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Wage Six - — DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1934 Otto Bauer Trapped Austrian Workers With False Theories the With the md of Capitalist Democracy Austrian Bourgeoisie Protected F the series of and prac- ught the A t the creat ble in Aus- with this theory ving of all Austrian cap’ Do the Au Bauer, who was For- 919, made the nd refused the of the weapons of the Inte Aus- army for the Hun- which was being ber how Otto B e Struggles Tazewell, Tenn., Miners Jailed Ta.ZEWELL, Te: Ta ell J: We are still in been in here panies. Sheriff Riley thinks he getting the Reds out of here but he that is just ma me redder every day that I stay here. We get just about half enough to eat. He gives us just, enough to keep from ha’ Ti us. ey have framed up six of us for id larceny. Our trial comes up March ‘th, I have wrote to the I. L. D. when we got in here, but I haven’t heard from th I guess they didn’t get my let ause the dirty dick Here at Tazewell will do anythit against the poor farmers and wo: . I would like to have the Daily Worker in here to read or some books but there is no chance for us to get them as we are all without money. I would write more but I haven't got the paper and can’t get stamps, There are lots of our people that come here to see us and the jailer won't Jet them come in to see us. Editor’s Note:—The IL L. D. has been notified of this case. We are {s | ng to bury} in E /See Local Parallel in Contrast of Militancy of | urope Are Like Electric Shock to Miners in Gillespie Section” Workers and Treachery of S. P. Leaders Mine Worker Correspondent) (By a GILLESPIE, Ill—The development | of ‘te A of this section. There less little groups on the bar-rooms and pool- ig the heroic fight of the*v imperialists. ;. Last evening at the local union meeting, a resoluti was vhich in part read: to these militant workers in their fight against fascism.” The revolutionary action of the | the prestige of the Communist Party | Austrian workers, the Socialists and|very.much among the miners. They | eads of the| are realizing in greater numbers the | Communists, over, the Social-Democratic lead: miners here. The mine! inspires the fold types of misleadership practiced ) against the miners of Illinois, includ- jing the Socialist Party leaders, who, ary action in France and | like their brothers in Austria, refused | heroic struggle of the} Communist Party proposal of united | g class against fas-|action against war and fascism, and|, KENILWORTH, Utah—There have like an electric shock | sabotage every militent move of the | Pen various letters by different local | miners. The miners here, pariicularly some of the rank and file S.P. mem- bers, are openly talking that they will |demand that the Socialist Party r and the admiration of | change its tactics and adopt a united | position group working in the local thi the French workers showed | front for a forceful and a revolution- | meetings. {their united fist against the French | ary way out of this crisis, or they will | local officers of the U. M. W. of A. | “discard it among other relics.” | The timely pointing out of the con- passed | crete course of developments by the | | Resolved that | E.C.C.I, and the Central Committee, | We give moral and material support | on the world situation, which is now | | being confirmed with such potent force in France and Austria, is raising |correctness of the Communist esti- feel the need} mate of the situation and what is; | of unity as weapon against the mani-| more, the method that this situation | |can be met by the working class, How Maloney and the Priest (By a Miner Correspondent) | Sold Miners to Lewis Outfit would join with the rest of the un-| UMWA Officers Spy ‘On Miners in Utah By a Mine Worker Correspondent | | unions of U. M. W. of A. in regard} to the condition of the miners. We have the U. M, W. of A. here} |in Kenilworth, and we have an op- Last week, Feb. 7, the} | took a voluntary cut in their wages of 50 per cent after party members| showed dissatisfaction in their wages, | and also cut the wages of the check- weighman 15 per cent which brought | | it down to 85 sents an hour where he | formerly was getting $1 an hour. Also, when members in the local meeting showed that they were not satisfied with their working condi- tion, their time was waiting at the company office the next night. This proved to most of us that it is no-| thing but a company union. Ne sroes Hit Most, By CWA D'sm’ssals In South Carolina PARTY LIFE Worker Asks That W. Z. Foste Take Good Care of His Healt Reflects the Sentiments of Many Thousands of American Workers Dear Comrade Foster: There was a load lifted off my heart as big as a load of wheat when reading of your return to the United States and of an improvement in your health. I have been following your activities and Jeadership in behalf of the workers ever since the great steel strike. It is a crime that there are not more such loyal leaders of the workers’ struggle such as you and your comrades of the Central Committee of the Com- munist Party. I have read everything I could get of your writings, and I have the first time yet to see any evidence of betrayal of the workers’ struggles from your leadership. If we but had a Foster at the head of the American Federation of Labor instead of that betrayer of the workers, Bill Green! We workers in Coshocton are beginning to hate the word Green, with“his record of betrayals of the workers’ struggles. I am not a Communist Party mem- ber but am in sympathy and. support their program. Am convinced that, only through the united front under the leadership of the Communists with their struggle and mass action program can the workers win. Com- rade Foster, the class-conscious wot ers in America love you and are con~- cerned about your health. We want | but may you live long in the int: of the toilers. : | A COMMON LABORE | L. H., Coshocton, Ohio, | Note By Editor | We are publishing the above k written by a worker to Comrade ; ter not only because we believe it presses the feeling of the wor, throughout the country regal’ Comrade Foster, but particular)’ !cause this worker points the w jall workers who love and value b| |rade Foster. Comrade Foster i recuperating from his long illness, | the class-conscious workers of Ame |can show their appreciation of ileadership and their joy at his turning health in no better way t | joining the Party of which he i | leader, the Communist Party of U.: | Comrade Foster has asked us ‘publishing this letter to add his « ‘nersonal appeal to the Ameri workers to join the only party wh } leads the struggles of the workers ‘better conditions, against wage c |for unemployment insurance, agai war and fascism, and for the fi overthrow of the capitalist syster the Communist Party. | Give your answer to Comrade F jter in the recruiting drive. Join Communist Party! WILKES-BARRE, Pa—The sell-|°mployed, they could make the re-| JOIN THE withholding the name of the writer. st the ere cut off from And now itability of the defect of revolution in Central Eu- Saga eotehath ae aie rope! 4 ; Protests came from P. M. A. locals Pae aceariaN ‘ake WeRNEH drles in the jails in South Carolina. We Besa: re mien the | But why was the proletarian rev-| and a dozen of Women's Auxiliaries, dF By a Worker Cor dent pray the day may soon come when oS ~ lution bound to be defeated in the| also carpenters, painters and music} J0ney and Father Curran has sent the y eneepenten we Negroes will be free in the South- Metetation had not poniuaien revolw tone: conditions of 1918,} cians’ A. F. of L. locals, minets bac! F aur ae wie NEWARK, Ohio.—The Farmer and) Jand. the British and French pro ; | while Austria alone, divided and ver-| ry addition to protests, the Wo-| mand the Anthracite Coal Operators| L@borer Organization of the unem-| Also I am informing you that on : Would have upset the intervention of | titioned. must, in the opinion of mee | men’s Auxiliary of Stauton voted! pave at the present time, The refer-, Ployed which was organized about a| Feb. 4, on a Sunday night, 11 notice By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. the capitalist world y| Bauer, now stand firm as an “island | ¢19 towards purchasing and replaciig'|ring-of the grievances of the miners {Year ago has had stormy weather at| Td ® deputy-sheriff came to Com- of democr the midst of a ring of European ism (Germony, Italy, t lavia, Hungary, etc.)? Is there a shade of logic, of po- | litical’ sense “in all ‘this? (To be continued.) upset the been’ “forced on Central Eur “peace” treaty wo fait the How ‘ALK about revol iD BE HELEN LUKE y cooking— Countess of Athlone, the Hon. Sir "law dem- | We are also taking steps to try to get the literature to these workers, Is some reader of the “Daily Work- er” willing to subscribe for one month for these jailed southern miners? 40 Protests Against | copies of protests which were sent to | the Mayor of Staunton and the Sheriff of Macoupin County, against the vicious atts:k made by these tools | of the coal barons and their union | agents upon the home of J. “rorkin and Pete Malahowski, two of the ac- tive and militant members of the, Communist Party. | the burnt household of the Cror- | kin’s family. | Gillespie collected on payday at the | bank $15 towards this end. | Campbell Workers Urge Unity Against N. R. A, By a Worker Correspondent | CAMDEN, N. J—Campbell soup } ; workers who are now organizing into the Cannery Workers Industrial Union have experienced all the fake maneuvers alloted labor by the N. R. | A. and the new deal. | ‘The Campbell Soup Co. has answered our demands by using all Miners of Benld and! out by Maloney and: Father Curran {is now completed. The result can |not be determined yet as to what | thé miners will do, once the full rea- | lization of the betrayal becomes ap- parent. One miner told me that there was talk that the coal com- | Panies were going to register all of |the miners as they return to work, {this morning the papers state that 35.000 miners have retyrned to work. , Of -course, they are wrong in both jimstances. There were 20,000 miners Striking and not 10,000, and they on'y used the figures of 35,000 returning to work as a means of fooling the wo-k- jérs that prosperity had returned to | to, Mr. Gorman, the umpire, that was coal operators, can mean but one thing, that Maloney and Fe‘hcr “vt- van have betrayed the miners into the hands of the Lewis machine and | the coal operators, and that the um- pire, who is now in Florida basking in the sunshine, will take up the grievances of the miners at his lei- sure, which may mean next spring, | when the public will want ice and | not-anthracite. In the meantime the | operators continue to exploit the |} miners even worse than before. Dov. in the Shamokin section in | District 9 a few bankers and ex- officials of the Reading Coal Ca selected by John L. Lewis and the, lief stations give unemployed relief to the heads of every family. What is needed in the Shamokin section is a closer unity between the unemployed and the employed, and a raising of the question of union rates on the CWA jobs. Some of the workers are working on State roads {for as little as 35 cents per hour Newerk, 0., Faction Seeks to Tie Un Unemployed Work times. Few of the members had ever taken active part in organization, and , the conduct of affairs seemed to drifs into the hands of the Drumm fac- tion, Several weeks ago, the rank and file assumed charge and elected @ committee to go to Columbus and have the C. W. A. workers’ pay ad- justed. Some were getting 40 cents per hour and others 50 cents. This {all applied to pick-and-shovel and | wheel-barrow men. The committee | made the demand on a Friday and the adjustment took effect the next ; monday. Soon after, the organization was (By a Negro Werker Correspondent) | CONUMBIA, S, C—I am writing| vou, informing you on conditions in ; South Carona. On the 15th the besses cut off a very larze number of Negroes to one white men all over South Cerolina’s Project No. 98 Camp Jnekson cut of 159 Nesrces, 35 wh'tes. Project No. 17971 cut of all the Ne- ing the Necroes. Maybe next winter, he savs, he will start another New “eal for the workers in South Car- | | olina. , Also, the Chain Gang is run over with Negroes all over South Carolina. They don’t put white men on the gang any more in South Carolina. Plenty of our young Nezro girls are rate John Castor's house and tried to take his little boy, 12 years oid, to jail just because the boy and a white boy had some words. After they could |mot get the boy, they wanted to take Comrade Castor to jail without a warrant. This is part of the New Deal | that we Negroes get in South Carolina. Also in the year 1932 the Deputy | Sheriff, Author Price. and the sheriff of Richland County jumped on Cas- tor in the Court House and beat him | up very badly. One year from this they wanted to kill Castor because he is a member of the IL.D. The same night they came to my house looking for him. The sheriff hates me and Castor and all the Negroes around here. There is plenty of white terrorism you to be careful and fully recover so, you can take your place where you! rightfully belong at the top leadership. | When the crucial moment arrives we are depending on you, with the work- | ers backing you. and your comrades by the millions, I.feel that the work- ers. will show how they value your leadership by joining the Communist Party and supporting and circulating myself fully to you, Comrade Foster, Communist Party 35 E. 12th STREET, N. Y. € Please send me more informa sion on the Communist Party 7 A “ 4: {and only five hours per day, which | grocs. This is the New Deal in S. C. N b} & W © BME ..oee OO ewes ces Attack on Crorkin Home| ia ave not been able to verify this cans even less than they were re- The governor of South Carolina Dias, Bee ee iatesioed | if ceiving in relief. They must pay ia a , . ster, | By a Mine Worker Correspondent | | It 4s interesting to read the local) ‘neir fare to and from the job, which | avy {BS wrotkers att 0 to the rivers | your: health, for ex you do, the work- |} STTOPE s-++tasscdteeetsseenees, STAUNTON, Ill. — The Inter-| 20h ear datihes raat eee there | sometimes 1s as much ‘as $5 cents| Herries will soon be ripe and the| Teor, su being eafecuarded, a Rn re se ky ti | national Labor Defense received | was about 10,000 miners involved but round trip. workers can live on such food, mean-| Words are inadequate to express Pros and Cons of Sterilization “Dr. Paul Luttinger “New York City Worker’ and ‘Young Worker’ about sterilization, that, to me, seem quite absurd. In the February 13th issue of the “Young Worker,’ on page two, I read this headline: ‘Fiendish Drive Against Detroit Youth Revealed as| Secret Sterilization of Sixty-One Young Workers Is Exposed.’ “That sterilization is practiced in Germany, with only the fiendish pur- | pose of intimidating the workers, is not surprising, for there the rulers are fiends; but in the United States, thank God, we have gangsters to rule ‘Dear Sir, “I have read articles in the ‘Daily | heartedly agree with the Communist: when they criticize the wanton ster ilization that occurs in reformatorie and penitentiaries, and when theg in- sist that all such work be dono # competent specialists. } “There is still a more general f cism, that Communists might qi ‘regarding eugenics and its potential ities. In cavitalist society a great mas: of peovle live under very unhygien‘: conditions They suffer from malnut- tition, over-fatigue, impure air, and ¢ host of other factors that condition their health. The persistent appear- ance of some diseases in certain peo- ple might be due less to the inevitable genes in their germ plasm, and mor to a persistent environment th: ‘ , evicted from the convention room of i here’s an item ta from an ar-| Bede E. H. Clifford (Governor Gen-| efforts to organize a company union. along with some fakers have raised | © en lina. We LL.D. com-| us, and they would hardly try such/ makes the appearance of the gen _ Wit tn the Moscow News of Ja eral of the Bahamas) and Lady Clif. | to split the ranks of the workers.| the issue of “Saving the Mines.” But the Court House. However, the trus- Ree ae ve to demand from|a thing. manifestation possible. So it renfpir /'- ae article dealing ford and their aides, |The N. R. A. the new rotten deal,| they do not say a word about saya feet Tae already rented a new home| i °° covernor of South Carolina to| “A number of diseases (haemo- | that eugenics will continue to Wm an Scientists are ma pea | must stand exposed to every rank} ing the miners and their wives and| in the business district, and the F. keep his hands off John Gastor, and|Dhilia, idiocy, etc.) and perhaps | idle dream or a cruel bungling §ntil utilize the sun (The unemployed, the half-em- i ployed, and the half-paid, will freeze, or be burned alive eight at a time in the northern tenements, as usual.) Can You Make ‘Em Yourself? Pattern 1773 is available in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46. Size 33 takes yards 39 inch fabric and 1% yard h lace. Illustrated step-by-step ing instructions included. power of the @nd more utilized industrial s Union Helio an experime’ Kitchen of a moveable t: mer can be pr e in the cour: [3 Ge-ails but we'll kcep our r for more news of this new cooking and file member and to all workers as a united front of the bosses to drain the American workers to lowest | possible starvation wages. The C. W. |I. U. must answer the bosses with | united front of workers and lead | them in a united mass demonstra- tion of all labor organizations in Camden, elect delegates to visit all labor organizations, invite and mobil- | ize them for a set date to answer the bosses’ new deal and all rotten deals by the N. R. NOTE We publish letters from coal and children. The miners there should understand, that this is s scheme to obtain money for the coal opera- tors, to pay dividends to the stock~ holders of the Reading Coal co. The threat to drown out the colleries is but a subterfuge to cover up the real issue. The colleries belong to the Reading Coal Co. and they will not drown them out if they can secure some few millions from the govern- |ment to pay dividends. The anthracite miners in the Shamokin section seem to be much harder hit thon the miners in other sections. In a family of 10 the girl and L. never missed a session. Two County Commissioners out of the three voted to bar the F. and L. The Drumm faction seems to be afraid that the bosses will not like us. The inner circle held an execu- tive meeting and framed charges against the recently elected secretary and tried to have the office declared vacant, It was soon learned that it was an attempt to retain the good will of the local political set-up, Mr. Drumm served a term in the City Council during the “Stevens rule or ruin” era. He voted with the Gas Co. group and a 10-year franchise was all other Negroes in our I.L.D. Branch in Columbia, 8. C. ‘The comrades here long to see the day come when the Daily Worker will be read in every worker’s home in South Carolina because this is the only paper that fights for Negro rights in the U.S.A. They say that what the I1.D. needs here in South Carolina is some white comrade to work with the Negroes like they do in New York and other large cities. Comrades, it is plenty to be down here in the South. Please ask the C.P. to write all the preachers—Negroes and white—in some criminal tendencies have been proved heritable. Such diseases and tendencies are expensive to society, and sometimes cause the afflicted persons no small amount of misery and pain; therefore, if there is a means of preventing these people from having children, without de- priving them of the pleasures of life, no one should attack such means as fiendish or undesirsble. Such a humane measure, I think, ts sterilization. (The article, mentioned above, describes sterilization as deserving. This is mis- leading). “It will never do for Communists ‘Young Worker’ | a society is formed where an unfavor- able environment can be ruled out as non-existent. Until then the eugenic- ists must confine themselves, in prace tice, to a field that is narrow, indeed. “Comradely yours, “EUGENE BUSHMAN.” Philadelohia Second Annual Bazaar COMMUNIST PARTY West Philadelphia ‘Saturday and Sunday : ete February 24th & 25th ©. contrivance : who is working must keep the 10,! given to the Gas Co. permitting ex-| South Carolina demanding a stop to Me aie a ore miners, and from oil fieid work- | 2; her father cannot obtain relief if ace rates. The alleged trial of|chain gangs for Negroes in South to eee pe Riehl in bea N, 4st STREET a Comrade Theo M. ers, every Saturday. We urge work-.|there is a member of the family |the secretary soon turned into a| Carolina because only ‘Negroes are pit ‘anced ig ses sea ae a Good Program ! * that we missed a trick in | ers in these fields to write us of | Working.. The girls in the mills there | farce-comedy but the wrinkles are|on the gang now. Please ask the party | Tits “poi a iy oe ney e Articles tor Sale at Low Prices y for the picture of Lenin, ‘ their conditions of work and of |87@ Organized in the Amalgamated, | not yet smooth. to take this matter up with the state | Witted fascists. However, I whole- prised to read that you had such al hard time to find a picture of Lenin,” | the writes. “If you will look at the Jan-| wary issue of “Soviet Russian Today,” | you will see that right on the cover is a wood-cut portrait of V. I. Lenin ‘by Liston M. Oak. ... The picture... 4s suitable for framing. It is about ix by eight inches. This, pasted on a White (or buf) cardboard about nine by twelve and then framed, will give the best picture of our leader for any Red Corner and in any home. { “If the January issue can’t be had 4m the stores, I still have about 25/ » copies. (I am literature agent of the! Workville branch of the F.S.U.) Also! 4m the present issue (February * is a wood-cut of J. Sts 0 by L. 'M, Oak. It’s a little smaller, but could | reminding us. Requests for either of | ‘the two issues mentioned will be for- | | (or, What They Do with the Loot) | > William Randolph Hearst, well-| known jingoist and shedder of croco-| \| <dile tears over the horrors of war,| "> very recently entertained at a huge} their struggles to organize. Please get your letters to us by Wednesday of each week. PIONEERS MEET TO DISCUSS MAGAZINE SUNDAY, Feb. 18, delegates from New York Troops met‘ to discuss their magazine, the New Pioneer. There were about a hundred dele- gates present. Membezs of the Edi- torial Board were introduced to the Pioneers, and the discussion followed. bigger, better New Pioneer soon it won't be the fault of the Pioneers. Sender Garlin greeted the delegates way, editor of the “Daily,” brutally beaten by Socialist Party leaders the previous Friday. The meeting closed with the showing of a Charlie Chap- lin comedy. | and many of them are laid off. In ene mill that employed some 1,000, there are only about 200 working. ‘f-these girls along with their parents scarfs and the Pioneers wear them at every fit occgsion, such as Lenin’: memorial, etc. We are going to show a play, “The History Lesson,” on ‘Women’s Day affair this month, if we possibly can. Oh, yes, we have certain jobs for the boys and the ‘girls. The girls do sewing and the boys make wood carvings. And last, but hot least—we are donating $1 for Ready”? We are! Laila Koistinen, for the ‘Teacher: Morris, why were you ab- sent yesterday? “Morris: My grandma died, teacher. ‘Teacher: Thet’s the fourth time your grandmother died, Morris, - Morris: I can’t help it, teacher. My It is hoped the rank and file will not be frightened and permit one- man power to continue. WITH OUR YOUNG READERS FINAL PERFORMANCE “Strike Me Red,” the children’s op- eretta by Harry Alan Potamkin, will have its final showing’ on Feb. 24, at the C.C.N.Y. Auditorium. Those of you who haven't seen the operetta, realize its your last chance and COME! It's something you can’t miss. . +e the other troop paners we've been hearing so much about? So we have to bribe you to send your troop pa- Cae ee | I. W. 0. 33-J is the highest troop in New York City again. So far they have raised $30.91. of South Carolina at once, TWO KILLED ON C. W. A. JOB By a Worker Correspondent MINERSVILLE, Pa, — Richard A. Adams, 71, and Joseph Melusky, 17, of Primrose near by Minersville was smothered to death when the Lytle Ash Bank collapsed and buried them underneath it. The men were work- ing on a Primrose ©. W. A. project, the ashes being used on the Cass Township athletic field. In some C. W. A. projects there are as many bosses as the workers them- selves. In Palo Alto two men on ©. W. A. and s boss and time- keeper. A worker said t6 the boss: “You don’t need to come out to work FILM AND P07) TEAGUE Entertainment and Novelties - Feb. 2ith - 8:30 W FAST 1th ST. 8 , Symposium “Future of the Film” saad Som ESMISSION ‘a5e. Sat. Workers School Forum RICHARD National Seoretary of the League of Struggle For Negro Rights The National and Colonial. Problems Sunday, February 25th, at 8 P.M. ° at WORKERS’ SCHOOL FORUM, 35 E. 12th St., 2d Floor Questions — Discussion — Admission 25¢ i B. MOORE \ Speak On “Soviet Russia Today” 2 a eats eae in the name of the Daily Worker, Green, Mich., Troop. | pers in? Send us a copy and you'll PARTY Friday, March 2nd Roger Smith Grill i ‘i taking the place of Clarence Hatha- see yourself in th~ “ioneer Corner, Movies, Jazz Band, Photos AT 7:00 P.M. 40 East dist St., N. ¥.C. Chairman: CORLISS LAMONT NINA TARASOVA { t ~ nd sumptuous dinner party in| © hae Finnish Workers 1.00 ASHLEY PETTIS, and others i ila | grandpa was a Mo:mon. Federati nt A tis NEWS FROM GREEN, MICH. Sent in by Blanche Kugler— | rvmely, Mich,” 2008 io0|| Freiheit Gesang Farein ee a : | a iigal eid Cyclone? You betcha! Since No- age 14. | ¥P.A. 62 2019 100 i Irina Skariatina | 5 pe: cote gape ed ane | vember our troop has kept up fine . 8 Bed Gubsp. Seon | re 1.00 In the Oratorio Sergei Radamsky | m>rtgage on the lives of mi ‘ 3 jeao, Til. .00 | 41 135 ye ena ds ' eee een {and otter) pr | He Saivave seayrl To go into the A FORM * CEPA og! 8 x00 TZVEI BRIDER Mary eu Rieck | has just sailed from Trin- inner work of our troop; we have| Fight, fight, for the Pioneers’ name, | Newark, NJ. 128 1.00 (Two Brothers) | ‘dad, Spain, in his yacht “Corsair, meetings every Sunday from 1 pm.| Let all the world hear of their | ¥.P.A. 1.62 2036 2.0 ya nosh cas combust or Dinner Music—F §S. U. Balalaika Orchestra H Granada, on the return trip sharp, We discuss questions fully fame See. Cae oe ep ees ce - JACOB SCHAEFER -Dance Music—Valhalla Club Orchestra | m the Galapasos Islands in the Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in|/and try to have a good and active| Shout their name up to the sky LW.O. School | 6-3 New York Lr { Po leoins or stamps (coins preferred) | troop. Pull down the bosses from up | committer 5.0¢ 2-3, New York 3.34] EMMA REDELL, Soprano Soloist Reservations—$1.25 in Advance at Joa ie . ig “8 ; |for this Anne Adams pattern. Write| We have a stamp club and have high! tava aed : tet iti if Also a Group of New Soviet Songs | Re les of brilliant entertainments |plainly mame, address and_ style| already gathered quite a few for-| THough they are great and we are | LW.0. Scho OyeaetieG go . 9. . j eae given in Florida by rich so-|number. BE SURE TO STATE|cign and new stamps. We also have| ..:- small B, Ture, Henip- | 121-3, Srracue 108511 MARCH ord, 8230 P.M. SOVIET RUSSIA TODAY { in ae of visiting or | SIZE. made a Pioneer wall newspaper into| The. working class will win over all |1.up, 'vetvian at the 80 EAST lth STREET, NEW YORK CITY ie King and Queen of England:| Address orders to Daily Worker | which we placed clippings of the ac-| While the fighting Pioneers Br, N. ¥. 2.00 139.16 p-General the Earl of Athlone, | Patiern Department, 243 West 17th | tivities of pias seas i the United Go marching to victory! ‘ se feenus a Previous total 522.64 brie ea tisa IY Royal Highness, Princess §lice,' Street, New York City. States. We have made our Pioneer MAX MAZER. 56-5 2.47! Total to Feb.31 661.80 “be framed in the same er. ” Z A 2 rine | The pencils and notebocks of the| the support of the New Pioneer, and JUST received the second copy | tomorrow.’ a inks bey Pini Pr | Editorial Board came in very handy | we challenge the other troops to hold of the “Shock Brigader,” the The boss: DIN NE R D A fh ok ue Doriate iTheodire 3 for| for there were plenty of suggestions | affairs and dances to help out the| troop naver of ILW.O. 33-J. It’s a| The workel : — i shale % if | flying about. If we don’t have a|Pioneer drive also. Are you “Always | swell, peppy magazine. Where are| come out.’