The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 4, 1933, Page 3

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Starving Miller Family Just; ‘Another Case’ to Relief Buro This is the second instaliment exposure of the Home Relief Bureau “relief.” of Elizabeth Potamkin’s first-hand In her first article she told of the trickery, the pettiest deceits, used by the bureau to force workers off the rolls, . e La Employe of N.Y. Times} Describes Recent Visit; F Soviet Workers’ Invite vVAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1933 U. S. Printer, 71, Stirred by Power of Soviet Workers Printer Rank-and-File | Page Three Nat'l Labor Board Announces N.Y Shoe Strike Decision Fi By SE SE ax WALL STREET'S CAPITOL YMOUR WALDMAN (Washington Bureau.) JNDERSTAND that the ‘captive’ miners will not accept the l a 2 | President’s agree vith the mine owners and the officiale santa! : nounced its decision last night on th resident's agreement Wi eee ots pt gre i us Nice A ag Solon SPAC HBS and a to) 2. SS. BR, | Delegation New York shoe strike. Declaring that; dom of the United Mine Workers of America,” one of a group By ELIZABETH POTAMKIN | stu eee ey ee we he om eciiass “the difference between the as jer ranink cede enatoe Wanner, liberal chathioan LOUIS MILLER, age 11, is shining Sa dace cpio cohalt deere nh an By SENDER GARLI | where, if a man gets disgusted with | Ployers and strikers are too gst wits ee shoes on wet cold pavements. This will be another source of in- come on Home Reilef records. His brother and sister are ill and un- a special case, he keeps analyz- ing the family history—it is his opinion that the rash on the daugh- ter’s face is probably due to v ereal heritage. To him, a m NEW YORK.—A 71-year, old printer who, during the course of a lifetime, has visited | the routine of things, he can go, there and take a rest for a day or $0. | | | i | “The trade union leaders in Rus- | ; Strike terminated ; Provides for an election to be seated to justify further attempts at mediation,” the Board orders the immediately ans, Johnsons and DuPonts may be forced to retreat—to await a bete ter cpportu spring forward = greater distance. uch significant employed. Hi , uided student falling for the bun bees aie sia get very little pay. You can't} PY the workers under its su Jevents as the adament refusal of the Tothies icdistenetl ben leaned Fost me ue baReee rg a eye alse in| (Siler the eh of the officials of cand oak AEM od ipa rte leas | ee sees zB Pak Bie this i very interesting case. I|the hope of finding one in | ‘Big Six’ with the wages of the ; 7. *) agre i E eetiielarrenitbeyae | be Rae A aap insist that the family must be Zed. | which “the worker is not an. under: j trade union leaders in the Soviet| With the employers | st»21 and coal lord soe Fa fe avi ct par apa ey ae nothing to eat. There is a possibility the rash is dog,” recently returned from the So- } Union, The terms of the National Labor|-¢f america. nition. But imran eee > Mrs. Miller has caused by eating swill. But then|yiet Union with the announcement | “The worker over there has control | Board’s -order to call off the strike) ‘But the worke ate raat hierare pia cea been feeding her I’m not a college graduate nor al that “life in Russia is much happier of everything. It 1s to his advantage | clude the following main points:| representatives a ea a f A ‘ sychia Mr. ke Fs The workers are to return to their | o¢ vee the open and brazen absorption of the j family with gar- student of psychiatry. Mr. Le-}than it is in any other place I have to keep ‘his machine in order, to ‘ti 9 a he entire government mechanism by the b 1 a vine’s intention is to go more thor-| heen,” see that everything goes right, that| Jobs immediately. Although rein-| ment,” replied : ruling clique dominated by 23 Wall eke E Paes e oughly into the case. His stuffi- toes nea inca there is no waste. Another thing,| Statement is promised without dis-| ator Wagner. : : from markets on ness and learning are suffocating.| ,,J008 A. Dean, @ printer for more he elects to the head positions above | Crimination, clauses are included | S. Waldman | Street. : Monroe St. When I wonder if the Millers ever ‘will | than ® half-century, is now employ him the men who can direct these | Wich provide that no worker “con- | President's |. This winter will bring militant la I visit the house, the sister hides be fed? * * in the proof-room of The New York; Born in Norfolk, Va.; in 1862 “Times. while the Civil War was raging— things. “The unions here in America are! victed of the commission or violence | , or the destruction of property” shall | ot be reinstated. There is also a clause | pact was none Lewis, against | bor'’s answer. her head in py. ; OCIAL workers: Do you Still be- | et eeddda tA Me Asbo Bein veodteal ce fia’ Sane ate: ; the miners : shame. She does Eliz: Potamkin lieve that charity under cap {reo Genes he was 18, Revell yess Corrupt politics have been brought | Providing exemptions to certain e,” Marguerite | I ress 1e Ss not let me see her. Yet I must,| ism can cure any of our ills? W jlater he began working for the New into “our unions tO suo bn cextent tert ee iy a panda to} u er inter- | i pi in order to put on my history sheet:|/do you think is the future possi-| Orieans “Times-Picayune” and re- that it has become a profitable busi- ce Aer petal He Alpes 1 : Ri f St ik U t ‘Saw all working members of fam-| bility of children under de mained there for almost 30 years. ness for a man to become a profes- ie PD) | Well, we'll see what happens,” the | e] use ig e vit] Vy ily, conditions unchanged.” How often and how true this statement has been. Mrs. Miller is feeding Louis a _ withered lettuce leat gleaned from the garbage can. I gagged when I saw this sick child cies, who stand for days in front of Home Relief Bures ritable mothers’ monotonously: is thi investigator?” What hope is there for the child who sits in darkness, us at their He has held a paid-up union’ card in the International Typographical Union for 51 years, ‘ Dean has returned to New York bearing with him an invitation from the head of the Soviet Print- sional labor man. He makes the best of it while the going’s good. The situation is entirely different in Rus- sia.” About Inventions I asked Dean about the teletype January 2, 1934 to select their repre- | ge, sentatives, are to allow workers on the payrolls of the companies be- fore the strike as well as those at | work on January 2 to participate. Union contracts made during the complacently concluded * ND what happened—on the next day—was that Myron Taylor, |chairman of the board of directors of the United States Steel Corpora- | ito Halt Low Wages NEW YORK.—In the first batsle of the dressmakers to maintain try to eat it. I run back to the! lights shut off? | > ” strike which did not result in a re-| ove Te ager Home’ Relief Office, This ta an| “Fouryear-old Marie hex | otra eg nny, See ee ee Oe rrememang (0| turn of the majority of the workers| fi" ine most Powerful band of Sil their wages and prevent s wage emergency case to me. I must have] friends if they have elec at |; auid-file: workers of the ‘Zypogra: JOHN A. DEAN me jivelibood. are held invalid. Only the Boot and| gerors of American labor, the com-| */@Shing campaign by the dress the electricity opened. I must feed this family. But there is a hitch. On the social service exchange slip —which acts as clearing house for social service agencies—relief must never be duplicated—there is an item saying that the Miller family is under care of Jewish Board of Guardians. Therefore we cannot ne in to feed this starving fam- ily. If the Miller family is an active case, I cannot feed them, but I know that they are starving. Con- ditions in the home did not at all prove that the family was getting any kind of relief. I make this my own particular concern. TI leave the Bureau office and phone the Jewish Board of Custodians. “Yes, the Miller family is under our care at present.” “But,” I said, “they are starving.’ “What are you do- ing for them?” A College Investigator They agreed to send one of their investigators. Mr. Levine comes, their house. What hope is there for children who, because their par- ents do not ungerstand to organize their rage against their oppressors beat their children over the head because they ask for bread? Children under burden of Home Relief are becoming un- healthily sensitive. Sensitive be- ings do not survive in a society where only thugs and gangsters find fertile fields to grow fat in. Psychologists of Capitalism Our psychologists will tell us later that these children have pe- culiar neurosis. There will be more documents and theories advanced infinitum. What. bility is there for the future of our com- s munities if we give our energ to preserve our present state? So- cial workers are prone to look-up- on themselves as public servants. Yet how arrogant and mean I have seen them act to those poor in- dividuals who are to be militant and wrathful in their demands for and I go again to Millers. I would like to see them fed. But Mr, Le- what belongs to them by every hu- man right. MAXIM LITVINOV, FIGHTER FOR PEACE, TS OLD, STAUNCH BOLSHEVIK (Continued from Page 1) pall-fledged member o1 the. Bolshe- viks. The next year, 1903, he was en- trusted by Lenin with responsible organizational work and he returned Hlegally to Russia to carry out the orders of the Central Committee of that their long experience can sub- e him. He shocked the capitalist world in 1927 and in 1932 with his proposal at Geneva for complete disarma- ment. This proposal so confused the as- sembled European statesmen that phical Union of New York (“Big Six”) to send a delegation to visit the U. S. S. R. “T was told by him that if we would send a delegation—elected at an open meeting to represent the Typographical Union of New York— they would be taken care of when they arrived in Russia, no matter how big the delegation was. oft course, they would have to pay their own passage across, but their ex- penses while in Russia would be taken care of by the Soviet printing unions.” Has Seen Many Countries Before the crisis (called the “de- pression” by the capitalist and lib- eral press) Dean worked eight months out of every year and was able to save .enough to travel. “I have been almost around the worki,” Dean veports. “I first started travel- ing to Europe just before the «war broke out; I was in Germany early in 1914. Besides Germany I haye also visited France, Italy, Austria, Rumania, Sweden, Finland, Norway. Greece, Switzerland, Holland, Den- mark, Belgium and England.” * * * EAN says that he went to the Soviet Union “to find out what was doing there.” Previously, he says, he “couldn't make head or tail of what I read about Russia, be- cause in some books and magazines they said it was like a paradise, and others said it was a, hell.” “I stayed in Russia only 17 days, but in that time I ‘vas able to get quite a little of information and im- pressions, particularly about “the printing business and the life of the printers and other workers. I spent all my time in Moscow and Lenin- more than any other. That cer- tainly brings contentment and @lso wipes out crime. * * “Forced labor? If talks about slavery in the Soviet Union,” Dean continued, “I should say he doesn't know what he is talking about. They have absolutely no Slavery there. Everybody works, both men and women. There is no reason for enslavement there. There is no slavery over there because the people own everything themselves. They all belong to trade unions, and as @ member of a trade union, the worker gets all the benefits. If there were unemployment there, work would be divided and ‘hours of work cut down, , Social Insurance @ Fact “They have a real system of social insurance. It is a fact, and it is working out there. There is no un- employment now so you really can’t speak of unemployment insurance. The workers there receive a vaca- tion of two weeks with pay. In heavier industries—mining, etc.— they receive four weeks with pay. They also have Day Rest Homes, * NOTHING LIKE THIS IN THE U.S. S. R. George L. Berry (President of the Printing Pressmen’s Union and Roosevelt appointee on N.R.A. La- bor Board.—S. G.) is a shining example of corruption... At last ac- counts his salary was $7,500 yearly. His hotel expenses run to about $65 per week and are usually drawn “On the question of the teletype machine and other technical ad- vancement,” Dean replied, “this would not result in people being thrown out on the streets in Russia. There the man is the master of the machine and not the machine the master of the man. The idea over there is that they should take ad- vantage of all these mechanical ap- workers. If there are machines that replace workers, they will simply have their hours reduced.” Dean told of a visit to a factory near Moscow employing 6,000 work- ers. “It was a cotton factory, they took the raw cotton and turned it out until it 1s ready to be placed on the shelves. I saw the 6,000 people working and they seemed to be very happy,—no rushing, nobody could drive anybody. Everything was done in a spirit of brotherhood. They each had their own responsibility and they are in complete control of this. The foreman cannot fire anyone. He can present a complaint against a man to the Union Council that meets every three weeks. They take up the subject of this man and make him realize that he has certain duties to others as a human being. This is the spirit that permeates every- thing over there. In capitalist coun- tries everybody is working for him- self. “The young workers in Soviet Rus- sie are encouraged always to do things a little more advanced than before, no matter what kind of work he is doing. To help in that direc- tion, when a boy or girl becomes of college age the government pays them a salary, which doesn’t amount to pliances that reduce the number of where Shoe Union made such contracts. Wages are ordered to be increased by 10 per cent over the wages paid before the strike on the basis of 48 hours of work. Working hours are | to be reduced to 40 hours. The Na-| tional Labor Board retains the right | to remake final settlement of any dispute in connection with the deci- sion. As we go to press, the Executive Board of the Shoe and Leather Work- ers’ Union is discussing the decision and its recommendations are to be brought before the membership for final action. Coastwise Dockers Get 8c Hour Raise; Bosses Fear Union Activities NEW YORK.—The Clyde-Mal- lory and Morgan Steamship lines posted notice yesterday of an 8 cent an hour increase in pay, effective today. The companies are trying to spike organization of the men now being conducted by the Marine Workers Industrial Union and also to keep the men from sending repre- sentatives to Washington to fight the 40 cent an hour code at the hearings on Nov. 9. NEW YORK.—A lareg number of ships’ crews have reported to the Marine Workers Industrial Union that they have sent cablegrams and wires to Washington, demanding that the union be Fecognized as their representative at the marine code hearings, next week. The messages also condemned the International Seamen's Union for its co-operating with the bosses and the N.R.A. . in| | pletely integrated unit without which |v. P. Morgan and Co. would be mere | moneylenders—this Myron Taylor of- ficially became a member of the N.R A. Industrial Advisory Board, And, into the N.R.A. edifice, behind Tay- lor, marched Pierre Du Pont, chair- man of the great ammunition and chemical firm of E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., agd General R. E. Wood, president of Sears, Roebuck & Co., better known to Congressional investigators as the war-time quarter- master general of the U.S. army, who kept 200,000,000 cans of vegetables, owned by the government, off the domestic market “to protect the can- ners, who had sold the produce, from competition with the governmental surplus.” (See July 28, 1919, Report of the Graham Committee.) Truly November 1 was 2 portentous day, one that the historian with any sense of economic reality must neces- sarily refer to—the day of the is- suance of the first official manifesto of emerging American fascism, the Gerard Swope plan. This prospectus Proposes a super National Chamber of Commerce, a “National Chamber of Commerce and Industry” to absorb the N.R.A. apparatus. One of the chief purposes of this move would be to stem the tide of workers’ oppo- sition by absolutely outlawing the strike. sees All of which brings to mind a Wall | Street whisper echoed here: that the National Chamber of Commerce soon will rally the local chambers of com- merce, the American Legion leader- ship, the dear old D.A.R., and other reactionary eleménts into fascist watch and ward societies, with quasi- legal power to recruit gangsters and other offal of the capitalist system, into local terror bands, American bosses, the officials of the Inter- national Ladies Garment Workers Union are giving direct aid to the jobbers in the drive to lower the |recent standards won in the dress strike. This was evident in Julius Hochman’s refusal to see a com mittee of dressmakers, who cathe out on strike under the leadership of the Needle Trades Workers In dustrial Union when a jobber, own- er of the Romarice Frock, ordered the contractors in whose shops hen | were employed to lower piece prices. The shops on strike are the Ben Joe Dress Co., at 151 West 25th St. and the Banmore Dress a 119 West 25th St. LL.G.W.-controlled shops of the same jobber continue at work. A though the strikers called on the workers of the Frank Dress Co. and on the cutters employed on the job- bers’ premises, to join the strike, the Joint Dress Board and Local 10 have taken no steps to call them out. In its appeal to all dressmakers to support the strike, the Industrial Union points out that the I. L. G. W. U. officials are proving that they are not ready to struggle to maintain the higher standards gained in the dress strike. The union calls all dressmakers of the Industrial Union and of the I L. G. W. U. rank and file to join the picket line at the Romance Frock, 463 7th Ave., and stop the wage- cutting drive’ of the dress bosses: DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin end Sutter Aver, Srooklyn a ibd they chose the English delegate, | stad. whether he is on the road or not. | much, but the government sends| tempting to put over the $40 a) castor oll brigades. PROXE: DICKENS 3-8012 ME OOS, as a Seeult of his re-| LOTd Chisendum, to reply to Lit:| Happier in Russia Than Elsewhere | Below are a few items, taken from | them’ to school, “tr this countey, | month wage for seamen. eae taka! eins £55 ces Sa markable successes, he was entrust- vee rebuttal the next day 8A Me pte aes Maa ae on ie. cp Vo ne ogre ee Sexe ‘The bosses don’t support the Daily | [7 or eg Ppaary Tienes oe i il = a a ministrato1 ener fol ed by the Central Committee with was s0 sensationally successful thet ested in printing, but I was also in. with a little trip of Berry's to ad. About Housing Worker. Its support comes fi eral inson (Brooklyn) the handling of illegal transporta- tion of weapons into Russia for use by the revolutionary workers. When the International Congress of the Second International was called at Stuttgart, in 1907, Litvin- ov was chosen to be Secretary of the the speech had to be translated twice for the enormous overflow of visitors who came to hear it. (It is reprinted in the “Soviet Union and Peace” — International Publishers.) It is a trimuph of analysis and terested in seeing how people were living, how this Communistic scheme was working out. My impression of life in Russia generally is that it is much happier than it is in almost any other place I have been in.” In every other country in the jJacent. southern cities, They il- lustrate why expense account re- ports of trade union leaders are commonly called swindle sheets. March 18th.—George L. Berry, railroad fare, berth, meals, en- “Housing? Well, there is consider- able crowding in Moscow. They are overcoming that. They are build- ing houses which will hold a thou- sand to fifteen hundred people. Rent is very low, from what the workers the working class. Have you done your share to help the “Daily?” Rash your contribution to the “Daily,” 50 E. 13th St., N. Y. City. ——————=— godfather to the Swope baby since it was the general, the aide-de-camp of Wall Street Barney Baruch, who recently prodded the A. F. of L. bureaucrats into more intensive strike breaking. “The Swope plen is a thing that he and I have talked over FOR BROWNSVILLE PROLETARIANS SOKAL CAFETERIA 1689 PITHIN AVENUE a ) © | irony. é have told me. The trade unions have| the Socialist Party, and I am prej-|for years. I am in thorough agree- aoe delegation to that confer He has a full command of the | Wotd, Dean told me, the conditions} route to Nashville for conference | their own restaurants. ‘The idea is| yaiced against lawyers. I can’t say|ment with him.” pasion poss for Brownsville Workers! ; English language. are just about the same—some are| on road to Pressmen’s Home with | to create unions in all branches, For h of ers Sesesds oeeah aida Heats ry ane Mt 5. that I even thought muc! into the open. U.S. steel enters the fe comes to defend the Socialist | tile more prosperous than others,| Governor, Highway Contmissioner example, take a hotel, all ‘hotel | iat? front door of the White House Hoffman’s power of the Soviet workers and| “but there is no remedy for any-| and Engineers and expenses as- | workers are in the union. It doesn’t _In his succeeding years he con- tanued his work in the closest touch with Lenin and the Central Com- mittee, mainly in England. At the 1915 Conference of Social- ists he acted for the Central Com- mittee of the Communist Party in protesting against the Socialist sup- port of the imperialist war. When his protests were not heed- ed, he quit the conference. After the October Revolution in farmers. He comes in the name of world peace. He comes in the inter- ests of the workers of the world. They could not be in more excel- lent hands. Columbia Students Pledge Fight on War thing.” That, he said, is the dif- ference between the Sovies Union and the capitalist world. Some Differences “All the other countries are mud- dling along and not getting any- where. ‘The conditions of the work- ers are bad. They have no protece tion against the man who employs them. sociated therewith, also. meeting on organization matters dealing with Knoxville, Nashville and Chatanooga—$193. March 18h—George L. Berry, railroad fare, berth, meals, en- route to New Orleans, meeting of local unions in connection with organization, cost of luncheon given to employers, union and matter whether he is the man who works at the head of the hotel or peels potatoes—they are all brothers and address each other as comrades. “The N. R. A.?—That doesn’t ohange the profit system and it can never work out. It may give more work for a certain length of time, but I doubt it. It will even- tually cut wages, and nothing ts Don’t Want Lawyers “We don’t want lawyers to lead us, we want workingmen. A lawyer will listen to a workingman’s theories, pat him on the back, but he really isn’t interested. We have the case right now of Mr. Frank P. Walsh, also a lawyer. I see by the press that he is representing Mr. Wiggins, a banker who gets a half million In short, Swope, the president of Morgan’s General Electric Company, cpenly claims the strike-breaking and monopoly mechanism which was so carefully built under government auspices with the liberal front and the demagogic facade to instill il- lusions into the workers. Now that the sword has been forged, the de- | Signer claims his own. Of course, the Swopes, Teagles, RESTAURANT & CAFETERIA Pitkin Corner Saratoga Aves. WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria a If work slacks down, they Jary.” — ————— en 1917, he was appointed first Soviet|| ._ NEW YORK.—Representa _ Ron-union, and conference with | being done to cut the profits of | dollars a year salary. 1638 PITKIN AVENUE representative to England, but ber| | tives of: the stadents of Col- Wor, toe re prot eae east! newspaper publishers on Web | the employing class, and all | ‘The Russians do not want war,| ee DA eOe | shel 'akedeuala Sec >: aaah aan cate Be predict a one of Ms umbia University, meeting in | |main idea, And when he begins to| 75S matters—#328.16. br dhs orig Petal 8 & to | Dean asserted. Bia ee bpd aS é | speeches that the working class o: i March 18th.—Ge L. \ Were before. ie work- | jast thing they want. ey are =! 3 Hurope would tooner of edge riee| | {M, Colwmbia Con ference | |lose the profs he has been malin | rmeate ox, | Ime man wil not get any more” | sorking on pleas. ‘They are now on || Meeting Rooms and Halll) Garmewr pisrrict up in Proletarian Revolution, he was deoliball a ance Rot asia A and that creates, more poverty, and i Wiiee spe the Second Five Year Plan and war To Hire arrested by the British Government. Later he was exchanged by the British Government for Lockhart, the British Consul arrested by the Soviet Government, and he returned to the Soviet Union. He is a man of medium height, rather. stocky. He is famous for the extreme sharpness of his wit. At the same time he is unsurpassed for the suavity and imperturbability of his speech when he is fencing with the capitalist diplomats who think Wednesday, unanimously adopted resolutions to fight war and war preparations in the University, to call on all “other students to do the same, and to support a permanent Anti-War Committee. A full account, of the conference will appear im Monday’s Daily Worker. , this happens periodically, “You have people contributing to this and that charity to save people from starving to death. Lamont, at the head of the Child’s Saving Soci- ety, is one of the men brin about this very condition uf misery. Now he says that we must save the children. He has millions, “The beautiful thing is that no- body has any great wealth in the Soviet Union. No one has any gives one the impression of being an honest, self-taught trade unionist. A touch of populism sug- gested his possible. evolution. “Were you ever a member of the Socialist Party?” I asked him. that there are too many lawyers in would disorganize everything. are working for peace. “Khe American people, in case of war, should defend the Soviet Union. ‘They -have wiped out poverty there and crime and this ought to be wiped out here. Crime cannot be wiped out by merely making laws against it, The fact that they are not work- ing for profit in the Soviet Union, is the reason that there is no crime there and all are brothers.” JOBLESS HERE FACE FOODLESS WINTER; IN U.S.S.R. WORKERS ARE SECURE Homeless Woman Collapses of Hunger in N.Y.; : Seventeen Million Are Without Work from now on be administered by the by In the United States theré is no unemployment or social insurance of any kind. Instead, the “New Deal’ Of Roosevelt is putting the unem- Ployed workers on the “salt pork Standard,” The government does official New York City relief com- mittee connected with the city gov- ernment, writes this week, “to date re-employment has not kept pace with the number of unemployed who No Unemployment in USSR, Trade Unions Give 2 1-4 Billion Dollars for Social Insurance have laid the foundations of a so- They | Suitable for Meetings, Lectures and Dances in the Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E.72nd St. New York ‘Telephone: RHinelander 5097 Going to Russia? Workers needing full outfits of horsehide leather sheeplined Coats, Windbreakers, Breeches, High Shoes, etc., will receive spe- cial reduction on all their purchases at the SQUARE DEAL Phones: Chickering 4947—Longacre 16080 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE FAN RAY CAFETERIA 156 W. 29th St. New York Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner 26th St. DOWNTOWN ed JADE MOUNTAIN ~ American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE | forced to ask for help” (Queens NEW YORK—This week an un- unions of the Soviet Union,| eversthin thle’ bo thiorast Rallet sioner ployment and speed up. Th employ- | clalist society. employed woman, which according the decision of wate stand for the ecko soeaalttee a 4| ing class tries to ed ae parce dy ‘There is mployment in the ARMY and NAVY STORE ee fon, wandered the streets of New | the Central Camnmkice of the Soviet! Unemployment Insurance Bill, wore re Ten dinioney Ungmbioved | but these markets can not be found, | soviet ‘Union Decale the ‘workers 121 THIRD AVE Welcome to Our Comrades for four days, begging une, Will now control all| Relief has been cut down in New and now war threatens between the has a planned economy, and * pera ancra a em mRNA eno Seken (the hemopoiine iecuice aie simliag institutions, | Xo City, Detroit, Cleveland, But- Took ‘scrces at. the Soviel ‘Union, c*Pitalist countries. Fane Industry for the use of the| (@ doors South of 14th Street She had been evicted. Almost as|There is absolutely no unemployment] 221} Syracuse, and many other cities | covering one sixth of the surface of| The crisis in the United States is | Masses of the workers and farmers. | ——— — Phone: TOmpkins Square 6-9654 iitions face an|in the Soviet Union. fevery workar| 1. ne bast ax weeks. This is what! the earth, where there is no unem-| deepening and broadening, produc-|In the Soviet Union there is no priv- —— John’s Rest: t peventeen million unemployed| and farmer there has complete sec- | 7°, NRA, has brought the workers | ployment, where there is complete so-| tion is at a low ebb, starvation is| Ate ownership of industries. Bigger (Classified) ohn's kestauran’ workers in the United States today,|Urity, complete social insurance. | °¢ ‘he United States. Clal insurance and security for allj the lot of the workers, while the | machines in the Soviet Union means | yoo ate Tne Ne ee ee as well as the mililons more in their|Every worker and farmer has old|,,"00d 1s being destroyed in the| workers and farmers. In the midst] members of the boss class live in lux-| Shorter hours for all. The workers | NOON, (7 oth. th amvsvements, fuen- A place with atmosphere families. Thousands of age insurance, and is fully taken, care! United States, at the direction of|of starvation diets of salt pork hash| ury. and farmers, through their state, run} owntown. Call, Alice, Watkin c169% where all radicals meet wander the country, men, women. of by the state when disabled or sick, Roosevelt, “because there is no mar-| and bacon rinds and beans, the un- Under the leadership of the ©: and own the industries. That is why | Sse * 302 E. 12th St. New York youth. 1,257 families were evicted in] The social insurance includes medical | #¢t, for, 1” While millions stafve.|employed workers of the | United| munist Party, the party of Lenin, the Ba ceeclecrent, and pebeaction Tras | / catia, 208 Woolly Be Ape. Gace len the workers demand unem-| States are ins vy le of Ht id unemployment, rod eae Me AE 2a ee New York City alone in the month een pie care pus enue care. ployment insurance and reliet in the| the working aah at es ‘Soviet’ Waion| Workers of the Soviet Union have| increased under planned economy, | APART to share one or tw ‘A Wendortel pot the Ofeantedtion? Sao ere evicted I thd nena ote crn ey muranc®.| United States they are shot down and | whieh hss scoomplished 20 much for | C2? SN8Y With the capitalist ays-| while declining in the capitalist coun- | 1178 St. apt. 18. Call' evenings.” ‘Attaies ; Fer othe wats Principal! ‘The above mentioned funds are|killed by the government forces | the workers, the Saviet Union ate new teiotrating tries. | FURNISHED ROOM for rent at 320 8. 1% || STUYVESANT GRILL ~ oa St eabiee aiec,PY millions and millions] (Cleveland, Chicago, Detroit). When| Why is tt that there ts security for| tne sigventh anmivertory’ cf irene | The workers of the United States, | Bb Api. 18. Por. single only age gee: ee 4 through ea Tubles given by other organizations| the workers strike against small| the workers in the Soviet Union and torlous October Revolution, the 16th |J¢¢ by the Communist Party of the | Nicery Furnished Room, heated, com || BEB R TAVERN Pg ed pg amie ; and do not include other advantages |N-R.A. wages their strikes are “out-|at the same time starvation for the successful year of the rule of the|U: 8: 4. and the world Communist | “radely atmosphere, ideal location, ‘reason. 137 Third A ’ Unions in the pte Labor | such as co-operative restaurants, fac-|lawed” by the N.R.A, and workers of the bee tBates. workers and farmers. 8: ee Party (the Communist International), | able. West End ‘to Bay Parkway, 2223 ird Avenue = is Sinai ‘announced | tory nurseries, milk for children, etc.] are sent to shoot them down on the| United States is by a capitalist! sco tea by the Communist arty | Will abolish unemployment and starv-| Bay View Place. Brooklyn. Betwosn’ 14th. and. 15th) Streote at four and one billion’ rubles | No worker or farmer in the Soviet picket line (Ambridge, mine strikes, | govetnment operating in the interests the’ Russian workers drovi ;| ation in this country, by following the Bi wnn (two and one quarter path dollars) | Union has to worry about the future, | Paterson, etc.), and injunctions are|of the bankers and employers. The] bankers and em} eB oe inspiring example of the Bolshevik ‘AB; Comtodes Most’ at the . erly or pra Soviet | about unemployment, sickness or ac- issued and strikers are arrested and | boss class owns all the factories priv- t Party of Russia and overthrowing the social insurance for the|cident.. New workers homes have] beaten (New York). ately, forcing the workers to produce | Profit ssytem and smashed up the| capitalist society here, setting up a NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA of the USSR. This state} been built, and illiterse» hac been| It is an open secret that the N.R.A.|to make profits for the rich. When | capitalist government. Now the work-| workers” state — a ‘Soviet “United : fund, it is further announced, will] wiped out, ji has not reduced unemployment, An | bigger machines are installed in the! ers and fartiers of the Soviet Union| Stater é UBM Dei nn. 2 hor sera easly Bivbirar e808

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