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Page Three '75 NEGRO, WHITE STRIKERS IN NUT FACTORY JAILED FOR MILITANT MASS PICKETING W YORK, The Fighting Vets By H, BRIGGS Extra! Blighty in Danger Are we downhearted? Hell No! The British tars are up in arms over their pay cut. H. M. S. Hood. was forced to abandon maneuvers when the gobs refused to main their sta- tions at sea. The Telegram says, “Tt was a typical British revolt:” Yes, | yes, anid the rank and file ex-service- men of America are leading a typical revolt against Roosevelt's New (dirty) Deal and the Economy Act. And the Dutch sailors led a “typical” revolt. And the Chilean navy had a “typical” revolt. The Cuban soldiers and sailors in a “typical” fashion kicked | out their “typical” admirals and gen- eral: These “typical” international ‘Living Costs Sweep Upward in Fifth Consecutive Rise Food Rises 28 Per Cent Since May; Clothes 24 Per Cent, as Wages Lag Far Behind Under Roosevelt N.R.A. Codes NEW YORK, Oct. 13.—Continuing its steady rise upward, the cost of living index for the working class swept up to a new high during September, it was reported today by the economic statisticians of the National Industrial | Conference. | This makes the fifth consecutive monthly rise since Roosevelt took officei | 1,400 Out Demanding Reinstatement of the Workers; Mass Trial Condemns the NRA, Company and City Plot By PETE CHAUNT. ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct. Seventy-five nut pickers, Negro and white were arrested this morning while mass picketing was going on at Funsten Company, following a general strike called by the Food Workers’ Industrial | Union upon refusal of the company to guarantee re-employment of all 1,400 Three men were shot Above is pictured part of the tented city , and higher wages. bringing the cost of living for workers®——————_—- ene j revolts will tickle the “typical” i ™ . ‘ | workers laid off t Kk: . The strike vote was cast in each of the to a point that is now 9 per cent D dR iti bankers and capitalists to death| of many scorés of cotton pickers and their | to death and a score of others including a Dilichamgestl a pili Sept We neh ee ae ban stk li aeks Se aa Se chica eman ecogni TON | some aay families in Tulare County, California, where | woman were wounded by gunfire when ranch | Workers Union. One thousand five ; mous verdiet finding the Company, ae siegborsth eg os dayue sd It Won't Be Long Now 10,000 cotton pickers are striking against the | owners’ deputies attacked the striking agri- [hundred workers assembled at the the N. R. A. and the ~ity officials | has risen at least’ twenty-eight per subd cogthasseh cua that ehasAmsy. Ss ee |e oisean De Peer BARE |Gaycty Theatre at a public mass|guilty of violation of Ni Ri A. 1 n 0! ue Eagle, abuse ranch owners for better working conditions 3 of Furniture Union cent ass result of the Roosevelt efican doughboys are forming griev- he com-| Pledge, e | and deliberate stalling at City Re- committees also. As ecretary of the Young Communist operas e,.| ab VOUE MOATING | se cine em aoe, , gta beens area) toast» ase ot ante Mary ap shot upwards as a result of the cot- va) i Le eld pa arr ie ap det Keep Communist N t 1 Vote to Present lielegram to meet all grievances of |W. H. Armstong, “Blondy,” Marie +. ton destroying program of Roveevelt,| Workers’ Delegates | ret to pay tor stamps eee as a ‘ z i ationa |\the workers against the company |Nowinski, Ruby McBride, Lizzie fects Sid, ie Soumya Pe ee noes |ETesenuUnionmemands |¢-A. And Ge gots Candidate in Jail Events Demands to Meat. Sak Jones, reputed leaders of mut ek; they were in May of this year, indi- — cating one of the swiftest advances in many decades. Rising coal prices will also increase WASHINGTON, D.C., Oct. 13. Furniture Workers’ Industrial Unio that their union has a membershi — | enough, A demand for recognition of the| do we can.” S, Cqeye aken it the English tars can | what ny Inflation Hits the Marines 5 Step the Plague as Murder Witness Barbusse Meetings This Week stead of the com re-employ one f a maneu Packers in St. Paul, |to eting hree-fold termination to increase mass-pick- was the response legation to the Peabody Coal -of- | i rs win- | vi I y | “i 91 t a hae ers y as a result ¢ % [ye the misery of the workers this win-| affliated with the ‘rade. Union Unity ane marines at the Legation Guava LL.D. Balks Fr ame-Up In Cleveland Representatives Oflcmvyor system, cracking machines Delegations went to the | y gue A in the trade, on|2t Pelping are not living the life of f I Tsland Henri Barbusse will spéak in Cleve- 2.000 at United and other new mes Mayor and N. R. A.«of- Prats: AURURS: ‘ see eee ees te dices the| Reilly these dayg ‘Their deflated or Long islan land on Tuesday,evening, Oct. 17, at , at Unite Additional demands are for equal f | as delegates from each ey pan ee ye ipo sensitive | the er ine industry was made yester. |@ollar-and the 16 per cent pay cut + Worker a huge anti-war mass meeting where Front Meet distribution of work, company relief | local elected to present demands | food index has just registered a oy a Akg barby. Ae ak Loniniarahc nakes seeing the world a costly pro- the Cleveland delegates to the United equal to last before layoff ‘or Unemployment Insurance and Res as Rie She Creatas eg ea Kane banat os ae A | positfon. The boys are spending a ees States Congress Against War willl \" "The ; ec and against proposed sales tax waube. ORL per Cent OVet ee erate ae aie ‘g ____|iot of time in the barracks now| GLEN COVE, L. I., Oct: 18—Mauro| make their report. The meeting will OU et RAM Mion sree | workers’) ¢ trial, composed |to the Emergency Legislature of the and 28 per cent since last May. This} M, Pizer and Joseph Kiss, repre-| studying the situetion, The hero|La Forgia, Communist candidate for| be held in the Prospect ‘Auditorinm,| United Front Conference for Actions} o¢ + food striking miners | State at Jefferson City, October “17. is one of the steepest advances of| senting the F.W.LU., wrote the de-| pyciness is in a bad way. | Assembly in the Second District of | 2612 Prospect Ave called by the Packinghouse Workers|, nq offi ted Amalgamated Ss ing nut pickers and_ the food prices in the history of the coun-| mand to the N.R.A. official recallin | Nassau County, was arrested in con-| Other speakers will include Prof. Industrial Union, met Wednesday | Cjothing naciathe nated also elected large | try. These advances have taken place on a background of declining wages through part-time work, or slightly advancing pay, which have been en- of 15,000, of fair competiticn, Pizer cents per hour for unskilled, an’ ‘Chelsea Shoe Company CHELSEA, Mass.—With the blue eagle as their protector, the bosses of the Avon Shoe company began to fire many workers from their shop. The leaders of the National Shoe Workers Union urged the workers to be “calm” and to submit to the out- rage. But the workers declared’ a 30 cents for those in the South. AEDES CER AO RMIE RE IEC SI a At a hearing on the furniture code presented the. union’s demands fo! wages up to $1.75 per hour for skilled | strike and picket, the abolition of | UP injunctions; prohibition of child la- | ™ bor and of discrimination against | young, Negro or women workers. The manufacturers appearing at the hear- | V! ing proposed a 40-hour week and 45 hours for seasonal work; and 34 cents per hour for workers in the North, | The recent so-called “uprising” of the Khaki Shirts in Philadelphia | must not be looked upon as a flash | in the pan, but must be viewed as a ‘| quarters but tomorrow the police and Khaki ‘Shirts may | be united as in | other places. | We should not be con- a damn fool. He also was at one time, one of the ways mbat Fascists regardless of their shirts is to build a strong MASS n thovement bound to-~ the wo) g class in DISCIPLINED SOLIDARITY. More than phrases are needed to combat the Fascist threat. Organization and struggle against the N. I. R..A., against wage- cuts, and for the right of free speech, nection with a murder here Tuesday, released after the International La- bor Defense entered the case and re- arrested Wednesday as a material witness. a Ku Klux Klan town, police to frame La Forgia. The present ar- The landlady of the house at 20 Hazel Street, in which the Commu- nist candidate lives, was murdered Tuesday afternoon and her body found in the cellar of the house that night. La Forgia was at work on a relief bureau job all afternoon and was arrested when he came home. The local branch of the I. L. D. is pushing plans to force La Forgia’s Cole of Oberlin College, J. William- son, district organizer of the Com- munist Party, and Carl Geiser, stu- dent delegate to’ the Latin-American Congress Against War held in Uru- In Detroit Barbusse will speak in Detroit on| Hendrie Sts. There will be 5000 seats| at 15 cents and 2000 seats at 25 cents. | The Workers Home at 1343 E. Ferry} has a capacity of 700 and has been reserved in case of an overflow meet- ing. On Wednesday, Oct. 18th, a literary evening with refreshments will be given by the John Reed Club at Forty Wayne Hotel, Temple and Cass Sts. Admission 50 cents. night at the Croatian Hall and voted| union delegat unanimously to present demands to} the Meat Packers for the return of} the 1929 wage scale, the abolition of | the bonus system and other forms of | ‘of Picket in Texas pany union conference board, Forty delegates representing about which was called on a few days no- tice, and about 200 visitors attended, including unorganized workers and members of the American Federation | of Labor. After the confernece, ‘an important department of a large) plant joined the Industrial Union in a body. It was announced at the confer- ence that the United Packing Co. EL PASO, Tex! pickers striking for a rate of 75 cents per hundred pounds, won a victory | today when the International Labor Defense, through habeas corpus pro- ceedings, forced the release of Jacinto Saeny, a cotton picket, charged with | intimidaton of scabs. The trial of Saeny who has been} 1 - {de 2nd St., St. Louis., Mo. here tion of terro: ive Miners demanding r against the Pro: in Southern Mii. ive ly Noble, Secretary, 907 N s workers; loyment insurance; _ 3 ~ Flies Blue Eagle and fecognitton of the workers! right to | tent mith i ro pope ita ie ad Ries ee avin tt he Thursday, Oct. 19th, at 8 p. m. at| 2,000 packinghouse workers of South CottonPickersStrike Fires Workers in Plant choose their unions, the right to] Cre’ une Rees SOO Wes 400! og campaign: the Arena Gardens, Woodward and|St. Paul attended the conference, | ri _ Strike over the heads of, the leaders. E 4 ; 3 . had granted recognition to the Pack-| in jail for months, was four times! Cente! The officials tried to soft pedal the| agreement reinstating the workers. pers tier, pea oie heme unconditional release. Epo ks inghouse Workers Industrial Union, Seaeponed Se ie eae (eeeaten ot | i | striké by calling it a “holiday,” and} But the trouble in the shop is by | win defeat the Khaki Shirts. sig oe ° In Chicago which has the plant practically 100| jack of evidence against him. He had Pittsburgh failed to organize a picket line. |no means over. Of late the workers rive has Ane pore? Anti-Injunction Meet Famous revolutionary writer of | Per cent organized. |been held incommunicado, until/| OCT, 14: Again the workers took the matter | do not receive their pay on time and|\ aye artef is putting on a Bonus France will be honor guest at open-| The Conference adopted proposals| Frank Bartolino, IL.D. secretary, Dance given by the Fifth Ward Daily into their own hands and picketed the families go very often without | play and requests some of the songs, THe BROWN BOOK OF THE HITLER TERROR PREPARED BY THE WORLD COMMITTEE TO AID THE VICTIMS OF GERMAN FASCISM Published by ALFRED A. KNOPF, Inc. RENE DR aOR ERE ET ad . This is more than a book that every Amer- ican Communist, every worker and intel- lectual, should read. It is a book everyone must read! It is the only book that tells what Hitlerism is, what Hitlerism does, what Hitlerism means to the working class and to culture. It exposes the whole bloody regime of the,Nazis—from the pogroms zations to the burning of the Reichstag. Youn need this book to help you fight fascism! Buy this book for your library. Use it as a prize at all affairs . ORDER FROM DISTRICT LITERATURE DEPARTMENT : At Regular Discount 35 East 12th Street New Yor k City Elizabeth, N. J. Mayor Threatens Workers in Order to Stop Strike ELIZABETH, N. J., Oct. 13.—Mayor4 Williams of Elizabeth issued a state- ment to the local press Thursday or- dering the workers of Diehls Plant, a subsidiary of Singers, to return to work under previous conditions, un- der the threats of using the police, and to swearing in 1,000 deputy po- lice if they fail to obey. The workers have been on strike for almost a month for an increase in wages and against the N. R. A. wage cut. During the strike, Kirk, a local politician and lawyer, also Dud- ley, have made all attempts to sell out the workers. Since they failed, the Mayor and the chief of police are trying to break the strike through the use of terror and force. The Daily Worker fights Fascism. in Phila. on Monday and Portfolio Makers’ Union and the strikers of the F. H. White Co., manufacturers of luggage, Sixth and Filbert Streets, will be held Monday, Oct. 16, 8 p. m. in the auditorium of the Labor Institute, 810 Locust Street, Philadelphia. Labor leaders say that this is the most sweeping injunction ever is- sued from the Philadelphia bench. Officials of the Suit Case, Bag and Portfolio Makers’ Union are deter- mined to fight the action of Judge Davis, 500 Attend Meeting to Protest Murder of. Jobless Leader FORT WORTH, Tex—That there is a growing sympathy in this town towards the Communist Party was evident at the mass trial of T. E. Barlow's murderers. The meeting which was held under the auspices of the Unemployed Council has Fight for the “Daily” with your brought about 500 workers and farm- ing of Communist Party Bazaar in Marx-Lenin Exhibited in Cleveland CLEVELAND.—As a part of a na- tional presentation, Cleveland will have the opportunity of seeing the Marx-Lenin Exhibition being toured from coast to coast in connection with the 50h anniversary of Marx. Open to all workers or groups of work- ers from 3 p. m. till midnight. on Monday, Oct. 16th. With a special lecture by H. M. Wicks at 8 p. m. sharp. Both the exhibit and lecture will take place in the Prospect Audi- torium, 2612 Prospect Ave. * os 8 Schenectady Lectures SCHENECTADY, N. Y.—An in- tense election campaign is in progress here. A series of lectures on four consecutive Sunday evenings has been arranged with M. E. Taft as speaker in conjunction with the cam- paign. They are as follows: Oct. 15, The Crisis; Oct. 22, London Economic Conference; Oct. 29, N.R.A.; Noy. 5, War Danger. |to call a number of mass meetings | thrown into the same jail with Saeny obtained a writ of habeas corpus and | after a hard fight secured Saeny’s| release. Saeny is a member of the! “Laboring Men's Protective Associa- | F tion,” of Fabens, Texas, of which D.| CLEVELAND, O.—A united front |p Creswell is president. The cotton | conference is called by the neighor- pickers were getting only 40 cents al hood council for the purpose of dis-,| + 75 cussing and plan ways and means of | eae pounds, and: siruck, for’ 76 how to organize the coming winter struggles. In order to make this con- . Turtle Creek Meeting Hears. Mother Bloor ference a success we ask all mass or- | Denounce Steel Terror ganizations to send delegates. The} conference will be held Sunday, Oc-| en TURTLE CREEK, Pa.—Three hun- dred workers listened to Mother tober 29 at Carpenters’ Hall, 13501 Kinsman Road at 10 a. m. Anti-War Delegates to Report eS iin a mint He? | Blooz's scathing denunciation of the LAWRENCE, Mass—The delegates! prutal terror against the Ambridge to the Anti-War Congress will make | steel strikers at a meeting on Thurs- their reports this Sunday, 7:30 p. m.| day and adopted a resolution “charg- at Taly Grande’ Hall, Oak St. ing Burgess Caul, Sheriff O’Laughlin | and the District Attorney of Beaver | Needle Trades Workers County”. with responsibility of the BOSTON, Mass—The Needle] murder. Trades Workers Industrial Union of | The resolution which was adopted , Boston will run its Fifth Annuai| States in part Bazear Nov. 9, 10, and 11, at New) Jobless Conference Called in Cleveland “We workers of Turtle Creek pro- mediate oration of civil rights in By I AMTER. Frances Perkins, secretary of labor, | held a conference in Washington on Oct. 6 on child health. Miss Perkins said that in 1930, there were 6,000,000 children in the country suffering from undernourishment. She declared that “conditions ‘are appalling.” Child Malnutrition “A ppalling’ : Perkins Admit | Conference Has Not Done Anything; Working, Class Mothers and Fathers Must Mobilize for Struggle for Immediate Needs went from various parts of the coun- clared that more than one-quarter Ambridge; we demand the immediate release of all workers and organizers | now in the hands of the Fascist mob jof Beaver County. We protest | against the arrest of Jim Egan and } demand his immediate release.” A MONEY MAKER FOR YOUR ORGANIZATION SOVIET FILMS ON 16 MM. FEATURES AND SHORTS May Be Shown in Your Club so that the children may have the! “lamb chop and glass of milk” Miss! Perkins is so worried about. | 2, Pending such enactment, ade- quate unemployment relief to meet the needs of the family, and to be increased as the cost of living rises. Rent, gas, water and electricity free Worker Committee at Elks Rest, 2315 the shop until the bosses signed an! food. dittes, etc., that the bonus marchers Te Chicago, on’ Friday evening, O-t. 20th| of’ individual plants, where the de-| for protesting relief discrimination, Wylie Ave. Refreshments. Admis- a za = ————————————— used to sing on the road and in|. 4 protest mass meeting against the | at the Peoples Auditorium, 2457 West |mends are to be endorsed and com-'| distovered his whereabouts. Bartoline | sion “the. : — = Washington, Send all material to|imiunction issued by Judge Howard | Chicago Ave. mittees elected to present: them. at once got in touch with Michael I Gary, Ind. i | the Artef, 8 East 18th St., New York, A. Davis against the Suit Case, Bag . * * a Kustoff, LL.W. attorney. Kustoff}] OCT. 14: Vetcherinka giyen by the Working Women's Progressive Organization and all Russian Branches at 224 W. 15th Ave. Los Angeles Section Comrade MacHarris, touring for the Daily Worker, with the great Soviet Film “Ten Days That Shock The World” and “Bread” will be shor in the following citles on the dates listed below for the benefit of the Daily Worker: Oct. 16—Alhambra Oct. 17—San Diego Oct. 18—Long Beach Oct. 21—Santa Barbara Oct. 22 to 26 inclusive— Monterey, Santa Cruz and Watsonville Oct. 27—Carmel Cleveland OCT. 14: Dance given by the McBride Bloch n at Probulow Hall, 528f from 7 p.m. to 2 a.m OCT. 14: i i i i test this violence against the Am- cto Gacky actateud to Wnlictian and the destruction of workers’ organi- dollars. Rush all funds to save the |ers to express their protest against| The lectures will be held at 128 S.| International Hall, 42 Wenonah St.,| House Party arranged by ba “Daily.” the murder of Barlow while in jail. ' Church St. and start at 8 p. m, Roxbury. bridge strikers; we demand the -im-| Ree as 50th St. at 8 p.m. Goot OCT. 14: Dance and Entertainment given by Unit 12 at the Finnish Workers Club, 4528 Detroit Ave, at 8 p.m. OCT. 15: House Party arranged by Unit 3-4¢ at the home, of 8. Halper, 3779 E 154th St. at 8 p.m. OCT. 15: Big Affair arranged by Section 1 at Workers Center, 3843 Woodla Ave., 3rd floor, at 8 p.m. Entertain- ment, Sterioptican slides on_ the Workers Pre: Columbus Relief March and V! from the Soviet Union * Toledo Miss Perkins was industrial com-| try to see Mr. Roosevelt in order to] of the children of Pennsylvania are i . - for the unemployed. Food, clothing, or Hall 3 missioner of New York—now she is/ present the situation of the working} suffering fro undernourish: a OCT. 15: the United States Secretary of Labor. a stag ment! shoes and fares for the children of | Write to Testimonial Banquet and Program | WORKINGMEN OF ALL COUNTRIES! You Need Natural, Undoped and Unprocessed Health Foods How does it happen that it has taken Miss Perkins from 1930 to 1933 to learn about the condition, not of the 6,000,000 but of the tens of millions of the children of the working class of this country, who are starving? class children, ‘The answer of the government was slugging by the Washington police. On March 6, a delegation of the Unemployed Coun- cils presented the situation of the unemployed and their children to Mr. Louis Howe, secretary of the presi- Even in the days of “prosperity,” the children and adults of Tennessee and Kentucky were suffering from pel- lagra and flux. Today we must add rickets and tuberculosis. In the des- titute sections of the mining areas of Kentucky and West Virginia 91 the unemployed. Proper school faci- lities. Immediate transfer of the| families in the jungles to decent apartments at government expense. 3. Full government maintenance of the children removed from gain- ful occupation and provision of ex- | Garricom® Film Distributors, Inc. 729 Seventh Avenue Room 810 New York City Also the latest silent and sound films, standard size for the readers and subscribers of the Dally Worker at the Jewish LW. ©. Hall, 410 E. Bancroft St., at 7.30 p.m, Auspices, the Daily Worker Committee of Toledo Section. Ad- mission free, Shadyside, Ohio < to Give You Health and Strength in Your Struggle for’ Power. Why this solicitude for the working] dent. What did the president do?| per cent of the children are hungry. | tension education for school grad- OCT. 14: Come to Our Store or Send for Our Health Guide Free— ~ class child? It is all part of the) Nothing: In May, a delegation of] aq to this the crowding into| uates. i a TRADE UNION Dace 8b ane ues 10% DISCOUNT TO ALL WHO BRING OR SEND THIS AD ALONG! HEALTH FOODS DISTRIBUTORS 4. 09 EAST 84th STREET (Near Lexington Avenue) x New York City, — Phone: LExington 2-6926 N.RA, ballyhoo, which is not, helping the employed workers and does not provide one penny for the unem- ployed. Wherever there is unemployment there is child undernourishment. This is the A B C of the situation. With 17,000,000 unemployed and millions working part time in. the country, the U. S. government knew that the situation of the children was menac- ing. What did the government do— the Trade Union Unity League and of the Unemployed Councils present- ed the situation to Miss Perkins her- self. What did she do? Nothing. Harrowing details of the situation of the children of the working class were presented by experts before Senate and House commissions during the early part of the year—with Miss Perkins testifying before them. What did these commissions do? Nothing. homes—two, three or four families in a like number of rooms without gas, electricity and water. Look at the shacks in the mining and textile towns. Look at the Hoovervilles, Rooseveltburgs, jungles— with men, women and children living like nomads, living on scraps of food while the government destroys 5,000,- 000 hogs, tcns of wheat and millions of bales of cotton, in order to keep 4. Abolition of the reforestration camps, which are for the purpose of making soldiers of the boys of the working class. 5. Utilization of all war and re- forestation camp funds (the latter $250,000,000) for the unemployed. 6. Immediate distribution of food- stuff to the jobless and not its des- truction. 7, Free medical, dental and hos- DIRECTORY:::; CLEANERS, DYERS AND PRESSERS UNION 298 Second Avenue, New York City Algonquin 4-4267 FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 4 West 18th Street, New Nork City Chelsea %-0505 FURNITURE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 818 Broadway, Gramerey, 5: New York City Chicago OCT. 14: Finnish Workers Club, will give» dance and, entertainment at °Im- perial Hall, 2409 No. Halsted Street at 8 p.m. Admission 20 cents. OCT. 15: Concert and Dance. Auspices of M Winchevsky Workers Club, at 4004 W. Roosevelt Road. Excellent pro- gram. Admission 15 cents. OCT. 17: ¥ All Arrangements for either in N. Y. State, wh The government knows of growing | uP prices. ital service for the families of the nyt! ate de ° ‘ Perkins was there tp iiees abe eee juvenile delinquency, of very young) ‘And above all—something known tinemployed. Mae tact ootte aitonh, wow york CRY.” readers will be helt ‘at Posple's AB. % came secretary of labor? girls driven to vice, The government] to the government—the fearful stt-| mj; is the minimum to saf a Gramercy digorium, 2457 W. Chicago Avente. i -knows of the pitifully low relief that] uation of the N both in th x desimpsany: 0 Sareguar s ‘The Volunteers Committee will be : Relief in every state of the country | famiiies are receiving. Sp i. hs hae Th In th@! the welfare of the working class NEE! ‘TRADE elected at this meeting to carry on b has been shamefully low. The starva- . North and the South. The Negroes | family, and through it of the working |} is: w the work for the beneft of the Daily oa | FROM THE tion standard has been still further! Stephen Raushenbush, director of|have suffered from unemployment class child. Without this security, all fest Waker. 4 reduced. In Mississippi the family| industrial relations of Pennsylvania,| more than the white workers. ‘Thetr| tax about, “child health” is purest ‘Argo, Il. SOVIET UNION to the United States and other countries can “be ‘ made through “INTOURIST,” Inc., representatives in the U. 8. A. of the Soviet State Travel Bureau FOR INFORMATION APPLY INTOURIST, inc. 545 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Chicago: 304 N. Michigan Blvd. Boston: 110 Boylston St. has to live on $3.96 a month, in South Carolina on $5.61, in Texas on $6.93. Does this mean living? Xt means slow death. In the north, with rellef around $18 a month—including = on Feb, 2 stated before the sub-2om- mittee of the U. S. Senate that “in Pennsylvania “a@lone, about 400,000 families are getting habituated to a livelihood on a $4 level. This is about one-sixth of the normal income how can a family live? It cannot. Therefore we find starvation on all hands. Children faint from hunger in schools; children pick leavings out of the garbage cans; hordes of chil- dren and adults pick rotten vege- tables from the city dumps. This is known to-Miss Perkins—even from government documents—but the gov- ernment did nothing. Last year a delegation of children necessaty for the ordinary decencies of life.” Mr, Raushenbush added: “In short, there are a great many forces operating to force the country down to a peasant standard of living.” Dr Wynne, of New York, declared that one out of every four children in New York is suffering from mal- nutrition, Workers’ children in Pitts- burgh are losing their finger nails from hunger, Governor Pinchot de- ’ wages have always been lower. The government added to their plight by discriminating against tens of thous- ands of them, giving,them no relief, or less relief, denying them hospital service—treating them like dogs. The Unemployed Councils have raised the demands for: 1, Immediate enactment of the Workers Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill providing insurance to the full amount of the workers’ wages for the full period of disability, whether for unemployment, part- time, sickness, accident, old age or maternity—funds to be provided by the government and the employers— hhypocriscy aimed at keeping the workers from struggling for the life of the working class children. We call upon the working class mothers and fathers to mobilize im- mediately for a bitter struggle for our children. In every neighborhood, the Unemployed Councils must rally the workers for a struggle to provide for the children. Struggles at the WANTED COMRADE to do man. Must be experienced. ¢/o Daily Worker. x in Ger~ Write S, B. ROOM FOR RENT, single, kitchen priv- ileges, telephone. $12.00 per month, 235 2nd Ave., Apt. 15, Inquire all week till 12. ats | LARGE BEAUTIZUL ROOM for two, all| improvements, Chernomorsky, 71. | Street. q ath relief buros, local marches, enlisting the support of all working class or- ganizations.. This soon enough will not only get relief for the .unem- ployed, but show up the hypocriscy of ioe and the Roosevelt covern- men’ APARTMENT to share for one man or couple. New apartment, cheap rent. 201) Allen Street, near Houston, Apt. 5C. WANTED furnished room, girl, private entrance; willing to share apartment; down town, Call Monday afternoon, LEhigh 4-2821. OCT. 14: Dance given by all revolutionary or; ganizations in Argo at 6219 Archer Avenue. Admission 15 cents. af Philadel phia OCT. 14: pe Party and Dance given by the LES at 1331 N. Pranklin Street. Admt sion 10 cents. This affair is for the benefit of the Daily Worker and the LL.D. Convention. OCT. 20th: ; Gala Concert at Turngemeinde Hall Broad and Columbus Ave. Rel Minor, candidate on the C. P. ticket in New York will be the mat speaker. Interesting program. Ad mission 35 cents, immediate All workers of St. Louis and tirely erased by the rising food costs.| the code; a 30-hour week with no/| Setlous menace to the working class. speed-up, and recognition of the| t St. Louis are called upon to aabcae overtime: a minimum scale of 79| Today the police “raid” their head- The I. L. D. stated that the first | guay. : workers’ rights to choose their own rush support for relief and deféhse : arrest waS an attempt -by Glen Cove, union and the abolition of the com- to Food Workers Industrial Union, orth ot acon O UL OF - Omar AFFAIRS