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D = ATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, URSDAY, €CTOBER 18, 1934 ‘ aot ORGAM COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERMATIONAL) Working Class FOUNDED 1924 PUBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, BY THE COMPRODAILY PUBLISHING CO., INC., 50 E. 13th Street, New York, N. Y. Telephone: ALgonquin Gable Address: “D: B “America’s Only Daily Newspaper” 44-7954. except $3.50; 3 mor THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1934 An Injunction Aimed at the Marine Workers OURT action taken by the shipping in- terests in New York against the A. F. of L. Longshoremen’s and Teamsters’ unions, “to restrain them from interfering with the movement of freight with non- union men. another step flowing from the N.R.A anti-labor policy. It is a continuation of the line of the West Coast shipvers, who, until forced by the militant strike, even refused to recognize the union chosen by the worke>: ees This action taken by 32 companies, backed by the Merchant’s Association, the New York Board of Trade and the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, came at the very moment when the Roosevelt board made public its decision on the demands of the West Coast longshoremen. While the workers, through a militant st-uggle, forced substantial con- cessions, the action of the shippers is only one of the steps to prevent the werk from actually penefitting. The injunction proceedings of the large New York pers, if not defeated by mass strug- gle, will have a far-reaching effect, and set a pre- cedent for all other po: But while the shivowners are taking such steps to prepare for ancther open shop drive, the officials of the Longshoremen’s, Teamsters’ and the Inter- national Seamen's unions are very busy dividing the workers, doing everything possible to prevent strike preparations, and direct the workers to stake every- Roosevelt Exposed by Own Committee HE Economic Security, which Roosevelt has set up as part of his election ballyhoo, has just unwittingly exposed his false claim that the admini- stration will solve the problem of unem- ployment. Dr. Edwin E. Witte, executive director of the committee, admitted on Oct. 16 that “un- employment has become a permanent problem.” The committee says definitely that unempioy- ment is “a chronic evil even in times of prosperity It adds that it is this long-term aspect of the permanent problem that particularly concerns the committee. Committee on In other words, while Roosevelt is promising jobs, and cutting relief because these will be made available soon, his experts are trying to concoct some scheme that can be passed. off as economic security because of the pressure of permanent un- employment. It is significant that the only con- crete point that the committee has made so far is that the burden of unemployment will not be borne by the employers. If the workers contrast Roosevelt's demagogic promises with the concrete program of the Com- munist Party for helping the unemployed and their families, they will see that the administra- tion is serving the big bankers and industrialists, while the Communists are really fighting in the interests of all workers, employed and unemployed alike. The Communist Party was the only political party which told the unemployed from the be- ginning of the crisis that capitalism could not re- employ them all. It was also the only party, which, realizing this ominous fact, helped to work out the Workers’ Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill. This bill, for which the Communist Party is fighting every day, is the one thing that will stand between the unemployed and mass starvation. Permanent unemployment is here to stay and the one way to combat this evil is to maintain the liv- ing standards of the unemployed through insurance at the expense of the employers and the federal government. The employed workers must also fight for the adoption of H.R. 7598. The destruction of the liy- ing standards of: the unemployed will bring with it the degradation of the economic standards of all workers. To ensure the quick adoption of the bill, de- spite the bitter hostility of the capitalists, we need workers’ representatives in the legislative assemblies of the ruling class. The election of Communists to | Party Life | ree | of Communist Party Sets Red Fighting Fund E following letter has been to all Party members in the York District “The rapid growth of the strike movement in the United States the | ever-growing struggles of the unem- | ployed for relief and Unemployment and Social Insurance; the constant growth of the ranks of the Com- munist Party and other revolution- organizations through their ac- tivities for the immediate demands jof the workers; the increasing ex- pressions of solidarity on the part | of the American working class with | the struggles in various sections of the country and in foreign coun- tries, are being met with in’ensified fascist terror against the revolu- | tionary workers. and especially | against their leadership, the Com- munist Party. | “The events in Toledo, Minne- apolis, San Francisco, etc., are not isolated cases of reac.ion but samples of what the ruling class. will resort to when faced with the problem of defending the interests of the bosses against those of the workers. The placing of police forces on a. military footing, the arming of thugs as vigilantes to destroy workers’ centers and work- ers’ property; the harnessing of the American Legion and of large fra- ternal organizations like the Elks in red-baiting campaigns; the in- creased use of the militia in labor | disputes, point to a period of in- creased fascist methods against the American workers—the same meth- ods used against revolutionary | workers in Germany since Hitler | assumed power. sent * “ITNDER these circumstances the Communist Party of the United States must learn from the ex- | periences of the Communist Party |of Germany and be prepared to meet any emergency that may arise jat any time. : é | “If every comrade acquaints him- Up | New | | | “AND WE PROMISE YOU Contributions received. to the credit of Burck in Previously received by Burck 4.40 |World Front By HARRY GANNES Japanese War Plans Hit by Typhoons, Strikes | | Wage Cutting for War | |MNHE Shinto gods have been | acting unfavorably on the war plans of Japanese im- |perialism against the Soviet Union. What with typhoons jand growing strike struggles, |the Japanese military clique |was forced to re-open negotiations with the Soviet Union and hike |their bid for the Chinese Eastern Railway, when they had their heart set_on taking it by armed force |. Most severely hit in the recent \terrific and death-dealing typhoon | Which swept the industrial centers of Japan were the war industries, | An editorial in the Osaka Maini< |chi calling for a “reconstruction fund,” actually appeals for a greater war fund to reconstruct industries destroyed by the typhoon, We quote from this editorial to indicate the extent and type of damage donc: “Considering the losses suffered by varieus industries in the af- | flicted area in the central factory districts of the city of Osaka along the western shoreline and by those close to the seaside in Tobe, Sakai, Amagasaki and else- where, rolled copper, iron and steel, machinery, ship-building, dye, fertilizer, sugar manufac- , turing, cotton spinning and many other plants (for example, poison gas manufacturing, explosives, etc, —H. G.) have been wrecked or in- | undated. The steam generating statiors of electric power com- panies have been rendered useless * * * JHE Mainichi asks the government 4 for over $400,000,000, in addition to the present huge war budget to “reconst:uct” the war industries. A growing strike sentiment has been sweeping the Japanese work- Ses a ——— I : ‘ ‘| self or herself with the methods of | lis Socialist competition with Mike Gold, Harry Rose Gotlieb .. 50 oe thee ee ae mae aioe Pay thing on the secret negotiations with the bosses office will guarantee that the fight of the unem- | S¢l af elias Communis: Party of 2nmes, “del,” the Medical Advisory Board, Helen H. Hirschhorn 106 Japanese trusts have been slashing | and the government boards. | ployed will be —— on right in the midst of the | Gok of + Godage te bess OF frou | Lake, David Ramsey, in the Daily Worke= drive for Red Party .. 25 [amaneee. sie Sane beste Uae Joseph Ryan, president of the International Long- | a sl conc a see so that the | aganda, the hundreds of weekly | £5°,000. QUOTA—S1,000. Previeusly received : Bs [tramway workers, have either struck | shoremen's Association, expressing great satisfac- | peselascig i oe injoy + oe passage, as the | naners issued under absolutely il- A. Feodor serene 200 Total to. date 0... $13.00 | already, or are threatening to tion with the decision of the Roosevelt Board on | Workers’ representatives bring tine pressure of the | legal conditions, the regular issu- Jerry Janson 25 NOTE:—Teday’s winner of Burek’s original (strike. An example of why the ~ Rip West Coast Marine Birike’ deminride ‘declare | DIKES ( Heat low She: iepitiarive aetvants ofthe «| anbe. ot sheabenteal creat the) °C Ae fo cartoon is A. P. Will he please send his full name |Japanese workers strike and how that delay in strike action on the Fast Coast was | Capitalists. Party, the Rote Fahne, the hun- John Reed Club Student and address to the Daily Worker Drive Editor—so that we can send him the drawing. |they do it we obtain from the fol- \lowing information sent to a com- rade in Cambridge, Mass. and transmitted to us: * dreds of ingenious but costly meth- ods of spreading Communis: prop- | | aganda, he or she will understand | the political significance of finances under such conditions. ent justified, claiming that the workers in agreeing to accept the board’s Gecision gained in the end. Then he attacked the Communists for bring about a strike on the East Coast. Anyone who is not acquainted with the recent An Appeal to Marine John and Beatrice McMehon * * st geles of eth marine workers would take Ryan a champion cf the workers. After all, a long- saoreman on the East Coast will reason, the Roose- velt board granted a 10 cents per hour increase, to 95 conts, $1.40 per hour for overtime and a 30-hour week But is this gain a result of Ryan's conferences With the employers? By no means! It is a result of the three-month bitter struggle of the West Coast longshoremen and seamen, led by the mili- tant workers, such as Bridges, whom Ryan attacks. It is because of the threat of a general marine strike on the East Coast. It is because the West Coast longshoremen have kept their union intact, and in San Francisco have elected militant strike leaders as officials of their union. Since the strike was called off they have maintained their vigilance, just as on the picket linc, and no scabs were per- mitted to get on the Cocks. The calling of the seamen’s strike on the East Coast speeded the decision of the Roosevelt board. If it wasn’t for the strikebreaking tactics of Ryan, in spiittmg the longshoremen from the seamen, or if the 1 . Officials would not have served as a seab-herding agency, a successful marine strike on the East Coast, would have resulted in a complete victery for hoth THE EAST AND THE WEST | attempting to | | Workers EAMEN, longshoremen and harbor workers: You, who have been on the picket lines in the great West Coast strike. You, who have fought in the recent struggle on the East Ccast and in the gulf ports. To you, brave fighters for the rights of Labor, the Communist Party extends its warmest frater- nal greetings. Members of the Communist Party have been with you on the picket lines, which have circled the U.S.A, during the past few months. They have been with you in every one of your batiles, expos- ing the treachery of Joseph P. Ryan, Victor Olan- der, leading, giving guidance and fighting in your front ranks. It was due to correct Communist leadership, plus your militancy and heroism in the fight, that concessions were wrung from the Roosevelt Long- skoremen’s Board following the West Coast sirike. You followed the advice of the Communists, elected an honest rank and file leadership in the San Fran- cisco local of the I.L.A. an‘ won a partial victory, despite all attempts of the shipowners, corrupt top membership of our Party must awaken to the fact that it is their DUTY not only to par- | ticipate in the every-day work of | the Party but also to undertake the responsibility of financing such work and establishing a strong | emergency fund for the future. We must also keep in mind that many | of the La*in-American’ sections of | the Communist International de- | pend on our Party for financial as- | Sistance. The New York District of | our Party has the task of helping the Cuban Communist Party. To the ex'ent that our District can come to the assistance of the Com- | munist Party of Cuba, to that ex- | tent the revolutionary work in this | colony of Wall Stree; imperialism can be extended. | “This is the main purpose of thé Red Fighting Fund of the New York | District. This fund, which will be | equally divided between the various | sections and the District, will also | be used to meet immedia‘e acute |meeds of the Party. Twenty-five per cent of the District’s share will | go to the Central Committee. Germ an Chuteh Show ‘HE unanimous walk-out of 12,« | | | - | | Conflicts in The actions of the high Nazi of: ficials on the question of the .con- |flict within the German Church in- (dicate a nervousness and a con- | vietion that the German Protes- | tants’ revision for the fascist-ap- pointed Reich-Bishop Mueller is really a revulsion for Hitlerism al- together. | Factual proof is ample, that the \churech conflict, far from being a ‘simple matter of freedom of religion, as the press here and abroad would like to see it, is a vent through which the fury and oppression of | the entire country is escaping. The clumsy and_ vicious Bishop Mueller was probably not surprised when on Sept. 23 a few straggling {thousand greeted him, instead of the Protestant hosts. The German Foreign Office had been hurriedly pressing for his retirement, but it \was too late. The Lord’s anointed was a favorite in high quarters and Protestants’ Hatre d of Nazi R took the opportunity to throw its whole weight of dissatisfaction and bitterness into this struggle. Did this mean that Meiser and the hundreds of other protesting clergymen were really opposed to Hitler? Did this mean that. they were willing to assume any sort of leadership in the battle, not only against religious oppression, but economic oppression? Not at all, The message of allegiance to Hitler, intermixed with the declarations of opposition, affords ample proof of this. The Protestant Bishop Meiser 18 as anxious to restrict the fight. to religious matters as Hitler himself. But there is equally little doubt that the impetus given by these powerful mass demonsirations, at which workers and peasants spat |at the mention of Hitler, goes far beyond the small reactionary aims of Meiser and the Pastors’ Emer- carrying out the commands of Hit- ler and his ‘associates in the guise of allegiance to Hitler shows this clearly. The leader of the church opposi- tion, Karl Barth, in the pamphlet, “For the Liberty of Evangelism,” de- clares: church of God on earth, cannot stand or fall with this or that pos- sibility of nature or with this or that cultural form, or with this or or a State.” These words reveal the well- founded fear that if the Proiesiant Church permits itself to be made a dependent of the Nazi State it will soon go under with that State. It is now of paramoun: impor- tance that the Protestant and Cath- olic toiling masses be made to realize that the question facing of “Servants of God,” and the oath: “The church, the righteous | that phase in the history of a people | 000 militant Japanese workers was the reply of the employees to a clever scheme of reducing wages ; which had been hatched by the jbankers and officials of the Tokyo jcity government. The city govern- |ment. controls the transportation | system. The 12,000 employees were to be fired on Sept. 4th and 1,200 yen “tear-money” compensation, or a | Solace bonus, would be paid to each worker, whereupon the city govern- ment would rehire 95 per cent of the employees at a reduction of 40 per cent in wages. The average wages of the works ers vary from $20 to $30 per month and average 75 yen per month, In other words, because the city | government cannot balance its bud- get and is virtually bankrupt, the banks have agreed to loan it money only on the basis of such a vicious attack on the living standards of | the workers. So anxious are they for immediate profits that they are willing to pay | out at once, 14,400,000 yen in “tear< money” in order to cut the yearly he: eh ‘A them is not that of demanding| a COASTS. For it must not be forgotten that the | Oficlals of the A. F. of L. and N.RA. folks to keep | “WWITH the rising militancy of an | 7? Qné dared to cancel his Primacy. |gency League. A valve has been |spiritual liberty from a. regime |Va8es of Hee ene eae ee 20! ‘Ss. ? ms ® 5 eq | you from winning. | aggressive working class, the | n in, where Mueller had pre- jopened, and the accumulated hatred | whose actual content is the bar-|} be 1406, ed . chief demand of the strikers, a workers’ controlled | nie a tht Z | ake of’ bur Pavey, f th by nit pared amplifiers for an enormous of the enslaved and _ brutalized barous and bloody persecution of all the “tear-money” outlay can be hiring hall, was not granted. Instead, there is the © you see that Communists are no strangers | viral Commirtee ie yinit audience, his speech, as the Basle|masses finds exp: “or ’ joint hiring hall, which places final decision on 7: erimination complaints in the hands of the ¢ ment Labor Relations Board, which, like all the NRA. divisions, is a strikebreaking and pro-com- pany union instrument. The action of the New York shippers shows that the shippers plan to follow the auto and steel bosses and renew their drive for company-unionizing the waterfront and instituting blacklisting hiring halls. This threat hangs over every port. “ut the ac- tions of the Ryans and Olanders is only to illusion the workers that the bosses attack can be met with negctiations. Instead of preparing against this at- tack of the shipowners, the top officials of the IL.A., LS.U. and Teamsters’ Union are centering their attack against the Communists—the very ones whose policies and leadership made possible the concessions. ‘Their attack is against the rank and file movement in the unions, which calls for prepa- ration of a general strike along the eastern sea- board, with a workers’ own hiring hall as the cen- tral demand. If the marine workers are to win their own hir- 4ng hell, and central shipping bureau, if the gains scored by the recent, West Coast strike are not to remain on paper, no time should be iost in kicking out the Ryans and Olanders and placing lea shiv in the hands of honest rank and file leaders. Marine workers in all unions must rally imme- diately to organize a rank and file opposition. Only such action will defeat the injunction, which is y the NR to you, brother seamen and longshoremen. They are seamen and longshoremen like yourselves—leading fighters and ozganizers for the rights of the work- ing class. They are miners, textile workers, trans- port workers, poor farmers—unwavering and honest. The Communist Party, therefore, welcomes you inio its ranks. The Communist Party needs fighters like you, The coming struggles in the maritime industry will bring greater victories to the working class if there are strong Communist organizations in all the ships and on all the docks. You, brother seamen and longshoremen, should become part of these organizations, leaders of your fellow workers. Your place is in the ranks of the Communist Party, the vanguard of all those who toil and are oppressed and suppressed. Merine Workers: Join the Party of your class— the Communist Party: Join the Communist Party 35 EAST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. Please send me more information on the Com- munist Party. Shipowners Now. Seek Injunction (Continued from Page 1) In the com the un: ping Act, the N. R. A. and vatious | laws in the state .of New York for- bidding combinations and “conspi- racies.” The shipping interests in their complaint express very fzankly | and we are confident they will be | owners, to keep the workers likewise united in 1934.” | state in charging the workers with violating a law against combina- tions, that they are out “to seaventi the employment of any person in| | struggling. ecm-|as well. The joint hiring hall, it was de | to the Central Committee is mul- | | tiplied many fold. Millions of leef- lets must be distributed. Pamphlets |on all problems confronting the | workers with the Communist way out must be published and dis- tributed. More functionaries must be sent into the field. More. func- tionaries must be trained in the District and sections. quires great amounts of money which cannot be gotten from the decreasing income from dues pay- ments. “No Party member who under- stands the emergency cf such a Red | Fighting Fund can fail to give ‘his full cooperation to ihe plan. Hof tee ve How the Plan Works “RVERY Party member fs to col- lect a minimum of $1 once every two months or thereabouts, | for which he will receive a stamp to be pasted in his membership book. |. “This collection will be made through the means of stamps of 5, 10 and 25 cen. denominations, bound in a small booklet. “Two comrades from each street nucleus or one comrade from every | shop nucleus of less than ten mem- bers are to be assigned every week to collect a minimum of $1 each. | “The Finance Secretary of the unit is to see that different com- ——— | rades are assigned in rotation every | from | week for ihis work so that every Negotiations are pro- eins of the em- | ceeding in the offices of the N. R. A.,| average of once every two months. mi is charged with |with Ryan only asking that th: ing the power to obstruct, | decision of the Ro: impede and even paralyze the eor- | |merce of the plaintiffs or of an: | business concera engazed |merce which attempts to refuse its | the Sherman An‘i-Trust law, Ship-'|tnjust and opzecsive demand:.” |Party member gets his turn at an e| All Party members must be in- velt Board pro- | volved in this work. viding for joint hiring halls on the | est coasy apply on the East coast | members one comrade is to be as- “In shop nuclei of less than six | Signed every two weeks. “The booklet, with whatever | amount is collected, mus; be re- The companies, most of which are | fined, gives the shipowners complete | turned within a period of eight part of lazge monopolies and trusts,|freedcm to choose workers, and! days after getting it from the unit. |therefore to discriminate. The Rank | “Comrades who cannot attend the and File committee in the I. L. A.| unit meeting at which accounting has in the meantime issued a leafict,, must be done, for reasons of sick- now being distributed, calling fo- | Ness, etc., are to see that the book- All this re- | | “Nationale Zeitung” put it, “had the effect of a bomb-shell!” This was only the beginning. In| rapid succession the masses of the nation answered his dictum for the “forcible amalgamation of the Prot- estant and Catholic Churches in | One single church, free from Rome.” On Sept. 18 throughout the country, especially in North Prussia and Ba- jVaria, peasants listened to their Protestant pastors with their pock- ets full of stones, ready to give the Storm Troopers a taste of “militant” Christianity. The day following the Munich police ran with drawn sabers into a crowd demonstrating against the Protestant Bishop Mei- ser’s expulsion. All during the week printing shops were busy, turning jout thousands of leaflets, and op- Position manifestoes, and when the Police confiscated them, -the pastors Promptly replied by announcing that they would read the manifestoes from their pulpits. Consequently the churches were overflowing on the day set for the reading. All Ba- |Varia, indeed the entire country, ion, What is an ecclesiastical struggle today may turn into an anti-fascist mass strug- gle tomorrow. For not only will the Catholic opposition against Hit- ler in the neighboring Rhine coun- try, but also the Catholic opposition in Bavaria, in the Ruhr district, and in. Upper Silesia, not to speak of the great Protestant districts of Wurtemberg and of Northern Prus- sia, receive a fresh stimulus. The fact that it has been possible for thousands of people to demonstrate publicly against the regime is cer- tain to encourage the anti-fascist struggle everywhere, since the news spreads everywhere, in spite of the immediate efforts made to hush it up. In reality the National-Socialist idea of a Protestant Reich Church aims at something further than merging the churches in the various German states and putting an end to particularism in this field. What the National-Socialists want is a State Church in the most literal meaning of the word, a church which consists of State officials freedom. spiritual or economic, among the masses of the people. The real question facing them is to rganize the struggle for the over- throw of the fascist system and for the establishment of Socialism, in the united front with the sovial- istically minded masses and under their leadership. For it is Socialism which creates economic freedom for the enslaved and suppréssed masses of the people, and with it spiritual freedom. The enormous energies of the working people, the mighty force of the psople’s hatred against a dic- tatorship which maintains itself cation and lies, must be sidetracked into a religious struggle, which is at the bottom harmless to fascism. The thousands of “Protestants” in Munich, the hundreds of thousands who will join them, are in reality protesting against the regime itself. lead them forward from this pro- test to the action of the anti-fas- cist united front for the overthrow of the fascist capitalist dictatorship. New Zealand Professor Denounces War, Praises | Bolshevik Revolution AUKLAND, New Zealand. Oct. 17. —In official circles and in the bour- geois press her2 great excitement reigns over a speech by an active end brilliant young visiting profes- sor, H. Dickenson, at a demenstra- , tion called by the local Anti-War Committee. - sae ‘ “The only good consequence of | the last war,” Professor Dickenson declared, “was the Bolshevik Reyo- lution. The motives which drove capitalism to war were the hunger | for profit and the desire to redis- | tribute markets and spheres of in-! fluence.” British Union Leaders Hail Soviet Gains (Special to the Daily Worker) MOSCOW, Oct. 16 (By Wireless). —Before leaving Soviet soil two members of the Gentral Council of British Trade Unions, Hicks and Macleen, told of the tremendous Progress of socialist construction and culture observed during their three week's visit. “Enormous changes have oc- curred here in the course of the ten years since my first visit to press talk of. Nor did I see poverty o: famine, or even signs of these. On the contrary, in the course of | visits to Soviet towns, industrial enterprises, collective farms and government institutions I noticed that all the administrative bodies jand chiefs strive to place the in- | terests of the workers and their families first in their planning. Everywhere I saw heppy, laughing faces in the streets, thectres and stadiums, where thousands of young pecple engage in all kinds of sport. . “Soviet youth looks at its future confidently, firmly, fearlessly. Ail whom I had occasion to talk with here are quite conscious of what is taking place in the Soviet Union, Although many recognize that great work is in store for thom, but I repeat they all look to the future with confidence.” solely by means of mutder, provo-| The great call of the hour is to, | financed by a long term bond issue of some kind, while the immediate \saving of 4,644,000 yen per year will |enable the city government to meet |the tax and interest payments to |the Tokyo bankers. | The workers replied to this at« |tack with a solidarity unequalled in |previous strikes. Preparations for |this strike were carefully made and the morning of the walk-out every Starting Station through out Tokyo was occupied by the workers at 4 am, The Japanese Press claimed that there was no Communist influence in the strike, but the history of the transportation workers in Japan is one of left-wing unionism, in which Communists play a lead- |ing role.” | The same news source reports also that all summer long there have been dozens of peasant uprisings throughout the land. All this show ‘of militancy by the workers has been met with a terrorism and | brutality equal in ferocity to that | of the bloody Hitler regime, cay ae N exampie of how the Socialist leaders in various countries greeted the armed struggles of the Spanish workers against Fascism is shown by “Social-Demokraten,” official organ of the Socialist, Party of Denmazk. While the fighting was as its height, the Danish Social- ist leaders encouraged the Spanish | Workers as follows: 3 “The Spanish ‘revolution’ seems jalready to be finished. The pro- lecedings there indicate once more how difficuit it is to gain the victory over the armed power of the state. The conclusion of a war excepted, where the people have arms, no re-, volt can be victorious in a fight with arms.” When the proletariat of Spain gives its lives to stem the advance | i si - jthe U. 8. S. R.,” Hicks oe Macleen entirely agreed with | % na the Socialist leaders ang 3 | any of said occupations who is not! proparaticas to struggle together | let and the money are forwarded to! ang as much as ssible, every |4Scertained with great satisfaction i declare: They should not have j the union smashing intent in the|, “member of one of said local | with the seamen for a workers own | the unit through the group captain po: Ty everything that Hicks said and j move. | drive of 1920, Louis K. Comstock, | Recalling: the open shop | ynions.” in the U.S. 8. R. we visited numer- { Sees ie |shoremen that Ryan is only co-cper-| “In all cases the booklet must be booklet, as we ‘vant to accustom country. ous cooperative institutions, wit-| Contributions received to the | president of the Merchant's Asso-| The complaint continues in con-| ating with the shipowners to make | returned eight days after it leaves workers to contribute reg-, “I was particularly impressed by nessed their daily work and studied | Credit of Harry Gennes in his So- | ati ted: iderable detail to explain how the| possible the N, R. A. antislayor ‘he unit. y to our Party. the high lebor efficiency, the ac-|their working plan. cialict competition with D:l, Mixe | Saal unions “have threatened and even | polic | “Comrades failing to carry out) As far as possible this collection tivity ad energy of the Soviet} “Soviet cooperation is working) Gold, the Medic2) Advisory Board, | “There 2s a fundamental principle called strikes.” that the handling the tock when assigned will be Cealt | should be utilized to reervit sym- ‘o2ders and administration, who! well, but I wish especially to em se, Jacob Burck and David { t\stake in the-casc—that is as to|of scab freight was stopped, ani Wots'tee Cuasie Syho Fight with in the same ma-iner as when i p2 hetie wevkers into our Party. show exceptional ability in being pnasice the splendid work of a co- Ren sey. in the Daily Worker driv i ther there sha'l be an mninter- | through similar action the move-| , Vole [or Candidates Who Fiz hey fail to carry out any othe: of Those who donate to the Psriy are *ble to mester and solve the cperative department store in Mcs-/ for $60.00. Quota—s500. | a flow of commerce th-onch ment of freight was “interfercd at rs = se ark Pays ® | the impoztant there we can recruit. If this is lems which come up and firmiy to|cow in’ Serpuhovsky Squ2re (a| Jaseph Potar. .. $1.00 | Part of Now York without stop- with.” | estate Commiaates: | unit. done we will not only establish a Carry out the general line of the| working district). We found alargo| Jchn and Mc- \ action of any kind and| While the shipowners are pre-. my “Collections for the strong Fighting Fund but we will |Porty. [number of purchasers filling ell de-| _ Maten eit discrimination. Public opin- paving the setting for an open shop| Communist Candidates Are fund should be made from among|als> broaden ihe organizaticnal| “I made a long trip through the| partments, but the greatest number| Previeucly received { the courts wnited to con- drive, Ryan continucs to put into, Leaders in. the Fizht for the | the hundreds of thousand of sym- | basis of our Party. uch discrimination in 1920 effect his ag-eement with the ship- Rizht te Organize, Strike, Picket. \hiring hall, and warns the long-| OF through some o her means. | pathizers of our Party in New York |Party member should approach. the | | came workers every time he has the | DISTRICT FINANCE DEPT. | the progress of economic, social and cultural development of the Soviet union, but didn’t see anywhere the added: “In the course of our siay was in the department selling things which a part of the foreign musical instruments and radios.” |taken up arms! ] Total to date... SIR15 ar AR A RA i SE ABO