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| \ | . Communist line of action! 2 DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 19. 3% Se | International | Notes \\ By PETER HENRY. RENEGADES’ FOLLOWERS ARE LOYAL TO THE PARTY. PRAGUE (By Mail).—Some time ago we reported that the leaders of the Muna-Hais group of expelled C. P, members in Czechoslovakia had voted to join the Czech Socialist Par- ty; we predicteq at the time that they would fail to induce their rank and file followers to follow their ex- ample. Now the district committee of the Communist Opposition in Wittingen has published a statement condemn- ing the decision of the Muna-Hais liquidators to join the Social Demo- cratic Party. The statement calls upon all members of the Opposition to stop reading the liquidators news papers and to read the official Com- munist Party press. On Oct. 30, the Conference of the Communist Oppo- sition voted to return to the Com- munist Party of Czechoslovakia. COUP AGAINST GERMAN C. P. PLANNED BERLIN.—According to “Der Deutsche,” organ of the Christian} Trade Unions and mouthpiece of Stegerwald, the former Reich Minis- ter of Labor, negotiations are taking place behnid the scenes between Von Papen and the Hitlerites. As the) fascists and nationalists failed to ob- | tain a majority in the Reichstag elec- tions, it is planned to’ provide this majority by force. The plan is to unseat the 100 Communist deputies on the ground that “owing to their ellegiance to Moscow” they cannot be considered members of a German Party. This would leave the nation- alists and fascists with a slight ma- jority in the rump Reichstag thus formed. This report, for which “Det Deut- sche” youched, indicate that Hitler and Von Papen will not shrink from disfranchising six million German workers by expelling their represent- etives from the Reichstag. This way well be the prelude to a suppression of the entire German Communist Party. But 6,000,000 workers cannot be dismissed so abruptly—they will vally ebout their party and nullify any plans to deprive them of their dearly-won Communist leadership. ipa ANOTHER “COMMUNIST PLOT” EXPOSED. Two years ago more than sixty bomb atiacks were made in the state of Brunswick upon railroad signal equipment, right of way, and trains. At the time the bourgeois press charged that the German Communist Party had ordered these crimes com- mitted by “terrorist groups.” Now the real culprits have been arrested at last, They are two inspectors of the Railroad Police, who committed these outrages to prove the value of their policing services. It has been ascertained that these two inspectors, as well as. all other members of the railroaq police are now revealed as members of Hitler's Fascist Party. ‘The Communist Party rejects indi- vidual terrorism as tending to weak- en the initiative and struggle of the masses. Only mass action is the THE GERMAN STRIKE WAVE CONTINUES Under the leadership of the Revo- lutionary ‘rade Union Opposition, the wave of strikes continues to roll over Germany. The workers of the Schaar and Schmidt textile mills in Limbach (Saxony) compelled the firm to withdraw wage-cuts an- nounced under the Papen Decree. ‘The workers of the giant Fritz Wer- ner A, G. machinery works near Ber- lin have also won a strike against wage cuts. A factory mass meeting voted to have the revolutionary trade union represent their interests, with members of the reformsit Socialist Metal Workzrs Union also supporting this motion. Other strikes against wage cuts, too numerous to list here, have also been won ali over the country—in Wurt- temburg, Silesia, Hessen, Thuringia, Gast Prussia, Saxony, and the Nhine- land. TSCIALISTS AS REACTION’S AGENTS vp to now no bourgeois official has da to suppress Communist newspapers in Germany for advocat- ink strikes against Von Papen’s pay cub decree. Bloody Gustave Noske, who is still an honored member oi the Germany Social Democratic Par- sy and President of the Province of anover, bas suppressed the Com- unist “Arbe.ver-Zeitung” for three jays for “agitating against the Von Papen cuts; strikes against the ap- plication of the Emergency Decree are illegal.” i It is again left to the Socialists to be the most ruthless and brutal instrument of the capitalist class— Noske and Hoan, Scheidemann and Hullguit. aa WAR WAS PATRIOLIC j ‘The President of the German Fed- | eration of Labor, Theodor Leipert, hhas made a significant contribution to the exposure of the anti-war pro- testations of the socialists all over the world. He stateq in the National Trade Union School in Bernau: “No section of society can ignore national development. Nor did we (the socialists) do so, when we fought in the World War for our Fatherland until the unfortunate coliapse ... We did not in the war, many patriotic speeches of i n (late head of the G ua vation of Labor) prove.” . ‘or our Fatherland,” in other woras, for the capitalists. Compet- aug with the open fascists for ap- wiuval, the social fascists protest waea patriotism and services during \ue war! How does Norman Thomas «plain these words of his party com- -ues in Germany? ‘his same Liepart is now negotiat- .§ With the reactionary Germany auugver of Labor, Schaeffer, and Fascist Militarism Hitler addressing part of Fascist youth brigades before his big election defeat, The Commu- nists scored a big victory in the elections, WRITES OF SOVIET! FOOD SUPPLIES Collective Farm Work-! er Tells Improvements The capitalist press, s ing upen the constructive self-criticism of the workers’ and farmers’ Soviets in the U.S.S.R. regarding the in- sufficiently high rate of produc- tion of means of subsistence, prints reports of “workers’ riots” caused by lack of foodstuffs. The following letter is extremely important as it reveals how the Russian workers and peasants re- act to the insufficiency of food- stuff the production of which, al- though increasing, is not enourh to cope with the increasing needs of the workers. The letter js an an answer to the slanders in the capi- talist press. It shows how the Rus- sian workers and peasants intensi- fy their activity to increase the supply of foodstnff. ee . Moscow, U.S.S.R. In this letter I will relate our struggle for the bettering of supply- ing of our workers with the food- stuffs. Our co-operative farm. in Balacava in the Lower Volga region exists already the second year. We accommodate about 6,000 water transport workers. In this autumn we have supplied already every one of our water transport workers with 50 kilograms of cucumbers, 40 kilograms of to- matoes and 105 kilograms of pota- toes. Besides this we have provided our water transport workers with great quantities of carrot, onion and other vegetables. Besides this many foodstuff stalls have been opened here in Balacava, where our workers can additionally buy the necessary victuals. Increasing Culivated Area. In order to better the supply of our workers with the foodstuffs we reguarly increase the area under crop of our farm. If in this year we have farmed and sowed with vege- tables the area of 803 hectares, so in the year 1933 the area under veg- etables will increase to 1,152 hec- tares. The number of hotbeds will grow_ from 550 to 1200. Of course, it would be hot suffi- cient to provide the workers only with the vegetables and therefore we develop also other branches of agri- culture, For instance we have or- ganized a short time ago a dairy, a bee-garden and a _ swine-breeding farm. Before and After the October Revyo- lution Many of our water transport workers have also their own small farms and if you will take all this into consideration you will see that our position is not so bad. In pre-revolutionary times our workers were oppressed by the tsar- } ist government and it was impos- sible to organize a struggle for the improvement of their life within the freme-work of the bourgeois society. Now after the October Revolution we have begun to work for our- selves and our whole life has com- pletely changed in the course of last years. We can record the great achievements not only respecting the providing with the foodstuffs, but also in allrother sides of our life. Comradely yours, : BULYCHEV. Moscow, Twerskaia 3, “Vodny Transport”. Net 'ndividual Action But Mass Action Wins Relief for Workers CHICAGO, Ill.—Our family only gets 24 pounds of flour every month from the charities, and we can't bake on it because we have no stove or gas or electric and we can’t bake bread or cake without lard anyway. We have lots of flour left from last month. If I won't get a ticket from the charity I'll be fighting, that’s all. 1 can’t pick up stale bread from the alley. If I won't get a ticket I'll break windows in the stores and take what I want. You charity people get good pay but I don’t get any- thing. You wouldn't be able to eat flour every day etther, Ww. T. NOTE:—From a member of the Stockyards Unemployed Council. This young worker has since joined Yhe Unemployed Council, and was taken to the charities. He will soon see that only through mass action will the workers be able to do away with the 50 per cent relief cut and awh Gregor Strasser, fascist leader, -or future collaboration in the gov- \.nment after the elections. Again a united front against the working class—~extending from the Hillmans and Dubinskys of Germany to the Junkers and the fascists! to get more relief. Build a workers correspondence group im your factory, shup or neighborhood. Send regular letters to the Daily Worker HAMMOND, Ind.—Readers of the GOP and Democrat Officials Unite to Break Up Jobless Families “Daily Worker” may remember read- ing about the case in Hammond where the juvenile officers, true to their | anti-working class policy, turned to gangster methods of kidnapping inno- cent children. Three children of one of the workers, Frank Pettit, were kid- napped by these legal bandits, taken out of the state and placed in deten- tion homes. Persecute Worker. The whole set of petty politicians (both Republican and Democrats) now in power locally—combined forces against this defenseless work- er. This man, unemployed, with no! wife and seven children to support, ; was a likely target for all their ma- licious and cruel frame-ups. First they robbed his home of half of his family, then they attempted to evict | him—and this was prevented by his neighbors and friends of the Unem- ployed Council. Their next move was to try to bluff him into leaving the state—rather than to provide him with the miserably inadequate relief. A large delegation from the Un- employed Council went to the relief office where a battle to the finish was fought to secure groceries for him and for another worker refused relief. Every possible pretext was used to continue to refuse relief. Some of the delegation got a free ride to the calaboose and here an- other battle royal was fought to show the bosses of Hammond that no worker will go hungry or cold or will be thrown out on the street if the workers of the Unemployed Council know about it. This delegation by stubbornly re- sisting every effort to side-track it, secured relief for both of these cases where others had failed and where the grafters warned us in advance that they absolutely would not give relief in these two cases particularly. No unemployed worker of Hammond needs to starve or do without the necessities of life. The Unemployed Councils (one at 713 Gostlin St. and another at 6037 Wallace Rd.) offer the weapon with which to beat off the attacks of these grafters who try to force the workers to starve quietly. $1. for 10 Hour Day in Minn. Town; Banks Close With Savings FARIBAULT, Minn. — This little city of 10,000 population, mostly Slavs, some of them working one and three days a week, at from $1.50 to $1 a day, based on a ten hour day, with a Chamber of Com- merce paying its secretary $4,000 a year for a four day week, has had for its first time this morning, its first real lesson in finance capital. The Citizens Bank, with deposits of $1,000,000, closed its doors this morning, a national bank. The Fari- bault State Bank, with deposits of $1,500,000, also closed its doors this morning, with depositors numbering some 3,000, mostly farmers and workers, who had cash there when all the factories here closed down. The city and county governments here had three-fourths of the tax money in these banks, all city and county work being stopped. The state bank at Kenyon, 18 miles east of here, with deposits of $175,000, closed its doors ten days ago, leaving the city without a bank. There is only one bank left at Faribault. What the workers and farmers who lost their small savings will do, is a question. E, B. FORD. NOTE:—The rest of the stories in this section today should show the way to the workers and farm- ers who are destitute in Faribault. Organized action will force the rich, who made their money out of these workers and farmers, to cough up. Council Victories in Tacoma Spur Growth of Jobless Movement TACOMA, Wash.—A recent case of electricity being cut off in an un- employed woman worker's home re- veals again how ready the workers are to fight for their immediate ev- ery day demands The worker was arrested for turn- ing on her electricity after it was dis- continued by the electric company and her trial was attended by a crowd of workers that packed the courtroom. They backed her up in jthe demand for free electricity for the unemployed. (The city inciden- tally owns the electric system and is used as an example by the Socialists and liberals as what municipal own- ership or “municipal socialism” can do under capitalism.—Ed.) .... .. .. Chats with Our Worcorrs What the Worker and Farmer Correspondents Can Do for the National Hunger March. (Worcors: Clip this section and keep it for your constant guidance in your activities from now until after the return of the march in December.) WHAT REPORTS DOES THE “DAILY WORKER” WANT? 1; What unemployed block, bread- line and flophouse committees are being built? 2. What local struggles are the un- employed engaged in? 3. Tell of the unity of shop work- ers with the unemployed. 4. What do the workers themselves think of the plans and activities? 5. What suggestions have the work- ers to make for strengthening the preparations? 6. If the marchers come through your town, what plans are there? 1. How is the march recetved in the town? 8. Local terrorism against the preparations, and attitude of the lo- cal relief agencies. 9. Carefully follow the local press and bring to the attention of your local Unemployed Council, and also to the “Daily Worker”, any action on the part of the local authorities af- fecting our preparations in any way. 10. Activity of Socialist and A. F. of L, and other misleaders. HOW CAN YOU GIVE EFFECTIVE REPORTS? 1. Take as active = part in the preparations for the hunger march in your locality as possible, in order that you report first-hand what you see and what the workers are thinking. 2. Study the directives published in the October issue of the “Daily Worker”, in order to be well ac- quainted with the plans and policy. 3. If you are elected as a delegate in the march, be an active reporter every step of the way. (Try to get some other worker who stays behind, to take up your correspondence du- ties locally while you are gone.) 4. If not, then try to get some marcher to undertake to send us constant reports along the line of march. THE VALUE OF YOUR CORRESPONDENCE. 1. In publishing your correspond- ence, the workers throughout the country get an inside story of the activities from below. 2, Even if all your material is not published, every bit of it will be help- ful here, and will be used organiza- tionally. Remember, it is through our worker correspondents that we are better able to feel the true pulse of the movement, ON THE JOB, WORKER AND FARMER CORRESPONDENTS! WORKER CORRESPONDENCE Local Struggles and Victories Help Hunger March Preparations Hammond Workers Fight and Win Food for Needy HUNGER CRAZES Youth Organizing for Relief Fight CHICAGO, Ill—I am telling of this case of which I know the ex- act bearing of what unemployment does to young workers. I know a young fellow, he is about 20 years old, who took things so hard that he went crazy, on ac- count of not being able to acquire || the necessities of life. This fellow was struggling all alone to provide himself and his parents and five brothers and sis- ters with needs. No matter how hard || he tried he could not, then he be- gan to take it hard. think about the things he didn't have; everything began to be more unjust for him. He would think of his clothing, spending money and so forth continually. About six months ago this young fellow had a brain snap, and though he gained his right mind for a few weeks he again had a relapse. I can say this, to be in his position wouldn't be so pleasant, would it? I am joining the Unem- ployed Council, and together with other workers I will fight for the necessities we need, and not let the same thing happen as did to this young fellow. All other young fel- lows should do the same. Grafter and Officials of Relief Bureau Kill Woman Worker In Ind. RICHMOND, Ind.—Henry “Hen” Shell, the former owner of one of the worst saloons in Richmond be~- fore the advent of prohibition, and the owner of many shacks—purchas- ed from the earnings of hundreds of workers, accepted as tenants from the Social Service the Creech fam- ily. He placed them in a house whose only water supply was a contami- nated well in the backyard. Three weeks after they moved into this death trap, Mrs. Creech and two of the children were in the hospital with typhoid fever. Whe mother’s condition was made worse by the birth of a baby, and one week later she died. Examination of the records shows that the well on this property had three times been condemned by the City Health Department, and it was only Hen Shell's pull with the gang of robbers in the City Hall which kept him from being forced to fill up this death trap and furnish his ten- ants a safe water supply. He was per- fectly aware of the danger, and the Social Service could easily have dis- covered that they were sending this woman to possible death if they had cared enough to investigate. A lawyer has been found who will help Mr. Creech sue Hen Shell for damages, and in addition the Un- employed Council is using this case to build a struggle to secure safe water for all the workers in Rich- mond. While these are the facts in the only case which has come before the Unemployed Council concerning Hen Shell's house, we have learned the following facts about the same house. Last year the water from this same well was used by the family of Sam Shaeffer. During the period that they were using this water, his daughter died of typhoid fever, A Worker, MICHIGAN WORKERS AND FARMERS JOIN THE UNEMPLOYED COUNCIL Win Relief in Jackson and Fight Terror Thru Militant United Front JACKSON, Mich.—Mass action is forcing the city of Jackson to give relief to the unemployed. Three months ago we did noi have an Un- employed Council and they made us starve. Now we have a council with over 2,000 signed supporters, 14 block committees in different parts of the town, We sent three committees to the mayor and welfare department de- manding $1 a week for unemployed men, woman and children depend- ents, no evictions of those unable to pay rent; free gas, heat, water, etc.; free hot lunches, books, clothes for school children and no discrimina- tion because of color or politics. Forced Through Relief. ‘They would not listen to the com- mittees but when we called a demon- stration they called out police and detectives from the blind pigs and mobilized the guards in the state A young unemployed worker and| prison to try to scare the workers. his wife were denied relief by the | After that they started giving out re- county organization until the Un-| lef. We forced them to give us fresh employed Council took up their case | meat once a week and clothes. and by mobilizing the workers forced oceae of the mass action of the relief. Now this worker {s telling all] workets they now get something to of his neighbors about the council|live on. Some workers are timid and has joined himself. about asking for relief for their fam- To divide the unemployed the so-| ilies but we are trying to convince called Citizen’s Unemployed League | them to demand their rights. was established here as well as in| The welfare board used to take other parts of the northwest under | license plates from workers who had different names. In Tacoma only cit~| cars before they would give relief. izens can belong. Discrimination is] We have exposed the officials in this practiced within the league to pre-|as not only enemies of the unem- vent unity of the members. Some destitute workers do not get much relief while others needing it less SIZE OF DNIEPROSTROI than these workers get more. The} WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—Com- county relief discriminates by ‘cut-| menting upon the successful comple- ting off the workers who refuse to|tion of the Dnieper power plant in fight “or the measly dole while in| the Soviet Union, the National Geo- some cases it raised the amount of| graphic Society states in its bul- relief to create a section of workers | letin: who will not want to struggle. “Some idea of this gigantic plant When we have returning workers| (the largest in the world—Editor) from the U.S.S.R. here they get en-|may be gained from the quantities thusiastic response and the workers |of material used in its construction. determined to establish similar/'The concrete to create the Woman Worker. great barrier make a pai ‘used would j= are conditions here, ployed but of employed workers, small gas merchants, also. The Jackson Council is growing stronger in spite of the campaign of lies and slander against it by the agents of the Klan, allied veterans, socialists and others, inside and out- side of the ranks. Farmers Help In Hillside County, south of here, the council with the help of the farmers are successfully fighting against the terror of Dean Stock, the big flour mill capitalist. Some time ago when a Communist candi- date for the state Legislature tried to speak there, Stock's henchmen, Sheriff Dagon. with 35 deputized Le- gionnaires and the state police, stood in the street and laughed while Stock and a gang of hired hoodlums threw eggs at the crowd. Several hundred eggs were thrown and many workers clothes ruined. Two workers were arrested and framed on charges of vagrancy. They are out on bail now and the work- ers and farmers are demanding their release. Their trial has been post- poned twice and now it is postponed until after the election. A. Mr. Mor- ross and wife have thrown their support behind the protest fight of the workers. We shall continve fighting and win relief for the workers and farm~- ers and not stop because of the bosses being helped by the authori- ties. HF. ment an inch thick and a yard wide from New York to Omahh. Nearly 7,000,000 square yards of rock and dirt were excavated and 900 tons of explosives and 300,000 tons of ce- ment were used.” The National Geographic Society further declares in its bulletin that: “If the timber used were made into @ single board one foot wide and one inch thick, it would reach nearly YOUNG WORKER, | He was laid off, and he began to|- jis increasing to an alarming extent} Women members of the British Hunger March which recently bat- tled London police. Dozens of wo- men delegates will be elected to go on the National Hunger March to Washington on December 5. WARPROPAGANDA ON ARMISTICE DAY 10 Million Dead for'! Boss Profits NEW YORK.—The return of | Armistice Day, celebrating the vic-| tory of the Allied and American im- perialists in the slaughter of 1914- 1918, is again the occasion of wide- spread war propaganda. In all the schools the children are being reminded of how the youth of 1917 died for their country, and ef- forts ave being made to impress the children to be ready to do this when needed. In the movies pictures of the millions of graves in France are glorified as the worth-while price of “democrac, | This year the bosses are having a} harder time than ever to spread their propaganda. The effects of three years of crisis and the murderous treatment of those who fought and! lived through the World War left a marked impression on the working class. This imp: nm is stamped deeper by the 15th Anniversary of the successful Russian Revolution | which laiq the basis of a classless, | warless society in the Soviet Union. In New York the ex-servicemen are turning the jingoistic day into| one of struggle by marching to the | City Hall for immediate relief -and support of the demand for the bonus. Workers throughout the country must: recollect the 10,000,000 killed and 20,000,000 wounded, and intensify } the fight against the war plans. MASS MISERY = GROWS IN JAPAN War Fails’ “To Bring Back Prosperity” BERLIN, Nov. 10.—While the Jap- anese militarists are demanding new war appropriations for the Manchuria adventure, the conditions of the toil- ing Japanese masses continue to grow more frightful. The bourgeois demo- | cratic “Vossische Zeitung” of this| city publishes a report from its cor- respondent in Japan containing the following: Farmers Debt Raden. “The Japanese peasants were al- ways poor, in fact, their poverty proverbial. During the last few ye however, their situation has bec catastrophic. In 1929 the aver come of a peasant holding was culated at 1,000 yen per annum. In 1931 it was calculateq at 300 Yen. A debt of about 1,000 Yen burdens on an average each peasant holding. Usurious interest rises in many cases to forty per cent per annum. For a long time the authorities were able to reckon with the conservatism of the peasants, and their stolid sub- mission to privations, but now the number of conflicts between the peasant tenants and the landowners and ‘red ideas’ are making progress amongst the peasant masses.” Eat Bark. The French newspaper “Paris Midi” publishes the following remarks of its Japanese correspondent: “Numerous trees in the woods of Northern Japan have been deprived of their barks. The peasants have stripped them and used the bark for food ha The japanese newspaper, “Nizi Nizi” writes: “The poverty of the peasants is frightful. In most of the cottages there is net a_single piece of money to be found. Parents are compelled to watch their children wasting away from hunger.” Thus it is seen that the capitalist arguments that war “would bring back prosperity” were lies to deceive the toiling masses into the new world imperialist war which the Japanese imperialists have begun in Manchuria, Communist Deputy in Poland Leads March in Front of Prison WARSAW, (By Mail).—A demon- stration on behalf of the political prisoners took place under the lead- ership of the Communist Deputy Rosenberg in front of the Prison Pav- jak. The police attacked the dem- onstration. Several windows of the prison offices were broken. Five revolutionary workers, Babsz- telski, Suchovlanski, Koloviki, Slepak and Brytan, were arrested in Grodno PARENTS OF HUNGRY CHILDREN WILL MARCH TO WASHINGTON; CHILDREN ALSO PLACE DEMANDS ng Funds for Na Ra Children’s delegates, elected at n || Help Save Lives of Children of Jobless by tional Hunger March! mass meetings and Open Hearings on starvation conditions in all Eastern states, will go to Washington on Thanks- | blessings you have,” these represent | employment insurance. giving Day and lay demands before Pi On the day the president calls tati LOCALS MANY AEL ELECT DETEGATES TO CINCINNATI Painters Defy Green’s Threats; Expect 200 at Nat’l Conference The New York AFL. for Unemployment Insuranc that delegates are being elec every part of the country for Cincinatti conferenc AF.L. Committee isting committ rence on Nov. 22 and 2: Ohio in the American Federation of Labo! Hall, 1318 Walnut St. Th er ence will begin on Tuesday, Nov. at 9a.m. This conference will tak place simultaneously with the 52nd annual convention of the American Federation of Labor which is being held in the same city at the same time. rts Expect 200 Delegates From the incoming reports the Committee anounces that there will be between 200 and 250 delegates elected directly from local w meetings and local conferences. These delegates are sent with ructions to fight for unemployment nce to be paid by the government and employers, for immediate winter re lief and for exemption of dues pa ments for the unemployed w still remain in good standing organization. A delegation of 2 go before the AFL con mn will present the demar and file. Green Fights Committee The reactionary f the American Federation of Labor, Green, Duffy, Hutcheson, and ot who were fighting bitterly against un- employment insurance were pelled by the press the local unions, ce! and of the rank bodies state federations of labor to com out in favor of “some kind” of un- But they are still carrying on a fight against the various unemployment r committees. One of their agents from the Brotherhood of Painters Local 121, at a special meeting held on Noy. 7, tried to block the election of delegates to the Cincinatti con- ference. He demanded that by Green be read again. After ing Green’s letter in which he c unemployment insurance “Commu- nistic,” he warned the local unicet not to support this movement Vote Down Green’s Agent The chairman put the q a vote whether or not de! should be sent to the Cincinatti con- > a letter sent read- d com- | ure coming from | $50 wInTER RELIEF AND Unemployment Insurance resident Hoover. workers to “give thanks for all the ives of the children will tell him that * millions of child slaves are starving on the pay they get. They will tell him that over 250,000 children are wandering homeless and hungry. They will tell him that millions more can’t go to school because they have neither shoes, clothing nor food. When they do go, they can’t study because of hunger pangs; some of m faint in the class room. 4 ver knows this, but he wants, ceal it; the children will see |that it is not concealed. They will demand that their unemployed fath- ers get $50 winter relief in addition |to local relief, and that there be fed- |eral unemployment insurance at the jexpense of the employers and the | government ‘ Men and women, tHe mothers and fathers of these children, will be | among those to march to Washing- ton, in the National Hunger March, | December 5. They go to the white of Washington because they re- 2 to allow their children to wan+ der the highways, picking up scraps |from garbage pails, begging. They go to the Capitol, the Federal Gov- ernment, that has not tried to save their broken-up homes, to DEMAND that they receive UNEMPLOYMENT RELIEF AND INSURANCE! | * Twenty-five days before the Hun- ger March there is a crucial lack of the funds necessary to send these to Washington! Trucks, cannot be obtained! Food for these marchers along the way | has not started to come in. FUNDS, necessary for all these things and a hundred more has not come in! It is of the utmost importance that | you get together all money possible, from your friends, from your shop- mates, today, and send it to the Joint | Hunger March Committee, 146 Fifth | Avenue, third floor, New York City. | This money can come only from the | working-class and its sympathizers! Only these will support the Hunger March to Washington! Fulfill your obligation! Send funds, food, cloth- ing today! Every day counts! IOSCOW PLANT COMPLETES 5- YEAR PLAN AHEAD OF SCHEDULE | Completion of its Five-Year Plan of production is reported by the Vlad- imir Tlyitch Machinery Works of Moscow. By 8 p. m, on Sept. 27, | the plant had fulfilled 100.2 per cent |of its program of machinery con- struction under the first Five-Year Plan, more than three months ahead | of schedule. ference. With the exception of four, the local retained its affiliation with the New York AFL Committee for ; Unemployment Insurance and elected financial secretary and its dele- e to the District Council to the neinatti conference. a ! ig delegations are expected from Minne: , Chicago, Detroit, Cleve- Jand, Wire Your O Special Hu of 50 EAST 13th ST. to apy (West White Russia) and charged with having killed a Polish agent pro- vocateur. ‘They are to be tried by a court martial and are threatened with a death sentence. Four revolutionary workers were four-fifths of the way oround the already sentenced to death and exe- world at the Equator.” cuted in Rivna (Western Ukriania). This edition wit of the Hunger leading articles rder Now! for Bundles of the nger March Edition the ' Daily, qlorker NEW YORK, N. Y. 2ear on THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 17 Ul contain a complete map March Routes as well as and directives on the March pececsneremeer Miron | TELE ne ed