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DAILY WORKER, N EW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1932 SUCCESSFUL COMPLETION OF 5-YEAR PLA a. Page Three ‘VETERANS PARADE THRU CLEVELAND; 1,000 WORKERS GREET CONVENTION Hnormous Applause for Militant Leaders: Cowan, Pace, Levine, Brown Squire; Gold Star Mother; Cotter of the Legion START RANK AND ! FILE FIGHT FOR BONUS PAYMENTS. me “stop President and Lrenton Potteries Workers the Congress from | Reject Forced Labor Plan | Worker “Correspondence Walking Over Us” crea me HARRY RAYMOND TRENTON, N. J.—Here in Trenton the bosses are trying to put the ‘empleyed workers on forced labor. Recently the bosses of the Trenton Cee cio con Pv ommmed Potteries Co, located at North Clinton Avenue and Oak Street, called a Cee a ttiousand. sotkers | jemmed meeting of the 500 t0°600-workers that sare. employed now and tried to force ein i ght, the workers to agree to work for grocery sHps-instead of cash. The workers all started shouting “No!” and force. @———_ the boss to withdraw this scheme. j The Trenton Potteries Co. is a plant more than five blocks long; ‘some parts of the plant are 3 and 4 ‘stories high. .It is owned by the gave a tumultous ovation to the’ del- cgates who arrived from all over the| country for tae Veterans Rank and} File Conference which was officially | onened at the Bohcmian Halb Sun- cay morning: This mess meeting of welcome was AFL CUTS WAGES {Crane Co. of Chicago, big metal com- |pany. Normally 2,000 to 3,000 work- eres mt e rene A bel jers are employed, now only 500 to 600 , blociing the traffic over #| Ce half hour and grested with applause } end cheers all along the 1 H held following a parade of all the Ge Wages Cut Twice v A was ; an ba peigitie es teal Wages have been cut twice already. ond symny ©. 3,| Wages used to average 82 cents, 90 cents, $1.10 and more an hour, piece r] Now wages average 35 cents vom a couple of hours a day to three and 45 cents an hour. Workers work days a week at the most. Some workers are given two or three pieces to make and then go home, by 10 o'clock or early afternoon. The work- ers can make only between $3 to $12 a week now, the most working a few days a week. In this fac’ory sinks, bathtubs, eis, etc., are made. Many women work there, and make from $3 to $4 ox — The company takes off the wages of everyone $1.50 every month for mocratie and socialist parties alike |‘msutance, even if you worked only are against the payment of the|* few hours during the week. On bonus, jone pay day $1 is taken off, the other ‘And here a frail grey woman arose | Pay day 50 cents is taken off, and in the center of the audience, two weeks nothing is taken off. If “We gold star mothers are with |® worker is sick he will get from this your good fight to the end,” gec- |imsurance $10 a week, for not more lared the little woman out of her | tho 14 weeks. simple mother’s heart. “My son was | _, departments have regular one of you. They took him to | save-driving foremen, as in the France, but he never came back.”=-! inne] kiln department, where Huey The whole crowd ‘stood and. g6V¢ | pargiiton 48 forenian, and also in the the mother an ovation which lasted | ‘inners department, where Fred Oe ite minutes ay ig Mrs. Lynn of | Tat is foreman. If these formen see Youngstown, Ohio. She hitch-hiked ck On Bares “men alag. Wey. At it here to the conference, Her son, e Howard was a lieutenant in the Air Service, “Howard was killed ten months before the armistice was signed,” said Mrs. Lynn with tears in her eyes, I have come here to be a del- egate and help you boys fight,” Mrs. Lynn was elected'as a mem- ber of the presidium at the opening session of the conference Sunday, Mrs, Peuchel, who came from St. Paul in place of her husband was wildy cheered when she called for the organization of a woman's auxiliary to fight for the bonus. “There are thousands of wives of veterans up_in the northwest where I live who are ready to march with you the next time you go to Wash- ington,” said Mrs. Peuchel. Brown Squire, a Negro and leader of the Chicago delegation, greeted the meeting for the veterans from Mlinois. “We didn’t get democracy in 1919,” declared Squire. “But if we fight hard enough under this rank and file leadership we will get it.” Delegate E. Cotter, member of the American Legion from Kalamazoo, Mich,, said, “We've got to get down to brass tacks, It’s a serious thing when a president and a congress Cowan, leader of the Cleveland con: timgent ef the bonus marchers, orene¢ the mesting ond outlined briefly the purpese of the conference, the recent bonus march,” said Co- | “We have come here to analyse ; wan,—“it’s significance, it’s lessons, it’s mistakes, We have come here to werk out p'ans to continue the struggie for cur-back wages along more militant and effective lines. We are kere to launch a mass struggle based en a solid united | front that will win the bonus.” | manuel Levin, chairman of the Workers ExServicemen’s League was introduced as the first. speaker, He Fointed out that the republican, Seth Parker Always Made Sure of Profit “Seth Parker,” radio feature artist that tries to solve the crisis in the minds of the workers by taking thhem back to the “old time religion,” is Phillips H. Lord, former principal of a Connecticut high schcool and son of a Congregational minister, the Rev. Dr. Albert J. Lord, 204 Colony Street, Meriden, Conn. How very proud Phil Lord's father jis of him may be gathered from a broadcast delivered over N.~B. C. The old gentleman unconsciously lets out the secret of his son's “success.” He said, in part, “At times he (Seth Parker) seemed destined for a busi- ness career. In college he carried on quite a business with the students, selling books and college equipment. He would sell anythirig he had, his coat, his hat, but from every sale there had to be a PROFIT. On his commencement day, one of the pro- fessors met him on the campus, and said, “Lord, is there anythi on this campus that you have not bought and sold?”—Worker Correspondent. BUT NOT DUES Car Line Boss Forces | Payment to Union | (By a Worker Correspondent) CHICAGO, Ill.—I have belonged to the A. F. of L. for 12 years. We used to get $1 an hour for our labor and paid $4 every three months to belong t6 the A. F. of L. Now we get wage cut after wage cut and work two or three days a week and pay $6 every three months to belong to the union. | Lately we had our wages cut 10 per cent and have no protection now | as a laborer. I asked the president, “Since we had our wages cut, when will we have a cut in our dues,” and he told me, |“Never!” I told him I have been |paying my dues steady and never know how much money we have in the treasury or what they do with the money. He said, “It’s none of your business.” If we don’t pay our dues, the boss of the company we work for (Chicago Surface Lines) tells us to pay our dues immediately. He tells us this because he is pretty darn sure he'll get his share of it. This union pays $5 per week if the | worker gets hurt on the job, They don’t pay anything for the first or last week.. If the worker does other work than his union card states, and gets hurt, he gets nothing. If he is just sick without being hurt on the job he gets nothing. If he hasn’t paid his dues regularly for six months he gets nothing and still owes money to the union. If he gets killed on the job his people get $50. Fellow workers, do not let the capi- talists’ union betray you. Join the T. U. U. L. and fight against wage cuts. Bangor Trust Co. Officers Indicted BANGOR, Pa.—Three months ago about 14 oficers and directors of the Bangor Trust Co. forgot, in a | thoughtless moment, their finesse in dipping their hands into the bank's funds. For being too crude in this particular thievery they were indicted on Sept. 14 and charged with “con- spiracy to defraud depositors and creditors of more than $140,000.” | Among those charged with this raw |robbery stands no other than a |former Congressman, Everett Kent. While .all this won't repay workers throughout the slaye-belt who were crually robbed of their little hard- earned savings; while it won't repay the girl worker who fainted over her machine in the Keyser Mill in Ban- gor when told of the bank failure— her whole life savings gone, way it is done. U.SS.R. BUILDING HE As its first goal the Soviet U: These girls, working in the “Dynamo”, the e members of one of the women’s crews of the factory. the workers. In America such club houses are used exclusively by the millionaire factory owners. ALT Ait ion plans to improve the Tieal ry hi The fac’ BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept, 25.—As the Scottsboro-Mooney Day on Oct. 8th draws closer continued attacks are being made by the police and the press on the preparations for the All Southern Scottsbbro-Civil Rights Conference, called for Oct. 2 at the Masonic Temple in this city. Fake Threat Stories. of the International Labor Defense and the arrest of workers active in the Scottsboro deense campaign, the Birmingham press are playing up sensational stories of fake threats against the police. These lying stor- ies aye prominently displayed in a against white and Negro workers who are uniting behing the fight to free the nine innocent Scottsboro Negro lads, ignores or plays down the statements issued by the I. L, D. office denying the charge of individual terrorism and threats against the police thugs. Wire Protests. The situation requires mass protest |against the police raids and terror and the attempt to smash the con- ference. All workers’ organizations are urged to wire protests at once to Commissioner Taylor in Birming- ham and to Governor Miller at Mont_ gomery, Alabama, All indications are that the next day or two will bring a terrific attack on the defense move- ment, Despite the terror, the prospects for the conference are excellent. Throughout the South, workers’ or- ganizations, both white and Negro, are electing delegates to the confer- ence, It is this demonstration of working-class unity, of growing Ne- gro and white solidartiy, that is alarming the bosses, who are des- perately trying to counter it with the most savage terror against the work- ers, These attacks are also aimed to stifle the rising wave of protests culminating in the world-wide Scotts- boro-Mooney Day, Oct. 8th, walks over you. We've got to get came. Sues together and stop the walking. The quicker we stop it the better.” John Pace, leader of the rank and file veterans in Washington, was given a big ovation when he got up to speak, s “We have found that for the last 15 years we have been nized inte erganizations that were used against us,” said Pace, “The leaders of the) American Legion fought against the bonus and the bonus march, It was) due to the program presented to vet- | erans by the rank and file commit- tee and the Workers Ex-Servicemen's League that the boys put up a mili- tant fight down in Washington and won one demand—the withdrawal of the two year restriction Clatise on our bonus certificates which made it possible for 214,000 eX-servicemen to * get half of the bonus. “Why did the legion leaders gv.on record for thebonus? “Because the rank and file ea ee pass the resolution or never show their face “But | 5 ie v. F. W. passed. resolutions . every. year. But the day after the resolu- spots, We've Bot. $e hers, ass us. We've got to haye, mass tion to win the bonus. = “We want every delegate to get up express himself in this confer- ence, The rank and file will lead the bonus fight—a rank and file com- PUSH WAR DRIVE “IN SO, AMERICA Mass Resistance to The Bolivian government yesterday called four more classes of reserves to the colors, as the Paraguayan ar- my reported substantial gains in the flerce fighting in the Gran Chaco region. ‘ The Colombian government issued an ultimatum to Peru in connection with ‘the occupation of the Putumayo town of Laticia. The Peruvian bour- geois press is supporting the seizure of the town by Peruvian civilians, The Peruvian army is-said to have ;sent munitions to the forces holding the town. The majority of the pop- ulation of the town are Peruvians. The town was ceded to Colombia a few years ago. Colombia has been massing troops for several days for The senates of both propriations, to be raised by loans from the imperialist powers, secured the tolling populations. m who served in armed forces. We get the bonus|, With the armed struggles in South pe America daily threatening to involve iE egetben : Got to ost of the countries in a huge holo- “The march to Washington. swan Couey Ot She! baais Bt Nhe alist more than a fight for the bonus,” |Tvalries of the U. S. t said Sylvester McKinney, , leader ot | Britain, there is not wanting evi- the W. E. §, L. from Pittsburgh, “It a revolt against the capitalist 4 cd one aoe erie Woson| VOTE COMMUNTST veatashcant must all Against r War; for the ,sixugele together -in.« of the people and AGAINST IMPERIALIST WAR! War Mongers Grows - Chang Séizes Loot of “Ally” In Generals’ ’ War In No. China, ‘ In North China, the Generals’ War ‘is continuing with Gen. Liu Chen- nien: apparéntly losing his* shirt to his “ally” Marshal Chang Hsueh- | | liahg. While Liu is pre-occupied with | the defense of his territory against | the attacks of Gen. Han Fu-chu, war | lord ‘of Shantung Province, Chang jaas been occupying Liu’s towns with marines, landed from his warships. His marines yesterday seized Teng- chow, an important revenue center of Northern Chantung. Liu's forces were defeated by Han's army at Lai- chow and are - generally retreating. Chang has not kept his promise to in ald to the aid of his “ally”, iu. Fifteen American, Japanese and other imperialist warships are lying off Chefoo, Liu’s capital, in fear that the workers of the port might use the civil war between the generals to rise up and throw off their imperialist | and war-lord oppressors. Strike Wave Grows In China As Nanking» Resumes Anti-RedWar SHANGHAI, Sept. 25.—More than 6,000 silk filature workers walked out on strike yesterday. said to have been organized by the Chinese Communist Party, Tn retaliation for attacks by the police, the strikers have begun to wrec'd machinery in the Hongkew lerea, They. have successfully re- “led attecks by the ermd guards JAPAN AIMING Troops Disposed for Attack WASHINGTON, Sept. 25.—Officials of the Washington Government de- clared yesterday that Japanese forces in Manchuria have been disposed “so that they can be thrown against the Siberian border on the north, east or west.” The statement is said to have been made %n the basis of “authentic advices recgived from the Far East” — probably from United States consular officials in Manchuria, s This information gives further sin- ister significance to the fact that Japanese war industries are working day and night rushing out war me~ terial. Foreign observers in Japan have recently expressed the opinion that Japan was preparing for a major war. They also named the Soviet Union as the probable object of Japan's frantic war preparations, It is also reported here that the U. 8. war fleet will remain in th: Pacific at least until after the n: ° Orders to this effect are to be dis- patched within the next two or three days. a growing strike wave, with many groups of strikers supnorting the mass struggle against the Nanking government and its imperialist mas- ‘The strike is | forg Alarmed by the growing strike movement and the victories of the Chinese Red Armies in the interior, the imperialists haye been rushing munitions to their Nanking puppets for a new “Communist Suppression” against the emancipated at the mills, The strike is part of campaign masses in the Soviet regions. maneuvers called for next Januory. | Workers Push Preparations for Octo! Scottsboro Day October 8 i | | | P tn addition to raids on the offices | campaign’ tQ create the atmosphere | for further raids and police terror) The same press either completely | BLOW AT USSR. Alabama Boss Press and Police Intensify Terror in Drive to Smash Mass Defense of Scottsboro Boys Seottshoro Meet In Harlem Tonight; Prepare Qct. &t NEW YORK —The Mooney mass meeting t ht New Harlem Casino, 116th St. Lenox Ave., e the first la: scale indoor nsiration in campaign between now and Oct, when the case goes’ hef the Un: | States Supreme Court, in the campaign include a Stration in Harlem, on S Scottsboro Tag Days on Oc! ano a parade and dem Oct. 8 under the a Young Communist Lea All workers ‘ged tonight at the New tc support the cam nine innocent Scot }and Tom Mooney. jbe asked to adopt reso U. S. Supreme Court demanding freedom of the boys, The Scotts! campaign was endorsed yesterd: delegates from mass organizatic a Scottsboro’ Defense held in Harlem at the Scottsboro Defense Com night's meeting is org Harlem Section of th Labor Defense. boro- th nd Sco! i. the To y the I of Be is facing a New York jury on the charge of getting away with $175, 000 or more from a lottery con- ducted by the Loyal Order of Moose. Graft and corruption is a logical accompaniment of the pre- | sent rotten capitalist system. ‘Ure Protest On Line of Children to Aid Japanese War Plans TOKIO. (By bourgeoisie is utilizin, dren in their banditry. Recently the puppet Manchukuo “Free State sent young girls to Japan as “people’s ambassadors of friend- ship.” In response to this the Jap- anese Federation of Educators, spon< sored by the Tokio Wichi-Nichi an Osaka Mainichi newspapers, has se- lected fifteen school children to send to Manchuria, Five principals and three prominent physicians will ac- company the delegation. The young Mail).-Again the innocent chil- messages written by Minister of Edu- cation Hatoyama, and Minister 0. Colonial Affairs, Nagai. on Usura-Maru, and will reach Dai- they will meet the puppet “Manchu- ;kuo buo” president and hi Shing-King, and will present them with dows, After an e: > tou through Manchuria, they will be back in. Shimoneseki on Working class childre: tions in all countries shoulq send ters of protest to the Federation of Educators for the abuse of children ‘n Japan. Imperialistic education should be smashed by mass protest and rev- org ternational solidarity, ‘The Young Pioneers of Japan is the only fighting organization of child education, The address of the Federation is: Committee ‘on Children’s Deleg: +++,to Manchuria, Kyoiku-Rengo-Kai, c-o Ministry of Education, Tokio, Japan, ith of the masse: Jonference | HY YOUTH And here is one goods factory in Moscow, are ag a clubhouse on the river for ber 2 Conference and World ‘NEW EUEL LEE TRIAL BEGINS LL.D. Attorneys Fight -| for Negro Jurors BULLETIN BALTIMORE, Md., Sept, 25.—A ‘otest meeting was held erday under the auspices of the Orphan. Jones-Scottsboro United Front Committee to demand that more Negroes be included in the jury panel drawn for the sec- ond The meteing condemned the in- | clusion of only three Negroes in panel as a trick by the prosecu- tion to nullify the victory won by I. L. D. attorneys when they forced trial for Lee on the grounds no Negroes were included in the jury panel for the first trial. BALTIMORE, Md., Sept, 25.—Ber- nard Ades and David Levinson, In- nal Labor Defense attorney: yesterday continued the fight to fore: the state to include Negroes on the Yuel Lee jury as Lee’s second trial jon a framed-up charge of murder Japproached. The trial is scheduled yen tomorrow, Sept. 26. he local authorities have included only three Negroes in the new jury |panel of 200.¢ That this gesture is meaningless is clear when it is re- d that the prosecution has ten peremptory challenges, It caz el ate all three Ne- roes without having to offer ar The I, L. D. attorne; | to groe: In | forced to admit that for 26 years it be included on the panel. the first trial the court w had from the jury panel. \the I, L. D. attorneys succeeded in |forcing a reversal of the lynch ver- dict and a new trial for Lee, The move of the authorities to make wajer-tight the deliberately excluded Negroes nt jagainst the aged Negro farmhand Lee, 3 ‘The I. L. D. atorneys are prepar- to counter this legalistic trick with a demand that the origin murder indictments against Lee be |quashed on the grounds that there | were no Negroes on the Grand Jury which handed down the indictments. PHOENI HOLD RED RALLY Ford Speech Rrevented \By Delay Thru Arrest PHOENIX, Ariz., Sept .25.—Masses | of Negro workers, forming the larger “ambassadors” will carry with them | Prt of a crowd of 1,500 assembled | being constantly adopted and revised | here at three hours’ notice Thursday | according to developments. on the chance that James W. Ford, | \h | Communist candidate for Vice-Presi- From Kobe they will go to Mukden | dent, could get here to address them. | base in the East, but in the Ural Kuz- Ford’s arrest and the smashing of | ren September 24, On September 27 his meeting in Les Angeles two days | first steel which prov before interfered with the s¢hedule, vife at |and Ford was unable to reach Phoe- | nix in time to speak, The crowd stayed until late, how | ever, cheering the Communist plat- form demands fer unemployment in- surance and relief, against wage cuts for full equality for the Nogrees and | self determination in the Black Bolt, }and for the united front struggle to |win these and other demands. Local speakers, including Commu- olutionary struggle on the basis of in- | nist candidates for office in Arizona, | ished all unemployed forever some jaddressed the crowd. | | “The Negro Reds 6f Chicago,” |by Michael Geld, begins in the ation | Daily Worker on Wednesday, | 000 workers while the number is al- Sept. 28. Be sure to order, your copy in advance! manding that at least 20 Ne-| On this ground | lynch verdict they are planning | X NEGROES N ASSURED IN 4th YEAR CAPITALIST LIES ABOUT TS “FAILURE” EXPOSED Bosses Use Old Stunt to Divert Ateention of Workers from Misery at Home | Difficulties in USSR Harvest Due to Drought, Kulaks’ Sabotage E By MYRA PAGE (European Correspondent of the Daily Worker) hose American newspapers who claim the e merely practicing the old stunt | of “whistling in the dark” to gain courage in the midst of the heavy gloom of capitalist chaos and ruin. Perhaps they hope to divert home, from the } bov | MOSCOV the thoughts of the workers from the actually today there are more members ve farm: e upward r put which has been doub- 3000 machine tractor sta- ns not included in the first plan been organiz: ain setback as the depletion been suffer- of live stock, the slaughtering and the world I successful Year Plan in four y assured, by the In- ct e which was the coal and jin the of the jof them pushing |plan, th d other year cent of the plan. The ion costs and the oductivity of labor achieved the full re- The workers are how- the six | Seize Upon Se Naturally many jably develop such an ambitious scl . s of comrade Stalin, thus bring forming a backward agrar: ical changes in this fields. pu ‘ Machine Production Fulfilled a Beyond Plan. taking x e production industry country devel e pla All the elee ist but socialized lines.) locomotive, transport, The Soviet p! : n of production is with the policy of verfulfilled ar so are also the Party. does not atte ing production and food supply. demand grows even than the supply. The erage wage is already 28 per cent ove the original plan while the ount spent for social insurance is e than double the amount plan- these difficulties and them to the aftention of t and peasants, poin ods of overcoming them, h |lagging sectors to catch |vance with the rest. The does not need to whistle in the dark But its bold prole f jis seized upon by }who try to spr \the real results of the abroad. Articles will follow ing and exposing the. arg the Soviet ill-wishers 2 analy: the reasons for the d culties in certai rs of }Bconomy and Achievements As the final q | Five-Year Plan approa | disputable tl ja whole has pr |success. Its colossal achievements |the face of tremendous od jhistoric fact — a fact that demon- strates the power of the workers and he national income has reached full amount planned for five € are some “failures” of the Five-Year Plan which the gentlemen critics quite overlook. Friday Donations | Decrease to $280 | Must Concentrate On /Half Dollar Campaign . Sept. donations ambunted | peasants, under the leadership of the | 8, not including $6% from mass or- |Communist Party, to build a new so- AE aE ie aged Stee Rican ei | ciety, and shows what millions of so- New York, $u8 47; Cleveland, “343, Most substantial tion, Farrell, Pa., $50. ‘om H. W. Kepler, Dayton, Ohio: have got to keep the good work w keeps the Daily going, so here's | hard-earned doller.” “I just goth the Daily Worker and read that you ask 50,000 work- |called “average men” are capable of, jonce they become fired with new | ideas, in creating a sodiglist life with |freedom for all who toil. | “With Our Own Hands.” me from’ Yugost: | All this involved a tremendous ers to give 50 cents each, which would |struggle. The new society is being | save the Daily Worker.” writes Paul R.. | built, as the Soviet workers say, “all | Farrell, Pa. “X will give my St and hope |with’ our own hands", while. the | Workers get up and save the ‘Dally’ which fights for workers and against imperialist war.” Fifty thousand half €ollars will give new life to the Daily Worker. Employed work- ers, send two half-dollars. and m if you can. Unemployed comrades, Rether, organize a “collective.” half- s among the group and speed them the Raily Worker. List of Sept. 19 follows: oris in y, lay for the on | workers are exerting heroic eff | order to construct heavy ind |the necess: technical higher standards of life, lcountry from any dependa | capitalist imports and be ab’ nd all with o wn mac fre int If any enemy star Total to date, Sept, 23. $14,822.08 e Soviet Union, the Dis. 1, Boston Sam Finkelstein are, aterm Axel Tuisku er | rE - Herschderg prepared to defend th _. Jack Perlman is the essence of what is going on in } Sok Werkiog Ed bart _ f viet Uni nnish Workin; L. epel the Soviet Union tod | Chub J. Silverman Building a socialist ty u Long Cove Unit \. Honeymal these given historical conditions r: Finnish Federa- Marris Charny quires heroism and endurance of first | ,°", peaavn peg beoreeg de order, it requires also that the work Gregory Kalaus aia | temporarily and volur ‘ily limits hi Peter Pantel- 3. Rubin ‘ | wants in order to guarantee his and |, monoft 5. Satsman Na pe eter Kachuk 8G, Reaniek Wherever one goes, W J. Podhorny Wm, Stein Moscow, Kharkov or Baku e. ackurinsky T. Courdet | Suchevsky 1.00 Astenfeld | - shn Finenco 2.09 0. K. jare struggling and sacrificing, and Penkevich 5.00 jexpress their faith in the bright mouki 1.00 |prospects of life ahead, Their un- ska |derstanding of the present problems A Briend lin constructing a new society, coup- : 5.00 ML J. Anskraut |led with their confidence in the fu- | Pochester Moth- —— ture, is markedly different from the | ‘™ ‘**™ regen pessimism, uncertainty and smoulde: Geier ing revolt that exists in the work- Biel A Friend |shops and breadlines beyond the ‘boarders of the Soviet: Union ‘TH. Dis. 2. F1S8.55 Tt is claimed by certain journalists | pehotehonk | 5-Year Plan A Dead Set of 10 date $5,926.26 | Statistics. . Philadelphia | mes 3 abroad that the Five-Year Plan is a | Paul Tech J. Sithan 00 failure because of the many revisions | tax Sanger Michael Savarese 1.08 of the original plan. It is true that Oe, Sannee nes |many revisions have been made. and | Total Dis. 2_3! Tu. to Distriet 4, Buf- |how!—generally upward The plan is not a dead set of : tisties but a living reality that is Nick Notis Theodosian | James Carolides Hattie William- The | 48 oy N. South Uni original plan for example did not in- | 5. Noreassenuk lyr sernee jelude the creation of a metallurgical M. eZbills | R. Marsh 25 E, Petuen Lancia 2 netek this week was produced the |} Urers ——— 4 to be of ex* | Jean Price co. Carsifilis 30 jceptionally high qual Me oo Manolikes: ¥ achs 3 Let critics get what pleasure they can from such “failures.” , Another change not foreseen in the original plan was the complete elim- ination of unemployment ‘in Surely over 15 million uner in the U. 8. A. realine what a seri- jous “failure” this change is, ‘The Mores Stemelston Cooper 8. Schaffer rkaminer Louis Denkin Mother Schwartz A Friend Kopenter Total Dis, 5_.$23. Tu, to date 521113 Dis, 6, Cleveland 1.00 05 AS 10 Ivan Vutua Martin Zadvaire 1,00 | original plan expected a considerable 1) Unit deration «1.65 | reduction of unemployment but the 1 Samuel Boris 1.00 j A Worker 1.00 tempo of socialist construction abol- Rothstein years sooner than formerly thought | Sehnelder | possible. | | Workers Grew to Over 21 Millions. +The original plan calied for the | growth of the working class to 15,800,- A. KKloner YT. Berkowite A. Sehlesbers A. Schlezbers enin Study Shircit i |. . titer over 21 million. According to feed i tere Ma atta cr) the plan one fifth of the peasants. [ke Seuntan ; Ful rf 4 . Wheton 0 Unit Ont were to- join the collective farms “gt P. Meyer lo ‘ab Le ie