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Frage Six Cleansed Own Ranks by ARTICLE V. THE 4th Congress of the Com he question the it to be organized from to the popular slogan of and Peasants’ Govern- made no struggle, the tac- conceiving and Peas- for reted workers’ uprising workers’ readiness for le and the opportunist leader- | of Brandler and Thalheimer, failed to mobilize and to| about the arming of the Ited in a severe | iness of the Brand- leadership quickly toward 1 t int of led “Peasai int Gov- | ed by an armed | of the peasant masses} st the big capitalist dictator- But the Bulgarian Communist tip failed to under- ist view of the al- veen the proletariat and| the peasantry and the leadership by | the working class in this alliance. | Brutal revressions of the Bulgarian | workers e “Peasant Govern-| ment” of Tzankov had confused the leadership of the Communist Party. | It did not mobilize the workers; it | failed to place the Communist Party | Comintern Fought 2nd Int’l Opportunism After Last War ‘Bitter Foes meaning a| DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURD. Merciless Self-Criticism During Stabilization Years By ROBERT MINOR at the head of the pro peasant m: arose between tarian and il war that s and the y declared struggle. eoisie had | ue and had | against the put itself at he spontaneous revolt. ism in the struggle was then in Poland led in armed upr nee of ti we m period of revolu- tionary by the workers inst the bourgeoisie that began with the end of the world war came to an end with the bourgeois still Western ‘ope, and in the Balkans. With the aid of its bloody victories | over the workers and peasants, the bourgeoisie was able to fasten upon the masses of Germany and Austria the heavy chains of double exploita- tion—slavery of the German and Austrian capitalists and debt slavery to the imperialist Allied powers. The famous “Dawes Plan” of the Ameri- can bankers chained the burden of the imperialist Versailles “Peace” upon the backs of the workers and reasants of Central Europe. This marks the end of the First Pericd, the first post-war period. re on. ain reached the ‘Id trade was re- increased, and in ency was ed ar countries the cw ized. e whole leadership of the Sec- Ir onal breathed a sigh of relief when the bourgeoisie seated itself comfortably again upon the backs of the saddled and bridled workers and peasants. “The crisis is over!”—the opportunist leaders resumed the pleasant profession of “representing” the working class in the strikebreaking ministries of cap- italist governments. The “Socialist” governments in Great Britain and Germany, thru the use of which as sirikebreakers the bourgeoisie had ridden out the storm, gave way to openly bourgeois governments. (To be continued) it x of questionnaires, — while we admit that the C. W. A., questionnaire, which left the worker just about as much privacy as a goldfish, takes the prize over any HELEN he Home | period. By this | i” | miners Pearcy Aid of the PMA for Nesbitt, Who Helped | Lewis Steal Election By a Miner Correspondent » MARCH 17, 1934 s\SHIFTED FROM CWA TO | 6 CENTS A DAY RELIEF Mrs. Roosevelt’s $25,000,000 Project at Arthurdale, W. Va., Peters Out MORGANTOWN, W. Va.—I am sending the full picture of the Mrs. Roosevelt's job at Arthurdale, W. a $25,000,000 project which is supposed to build 125 shacks. the same time Mr. Roosevelt has |laid over 600 workers off this C. BENLD, Ill.—In view of the fact | that uring the “Mulkeytown | March,” when the present rank and file members of the P.M.A. were as- | | saulted, their caravan wrecked, and | {the whole march driven back to Coulterville, Ill., and C. E. Pearcy; y at a mass meeting | | that “As long as I vote the Demo: ublican ticket and I s to do the is the difference | nts, and |; tblican clubs or the ontributed | He: s, they all hurt the ovement. | car vivid reflection of | after | en, | ying the striking with promises of N.R.A. intervention, he sent a TEL- EGRAM from Washington into his own local No. 1 (the seat of the P.M.A.) urging the membership to immediately endorse Walter Nesbit as Democratic candidate, simply be- cause Nesbit, the notorious racket- eer official of District 12, U.M.W.A., now Congressman, but still a member of the U.M.W.A., had promised to “aid” the P.M.A. in the New Deal at Washington! Ridicu- lous! Nesbit was the man who was in- |strumental in putting over the last infamous wage reduction by help- ing to steal the ballots of the refer- endum which was against the re- duction and which later provoked a state-wide fight and the formation of the P.M.A. This same man also made the statement to some of his friends in Balleville (Mr. and Mrs. Wieck) | urging them not to take part in the | | formation of the P.M.A., saying, “They are nothing but a bunch of fools and it won't be long before they will be crawling back into the U.M.W.A. on their bellies, and those that won’t come back will be ‘shot’ in!” (Meaning that they will be driven back at the point of a gun.) Members of the P.M.A.! Do not let the Democratic Party fool you any longer. The Democratic Party is now in control of the P.M.A. and is slowly stifling it to death with lies and empty promises. The very fact that the Democratic Party is allowing P.M.A. officials to run as candidates on their ticket (Joe Oza- nick of Mt. Olive as State Commit- teeman, etc.) shows that they are making these slight concessions in order to more easily confuse and destroy the Progressive movement. S.S.C., Progressive Miner. 24 MILES A DAY ROUND TRIP (By a Miner Correspondent) uD LUKE “—We want to work in industry —they answered in one voice. “,.. In the summer of 1930, the section for housemaids at the labor exchange ceased to exist. that we have ever read—a reader of | The industrialization of the coun- the column has mailed us another, try had caught*up the women in which is a preity close runner-up.| its course. They were given any This one was sent out from a well-| number of recommendations to to-do home in Connecticut, to be filled out by a hopeful prospective | housemaid. ne questionnaire, which is fairly representative of the sort of soul- searching almost any applicant for a job as a big-store salesgirl or a housemaid, mus: submit to, asks: Name? Address? Age? Nationality? Religion? Is your health good? Has it always been good? Are you married? If so, is your husband | living? Have you a child you wish to bring? If so, how old? Salary desired? Salary previously re- ceived? List here five previous Positions, and describe type of work done; also telling how long you worked at each place: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. —Are you fond of children? Are you fond of dogs? Would you mind taking care of new, steam heat furnace with help of eleven year old boy? Would you mind doing mending? Would you be satisfied to take only one day a week off— Sunday? Would you be contented to stay evenings? Do you wish to do the laundry? If so, how much do you wish in addition to your regular pay for doing it? Have you friends or family living in Bridge- port? Do you speak English fiuently? How long have you been in this country Do you like the country? Are you a good cook? Are you willing to make cakes, pies, ete.? Well, here’s a word to the wise (housemaids). It is a quotation from Sibiriak’s pamphlet, “The Working Woman in the Soviet Union.” Moscow Without Housemaids “To begin with we shall quote a small extract from a review, published at the end of last year in the magazine Smyena. The author had paid a visit to the Moscow labor exchange, ard this is what he wrote: “If you raise your head you can see three women at the highest span. They are crawling along the steel girders, high above the ground. Sometimes they pull drawings out of their pockets and consult them to see if everything is in order, or if the structure will have to be strengthened. All of them are ex-housemaids. When thy were given the addresses of the families requiring housemaids, they all refused. “—I don’t want to—said the first. —“Nor do I—said the second. “—Nor I—said the third. “—What do you want then?— they asked them at the labor ex- change. i | get work as housemaids, but they refused all of them.” Can You Make ’Em Yourself? Pattern 1666 is available in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 takes 3 yards 36 inch fabric and % yard contrasting. Address orders to Daily Worker Pattern Department, 243 West 17th Street, New York City. Send FIFTEEN CENTS (15c.) in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this Anne Adams pattern. Write plainly name, address and _ style number. BE SURE TO STATE | SIZE. Address orders to Daily Worker Pattern Department, 243 West 17th Street, New York City. | | | CONNORSVILLE, Ohio. — I am working in a small mine called Little Piney Fork. I have 24 miles a day round trip. During the cold zero days I couldn’t get my car started, because it was frozen and therefore couldn’t get to my work. When I got started back to work again, my room was given away. fore getting back to a new place, with no air in the damn thing. That's the way the N. R. A. treats us. There wasn’t a man who spoke up — only another comrade who took part. (Initials requested) —J. Z. NOTE: We publish letters from coal and ore miners, and from oil field workers, every Saturday. We urze workers in these fields to write us of their conditions of work and of their struggles to organize. Please get your letters to us by Wednesday of each week. WITH HONOR MENTION We were glad to hear from Abe Heller of Brooklyn, N. ¥., who sent us a cartoon, from Lila Mezur of Stelton, N. J.; Morris Minkin of the Bronx; Rose Kaminsky, Brooklyn, N. ¥.; Meyer Levine, N. Y. C.; Virginia Luttinger, Bronx, N. ¥.; Mabel Kauffman, Brooklyn, N. ¥.; Betty Fig, Brooklyn, N. ¥.; Fred Lesny, of the Bronx; Leonard Stogel, of Brooklyn; Marline Bes- semer, Alabama; Raymond Weil, Brooklyn; N. Rothstien, Hartford, Conn.; Josephine Wind, Allentown, Pa.; Marguerite Godwin, Staten Island, N. ¥.; Sam Stien, St. Louis, Mo.; Casper Mohl, Sharpsburgh, Pa.; Ray- mond Gerez, Chicago, Ill.; Bernice Saudler, Chicago, Til; M. Pabst, Bronx; Walter Laputz, Brooklyn. * ANSWERED BY ROSE KAMINSKY Dollfuss is a fascist who fought against the courageous Austrian workers and with the help of the Socialist leaders won. ‘Mussolini is an Italian fascist who or- ganized a dictatorship in Italy and at a moment's notice is ready to kill any worker who fights for his rights or liber- ties. Hitler is a German fascist who day by day is killing thousands upon thousands of rebellious workers. ‘The three countries in which fascism exists are Germany, led by Hitler; Italy by Mussolini; and Austria by Dullfuss. The Communist Party and its organiza- tions are the real fighters against fascism. QUESTION ON RELIGION The children of the Soviet Union can be brought to church by their parents, if their parents so wish. However, there is no church, school or religious education for them to attend. They are taught science in school instead of religion, so that they grow up with clear scientific minds. Then when they are 18 or s0, they can embrace religion 1 they want to ther ROTHSTIEN, Hartford, Conn. Dear Editor: On Monday after 2:30 o'clock, the white school boys met the colored school boys, and began to throw stones at them, and fighting them. After a while one of the white boys ran and called the police. The police came and run the colored boys worser, than a dog run a rabbit. They caught one of the colored boys, but they turned him loose, a week before. The same thing happened on the southeast of the town. They put those boys in jail. I don’t belong to a Pioneer troop. I wished I did. I want the people here to hurry up and begin to organize one. For I want to join. pee A LETTER TO MARLINE, Composed by MARLINE, Bessemer, Ala. WE'LL SEND IT TO HER | Then I had to loaf three days be- | W. A. project, and has turned them j into 6 cents a day relief. About 200 workers are still work- ing, but all laborers that work there now are paid as low as 37%4 cents an hour. Those that want to get to work must be re-emploved through the same politicians that Say that there is no more money to carry Roosevelt's project, th 000,000 has already di the same time we have 15,000 un- employed in Monangalia County alone which is the best producing coal area of W. Va. There have been only 1,600 work- ing on the C. W. A. projects out of the 15,000 unemployed, and they only receive three or four days a week. Also in Preston county from 30 to 35 per cent are unemployed If Mrs. Roosevelt spends one mil- lion dollars, the job will be com- pleted, and what happens to the other $24,000,000. The workers who work in the furniture shop making furniture for the homesteaders are being paid 10 cents per hour six hours a day At | from the county welfare board. Mrs. Tells Members to Vote |®* # C:W.A. Worker Correspondent | and three days a week. One of | Mrs. Roosevelt's best friends, Mrs. Nancy Cook of New York, has coi trol of this furniture shop. Also here is some information Alice Davis has cut the direct re- lief workers to 6 cents a day, which she says is only temporary for 10 days, and after 10 days there will be nothing done. Also Rev. Brook, chief administrator of the C. W. A. jobs of Monongalia county, gets $600 a month, and none of them Loyal Member of Auxiliary Dies GALLUP, N. M.—Just to let you know that we lost one of our comrades, Mrs, Concita D, Camillo, aged 58. On Washing- ton’s Birthday we held her fu- neral. She was very active during our strike; helped all she could; was on the picket line every morning. Her daughter was our secertary in the office before and during the first part of our strike. The Women’s Auxiliary marched with the National Miners Union members. Comrade Camillo had a very nice funeral and all our sympa- thy goes to the bereaved family. Signed—Women’s Auxiliary, N. M. U. has been cut off the relief yet. When the public hearing was opened by Mrs. Davis and the At- torney Frank P. Weaver, chairman | of the county welfare board. the judge was Father Flynn, a Cath- olic Priest. The jury was composed of the same people who were to be indicted themselves. Our Father Flynn has helped to crush relief of the workers down to 6 cents a day, because he has never worked a day in his life. One worker ran a stake through his foot on the C. W. A. job, and the doctor cut off his leg above the knee and they gave him $138 for the loss of a leg. Another worker lost an eye near a cement mixer on the Arthurdale project. This is from Mrs. Roosevelt's visits to Morgantown to help the forgotten man. Now they put the workers off the C. W. A. jobs to 6 cents a day relief. ‘Supported PMA and Democratic Party and Where Am I Now?” By a Miner Correspondent BELLEVILLE, Il.—This is a let- ter I sent to the editor of the “Pro- gressive Miner”: gressive Miner I notice some Catho- lic has a running og at the mouth. He strikes violently at every noise he hears, “He picks out a low paid U. M. W. A. miner and shows him up at $23.75. Look at the goose eggs. The Progressives are making goose eggs too, brother. “Mr. Progressive Catholic, while you jab at the U.M.W.A. with your poison dagger and try to sink your Poison fangs into the heart of the Communists, believe me, you poison viper, we know that in 1897 at Breeze, Ill., the Catholic priest tried from the union activities. It was the Catholic priests in Vienna, Aus- tria, who went out to solicit men to take up arms against the workers, and it is the Catholic priest now intrenched behind this Progressive Miner at Gillespie, Ill, who is try- ing to inject his poison into the brain pan of the poor, down-trod- den coal miner, in order to be able to climb on his back. “I ran the picket line for the P.M.A. I supported the Democratic ticket in the last election to some extent, in order to try to escape the heavy blows of the money power. Where am I now? “Take warning, fellow workers of other states. Do you want to ride, or do you want to be ridden? One mistake and_you will be helpless and hopeless, with the agents of this monster continually on guard. TWO WEEKS’ RELIEF (By an Unemployed Negro) OXFORD, Miss.—I went to the government 10 times and didn’t get anything. The 1ith time, I got a pound of butter and a half a bushel of potatoes. It has been three weeks since I drew, again. Feb. 19, I drew again. I got 6 Ibs. of flour; 25 cents worth of coffee; 25 cents worth of sugar and rice; two cans of tomatoes; one can of salmon; one can of pork and beans. That was for two of us to last two weeks. OUR YO ‘This is John Henry. He, too, is a mem- ber of the Pioneer troop. He can wear the same clothes as Bill, Jr. His Pioneer uniform is also the same. Match next week for Red Pepper. Marx was right I fell in their steps, And Lenin, too, So why don't you? SAM STIEN, aged 13, “In the Feb. 23 issue of the Pro- | to lead his miner members away|of the 8th inst. we notice a sad Letters from Our Readers A GOOD START IN LIFE Battle Creek, Mich. Comrade Editor: I am a little boy of 8 years old and I wanted to do something for the Daily Worker so I collected these few pennies. When I grow up I want to be a Red Army soldier. I will try to collect some more money. Thank you. c. J.D. A_ SERIOUS OMISSION ON INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY Brooklyn, N. Y. Under the caption, “Traditions of Revolutionary Heroines in Working Class History” in the Daily Worker omission of the Negro women, and we are going to name them, who Played a very great role in the abolition movement that led up to the Civil War, namely: Harriet Tubman and Sojourner Truth, The latter without aid, made over 47 trips into the South, evading the vigilance of the slave owners, and | by the route of the underground railway, smuggled more than 600 Negroes into freedom. Great re- wards were offered for the capture of this daring Negro woman, but at all times, she evaded her pursuers. International Women’s Day must | reflect the heroic struggles of these | pioneers and those who are follow- ing today in their footseps, in the liberation struggle of the Negro masses, With the growing struggles of the masses, and the strenuous en- deavors of such workers as Williana Burroughs who was candidate for Comptroller on the Communist Party ticket in the last election, and who is now head of the Har- lem Workers’ School, and many other Negro women who are ear- nestly and steadfastly using every energy to bring forward the rev- Olutionary solution to the problems of the masses, why are not these Negro women brought forward on International Women’s Day to the masses, through the medium of the 12 Men Take Place! Of 150 With Coal | Loading Machines (By a Miner Correspondent) KENILWORTH, Utah.—The coal mine here works on the average of three days a week in winter, and at present it is working from one to two days a week. For a miner with a large family the wages are about $5.30 a day, with the company month and, besides, $3 for United Mine Workers’ of America dues. House rent runs from $10 to $18 a month for four to six room houses. The company has been laying off men, and at present most of the men are living off the rellef. The coal company at present em- ploys six coal-loading machines which work two men to the loader crew, and it takes the place of 150 men. At present we are going to work on our own time which is against the state law. It says that all un- derground men should go and come home on company time. We are in the mines about nine hours a day, and it should be eight hours bank to bank. CWA Foreman Killed by’ His Intense Eagerness | to Speed Up Workers (By a C. W. A. Worker Correspondent) VAN DYKE, Mich—Tom Quinn, the crack production foreman on the Centerline sewer, is dead. As he was getting one buck an hour he tried to drive the men and was getting out the work accord- ing to the Hunger Government program on a 14 below zero morn- ing. He had two single planks on which he had 7% Ibs. crock-rolled, and in his slave-driving speed failed to notice the severe cold and stepped on one of the planks which broke in two and let him down on his head, 22 feet below. Also, another worker fell 10 feet, but was caught on a jack that saved his life, Quinn, the slave-driver has been a hunger foreman practically all his life, or ever since concrete roads came into creation, but the sewer job wound up his career in Center- line. Comrades, it’s our job to elect a foreman from the careful work- ers on the job. All the workers on this job prophesied that the produc- tion slave-driver would kill him- self or kill some worker. He wore a deputy’s badge to frighten the workers so they would get more production and be in fear of their jobs, so workers, let's get together and stop these slave bosses. The boys are saying he’s laying crock for St. Peter. None of the workers went to this slave-drivers’ funeral, although they were asked to go (but without pay.) Also, the hunger government won’t let the workers make up lost time. We don't get any Welfare eggs or cereals. This Welfare in Daily Worker, TOM TRUESDALE. | UNG ACROSS 1 and 4—The first and last name of the father of so- cialist thought. His anniversary comes in March. He was a German and organized the first Tnternation- al Workingmen’s Association. He wrote many books on_ socialism. 8—The possessive neuter pronoun 9—Railroad (abbrev.) l1—A coloring ma- terial 12—An old saying: “Hears no evil;— no evil; speak no evil.” 13—Permit 15—Vie, with “P" left out. 16—A duty imposed on people by the state 18—The first two letters in the name of the little the (Ld 25—Past part of to} 10—To elect again By CASPER MOBL This is the way the Big Shots would like to see Tom Mann walk; limp- ing and looking old and worn, But Tom Mann came to Pittsburgh like a man in his middle age walking with case and not limp- ing, and smiling as he talked. READ Van Dyke is crooked and discrimi- ERS girl heroine cat 14—The landlord — the alphabet 19--Related 27—Street (abbrev) ; tenants when| 28—Leave the K 20—Prefix meaning| 2@—To question they don't pay off of auk, a ‘apart; away. 1t| 80—Catch sight of | rent webbed-footed sea comes from the| 31—Obligation 17—To help bird Latin DOWN 2%5—The first and | 29—Kentucky M—To cease living} 1—Murdered fifth letters of (abbrey.) is a 212th and Sth} 2—A preposition the alphabet state where there letters of the al-| 3—Rose without |20—The fifth and was a huge min- phabet (also a the o and the e| 16th letters of ers strike. Freneh article) 5—Advertisement 23—Onager 6—Railway 2%4—To meke de-| %—A king of Per- ANSWER TO LAST WEEK'S signs on metal,) sia, about 465 or glass by eating| B.C. ee ee aes out lines with| 9—Revolutions or acid CETN IN CIAIT IN Molar pa cl expense running to about $23 a|-ership; in other shops there are two PARTY LIFE Cleveland Dist. Mobilizes te Carry Out Convention Tasks (Continued from yesterday) The Ohio District Pienum devoted considerable time to the trade union work and a special detailed separate report was given to the Plenum on the Youngstown situation. In some places (Youngstown, some steel or- ganizing groups in Cleveland) there had been retrogression. Some 1,600 T. U. U. L. members was the max- imum figure in the District, and the existing locals do not have a solid foundation. The concentration con- trol tasks adopted at the time of| the Open Letter were in the ma jor- | ity of cases neglected and one of! the decisions was to energetically catch up on these before the con-| vention. In examining the work of Party on the trade union and shop field, it was brought out sharply, that the Party was not alert to this control task and on the trade union field itself there was need for more aggressive work. In many shops, the workers were talking “strike” but we were not on the job to give lead- ths | | S8.M.W.I.U. locals actually control- ling the shop but no Party shop nucleus; in other places we saw where the SM.W.LU. had a foot- hold (Otis, Carnegie, Farrell) but the A.A. had come in and practically eliminated the Red Union; in New- castle 200 had joined up in the S. M.W.1U. but the union organizer had consistenly neglected to organ- ize them; in Packing where we had organized some workers, a strike broke out in neighboring shops un- der A. F. of L. leadership without the Packing Workers Industrial Union moving a finger for united front action and this is a one-man leadership instead of developing functioning executive boards, etc. In the three months under ex- amination, 6 new shop nuclei were organized and since Feb. 3, six more. These 12 are in the following in- dustries: Railroad — 2; Auto — 1; Steel—4; Rubber—1; Metal—2; min- ing—1; Electrical—1. While the es- tablishment of these is a step for- ward, the main task remains of con- solidating them—having them de- velop union activity—build them- selves and issue shop papers. Party recruiting was unsatisfac- tory. Only 263 new members were recruited during October, Novem- ber and December and for the first five weeks of the recruiting drive, for 500 new Party members, 169 have been recruited of which only 1-3 were employed. Particularly poor in the recruiting drive were Youngs- town, Akron, Section 2, 3, 11 of Cleveland and Columbus. The Ple- num examined the reasons for these weaknesses and gave directives for correcting same. Special attention was given to the impermissible high fluctuation and tendency to “drop” members instead of activizing them. Those sections most guilty of this are Section 3 of Cleveland; Cinci- natti, Toledo and Akzon. In connection with the Daily Worker circulation, the -Plenum sounded a sharp alarm, not orly about subs but equally about bundle circulation which had practically no increase over a year ago. Decisions were adopted to carry through not only the sub-drive but also to ex- tend bundle circulation and increase the sale of the Communist four times over. Special attention was given to the question of the united front task, rooting out of opportunists and im- provement in the functioning of the units, as the key to improving the political life and mass work of the Party. The Plenum adopted decisions with reference to all Comintern! Communist Party of Ohio Adopts Sharp Rese- lutions in Reviewing Work of Past 3 Months | | ; Preparations and took organizational steps to improve the Youngstown situation, challenged District of De- troit in the Daily Worker sub-drive, took immediate steps to carry through the struggle against Na- tional Preparedness Week and worked out plans for greeting of the 8th Natioral Convention in Cleve- land. At the end of two days hard work, the Plenum unanimously adopted the folloding control tasks to be definitely carried through by the time of the National Convention, 1.—Fulfill the specific Party and Y. C. L. concentration tasks in the Open Letter and July Plenum, as amended, 2. Developing T.U.U.L. and Party activity and recruiting in the shops assigned, by strict adherence of or- vanization policy of assigning one street nucleus to each concentration shop—one comrade released from all other responsibilities—one comrade from language bureau of dominant nationality to be also assigned ex- clusively to this, and giving of guid- ance and bi-weekly control and re- view by the Section Committees and leading T. U. U. L. fraction. Fur- thermore, in connection with the Party discussion, to organize com- plete recruitment of all steel and metal comrades in Cleveland into the Steel and Metal Workers’ In- dustrial Union. 3. Prepare thoroughly the Conven- tion discussion, especially in the units, with the objective of deepen- ing the political understanding of the Party; developing new prole- tarian cadres; carrying through the District Training School, and in each section and unit to review con- cretely the plan of work and central tasks adopted. 4. Extend the work among the unemployed and C. W. A. workers, through developing mass struggles and building of non-sectarian Un- employment Councils and Relief Workers’ Union. To accomplish this means specific assignments of Com- munists by units and section com- mittees and their strict control by by these bodies, all working under the leadership of the leading Party fraction in the U. N. and R. W. U. 5. Carry through successfully Re- cruiting Drive for 500 new members and the Daily Worker subscription drive for 500 new daily subs and 1000 new Saturday subscriptions. 6. Begin active preparations to carry through within the next two months a state-wide United Front action (state-wide conference with roots in localities leading to a mass action at State Legislature) of all workers and workers’ organizations against the organized offensive of the Roosevelt government which takes on sharper forms daily. To be successful this must involve de- cisive masses not as yet under our influence, and thus undermine the dangerous Musteite influence of the American Workers’ Party. 7. Connect all work with prepara- tions for a Mass May First cam- paign, the struggle against war, as political center of the campaign. 8. Instruct District Buro to pre- pare District Convention Resolu- tion for Party by March 1. Join the Communist Party 35 E. 12th STREET, N. Y. ¢, Please send me more informa- tion on the Communist Party. NAMe ..cssecsecssssees Street City ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS Dentist’s Address Corrected Dr. S. J. Green, who is doing dental work for comrades in Brook- lyn, at nominal fees, has his office at 238 Kings Highway, corner West 9h Street, instead of corner 9th Street. Raw H. M., Brooklyn.—It seems that your friend is suffering from a neu- ritis or inflammation of the nerves distributed over the palate. It is quite possible that it followed a severe cold that she had in her childhood. If it lasts only a short time, we would advise you to do nothing about it. It might cure itself in time. If the pain is severe and of a longer duration, a tablet or two of aspirin will probably re- lieve it. Has your friend been ex- amined by a specialist of nose and throat disesces? If not, it would be advisable to let her have a thorough examination of the entire Doctor advites: By PAUL LUTTINGER, M.D. naso- pharyngeal tract; inehiding the sinuses. te By Drug Addiction Always a Revolutionary.—Your letter to Mike Gold was referred to us for attention. Please let us have your address so that we may ad- vise you to the best of our ability, Rope oe Addresses Wanted Mrs. K. Stekey and Robert Rosen- feld—Private letters addressed to you were returned marked “Not Found.” Please get in touch with us again, giving your correct ad- dresses. i 10 Anniversary Concert Freiheit MandolinOrch. JACOB SCHAEFER, Conductor Saturday Apr. 21,8:30 P.M. TOWN HALL 43d St. & B’way Tickcis 50c, 75c and $1.00 at Daily Worker Office ‘DEL,” Master | GOOD TIME— DAILY WORKER VOLUNTEERS ANNOUNCES Dance and Entertainment Saturday Evening, March 24th Dance Music by Harlem Hot Shots MANHATTAN LYCEUM 66 East 4th Street, New York City Admission 30 cents in advance; 35 cents at door ALL PROCEEDS TO THE DAILY WORKER of Ceremonies Nna — DISQW LOH