Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
_ a: _ Vol. X, No. 162 Give a Fellow-Worker Your Copy of the ‘Daily’ When You Are Thru With it. Discuss the News With Him! _* Daily Central Or (Section of the Communist International ) orker nist Party U.S.A. . NEW YORK, FRIDAY, JULY 7,1933 — . Police Jim Crowism ITH the decree of the New York police that Negro and white men ‘und women shall not be permitted to walk together on the streets, the crimes of capitalist government against Negroes and against the work- ing people of this city have reached a point where tHey will have to be checked by mass action. . Negroes in Harlem, “biggest Negro city in the world,” are jim-crowed, abused, doubly exploited at wages even below those of white workers, refused any but the worst jobs, discriminated against in unemployment relief, crowded into miserable holes for which they pay double rent, bru- tally evicted if they can’t pay, and generally treated like outcasts. , There is a reason behind the actions of the police. Every thinking person knows that a deep change has already begun in the relations of the Negro people and the white workers. ‘The Negroes and the class-conscious white workers are beginning to act together. This new change was started by the Communist Party and the International Labor Defense, by the Scottsboro campaign and continued in struggles of Negro and white workers for unemployment relief, against low wages, in organizing unions, against jim-crowism, against the national persecution of the Negro people. It is bad—for exploiters, wheh Negroes and white workers break down the Jim-Crow wall of division. “Jim-Crow”—thai is, the separation of white workers and Negroes and the special national persecution of Megroes. \ Don’t forget what happened in Chicago in 1919. Stockyard workers ‘were organized together—black and white—for a strike to raise wages. But the packing house millionaires’ agents started a “race-riot.” Hun- fireds of Negroes and whites were killed and wounded. The movement was broken up. The packing-house bosses had more money to spend on duxuries and the babies of the stockyard workers had less to eat. This is the great “usefulness” of Jim-Crow segregation. @Brien’s and Bolan’s police can succeed in breaking up friendly re- / Yations between Negroes and whites in New York, it will be possible for ew York bankers to save tens of millions of dollars which they would otherwise have to sacrifice as unemployment relief insisted upon by @ powerful united, black and white unemployment movement. Not to speak of the better wages that can be won by organizing powerful unions under yevolutionary’ leadership—black and white together. "The banker-bosses of Mayor O’Brien and Police Commissioner Bolan me against the mingling of Negroes and whites in Harlem. Mass action, all together, Negro and white, can do it. This must be farried into struggie—in the streets, in the workshops, in the trade unions amd Negro organizations and into the city election. Blood on the “Recovery” Act Roo chapter has been written to the industrial recovery act, this time in the blood of New York fur workers who were viciously attacked hy police thugs on Wednesday for participating in a demonstration ar- enged by New York sections 1 and 2 of the Communist Party to protest against the slave codes. General Johnson’s hearings in Washington, and the A. F. of L. and ocialist hopeful expectations of blessings under the slavery code are but the politer, the drawing-room side of the Roosvelt slavery law. The more brutal part, the real fangs of the act were shown in starvation. wages to the cotton mill workers and through the crunching of Tammany police clubs on the heads and backs of New York fur workers, It is this bitter class war that the slavery code tries to crush through mobilization of the government behind the leading trusts that the Socialists and the A. F. of L. do not want the workers to know. Every instrument of the boss terror lurks behind this bill. The police clubs, the cossack mounted attacks, the courts with their jails and in- junctions, the concerted attacks on striking workers, the mobilization of the whole federal government against picket lines—this is the glimpse of the Roosevelt slavery act that was given to the workers on Wednesday in the New York fur market. And the slave code is yet to come in the needle and fur industry. Tammany Hal’s police did pioneering work, mangling flesh of work- ers, on behalf of the industriel slavery act, the pride of one of its spawn, Franklin D. Roosevelt. a of 8 Oo Wednesday, 1,500 ‘workers, most @f them employed (or unemployed) in the fur trade, met in Union Sqtfte to protest against the Roosevelt slavery code. The police knew that this would take place more than a week in advance. They knew the workers would march into the fur market and hold meetings there because they granted a permit for this very purpose. Yet seldom in the history of the strike struggles in the fur mar- ket was there so heavy a police mobilization as there was on Wednesday to meet the workers protesting against the slavery act and rallying the fur workers against the forthcoming slavery code for the fur industry. ‘The workers resisted valiantly against the bloody armed onslaught. Many workers were viciously beaten in their heroic resistance, one hay- ing his arm broken, reas | hd worker should respond immediately to this brutal attack by working to build up organization to defeat these attempts of the bosses to club the industrial recovery act into the lives of the workers by mo- bilizing for a fighting conference on July 15 in New York to work out tactics of struggle against the act. The Trade Union Unity League calls on all workers’ organizations to send representatives to Webster Hall on that date to strengthen the united front against all of the actions of the bosses under the slavery act and its codes. The Sopkins Dress Strike the recent strike of 1,600 Negro and white workers of ihe ©opkin Dress Shops, we witness for the second time within a short period successful strikes in which the Negro workers have come forward into the leader- ship of the struggle against sweatshop conditions, winning substantial gains in wages, reduction in hours, recognition of their unions and shop committees and equal pay for equal work. Both in the Chicago dress strike and in the St. Louis nut strike which preceded it, the Negro work- ers led by the militant unions of the Trade Union Unity League revealed @ tremendous reservoir of proletarian strength, courage and militancy. In their first experiences in the class struggle the Negro workers in the Chicago dress strike soon learned to know their friends and their enemies. When the Urban League and Oscar De Priest, Negro Congress- man, entered the strike situation, they prepared the way to smother the strike by substituting an @rbitration board. They tried to separate the workers from. their leadership and from their union. They proposed com- promises on the workers’ wage demands which would help the company. They proposed to drive the workers back to their jobs at starvation - wages and into the clutches of Sopkin again. eer aa guidance of the revolutionary Needle Trade Workers Industrial Union helped the workers to elect their own rank and file committees to take charge of the strike and negotiate only through their own repre- sentatives. The union leadership exposed every maneuver of the reform- ist betrayers of the Negro masses in a manner which convinced the work- ers that the union was correct in its appraisal of these enemies and that only under its militant leadership would their interests be pro- * The policies of De Priest and the Urban League were repudiated by the strikers. The Negro workers in their first test in the class struggle stood by their class and against the “friends” who openly showed their class interests by supporting Sopkin. Even at the final settlement De Priest maneuvered to rob the workers of the full fruits of their victory. But the Sopkin Dress Shop workers returned to their jobs having won an important partial victory, steeled in struggle and prepared to resist, through their shop organization and their union any further attacks on their working standards and to continue the struggle for better conditions. The heroic struggle and solidarity of Negro and white workers must awaken every T.U.U.L. union to orientate their organizational activities to reach the masses of Negro workers in the basic industries, in the shops, mines and mills to draw them into the militant unions in preparation for struggles, In the Needle Trades where the Negro workers are among the most exploited in the sweatslwps the Industrial Union must wage an. yesterday in Special Sessions to a -energetic campaign to win. the workers for the coming battles against sweaishon conditions. 4 Strike on MORE EXPECTED TO JOIN WALKOUT FOR HIGHER PAY ‘Tie-Up of AllWork Due Today; Police Menace Picket Lines | ROCHESTER, N Y., July 6. ;—The strike on city and leounty relief work against a ‘cut of from 45 to 35 cents an hour already involves six thou- | sand workers. Three thousand ‘had walked out in the early | part of the week and it is ex- | pected that all of the 8,000 | will be on strike by tomorrow. Among the demands are: 50 cents jan hour wage rate, recognition of the strike committee and remoyal {of all straw bosses from the job. | The Strike committee demands that the city give relief to all jobless while on strike. | The men are actively picketing all relief work jobs. Picketing takes place at all points where work is distributed by the Public Works and Park departments. Police were call- ed out to the airport and the On- tario Beach Park where effective picketing is going on. City and county relief heads re- fuse to negotiate with the strikers in Rochester Spreads; 6,000 Are Now Out Relief Job | | | HUNGER MARCH 1 ANTHRACITE WILL ASK MORE RELIEF To Present Jobiess' Insurance Bill at the UMWA Convention SCRANTON, Pa., July 6.—A county hunger march against a 20 per cenit cut in relief is being organized by the rank and file opposition of Dis- | trict 1 of the United Mine Workers) of America and the Unemployed! Councils. Marchers will gather on| July 17 at the county court house here. A demand will be mgde on the county to pass an ordinance giving the unemployed adequate relief, stop evictions and pay light and water: bills, A delegation elected by the march- ers will apvear before the UMWA district convention asking its endorse- | ment and participation in the strug- gle for the adoption of federal un- employment insurance. The conven- tion will be asked to adopt in its by-| laws that each local union elect an employed committee to affiliate| with the Unemployed Councils ang) work in cooperation with it. ' The convention will also receive a | vroposal that the wage scale in the agreement and the colliery rate sheet be enforced and that each local union }have the right to strike to enforce} i the agreement, ‘AMALGAMATED HE strike. Workers were called to strike halts today but no meetings were held and no plans have been presented to the Fire, Then Rehire 1700 Coast Guards 'To Recruit 3,500 New | Men Into Service, Is Report | NEW YORK—On the heels of the | firing of 1,700 men from the Coast | Guard service, information has been |received that they are to be given | “preference” in the recruiting of 3,500 new men at third-class enlisted men’s ‘BUT TAKE NO STEPS TO CALL STRIKE With Lower Wages ADS ASK STOPPAGE NEW YORK.—Ofticials of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers declared | , a stoppage today of the workers in the union shops. Figures of the number cotton industry providing a S/2-812 of workers who stopped work are variously reported at from 30,000-to 50,000. The stoppage is announced for the purpose of getting an increase in wages, but no steps are being taken by the officials to carry through a real o— | workers for pursuing the strike. Meet- ; ings were not held because the offi- cials fear that the workers will raise demands, will take matters into their | own hands and organize a real strike. | The action of the officials in mak- ‘ing the stoppage a sort of holiday is | causing many workers to suspect that |a deal is being made behind closed doors in which the officials will put | | over some plan which will not bene- | | fit any one but the manufacturers and the officials. The 20 per cent “loan” wage cut effected by Hillman | | in Rochester and Chicago is still | fresh in the memory of the clothing pros While some workers may receive | | small increases as a result of the ar- |rangements between the bosses and the officials it will be taken from the | ‘workers by the plan proposed by, Hillman to obtain payment of back dues, Back Dues to Come from Increases | Hillman has proposed that workers owing back dues since 1928 may re- ‘Fire 300 at Ford | Edgewater Plant | in Efficiency Plan EDGEWATER, N. J., July 6.— The Ford Motor Co. today laid |off 300 workers on the ground that “production bas fallen off.” The workers at the Edgewater plant, report, however, that about 1900 workers are still at work | and that the lay-off was due to | plans for reorganization which are being introduced to put the plant on a’ more efficiaat basis. The new plans will mean the in- = troduction of speed-up methods Navy “S for those employed and new ma- chines to displace workers. | Instead of creating more jobs for the unemployed the Indus- trial Recovery (Slavery) Act since its operation is helping to swell the army of unemployed. i WASHINGTON July 6.— Explain- ing that the request for an additional $14,000,000 for the navy is intended AIM OF ‘SLAVERY’ ,to be nips for ACT IS TO SUSTAIN v=: or ie ; ava fic pounding,” Secretary of the % ao Navy Swanson declared that he ex- y pe to build up a navy second to PROFIT SYSTEM *:: 2 “When coriplete,” ‘ the Uniled S$: Lawyer forActAdmits tual of a: Canitalism Shaky ' world, We believe that it will be invu.nerable. “Our new or modernized battie- ships will be formidable. We a not building them for fand. deliver and take i he able to take ind give a terrific pounding without being hurt. NEW YORK.—It is not the aim of the industrial recovery act to union- ize labor, but to save capitalism from entering deeper crisis, declared Don- ald R. Richberg general counsel for the advisory board of the National Industrial “Recovery” Act in a speech ‘Thursday before the Merchant's As- sociation Luncheon. Richberg, an attorney for the rail- ; road. labor unions, was one of the leading collaborators with Roosevelt | — EXPOSES TERROR IN FUR MARKET complete collapse. “If this adventure should fail” he said, “it will be the A. F. of L. Union Fails to Put in Appearance failure of an industrial system. It will mean, either that the system at Committee Hearing NEW YORK.—Slugging and arrest- is fundamentally unsound, or that the present managers of private in- dustry are incapable of operating it mg. fur. workers who refuse to join the A. F. of L. controlied Interna- tional Fur Workers Union, police t and aireraft carrier nson’s idea of a “terrific x’ is not relegated to paper plans, it has in view the coming war of the successfully.” He told the exploiters they should waste no time in putting the slave codes into effect Richberg was in favor of immedi- te adoption of the slave code in the weekly wage, saying: “If the cofton textile code were approved as written, Re veal ae Ske forward step | -orking hand in hand with Socialist union Ieaders, these are some of the He told the bosses that the indus- facts disclosed by the Citizens’ Com- trial recovery act was not government nittec, which has started an inves- control of industry as the bosses Were tigation of conditions in the fur in- free to use their own methods of ex- Gustry. The committee began its ploitation, but it mobilized the sup- juptic hearings yesterday at Labor port of the government behind the Temple, Horace A. Kallen of the New bosses In this critical period. \Schoo! for Social Research is chair- 3 rN man of the committee. Roger Baldwin, executive secretary 4 of the American Civil Liberties Union, briefly outlined his investigation -in the fur industry as impartial chair- LL.D. Plans Appeal to Supreme Court man between the [Industrial Union and the Association of Fur Manu- faeturers. He highly commended the work of the Industrial Union. \d- win stated that, following the mur- derous attack on the Fur Union head- = quarters on April 24, Police Commis- ATLANTA, Ga., July 6.—A new trial sioner Bolan informed him that he was denied to Angelo Herndon, young See resus Reccasiie i G jan fills the fur market with Negro organizer of the unemployed, 15° police and plainclothes thugs to condemned to, 18-20 years on the crest and intimidate fur workers and chain gang, by Judge Lee B. Wyatt, protect scabs. the original trial judge, in a decision The chairman then called on rep- handed down today. Judge Wyatt | resentatives of the American Feder- last. week refused’ to set bail for tion of Labor and the fur associa- cannot always have police around. for invited by letter. salaries. This amounts to a pay cut |turn to the union with the payment of from $21 to $50 a month and in| 0f $20. This will mean thousands of Herndon. tion, who were Among them were Samuei Shorr, some instances $100. The rehiring follows a 15 per cent) pay reduction made effective May 1. At that time the men were told that | \the cut was “a temporary loan to the | government” and would be returned | July 1, This date has now been ex- tended to December 31 in an execu- tive order by President Roosevelt. Coast Guardsmen are urged to or- ganize committees on every boat and to demand the return of the 15 per, cent “loan” which the government is | Hold Communist Meet in Farm Community at Luttrell, Tennessee’ LUTTRELL, Tenn.—The first Com- munist meeting ever held in this town took place July 1st, when: Jim | Garland and Bragdon spoke to a group of farmers on Roosevelt's “New Deal.” t Many of the farmers here have been unable to procure seed for the fall planting. As a result of their inability to pay taxes they are expect- ing the state to foreclose their farms. The farmers present received the speakers with great enthusiasm, in-| viting them to come back in two weeks and hold another meeting. A committee was elected to get all the farmers of the countryside to the next meeting. Notables Paid For Publicity NEW YORK, July 6.—Lionel A. Stagg who posed as a British news- paper representative and. swindled | Mrs. Reginald C. Vanderbilt, Greta | Garbo, Otto Kahn, Jack Dempsey | and many others of small sums of | money, on promise to use “puff” stories about them, was sentenced penitentiary term of not more than three years |dollars in the coffers of the labor | racketeers. The increase given the workers will be taken away to fill the pockets of the racketeering of- ficials. For a Real Strike The rank and file committee of the union is calling upon the workers to turn the strike into a real struggle for week work and for more wages. | At the strike halls today, the work- ers raised the slogan of week work. The Italian workers who are blamed by the officials for the existence of | piece work were among the most out- spoken in demanding that the week work system, be established. Leaflets of the rank and file committee were spread by many workers and read with great interest. Rank and File Program The rank and file committee in their leaflet to the workers point out that the small increase promised by Hillman will not offset the raise in prices which reduces the value of the dollar. It points out that Hillman has supported the Industrial Recov- ery Bill yet he has been responsible for many wage cuts, for production standards and other methods which have been put over by the same fake stoppages. The rank and file com- mittee call on the workers -to wage a real struggle to abolish piece work, to reduce the hours of work with a 25 per cent increase in wages, to abolish the checkoff system, compulsory arbitration and to estab- lish an unemployment insurance sys- tem paid by the bosses and given to the tailors, The rank and file committee at 126 University Place is preparing a/ series of open air meetings and fo- rums to expose Hillman’s role under the Recovery Act and Yo rally the workers around a rank and file pro- gram. Go to see every subscriber when his subseription expires to get his re- newal, and | The state’s evident intention, in this, manager of the A. F. of L. defunct decision, to send him directly to the furriers’ union; William Collins, of chain gang to be killed, will be de- the Central Trades, and representa- |feated by immediate filing of a notice tives of the fur manufacturers. The of appeal to the State Supreme Court, names of Nor:nan Thomas, who is fit was announced by John H Geer, Supposedly making his own investiga- | young Negro attorney, who, with Ben- tion, and -F. LaGuardia were also |jamin J. Davis Jr., has been retained mentioned. But none appeared before \by the International Labor Defense to | the committee defend Herndon. Rabbi Goldstein read a prepared An appeal for funds to cover the report on police behavior in the fur lexpenses of the appeal to be sent to market. It was a record of brutal | the national office of the I. L. D., 80 | attacks, indiscriminate beating up of |East 11th Street, New York, was old women and young girls and later issued by the Atlanta section of the arresting them. After this, Tammany jorganization. The bill of exceptions, judges hold them on high bail. Rabbi |on the basis of which the legal appeal Goldstein denied the charges of | will be made, must be prepared and Samuel Schorr, of the A. F. of L. land filed by July 15, it was pointed union, that the ‘Citizens’ Committec | out. was a Communist-appointed inno- | Protests againsi the continued im- cents committee.” He told of his own |prisonment of Herndon, whose participation in starting the impartial “crime” was that he organized Negro investigation. and white unemployed workers into, The committee will continue its a demonstration which forced addi- | hearings today at 2 in the afternoon tional relief from the county author- at the Labor Ternple. ities, should be sent to Governor (See letter from Theodore Dreiser Eugene Talmadge, at Atlanta, Ga. supporting furgworkers—page 3.) So. Carolina Negro Seized In Jail Cell and Lynched COLUMBIA §. C., July 6.—Describ- striking him. Read in Tomorrow’s ‘Daily’ Ar- ticle by Earl Browder on “The Roosevelt ‘New Deal, and Fascism” THE WEATHER Yoday—Fair; stightly warmer; light, westerty winds. CITY EDITION Price 3 Cents Being Built to Speed War new markets. money for war definitely rialist powers for There is no end of preparations, just as Wanting to prepare take and > rrific pound’ng,” Secretary Swansor asks an ad- ditional apprepria- tion of 114,000,099. there hand over for unemployment relief. NEGRO AND WHITE MEET TO BALK JIM CROW LAW To Demand Release of Negro Victim ‘of. Discrimination NEW YORK CITY .—Discrimination ainst Negro workers in Greater New ork, especially, the brazen order given by the city to police to stop Negro and white workers walking to- gether, will be denounced at a ma‘ meeting at Rockaway Palace, 69) Rockaway, Brooklyn, this Monda, y 10, 8 p.m., with Louise Thomp- son, secretary National Seottsboro Action Committee, and Frank Spec- tor, assistant secretary International Labor Defense. Called jointly by the Brownsville Section International Labor Defense and the Brownsville’ Unemployed Council, the mass meeting will also raise the issue of the holding for trial of William Bryan, Negro worker, of Brownsville, whose ¢viction from his nd arrest was the mination bis wife food, relief - bureau lost a the was give Bryan and child because of lack of After Brooklyn home forced through mass pressure to them rent check The landlord, now- ever, refused to accept the chec and ordered Bryan and his wife thrown out of their home. This action was a warning to other Negro tenants to intimidate them against uniting with white workers as Bryan did in the struggle for the right to li ryan, it is charged, threw a flat- iron at one of the policemen during the eviction, which took place on April 20. Vigorous demands will be made at the Brownsville mass meeting that ali race discrimination be stopped, that Bryan be released. Workers will be urged to attend the trial of William Bryan, in Special Sessions, Smith and Schermerhorn Streets, Brooklyn, Wednesday morning July 12, in large numbers. In defending Bryan, the N. Y, Dis- trict International Labor Defense will raise the issue of the right of workers to defend themselves against being evicted from their homes. City Paid Graft to Big Cement Companies ; Slogan: ‘Buy American’ NEW YORK.—Revelation that the city authorities were making heavy contributions to the American cement manufacturers, under the patriotic |slogan of “Buy American,” came out jin hearings before the Board of Esti- mate yesterday. On May 26 a resolution was adopted | providing that only contractors using | American cement could bid for city worl. At the hearings yesterday it |was decided to eliminate this clause, jin order to save some money for the Tammany authorities Samuel Untermyer, lawyer, who ing the killing of Morris Bendy, 35- year-old Negro who was yesterday lynched by an armed gang as a “mur- der and not a lynching,” Gov. Black~ wood today ordered an “investiga- | tion.” Invading the Clinton jail—which {has no guards—tae gang spirited Bendy away in an automobile and ‘lynched him. After being mercilessly | beaten and strangled, the Negro was ‘riddled with bullets, | Bendy had been in jail only a short time having been arrested following an altercation with a white truck | driver who accused the Negro of! Feverish Economic War Preparations Follow Breakdown of Parley Sil to None” POWERS MOVING RAPIDLY TOWARD | | as and ARMED CONFLICT FightApproaching War in August Ist Mass Demonstrations LONDON, July 6. — The Economie Conference has to all intents and purposes broken up. The steering committee, after being deadlocked for % | three hours this morning, after meeting at four this afternoon immediately recessing again, has met for the third time and arrived at a decision —the Conference will not ad- | journ—it will continue—but it After the discovery of the body near brought out this gouging by cement | Old Sardis Church on the Calhoun | Contractors, said that on one contract | | highway this morning, Sheriff Colum- bus Owens said he was “unable to trace the route of the ’ The sheriff, of course, disclaimed any knowledge of the identity of the killers With no guards at the Clinton jail, the lynchers had little difficulty in making thelr way to Ben cell, after smashing in the lock with a large wrench, |the extra-cost for patriotic reasons! ‘would amount to $4,000, but Unter- meyer, who is closely connected with the city subway deals, did not reveal the millions of graft that went into subway construction, The hullabaloo about high cement prices for local products is made to ve the appearance that the city offi- cials are concerned about watching expenditures. But the shelling out of millions in graft to Tammany-sup (A story on lynchings in the | porting contractors will go on whether | last six months appears on Page 2.) ‘they use U, 8. A. or any other brand “=P” | will no longer discuss monetary is an end to money the bosses | ‘d measures or tariffs. the wat It will no longer disc very subjects for which i ‘alled together. More vigorous measures of economic war are the first re- sults of the deadlocking of the Conference. The preparation for the ‘intensifi- cation of the general economic strug- gle between the imperialist powers began with the announcement that the United States has withdrawn from the International Convention for Abolition of Export and Import Prohibitions. Great Britain’s with- drawal was announeed June 14. Reports of proposed tariff increases by the Gold Bloc powers immedi- ately the Conference adjourns were so circulating. The French gov- rnment have- under consideration a ban on the entry of all American tilms, and also a special surtax on U. 8. imports: into France. A special tax of 20 per cent on all imports from Portugal was decroed by the French government today, toreshadowing similar measures against all “cheap money” countries, The representatives of the central of the six gold standard na- ms called a meeting for Saturday their strategy in the cur- war they expect to follow the break-up of the Conference. The German government, convinced (hat the Parley is as good as ex- ploded, is preparing to take steps against its competitors. ‘The currency struggle between the dollar, pound and gold exchange cur- rencies, headed by the franc, took @ vew turn today, with vigorous Eng- lish counter-attacking holding up dollar depreciation and keeping the exchange rates around $4.48. While America strenuously depresses the value of the dollar, it-is difficult ‘for Great Britain to enter into any al- liance with the gold standard coun- tries, since she must answer depre- ciation of the dollar with deprecia- iion of the pound. It is reported from London that the Canadian and Australian governments are seeking for a tying up of their currencies with the dollar rather than with he pound. America’s policy of aggressive at- tack on its vivals, which will be even more viciously carried out now that the Conference has broken down, will take the form of continued in- {lation a‘ home, ng prices and eutt'ns ‘> ‘vores of labor, and the same time using this depres. (CON1 kD ON PAGE 4) Hare yeu approacaesd sonr fel- low worker in ronr shop with « cops of the ‘Daily?’ Tf not, do so TODAY! Vet Short Stor |} To Be Featured in 'Tomorrow’s ‘Daily’ “Sam the Veteran,” a short story by Emery Balint, heads the) list of special features to appcar) in tomorrow's (Saturday feature) | edition of the Daily Worker. It! is illustrated by Walter Qui:i,| well-known revolutionary artist. | Other features include a poem, | | “When the Hour Str’kes,” by Sey-! mour Waldman, author of “Death for Profits;” a review br Samyel) Brody of “Upton Sinclair Presents William Fox;” and a special ar- ticle on the Moscow Sports Fes- tival by Nathaniel Buchwald, So- viet correspondent of the Daily Worker. Book and movie reviews complete the Saturday feature | page. Don't fail to get your copy of the. ‘Daily” tomorrow! ~—e