The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 12, 1932, Page 3

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DAILY WORKER, N 'W YORK, MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1932 Page Three FARMERS DEMAND R ELIEF AND RATO MO RIUM FROM CONGRESS International Notes By ROBERT HAMILTON REVOLUTIONARY UNREST IN . SPAIN HENDAYE, France, Dec. 6.—Trust- worthy reports reaching this border town from -Madrid indicate that a considerable part of the Spanish Army is known to be in sympathy with revolutionary ideas; this is par- ticularly true of the First and Sixth of the Madrid Guards. These troops are suspected of complicity in plans for the projected general strike. Premier Azana’s government is stationing troops armed with ma- chine guns and hand grenades in the Central Telephone Exchange and the other principal government buildings. A very large concentration of troops is being held in readiness in Madrid to meet any situation that might arise. Companies of machine gun- ners and artillery batteries are sta-| tioned ready to attack the army units suspected of sympathy with the united front of workers and peasants. The railway workers of the coun- try are now in convention to vote on declaring a general strike for in- creascd wages. A nationwide strike is proposed by workers’ organizations to compel the government to confis- cate the telephone company’s (Am- erican-owned) system. Subsequent reports show the Ker- ensky-like Spanish government again backing down before the militancy of U, S. imperialism and consenting to negotiate the matter of the illegal telephone monopoly, granted by the overthrown royal government. Com- pare this with the resoluteness of the Bolsheviski in Russia, who stead- tastly refused to knuckle under to the capitalists’ demands for the pro- tection of foreign private property. RAILWAY STRIKE STOPS DIS- MISSALS IN DUBLIN DUBLIN, Nov, 21. (By Mail). — Strike action ye@erday at Kings- bridge station in Dublin compelled the Great Southern Railway to take back twelve porters who had been notified their permanent employment was over, and that they would be hired on a day-to-day basis. At a meeting of the National Union of Railwaymen, strike action was voted,. involving about 5,000 men. Pickets took up positions and stopped a freight train at 10 p.m. This action showed the rail companies that the strike was on in earnest and half an hour later the porters were uncon- ditionally taken back. This action of the railwaymen di- rectly opposed to the policy of the union officials, one of whom said, “The last thing we would ask the men to do is fight.” But the rank and file want to fight, and by their suc- cessful fight have shown how dis- missals’ and wage-cuts’ cari be com- batted. “IRISH WORKERS VOICE” FIGHTS FOR ITS LIFE The organ of the Irish Revolu- tionary Workers’ Movement, the “Irish Workers Voice,” is facing the stiffest struggle it has ever been con- fronted with. Its difficulties in- crease with its growth in every part of Ireland. No less tthan sixteen printers have refused to print the J paper. Many that would daren’t do it. Many that did have had to give it up. Liberty of the press—but not for the revolutionary press of the working class! The Irish workers in the U.S. must air their comrades in Ireland to save their paper. Have your organization send cables and letiers of protest against this stifling of proletarian opinion to the “Irish Workers Voice,” 206 Pearse Street, Dublin, Ireland. Collect funds to aid the paper in its fight for a truly free Ireland of free workers and peasants, a united Irish Workers and Farmers Republic! KARL MARX ON IRLELAND “England has destroyed the con- ditions of Irish society,” wrote Karl Marx (New York Tribune, July 11, 1853). “First of all, she has confis- cated the lands of the Irish; then by ‘parliamentary decrees’ she has sup- pressed Irish industry; finally, by armed force she has broken the ac- tivity and energy of the Irish people. In this way England has created the ‘social conditions’ which allows a ll caste of robber landlords to (A quotation from a new pamph- fet by Ralph Fox, entitled “Marx, Engels and Lenin on the Irish Re- volution,” cos'fag threepence and published by Sphinx Publications. 206 Pearse Street, Dublin, Ireland. Watch the Daily Worker for a review of this 1 pamphlet by Brian O'Neill. - é COMMUNIST WINS IN LONDON pickets were arrested and fined $3 strike continues. It is led by. the 120 of the Amalgamated Cloth- adil feces he eres | ELECTION 3 | LONDON, Nov. 25. Mail) —At the municipal by-elections last. night | in West Ham, working. district | of ity Labor Party was handed a severe beating by the militant workers of the borough. Only two seats were up for election; in one Motsfield, the Com- munist candidate sponsored by the | National Unemployment Workers j Movement, defeated the Labor man | 519 votes to 401. In the other ward, the candidate missed election | 490 to Labor’s 493. ‘The cowardly policy of the British “® Labor Party conniving at the Means | ‘Test and the peaate snare workers ty igo the revolutionary way out of Guides Moscow Traffic | | In charge of traffic at an im- | portant Moscow corner. This officer is entrusted with the job of pro- | tecting the lives of his fellow | workers, ‘SOVIET FIRST IN ARCTIC. RESEARC |Five Dangerous Trips Marked by Success | MOSCOW, Dec., 11.—Mass demon- stration marked by tremendous en- \thusiasm of the population through- |out the Soviet Union greeted the re- jturn of the scientists, Prof. Otto J. |Schmidt, Ivan Voronin and Prof. V. J. Weise who led the long Jit>riakov jexpedition. Similar reception’ sreet~ jed the return of other expediiions which have marked 1932 as the most successful year- of Soviet Artic ex- |ploration, since Lenin ordered the first Artic expedition on the Perseus, {more than ten years ago. Eliminate “White Spots.” Since the Perseus expedition, So- viet exploration activities have shown |@ stormy growth which likewise holds |good for polar exploration. As a re- sult of the work of Soviet explorers, \the “white spots” on the map of the Soviet Union which represented un- explored regions, have almost entirely disappeared. New islands have been discovered. Valuable resources of all |kinds have been found and new in- dustrial districts opened up. Organized Socialist Exploration By 1932 the Soviet Union is far ahead of any of the capitalist-coun- tries in this work. The State Ocean- ographi¢ Institute has been establish- ed which organizes these activities on a scale which is beyond the limits of possibility for capitalist countries. Of the seventeen new polar stations \laid out in 1932, by a number of coun- tries, nine have been allotted to the Soviet Union which has more than fullfiled its share of the work. Over 50 Expeditions More than 50 expeditions have been arranged since Artic exploration was begun by the Soviet Union. The extent of these activities has grown each year, making this year the richest in the scope and achievements of this work. Particularly important work was done this year by icebreaker, “Maly- gin,” under the direction of Pinegin and Captain Chertkov. The Malygin jaccomplished the unusual task of making two trips to Franz Joseph Land in one summer, thus greatly enlarging the possibility of scientific research work. HARLAN NEGRO MINERS KILLED \Explosion at Yancy Traps 23 Coal Diggers {CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tact that they were sent into the mine filled with dust and carbon monoxide after the blast. shows that there either was no shot fired, as provided by law, or that he did not do his" job right. A second blast foliowed as the men were approaching the working place, and all not immediately killed were trapped underground Recover 10 Bodies. Bodies of nine Negroes and four white miners have so far been re- covered. The state mine examiner John F, Daniel, is present, making excuses for the company, claiming that Harlan mines have little gas, and the danger could not have been foreseen. He avoids the question of dust, which Harlan mines have plen- ty of, and which, mixed with air were those of Tom, Messengill, sons of Tom Messingill, who states that three more of his sons are still below. Deputy sheriffs drove from the mine entrance a crowd of several hundred relatives of the men in this Sale boat WORKER CORRESPONDENCE || | RELIEF JOBS ARE VIRTUAL PEONAGE Work All Week; Families Hungry | Unemployed The letter from the Pocatello work- r is a good example of the kind of the Daily Worker Council Fighting Forced Labor | eorrespondence | values most. POCATELLO, Idaho.—We are mak- Here is a general unfolding of an ing every effort to organize the 475 | entire story—first the background of |workers who are employed on the | conditions of a certain section of |eity dump. They get five days ® | workers; then the organizational steps week and six hours a day. Their|the workers are trying to take to pay is $1.50, paid in script. This is | fight these conditions, and the meth- |good only as exchange in the com- | ods used in organizational activities. |Muissewy set up by ithe politicians | ‘The difficulties met with are then |with the money received from the! mentioned, and the method with| [Paseger nation regu a Ea which the active workers will try to| |ceived $300,000 to provide work for | vercome these difficulties. | \the poor, _The next step will be to folow up this | The reason this money is not given situation. The correspondent should | jto the workers in cash, is, the ex-|¥ to find out what the workers |ploiters want them to understand | themselves think — particularly the that if they want to eat, they must | Workers who enjoy coming to meet- | |work, and that they must not ex-| ings. but are hesitant about joining | pect ‘to enter the parasite class who| in the activities. Perhaps” these |live in idleness on the “fat of the | Workers have some opihions and sug- | land.” | Those who are in charge of the |commissary, deal out the relief just jas they see fit. Some receive so lit- |tle for their work, that they are not jable to feed one person on the |amount. None of them receive what jany family should have to sustain |\them, The marks of hunger can be |seen on every face of those who are subjected to this forced labor pro- gram of the capitalist system. The workers who are interested in organizing a council here, have rent- jed the Columbus Hall as headquart- lers, and are houlding meeting every |night, We have put on several en- |tertainments with very good results, jbut it still takes a lot of energy to jmake the workers active in the. or- |ganization. However, we are start- ing block committees now, and will {Keep on with our educational work juntil we get the desired results. |_ Our speakers stress the need of the | Western gnd Daily Worker, which | will give them the.educational matter |which they need, and taking it from the way they buy these papers, the circulation of them will grow rapidly. —A Worker ‘Take Job or Get Out of Flophouse Veterans NEW YORK CITY.—Today at the Bear Mountain relief job for vet- erans I overheard the foreman on the job telling another one that the next group that are going up to work will be sent from the Municipal Lodging House. They will get paid a dollar a day or 2 dollars a day. Those who refuse to accept this work will get beaten up and discharged, and thrown out ot the Lodging House, and they won’t get any eats or lodging anywhere they go. . They have to bring their own lunch up there. Saturday afternoon there was a fight up there in section 8 again. State Troopers beat up a worker, but I couldn't get his name. 2 —A Comrade. Editor's Note: Intensive work should be done among these tricked and exploited relief job victims to get them into the Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League (main office at 1 Union Square), and the Un- employed organizations district of- fice at 10 E. 17th St.). Armed Guards Over Jobless Road Workers | BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — We have forced labor here and the unemployed. men who have to dig ditches, build Toads and toil for the little slop and meagre rations handed out by the relief agencies say they work for the “Red Cross Construction Company”. Big city trucks pick the men up at daylight and haul them off to their forced labor jobs under armed guards. The men made up a song they sing on the way to work and when the woman in charge of the “relief” sta- tion heard it, she told them if they sing it dgain she would cut off their rations and kick them out. Here is the song: “We've counted the greens; we've counted each bean; we've coynted the white meat without any lean; we've measured the flour; biscuits to bake; It’s been 20 years since we had any cake.” e Living conditions here are impos- sible to describe. Thousands of white and Negro workers are almost ‘Forced Labor Jobs for, gestions of their own to give on| what's wrong, and how things can be improved. 2c. AN HOUR FOR RED CROSS ROAD ‘JOBS FOR RELIEF | Forbidden to Speak on} Jobs; Relatives of | Officials Favored | HUEYSVILLE, Ky.—The Federal | | Road Aid Projects and the American Red Cross Program of Relief in Eastern Kentucky has anything | skinned in brutal exploitation except maybe the builders of the Pyramide. The Allen to Lacky highway was made a federal project and J, EF. McComas of Huntington, Ww. Va., re. ceived the contract covering ten miles of grade work at $196,000. The cash ‘is ‘mentioned so-you can com- pare “it “with what the workers re- | ceive. z ‘The contratt provided for working only loeaF Then in 30-hour shifts al- ig ase peice Pay not less than Ye per. hour. unskilled Jal 30c for aitled.* i eee At one relief project the men were | sctually commanded to not talk to bystanders, and to not talk among each other, but keep steadily at work for ten hours, with all pretentions of safety thrown to the winds. A break- down occurred to the machinery and the men were told to hang around until it was fixed, Perhaps they could get another hour or two of work. A worker in explanation said to me: “If we are off 15 minutes we are docked. You only get pay for what time you are actually throwing dirt like a badger.” A committee of mayors, doctors, etc., was appointed to see that the workers got fair turn about. Well it came on the job once or twice, done nothing but get their sons and near relatives the soft steady six-day per week jobs. Men who had other income were hired, some single men, who have other work. Men with large families are turned down daily. Since the committee just faded out of existence, the contractors just laugh at any dissatisfied worker who kicks. [250 Delegates, of 32 States Score System That Lets Many Starve While Food Is Spoiled “We Come Ourselves”, They Say, to Demand $500,000,000 Releif and Moratorium Call for Reduced Prices to Consumer and Higher Prices to Farmers; Is No Surplus (STATEMENT TO CONGR ’ BY THE NATIONAL FARM RELIEF CONGRESS, WASHINGTON, DEC. 7-10) We, farmers 250 strong represent eral Government directly from the the struggling majority of the farm} farmers at a price which will ine population in 32 states. For the first! sure the cost of production plus time in history, we come ourselves, | face to face with Congress without| The processing and transportation high salaried “farm leaders or Lob. of these products and other x e ‘ byists” standing beetween to becloud} relief supplies shall be regulated : eh SE Se SE: ABIES HE 8, Bie. Mila jand divert our purpose and our pur-| by the Federal Government so as Part of the 3,000 National Hunger Marchers, photographed as they |P9S€ is to demand immediate action. | rofits to the Food to prevent usts and Transportation com- ing the period of the We are determined to stop a ruthless pressure from creditors who threate! and hom waited in formation before the capitol building, while their two com- mittees of 25 went in to present demands for $50 winter relief and for unemployment insurance. These marchers had paraded the streets of Washington from their camp on the outskirts of the city, and after return For the last three rs, @ world 3 istration of Relief for of the delegations, marched back to camp. economic crisis has sharpened the | effect of ten years of post war fa Federal cash relief and relief in Sak Meco e. a e | Our: leet reeorves. stered by local ‘ been taken from us 2 armers in each Hi Id H aring 0 U § i A ! responsible for the Univer: towns t or other local 0 eal ing n Jo De D AL LU down that forced sever unit selected by a mass meeting of a Americans into distress all farmers needing relief B I Ca t ] TRADE IN BRAZIL and want in the richest countr 4—Government Price Fixing: onus In Capita \ Les ee ee ee par a | Food Rots Amidst Starvation controlled by actual consumers and Picts Aas OMA its 2 one: NTA acs We know that the relief funds are be immediately To Petition Congress 3attle Rages Near |Jargely squeezed from, the worried] set up whose function shall be to Wednesday (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) balance of the population wt Ve S5¢ +f ye Fort Saavedra |themselves slippi lof jot fs zB joblessness, that RIO DE JANEIRO, Dec. 11 tastic costs of local, State and Fede move for the cancellation by Brazil | 7 fi {governments are also squeezed from | ad Argentine of the most favored |them by Sales Taxes while the big ‘Thursday a memorial will be held | "@tion Gla uses with Great Britain is |incomes and corporations escape. We in Arlington Cemetery for Hushka | the latest step in the fierce struggle |imow that actual starvation is more and Carlson, the two vets murdered | between U. S. and British imperial- sold by deduction from profits of the middleman the swollen no cuts in disability allowances, On 5—The Defeat of Any Legislation Based en the Theory of “Surplus” Production: n and more frequently admitted in While millions of our population in the attack on the first army of | 8S over ets and war debts. |spite of bulging banks and store-| are undernourished through loss bonus marchers on Bloody Thurs- | U. S. Puppets. {houses of food. We have seen food} of purchasing power. the accept- theory is a day, July 28. The Veterans’ National Rank and File Committee announced from its | headquarters at 905 “I” St. N.W., that before presenting the petition | ¢, to Congress the following immediate | demands are being made: | 1—That police stop interfering | with bonus marchers coming into | Washington, 2—That Congress pro- vide a fund to secute food and hous- | ing for the veterans. 3—That pend. | ing the voting of this fund, there | should be no federal or local inter- | U. S. interests have succeeded in | mobzizing their puppet governments in Brazil and Chile for a concerted ish influence. government is ready wored nation clause h Britain. The Chilean govern- ent has protested to Argentine against its concessions to Britain. Argentine has no favored nation treaty with the U. S. Chile, how. ever, has such a treaty with the U.S. under which recent concessions granted by Chile to Argentine are automatically extended to the U. S. |destroyed and everywhere our crops rot on the ground in a marketless country because hungry millions have \lost their purchasing power. | In the face of this soc \“Farm Leade and politicians dare | to talk of “Surplus”: Dare to base a legislation on a theory of reduction lof acreage that. will fit the present jStarvation markets. Finally this |bankrupt leadership dares to advo- cate the abandonment of our scien- tific and technical advances in farm- ing and recommends that we return ance of the surplus against society ctment of legislation which will provide production credit for all farm families so as to insure basis for national consumption at normal levels. The defeat of all proposals and the repeal of all legislation now in force which provides credit only for well-to-do farmers and cor- porations with collateral. i—Debt Holida; 1 calamity ; | a pri ve, self-sufficing form of A mor on mortgages, Ce i ee ea oy ina, ce eee eee | Szeto for at farmer es non-veteran sympathizers, 4—That | working on the case | There Is No “Surplus” | biden nit production has yee the veterans be permitted to dis- Yee Sie “We declare that this country’ is| Tecnu dec mnt srenderd be tig fribute leaflets and sell lUterature, | Misleader in Deal with Government. lin the throes of a permanent Farm| Gyrtolfatie of eee no ne 5—That there be no discrimination | , WASHINGTON, Dec. 11-—George |crisis which threatens us with degra-| oa pang escort PF She TRA of the Oli: and debts for supplies and oe dation and poverty unless we enforce | o furnishing for farmers whese . | of the Bonus Expedition: jabrupt changes in our economic set-| yolume Gt production nna wee 30 Arrive from South Dakota who Started with a lotjups. We declare that such an emer-| Gmic unit has always been too WA : re or onus march of his) gency can be met only by putting} small to carry the debt load and BRM or SP Hie cateae cna | wns Setlved ere the ottiec'day with| into ettect ine folio deere | support the family at a minimum health standard. (Marginal farm- ers, share croppers and otuers) Cancellation of back taxes and moratorium on future taxes dur- a total of two henchmen. They ap. peared before the Veterans’ Na- tional Rank and File Committee and pretended to endorse the rank and file program and to denounce the Chicago Emergency Relief and the Red Cross. He promised to return jJater to sign an agreement on the Were deported to Baltimore by the| pasis of the rank and file program, Washington police together with the| put, instead went to ‘see General departing hunger marchers have| Frank T. Hines, administrator of sent a protest to Congress against | veterans’ affairs. A few hours later their forcible ejection. The vets are | Anthony was on a Pullman back to how preparing to return to the cap-| Chicago. He had told Hines that he | | would “call off” the second bonus The police are continuing their at- | march if Hines would “request” aid tempts to terrorize the bonus march- | for his men from the Emergency Re- rived here yesterday from South Da kota, arriving in a battered truck. The vets had a tough trip, but are in high spirits, determined to fight to the last ditch for payment of the bonus now. Eighty-four bonus marchers who/| which must be considered as a whole. | | We ask Congress to suspend its rules | |and to permit the delegation from the | Farmers’ National Relief Conference | to read these demands on the floor| ing the erisis of Congress and that Congress shall |g no ictions: immediately proceed to the enact-| nent of emergency legislation on the | During this national crisis Con- ya Se ye a tgetcha he th Rea must declare ail foreclosures, |basis of these demands: b siezures of property and evictions |1—Federal Cash Relief: illigal. To raise all rural families to a We farmers have no collateral, minimum health and decency but we represent the majority of standard of living, a minimum the farm population. We have at fund of $500,000,000 must immedi-| last been forced to organize and ately be appropriated for the re- present to this Congress our final lief of that section of the dis- | demands. If our duly elected na- tressed farm population in need of | tional representatives and senators Both are being held by the The International Labor Defense is | the police. | past as working hand in hand with | | Chicago police. shoul ed for relief of city unemployed | ers. Two members of the New York | lief. Hines also arranged to have immediate relief, regardless of fail as did the local, county and contingent, Kolb and Wenky, were | Anthony broadcast his “change of race, creed or color. state authorities, then we pledge beaten up and arrested for trying to| heart” over the radio. |\2—Federal Relief In Kind: ourselves to protect our fellow sleep in an old deserted building, | Anthony has been exposed in the| Food products and supp! need- farmers from suffering and their families from social disintegration, Id be purchased by the Fed- by our united action. Things got so.bad that the con. | tractors got orders to clean house. | You can imagine how bad they must be if that can happen. The writer's’ opinion is that the worker's interests can be served on- ly by Socialism. and that on the Sov- jet style, and he has pledged his life end welfare to that end. And that, can be attained only- by the upsurge and pressing forward of the broad masses, by militant, struggle. starving. Many are too weak to walk and Jay all day in a filthy pile of rage called a bed. These people must organize and join the Unemployed Councils and struggle for their very lives against, such misery. The Unemployed Coun- cil is waging a daily fight to orga- nize and overcome the police and K. K. K. terror here, and through these daily struggles many are learning for the first time that there is an or- ganization they can join right here in Birmingham for the war against starvation and death.—D. 12-HOUR DAY. An. employment shark had a job for three coal shovelers. 12 hours a day good for three days. The wages were $1.00 a day. Paying the shark 50c for the job, what was left? Workers you can do nothing alone. naked and nat slowly, but rapidly You must organize!—A, B. TACOMA, Wash—The bosses have launched a subtle campaign against unemployed receiving relief here. The of jobless receiving other aid beside their County relief. They are charg- ed with grand larceny and ball set at $2,000. Part time workers in the mills earning only a few dollars a month are subject to arrest if they do not pay back to the County ali relief ago forced labor in a f. Tacoma Workers Accepting Relief Are Jailed third arrest has recently been made | for the purpose of putting over propaganda in the newspapers to in- cense the public mind against jobless relief and to pave the way for the cutting off of all relief. Tampa unemployed and employed must mobilze and struggle shoulder to shoulder to defeat this brazen, at- tempt of the bosses to beat down their living standards to and_ below that of Chinese coolies. —E. M. s ee ge Four of the most outstanding leaders of the Soviet Union were caught together as this picture was snapped. president; Kaganovitch, Secretary of the Moscow Communist Party or. ganization, is next; then Ordzhonikidze, minister of heavy industry and FOUR SOVIET LEADERS “TALKI be At the left is Kalinin, Soviet therefore in charge of the most important development of the Firet Five-Year Plan, ana finally Stalin, secretary of the Communist Party. NG THINGS OVER” ae \ (F. P. Pictures.) Delegation of 75 Put Relief Demands | to Des Moines Mayor pe | DES MOINES, Ia., Dec. 11. — 75 | delegates of the unemployed appear- | ed before the city council here, Dec. | 6, and presented local and national | demands of unemployment relief. | Robert Zornes, of the Unemployed | Council headed’ the delegation and | spoke for nearly an hour, The un- | employed leagues ‘took advantage of | the situation and also brought griev- | ances and demands before the city | council. Twenty demands were placed be. fore the city council. Before Zornes spoke Mayor Lewis whitewashed his hands by saying that the city council has no juris- diction in regard to unemployment | relief, In spite of this he answered nearly each of the twenty demands Lewis “gave his sympathy” to the | unemployed and hoped that the | crisis will soon end, He said all re- lief measures are temporary. He | admitted the situation was bad. He | did not deny any of the statements made by Zornes. He referred all the demands to other bodies. EDITORS NOTE-— If there is an ‘Tacoma, should mention this and address for all Tacoma give the | workers to GREET THE To All Workers & Organizations Dear Comrades: SUNDAY, JAN. 8, 1933, MARKS THE NTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE DAILY WORKER. These were nine years of hard struggle in the life of our paper. During these years, the Daily Worker has made itseif indispensable in the yarious struggles of the American working class. As the central organ of the Commu- nist Party, it has railied the workers for the support and defense of the Soviet Union, It has constantly carried on the fight to mobilize the workers in the struggle for better living conditions, against wage cuts, for unemployment insurance and for the support of the Hunger March, It fights-against the oppression of the foreign-born workers, against deporta- tions, for equal rights of the Negro mas- s, and for the freedom of ali class war prisoners—Tom Mooney and the Nine Scottsboro Boys, ete. This celebration is a great event for all workers. We ask you to express your solidarity and support the Daily Worker by sending Greetings to the only Revo- Intionary Daily in the English language. DAILY WORKER ON ITS NINTH ANNIVERSARY *- ¢ Onward to A Bigger-and More Powerful Daily Worker! ° * Our Greetings to the Daily Worker On Its 9th Anniversary! Name? oes .. a * teeatences ) MdAVORE bo. g EG LCR heed We request space in the 9h Anniversary Edition of the Daily Worker for $ YOUR GREETINGS MUST REACH THu DAILY WORKER, 50 EAST 13TH ST., NEW YORK, N, Y. BEFORE JANUARY FIRST, 1933

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