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Report of Her _ March Vretiow delegates: International Notes PROGRESS OF FACTORY RESTAURANTS MOSCOW.—The question of the factory restaurants and the food pro~ vided by them to the industrial workers was discussed at the recent plenary session of the Central Coun~ cil of the Soviet Labor Unions in Moscow, Representatives of the two big fac- tory catering organizations, known as “Boyusnarpit” and “Vsekopit” re- spectively reported to the session on the progress being made. Together these two organizations provide 143 million industrial workers daily with warm meals. These organizations have over 20,000 restaurants at- tached to various factories through- out the Soviet Union, including new gigantic factory kitchen-res:aurants in large-scale undertakings like the tractor works in Tcheliabinsk, the engineering works in the Urals and the big factories in Leningrad, Many of these factory restaurants provide 50,000 meals a day to the workers. In Moscow 74 per cent of the workers are fed by these associations. The pecentages for other industrial dis- ‘tricts are: Leningrad 67, the Done.z Basin 76, and the Ural industrial centers 77 per cent. ‘The representatives of these organ- izations also reported that steady progress was being made in the work for the improvement of the quality of the food povided. During the first six months 2,500 tons of meat daily had been used. This had now in- creased to 3,000 tons daily. All these factory kitchens were under the close control of the trade unions and fac- tory commiitees appointed by the | workers, nee a ke BUILDING PROGRESS IN PILSUDSKI POLAND | WARSAW.—Considerabie buuaing | Progress 1s being maae in Pusuds | Poland, but it is not housing buc une bwiaug of new prisons, waust tne expenawure of tue Foush svate lor BL cuwural and sociial purposes is being cut down to une bone, wo it~ ema in the Svate Budget suows con- tinaualiy increasing ligures—ine ex- penditures tor armaments and toe expenawure lor prison auminisuration. In 1ys0 4.5 miumion “oiy (1 Ziocy | equais shows 11 cenvs) were expenaeu | for prison administration, In lysl tne figures nad mmereaseu wo 40.3 miluoa Ziovy and in lysz the rgures wus oe |} 26.2 mullion Zio. New prisons are peng punt aua new wacueis ea- gaged to ueal with the ever-increas- ing ranks of the polcical prisoners, ra Sri ILLEGAL CONGRESS OF TRADE! UN1UNS SOFIA—The second congress of the inaependent trade unions of Bul« garia Winco Was Wo nave tlaxen piace Or the lith of Sepvember ana was then prohipitea, wiuca was again ar- ranged for tne 47 Noyemper and again sutfered prohibition, has now taken place ‘illegally. Many of the delegates wee arrested by the police, but seventy delegates representing important industrial districts includ- ing Sofia, Russe, Haskovo, Burgas, Sliven, Plovdiv and other districts, succeeded in coming together in Plovdiv and evading the attentions ‘of the police. It is true that the po- lice finally succeeded in finding the congress and arres\ing all the dele- gates, but only after the main busi- ness of the congress was ended. The General ouncil was re-elected and a | new secretary elected in place of | v who is in prison and unable to fulfill his functions. The organ- dzational report showed that the unions have 10,000 members organ- | ived in 600 factory groups and are | ‘thus the stongest unions in Bulgaria. | ‘The report showed that 150 of the) recent 250 labor struggles were led ‘by the independent unions. Eighty per cent of these independent union | @trikes ended successfully or with Live whilst twenty per cent were feated. Chinese Festvists Get Protest on Brutal Treatment of Rueggs NEW YORK, Dec. 16.—-A protest the treatment accorded by | States government, the best that the |have been all too much accustomed Fellow Hunger Fighters of the United States, we have come here after a long and difficult journey for the purpose of carrying forward, making new adyances in the struggle against hunger which involves 48,- 000,000 of the population of the United States. We have gone through countless difficulties, steeled by our determin- ation to carry through that trust, that task, which was given to us by the tens of thousands of workers]? who elected us. Conscious of the seriousness of the mission we have undertaken, We have not flinched before all of the organized forces of violence that have been every-! where directed against us, Today, we hold our conference un- der conditions which, like the whole character of our march, is represen- tative of the conditions that the masses of the toiling population of this, the richest country in the world, are subject to. Cross Section of Toilers Our conference represents in its composition, those workers, those ele- ments of the population, who are suffering hunger, misery and want. We have in our ranks men and wom- en, workers of industry and workers on land, the poor farmers. We have in our ranks, native workers, Negro workers, foreign-born men and wom- en workers. And in these, and in the representation from all of the indus- tries of this country, our conference, our Hunger March, has presented the cross section of the population of this country which is the most use- ful, which is the most productive, that section of the population which has enriched this country by its toil’ And in the condition under which we find ourselves, we present a pic- ture which represents a cross sec- tion of the conditions as they are. Here we are out on an open high- way. That is the best that the United multi-millionaire ruling class of this country, can provide for those who have built all its homes and high buildings, all of the factories, and labored to take out of the soil all of the natural resources of this coun- try. A highway, wind swept, with- out even the most elementary of the necessities provided for us. M’sery for Millions This is not a condition confined to those of us here. This is the con- dition under which millions of us are | ff suffering at the present time. If/ HERBERT BENJAMIN National Organizer Unemployed Councils of U. S. A. we have no shelter, then we are not alone. There are millions who have no shelter. If we have no prospect of food, then we are not alone, for there are millions who face the fourth winter of the hunger crisis without knowledge of where they will get bread for themselves and their children. If we have been able to carry through in the face of such hardships as these, it is because we to such conditions in the period of the last four years. ' Our ranks are not confined to any one section of the population. Within our ranks are workers who only a short time ago worked and took pride fis to Congress of the United States that the biggest issue before us at the present time, that issue which should most engage the attention and immediate action of the legislative representatives in the Congress, shall be the question of bread for the pop; ulation of the United States. (Shouts of Hurray! Hurray!) It is possible for us to say, fellow workers, that we have already, to a very considerable extent, achieved our urpose. Today, thé Congress of the United States opaned and today, if you will take up the newspapers in any city of the United States and in any city throughout the world, you will find. first of all on the front page, not those fake issues which Congress seeks to focus attention upon, but you will find on the front pages of these newspapers, those is- sues which we are determined to focus attention upon. (Hurray! Hur- ray!) In that sense we have already to a considerable extent achieved our purpose. We have not waited to starve quietly to death and then get the benefit, if it is a benefit, of a few hypocritical words of sympathy and 2 few crocodile tears. We have come here to make our vojce heard. Yes, we know that Congress didn’t need to get a picture of the misery that prevails for the masses. Yet, we know that every member of Con- gress, if he wants to, can easily see that in his own congressional district and in his own state and city. We have not come here to parade our misery. But to parade our deter- mination to fight for the right to live. (Hurray! Hurray!) Inspiration to Masses Also we have achieved this not by virture alone of the fact that public eye has been foct upon the issue more important, that in the course of our march, by the practical ex- ample of unity and solidarity which our march has provided for the work- ers ih every city and town, through Which we passed, we have been able to give new courage and new inspira- tion to the masses who are looking for a way out of their misery. We have giyen them a practical ex- ample of how they must organize, how they must unite in order to ef- fectively carry forward their struggle for bread and, fellow workers, that achievement. cannot be taker away tom us no matter what all of these cops may do!. (Hurray! Hurray!) They might today and tonight, throw a few stones or anything else they think of doing. But that won't alter the fact that as a result of our action, as a result of our mili- tant demonstrations in the cities and towns of this. country, we have awakened to life the new forces to go into the struggle, and for everyone of us who might be injured or who might be arrested, for everyone of us who might be murdeted,:for évery='} one of us who might possibly die as a result of the conditions we have been forced to gd through in the course of this miarch, there will be tens of thousands, able and willing to better carry forward oyr st le, so that we can defeat the hut Plans of the United States class, (Hurrah! Hurrah!) ‘Tomorrow we go to Congress. We ‘re to present ‘there our 5 ‘We are to present there de- mands which the masses of work- ers who elected us have asked us to convey to js Bosses’ Hunger Program We will be guided in formulating our dethands by the experiences that we have had in the past three years and more.” Guided by a realization that the present program of the United States government calls for more misery and more starvation. That the present program of Con- giess provides for further putting of the burden of the bosses’ crisis upon the backs of the toiling popula- tion. We go knowing that we are facing a winter with 16,000,000 al- Teady unemployed, with unemiploy- ment growing at the rate of 600,000 per month; knowing that any work- ers who might yet have had some resources to fall back on are now left entirely without resources; and at the same time that the United States pee: has thrown us, thé mil- who are without means of live- lihood, upon the ity relief organ- izations, knowing that in every cily and town in the United States the DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1932 Replying to The New York Sunday the National Hunger March. wide campaign of lying and “The cops can’t put us agents fully equipped at the employed American workers. of Police, Spies, Press wark the police attacks on the Hunger March delegates of the Unemployed Councils, reported Herbert Benjamin, Na- tional Secretary of the Unemployed Councils, as stating in his speech to the delegates: of them ... we'll break into the capital by brute force! They vill listen to our demands or we'll stage a riot right on the spot ... If Hoover brings in the troops Pennsyl- vania Avenue will run red with blood.” As the article by Comrade Bill Dunne, published on Page 4 of the Daily Worker Dec. 8 stated: “This report is made up out of the whole cloth.” Benjamin never made |) any such speech or statements. ‘We therefore publish, as a further refutation of this piece of department of justice jamin did‘'make to the National Conference held on the “windswept highway”, where they were penned for three days by the Washington police and department of justice slaught upon the elected delegates of the Unemployed Councils, representing the interests of the millions of un- ers on December 4th Refutes Page Three bert Benjamin’s Speech to Natio nal Hunger | th Provocation | News, during the course of |) ® , and as part of the nation- provocation designed to bul- There aren’t enough mi ly to out. | th inspired lying, the stenographic report of the speech Ben- | of least excuse for an armed on- ||‘ ment of Labor admii vb of hunger in the United States, but | 1 : Hee oy 4.8 per cent of the employable pop- latin OF Wiis county toe fan ee work and now we, the millions of us who jobless, are asked to take away the bread from the mouths of those few weiter who still have a Job, and cal} ® solution for un- employment. Our answeér to the Hoo- ver government is that we do not pakipa yl sid has not only p ical obstacles in our way, but it has tried to set up ideological ob- stacle ane told us that we have no maid: «“Wap dome fea ale eat RE, Hinceren 1 Seger 4 then president of the United States. (Boos!) : ‘We know that according to the n ns of the Welfare bodies in suite of fan, Rundveds of works ers, thelr wives ‘ar ‘ahiidren, without PHILADELPHIA SKIPS PAY DAY Crisis to Deepen in 1933, Says Big Banker PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Dec. 16— Yesterday was the second pay day without pay for city workers. There are 23,000 employes of the city who didn't get a cent for the work they had done. In the old days before the depression, Philadelphia used ta pay double on the pay day before Christmas, as a gesture of “Broth- erly Love” and as an indirect sub- sidy to the department stores, selling Christmas gifts. ‘ New York Wage Cut. Se eae he men and ‘a , meeting in two erent Capac- flee, a8 holding Tie Certainly, there is not much to wait | is thing that we can console ourselves with. which Mr. Roosevelt comes as goy- ernor, that in the city of Syracuse, rélief has been reduced to 9 cents a day. And we know this is no pros- pect we can afford to wait for. Furthermore, we know that we here, tonight, without shelter, sur- rounded by an army that is com- Pletely equipped with all the lethal | instruments at the disposal of the| government—it is not only the fault of Mr. Hoover but we know it is the fault of Mr. Roosevelt, we know that Roosevelt is just as much re- sponsible for the fact that we stay here without shelter, without suffi- cient food, without a piace to meet, Surrounded by elements looking for @ chance to annihilate us. We know that Roosevelt could have changed the situation if he felt any more idness | kindly disposed to the demands of the unemployed and hungry masses. Two Parties; One Med’um We know that John Gamer, who was elected vice-president, could have | them a dose of \icine they had before |they are going | You won't stop the Hunger March | because you will not provide ers by trying to intimidate tt | hunger. Congress which | are going to a Cong {of which are unde |the Democratic Pa | have the intention to provide | they would have demonstrated it | ready now by thi | the Hunger Marche | pose upon the toilin | this country and we here today, and ess_ tomorrow, to say | prevent them from imposing such} | conditions, for here, Certainly this is not some-| know what our task is. little relief we have won has come | only as a result of our militant strug- They tried to make us submit |to evictions from our homes by, the | use of such forces as we see arrayed But they didn’t succeed. They murdered three workers in Chicago | for fighting against evictions but the struggle swept the city and made | them stop evictions, whether they (Shouts of hurrah!) | We know that in the state from | gle. | here. | liked it or not. | “Well, now the election is over, now] ch talk, we} will give | i food| e Js no need f e been ele med. They thing that by t to a We unger Marchers y to y nd lodgings for them. (Shouts oj | hurrah!) You won’t stop the Hunge The only wa the Hunger | ers will stop is when there (Shouts of Hurrah Fellow workers, we a: ajority of the mem! that made such us 2 few short ¥ both House: control o! And { And we know, re attention of the conditions tk @ are going to Con we will do our damnedest t (Shouts of Hurrah!) Win Workers Through Struggie The conditions under |meet does not permit of that thoro| | discussion of our problems which we jof the National Committee would) any kind of relief whatever and that | have liked to arrange, but on the| the felief in the city of New York| other hand, they provide sueh living has been reduced to levels as low as|arguments for the program that we} $6.20 a month for a family of five,| must put forward that less eee e Whatever therefore made necessary. The Minute Men of 1932 They fired into a demonstration of | aS 1em with| TdS| AS a result of that the unions and population of which we | unemployed at the City Hall in St./ | Louis, in an effort to make them sub- | | mit to a decision that 13,000 families |shall be cut off the relief roles, but | the workers there in demonstration made such a vigorous resistance that | the authorities of St. Louis found it necessary to restore these 13,000 fam- | ilies to the relief roles. | From these experiences, we know | what our task is if we would enjoy the right to live. We know that’we |can enforce our right to live only by our united might, and therefore, | the big task ahead of us is to unite | our power by bringing greater masses Sets Exampl Never in the history of building As 2 result there already exists a | years gone by been one of its most ‘| prominent sections are at present in a bankrupt condition, with the mem- bers falling out in the tens of thou- sands due to inability to pay dues, ,| the central bodies are becoming so} demoralized that in many of the cities there exists no semblance of *| organized bodies of building trades workers, The bureaucratic officers of the various building trades unions and central bodies that still exist | declare the unemployed “constitute dead wood for the union”, These leaders of the A. F. of L. unions re- tain a small part of the membership to support them in office. | Many of these building trades | j union bureaucrats conive in the at- | tack upon the non-organized work- ‘0 | ers who have at all times been forced | | to work on so-called “alteration jobs” | only. They are forcing their mem- | bership to accept a reduced rate of | Wages in order to give the bureau- | crats an opportunity to compete with | un-organized workers who are work- ing for the lowest wages imaginable. In this way they are directly help- ing the bosses to lower the standards of living of the workers so that on contemplated government construc- tion, etc., these workers would be working at a very reduced rate of wages and under bad conditions. In the meantime the unorganized workers in the building trades as well as those who have formerly been | members of the A. F. of L. unions are beginning to look forward to the creation of labor organizations which will be free from such betrayals. Only 6 Months Old. In New York City there has been the successful launching of the Al- teration Painters, Decorators and Paperhangers Union. in spite of the attacks on it by the officialdom of the A. F. of L. Paint- ers Union and its District Council, No, 9, and the attacks of the bosses, has been able to register definite and positive achievements in the field of organization of the workers and the improvement of their conditions of labor. This Union, Th Alteration Painters Union was he had °desi very readily chan ired to do so, But that organize them. ged the situation if| into the swe2p of our movement, to| We have come for. on the contrary, all of the chiefs of | ward with the resolution that not | the. Democratic Party joined hands} one unemployed or his family shall | with Mr. Hoover and they said:|be without housing, without decent | | food and clothing during the present | winter. We have made a great step | forward towards ensuring this by our | |national Hunger March because in started in the middle of July, 1932, . | and already, in less than six months, Salvation Army Gets 50c for 10c | Meal for Jobless | \JAPAN PUPPET EMPIRE PLANNE War Drive in N. China Grows Shaper Japanese troops are concentrating at three vital points of the Jehol| Province and North China borders for the invasion of North China. Huge concentrations have already | beeri accomplished in the Tungliao- gions. Japanese troops have also car- | fled out’ an advance several days ago fegion around Shanhaikuan. Open Imperialist Piot. | thousands blocks who will stand guard to see} to provi 4 °- | of our Hunger March and that is the | chen, Sdlunshan and Ohinchow re-/ ooo. of our struggles for which | ® this Hunger March is o1 only an introduction, a beginnin Devond the Great Wall in the coastal | (77S. oo pack to our various com | munities, each and every one of us| morning. |"Will be provided with a card identify- | Japanese officials and the Manchu- jing him as an organizer of the Un- kuo henchmen are openly declaring employed Councils of the United | | every city and town we have created | minute-men of 1932 who will stand| this hydra-headed monster, the Sal- guard over the homes of the Amer- ican working class and prevent these | Daily Worker, I shail do so in the | workers from being evicted out of | bright open light of the day. | | their homes. (Shouts of hurrah!) Marcher An Organizer We have established minute-men in |50c—five times what I asked for. and| ris ticket is good at various Sal- of neighborhoods to it that no family starves because | put t nave to wait till 5:30 tonight, {they will be able, by organized mass | A to compel the authoritie: relief. That is the purpos: their intention to seize North China | States, Shouts of hurrah!) and set up the puppet Manchukuo | President Pu Yi, deposed “Boy Em- peror” of China, as a vassal emper- or of Japanesé imperialism over all! North China. A number of North |); Each and every one of us will un- |d-rtake to build up, to develop, that | reply that we are not yellow. necessary unity of the workers in the neighborhoods, factories, eadlines a> y @ prelude, | on the) d in the flophouses, so NEW YORK, — Who can attack! vation Army? With the aid of the This morning I bummed a man for the price of @ cup of coffee. He | |handed me a ticket that cost him j vation Army and charity houses. and then have the pleasure of stand- | ing in @ long line for a long time} jin freezing weagher, and get what— rotten 10c meal for that 50c ticket. I want my reader to get this/ traight—I bummed 40c for the Sal-j ation Army and 10c for myself this} The time is near when god is go- ing to need an army and he with his managers, the Salvation Army, |are going to lose. | Let them call us Reds and iet us —Gilbert D. Smith. | WEAR BENJAMIN TONITE | Capitalist Press Lies Alteration Painters Union e of Unity of Jobless and | Employed Men ‘| Wins Strikes and Grows While A. F. L. Union Officials Suspend Tens of Thousands for Non-Payment of Dues (By the Publicity Department of the Alteration Painters, Decorators { and Paper Hangers Union.) construction has there been such & ‘aperal decline of work as is being witnessed a the present time. mong building trade workers generad | destitution and reduction of the standard of living to an extent never wit- The A. F. of L. Building Trades Union which have in the fee TNNERE NNER EPI ETI existence, has been able to success- fully conduct strikes, settle 72 shops and raise the wages of over 1,000 painters. These wages have been raised from 20 to 50 percent and working condi- tions have been improved to an ex- tent never before enjoyed by the workers, At the present time the union has ® dues-paying membership of 950 in six locals which maintain their own headquarters in the various parts of the city. In spite of the general de- cline of work in the painting trade there are at present close to 500 j members of the union working full time on jobs. On the average, 40 new members affiliate weekly to the unian. In spite of the fact that only a little more than 300 workers inau- gurated the union, there are at pres- ent on the rolls a membership of over 1400 workers. It is of course due to the general unemployment situation that many of these work- ers are not regular dues paying. The union is making a serious ef- fort to keep on its rolls all the work- ers in the painting trade even {f they are unable, due to the crisis, to pay dues at all. Job Committees. The method of. job control by the Alteration Painters Union. is unlike that of the A. F. of L. union. The control of the conditions of jobe in the A. F. of L. unions is entirely vested in the hands of highly paid business agents who invariably ac- cept graft and permit thé, bosses to violate union rules. ‘The Alteration Painters Union con- trols union conditions on the job through elected job committees which are required to report weekly to the union on the existing conditions. This method compels the bosses to live up to the agreements signed with the union and raises the!confi- dence of the workers in their, union. The union has also inauguréted = shop, “work distribution ‘a which eliminates the antagonism: which exists between the of the A. F. of L. union on the qi of unemployment for the majority and employment of a small minority. United Front. Local organizers of the new union Periodically visit the jobs and sit in with the shop committees, taking up | grievances etc., on the jobs. How- ever, the primary function of these organizers is the recruiting of new workers into the union, organization of strikes for the improvement of their conditions and signing agree- ment with the bosses. These orgs- nizers are constituted into a city council which weekly plans out city- wide organizational drives. The union has also been able to organize unemployed committees in each local for the purpose of obtain- ing necessary relief for its members in distress. The Alteration Painters Union is helping in every possible way for thembers of the A. F. of L. Unions, to obtain the prevailing scale of wages and union conditions of work, This, the Alteration Painters Union hag been able to achieve, in many instances where the member- ship of both unions has been work- ing in one building and the A. F. of L. bureaucracy refused to enforce union conditions. As & result of such fraternal interest in the welfare of the membership of the A. F. of L. union, whose officials are trying to beat down conditions in many” in- stances whole shops of A. F. of L. union workers have transferred into the Alteration Painters Union. eR TEAR \ the Chinese Government to Walter|in the maintenance of their homes. | funds are exhgusted, that there is no| ready to put over a stunning w: China militarists are supporting the it will 63 ‘ x | \ and Gertiud Ruegg, Swiss citizens, | They listened to the capitalist real lity of praviding relief for all| cut on ci cehthayes, Tande Poona | Sepanese scheme, inelenee te war | ee ia err as 2 et | NEW YORK, N. ¥.—Charges ‘st RUSSIAN ART SHOP serving sentencés in China for] estate men who told them to buy| those who starve; that this | by removal of state mandatory power | lord of Shantung province. | Washington with our hearts steeled| news dispatches of the recent hun- mem! ip in the Communist Party | their own homes, They worked and|is true in the State of Ne York, | over wages at the special General Noboyoshi Muto, Japanese | (1) . nth aes | i .| PEASANTS’ HANDICRAFTS was gent to the Chinese Minister at | put their savings into these homes.|/ as in the state of Oregon; Toowis of the legislature, 7 mili‘ery dictator in Manchuria yes. | “!' steater determination to go for-| ger march on Washington were mal 4 y » E t ef Washington by the International | Today, they are homeless and all that | that it is true in eyery city and town | Wednesday. cs Jesijigture “iteelf | terday hinted that an “incident” may | We dint reths ney char ar Gate | fclously distorted and that pollce/*100 East 14th St. N. Y. C. x for Political Prisoners fol- | they have saved has gone to the real|in this country, knowing that the| cut the wages o! from six} occur on the border of North China |i. ciready dons, but realizing that ove | Handling of the march was deliber-| tmporte trom U.8.5.R. (Russia) : adviges reelved by cable from |extate sharks goly measure proposed by the federal holla fores”" Japan to at-| ask has but just bemun. We. will| Slely calculated to provoke trouble | tes, candy 's Tepresen- Conditions Brought Them governme! ovided ; for more tack nese ol er forces. | ;o°* 4 haere I rit | fe tine ‘Beware, Caren | women wae hae take apie SMe Bi vin 8 farther Wor ie Nolupicers Ae uaring the Por~| renga demand that the federal ere wil be red a! the New School ot Taase"augenun 40 he we taken a le is : je a s ie . 3 | N, Baldwin, | {han family life, wo have wrtea to| employed. as 5 unemployed; torous policy of non-resis ance to ta eaten ee ccal nallee by pane | Social Research tonight (Sat, Det.) os oF Comte cad by | maintain thelr families and yet to-| MNewing thet Mr. Hoover's Welfars A) semen’ of the Imperiéiist powers for | Haine for every unemployed $50 as | 17) st 8:30 p.m. at a meeting celled | NEW SERGEY transmit to his gov- | aay there are many armors you wnoss | were eis wohl tale art tee Be gene Teer meetion, of China.) cosh winter relief. (Shouts of Hur- | by the Leauge of Professional Grows b , Mr. and MTs. | scattered. Many t your no/one shall be hungry or wi se] destined "to become an important | ‘> lr nthe. Cokabldred Counphs ant 562_ BROAD | “inteler- : ‘ter in the Province of the new State of Man-| No Let Up Until Retief ¥s Won | Of the Unemploye “% | STREET ; doubt, whose children have already coming winter, that that . | ‘ babes | leader of the hunger march, has been es Ue |S na a PO ne ne orth Chin aed to aman onrncn ove” ceeennares to MOU, Newaaeesasoused of | BEGINNING 1 other oftener than Toe ik ap arer aarti Bi Charity Racket the i serepethen the Japanese military | rent for more permanent security to | LOTURE Une REVS Tepe es | riet B n Talkies permitted. || this’ too, is not confined only to the, e no. ‘on the > base in hutia thereby facilitat-|wh'ch we are entitled by virtue of | i soa . || Two Soviet Sone Rueggs took place] > 0, or more delegates here, but is|_ 2S oply ther rl ON . hogs, the armed intervention agains the | the fact thas we are the creators of |- | Both With English Titles . they had been held in | 3 , nity fund cam Me tte eh 65 | Sovist Union, the People's Govern-| the woslth of this contre: attrs have , | ” representative of a condition whic i ¥ are the lowest point the R av | P: SI J } “ ’ prevails thtoughout the length an the pennies out of the pockets of the ces and luction gener- | Ment of Mongolia, and the rising So- inw said to the government thet we Mimeo Paper Specia! | - readth of this country, These are | WOreerE who still have a Gay's work Bip) ake shattering. ua thé Sear combs viet Power 3h Central and South wii xo forerd with our fieht for | aa Bove ‘ G TO CELEBRATE | je conditions that have brought us| *2 turn them over ity || to an end, “new lows’ ’in both being| China. It is another effort to ‘solve’| umemplovment insurance at the ex-| 30c Re: ; Shar at ae tere | Bites DenateGrunfleone ea ane | ule enh omMed MY Meee | ei id ue eel ae’ We aes nae ea tt ony | ALONE” ¥ n 1 0} @ expense of | y s dema is been; | s = es Eniladgiobile dass ighales. that wh have. cob ae sy 10 ee. sia ee “8 such meee spe by bn ang Shancial the flourishing Soviet world. kas ee ey feet ce eat UNION ‘20, i MTG RUPPLY | bn or gyaig hs of some {ee iat SF is| Be r P. Ayres, ace | We are saving to Coneress now, to . ii pm.—Sunday bebtinter hae pate ke bo8 relies Bos becaves o here, t bord f, nd eee or the bank : -|Demands Freedom fort is for us impossible! We have | 1 Past MM St a Room 205|] Daily 11 am, to 11, wnday nee a ag id conditions of life for us, and ; ats, "i y - prove to S| been driven by hunzey into action ve. This affair has been ax aoe e “workers who have, sent ug maintaining what they call “character | Ml aie : pession..../14 at Meerut, India ana therefore in every city and town | celebrate the apn M4 here, afe such that. we have been berg i 1 ses TN pais mag industri ra be lower |to which we return we already bezin | are n | driven to determined action in order iPr d ie pours, sees the nt ber of fail-| NEW YORK, N. ¥. — The im- that action, This place, Washington, 4 ink “ht sane hail." |to once more come to the seat of | CU minds for the food that we Ihe greater . .'. our mediate release of the 14 Meerut pris- | i8 not the most important place for T a | E RO AD A Oe government of the Unites Bites 5 and fi Sahni ? opera was demanded yesterday in a oR bie The ae sean Demand the Congress ie United hare lej y e Anti-Imperialist Place for our struggle is in our own) . 7 x pera sie pha tates: We refuse to starve any! We go to Congress, knowing that crisis, could | League of the United Ste to the | community snd if we will develop in by George Marlen $2.00 NEW "YORK-—The Junior Jonger. (Shouts of Applause!) the further geniel ut .| Seoretary of India wt London. ‘The | our every community the necessary | ED 8’ RESS | WORKERS BOOK SHOP pt Oommnerce, ins letter to the | i " League’ e followed a similar forces for the struggle, we will be RED STAR PRESS it Congressional Veterans’ Com- Shouts of Applayse comes from Mr. Hoover and the 3 dust og Monga ag ap dh lapaaaagaall FS) Gea’ Vibtoglad 7, ‘.¥. 50 E, 13th Street, New York joins St.’s| We do not want {pore empty | eral forerpanen ise ting next month, | one by the I. L. D. on Dec, 13. |able to achieve victories and assure | P. O. Box 67, Sta. D, N. ¥. . tree b of ey orn dareace that prcibes we have yeh to Wash-| we shall share jo, ‘We share | and he on thinking so year after| The Meerut prisoners are working | for the working class population of | ,000 deanied veterans be cut off| ington, we have marched ov:r the} share jobs! ‘ay back in April of| year—or at least, he Kept on saying | class leaders imprisoned for the last | this country the right and oppor- highways of this country, in order to this year, the United States Depart- three ywars tunity to live. (Shouts of hurrah!) all present compensation.