The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 24, 1932, Page 3

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9 _ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1932 By ROBERT HAMILTON. “PRAYER OF HATE” IN THURIN- GIAN SCHOOLS Some time ago the Nazi Govern~ ment of Thuringia decreed the recital of a “prayer of hate” in all Thurin- gian public schools. ‘The teacher reads the pasage in the Treaty of Versailles which states that Ger- many alone is responsible for the World War, after which the pupils | “This Ger- | must recite in chorus: man shame shall burn in our souls until the day of honor and freedom. The determined ‘opposition of pro- letarian school children to the re- cital of this hate prayer has pre- vented its introduction in many schools, such as the Jona Trade Schocl for Boys dnd the Lovise Ele- mentary School for girls in ‘Weimar. In the latter school one of the pupils drew up the following resolution : “We' refuse to recite the prayer and demand that—if we have a majority @p_ our side—the prayer be no long- er recited.” tls in the class signed the resolu- tion, ten abstained and three were fgainst it. the resolution, but the 37 girls reso- tutely refused to recite the prayer, | so that it had to be given‘ up. A brilliant example of proletarian activity in the public schools which ought to inspire American children to stand up determinedly against the patriotic propaganda in their classes. KILKENNY COAL STRIKE WON Readers of “International Notes” will femember the report of the hard- fought coal strike of the Castlecomer miners in Kilkenny, Ireland. Now, after six weeks of glorious st gle, the strike has ended with a brilliant victory for the miners. a triumph of ‘Twenty-seven of the! The teacher disregarded | | | LETERS TELL HOW AND W: ‘OF STRUGGLE IN JACKSONVILLE White Workers Rid Selves of Boss Poison Against Negroes JACKSONVILLE, Fia.— Fourteen years ago the local préss here was carrying articles on the front page which they called, “Doings in Bol- | shevik Russia.” They explained in their articles how the Bolsheviks had | ruined everything and closed the fac- | tories and put all of the workers out of a job—how there was nothing but smokeless factories in Rusisa, how they have nationalized the women and made them the common prop- erty of all men and all the rest of the lying propaganda against the U.S.S.R. ‘We made contact with a printer | who was friendly to the working class jand had some leaflets printed ex+ plaining to the workers not to listen to the false propaganda of the boss |class and telling the workers what | was really taking place in Communist Former Chicagoan, who won the admiration of the Soviet masses as one of the outstanding leaders that helped build the Turk-Sib railroad | | in the U. S. S. R. He is continuing his leading work in Soviet industry. | | | ‘WIN RELIEF AND TURN ON ATER | Birmi ¢ ‘Russia. We distributed th [Birmingham Jobless ir ovine class For thet T wes | Win Despite Terror | ‘manhandiea” by the misled workers and turned over to the police. What a different story I can tell pe See about Jacksonville today. Blake 4 the police withdrew the deputies and | hard work with the help of Comrade motor cycle officers who had been; D—— and his family we have man- (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) FOURTEEN YEARS 1 WORKER CORRESPONDENCE HY OUR MOVEMENT GROWS Chats with Our | | Worcorrs | At Monday's meeting of the New| | York Worker Correspondence Group, | it was decided to develop a real cam- | paign to extend the group and draw |in more workers from shops and in- dustries. The members who are at present in shops strongly expressed the necessity of worker correspond- ence organizations in shops or indus-} tries, since this would make it pos- sible to be better informed about conditions and struggles in these snops and industries. Of ciurse this | campaign must be conducted from below among the workers themselves, by personal contact of the present | members with workers in shops. | Through this individual contact these | | Workers can be encouraged and as- | | sisted to become good worker cor- | | respondents, Regardless of the holidays, the | New York Worker Correspondence |. Group will meet as usual, at 7:30) Pp. m. Monday, Dec. 26, at 114 W. 2ist St. Any worker is welcome | to attend, | i} Worker Writes of | Lessons in Crisis Gets Rid of Patriot “Prosperity Like San TO all STORE MANAGERSS workers to read, but here it is! It 1e befitting the season to shower good ‘Page Three ee. ional Miners Union lron Ranges Conference Plans War on Wage-Cut | Companies Using Failure to Get Tax Reduction As Excuse for Slashing Wages to Make Men Work at of Employed and Jobless A Myth” | ta Claus, Is 15, 2982. > Towns Then Cut Relief New Pay; Need Unit oheer ant td ory lowlly that Prosperity oni all | HIBBING D , ‘ towns this already good things are in signt, ( if they are not conteal~ { 5 a-| ha ea in the stout bag of Santa Claus ) but those of us | ‘ iS . who are in direct odntact with the buying public are e delegates brought out the need é ty, like nm workers, employed and oan Gnly be f ed by & definite policy * ay » ionalities, creeds + ofwill ami confidenée of ow customer o belie the fight against this real effort to create sale ¢ on standards. ere a lp z elected a broad Photograph of part of a letter sent by the big boss of a chain store | P OVC". on ofganisatonal system to all his store managers. It’s the lowdown, not meant for us beste : 1e task of getiing = report by Following ese mining towns that the cut in fact |ALA. SMERIFF INCITES LYNCHIN Lies About Hunted Share Croppers DADEVILLE, Ala., Dec. 23.—Sher- iff Young, leader of the landlord-po- lice lynch gangs engaged in a mur- derous terror against Negro cropp2rs of Tallapoosa County, yesterday con- tinued his efforts to incite lynch feeling with the statement that he had reecived information “that sev- eral of the (hunted) Negroes are bad characters” and that there were in- dications “that Negroes throughout iso a cut in relief. joyed and employed - 5s | { 4% | would have meant that their united ac- pany W t Ss said: taxes than { 7 : cussed weak- have appeared in the ed to correct them v and build Jnion into a movement on the the s ning hroug NEW ALA. TERROR Boss Press Admits the | in casi | iat ——- a > that showed 30 del- | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) present from’ the vasious | ee on the Ranges. Every Birmingham zed If to carry The boss press admits that Gov. | Miller of Alabama is alarmed by the flood of protest telegrams and reso- | —— Rare ee ae lutions which are pouring in on him | from all parts of the country, | Attack Leaders i | So great is the anger of the mas Housewreckers Win Many here that the local press has ra forced to print over a dozen of the | protest telegrams and resolutions, At | the same time the boss press seeks | to behead the mass protest mor ‘The fight has be rank and file leader ¥ ing farmers in| of the city. | é oe te Rie ane industrial | miles from Scottsboro, hundreds of | ish a movement here. | workers in the city—regardless of | Negro and white workers turned out | Needless to tell you what @ job this section had been contributing | firearms and ammunition to the or- | Bunk a | Sanization,” the Sharecroppers Union | NEW YORK—As @ native Amer-/ which the white landlords are try- | ican I used to be a red hot patriot. | es re- | posted the highways leadi | aged to break down the boss class} Sesame oer ty Gand. ony & few | Prejudice of the worker and estab- | Advantages in Contract Big Raise in Pay; Shorten Hours; Provide for grade union officials—would support the fight of their class. The Dublin ‘Trades Union Council, and the lead- ing trade unions in Dublin refused | to give the striking miners any aid, while the rank and file union mem-/ bers collected money for the strikers at union meetings every week until the strike was won. The strike has |to greet the Hunger Marchers as| it is to organize the white and col- they passed through, | * * March to Lansing, Dec. 27. DETROIT, Mich., Dec., 23—As a| result of the movement which is be- | ing developed by the unemployed in | Detroit and Michigan, Governor | Brucker was forced to call a special ored worker together in the most | backward state of the union. How- | ever, we have succeeded in neutral- izing the poison that has been for generations built up in the minds of the white workers against the Ne- groes. We have succeeded in organizing | I hated Communists. If a worker tried to tell me conditions were bad | I would say that worker was a red. | I was misled and din’t know better. | I went through hell the last three | | years because of the depression. | When I couldn't stand the conditions of the flophouses I would go on the ing to wipe out. Solidarity of Negroes-White Croppers Despite these efforts of lynch-in- the struggle here are -the firm soli- darity of the local white croppt with the Negroes and the heroic re sistance of the latter to the land- lord-police attack. So marked is the ments with a vicious tirade against | citement, the outstanding features in | | the Communist Party, which the | bosses recognize as the leading force in uniting white and Negro toilers | for joint struggle against starvation | and terror. | Behind this attack on the Commu- nist Party, the Alabama lynch bosses Job Committee | NEW YORK—The Housewr | Union, newl; ized and le | four strikes has just | its strike against th and 20 c |per hour wage at the Louis Form | Job at 6ist St. and Ty ng on and Job Steward | jour day, permission must | be obt from the steward on the job or any of the officers of, the union, and payment made at double | the above rate for each hour. How- : = if : 6 Tea it of the C. P. and a Young Com-| road. On the road I suffered from | t sith crommexa have united the white and Negro Te- | Housewreckers conside the r vorking class unity in Ire- | Session of the State Legislature for | ® U0! | sympathy of the white croppers with 4 aha i s he PUT Bealnet the efforts of British | Tuesday, Dec. 27. This session is|munlst League, We have established | want of food and shelter. After| the Negroes that the boss press has | yoision on Gntcr-raeiel ‘relations, | significance of this v Pages| imperialism—aided by native Irish} capitalists and landlords—to divide the workers. NOTED WRITERS CALL FOR UNITED FRONT “{ should like to proclaim on high my sympathy for the Soviet Union, and I wish that my appeal might be heard, might have a telling effect. I should like to live long-enough to witness the success of this tremen- called for the purpose of discussing | | emergency relief, especially for the | city of Detroit. a Immediately after Brucker’s an-| nouncement, the Unemployed Coun- | cils decided the jobless must be re-| presented at this session and present the demands of the National Hun-j| ger March for immediate relief and unemployment insurance. A conference was held of the re- turned National Hunger Marchers a branch of the Interhational Work- ers Order and we have an Icor Branch; in short we have a pretty | good movement here. Long live the Soviet Republic! Long live the Communist Interna- tional. —L. B. Proud to Hear His Daushter Joined the Hunger Marchers | foaming from town to town and find- ing no work I would come back to the city and the flophouses. Finally I was barred from the flophouses be- pened I would not submit to forced r. I got lousy from sleeping in parks, doorways and speakeasies. At times I was so weak from starvation that I would lay down and get rested up that way. Beaten in body and mind I didn’t know which way to turn. I been forced to take cognizance of it, both in editorials and news dis- patches. Many of the dispatches ad- mit that white croppers had gone to the aid of the Negroes and were hiding wounded Negroes in their cabins, In contrast with this solidarity of the white and Negro croppers it is to be noted that the Negro reform- ists at the head of Tuskegee Institute turned over to the sheriffs a wound- | boss-sponsored organization of white | bosses and Negro reformist leaders. | Two days ago this bunch issued a | statement attacking the struggles of the Negro croppers and calling on | the Negro reformists to combat the | rising resistance of the Negroes to | landlord robbery and terror. Lynch Press Praises Reformists Within 24 hours, the reformist | heads of Tuskeg2e Institute respond- jin the raising of w |and 45 cents, for lab |Mmen, respectively, on piece of work, but i ga | tract that gives them and 75 cents | Per hour on future jobs of this com | pany. = to 40 's and bai partic’ jar se con- Job Committee { This contract goes a long way to- j ward establishing the Ho’ 5 | Union in the industry, Another fea~- ture of it is the creation of a job There is the five-day week. man is required to work Saturd: Sunday or any holiday. | ‘The union shows solidarity with \other trades, and the employer con- | tracts not to make house wreckers {cut or burn steel, remove plate glass, jor in any way infringe on other ‘or- ganized trades. npathy strikes do not break the No a res iv ai ed to this call of their masters, sid- | ti ‘ +. | contract, } ger ale ages which I-de- | 20d representatives of the Unemploy- | was actually licked, ed Negro cropper who sought medical | ; 3 ; in the lynch | Committee of three, elected by the} |. 4 Bound ait ay ; ce ae aes [| ed Councils Detroit, and it was awn About a month ago I was sitting | attention at the hospital of the In- | ing. with the Passer in oe woe | Workers on the job, and representing | No man shall be hired for less than chould like to be able to work for.” | decided:to immediately begin to make| ARLINGTON, N. J.—The writer {s/|in Madison Park and the workers of| stitute. This traitorous act of the | C770" campaign Piscine e Negro) the workers there in relations with|® ‘ull day’s pay, st ene “Andre Gide. | 8t7&ngements to send large delega-|one of those wage slaves who has|the Unemployed Council were hold-| Negro reformist leaders and their | C'°DPeTS. and urgiig the Negro mass~| the employer. The chairman of the| Factions Fight in Local 95 ci our efforts to establish “a | tions to Lansing, and to have del-|been exiled from his home; one of |ing a meeting. I was so impresesd | support of the landlord terror in a|°S i Shen Deacetut re ee mM | committee is to be the Job Steward, Bert united front” against’ war they | ¢S@tes from all other cities in Mich-| those whose home has, in one sense, | that I said here is the organization | statement urging the Negroes not to |" the murderous landlord-police at- | ang is to be approved by the union.| During the conduct o . havé #2 nothing but dark mach- Srations, Apa the very term “united front” has by an aberration of ay age thac nas lost the vital elan of giest revolutionary periods im wacte paper and debating clubs,— | th’s glorious slogan has become a searccrow.” Romain Rolland. “Let those who have not yet join- ed, jo new! Let no’ organization, no association championing in its program the caus2 of the masses or the cause of peace lag behind! Let no right-minded man or woman keep in hiding! ‘Let all, rising above all other considerations, unite with those wh) already e become an im- Prisive thro: Henri Barbusse. “Above the vicissitudes and quar- ws of irelividualy, tendencies, and parties the Russian Revolution is an elemental force which must be detested or loved whole-heartedly. “For those who, like myself, be- liave that the elements of renais- sance, of salvation, and of prog- ress that it has introduced into the evolution of social orders very much outwe’gh errors ef detail and the occasional hesitancies that one may regret to see in its advance— for them there is only one possible attitude; to love the Russian Revo- jigan. The marchers will arrive in | Lansing on Tuesday morning, and ; will present their demands to the | State Legislature and Governor Brucker on Tuesday afternoon. Meetings are now being organized | in all section of De'roit and cities of | the state. In addition to this, the | conference detided to immediately ‘plunge into work in the neighbor- ; hoods and at the welfare stations for. | relief, and build up the struggle | against evictions. Also, the question | of the single men was taken up and |a program for housing and relief is | being worked out. |. ‘The National Hunger Marchers | brought tremendous spirit and pledg- ed themselves to be the active or- ganizers in unemployed work. Vets March Also Ex-soldiers are organizing and} electing delegates to go with the rest of the state marchers to sup- port their demands and present spe- cial demands of their own. A mass banquet will greet both state hunger marchers and ‘veterans at a banquet being arranged by the Unemployed Councils in Detroit, and meetings will hear their reports, Ona ne Youth Get 15 Jobs NORWOOD, Mass., Dec., 23.—The You*h Committee of the Unemployed Council here registered another vic- tory by forcing the Town Unemploy- ed Committee to grant 15 emergency jobs to as many young workers and by compelling the Welfare Depart- been “broken up” by the capitalist system. Even in the so-called era of pros- perity, I could not demand sufficient wages to pay the excessive rents exacted in the metropolitan district, where I was employed. So my family was shunted one hundred miles out into the country where they might grub part of their living from the soil and where rents were low. A year and a half ago my girl was graduated from the nearest high school, She was intelligent, active, industrious, but not especially studi- ous, She had common sense enough to escave the phvsical pitfe'ls to which her mates had succumbed, Mentally, howpver, she was a yictim of her environment; she did not become class conscious. That, however, was two years ago. She has been unemployed for 18 months, has had time to do some thinking; has read some Leninist books and the Daily Worker regularly. In other words her education began after her high school graduation. A few weeks ago a letter came to me informing me that Mary was busy collecting food from farmer let neighbors for the benefit of the hun- ger marchers. And then another let- ter saying she had been elected as a delegate to go to Washington her- self, And then a report of her ex~ periences on the march, how she and her comrades have been domi- ciled, one night, in a Salvation Army barracks, had been driven out by where I belong. Since then I have been active and also was elected del- egate to the Hunger March. I have seen how the bosses’ government handled the workers. I have seen how the capitalistic press lied about the Hunger Marchers. By building up strong, powerful Block Commit- tees is our only answer to the bosses and their government. San Diego Movement | Developing Rapidly | SAN DIEGO, Cal—As a natural consequence of the crisis in San Di- ego the Communist Party in the last year has been able to secure a mune Zoo. It has led the strug- gles of hundreds of unemployed for food and shelter and in turn has Time after time conces- sions have been won from the of- ficials including an increased welfare budget for this year of $280,000, the retraction of a ruling prohibiting car owning indigents from receiving re- and the securing of food for innumerable suffering families. Due to an incessant struggle against race discrimination and for complete race equality a strong fol- lowing has been established among the Negro people. As San Diego is an important Naval Base we are beginning to con- resist has evoked the praise of all the lynehers. Sheriff Golden of Montgomery County, one of the lead- ers in the man hunt in Tallapoosa County, in an attack on the Share- croppers Union which is leading the croppers in the struggle against star- vation, cutting off of their rations and the right to sell their own cot- ton, declares: “The Negro leaders in Montgom- ery County are too intelligent. to be victimized by such a scheme. We are proud that we have the same intelligent leadership here in Montgomery that is exemplified at Tuskegee Institute... .” N.Y. Red Cross Proves Unemployed Can Live, NEW YORK—The local Red Cross breaking and starving workers and poor farmers throughout the country has put on a publicity stunt designed to k>ep the unemployed from fight~ ing for relief. Nine housewives, after Cross, were given certificates for ilies on $1 a day. Most of the families are suppose to be those of disabled or unemploy. ed veterans, and the $1 a day is spent If They Have Money which has a long record of strike-| taking courses provided by the Red | their ability to provide “nourishing | meals” for themszlves and their fam- | | praise from the very newspapers | which have been busily attempting | to whip up a lynch spirit against the Negroes. These same papers led the | hue and cry for the lives of the in- | nocent Scottsboro boys and likewise | praised William Pickens ar” other leaders of the N. A. A. C. P. their attacks on the Scottsboro de. -se or- } ganized by the International Labor | Defense. I. L, D. attorneys arrived yesterday | at Dadeville, Ala., to conduct the de- |fense of the 12 arrested cropper | leaders, | . 1. L. D. Campaign in South BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Dec. 23.—The Southern District of the Interna- tional Labor Defense has issued an urgent appeal for funds for the de- fense of the Negro croppers arrested |in the struggle in Tallapoosa County and to further its work of mobilizing white and Negro workers of the outh against the bloody terror launched by the Alabama landlords and their police against the Negroes, Funds may be sent to the National Office of the I. L. D., 80 East llth | Street, for remittance to the South- ern District. 40 Meets in Birmingham Neighborhood protest meetings on e been called by the I, L. D. here, | Forty meetings are planned in Bir- tacks. This traitorous action of the | | Tuskegee reformists has won great} The eight hour day is provided for, j and men are to report and be ready |for work at the lockers on the jobs jat that time, whereas formerly they | had to come from the lockers at that | time be on the job—a difference of |Some half hour every day. | Double Time The contract provides specifically: “In the course of dismantling of buildings, walls, floors, scaffolds, etc., |if the conditions become precarious |to public safety requiring work after The Daily Worker fights on every battlefront of the workers’ cause. Demonstrate your support of the | struggles the Daily is leading by at- | tending the big Ninth Anniversary | Celebration New Year's Eve, Dec, | | tries in the heart of the struggle. | A delegation of three left here two | days ago for Montgomery to demand | the release of the 12 arrested cropper | leaders and organize their defense. |Irving Schwab and General George |W. Chamlee, I, L, D. attorneys, are | now in Montgomery working on the Scottsboro case and the defense of | the croppers. | The Communist Party district is the broadest united front basis have | Supporting with sttenous activities | the defense moves and will be issuing | 100,000 leaflets shortly for distribu- | tion all over the South. | Housewreckers’ Union strikes, the A F. of L. union’s Local 95 officials tried strike breaking in all its forms. There is dissension in what re- mains of Local 95, where two mis- leaders, Truchan and Zinovik sre struggling for power. The Housewreckers Union has is- sued a warning to all in the trade not to be fooled by the false promises of either Truchan or Zinovik, but urges them instead to unite with the Housewreckers in a struggle for a living wage and decent working conditions. New Headquarters The Housewreckers Union hae hired spacious day rooms and head- quarters and its membership is a& present, building them up for union and cultural activities. They are at 122 Second Ave,, on the second floor and can be rented by any other workers’ organization for lectures, meetings, etc, The strike on the National Biseuit Co. property is ended with the recent finishing of the job, THE ROAD A COMMUNIST NOVEL By George Marlen $2.00 RED STAR PRESS P. 0, Box 67, Station D, N. ¥, ment to promise clo‘hing and cash centrate on the sailors stationed here. | only for food. Where they get this/"imgham alone, with meetings in| Jean Richard Bloch. | rotief to three needy cases among Vermin and were compelled to walk} “Revolutionary organizations in ex-| money, plus money for rent, clothing | Atlante, New Orleans and other | ——— —_— iRUSSIAN ART SHOP LUDWIG RENN ARRESTED the young workers following inves- bind i ‘Washington ae bony istence here, in addition to the Com-| and miscellaneous, the Red Cross | Southern cities. Mass organizations, | PEASANTS’ HANDICRAFTS Ludwig ted Ge: Keeping their promise of | vuzstes of machine and was|munist Party, are the International | does not say. churches, and liberals are being vis- | PPLIES a! ‘ + a ge aavip man au- | lst week, that they would return | Muzzle: be Lag The | Labor, Defense, section of the I, R.| It 1s clear that this publicity stunt | ited with resolutions and appeals for | MIMEOGRAPH $U | 100 East 14th St. N. ¥. C. thor, who wrote the novels “War” | with redoubled suppor, young un-| frm ire + pagal can A. Several Unemployed Councils, | 1s intended to make the unemployed funds. The I. L. D, has already js-/ INK STENSILS | imports from 1.8.8.8. (Russia) Rep Aer en «ae: Wiee. Brees workers marched from the | XS. Oe Me So dic 1s first | OUF strongest mass organizations, the | f2el that they can live on next to| sued 5,000 leaflets calling on white| pyyer, soe meas Index Cards, 450 MN | jt mwor™ from Us, UMUOaN ed by the Berlin police on @ charge | Lithuanian Hall on the “flats” to oy be but th of | Friends of the Soviet Union, a Young| Nothing if they only know how,|@nd Negro workers to rally to the| Rebuilt Machines $15 up | Meustn itetenien Weslcentenrorn P| of “literary high treason.” He was | the Town Hall in the swanky resi- | ™#rtch. may ui rap aa is Communist League group, Pioneer| Though advertised as unemployed, | defense of the eroppers and plans to UNION SQUARE HOMES Bt ig aoe Work (* arrested while teaching class in | dential ‘and business section of the| * Kaoekeple ee cre Ages of Lyra groups and the International Work-| all nine families have sources of in- | issue 50,000 more immediately. Many | 108 B. ttm St. Room Sik no 818 | Phone ALgonquin 4-006 the Marxist Workers School in | city, They were led by Sulo Sading- Hae gy ae net anion will | €°s Order, come amounting to about $20 a week | Of these leaflets are being distribut- | OPEN FROM 9 AM. to 7 P.M. i The of v of the| frst place the red flag above the throughout all “our |@ach. The millions of starving and | ¢d'in Tallapoosa and adjoining coun- Bie i Seime ae tae en Youth Committee of the Unemployed 2 activities 1s a strong defense of the | ROmeless, who are eating garbage man judicial machinery as its con- | ‘The whole procession, with an elected ~~. Union. With a living example | Slarvation diseases, Navon's even the | \ tribution te the world-wide fight | committee of 5 at their marched of socialism actually under con-| miserable weekly income of $1 per { Communism. One author | into the Town Hall. After a lenethy| Steel Workers Sereere, We sig ble, fo. win. f0l- | apy | Germany for the sole crime of | ousted from the office of the Un. Joining Party before in history, in spite of the | : Commnmuieh views, Wass yeios trec- | eraploved onumitice mao toe slanderoug lies spread by the capital-/ Speed-Up Hospital Pala dsc ll a ll allt BINED NINTH om of speech when capitalism's. | made three times to also and Union | is: press. Workers th Masa: | EA COM oils us cobeneecca? Bao sadinganens bartkeeeunen |: a ; Belleve me, when the war dogs of orkers In aSsS |B To All Workers & Organizations! ANNIVERSARY AND LE that he not lived in the town By ene i are loosened upon the = i Dear Comrades: { KRUPP WORKERS WIN STRIKE.) for ten years and “therefor did not LOYAL! TA, Fa—she workers Bemt Unions we in San Diego will Lay-off of Foreigners } ON SUNDAY, JANUARY 14, A COM- ESSEN (By Mall).—The blast fur- | know the conditions of the young| of this town demonstrated for the | rally by the hundreds to its defense aoe BINED LENIN MEMORIAL AND NINTH MEMORIAL EDITION nace workers in the huge Krupp| Workers.” These attempts, however, | frst time last September, ‘This is| and we shall struggle mightly for a| NEW. YORS.—Only six hundred of | plant went out on strike, under the | Were defeated. "|'a mew eection for us to organize and | conversion of this coming war into| ‘he 1416 ousted allen hospital work- | § ANNIVERSARY | EOTTION | On Ze ° * leadership of the Red ‘Trade Union| Outside the office of the Unem-| we have taken over 200 applications | civil war and for the Anal over- | CTS, Ve been reporied replaced by | # DAILY WORKER Wit, Abrtsn. fi h 1 he " \ locate oh Fa n workers. spite demagogic olw . oti. Gprginon (the German | Soenteease ber Hg Uber a ee for the Party, and the Steel Work-| throw of the capitalist aystem. Ganeplions ef Wehr wtb hae. aos and articles dealing with, the, life and Our napa to the Daily best er . Trade Union League), young workers ke} @ continual Union. taney plied for citizenship, these workers writings 0! Baa dl ii iv against an announced wage cut, and | Gin, shout thet coon eet aaa! |: Wo. matted freee pg tlt | (Ce of Signature Permitted.) were also laid off, The lay-off was | 4 lUghts of the history of the Daily Worker. on its 9th Anniversary an on management to shri oe ee meet dae pong their demands for working igi different Sees The Gets Daily We rk ig as a ee ae pg toad bey Tee ry Sia ry Hed Canaan theo ccasiqn of Lenin’s Memorial p 4 an § “fl moye but has resulted in greater | erty, a . fepeike, tess eee See to! “As a result, the spokesmen of the tiny tan tate Salis cat aes ‘he Renee speed-up for the native-born work- | workers for the support and defense of ‘ Crisis or no crisis, depression or | Youth Committee of the Unemploy- | shout three to one for these organi Then Joins Party |ers and wave-curs tor highly skited |B the, Soviet Union, , Neerasts Ss bo. depréesicd, united tnaas of ed Council forced the relief officials satione: — nurses and unskilled hospital help as | It has constantly carried on the fight to NLA pera snteetoliy play gain to hear the needy cases individually. | “at our demonatriition we bad bet. OZONE PARK, L. I.—I am a sub-| well. , | mobilize the workers in the struggle for dddvese ase ver ‘and shop, “The | , Meanwhile, the young workers had| ter than 300 workers, We had no | Sctiber of the Dally Worker: since| The Hospital Workers’ League has | {$ better living conditions, against wage cuts, ni ‘ i rasta ot yagi! ley ‘oitioieis are | been going in a stream to the offi-|iterature or other supplies but 9 | the elections, when I became inter-| protested the lay-offs and is working for unemployment insurance! to break every strike move, not | 2°8,0f the nt Committee, | went back from Pittsburgh on ‘ot, | ested. in the Party, at} to organize both native-born and It tights egainst the oppression of the Cf tn Germany but in the United | ° semi-official charity organization, 8, properly equipped, 141-28 Rockaway Blvd., found out 1| foreign-born workers to fight fur- foreign-born workers, against deporta- ‘as well. The Krupp strike vio- located on the second floor of the —z. m | 7 5 he me to| ther lay-offs, tions, for equal rights of the Negro masses : m set , mstiiden oo tice was achieved under Communist n Hall. Fifteen of them received move because he didn’t want any and for the freedom of all class-war pris. We request space in the 9th Anniversary no! ahi teled. acid trie lend town jobs and were told to report CAPITALIST CIVILIZING Communists as tenants. So I told| COMMUNIST DEPUTY ROBBED oners—Tom Mooney, the Nine Scottsboro , 2 ¥ fagiie vat the batting or che wi lead~) the following morning for work, him to try and make me move. I OF SEAT. | & boys, and many others. Nally Worker for §...., Nigees soreyas A eal orking PosIbly the fact that rich gold| have to go down early every day to| PRAGUE, Nov. 28 (By Mail).— | This combined Lenin Memorial and dts nen a a ia i es % ‘The Daily Worker fights on every | reefs have just been discovered in| get my paper, because if I come down! The Immunity Commitice of the | Ninth Anniversary edition is a great event YOUR GREETINGS MUST REACH THe DAILY. n : battlefront of the workers’ cause. | Central Australia at least partly ex-| late, it is already destroyed. Czechoslovakian Parliament has for all workers. We ask you to express your WORKER, 50 EAST 13TH ST, NEW YORK, N, ¥. Send greetings to the special | Demonstrate your support of the | plains why capitalists and mission-| From reading the Daily Worker} vacated the seat of the Communist solidarity and support the Daily Worker Ninth Anniversary-Lenin Memorial Faw vag Dally is leading by at- | aries are so suddenly and feverishly |I was convinced, must join the| Deputy Barse, because of his sen- by sending greetings to the only revoe | BEFORE JANUARY FIRST, 1933 edition of the Daily Worker Janu- the big Anniversary | desirous of conferring on its Party, 80 last night I joined in Ja-| tence to six months imprisonment Jutionary Daily in the English language! > pe Cid ar ta ie ay Se eee New esse. Bees, feavaptee Se po the maica, at hard labor in connection with a TRL rues

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