemployment insurance. It comes after Green circulated the A. F. L, locals with a letter denounc- ing the A F, L Trade Union Commit- tee for Unemployment Insurance and Relief, which had lined up 800 local unions back of its demands. Regrets Necessity. Green himself in his Labor Day speech regrets that he can not still denounce unemployment insurance. He says: “The American Federation of Labor wishes very sincerely that the enactment of such legislation could be avoided.” i suspicion, And ia A A Sanaa than justified by the sort of insur- | ance Green proposes. . : say @ word in his Iabor day speech | Election Campaign about who should surance. ertheless. council of the A. F. of L. met, as usual, Atlantic City, and insurance, Green, speaking in their name, said: Federal well as the em T can not say at this time. be sufficient for industry and the workers to make joint contributions.” pay for this insurance, when and if the A. F. of L. secures its adoption as @ law, Just how big a share the workers pay, whether half or three quarters, or what, is not even yet subtle demagogy of Green's Dav speech. The call of the TUUL an§ of the Communist Party for strikes now against wage cuts, and for unemployment insurance at the expense of the employers and the state, is still the order of the day. And the brilliant victories of workers Such grudging support {s worthy of | fighting for relief and against evic- the suspicion is more ! tions show it can be done. | INTENSIFY THE He did not | pay for the in- But he is on record, ney- Every Worker Must Wear a FOSTER-FORD Vote Communist BUTTON $20 a Thousand in large quantities $3 a Hundred Send Money with order or will send C.0.D. On July 12, when the executive in_the milli ire resort at to propose Workers to Pay. “Whether I shall propose that the | gov ment contribute as Ts and employes. It may Tt is plain that the workers are to | Indicated by Green. Subtle Demagogy. The workers must see through the Labor Order now from your District or from Communist Party, U.S.A. P. 0. Box 87, Station D New York, N. ¥.

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