Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
POM Meret ONHOMHOsHan OM APRS HOU me RHO Teexger FRLSS F5h. BHT names & <= : Page Six eee “America’s Only Working Class Daihy Newspaper” FOUNDED 1024 ae hed @unday, ‘ts Comp Co., a ken 18th Street, ew Fork n Telephone: ALgonquim 47055. Cable Address: “Daiwork,” New Fook, B. BK ean: Room 4, Metionsl Beees Balldieg, a Waskington, 6. 0, if Sebscription Rates Washington 14th and G. Manhattan and Brong), fF TE el raonths, $3.00; 1 month, 2 out. Manhattan, Foreign and Ganada: 1% year, $@.60) 6 months, 3 months 96.00. By Carrier 38 cents; monthly, % cents. | Make Them Pay! out that another big shot cepitelist banker Albert H. Wiggin, in Wall Street made millions of urns S° profits by simply making telephone calls, and evaded paying the greater part of his income taxes by creat- | r corporations. | zin is a Rockefeller financial agent The | rs own $500,000,000 of New York real estate. | they get away with most Many of their proper- Like of the tax bur their agent Wiggin ens of the City are tax-exempt This brings to mind the penetrating sentence of the mighty proletarian genins, Karl Marx, founder @f the Communist movement, who said eighty years “go tes “The capitalists are able to shift the burden of the costs of their government om to the backs of the workers.” That's just what is happening in Mew York City. ‘The Untermyer tax agreement with the bankers does just. that The water cover of the Causing an amounting tax increase slipped over under the so-called “Wall Street tax,” remains, | increase in the rents of the workers to over $12,000,000 a year. The “Wall Street taxes” have been docked ‘The Untermyer tax agreement guerantess the | abolition of the five cent fare. Tt is a fact that the Wall Street banks, the rich “eal estate owners of New York City, pay only the slightest proportion of the City’s taxes. It is the workers who pay the $150,000,000 that goes te the bankers every year im Interest and loan pay- tment This can be stopped. The rich can be made to y the cost of thetr own City government. bert Minor, the Communist cendidate, pro- poses that a 10 per cent capttal levy be clamped down om the Wall Street banks. Let the City take 10 per cent of all fortunes over $1,000,000, says Minor. Let all large troomes feel the axe of heavy sharp tices? Minor alone of all the candidates would teer ep the Untermyer tax Agreement. He would make % impossible for the rich to shift the tax burden on the workers and small home owne leavy tawes for the rich! Cenoel all taxes for the workers and small home owners! Abolish the Untermger tax agreement! murist! Vote Com- fa | The Swope-Johnson Plan ARD SWOPE, General Electric head, spokesman for the House of Morgan, powerful figure behind G the Hoover regime, and now through General John- | son closely linked with the Roosevelt administration, Propeses a new set-up for the N. R. A | General Johnson, lackey of Bernard Baruch, | Wall Street manipulator, contact man for Roosevelt with tt might banking institutions, embraces Swope’s plan as his own, and adds: ‘We will, of course, forbid strikes and lockouts. j The proposed change, which openly gives full | control of the in the U. 5S. N. R. A. to the most powerful trusts comes at a period of mass distilusion- ment with Roosevelt's program. It is the answer of | the Roos regime to the deep-going, seething, widespread dissatisfaction expressed by the toiling masses through strikes and farm struggles. It is the @oncrete steps to meet the criticism of the bourgeoisie themselves, especially against the demagogy that was Pert and parcel of the N. R. A. It is designed to Strengthen the attacks of the big bosses against the worker: elt Basically, the new move reflects two tenden- . eles: They are, (1) The etimination of those features of government control over industry, objectionable to the biggest trusts; (2) An in- erease in the control of the government by the biggest monopoly capitaliste—the Wall Street bankers. ‘Through the Swope-Johnson plan, the various Yndustries set up thetr own dictators, centralize their Power through a government Chamber of Commerce, “and run the N. R. A. to their own choosing in every Wetail. There is thereby formed a new extra-gov- fermment apparatus, subordinating the Roosevelt Yegime more directly to the Wall Street banks, and iving greater flexibility and driving power in the Fascist attacks against the workers. The steel trust, the texttle trust, the metal trust, “the aluminium trust, the war industries, the bank- ers become the all-powerful dictators in determining the action to be taken under the W. R. A. . * . E pretext thal the government is a sort of super- body, standing over and above society, “tmpartially” “eaning between the classes, is largely dispensed with. ‘There is sel up an administrative apparatus that be- “eomes quite openly a dictatorship of the bankers. _ ‘The New York Merald ‘Tribune reports that some” ef Roosevelt’s own close advisers term the whole scheme “Business Fascism.” . ‘The ballyhoo about Section 7-a of the N. R. A, “Supposedly granting the workers the right te organize, and the right to bargain collectively, is stamped out -and in its place new fascist relations are to be set up for labor. The chief seab corporations would be- “come the interpreters of the labor clause and its “executors. Those who directed the shooting of steel Workers and coal miners would openly direct the Rovernment forces against labo: throughout the United States |. This new proposal is put forward as a “plan,” 6 “Swope's Plan,” with the endorsement however of General Hugh L. Johnson, which indicates clearly ‘het it is an administration measure. Actually, though, “with the exception of those phases of the proposal ‘hich are purely structural, that Js those concerned _ With the character of the N. R. A. apparatus and its “Felations to the bosses’ associations, these changes being put into effect already. The veice of the bankers fs becoming daily more “tevisive in the N. R. A. administration, less considera- ‘tion is given to labor, the “no strike” policy is being applied, ruthless terror to smash the workers’ re- sistance is the rule in all strike areas, nai a pone with this sharpening in the administration ef DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, the N. R. A. comes the placing of the head of the chief war industry, Pierre S. du Pont of the du Pont de Nemours Company, on the Administrative Board of the N. R. A., making it more openly a tremendous apparatus for war preparations. OW we can see the role of the Socialists and the A. F. of L. leaders in preparing the road for this fascist move. The Socialists appealed to the workers te support the N. R. A. as a step in their interests, as a “revolution” that would lead peacefully to Soci- alism. ‘The Socialists declared the N. R. A. was a distinct advance for labor, and that instead of fight- ing against it the workers should struggle for its success. ‘The A. F. of L. officiaidom, particularly Green, Lewis & Co. stated the N. R. A. was the “greatest advance ever made by American labor.” Green declared it set up a partnership of capital and labor, with the government acting as “impartial” mediator. Yet from the very beginning, behind the shell of the N. R. A., behind the volley of phrases and promises, the Roosevelt regime was paving the way for the present step, the more open dictatorship of the bank- ers against the workers. HETHER this plan is adopted in its present form, or is modified, no matter what guise the Roose- velt regime gives the change in the N. R. A. adminis- tration, its growing fascist content will remain in- tact. The Roosevelt regime moves steadily toward fascism. This new move is s logical step in the brutal attacks against strikes and against all workers’ rights. The workers are now faced with a centralization of the boss attacks against every vestige of their right to organize and strike. The Roosevelt regime, now entering on a program of more rapid inflation, smashing still further the present starvation conditions of the American work~- ers and farmers, finds it necessary to increase and centralize its drive against the workers. The main aim of the Roosevelt regime now is to root out the resistance of the toiling masses to the new crushing burdens it intends to impose in order to propel capi- talism out of its crisis. ‘The whole working class, the unemployed, the poor and middle farmers, the petty-bourgeoisie, must be aroused to the sharpest resistance to tHis latest move of the imperialists. Against this danger which threatens every worker, the broadest united front must be built up. Fore- casting the present step of the Roosevelt regime, the Cleveland United Front Trade Union Conference held last August laid down the basis for a united front of all workers to resist the N. R. A. attack. This united front becomes a thousand-fold more burning now for the entire workingclass. The smallest strike now becomes of major political impartance, behind which the whole force, energy and determina- tion of the workers must be rallied. oe . | ieee strike now becomes a struggle for mainten- ance of the workers’ rights to organize and strike, amd every defeat a dangerous defeat for the workers. With the fascist agents of this bankers’ dictator- ship confrolling the A. F. of L., we must with the greatest energy and persistence penetrate the ranks of the A. F. of L. unions. The time is definitely here when our activities in the ranks of the A. F. of L. must lead to the rapid organization of opposition groups, to rally the rank and file for this life-and- death struggle against the growing fascist trends and against the fascist lieutenants in their own ranks. We must build the revolutionary trade unions particularly in steel, marine, auto and textile, where, through struggles and determined leadership, they have rooted themselves amorig the masses. It is crystal clear now that the fascist attacks, the murderous assaults on the workers, the move to smash their organizational independence and their struggles, will Increase, and that this attack will be directed mainly against the vanguard of the working- class, the Communist Party. The Communist Party, which. from the very beginning exposed the real purposes of the N. R. A., correctly and accurately traced its course and led the most militant struggles against it, is the most stalwart fighter against the fascist trends of the Roosevelt, regime. The best guarantee that the fight against the latest fascist steps of the Roosevelt dictatorship will be strengthened, increased and lead the workers suc- cessfully against it, is the rapid building of the Com- munist Party, rooting it deeply in the basic industries and building it into a mass revolutionary party of the American proletariat. Brisbane and Boudoirs WATCHDOG barks when another éries to use the stable of his master. Maybe that explains why Arthur Brisbane, mil- Monaire journalist of the Hearst press, lifted his fat Uttle hands in horror yesterday when the capitalist press reported that Litvinov was coming over in the Toyal sutte of the Berengaria. The sitken cushions and marble bath of that bourgeois paradise belong to Marion Davies, or some- body like that, implied the wrathful Mr. Brisbane in his column, So yesterday when the eapitalist press reported that Litvinov was lodged in that holy bourgeois luxury, Brisbane crowed. “Look,” he sald, “this representative of the Workers Soviet Republic ts just as rotten es we a . . TTVINOV, the Soviet emvcy soming to America, peered furtively into the luxurious royal suite of the Berengarie, % had been reserved for him by the officials of the company. That was » huge compliment, they thought. Usually, only big American bankers travelled im it in the company of expensive courtesans. Sometimes the wife of a leading American diplomat spent a blissful week im it in the company of a ‘ friend.” Litvinov, with the officials in back of him beam- ing proudly, sniffed the air of the royal imperial suite. Faintly, but unmistakably, he smelled the familiar smell of the big American bourgoiste and the mistresses emanating from the silken cushions of that place. It isn’t that he was timid before the royal suite. Litvinov belongs to a Party that has already wrenched one-sixth of the world away from the capitalists, in- cluding the most barbarically luxurious C2arist suites in the world. It was simply that his good proletarian nose has become too sensitive to the smells of the bourgeoiste and their mistresses. So he turned down the royal suite and betook himself to a small private cabin where he could work without scenting the effluvia of American bankers and their ladies. . §° EXCEPT for the fact that they deliberately got all the facts wrong, the capitalist papers were right about the boudoir incident on the Berengaria. And Mr. Brisbane’s master, Hearst, can go ahead with his arrangements for Ys next trip in the Beren- garia boudoirs without any fear of meeting the gaze oan proletarian representative of the Workers Re- 6, j has announced that the government | | graft and expenses of the anti-Com- i FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 38, 1933 ‘Cuban Government Prepares Blood-Bath for Nov. 7 reas Red Army| Routs Foes, Takes: City and Munitions’ White Army:Flees in Disorder; “Nanking | Plans New Taxes 2 HANKOW, Nov. .2,—The Chinese Red armies have taken the city of Wan, in Szechwan Province, on the Yang-Tse River, completely routing | the Szechwan army of Chiang Kai- | Shek | The anti-Communist army has fled | in complete confusion, ab: arms and large quantit tions and supplies to the ‘Red J my, which struck from north Szechwan. Dr. H. H. Kung, the new minister of the Nanking government, | must find new ways of taxing the| Chinese masses in order to pay the munist campaign. The Peiping| schools have not received their | THE JOHNSON-S monthly fund from Nanking. Dollfuss Turning To | Open Anti-Semitism Official Newspaper Calls for Pogroms VIENNA, Nov. 2—The active but “gnofficial” anti-Semitic policy of the Dollfuss government took on an open form yesterday with the pub- lication of @ sharply anti-Semitic ed- itorial in the semi-official “Reichs- post.” Anti-Semitism is “perfectly recon- cilable with the warmest Austrian | patriotism,” says the editorial, which insists that “not all anti-Semites are | Nazis.” It concludes with an open incitement to pogroms with the state- ment that “it may be dififcult always to practice moderation.” | This editorial, in “a semi-govern- ment organ, evidently forecasts an active anti-Jewish policy by the Doll- fuss sore uae Speaks in Harlem (Photo by Irving Lerner, Workers Fitm and Photo Leagne). HENRI BARSUSSE | Henri Barbusse,. noted French author and anti-war fighter, speaks tonight in Harlem under the auspices of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights, in Dun- bar Palace, Lenox Ave, and 139th St. His last pais appearance in New York will be. at a farewell meeting in St.~Nieholas Arena Nov. 7, under the auspices of the New York Committee to Aid Vie- tims of German Fascism and the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s Leagne. This meeting will take the form of & protest against the Reichstag fire frame-up, and against Hitlerism in Germany andthe United. States. MINOR FOR MAYOR WOPE PLAN —By Burch The original of the cartoon above will be given by Burck to the one who sends in tribution by Saturday in the Daily $40,000. The contribution should be ei ‘British Suton Show Radicalizing Of Working Class) Labor Party’s Radical Phrases Win Many New Seats LONDON, Noy. 2.—Eyidence that the workers of Great Britain are looking for radical solutions to their problems is shown by large gains for Labor Party candidates in yesterday's municipal elections in England and Wales. While the Labor Party carries out a reactionary policy, its leaders have been using increasing) radica. phrases, and the elections reveal that the workers. who have not yet ac- cepted revolutionary leadership are responding to the radical demagogy of the Labor Party in their effort to ut of the crisis. nual elections of one-third of the membership of the municipal coun- cils. Figures from more than 100 of the most important towns show the following results: Labor Party gains, 180 seats, losses, 7; Conservatives, gait losses, 112; Liberals, gains, 5, losse: ; Indepen- dents, gains, 10, losses, 52. Nazis Release, Expel | Writer Who Revealed W ar Preparations BERLIN, Nov. 2.—Noe] Panter, Mu- nich correspondent of the London “Daily Telegraph,” arrested last week on a charge of “espionage and treas- on,” will be released and expelled from-Germany, it was announced to- day, Following a sharp protest from the British government, the prosecuting attorney announced that he lacked evidence for the charges, and would not prosecute, Panter's arrest, for having sent out a story describing German military Preparations, reveals the lengths to which the Nazi government will go in affronting oth: powew in order to cover un “is preparations for war. elections were the an-| the largest con- Worker drive for partments. Wednesday's credit in the contest between the various feature de- cartoon, “The Eagles, They Fly High—”, went to Jaines Joseph Muliarky, who sent $6. ered to Burck’s oes makes the total to date of $46.11. Ask Tokens for British Use Plane NEW YORK- organizations sympathetic to the rev- olutionary Cuban masses to send not only greetings but also tokens, such as @ banner, or charter of honorary membership, with the American dele- gation which leaves Noy. 9, was made terday by the Anti-Im- perialist Leag’ Carleton Beals, Waldo Frank, Man- uel M 1, Manuel Gomez and Rob- eri Dunn will speak in a sym- posiun; on “Cuba Revolts” at the New School for Social Research, 66 W. 12th St., at 8:30 p.m. this evening, to raise funds to pay the expenses of a de union delegation. A Cuban Dance will be held Sat- night at the Anti-Imperialist 3 E. 10th St., sponsored by Youth Committee of the Trade Union Unity League, to help finance the sending of Joe Thomas, youth member of the trade union delega- tion, The Anti-[mperialist League asked all organizations to send contribu- tions to cover the expenses of the delegation, and to take part in the Red Sunday canvass, next Sunday, for signatures to a petition to Presi- dent Roosevelt, calling for hands off Cuba and nullification of the Platt amendment. France Has Deadly New Gas; It Kills Despite Gas Mask PARIS, Noy. 2—A new poison gas against which masks ate of no ayail has been discovered by two profes- sors of the Chemical Institute at Clermont-Ferrand, it was announced today. This gas, so deadly that it attacks even the dry skin, and killed a large dog within a few hours, is so easily to make that existing chemical plants could manufacture it in unlimited member of the) Deleg ates to! To Break Up Arab Bring to Cuba March Of Protest An invitation to | Palestine Arabs Strike On Date Of Balfour Declaration JERUSALEM, Nov. 2. Arabs throughout Palestine demonstrated on this day in a nation-wide general strike on the sixth anniversary of the Balfour declaration. The censorship which. the British authorities have established through- out the country covers up what hap- pened at the demonstration in other cities. Here in Jerusalem the British used a military airplane, flying low, to disperse thousands of Arabs on their way to Tulkarem, to take part {in a demonstration. The Balfour declaration, made six | years ago today, was a step in Brit- ain’s seizure of Palestine as a semi- colony and military base. In this declaration, Balfour made the swing- ing promise that Palestine would become a “national home for the Jewish people.” Arrested As Another BERLIN, N. J., Noy. 2.—It may be a little bit difficult to understand; but when Ralph Baccellieri, township emergency relief director, accused Nicholas Capone of striking him in the face, poltce arrested Edward Winter, 21, on charges of disorderly conduct. Baccelieri told police he refused last night to give a food order to a girl who had been sent by her moth- er, Mrs. Rose Winter, telling her the mother would have to apply in per- son. The girl returned with her mother and brother, Edward. It was then that the latter was arrested. NAZIS 1 BAR “LAZY BONES” LONDON, Nov. courages idleness” and does not con- form to Nazi ideals, publication of the American popular song, “Lazy Bones,” was Verboten by German quantities within eight days. authorities today. Lenin on the Role of a Communist Newspaper Editor's Note. The foundations | of Bolshevik journalism were laid fm the period when Lenin was writing the article which follows, published first in 1902. The need and the role of a national political newspaper of the revolutionary movement have not changed since Lenin first discussed them, in the Period when the Bolshevik Party was first being forged in the strug~ gle against Tsarism, At this moment, when the fu- ture of America’s Lemmist aesly newspaper in the English language Is entirely dependent on a supreme effort of all its supporters to wipe ont its $40,000 deficit, these words of Lenin take on a special Senin- cance. The extract which follows is taken from “The Iskra Period,” Vol. TV, Book 1, of the Collected Works of Lenin. (International Press.) Pies Seas) OUR opinion, the starting point of all activities, the first practical step to take towards creating the or- ganization we desire, the factor which will enable us constantly to develop, broaden and deepen that organization, is to establish a na- tional political newspaper. A paper is what. we need above all; without it we cainot systematically carry on that extensive and theo- retically sound propaganda and aqi- tation which is. the principal and constant duty of the social-democrats in general, and. the essential task of the present moment in particular, "Bolshevik Leader’s ] Plan for a National Political? Newspaper, Exposing the Class Enemy and Organizing the Struggle plementing individual agitation in the form of personal influence, lo- cal leaflets, pamphlets, etc., by a general and regularly conducted agi- tation, such #s can be carried on only with the assistance of a ‘per- jodical press. It would be hardly an exaggeration to say that the fre- quency and regularity of the publi- cation (and distribution) of the paper would serve as an exact measure of the extent to which that primary and most essential branch of our militant activities has been firmly established, Must Be Political Organ Finally, it is a political paper we need. Without a political organ, a political movement deserving that name is impossible in modern Eu- rope. Unless we have such a paper, we shall be absolutely unable to ful- fill our task, namely, to concenttate all the elements of political unrest and discontent, and with them en- rich the revolutionary movement of the proletariat. The first steps we have already accomplished. We have aroused in the working class a pas- sion for “economic,” factory, expo- sure, We have now to take the sec- ond step: To arouse every section of the population that is at all en- lightened a passion for political ex- posure. We must not allow ourselves to be discouraged by the fact that when interest in politics and in questions of Socialism has been aroused among wide.sections of the Population. Never before has the need been so strongly. felt for sup- the voice of political exposure is still feeble, rare and timid. This is not because of a general submission to political despotism, but because those who are able and ready to expose have no tribune from which to speak, because there is no audience to listen eagerly to and approve of what the orators say, and because the latter can nowhere perceive among the people forces to whom it would be worth while directing their complaint against the “omnipotent” Russian government. But a change is now taking place, and a very rapid one. Such a force now exists—the revolutionary proletariat. It has demonstrated its readiness, not merely to listen to and to support an appeal for‘a political struggle, but to fight boldly in that struggle. We are now in a position to set up a tribune for the national exposure of the tsarist government, and it is our duty to do so. That tribune must be a social-democratic paper. Must Be Organizer But the role of a peper is not con- fined solely to the spreading of ideas, to political education, and to pro- curing political allies. A paper is not merely a collective propagandist and collective agitator, it is also a collective organizer. In that respect, it can be compared to the scaffold- ing erected around a building in construction; it marks the contours of the structure, and facilitates com- munication between the builders, permitting them to distribute the work and to view the common results achieved by their organized labor. With the aid of, and around, a paper, there will gers! develop an organization that be concerned, Bot only wit loa! activities, but allo with regular, general work; it will teach its members carefully to watch | Political events, to estimate their im- portance and their influence on the j various sections of the population, and to devise suitable methods to influence these events through the | revolutionary party. This stage of military prepared- ness can be reached only by the constant activity of a regular army, Tf we. unite our forces for the con- duct of a common paper, that work will prepare and bring forward, not | only the most competent pzcp2gan- dists, but also the mos) -d¥ed ov- ganizers and the most talmited po- | litical party leaders, who w eis ab the right moment when to issue the call to battle. and will be capable of leading that battle. In conclusion, we desire to say a few words in order to avoid possible misunderstandings. We have spoken all the time about systematic and methodical preparation, but we had no desire in the least to suggest that the/autocracy may fall only as a re- sult of a properly prepared siege or organized attack. Such a view would be stupid and doctrinaire. On the contrary, it is quite possible, and his- torically far more probable, that the autocracy will fall under the pres- sure of one of those spontaneous out- bursts of ttareeka Political com- plications which constantly threaten jit from all sides, But no politics) party, if it desires to avoid adven- turist tactics, can base its activities on expectations of such outbursts and complications. We must proceed | along our road, and steadily carry, out our systematic work, and the less we count on the beeping the less likely we are to be taken An sur- prise by any “historical tury Strikes Food Director | 1.—Because it “en-} ‘Gran Government \f Frantic As Fight | For Power Nears Party. Warns Workers As Civil War , Approaches ai (Spetial to the Daily Worker) HAVANA, Nov. 2.—Events in Cub are rapidly deevloping to a cris which may reach its climax on Nov. 7, when the workers of the island celebrate the 16th anniversary of the 4 Bolshevik. revolution. The Grau San Martin government | has announced that it will use all * its forees to smash the November 7 demonstration, and the police chief of Havana has issued an appeal to the Red Cross to have all its facil- ities reddy for an “emergency” on that day. Five hundreds trade union dele- gates to. a conferente called by the National Confederation of Labor un- animously decided to call a complete stoppage of all work on that day, and to make it a monster demon- stration a Government Desperate The%government, fast losing its last support if te face of its failure to halt the revolutionary upsurge, de- spite its*terroristic measures, is pre- pared to.make its supreme bid for support ‘by the reactionary forces by makingNovember 7 a test of its ability to suppress the masses by vio- lence, if it lasts until then. Rumors are rife that the A.B.C, terrorist cap- italist-landiord party will take ad- vantage of November 7 to make an attempt to seize power. The government is frantically con- tinuing.its campaign of arrests. More than 500 Havana workers are in jail, i the leaders of the port workefs and the land transport work- ors. Port. Workers Fight Deportations The Port Workers’ Union has is- sued a manifesto declaring that. it will not. allow any ship to stir which carries“Any deported worker. Jt is also sending an appeal to the sections | of the International of Sea and Har- bor Workers to refuse to work any ship used to transport deported workers from Cuba. This affects ships of the Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, the Ward Line, the United Fruit Line, the North Ger- man Lloyd, the Cia. Transatiantice, the British Royal Mail, and the United States Lines. The-rapid approach of @ state of civil war is shown by the wholesale arrest and disarmament of hundreds of soldiers in Oriente Province, and the widespread arrests of “Commu- nist” soldiers throughout the island. - Communist Party Statement With the rapid approach of s critical situation in which the ques- tion of power will have to be decided, the Central Committee of the Com- munist Party of Cube has statement in which it explains present situation, |some seem to believe, but thet the Party will call on the masses to act when the situation is ready. In the meantime the workers are called on to intensify their struggles and pre- pare for a coming decisive period. They Fight to Help Our Daily Worker Battle On NEW -YORK.—Here are a few of the many workers who are giving their time and energy to putting the $40,000 Drive over the top in order to save the Daily Worker. Fotnitcers| aloe 33% Harn, oo eee is the organizer of the Daily Worker Volunteers, who in the period of six weeks collected 3336, “We're extend: ing our activities into trade unions, party units, fra- ternal and mass organizations,” he states. “We will not relax until the Drive is a Harry: Lichtenstein complete success.” “Section 2 Raises $500 Speaking for Section 2, Communist Party, New York City, John Greg- ory octates, “We have raised $500 already, We chal- ‘lenge Section 1 ‘beat our record. We will re raising funds thru™ effairs, collection lists, and by visit , 4 vations in our i i territory.” How about Bod chal lenge, John Gregory tion 1? Garment Worker Does His Bit Abraham Brody, a member of the Executive Committee of Local 9, In- ternational. Ladies Garment Workers Union, collected more than $10, even before he se- cured collection lists. “It's easier than ever before to collect money from workers -for the Daily Work- er,” he say, “bes cause our paper is mueh better, he workers are illing to give if conditions ore hard. I pare P licipate in all camp to help the Daily Worker, our paper, to continue pub- -= ne St on Pras us to freedom | | | | * eeommeot ee