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. DAILY Wi ORKER: International | | | COMMUNIST PARTY ENCE DISSOLVED IN CONFER- BAVARIA (By Mail) — NUREMBERG, Dec. 5 The Communist Party Conferen for the District of North Bavaria took place yesterday and the day pre- vious. Saturday's session went off without interruption, but on Sunday morning the conference hall raided by a large police force armed with rifles. The hall was surround- ed and the commanding police offi- cer then declared the conference dis- solved: He read a document stating that the Communist Party was a sec- tion of the Communist International and that the decisions of the XIIth plenary session of the Executive Committee of the C. I. had instructed the German Communist Party to or- ganize an armed insurrection in Ger- many. This appears to be the first step in @ campaign to suppress the entire Communist movement; in Germany Although the Communist Party is Officially a legal party, recent deci- sions of the Supreme Court of Ger- many have held that the officials of the Party comprise an illégal or- ganization, membership in which can | be punished at any time with im-| prisonment at hard labor. ! orro WELS AND DEUTSCHLAND UBER ALLES BERLIN, Dec. 28—An interesting trial is taking place in Berlin. Re- actionary journalists are charged with calling Otto Wels, the chairman of the German Social Democratic Party, a traitor to the country be- cause he negotiated with Henderson some time ago in England. In evi- dence Wels, who has really been tlandered, declared that he negoti- ated with Henderson at the request | of Bruening in order to obtain a loan for Germany, i. e., for German capi- talism. According to the report in the social democratic “Vorwaerts,” Otto Wels declared: “In reality no organization has stood more steadfastly by the prin-| ciple, the Fatherland is above the party, than~the Social Democratic | Party. For the Social Democratic Party has sacrificed everything for the Fatherland, even the unity of the) party itself because on account of its attitude towards the Fatherland it had to suffer a split in its own| Tanks.” The chairman of the Social Dem- ocratic Party, Otto Wels, thus boasts once again before a bourgeois court of the services rendered by his party | to German capitalism when it be- trayed the working class and led it into the bloody shambles if imperial- ist’ war. PROTEST NEW SLAVE LAW_IN SOUTH AFRICA CAPE TOWN.—A law which re- duces the native workers and farmers in the Transvaal and Natal to a po- sition of virtual slavery has recently been passed by the South African government. The Communist Party here is calling for mass violation of the law. This law, known as the Native Contract Service Bill, compels the native farmers living on the land of European farmers to sign a contract, of six months’ duration, during | which time he will receive no pay, but will work merely for the right ) {0 live on the land. Those who re- \ fuse to sign such a contract, the law | Bien provides, are to be driven from the | In addition, the Act provides that no farmer has the right to employ any native unless that native can | produce # document signed by his | previous employer, permitting him to | eave for a period and look for work. This regulation gives the landlords full control over the natives’ move- ments, and enables the landlords to tie the Africans to the land. A native “who appears to be not | more than 18 years of age,” and who breaks his contract or in any way disobeys this law, may be punished | by whipping. ‘The Communist Party of South Africa has sent out an appeal urging the native toilers to mass resistance of this law. The call says in part: “Native toilers in Transvaal and Natal! Refuse to sign the contracts! Refuse to be driven away from the Jand you have been tilling for years. Form committees on each farm to fight against the contre**s and the i gal was | Hails A nti- War Theodore Dreiser, noted author, who has sent a message to the Students Anti-War Congress now being held in Chicago urging the youth to join the millions fighting for the defense of the Soviet Union. INDIANS SEND STATE MARCHERS) |Support Fight of the | | Jobless | (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the State Hunger Ma | Work for Carrots | While the meteing was going on, | the “relief was distributed.” A family | | of five, whose head puts in a day's | work on the roads, gets in return for |the toil, not cash wages i small quantity of thin, frosted cai wvilt- {ed lettuce, shriveled potatoes and c1h- er rotten food. While the organizing of the march proceeds, block committees are being | organized, | Pat Chamber and Jess Shapiro, field organizers of the Southern California delegation, are making arrangements |for the trip up the coast. They re- | port success at Santa Barbara, Santa Maria and San Louis Obispo, At Ventura the chief of police refuses so far to give an answer to their demand that the marchers be housed and fed. Gasoline for the trucks is promised at San Louis Obispo. . 8 New. Club Hears Marchers SALEM, Mass,, Dec. 28.—The first public meeting of the Salem Workers Club was*held “Dec. 23 to thear the reports of two returned National Hun- ger March delegates from here. The meeting was well attended, Peer seers Report to Iron Miners IRONWOOD, Mich., Dec. 28—The National Hunger March delegates from Gogebic County, an iron mining district, will report at the following times and places: Ironwood, Jan. 2; Newport, Jan, & River Branch, Alonens Farm, Jan. 45 | Van Biskirk, Jan. 5; Plymouth, Hills Place, Jan, 6; Hurley, Jan. 9 and North Bessemer, Jan. 10. All are invited to these meetings, jand if workers and farmers in any |other locality want the delegates to come and report they should get in touch with the Ironwoéd Hunger March Committee, Box 204, Iron- wood, Mich. e supervisors of Gogebic County | have agreed without argument to re- |duce taxes on the Steel Trust mines | by $215,000. Unemployed workers are forced to work for clothing and groceries, and get no cash. Young workers are jespecially discriminated against. | Youth committees are being organ- ized among the jobless, and there will be demonstrations before the |county board of supervisors. | FOOD WORKERS LETTERS. Letters from food workers will make up the entire Worker Cor- respondent Section on Tuesday, Jan. 3. Districts aud union groups order special bundles for distribu- tion. Rate: 112 cents per copy. Hold an Open Hearing on Hunger in your neighborhood; invite all jobless and part time workers and keep a record of their evidence | white | that a | Negro comrades and together put the |furniture back in the house. STRENGTHENING YN BLACK AND WHITE xe, Pound of Bread UNITE AND FIGHT IN BIRMINGHAM) Stop Ev ictions in Jim- Crow South Fight Against Terror BIRMINGHAM, Ala.—The unem- ployed workers, both Negro and white, by their united action have almost stopped evictions in Birming- Just before Sept. 1, which is ing day” tions took place. At that time the Unemployed Councils had few mem- bers. One morning a Negro comrade nt to a white comrade and told him f an eviction of an unemployed | worker's family. He asked | few white workers meet the hex. When the white workers were called, they were surprised to learn of Negro | workers going to the assistance of a white family, as it was the first time hey had ever heard of such a thing. |A little later, when a Negro family | was evicted and their furniture at- tached by the white landlord, aj white worker got busy and not‘ only forced the wealthy owner to release the furniture, but pay all charges and haul it back at his own expense. The white and Negro workers are learning to “unite and fight” and this solidarity of the workers fills the K.KK. and rich boss class with anger and dismay. For so many genera- tions they have taught us to hate each other so we would never unite against their rule of greed and op- pression of all workers. New Block Committees of the Un- employed Councils are being formed | rapidly, and we white workers of the South are learning that only through | our united action with our black} brothers can we build @ mass or- ganization that will smash our chains of poverty, misery and starvation. A White Woman Worker. Destitute Family Told to Gather Weeds for Fuel KANSAS CITY, Mo.—Mrs. Chap- man, one of the women of the Provi- dent Association, told one family when they applied for coal: “We just can’t give you coal, Mrs. S. You will have to help yourself some.” When Mrs. 8. asked her how she could help herself without work of any kind, Mrs. Chapman answered that she knew wheer some tall weeds grew which Mrs, S. could gather and that she would give her 50 cents to buy some slack coal and “that is the best we can do.” When asked who the “we” are, she answered: “Oh, the Provident Association.” Workers here on the East Side de- mand two tons of coal per family and they are starting organizing in order to get it. G. Only Men in Debt Get JUNEAU, Alaska.—There are about 5,000 people here, but only 600 or 700 working, that is steady, in the mine. They don’t need many men, but every once in a while. They have an employment agent who is also an insurance agent. When he wants a man he goes down- town and gets names of workers from his business asquaintances, to whom the workers owe money. the man has to buy a policy. He col- lects $25 from the poor devil. However, this agent is one of the crookedest men ever. Some people go in his office all year round two or three times a day for work. You can see four or five hundred every day. They better organize themselves and fight for immediate relief this winter or they are going to starve. They are hard to organize because they are so suspicious. Longview. , Last Words of Murdered Cropper Denounced the Tuskegee Leaders MERY, Ala., Dec, 28,— The death of Cliff James, murdered Neg cropper leader, in Montgomery County jail followed closely on the heels of threats of lynching him) made by the sheriff deputies. James’ betrayal to the police by the reformist heads of Tuskegee In- atitute was accompanied by a vicious lynch-incitement statement by Dr. Bugene A. Dibble, Negro physician in eharge of Tuskegee hospital where James had for treatment of his wounds received in the battle of No- (Reeltown) when armed attacked the croppers and at- to expropriate James’ mule . In that statement, Dr. told the police that James had declared to him that “he was sorry he didn’t kill any of the officers.” Interview with James A few days before his death, the Montgomery Advertiser published an interview with James in which he denounced the reformist heads of ‘Tuskegee and vigorously repudiated the statement attributed to him by these assistant hangmen of the Ala- The Advertisers’ nf : “His (James) statement, too, was at variance with one he was re- ported to have made to Dr. Eugene A, Dibble, Negro physician in charge of the Tuskegee hospital. It was re- that he told Dr. Dibble he had in his home to fight “and He would have been fighting yet i 4 if his crowd hadn’t run away on him.” He is also reported to have told the physician that “he was sorry {he didn't kill any, of the officers.” The Advertiser further quoted James, as follows: “James said the trouble was about some money he owed W. S. Parker, Notasulga merchant, on a T7-acre farm he had bought in 1924 for $1,600. He said he owed $950 on the farm and had not been able to pay any- thing this year. “Have To Sell It” “Mr, Parker not long ago came to me and said: ‘Cliff, if you can’t pay for your place I'll have to sell it,’ the Negro said, “‘T said, ‘Mr. Parker that will be tough on us.’ I asked him to just give a little time to raise somet and buck up so I could have a showing. ee “‘He told me he’d give me this year’s interest on the place if I'd make a note for $80 and that if I would agree to pay him the $80 could go on and owe him another year. I told him I didn’t have $80 and he told me to make him a note for it. |I told him I would study on it. “‘Monday Mr. Elder came. He said he had an attachment on my two mules and two cows. “T told Mr. Elder that it looked like Mr, Parker ain’t doing what he said, and that Mr. Parker had said he would allow me a “'Mr, Elder said he nothing to do with that, that he had to carry out the law. Mr. Elder said, ‘Cliff I'm trying to help you!’ “I said: ‘Mr. Elder do you think it will help me to take my cows so my family can’t have any milk?” ““T told Mr. Elder, ‘you're the law, but I won't agree for you to get them but to go ahead and get them.’ “‘About that time Ned Cobb, he come up. He said, ‘Mr. Elder please don’t take ’em’ . “Mr, Elder, he said, ‘Boys I'll tell you what I’ going to do I'm going back and get some more men and come back and kill you all in a pile!’ James then described how Elder returned with an armed posse which immediately opened fire on the croppers and rushed the cabin. Steel Workers Greet Scottsboro Mother YOUNGSTOWN, Pa, Dec. 28. — Over 500 stecl workers attended the Engdahl Memorial meeting at the Ukrainian Hail last night. A large proportion of Negro workers were in the audience which extended a tre- mendais welcome to Mother Wright when she entered the hall and also | when she spoke, Huge banners decorated the hall, which read: “Stop the Alabama mur- der drive against the Negro share- croppers,” “Free the Scottsboro Boys,” “Free ‘Tom Mooney,” “Build a mass fighting I. L. D, as a memorial to Comrade Jobs in Alaska | | WORKER CORRESPONDENCE YEMPLOYED ORGANIZATIONS here, wholesale evic-| very brutal to the workers. They Then | Pound of hy I Porto Rican Town| CATANO. Puerto 1 Rico.—No relief for the workers of any description. | Fifty per cent of the workers’ chil- ‘dren cannot go to school on acocunt of having nothing to eat, no cloth- ing, no shoes, half of the working people sick. No aid from the gov- ernment, 50 per cent homeless, noth- ing is done to shelter them. The Red Cross is the only one that gives one pound of bread per day after they sarcastically make you walk from one place to another and receive insults. The police are have no sanitary conditions of any kind for the workers. A Puerto Rican Worker. The Story of Many | | Workingclass Women | BALTIMORE, Md.—My husband killed himself three months ago. My oldest boy works in the mill, but he only gets about two days a month, My husband worked for 18 years for the lumber veneer factory and then he got blind from the furnace job. At the hospital he recovered the use | rehired him for three weeks. Then they ‘fired him because he was “too old.” | | | | My furniture will be taken away, as will my house, in February be- cause I can’t pay on them. I am not going to give up. T’ll fight on my block for relief with the rest. MRS. Borax Miners on War Production Ss. United Struggle LOS ANGELES, Calif. — At the Western Borax Company’s mine the miners enter the bowels of the earth to the tune of $3.75 for nine hours shift. From this $1.10 is deducted for meals, leaving the balance of $2.65 for their hard days labor. Incident- ly, when a meal is missed, as is often the case through sickness or too fati- gued, the men are charged for it. The mineh who works below usually takes his lunch consisting of a few sand- wiches, and cookies. The predomi- nating edible commodity of the sand- wich consisted of boloney or fish, the latter being of the canned vari- ety. Upon holding an underground meeting we discussed the situation, whereas every man piled his lunch into the big bag, and then elected one to be the delegate and accom- pany the foreman to the cook house After an hour of arguing the de- mand was won, “That the men come up ten minutes early and have a hot dinner served in the dining room in a humane fashion.” Sorax mining is tough and very unpleasant work. When one is bent over a huge pile of this crystal like mineral, digging his internals out, the powder blends perfectly {with perspiration and causes a biting or stinging sensation which also in due course starts a skin infection: the eyes, nose, threoat and lungs be- come parched. The next big sensation comes when we are through work and go to take a shower. The water is borax water from the mine; after taking a bath in this it makkes you feel like a cellu- loid doll. Some of the men have to sleep in an old warehouse which has a beaverboard construction within, and this, comrades, is the so-called dor- mitory. And don’t forget to supply your own bedding! The workers on the top side get $1.25 less than the men below, work- ing conditions are just as miserable. I gave them plenty of literature, old copies of the Daily and Western Worker, Moscow Daily News, Noon Hour Talk on the C. P., etc. This plant, as well as other Borax industries are working full blast. Why? Borax has a hundred or more by-products which ¢an be used for war fare, especially explosives, and like all other combines sueh as mu- nition factories and dye works are speeding up; while other factories are closing or running part time. Fellow workers, we can understand this as a preparation for the contem- plated blood bath against the Soy- iet Union, the workers only father- land. Comrades, in every meeting ex- pose these activities of the Borax mines so as the masses should know, what the boss class is doing behind the smoke screen of peace confer- ences and the League of Nations. Indiana Cops Beat Up Workers’ Child for Selling Paper-Bags INDIANAPOLIS, Ind—A Jewish worker unemployed for some time said today his little boy who was trying to help him by selling shop- ping bags was attacked by one of Morrisy’s cossacks because he stood his ground when ordered off the street. The boy’s knee was bruised so bad that he had to have a doc- tor's care. The worker said he was told by Chief Morrisy that he had orders to keep all workers’ kids off the streets by the uptown business men. He told the chief he didn’t EW ZORE,, |Case Set for Jan. of one eye and then the company | Win Small Demands by} The body of Mike Potzik, first to be recovered from the death pit at Moweaqua, Ul. It is wrapped in Diankets to hide the burns and lacerations of the gas explosion that T HURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, Page Three ee | killed 54 men, They were forced | to work in the burning, gas-filled Shafer mine because they were unemployed, and this was the only form of “relief” they could get. MASS PROTEST AT FARRELL TRIAL Cops Display Guns Dec. 28.—Two ‘s gathered at the court house her eyesterday where three returned National Hunger Marchers were to be placed on trial because the crowd assembled to hear their report defended itself against a vicious police attack. When Mayor Franek saw the mass support for these arrested marchers, he had the trial postponed to Jan. 3. All day, from morning to 2 p. m., the hour at which the time of trial was set, motorcycle police with machine guns made a display of force to try and terrorizing the steel workers here. Organizations of workers continue to flood Mayor Franek with resolu- tions denouncing the arrest and de- manding release of the marchers. The International Labor Defense has subpoenaed the mayor as a wit- ness. The I. L. D. is continuing its mobilization of the workers to force the release of the three arrested. ROLLAND’S CALL IS ANSWERED Dreiser Statement: to Anti-War Meet (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) bear to see them starve. We read of children starving to death, of the jails being filled with young work- ers. Criminals go to the electric chair at the age of 19 and 20. They are the products of the “American,” the capitalist’s way of running so- ciety. Over fifteen million without jobs. Millions of young boys and girls forced to leave school at an early age to look for jobs. They find none. Those who have been gradu- ated from schools in the last three years have never been inside a fac- tory. Under capitalism they are useless creatures, their potential ability and talent disregarded and wasted. USSR Showed Youth “Road to Life.” After the Russian Revolution, there were hundreds of homeless children. Apparently the Soviet gov- ernment has taken care of them, set them on the “Road to Life.” We have about 300,000 homeless children, not products of revolution, but of capitalism’s collapse. Most of them are on the road to religious bigotry and many to misery, The revolutionary youth of Ameri- ca and of capitalist nations must lead these millions of young workers and show them where the enemy lies. The World Congress Against War was the beginning; the strug- gle of the Communists against war is bearing fruit. The intellectuals are responding to the call. And when Romain Rolland says he is “ready to take up arms in defense of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics,” he receives the echoing shout of millions. BETRAYERS BACK HEARST SCHEME A. F. L. Behind War Inciting Plan ‘WASHINGTON, Dec. 28—The mis- leaders of the American Federation of Labor have joined in putting over the latest shell game designed to fool the millions of starving unem- ployed, William Randolph Hearst’s “Buy American” campaign. This campaign is based on a very “orig- inal” idea; that the way to put in- dustry back on its feet and relieve unemployment is to persuade the working masses to buy American goods—with money that they haven't got. It also aims to whip up a na~ tionalist war spirit against the im- perlalist rivals of the U. S. by boy- cotting foreign-made goods. ‘Yesterday the yellow Hearst press, which is ballyhooing this imperial- ist scheme, announced that Frank Morrison, secretary of the American Federation of Labor and one of the oldest practitioners of labor betrayal, came out in support of this cam- paign. He claims it will give “our people more work”. He completely give a damewhat his order were, he would not stand for his child being beaten es bin way, ignored the effect that this campaign would have in increasing unemploy- ment when the other nations start reciprocating by boycotting Bods made in the U. 8, \NEW JAPAN WAR THREAT ON USSR ReorganizingArmy for Major Conflict BULLETIN. TOKIO, Dec. 28.—Police yester- day arrested four members of a reactionary patriotic society on charges of plotting the assassina- tion of Premier Makota Saito. A similar plot was uncovered during the military maneuvers in the sec- ond week of November. As in the case of the assassination of Pre- mier Araki, the action was plan- ned to speed up the Japanese war drive against the Soviet Union, the fascists and militarists being dis- satisfied with the failure to imme- diately start this drive, Huge Troop Concentrations. The Japanese militarists are com- pleting huge troop concentrations in Manchuria for an advance toward Pogranichnaya, an important Soviet city on the border of Manchuria. Other Japanese forces are concen- trating at Chinchow for continu- ation of the drive into Jehol Province and North China. Additional troops are being rushed from Japan daily. The Japanese war office yesterday announced plans for the complete reorganization and mechanization of | the Japanese army in preparation for # major conflict. The proposals include: 1, Increase of forces in Manchuria, | strengthening of technical units, | such as aviaton, machine gun, auto- | mobile and armored train detach- ments. 2. Provision for training 100,000 soldiers at home in mechanical war- fare at a cost of $9,000,000 yen (about $1,900,000) the first year and 6,000,+ 000 yen @ year thereafter. 3. Extension of the military aca~- demy, intensified training of com- pany officers, increased facilities for training volunteer and reservist of- ficers, establishment of new schools to train aviation and tank corps and schools in gas warfare. The new Japanese war moves were directly connected up with the Sov- by @ war office spokesman: “Although Soviet Russia’s atti- tude toward Japan is at present entirely friendly, it is impossible to forecast the future. Therefore we must bring out forces in Man- churia to a state of efficiency, mo- dernization and mechanization equal to that of the Red Army.” 1,500 RUSH DOOR OF CHARITY INN Were Denied Xmas Meal After Long Wait TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Dec. 28. — Three thousand hungry unemployed waited for hours in a line three blocks one hears so little of it? I tried to answer through the While A.F.L. Leaders Help Bosses By SAM FINKELSTE! NEW YORK.—A worker had a question printed in the Jewish “Day” asking whether there is 2 left wing butchers’ union, and if their is, why s |Butcher Workers Organize 15 N.Y. Shops in One Month Did It Right in the Mi idst of Depression, and N. “Day” bot they wouldn’t print my answer, ———_ ee But the answer is: Not only do| 1, H 4 we have a militant butchers’ union. | Lronwood Sub- District but it is going ahead, organizing | more and more shops, “Can’t Be Done?” The AFL. Butchers’ organizers, | Geft and Gusman say that in time of depression shops can’t be or- ganized. They do nothing when notice from the shops. The bosses the AFL. leaders, so they started to lock out one section after another of the butcher workers. Wage cuts and longer and longer hours. In one A.F.L. union local there are 140 unemployed members, and o: 17 ever get a day's work. The rest get nothing, the Food Workers Industrial Union, | what the “Day” means by 2 “left | union,” the employed still get skilled | | Workers’ wage: | Every unemployed member gets two or three days’ work a week. And the bosses don’t dare try lock-outs. This unicn organized 15 shops in the last four weeks. They did this, although the AFL. | union has often tried to come in and give the bosses all possible conces- sions to sign up the shop. AFL. union officials and bosses unite to attack strike pickets, get out injunc- tions, have them arrested and sen- tenced to 30 days or so. these 15 shops just or- ganized is one at 1707 Liberty Ave. Brooklyn, three working. Next to} that a shop was organized that is part of a chain of six shops in Brook- lyn. Their main office, now organ- ized by that “Left Union” is at 1701 Liberty Ave. Other shops organized within the last month are at: 286 Brighton Beach and 298 Albany Ave., Brook- lyn. Ir the Bronx, shops were or- ganized in the last four weeks at: 2004 Holland Ave., 2650 Briggs Ave., 236 East 194 St., 5649 Broadway and | 222 West 231 St., and 89 East Gun- hill Road. I believe that should answer the workers are fiféd with or without | see it is easy and have no fear from | and more wage cuts went with this, | In the butcher workers’ section of | $45 to $50 a week. | |Conference, National |Miner Union, Jan. 22 TRONWOOD, Mich., Dec. 28.—The Tronwood sub-district conference of the National Miners’ Union will be held Jan. 22 in this city. Such con- | ferences are being held in all the metal mining districts. They an- |alyze the present situation, discuss the tactics of struggle and outline the next steps in the fight against wage-cuts and unemployment. Instead of more miners being em- ployed here, as the mining officials stated would be done a week before the election, and when the tax bud- get of the mining companies was cut $215,000, more miners have been laid off. The miners are facing another Wwage-cut in the near future. and the j union must be aware of this and send an alarm to every miner of this danger. The union must help to organize anti-wage-cut united front committees in the mines, which also struggle against the blacklisting of miners. Scranton Mines Shut Down Permanentiy SCRANTON, Pa.—The Glen Alden mines, closed by that company some time ago, are permanently shut down, according to the statement made by Worthinton Scranton, president of the Scranton Chamber of Commerce, be- fore the meeting of the Advertising Club. That the move, which throws a great number of miners in this city out of employment, may be an at- tempt to force the extension of the stagger system on the miners, was in- dicated by the following words of Mr. Scranton: “The suggestion has been made that | work in the mines be put on the stagger system Perhaps the miners may yet agree to other miners question asked, but not answered, in| the “Day.” coming into their chambers to work a couple days each.” TORGS in the U.S.S.R., to purchase goods in send a money order to the USSR., choice. Immediately after receiving your son to whom the money order is sent reasonable prices. TORGSIN stores most varied goods, wearing apparel, antiques, handicraft goods, and furs. throughout the U.S.S.R. The chain o: Amalgamated Bank of New York long in front of the “Friendly Inn” charity for a Christmas meal. Only half of them were given tickets. The rest, bitterly oe, pointed, rushed the doors, and a hot fight resulted with the police guard- ing the doorway. Many aged men and women fainted. Others had their clothing torn to rags and their heads bloodied by the police. But they didn’t get fed. Dear Comrades: BINED LENIN MEMORIAL AND cluded in its pages will be special and articles dealing with the life and writings of Lenin and with the high- ON SUNDAY, JANUARY 14, A COM- Am-Derutra Transport Corp. American Express Company Public National Bank Money orders can be sent by anyone, it will be sufficient for you to visit any of the banks listed below and to articles, novelties, perfumes and soaps, bicycles, ments, radios and supplies and accessories. Imported goods in large assortments are on sale. of the customers TORGSIN has opened new stores in Moscow, and other cities in the Union. TORGSIN has over 250 branches in cities and towns 250 TORES in the SOVIET UNION THROUGH WHICH GIFTS MAY SENT TO RELATIVES AND FRIENDS ‘You can send money orders enabling your relatives and friends residing BE TORGSIN stores. in any quantity. To do this addressed to TORGSIN, giving the exact first and second name, and the address of the person whom TORGSIN iet Union in the following statement | must furnish with merchandise in accordance with your instructions, or his transfer, TORGSIN informs the per- that the money order is in his name and that he has the right to purchase in the TORGSIN stores according to his own choice, any goods of the very highest export quality at extremely always contain a wide choice of the shoes, cloth of all kinds, househeld cameras, musical instru- Departments for objets d’art, For the convenience f TORGSIN stores is being extended, and goods are sent by parcel post to those points, where there are no | TORGSIN stores. 11,000 branches of the companies listed below will accept money orders for transmission through TORGSIN to any person residing in the U.S. S. R. Manufacturers’ Trust Company Postal Telegraph-Cable Company R. C, A. Communications, Inc. and Trust Company GENERAL REPRESENTATIVES OF TORGSIN IN THE U.S.A. 261 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK CITY, N. Y. GREET THE DAILY WORKER COMBINED NINTH ANNIVERSARY AND LENIN To All Workers & Organizations! NINTH ANNIVERSARY EDITION OF THE DAILY WORKER WILL APPEAR. In- features Our Greetings lights of the history of the Daily Worker. As the central organ of the Communist Party, the Daily Worker has rallied the workers for the support, and defense of MEMORIAL EDITION ° 7 to the Daily Worker on its 9th Anniversary and on the occasion of Lenin’s Memorial Name ... Addre€88 64,0: :9:0: City caanemen: We request space in the Daily Worker for $....... YOUR GREETINGS oi ona %h Anniversary Edition of the MUST REACH THe DAILY WORKER, 50 EAST 13TH ST., NEW YORK, N. Y. BEFORE JANUARY, FIRST, 1933 gat