The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 2, 1935, Page 1

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Obtain at Least One Greeting from a Friend Today for the Daily Worker Anniversary for the Congress on January 7 JN THREE days, | tional Congress NATIONAL | Join in Rallies) ———————e Daily Worker CENTRAL ORGAN COMMUNIST PARTY U.S.A. (SECTION OF COMMUNIST INTERNATIONAL ) Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. ¥., under the Act of March 8, 1878 EDITION the Na- for Un- employment Insurance opens its sessions in Washington. This workers’ congress opens immediately after the begin- ning of the sessions of the United States Congress, at which President Roosevelt will personally lay down his “recovery” program. The message of President | Roosevelt, it is already cer- tain from previous statements of his administration leaders, will launch a new and inten- + sified aftack on the whole LEGISLATIVE Workers to Compete in Plan standard of living of the workers, an offensive of fi- ‘. Sp read Special Edition WHIP GIVEN Of ‘Daily’ at Factory Gates T0 RICHBERG A plan of action:for collecting greetings for the Daily scala | Worker on its Eleventh Anniversary and for selling the spe- nance capital, whom Roose- Him ial Anniversary and Lenin Memorial Edition of the paper, Vol. XII, No. 2 a" NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1935 (Six Pages) Price 3 Cents DELEGATES OFF FOR PARLEY NEW RECORDS Nationwide Demonstrations IN 1934 SET To Back Insurance Congress IN U.S. SR. As Boss Legislators Convene Big Bifticuliies Over t6r|- velt .represents, against all workers’ organizations. The Workers’ National Con- gress for Unemployment In-| surance, meeting at a time| when the employers, through | their government, are speed- 2 ing up their attacks on the Roosevelt Gives sy _«, professionals to resist the at- {| tacks of the Roosevelt gov- i workers, assumes great sig-| which will be published on Saturday, Jan. 19, was issued “ponus) and has given notice) Authority Over the nificance for every worker in Per House Majority the United States—employed as well as unemployed. | What is the program which Roosevelt is bringing to Con- gress in his annual message? It is the program of finance capital, the program of Mor- gan, the program of the em- ployers, which was drafted in unfinished form at White Sul- phur Springs and in New York by the conferences of the employers’ associations. sevelt’s program means ager ete LAiBna with a plan éresemen not to his liking. of forced labor and cutting | Thus all new acts of Congress will down on relief lists. Federal| have to get the seal of approval of | Relief Administrator Hopkins, | richberg before they can be acted | even before Congress opens, | upon. All Democratic keymen in| has already given instructions | the Congressional committees will that on Feb. 1, 4,000,000 “un- | cooperate with Richberg in employables,” now on relief | pian. | rolls, must be taken care OT| pis decision is looked upon as by State and local relief agen-| having unusual significance in view | cies. All others on relief | of the fact that Richberg in the| must go on work relief rolls, | Past few weeks has been prominent | i i making speeches for the ad- Hopkins ordered. The min-| vinistration Pa Rit nace imum wage of 30 cents an| WASHINGTON, Jan. 1.— Deter- mined that the policies and plans agreed upon between the Roosevelt administration and the Wall Street monopolies for the coming year shall not be upset by “radical” legis- lation coming from new members of Congress, Roosevelt yesterday gave Donald R. Richberg, executive administrator of the N.R.A., full power to stop all proposed legisla- tion coming from Democratic Con- hour on work relief was abol-| to the maintenance of capitalist | ished by the Roosevelt | ee aria : . veeks ago to enable ichberg w us act as the} ernment weeks ag | liaison. man between Roosevelt, | employers to cut down the en- | Congress and the Wall Street mo- | tire wage standard of eM- | nopolies. making sure that the open- ployed workers. This aboli-| shop, wage-cutting. relief-cutting | | * work relief min-| plans of the administration - and le wane has already dras-| the industrialists will be carried kCay. 4 “eli ¢|,Richberg, in a recent address to| tion income of work relief tie National Association of Manu | | Roosevelt, under the em-| Roosevelt government that profits) , 7 would be protected fully, and that) ployers slogan of economy, of | all opportunities to increase profit | fe denied. the exsen | would be increased by the adminis- | 2ynically -Ser- vicemen their back pay (the} In appointing Richberg as virtual | dictator of all Congressional legisla- that relief to all unemployed! maces to will be cut drastically. The qustrialists for the swift carrying| P.W.A. funds which went for | ing year. | battleships, railroads and war : employed relief, foreshadows Nazis Decree the fact that new millions out of coming P.W.A. funds will | go not to the unemployed but | | | Roosevelt, dropping cartier, FOr All Youths. demagogic promises, has come | es ; out definitely against Federal | BERLIN, Jan, 1.—The new year unemployment insurance and) pegan for Germany with the of- on a State scale which will) tinat military and labor conserip- | not provide at all for the mil- ‘tion of the entire youthful popula- | The employers and the ZoV-| «peyining with Jan. 1, 1935,” the| ernment refuse to tax profits ‘ of age shall be employed by the) ployed. Instead they advocate eR ES Es of all enterprises sales taxes such as exist in| only with the consent of the Labor M jis tantamount to being offered the force the already starving | grim choice of entering either the ers to pay for unemployment | “MPs: valief. | Thus an employment permit is Roosevelt government, and pssst ay sire re we see a | “4 v " obtain only by a long and) the employers he represents, | camps or in war-training for the United States Congress. It is serie | PaO Aiee Reeeule te. AE a program of relief cuts, wage | than it can handle, it is reported here. In this way the forces of preparations, fascist meas- of (Gaunin : 55 iy into the most regi- ures against the workers,| mented war-machines in history. surance, outlawing of strikes and abolition of the elemen- # For Pressing Case The National Congress of Destitute Family for Unemployment Insur-| | oy ween i The Unemployment Councils yes- 5, 6 and 7 in Washington, wi See Fourth District Magistrate Court, give its answer to the Roose-' 153 mast sith Street, today at 9 a.m. tal. The Workers’ Congress | 17th Precinct Home Relief Bureau! will map out a program for | Monday come up for trial. | | workers formed a committee which | Sef. fox the Workers Unem- | placed relief demands before Super- ployment and Social Insur- the case of Mrs. John Riviera, a gress will mobilize he masses | P°ft0, Rican woman. of the workers, farmers and through. | tically cut down the starva- men, - | facturers, gave the pledge of the| balancing the budget, has) tration. tion, Roosevelt is carrying out his more than a billion dollars of | through of their wishes in the com-| preparations, instead of to un- Forced Labor to war purposes. advocates a “reserves” plan | ficial fascist announcement of the | lions now totally unemployed. | tion of the country. H decree reads, “youths under 25 years | and war funds for the unem- | i; . Office.” For thi ‘Ki is New York City, in order to Ee SOE Sr ReE OU part-time and employed work- | regular army or the forced labor ie ranted ly to the hi This is the program of the | é Rp pra Camanche |terrible year’s regime in the labor for the coming session of th is being besieged by more recruits cuts, company unionism, war Hitlerism are mobilizing the toilers | denial of unemployment in- Jobless Face Trial tary rights of the workers. ance; which convenes Jan.) | terday urged workers to pack the | velt program of finance capi- when ten workers arrested at the immediate adequate cash re-| waters Co arrested unemployed visor Wilson of the relief station on ance Bill. The Y_ ers’ Con- The Riviera family had been forced by the relief bureau to move from a si heated flat to a room without any heating facilities. The committee demanded that a coal stove be given to the Riviera family and provisions be made for trans- porting the furniture. ernment and to fight for se- curity for the masses of the people. The national leadership of the American Federation of Labor has in all important cases not only given in to the (Continued on Page 2) No class-conscious worker will want to miss the special Anni- versary and Lenin Memorial edi- ‘tion of the Daily Worker. Order the bundles for your organiza- tion NOW! ' | of the administration,” Roper made munist Party. Each unit, the statement collection of greetings. These lists | yesterday by the Milwaukee District Committee of the Com- read, is receiving lists for the must be immediately put into the hands of the largest number possible of individual workers and organ- izations. The units are to begin the work mass sales of the special edition. “canvassing and sales at busy corners, at factory gates and at meeting | places.” Socialist competition among the of immediately getting the broadest Their arrangements must include units on the sales of bundle orders should be started, the statement continued. Greetings and orders, it was stressed, must be in by Jan. 12, the Government's | Big Navy Drive WASHINGTON, Jan. 1—As part of his rapid building up of a huge Scottsboro-Herndon protest meet-| to Wall Street monopoly capital and | war machine, President Roosevelt is | iN& here on Jan. 8 is expected to {mark a mighty forward sweep in| prepared to recommend to Congress the giving of direct subsidies to| ocean shipping lines instead of in- direct sudsidies now going to the shipping firms, it was reported yes- terday. The government pays the ship- ping companies millions of dollars yearly in postal rates for the carry- | ing of mail, Investigations haye | shown enormous graft and corrup- tion in this subsidy system with shipping companies getting millions of dollars for carrying negligible quantities of mail. It is admitted by officials that the granting of subsidies is for the pur- | pose of supporting the shipping | lines in order to keep them as part | when war comes, | Many of Roosevelt's closest friends | are tied up with the shipping conm- | panies and are reaping easy mil-| lions in graft from the government subsidies. Thus Roosevelt's recommendation | to Congress for direct subsidies wil! not only fatten the pockets of his) friends but also will aid in the! building up of the naval fighting | apparatus. Relief Wages Slashed To 12! Cents an Hr. On Project of County BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Jan. 1.— Under the cloak of “adjustment” work relief in Jefferson County has been further cut, while relief wages | have been slashed to 12 and one-| half cents an hour in line with the | demands of local employers ‘for a| relief wage scale so low that the un- | employed would be forced to accept | any wages offered by an employer. | In addition, pressure is to he| brought on the unemployed to ac- | cept such jobs; with threats of be-| ing cut off from relief altogether if | | they turn down the offer of a private | im employer. The slashing of the work relief rate has brought a storm of pro- tests from the rank and file mem- | bership of the American Federation | of Labor. This has forced some of | the American Federation of Labor | leaders to make a pretense of oppos- | ing the cuts. | 615 Oakwood Boulevard, | attempt to railroad his wife, Jane SHIP LINES (ANTI-HEARST CET SUBSIDY DRIVE URGED the Roosevelt Move Part of Chicago I.L.D. Calls for Big Campaign Against Terror CHICAGO, Jan. 1—The giant the united front fight for the lives | and freedom of the Scottsboro boys, | reversal of the chain gang verdict against heroic Angelo Herndon, and against the increasingly fierce fascist attacks on the working class and the Negro people. The meet- ing will be addressed by Herndon and Jane Newton, white. worker | whom. a Chicago court attempted to | adjudge insane because she had married a Negro. The meeting, which will be held on the South Side, will be preceded by a series of preparatory rallies throughout Chicago. In calling the Wall Street in-|of the American naval equipment | these meetings, the Chicago district of the International Labor Defense warns of the growing fascist reac- tion in Chicago: in particular, the attacks led by the Hearst press on the Chicago Workers’ School; the inciting by the Hearst press of an American Legion march called for Jan, 4 “against the Reds”; the chauvinist attacks by Chicago land- lords and courts on the Negro masses, expressed particularly in the attempt to evict Herbert New- ton, Negro Communist leader, from and the Newton, to an insane asylum. It points to the splendid response of Chicago workers, white and Negro, to the defense of the Newtons and the Chicago Workers’ School, and calls for the sending of further pro- tests to the Mayor of Chicago, de- manding the release of Newton, at present serving a term for partici- pating in a relief demonstration, and protests to Governor Small and State’s Attorney Hall, demanding the dismissal of the criminal syn- dicalist charges against the Hills- boro defendants, and the repeal of the Illinois Criminal Syndicalism Be sure that you do not fail to send your greetings to the Daily Worker on its Anniversary! Your greetings should be in before Jan. 12! Greet the Daily Worker in the name of a comrade of your — organization. | ' Soviet Union, Says C. P. Organ (Special to the Daily Worker) MOSCOW, Jan. 1 (By Wireless) — “It is with undisguised horror that capitalism looks back to the outlived year of 1934,” writes Pravda, organ of the Communist Party of the So- viet Union, in an article devoted to |an analysis of major events. “It is with quaking fear that cap- la looks forward to the coming year,” Pravda continued. “Dark as night are capitalism's past and future. Throughout the world only one country is passing the elapsed year in a triumphant march of economic victories and meeting the new year with the joyful foreknowl- edge of still more striking economic and cultural successes. This is the country of the Soviets, which is guided by the Soviet government and by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the country of victorious so- cialism. “Sentence has been passed by his- tory. Not only in theory, not only in the hearts and hopes of millions of people, but in practice and in actual facts the advantages of the socialist over the capitalist system have been proven, It was proved that oniy after the burying of capitalism can human society move forward. “It is very simple. On the one side, upon the threshhold oi 1935, five years after the beginning of the crisis, industrial production in the capitalist world stands one third) lower than the level existing before the crisis and in the most important countries on a still lower level than before the war. On the other side, in the course of one year, pig-iron smelting in the U.S.S.R. has in- creaséd 45 per cent, and compared with the pre-war level of production ‘socialist industry has increased many-fold. “Such are the two summings-up. However loud the jackals of the bourgeoisie howl, they are unable to | smother these powerful facts which are imparting vigor to all the toiling Population of the globe and sound- ing the death knell to the world’s exploiters and their chained dogs. “Soviet achievements for 1934 shine with brilliant lights. It is rightly called here the year of rec- ords. The brilliant epic rescue of the Chelyuskin crew, the Litke ex- pedition, the aviation records, the whole series of scientific congresses, and the achievements of the Soviet sportsmen are only the outstanding feats of the year. There is also the writers’ congress, the first in’ the | world, the victories of the Soviet | films, and the record flights into the stratosphere, accomplished by Soviet | stratosphere fliers. All this, as well | as hundreds of other striking events | | of 1934 is an expression of the tem- | pestuous growth of Soviet industry | and agriculture, | “The past year was a year of sharp | jumps. The experience and the growth of. trained forces, the tire- less work of the Communist Party | have manifested their effect. The enterprises which do not fulfill their plans become rare exceptions. Fur- thermore, we see one enterprise after another, even whole branches of in- dustry, over fulfillinf their plan. The coming year will show this still more clearly. Victory engenders still greater victories—such is the law of Soviet development. Chief Difficulties Behind “The chief difficulties are already behind. The very word ‘difficulties’ is beginning to be met with less frequently in the lexicon of Soviet | economic workers. There are stil! (Continued on Page 6) stocked with oranges. oranges.” boys were taken away. Boys Try to Relieve Hunger, Two Get Two-Year Terms SPRINGFIELD, Ill., Jan. 1—The new year, in the year of our lord Roosevelt, 1935, opened majestically in this town as two jobless hungry boys were sentenced to two-year prison terms for stealing exactly ten oranges from a freight train. The two boys, Howard Miller, 18 years old, and his friend, Oliver Thompson, also 18, were caught by railroad detectives on Dec. 28 putting their hands through an opening in one of the freight cars “We were terribly hungry,’ Miller pleaded with the judge. “We were riding the rods to find work. We just moved the bar about an inch so we could get our hands in a refrigerator car to get some But the majesty of the law was not to be moved. If hungry, home- less sons of the working class begin to steal oranges, where will they stop? The court ruled that’ moving the bar was “preaking in,” and that poking their hands in was “illegal entry.” “Two years for second degree ‘urglary,’ rule¢ the court. The STEEL POLL USSR TOILERS SEEN AS TRICK’ FLAY KILLERS National Steel Board At Meetings They Hail Orders Elections To Head Off Strike WASHINGTON, D. c., Jan. 1—| Foreshadowing the coming sharp struggles in the steel industry, the National Steel Labor Relations | Board on Monday rendered a dé- cision aimed to sidetrack the grow- ing discontent of the steel workers and prevent them from striking. The Steel Board ruled that “elec- | tions” should be held in plants of the Carnegie Steel Corp., subsidiary of the U. S. Steel Corporation, un- der the Board's supervision. The United States Steel Corpora- tion has already served notice on the Steel Board at previous hearings, that they do not intend to carry through or abide by even the pre- tenses of such an election. That such rulings of the Steel Labor Board, though carried through, are not beneficial to the workers is seen in such cases as the Weirton and Houde cases where firing of union members and company union dom- | ination continues in spite of all N.R.A. decisions. The rulings of the Steel Labor Board comes after months o° delay. Over six months ago the Amalga- mated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers (A. F. of L.) officials | requested the elections, The ruling is prompted by fear of the growing rank and file movement in the A. A., | the rank and file demanding strike | preparations. Since last June, un- der the Steel Labor Board's regime, the conditions of the steel workers ‘has grown worse—the company ‘unions have grown, the speed-up has increased, union men are being | fired and blacklisted, and there is rumor of coming wage cuts. In view of the growing demand for suruggle on the part of the A. A. rank and file, the Steel Board issues this decision in order to once more take the steel workers’ minds from strike preparations, to create new) illusions that they will get some- thing out of such elections or out of the Steel Labor Board. The officials of the American Fed- eration of Labor, Mike Tighe, pres- i \ (Continued on Page 6) Roper Hails Huge Profits v i d aaa Disburse.| a He hen at the eae Be ta ca Di ments Rise in 600 Con- cerns, Report Shows WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 1.~! The huge increases in capitalist profit during this year, and the de- termination of the Roosevelt gov- ernment to expand these Wall Street profits even more in the coming year were the keynotes sounded by Secretary of Commerce Daniel C. Roper, in his official ze- view of the last twelve months business activity. Proclaiming that the tie-up be- tween big business and the Roose- velt government are “better than they have ever been during the life the very heart of his speech the em- phasis of the New Deal-Roosevelt program on increasing capitalist set of his speech: “No longer does the impression Roper’s figures showed that the national income had dropped from prevail that the administration is| $90,000,000,000 in 1929 to $40,000.- opposed to the profit system.” As proof of Rooseyelt’s dominant Purpose to increase profits for the | big corporations, Roper cited the ex- traordinary increases in corporation italist profits in foreign markets, months. “More than 600 corporations in- creased their dividends during the year,” Roper boasted. i Talking in language which is be- coming more prominent every day in official circles as the tie-up of the Roosevelt government with the biggest Wall Street monopolies be- comes more open, Roper challeng- ingly admitted that the biggest capitalists are playing an increas- ing part in the government ma- chine. “The Department has openly and frankly throughout the year helped and encouraged all legitimate business at home and abroad,” Roper declared. “We have and will continue to court the ad- vice ef sound business men and 000,000 this year as a result of the crisis. Roper then cited the little known activities of the Business Advisory jand Planning Council in “cooperat- ing with the government.” This group consisting, Roper stated, of “fifty-two of the leading business- men of the United States... has | met regularly in the Department of Commerce building in Washington and has endeavored to solve major problems confronting business and to interpret the administration's de- sires in the commercial world. For- coming year.” home and abroad are in the mak- ing,” Roper stated. In line with the Roosevelt im- | Perialist drive for increased cap- italist profits in foreign markets, Roper urged the building of a National Income Shows Big Decline as Result of the Crisis mighty marine fieet. “We need in the interest of this creat nation to keep our flag proudly on the seas. eur vessels manned by officers and crew of American training and ideals, and we must go even further | becanse aviation has now reached a point where we must extend our air commerce throughout the | world,” he declared. | The war preparations note this speech was supplemented by Roper’s remarks on the encourage- | of the Roosevelt government. , War uses. “Activities for the foster ing and development of commerci2: aviation have been undertaken . "Roper declared. “The airways have Sentence Against Kirov Assassins (Special te the Daily Worker) LENINGRAD, Jan. 1 (By Wire- less).—At mume:ous meetings here the workers are unanimously ap- proving the sentence of the Su- preme Court against the confessed murderers of Sergei Kirov. “We warmly welcome the sion of the Supreme Court,” say workers of the Putilov factory in their resolution, “as an expzession of the will of the working class and of all the toilers of our country. Let our class enemies know that the chastising hand of the dictator- ship of the proletariat knows no mercy towards those who lift their hands against the best sons of the working class.” (Special to the Daily Worker) MOSCOW, Jan. 1 (By Wireless). —Soviet heavy industry has over- fulfilled its yearly plan of produc- tion. Its output for the year amounted to 20,200.000,000 rubles. Compared with 1933 the increase comes to 26.7 per cent, instead of 23 per cent as outlined in the sec- ond Five-Year Plan. Pipe Strikers Lead Struggle Against Writ Hearings on the injunction issued recently against the striking smok- ing pipe makers of the L. and H. Stern Briar Pipe Company, 56 Pearl Street, Brooklyn, by Judge Reigei- man, will be held early this morn- ing befo-e Judge Peter B. Smith in Part 3, Special Term, Kings County Court, Borough Hall, Brooklyn. Following the conference of | unions in protest against the in- Independent Smoking Pipe Makers Union of America, which is leading the strike, numerous workers’ or- Smith. Outstanding among the latter was the City Central Committee of the International Workers Order. De- manding the withdrawal of the in- junction in the name of the 18,000 | members of the I.W.O. in New York, | Nathan Shaffer, secretary of the committee, characterized it in his telegram to Judge Smith, as an in- strument of the bosses which pre- vents the workers from exercising their constitutional right to strug- gle for the improvement of their conditions. Further arrangements are beinz made for the city-wide anti-injunc- tion conference on Jan. 19, decided | upon at the Saturday’s conference, in| the union announced late Monday. The union appealed to all work- | ers to be pzesent at the hearings in by Get on the Honor Roll in the special edition of the Daily Worker by sending in your greet- ; been improved and extended with ing on the “Daily’s” Anniversary P. W. A. funds ~ TODAY! | junction Saturday, sponsored by the | During 1934. ganizations sent protests to Judge | Sponsors Urge Funds Raised Be Turned in Immediately Grimly determined to raise the powerful voice of American masses in the capital for real un« employment insurance, delegates from the deep South and the West« ern factories and farms have already started their long trek to attend sessions of the National Congres Unemployment Insurance which will convene in Washington Saturday. At the moment that Roosevelt's Congressional message of war plans and hunger schemes is broadcast through the land, the deliberations of the mighty National Con s for Unemployment Ins' ‘ance will ham- mer out the demands of the Amer- ican workers for genu inemploys ment insurance for all workers—a system of unemployment insurance to be paid with war funds and by the boss: In each city and town represented, the mighty united front which is rolling up behind the National Con- ress is pictured in miniature. One county in Pen: lvania sented by fourteen United Mine Workers of America; steel workers from the factories in Pittsburgh, Youngstown, G r Buffalo; marine ers from the whole Atlantic the Great Lakes; unem- ; Negroes are preparing to and white worker meet in Washington. Demonstrations Planned In each city and n, plans are being put into final shape, the Na- tional Sponsoring Committee stated yesterday, to demonstrate in thous- ands before city and relief stations on Mond: an, 7 in sup- port of the National Congress and for immediate relief needs To carry on the mighty work of the National Congress and to insure the success of the demonstrations, all funds now due to the National Committee mu be turned in at once to 799 Broadway, Room, 624, Herbert Benjamin, exec direc- tor, urged yesterday. Printing of the Congress reports to be made available to cach delegate, advance payments for food and lodging and other immediate bills must be met, Similarly, money is urgently needed to bring delegat from poverty- stricken areas to the National Con- gress Boston Send-off Tomorrow BOSTON. Mass., Jan, 1.—Boston workers will greet their delegates to the National Congress for Un- employmeut Insurance at a mass send-off rally Thursday night at 8 o'clock at the Dudley Street Opera House, 113 Dudley Street Delegates will be present from shoe, textile, clothing, metal and railroad shops, and from the grauite quazries of. Vermont and New Hampshire. Following the send-off, which most of the New England delegates will attend, the entire delegation will entrain for W: ington. A. F. of L. Delegates Elected EVELETH, Minn., Jan. 1—Two delegates to the National Congress for Unemvloyment and Social In- surance are leaving for Washington. of Mine, Mill and Smelter Wi and the Roosevelt Wo-kers Ciub. LAS VEGAS, N. M., Jan. 1—The League of Spanish Workers has elected a delegate to attend the ses- sions of the National Congress for Unemployment and Social Insur- ance. DETROIT, Mich., Jan. 1—The Russian United Fraternal Organi- zations have elected one delegate to the National Congress for Un- employment and Social Insurance. IRONTON, M Jan. 1—The Unemployed Miners Organization has endorsed the National Gongress for Unemployment and Social In- surance and elected one delecate to go to Washington. |_HAMTRAMCK, Mich. Jan. 1— The National Congzess for Unem- ployment and Social Insurance has ) been endorsed by the United Rus- | sian Fraternal Organizations here. | One delegate was elected to go to Washington. ECOSSE, Mich. Jan. 1—The Hungarian American Citizen’s tunately, for the country, this group, ment of commercial aviation which | in court this morning and to report | League has elected one delegate to will continue its work during the/has been one of the major activities | to the strike headquarters, 62 Main | the National Congress for Unem~ It is | Street, Brooklyn, to participate “Broad plans in the making of! well known that commercial avia-| the daily picketing carried on; better service to businessmen at| tion can be quickly converted for the strikers. | ployment and Social Insurance. | DAVENPORT, Ia.. Jan. 1—One | delegate will go to Washington to the National Congress for Unem-= | ployment and Social Insurance from | the Unemployed and Relief Work= | (Continued on Page 2)

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