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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1932 rage ‘rtree STEEL MISLEADERS EXPOSED IN WARREN, OHIO Part Tit By BILL !; UNNE The Warren strike showed that in the officialdom of the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, in its official machinery in the mill and the central labor bodies of the American Federation of Labor throughout the area dominated by the Republic Steel Company, the company has an instrument -whose use in demoralizing and btraying the fight against wage cuts, unemploy- ment and the stagger system is dan- gerous and effective, This is in spite of the fact that the total membership of the AA is net more than 4,000 to 5,000. The capacity for damage to the rising struggles of the steel workers lies principally in the fact that the A. A. officialdom, and the more favored section of the hot mill work- | ers which constitutes its base, are closely connected, not only with the officialdom of the Republic com- pany, but with city, county and state government. As is not uncommon in an indus- try where the great mass of workers ls unorganized, The A, A,, in spite of its years of betrayal, by the mere fact of its existence, represents to a Jarge extent what trade union tradi- tions there are in the industry. This same phenomenon is to be observed in the metal mining industry where the few local unions of the mine, mill and smelterment (notably the hoisting engineers) have an influence entirely out of proposition to their membership, or their importance in the industry, fact that for years they have be- trayed the militant traditions of the old Western Federation of Miners which they succeeded. "The facts that the members of the A. A. are in a decisive position in the hot mill depertment of the tin sec- tion of the industry and that for the most part they are native born Am- erican workers, strengthens the posi- tion of the official machine. For these reasons it must be stated that ro successful struggle can be carried through by the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union and united front organizations led by it without and in spite of the} |the agitation and propaganda of the |Party organizations and the militant ren revealed very clearly to workers the role of the A. A. officials as part of the wage cutting and strikebreak- | ing machinery of the Republic Steel Company. It also revealed the great inner weakness of the A. A. which result from the growing dissatisfac- tion of its membership with its purely company policy and the rising level of consciousness among the masses of workers due to the in- creasing pressure of the crisis and unions, The strike in Warren brought for- ward sharply ,both before the mem- bers of the A. A. and the masses of workers, a fact which in “peace time” was shoved into the back- ground i. e., that the Trumbull plant was working largely on orders trans- ferred from the Follansbee plant of the same company where Amalgamat- ed members having protested a wage cut are either locked out or on strike. (whether a lockout or a strike is not clearly established but the mill is skillful and systematical exposure, and determined struggle, leading to the defeat of A. A. officialdom. ‘The basis for such exposure and | public defeat exists. The struggle in War-| Youngstown, etc.) closed because of “labor trouble” and |its orders have been transferred, with |the consent of A, A. officials, to Re- plants in Warren, Canton, They worked openly to fill the places, | not only of non-members of the A. A. members—with non union men. In the Warren strike the A. A. of- | ficials openly aided the company of- | ficials in recruiting strikebreakers. who stopped work, but of their own | In the Warren sirike, therefore, the | A._A. officials not only did thi utthost to break the strike in the| Trumbull plant but took another de- cisive step in the direct betrayal of the interests of their own members in Follansbee, West Virginia. A knowledge of these facts in the part of A. A. members, brought sherply into the foreground by the strike struggle, as stated above, shook severely the grip of the A. A. offi cials upon their membership and the workers generally, Many A. A. mem- bers with whom the Rank and File Strike Committee and the Steel and Metal Workers Industrial Union had no direct contact, did not report for work. Most of them did not come to the strike headquarters but their re- fusal to act as strikebreakers, cau- tious and confused as it was, con- tributed greatly to crippling hot mill production. The company learned for the first r|}this alone was not ce of an upsurge of s of |the’A, A. officials, the Rank and File workers against t ation ;Srike Committee and the Steel and | policy, could not control vely |Metal Workers Industrial Union | even the A. A.’ membership. ected correctly in ending the strike | The company and the A. A s soon as it was physically possible cials in the face of t striki he necessary meetings, have forced to make a public ment repudiating the wage cut. But sufficient waning prestige of the A. A. of dom and the rising sense of {among the work plant is shown by the fac lowing the public re wage cut over the D officers of Trumbull Lodge No. 7: the A. A. the company officials. Bi ness Agent r of Local |73, Edward Mille : jthe A, A. and had to carry on a campaign with the aid of the po jduring a 36-hour period in order |get enough workers to operate the mill. Demagogy in regard to great sacrifice made by the company in withdrawing the wage cut threats of the blacklist and evict ions endorsed and acquaint the workers with them. he main objective had been won. The defeat of the wage cut for the | time being (the company will try put it over again and as soon as in a strong position) hrough therefore against |the determined opposition of the of |.company, the city and county auth- orities—clubbings, firing upon pickets by company gunmen. and deputy arrests of most/of the strike ete A .A. officials, on the day fol lowing the ending of the strike, found |themselves in a peculiar position. lly, they had fulfilled their | the | function as the guardians of the in- | terests of Republic Steel as against i | their own members and the mass of ion, | wor | | | had to be combined in ord o| But the wage cutting provision of weaken the resistance of the jthe A. A. sliding scale contract had With the main issue—that of the | been nullified by the militant action wage cut—taken aut of the situation |of the workers—rank and file mem- time that the A. A. officials in the ‘by the retreat of the company and |bers of the A. A. unorganized work- loyed, Negri born of ers, employed and white ¥ foreign born, and mer Ss. M. W. I. U.—and had suffered greatly. The acute natur lems created agents in the ers can be g: story published in t of Warren which nguage the fact that | | ‘0 id r prestige the prob company relates tendents and to this lo stated that “the c Republic equence to A_ stand cording to the Tr’ which all pre to the sl Communi: tators” and “coward were he- rated with y the A. A.} akers at th and in the} press 1 aft the strike: But the ne ity for taking | measures as al such extraordinary |the S be lived standing vote of loyalty to the wage cutting contract, forced upon A. A, members in the presence of ¢om- pany officials with discharge as the pen: for opposing or abstaining, is proof that the control of the A. A, fficials upon their own membership as k weak d greatly by the contrast shown in struggle between the militant and’ resolute tactics of M. W. I, U. and the strike role of the A. A. officials. ership of the sending a del- e workers and g a united front of all Res el workers against the em and speed- the” Follansbee broad fighting el workers in 1 based on the eeds of the workers, to out by representative elected rank and filqg committees, This is a measure which there should be no delay i carrying through and which will serve to overe come some of the weakness in the united front in preparing and con- ducting the Warren strike TRY 10 DEPRWE WIS, JOBLESS Worker Correspondence OF TEFIR VOTE Hf AMMOND OFFICIALS General Policy of the Republican Party; Communists Protest MADISON, Wis., Sept. 15.—Assist. ent Attorney General Samuel Bryan of this “Progressive Republican” ad- ministration has ruled in an opinion given the attorney general of Cooper Ccunty, that those getting any public unemployment relief are barred from voting in this election. If this deci- sion stands, tens of thousands of job- lcss workers will be deprived of their right to vote, This decision follows-in line with the announcement at the time the Maine Republican state government cut off the voting list the jobless get. ting any relief. It was then stated indirectly through the Republican national committee that those on re- lief lists would lose their vote wher- ever the Republicans could manage to cut them off. It is recognized that most of the 15,000,000 unemployed victims of “Hoover Prosperity” prob- ably will not vote for Heover, Communist Demands Vote, The Communist candidate for gov- ernor of Wisconsin, John Bassett Blair is touring the state now, calling for mass protest against taking the vote away from the jobless, The Com. munist Party demands the right of the jobless to get relief, to get un- employment insurance, and also to vote. SCOTTSBORO BOY IN DEATH HOUSE Williams Remains De- spite Ruling BIRMINGHAM, Ala,, Sept. 15,— Eugene Williams, 13-year-old Scotts- boro boy -whose conviction and death sentence was reversed last March by the Alabama Supreme Court as a result of mass pressure of workers all over the world, still remains in the death house. The vicious special persecution which the Scottsboro boys are being subjected to by the white ruling class in the South is again revealed by the refusal of the prison authorities to remove Williams from the death house despite the reversal of the sen- tence, and despite the announcement by the Solicitor General of Alabama that he had no objections to the re. lease of the Scottsboro boy from the death chamber, The Solicitor Gen- eral himself had removed his objec- tions only under the pressure of the workers, leq by the International La- , bor Defense, Only continued mass protest ‘will win the demand that Williams be memoved from the death house. |: KIDNAP A man in Hammond by the name of Pettit recently came to the Un- employed Council and told how the | Juvenile Officer, with the police ma- tron and two policemen, had come to his house one day ¢nd put him under arrest, telling hia they were going to take him t> Crown Point, He dressed his four children and went, They took him part way to Illinois and put them into various children’s detention homes. This act constitutes kidnapping and is against the rights of any citizen, Not being satisfied with such per- secution, they followed it up by try. ing to evict him from his home, This has been prevented, however, by his neighbors in the Unemployed Coun- cil, Recently they arrested him again on a charge of child neglect (a trumped up charge) and took him to Crown Point and put him .in fail, This was done to establish some ex- cuse for having illegally removed these children from one state to an- other. He was not released until threats were made against him that if he asked for relief in the next 30 days he would be arrested again, However, these thugs should be no- tified that he will have a working class defense, and it will not be so easy to hush the matter up behind closed doors, The workers of Ham. mond must fight the baby snatchers now in office. tL, J. Sends Daily Worker His Wages for Five . Hours: of Labor NEW YORK.—The Durable Metal Products Corporation, 468 Broadway, New York City, hired me at the rate of $8 a week, without saying anything to me that I was to contribute 10 per cent of my wages to the so-called fund of the unemployed. Five hours after I started to work, I came to know of the 10, per cent contribution, so I quit the job. I am the father of five children ang I cannot accept such conditions, and besides I am not to blame for the present depression. You will find enclosed the check for 52 cents which I received as pay- ment for my five hours’ labor which I donate to the Daily. o RAMON ORTIZ Edior’s Note—The sacrifice of this worker is the spirit out of which our Movement will grow great. It would be better if, instead of quitting the job, this worker would stay and or- Ganize a grievance committee to fight this robbery by the company. 4 CHILDREN HAMMOND, Ind.—A few months ago the capitalist press carried noth- ing but the story of the Lindbergh kidnapping case. But in Hammond, when workers’ children are deliberately “kidnapped in broad daylight by those supposed to be law officers, we do not hear the hue and cry go up that our homes are in danger. Workers Forced to Buy Real Estate to Get Jobs at Ford’s (By a*Worker Correspondent) DETROIT, Mich.—The Ford Motor Co,, when it called many workers back some time ago, later took away their badges, in other words, fired them. Now here is what is hap- pening: The Frischkorn Real Estate Co. of Detroit, that is, the agents of this company, are going around and sell- ing lots, promising those who buy them, jobs at Ford’s. Some of these agents charge the worker $15 as de- posit on a lot, and after he gets a job at Ford’s, he pays $6 per month and an additional sum of $35 to the agent of the company. The rumors are that Edsel Ford owns bonds of this company, and in this way the company sells lots, offering jobs to those who. buy with the consent of the Ford Co. On the other hand, some tens of thousands of workers are fired. At the Ternstedt Manufacturing Co., part of General Motors, the pay of the machine-setters was cut to 32 cents per hour. This factory pro- duces small parts and is being pre- pared for production, which will start about the sixth of October. This is true. They will only work at the most about three months. Normally there are working about 5,000 to 7,000 workers, a large ma- jority women workers. Now when they will be called back, the pay, will no doubt be cut to about 20 cents per hour. Those who had any savings with the savngs department, deposited this year, will not get a cent interest on their money. At present only aboyt 500 are working. The officials are supposed to work hand in hand with the welfare de- partment, but when any on the list of this welfare is sent to work he gets one day work, so as to be taken off the relief list, and is sent home, to come back next week, when the same thing happens again. Daily Worker Meet In Lymn, Mass., Fri. LYNN, Mass., Sept. 15—A con- ference of all workers’ organizations and of readers of Novy Mir, Frei- heit, Tribyna Rabotnicha and Laisve has been called for Friday, Sept! 16 at 7:30 p.m. The purpose of this conference will be to discuss means of saving and strengthening the Daily Worker. U.S.S.R. Production Increases As Capitalist ‘The final figures showing the de- velopment of the socialist industry of the Soviet Union in the first six months of the current year are now available. As was to be expected, these figures show a steady growth of production in the country of so- cialism, whilst in the capitalist coun- tries production declines with equal steadiness. Compared with the first half of last year, the various. branches of production have increased as follows: The total output of state industry has increased by 18.2 per cent. This crease is, however, not divided | qually over the various branches. But Soviet Regard In- crease As Not Satisfactory for demands of the whole na- six- months there has been a ten- dency towards a falling off in the average daily output. Between Jan- uary and July it declined from 195,- , 000tons to 172,200 tons. th ; tlonal economy. To this must be added that in the course of the first | Iregulation that only permit Output Goes Down Pre ihe tominineninenier an exception. The machine building industry for instance with 19 per cent, the chemical industr ywith 20 per cent, and the cement industry with 24 per cent. This insufficient devedopment of the productivity of labor is dué again te the inadequate and in part incorrect utilization of the up-to-date means of production, doner to complicated machniery. Difficulties Can Be Overcome It will be admitted that these causes are of a serious nature, and that it is a hindrance that precisely sch imnovtant branches of industry should fail to come up to schedule, but the difficulties are not unsur- mountable. The measures taken by them are already belng Put into prac. are already put into prac- tice. Among these measures is the svch workers are itted to work wit machinery as can prove that they have been adequate t , besides this the provision of educational op- portunities for the accelerated train- policy stimulating the workers to in- as evidenced by the excessive damage | .|ing of skilled workers, and the wages| R Green left) on the track in full view of sands of spectators; (bottom left the workers being arrested. trial in which the judge made no attempt were convicted and sentenced to 9 CONTRIBUTIONS T0 “DAILY” FUND 9 Worker Contributions—Friday, Sept it received Friday, Sept. 467-49 Total to Friday, Sept. 9 $10,207.12 District 1—Boston 1.60 Photo shows how six young workers dra- matized the demand for the release of Tom Mooney, framed militant at the Olympic Games held recently in Los Angeles. Picture (top right) shows the runners starting; (top Following a to conceal his prejudice, the heroic workers prison, The LL.D. is appealing the case. (Photo from WESTERN WORKER, San Francisco) | ic Games in Los Angeles | the thou- t) one of months in Secret Military Clause in Japan--Manchukuo Pact Pact With Puppet State Aims To Organize SURVEY OF INDUSTRY SHOWS NO GAIN COMING; STOCKS ARE NO GUIDE Talk About Depression The recent advance of the stock exchange, ‘upon which Hoover bas ed his ballyhoo about the “return- ing prosperty”, is being completely wiped out as stocks and bonds steadily lose ground. Meny leading stocks which had figured prominently in the recent artificial advance resulting from a pegged market, lost heavily, Prac- tically all industrial’ stocks partici- pated in the setback. Further proof that the stock ex- change advances are not based on any fundamental change in the eco- nomic situation, is offered by view of the Standard Statistics Com- pany, clearly indicating that no up- turn is in sight in the industries un- der considreation. This review supports «the Dxily Worker's contention that the stock exchange advances are merely based upon the false perspective of an im- pending recovery which in its turn has only Hoover's lying propaganda as a “basis.” The Daily Worker has exposed time and again the viciousness of Hoover's false propaganda designated to fool the workers into believing “that the Market Fluctuations Manipulated On Weak Basis of “Prosp rity” Rallyhoo Ending Soon Is Meant To Fool Workers Into Not Fighting Cuts Chemicals: It is unlikely that early future sales gains will be of substan- tial proportions. (Early furture ‘sales of chemicals are expected to register some gains, although of no substan- ial proportions, in view of the war developments in the Far East, Edi- tor.) Electric Equipment: Public pur- chasing power must be substantially increased before consumption of do- mestic appliances and lighter goods can be re-established at a wholly satisfactory level. Coal: Anthracite production for the full vear undoubtedly will fail by a sizeable total to equel even the small output for 1931. Metal Containers: Sharp declines are indicated in practically every canning pack this season, with the important corn crop expected to show a recession of nearly 60 per cent. Radio: The radio trade continues to make only slow progress against such obstacles as excessive plant ca pacity, price weakness and sharply curtailed demand for the more pro- fitable lines. Shipping: Extremely low levels of operation continue to characterize all phases of domestic and foreign ship- ping activity. Steel: Obyiously, large arrearages are accumulating in leading consum- ing outlets, but as yet there is little sign of an early sustained increase in demand. Tobacco: Declines in cigarette con- sumption, as compared with last year’s totals, has shown compara- tively little variation during the last two months, an 11 percent contrac- tion in July having followed an 8 per cent recession inJime. Utilities: Although there has as yet been no definite recovery in electric r production, the trend has been ely stable through the sum- nonths. Manufactured gas sales have been affected to a relatively small extent by depression. With- drawals of telephone instruments continued their increase through July, more than 1,000,000 stations having been disconnected in the first seven months of the year. —(New York Herald Tribune, Sept. t 4, 1932. In spite of the tremendous ballyhoo about the pick up in textile mills, the Herald Tribune (September 4, 1932) shows the real situation when it says: “It is estimated that. if all retail stocks were replenished to a figure even near normal this buying alone would run the textile mills of the country at their present accelerated pace for at least one month.” In other words, oné month’s em ployment is held out as a possibility for replenishing the stocks of textile mills. This is quoted from The Tex- tile Organ, published by the Tubize Chatillon Corp. 14 COMMUNISTS EXECUTED IN CHINCHOW . SHANGHAI—Kuomin, -the semi< official agency of the Nanking -Gove ernment reports that fourteen Come munists have been executed in Chine chow (Shantung). e charged with conspiring ng Government. trial and 'The DAILY WORKER Fostes i ‘ tual crisis has be but nit $5.00 tien 5 Unit 19: actual crisis has been passed” but machue et, it bens joe so Drive on U.S. S. R. that “there is yet the possibility of Provincetown me pag 50 5 3 a relapse” which can and must be memory, Com- Simon Imperialist Army Guards Signers Against Any |:voled throurh the workers’, sub- Fi * * | -cut= notion G2 2an| Horowits Hostile Demonstrations ting offensive. 1, K. 1.25 mines —_—_— Hoover's campai “ Mabel ‘s paign to “liquidate Cette anlesmat 00 D. Gorman Japan yesterday formally recognized the “independence” of the pup- the inheritance of the depression” z Ce. fa| pet Manchoukuo state set up in Manchuria by Japanese bayonets. Reeog- | appears even more patently as a Dist. 1, Total S050 | Sam Nestler hition was extended by the signing of a treaty of alliance, with Gen. No- | treacherous manouver to lull the ese 1.00 | Worker buyoshi Muto, Japanese military dictator in Manchuria, signing for the Jap- | workers into passivity, to stem their Le Orrobnick 8.00/ M_ Sobotkin anese Government, and Cheng Hsiaohsu, one of Japan’s Chinese tools, struggle against increasing misery Loyal Order ot 5, i “Golastere igning for the puppet, state, Cheng jand starvation, ‘This. manouver is jose - ine was appointed by the Japanese sev- | skillfully aide yy William Green & inane bad ae ral months ago as Premier of Man-‘and Norman Thomas. Followers of Giue * Mieinigen ssi.) . s neMAs. George Students 1.00 3 fan Motus! nternationa choukuo, \ While admitting that uremploy- ‘Trial sao he’ 7 sna Secret Military Provisions. ment is increasing and will reach |t ea; ee, 0 mets Notes Under the terms of the treaty, Ja-|larger provortions before next win- See. 7, nUit 2 ~~ i Aad pan undertakes “the internal and|ter, the President of the American Coral “we | F Barnes | external defense” of the puppet Man-} Federation of Labor said on Labor Depeko 75 | acme. ‘Theatre HUNGARIAN RED ARMY MEN |choukuo government, In addition, |Day: “There are indications that the it 7, See. 7 2.06 | Xingeriand dine ON TRIAL the treaty is supplemented by a se-|economic skies are clearing and that Grou 2.85) we Sch: ae s-eight year |CTet military convention which, it is |faith and confidence are being re- amp Transport- wens), , USS arrested by the police and will be |the Soviet Union, tions instore for the workers, he ation Wes 25.00) WEOl For Xo dooltrial in the Szolnok Court for mur-| Im Midst of Insurgent Advance. |Sald: “We refuse to accept them as M. M. 41.80 | Hotel Workers der, The treaty was signed in Chang-|final......and will bid our time.” pace 1.00] , Rallsbers Voeroes was a Serseant-Major in |chun, capital of the puppet state, “Norman Thomas also lends a wil- Ukrainian Ed. zn | Golden the Hungarian Army during the war | under the watchful eye of the Jap- {Jing hand to foste: Hoover's cam- Wrkg Woman 1.00 | Mannan and after the war he sided with the |anese Army which took elaborate paign when he says: “....there may Joaatia 1,00| 7 Hansen second Proletarian revolution which | Precautions to prevent hostile dem- |be at the present time some improve- Dee seblossman 3.0] rots: pip 2 gag000|set the Hungarian Soviet Republic. | onstrations in the city, The treaty }ment of conditions in financial cir- Dr. Musiker 1.00/ ist g_pnita, | As a member of the Red Army he | Was signed in the midst of a tremen- |cles. Sec. 1 Unit 1-D ie r dente 40] is accused of having shot and killed dous upsurge of the anti-Japanese| The workers must defeat this man- Bee | Mrs. Harper tos] a, peasant. national revolutionary war in Man-Jouver of the capitalists and their Wkrs Club: Sympathizer 10 oe churia. At the very moment of its|agents through the formation from 2.00| E Steinbarrte signing, large forces of volunteer and |the ranks of the workers of united STS in i ry hel a0] 4 Schaller 1a] 9% pouiG oe ad JOIN | artisan troops were advancing to|front committees of action against 2:50|R Nassis and Buph IN UAL. alk theeting Gt the attack the Japanese garrison and the | any reduction of wages, for unem- Mierian 1.00| R Furmer 2.00 AG i puppet government in Changchun, |ployment relief and insurance, for ‘on Family 2.50 | Shenandoah Unit 1.00] Young Socialist League in Hamburg |phe insurgents were also advancing | their daily needs. Sherman | A eae 30) five districts with 600 members left |in great strength against Mukden,| Standard Statistics Company's hat 1,00| V Vashilianskas .50 pany Shareet. “30| P Valenta tso| the organization and went over to) Harbin and other cities still under Review. Anna ES Greenfield 1.00; J Maliniak the Young Communist League en | Japanese control, In both North and} The following is in its exact word- faster Cpe Freee, ay oF é Bee Sans South Manchuria, the Japanese ibd ing the review of conditions in cer- urzer . mong the young worke: vhO |}been driven out of many cities and |tain industries by the Standard Sta- t plicsaursky 00 Dis 3~Totat $11.61) joined the Young Communist League | towns. The entire railway system has | tistics Company: M Schmitt 2.00| District 4—Buffeto | are several high officials of the Young | heen thrown into chaos by the daring| Automobile: The recent distinct Seen unit 28 is] Rese aia Socialisé organization. raids of the partisans and volunteers, |improvement in business sentiment | Psu ‘Mosholu Br 5.00| Mi "Ald 7.50 Contrary to the usual custom, the | (the improvement is here reearded fg ro 9 a4 Bs oie vat = ngitelas ad Japanese government will not regis- edna Lecdormrsiauey basi has b abiyend 4 atEre hs ye or ter the treaty with the League of Na-|not yet resulted in any marked up- St Maria Risol t10 Francisco ‘ vo + taecene’ Sukie. we ccmeet ‘ae 10.00) A Friend 4 125, Workers Center tions nor officially deliver a text of it gti pc Seg oo ao i. eer gae Jobn Clark 5.00! Two Friends 150| (Sacramento) 3.00| pist 1%Wiseonsin | to the foreign ambassadors, Bike Brownsville See, | | Sennonl | * 1.00) as otal W and R Harju 10.00 sersesinnandsey-seelonian ong week ended Sep c c "oblo R st, 13, = , tion of car: tri i c .00 | Russian nt No. strict 19—Denver Nee Wierots Only 22,963 Aero teo sary Mb teailpg ieo| Ad Tf. soo] Atlantic Clty 4.00 Denver. Plente ‘elit ey at ‘ayn we oh ee, aes he preceding woek and 4 M Persibere 1.00 | Unit 6 1.69 ™M Pharo 1.00; (August) 1o.09| self-determination in the Black race ae lsc —-| Dis 15, total $7. Dist 19, totat £19.00| Grossman . ——| Dis 15, totar si st 19, total £19.00 ‘HH Saltzmen 5.00| Dis 4—Total $22.80. A Revolutionary Dist. 5—Pittsbureh BALANCE OF THURS. DONATIONS asation hid coterie cn title 8 ction 9, - So¢., Jack Delaney 05! P_ Mingas olis Nothing nd iz fi 2 Dist. 6—Cleveland I PA Kan. ay, - ec Finnish Workers on Bh E N Rosenbe: : Black 100 | a FOR NEWS OF THE CLASS STRUGGLE IN THE UNITED STATES AND ALL 3 Juried Bisse al 2 3 total $1.25 | 1.W.0. Youth OVER WORLD EVERY DAY! H + a . 3.65 “— me Unit leit SRG, medling| ‘Comrades:—I enclose ......-....0++¢00++s-. fora f Oohen Ragen Metal | Wash, Nothing | Dis, 13 Belgas Lssserees Sub to the DAILY WORKER. Please Sausake Yauany pis 6 totat Wat tees | churew x00 |g} Send me your list of premiums. H Bronfman 4 ee OM det, Le 1.00 | PB. Setron 1.90 B Lichtenstein Pitre T—Detrolt | 4. ates @ T. Skrees 1.00/4] Name ead gs othe 1.50} 0: Shlar 5.00 | S$. Bacon 50 sas SA eee Ma x pest aan a stara, Oe a mansky a areca 30] at. & D. Gold F. Grubi 50 ‘ berg 5.00) N. 25 Address ..... bs bn Win ble dale ately cheeeee lina 5 Ay, bd s Hegre vieley dee yer Print) ely . Dist 7, total $8.00) Toe angeles |g whencow 2s (City 2... ; Va IA cane ak Li onerman tne | Misale $175.00 | M. Plescot ‘50 A Jones Rel HW lenieh tats ieee FREE Premiums with all subs! Ask for complete list! Lose aol m4, Newark CP. Milwaukee 10.00 bietawnaibemneet recs {One yout, 90: nix months, #3; ie bata, $1; excepting —| marry .50| Dis. 19, Den- ‘ Dist, 8, total $0.00 Ukrainian Sclen- ver; Nothing 3 is your nelrhbor home, shop, ming or farm ik or Czech worker? tf he is, © him subseribe to the Daily Rovnost Ludu cgvaper in the. Us Se ane stands for the very same 36 The only daily