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‘ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1934 Page Three Second Year of New Deal Opens With Congress of Bosses Jim-Crowed Negroes Rooseveli Hopes Fight U. S. Troops In CCC Camp Strike Strike leidic Held In Tuscaloosa Jail, in Danger of Lynching BIRMINGHAM, Ala., March 5.— Heroically defending themselves with bricks against the bayonets of regular troops, the more than 200 Negro youth in the jim-crow C. C. camps near Tuscaloosa, last week, carried out a militant strike against rotten conditions in the camp, orutality and discrimination and militarization of the youth. A leaflet issued to the men by the Young Communist League) played a major role in organizing | the strike. Soon after the strike} was begun, white regular troops were sent against the strikers. The latter fought back heroically with bricks and other weapons, but were finally forced to flee into the woods. One hundred and sixty of the youths were discharged after the revolt. Beykin Queenie, of Birmingham, was arrested charged with leading the strike and is now in grave danger of lynching in the jail at Tuscaloosa, where three Negro youths were lynched last year. The discharged strikers who have returned to Birmingham held a meeting yesterday and demanded the immediate removal of Queenie from Tuscaloosa to Birmingham and his unconditional and immediate release. They called on all work- ers organizations throughout the country to rush similar demands to President Roosevelt and Gov. B. M. Miller of Alabama, Postal Workers Get Payless Furloughs Vacations Also Off, to Save Money WASHINGTON, March 5,—All postal workers throughout the coun- try would be required to take one day of payless furloughs each month for the next four months at least, Postmaster-General Farley declared yesterday. Roosevelt's “right-hand man” said that “budgetary requirements make it essential that I save $9,000,000 during the present fiscal year.” So he “saving” is to come directly out of the wages of the postal workers. All vacations between now and July 1 where extra help would be needed to fill in on the job were cancelled, thus cutting off the hope of thousands of substitutes of getting x Tew weeks’ work. Only the vaca- ions of those whose job can be carried on without hiring additional help would be allowed. This invari- ably means the postal executives and righer-priced officials. 150 Hotel Workers in Detroit Strike DETROIT. — One hundred’ and iifty men and women workers of the Hotel Tuller, one of the largest in the city, are now on strike, under the leadership of the Cooks’ Union, the Waiters’ and Waitresses’ Union and the Bellmen and Hotel Porters’ Union, all affiliated to the A. F. of L. Hotel and Restaurant Employees International Alliance. The strike is receiving the full support of the Trade Union Unity League. The workers are striking against a system which deprived them of the major part of their wages each week, The Hotel Tuller has for some time been in the hands of a receiver and has been paying its workers so much on the dollar. Thus cooks, who were supposed to be getting $100 a month, were actually receiving about $6 a week, Dish- washers sometimes got as low as $1.25 a week. ‘The workers are demanding the abolition of this percentage system and full payment of their wages. is going on day and night and the workers are out 100 per cent. The hotel has succeeded in recruiting some scabs, but these constitute only a skeleton crew. Trial Offer—50c. Help win over your friends and fellow workers to our revolu- tionary movement. You can do this by reaching them with our Daily Worker. Present them with a real revo- lutionary gift, a trial subscrip- tion of the “Daily. every day or for 4 months every | Saturday for only 50 cents. | List below the name and ad- of the one you want tc offer does not apply for the and Manhattan, New York. * pay for the following subscription at the spe- etal trial rate. Name — Address City Dalty — State Sat lo | | AFL Locals Arrange | Mass Meet to Greet Louis Weinstock | NEW YORK.—Louis Weinstock, | national secretary of the A. F. of L. Trade Union Committee on Unem- ployment Insurance, is now on a tour of the country, speaking before A. F. of L. unions, urging their sup- port of the Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill (H. R. 7598). Forty-seven delegates representing eleven Los Angeles A. F. of L. locals have arranged a mass meeting on | March 9, at Walkers Auditorium, 730 South Grand Avenue, at which Weinstock will speak. The Los Angeles A. F. of L. Com- has sent committees to all A. F. of L, unions urging the endorsement of the Workers Unemployment Insur- ance Bill, and supporting the mass meeting. Politicians Launch Farm-Labor Party at Michigan Meet Sponsors Have Long Records as Labor Fakers JACKSON, Mich.—At a meeting |here composed of odds and ends \from the Republican and Democratic |scrapbag, the Farmer-Labor Party |of Michigan was launched. The or- ganizers are for the most part sea- soned politicians who have spent most of their lives on the Repub- lican and Democratic bandwagon and are now preparing to show their |real usefulness to the capitalists by |preventing the workers and poor farmers from entering into struggle under the leadership of the Com- munist Party through harnessing them to Farmer-Laborism. Among. the organizers are Judge | Edward J. Jeffries, of Detroit, a democrat who has always supported | anything that gave him an opportu- nity to indulge in demagogic phrase- mongering and Eugene J. Brock, Re- publican politician who was Com- |missioner of the State Department of Labor under former Governor | Green. When Brock was Labor Commis- sioner, the Auto Workers Union pre- sented proof to him that the Briggs Manufacturing Co. was violating the state laws- by working women at night. Brock’s reply was: “We have no power to enforce the law. If a grocer violates the law, we can scare him into obeying it, but we can’t scare Briggs.” Among his other “services” to la- bor was his ardent support, when he was an organizer for the A. F. of L. International Association of Ma- chinists, of the infamous B. & O. Plan, the no-strike scheme origi- nated by Daniel Willard, president of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad., The Farmer-Labor Party has an- nounced it will hold a state conven- tion on July 4 and county conven- tions May 30. The Communist Party warns. all workers and farmers against this outfit, which in Min- nesota and in other states has shown itself to be no different in practice from the Republican and Democratic parties. ’ | Send us names of those you know who are not readers of the Daily Worker but who would be interested in reasing it. Address: Daily Worker, 50 E. 13th St, New mittee on Unemployment Insurance | ® York, N. Y. and Works for War; UMWA lieads Order Stimulates Parasitism and Fascism 1,700 Mine Strikers To Stop Picketing | Tremendous Cost of New Deal Placed on Backs of Workers; Negro Masses Feel Increasing Fas- | cist Terror; Roosevelt Biographer Admits President ‘‘Courageously” Breaks Promises To Achieve Aim of S: aving Capitalism; 13th Plenum Shows Drive Towards Fascism Does not Signify Its Inevitability; How Communist By HARRY GANNES ir | d ig first day of the second year | of the New Deal opens with the| convening of what has been des-| cribed in political circles close to| Roosevelt as the “First Fascist Con- gress.” Perhaps these bureaucrats | are a little too hopeful or hasty. Yet what will be done by the 4,250) code authorities and leading exploit- ers who meet to bolster up the N. R.A,, will have a tremendous effect in increasing the oppressive and| strikebreaking measures of the N. A. | The open hearings made it as clear that there is tremendous dis- | illusionment among the masses and | rising wrath and resistance. What | the code authorities and the em- Ployers of 90 per cent of the work- ers under codes will do is to attempt to strengthen their newly won mon- opoly positions and to keep the workers from disturbing the low| level of living standards. That this will be done by more brutal inter- ference of the government, by more open strikebreaking measures, is guaranteed by the whole history of the National Labor Board and its new set-up. Before Roosevelt came to office he promised the workers unemployment, insurance. In the last days of the first year of his regime he con- demned the unemployed to unre- lieved hunger and shameful banish- ment. Faced with massive strikes, Roo- Sevelt, to avoid the tremendous im- pact of simultaneous struggles of the employed and unemployed, developed a program of unemploy- ment relief that in the main was part of the huge war preparations of American capitalism. We already have the admission of Assistant Sec- retary of War, Woodring, that the | expen of country All of these features intensify the general crisis of capitalism. Par- ticularly they undermine its finan- cial parasitism. Profits no longer come primarily from the expansion of capitalist production and an en- larging market. ire with history butions paid for by lowered living ployees’ wages, veterans’ slashes in railroad wages, and in- creased taxation. Since these meas- ures do not solve the economic crisis, they must be constantly ex- panded to keep capitalism alive, and to prevent it from falling into lower Party Forecast the New Deal merely economic struggles again: individual corporations and hkoss but by their nature become in direct | conflict with the state. s ability and foster rampant| From economic struggles they be-|may turn out to be imp | come political struggles directed | }against capitalism and its more | openly brutal, oppressive state. Since | and more from government contri- | mainly based on artificial measures, | farm: | Which do not solve but intensify th standards, cuts in government em- | basic contradictions, these struggles | rapidl relief,| of the workers become more dan- | as }gerous for American capitalism. | |For that reason the Roosevelt | |regime stops at no lengths to end| and smash them. This opens the | way for more and more direct fas- | |cist measures. Proof can be seen| ,and admits Roo | $1,372,387,166—this is a record war capitalism. The struggles of the, able to resist the temptation tc | the| workers become more and more not | furnish the materials for it.” it further The same confidant goes democratic pret adjustment by achievement.” Then, of come fascist dictatorship. a toiling ers face in the second year of he New Deal. The c: ali are ding to fascism and war a way out of*the crisis. The pr: 1 , in the most powerful c' dels of American capitalism, weig down by the most corrupt A. F. of L. trade union leadership in the world, by Socialist leaders who have been among Roosevelt's closest ed and deeper chaos. The door is thus | in Roosevelt’s latest decree. Though | ®lies, have taken the road of strug- } opened for the 1 ost rabid para- sitism, based primarily on the tre- mendous impoverishment of the toiling masses, fierce sharpening of national op- pression, with increased terror and fascist attacks (49 reported lynch- ings last year alone) legalizing of discrimination through the N.R.A. code differentials. Jim-Crow. wages are legalized. Discrimination comes more prominent as seen in the violent expulsion of Negroes from the Senate restaurant; dis- crimination on C.W.A. jobs and in relief; jim-crowism in the C.C.C. camps; further plundering and im- poverishment of Negro poor farmers under the “acreage reduction” plan, robbery of the Negroes by sending checks (compensating for acreage reduction) directly to the feudal landlords. C.C.C. camps are war training camps. The P.W.A. allocated the greatest bulk of its $3,300,000,000 for war works. The C.W.A. was the | The government’s policy of | strengthening the hands of the A. |F. of L. bureaucracy as an open | agency for putting over the “New be- | and share croppers in the South | with the government aiding in the | he Wagner Bill provided for the! |most powerful government strike- breaking agency ever set up in the United States, the very speed with | beginning of the New Deal, clearly | | which the strikes are developing | forecast its role, branded it as the R the Negro masses, one year|made Roosevelt act before the bill | rule of the “New Deal” has meant a/could go before his well-controlled | ®gainst the workers. Only the Com- | Congress. By “executive order” he | |empowered the National Labor} ;Board to do all that the Wagner | Bill designed to accomolish. Roe leading spokesmen | admit that his main object is; to save capitalism at all costs, if} necessary by the development of | fascism and the preparations for | war and the stimulation of war. When Roosevelt came to power, his actions were predicated on what! he thought was “the knowledge that capitalism generally was collapsing. | The whole question of the personal | (private) ownership of property was | | hanging in the balance.” (‘The | | American Way,” by Earle Looker). | Promises Made To Be Broken Promises to the masses mean | nothing to Roosevelt and can mean | nothing. They are made to suit} the needs of the immediate situa- | tion, but the relentless goal is the | main actual contribution to the un- | Deal” at the same time, supports the ; Preservation of American capital- | employed, but was only a tem concession, beset with graft, corrup- tion and discrimination, especially against the Negroes. It is now be- ing rapidly abandoned, the tremendous worseni conditions of the unemployed. Regarding the functioning C.wW.A. itself, we have the following com- ment published by the Baltimore Sun from Harry L. Hopkins, Ad- ministrator: “We are spending tens of thou- sands of dollars just to investigate charges of graft that fairly fill the air. The lid is liable to blow off at any minute...Some of our directors are incompetent; we will soon remedy that...Some of our Projects are lousy and we know it-..The whole thing is a flop.” The financial balance sheet of the first year of the New Deal records over $7,000,000,000 contri- buted to the bankers and giant corporations and railroads. A crush- ‘ng $10,000,000,000 budget was jaunched, the greatest share for Profit subsidies and war prepara- tions. The total cost of the New Deal is estimated around $25,000,- 000,000. The government deficit, a constant millstone around the necks of the toiling masses on which huge sums of interest musi be paid, reaches up into the $33,000,000,000 mark, and will sore still higher. The interest alone on this mighty debt is over $1,400,000,000 yearly. The tal spent for war during the first year, as itemized by the Daily Worker Washington Bureau, By D. H. In following the Open Letter of the Party, we are beginning to turn our face to the basic industries, to prepare the working class for the proletarian revolution. And in pre- paring now for the District Con- vention, we see that is necessary that we draw a clear picture of the shortcomings of the Party in one particular shop, In Stochham Pipe Fitting Com- hich employs Relates3 Years’ Experience of Party Shop Unit in the South they issued a leafiet that the work- ers of the grievance committee did not approve of, and that caused a | demoralization in the committee and the unit, with the exception of two members of the unit. As the crisis grew deeper and deeper, and wages were being con- stantly cut, in 1932 the workers be- gan to see that there was no way out but through struggle. Then five workers who were members of the Committee joined the Party, | eracy. | The Negro reformists have res- ;ponded nobly to these bribes with ;champions and informers (Walter White, Charles Houston at the | Senate hearing on the Costigan- | Wagner imitation anti-lynching | Bill) of American imperialism {against the rising revolutionary struggles of the Negro masses, in | growing unity with the white work- ers, We can sum up the economic and | political effect of the first year of the New Deal as follows: The measures taken by the Roose- | velt government for overcoming the lowest point of the economic crisis— | Measures taking as a rule the form | of political interference in economy, | forcible measures in favor of mono- | polist capital, drastic reduction of | the standards of living of the broad | Masses, more open dictatorship of | the capitalist state, nationalization | of debts, armaments and prepara- tion for war—are measures bound to lead at the same time to an ag- gravation of the general crisis on a world wide scale, to an increase of class antagonisms and of the | the capitalist class itself.” All roads of the New Deal lead to fascism and war. On the one hand, there is the trem resistance and coi the workers, which ‘tends to under- Check-Up "Shows Party Members in Union Not Active By H. FRIEDMAN The entire party membership seems to agree that our major activ- ity must now be directed toward trade union work, toward developing struggle in the A. F. of L. and So- and by proper agitation by these five workers in the shop, there were small struggles led, and victories At the beginning of 1933, the ithern | Party in the shop did not see the i of the workers, In this the the shop was lagging far e masses. After the May demonstration, when the workers E & Es : i i a BE : i i g 5 E : B Ad § z ¥ : &, e against 30 minute over- and their demands were Party again failed to ictory and organize the failed to call upon the set up shop committees the Company could have been ‘forced to recognize them at that time. Then the A. F. of L. came the New Deal of Roose- velt, 90 per cent of the work- ers in the shop joined the A. F, of L. After three months of the A. F. § a4 ge a s oe cialist-controlled unions. Whomever you talk to in the Party will tell you unhesitatingly that the perspectives for mobilizing the workers in the trade unions for struggle are very of L, misleadership in the shop, the workers began seeing that they themselves can and will fight for better conditions. We now have established a shop committee with non-Party members, meeting regu- larly and this committee knows our Party members and works with them in order to build opposition groups within the A. F. of L. We can see from this that the Party leadership has learned from its ex- periences from 1931-1934, and is now beginning to correctly turn its face toward the shops, mills and mines. It is now beginning to give lead- ership to the unit so that the unit can lead the masses. It is bring- ing in the Scottsboro case and ty- ing it up with the conditions. And the unit is gaining close infiuence over a few of the most militant white workers Hits Loosenessin Trade © porary | jim-crow policies of that bureau-|ism. “The situation at the begin- | |ning of his administration,” says | | the same author, “was such, that, | despite the copybook ethics, a Presi- | leading to | paeans of praise for the “New Deal”, | dent was demanded courageous (!) ing of the| openly coming forward as advisers, | enough to break promises, to reverse | commitments, to discard associates |when and if the broader policy | Seemed to demand that of him.” | |. All promises to the workers are | jbroken. Former associates are be-| |ing discarded for those more closely | | associated with the banks, who rep- | resent the “broader policy” of Am- | }erican imperialism followed by the | | Roosevelt government. It is no accident that in his |speech on March 4, 1934, the anni- | Yersary of his first year in power, Roosevelt’s mind dwelt on war. Any war would be agreeable to} the Roosevelt regime. A Japanese | war against the Soviet Union or a} European war, both of which would | offer tremendous opportunities of | supplying war materials. At the, same time it would give the United | States the opportunity of weaken- | ing its rivals and entering the war, as it did during the World War, at | the most ‘favorable moment to gain | the biggest share of the booty. | i} { biographers, Earnest K. Lindley, in | his book “The Roosevelt Revolu- | tion,” partly admitted this. Discus- |ropean war might be helpful. We is| mine still further the instability of | would probably find ourselves un- | to Soviet Power. gles and strikes. Only the Communist Party, day by day, as well as from the of finance-capital, directed munist Party tore the mask of demagogy from the face of the New Deal and revealed behind it the developing fas organs, Only the Communist Party took the lead in urging the workers to struggle against the N.R.A. and the whole New Deal, fighting every betrayer in the ranks of labor, leading the most militant strikes, and providing the best leadership within the A. F of L. opposition in girding the work- ers for struggle. Only the Com- munist Party led the revolutionary struggle against capitalism by point- ing and directing the workers against every slimy move of the New Deal. In fighting against the increas- ingly fascist measures of the Roose- yelt regime, we must remember the warnings of the 13th Plenum Reso- lution of the Communist Interna- tional: “In the fight against the fas- cization of the so-called ‘demo- cratic’ countries, the Communist Varties must first of all brush aside the fatalist, defeatist line of the inevitability of a fascist dictatorship and imperialist war and also the opportunist under- estimation of the tempo of fas- cization and the threat of im- perialist war, which condemn the Communist Parties to passivity.” The New York Herald Tribune editorially summ: ing up Roosevelt's first year in power “By his voice, by his laugh, his confidence, he has transformed the mood of the country. He de- serves high credit for the miracle.” When the unemployed starve he lets them hear his voice and his laugh. As the Draft Resolution of the Central Committee of the Com- munist Party puts it: “Under cover of the most shameless demagogy, Roosevelt and the capitalists carry through drastic attacks upon the living standards of the masses, increased terrorism against the Negro masses, increased political oppres- sion and systematic denial of ex- isting civil rights, and are strengthening the control of big monopolists over the economic and political life of the country.” The tremendous radicalization of Another of Roosevelt's close sup-| the American workers, its rapid | antagonisms of the interests within | porters, and one of his confidential | disill lusionment with the Roos promises, its bitter experience with Roosevelt’s strikcbreaking, presents the Communist Party with the mosi iendous growth of | sing means of solving the crisis, Mr. | favorable opportunity of organizing unter-offensive of | Lindley writes: “A good-sized Eu-| and leading the masses for the revolutionary y out, for the road Take Up Factory, Union Work in Pre-Convention Discussion good. The general understanding is that, as a result of the class-collabo- ration policy pursued by the labor bureaucrats, which, since the begin- ning of the crisis, has meant a con-| stant lowering of the workers’ living | standards (while the comfortable the latter have become discredited in the eyes of the workers. If previously the workers in the trade unions could not so easily grasp why we brand the leaders as agents of the bosses—now the workers are thoroughly convinced that the treacherous activities of their “or- ” or their “presidents” befit this name. Slow Progress Yet, in spite of the general agree- ment as to the ripeness of objec- tive conditions, our opposition work in the A. F. of L. unions does not make the desirable progress. I am speaking of my trade (the cap trade). The workers in my trade realize now that the office does not serve their interests. Furthermore, their experience has taught them that what we have said right along is true; namely, that the union, as it is constituted now, can’t even be reformed into a fighting instrument for union conditions. “What’s the use, you can’t do anything anyway” is the invariable reply by the gen- eral run of workers to your query: Why he stays away from union activity? So, why is the left wing group in our union so weak organization. lives of the leaders remained intact), | ti “ ing around our program the mass/ of the disillusioned and discontented workers so as to be able to lead them in struggle against the high-| salaried officials who continue to betray their interests openly and in a disguised manner? To my estimation, the answer lies| in the fact that if the objective conditions are ripe the subjective forces are not, say is that our party members and closest sympathizer¢ have not as yet transformed the s!ogan “Turn your face to the shop” into a living reality. Where To Concentrate It is a truism that a good, fight- ing, determined Communist will as @ rule, carry in the wake of his influence scores of workers. But that influence will be felt only in that field of activity where the Communist carries on work on be- half of the workers, associates with them all the time. Now if a Com- munist is doing most of his work in, Jet_us say, a I. W. O. branch, his influence in the union will be nil, ‘My trade is not a basic industry, but in consideration of the fact that | it is a part of the headgear indus- try, comprising many tens of thou-| sands of workers, revolutionary work there has some significance. The party members in my trade are all good activists in various fields of our movement, but not in the| union. To prove to what extent union work has been neglected by our comrades, suffice it to say that | These are the problems that the ‘They come more | the whole economic improvement is} American working clas: ‘Shows Much Lip-Service ‘What I mean to} “ | strengthen our opposition work. iz ; Workers as weaklings and deserters. JOHN L, LEWIS ‘UMW Local Sends ' Lewis Protest on ConventionAction Say Machine Flouted | Will of Membership and Their Demands BICKNELL, Ind.—Declaring that the Lewis machine at the 33rd U. M. W. A, Convention flouted the will of the membership as e essed through their resolutions, the U. M. W. A. Local No. 6803, in this city adopted a protest which was sent to the union officialdom The resolution of protest follows: Whereas, the local unions of the |s U. M. W. A. sent approximately 3,300 resolutions to our 33rd Con- vention demanding in wages, six-hour day, five-day week, payment for dead work, unemploy- ment and social insurance, the right | to strike, abolition of the appointive power and the right of the rank and file to elect o tion in the offic: penses, etc., and increase aries and ex- Whereas, e resolutions must be considered as det ms of our |membership; and Whereas, the 33rd Convention of the U. M. W. A. rejected all thes resolutions either by voting against them, or by referring them to vari- ous committees, or by modifying them, thus disregarding the wishes | and decisions of the membership; | therefore be it } 1 0. Resolved, that al Union 6803, located at Bicknell, Indiana, r ts against the manner in | which the Convention handled these jresolutions and against the de- cisions of the Convention to give the international officer the unlim- | ited power to handle the affairs of jthe U. M. W. A., disregarding the opinion of the rank and file mem- bersk and be it further | Resolved, that we particularly | protest against and condemn the invitation of the coal operators’ | | representative to address our Con- vention, the same coal operators that are responsible for the misery and suffering of our members and their dependents. CLAUDE DAILEY, Secretary. 22 Adopted Feb. 22, 1934. | Union Fractions se ny 3 To Factory and Union Work party members in our | have been in the party for quite In other words, the party mem- into a functioning fraction—to work out a policy of action to be pre- sented to the left rank and file group and through them to the en- tire membership. When the op- position group undertakes a certain party members are not in the fore- front of this activity, And precisely because the fraction is not func- respective shops act sometimes in aj} manner as to be pointed to by the Yes, our party members seem to pay ample lip-service to the! maxim; “We must root ourselves | in the shops,” etc.; but in practice shop work is still the weakest link | in our diversified activities and— this in spite of the Control-week that took place a few months ago. The convention will have to pay considerable attention to this prob- lem and find a solution to the much | mooted question of how to make / union work the major activity for / ally? Why are we so slow in rally- only recently I “discovered” a few party members, y officers, reduc- | a time. They never felt necessary | to attach themselves to the left} group in our union, and to!® bers in our trade are not mobilized | ® activity; say, issuing a leaflet, our|# tioning, the pgrty members in their | § Men at Bethlehem Mines Are Out for UMWA Recognition JOHNSTOW Pa. — “We have ordered all picketing of the mines to cease Saturday morning. the encouré of Depe of the Fi in Wash ton, who came in response to a to Frances Perkins from the pug nacious Mayor McClosky of Johns town, and which can be expected t« roduc\ WE President of played in ti 3 know However, it c be taken for granted that the little faker been steered into this decision big ones, miners struck on Jan. 2 for belong to the U.M.W.A P result betrayal came the when the local offi gave per: to the haulage mei to haul loaded ca the mine: the com, any to pay off ail the m ge the strike to a loc! , the pickets were w drawn At meetings of the local, marks, other than those in pra f the o: Is of the U.M.W.A., t the N.R.A. and the gover that bred the vulture it wu bol, were permitted. known to possess differc were expelled During the intervening time. sorts of jockeying has been practiced and when the miners showed sign: of becoming militant, the picket lin: Was re-established. Now, the crown- ine point has been struck in the the most beggarly sur- form of Worker ia New Goshen Tells How He Secures Subs for Daily Worker Here is how Leonard Morgan, of New Goshen, Ind., gets new subs for the “Daily.” He writes: “T talk Tellow wor and listen their opinions This way I learr what they thin! is the troubk with the situa- tion today. Wher T explain what I think is wrong with the way workers are Leonard Morgan treated by the bosses I inquire if they have ever read the Daily Worker. If they say ‘no, then I tell them I will leave a copy at their home, “After I leave the copy T go to their home again to see how they like the paper. Many times we dis- cuss some more the situation of the I find very much success SPRING CIFTS for your | RELATIVES ® Send a Torgsin Order to your relatives and friends in Soviet Russia and enable them to buy in the Torgsin Stores ® orticles needed at the turn of the weather, Prices compare favor- adly with those in the United States For Torgsin Orders apply to your bank or local authorized agent GEnERAL GE: SRESENTATIVE U.S.A, at AMTORG, 261 Fifth Ave., N.Y, . J, LEAGUE OF WORKERS— THEATRES, presents DRAMATIC GROUPS from NEW BRUNSWICK, PLAINFIELD, ELIZABETH, ORANGE and NEWARK IN COMPETITION Wed., March 7, at 8 P. M. NEWARK SCHOOL OF FINE |! AND INDUSTRIAL ARTS, 536 Hight Street. Newark, N. J. |) Tickets 25¢ in advance; 0c at door |)