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DAILY WORKER. NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1935 Page 3 89 PER CENT OF JOBLESS SEEK WORK, FERA SURVEY SHOWS 18 PER CENT WORK ILD Campaign Challenge Is Issued State Board W.ES.L, MOBILIZING ON JOBS THAT PAY Wins Ouster SUB-RELIEF WAGES Thousands Within Theoretical Age Limit Will Never Again Get Job: s in Private Industry, Report from Southern Cities States WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 13.—While 89 per cent of the households in six large cities of the South which were recently surveyed by the Federal Emergency Relief Admin- istration contain one or more persons seeking work and able to work, 18 per cent of the families had some member who was actually working in indusiry.¢-— “The earnings of these workers, however, the survey stated, “were so low that they did not provide the necessities of life for the fam: and supplementary relief was re- quired. Such Tule, from part-time j time jobs in traditionally low-paid occupations. The average weekly earnings were less than $5 in nearly half of the relief households con- taining a worker in private in- dustry.” The six cities under consideration are: Baltimore, Washington, New Orleans, Houston, Atlanta and Bir- mingham, and the figures are com- piled from data of the F. E. R. A. survey in 79 cities to provide an inventory of the employment and employability of the urban popu- lation receiving relief from local, State and Federal emergency relief funds. “The data used in making the calculations were as of May, 1934,” the F. FE. R. A. stated, “but for all practical purposes, they hold good for the current relief rolls.” While 89 per cent of the heeds of the households surveyed were locking for work of some sort, the figures disclose that of all members of the families surveyed, 69 per cent of all persons on relief between the ages of 16 and 64 were looking for work and willing to accept jobs. The other 31 per cent were disabled, go- ing to school, or confined at home by the care of children or depend- ant. spite their search,” the report says, “a considerable percentage of the persons looking for work are very likely barred because of their age, although they are within the theoretical limit. Thirty-nine per cent of the he: of the households in t Southern cities are 45 o: more years old. Highteen per cent are 55 years old or older.” Anti-Fascists Wire Protests On Extradition PARIS, Jan. 13.—At the request of the World Committee to Aid the ictims of German Fascism, the sench Comite de Vigilance et relief | Farmers Push Drive to Build Their Paper’ | Lay Base for Parle y! | ? on Drouth Relief | to Be Held Soon | CHICAGO, Ill, Jan. 13—The en- | dorsement of the proposed farmers’ relief conference to take place in the drought region, by the National | Congress for Unemployment and | Social Insurance is being heartily welcoraed by the small and middle farmers as a sign of the support of the industrial workers of the | struggle for drought relief. The farmer delegates to the recent | Workers’ Congress realized better | than ever before that their enemies are the same as those who are suppressing the rest of the toiling | population. | The endorsement of the farmers’ conference by the Workers’ Con- gress has stimulated the militant farmers’ organizations to create the | widest possible support for the com- ing drought conference among the farmers in organizations like the | Farmers’ Union, the Holiday. the | | co-operatives and others. One of the |main organs to accomplish the | widest support for the conference | will be the wide-spread use of the Fermers’ Weekly. cipated in the struggles of the farmers for drought relief and the only one which has pledged | its utmes’ supr to the coming | conference and to the fighting pro- gram which this conference di: cusses. In order to make it possible for ‘the weekly to be used most ef- fectively in the drought relief strug- sles the management committee of the Farmers’ Weekly is pushing an anniversary drive. In the course (ef this drive the management com- mittee is striving to build a solid | foundation for the paper through , the enrollment of farmers’ and | Workers’ clubs, groups, and organi- |zations as members of the Farmers’ | National Educational Association | | which publishes the Weekly. Ot Terrorists Birmingham Police Had Invaded Home of Negro Worker BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Jan. 13.— For their invasion of the home of Steve Simmons, Negro worker, in North Birmingham, two city policc- men, T. E. Lind: and A. J. Bry- led indefinitely from the police foree. The action taken by Police Ch: Luther Hol- lums, ests the raid on <immons" home and the general campaign of police, vigilante and Klan serror which has swept Birmingham in the last few weeks. protesting Although the terrorism against workers hes been going time, th Bryant is the first taken by city officials, and was 0: as a di- rect result of the protest campaign | erganized by the International La-| bor Defense. Operating outside the territory to which they had been assigned, the two Red-baiters tried to enter Sim- ms’ home in search of “Commu- ic literature.” Simmons, in self- deiense, fired a shot. Lindsey was struck in the right arm. Simmons’ home has been raided three times during the past two months. Eight white-robed ma- yauders entered the house on thr night of Nov. 21 and beat Simmons brutally. Two weeks Jater there was a second invasion, but this time Simmons fired a gun and fright- ened the terrorists away. Sears-Roebuck Edict Is Aimed AtNegro Trade CHICAGO, Jan, 13—An order not to cater to Negro trade has been issued by the General Manager of the Sears-Roebuck Englewood ores, to the clerks in those stores. ern of refusing employment to Ne- groes as clerks, is tantamount to instructing the salespeople to refuse to serve Negroes. This discrimination is vigorously denounced in a protest letter by the West Side Unit of the Young Com- munist League to Colonel .Wood, general manager of {he Sears-Roe- buck stores, and to General Man- ager Kohn of the Englewood brenches, The letter points out that the order is deliberately de- signed to provoke dissension among Negro and white work: incite race hatred and race riots. The letter Statec, in part: “We young workers and students, who have been customers at your he order, supplementing the tra- | the only farm paper which ditional policy of the powerful con- | By In Daily Worker Drive Organizer Plans To Outstrip Alabama in Num- | ber of Subscriptions—Prizes To Be Given | To Units Getting High Score Declaring that “\ mightiest effort we have e to exceed its quota,” the Ca e are mobili ng all our units in the ar made to be the first district rolina Distriet of the Commu- nist Party yesterday challenged Alabama to a Socialist com- petition in the Daily Worke drive. “Alabama has more than twice the membership of Carolina.” de- clered Paul Crouch, Dist Or- sanizer of Carolina, “but we are leaving no stone unturned to out- distance it. “We call upon ev district, in this period when the working class | needs the Daily W or more than it ever did before, to make the drive for new subscribers and readers the most successful ever held by the Daily Worker.” |. The quotas of Carolina and Ala- bama are the same—150 daily and 225 Saturday subs. Steps Taken Six steps are in the first direc- es on the subscription drive is- ed by Carolina. The first is the uance of a special “Daily Worker ber” of the District Organiza- ional Bulletin, to organize the dis- trict membership ‘or the drive. Fur- thermore, every unit has been in- structed to put the Daily Worker drive on the agenda of,every mect- ing. Leaflets will be issued publiciz- ing the special offer of a two- h subscription to the paper. ery Party member will be sup- plied with a subscription card. Unit Competitions | Socialist competition will be started among the units and a set of Lenin’s works will be given to the unit getting the highest number of Scottsboro Fund Quota Set in Denver DENVER, Col,, Jan. 13—The particl victory secured by the In- ternational Labor Defense and the mass fight it is leading for the Scottsboro boys, in forcing the U.S. Supreme Court to agree to review the death sentences in the cases of Clarence Norris and Haywood Pat- terson, was signalized here by the launching of an intensive drive to raise funds to help the I. L. D. de- | fray the necessary expenses involved jin the printing of briefs and other legal papers for the appeal. r circulation’ and subscription subscriptions per member. Sets of the Little Lenin Library will be given to the units finishing second and third A Special District Daily Worker Commities, to supplement the ef the District Buro, has been established. It will regularly check up on the speed of the work, 177 Per Cent Last Year Carolina gained 177 per cent of its quota in last year's circulation drive, finishing second among the districts in percentage. A district of great class battles, a district con- taining ten of thousands of workers who are ready for the message of the Daily Worker, who stand second to none in needing the guidance of the Daily Worker, Carolina must no* fail in the present cam) Alavama, too, must put forth it reatest efforis ve its quote. The territory need the Daily Worker no less than do the workers of Caro- The “Daily” calls upon both icts not to allow a moment let-up in this major political Paign of our Their Shoc! Brigaders up among the contestants for the free trip to the Soviet Union which the “Daily” is offering in the subscription con- Court Listens; Job Promised; Case Dismissed YONKERS, Jan. 13.—He loved his six-year-old son, and he believed in the spirit of Christmas. And it is this that brought a jobless. penni- less worker, Joseph Servocky, 39 years old, before the police court here yesterday. He had been caught stealing an expensive tree from the Oakland Cemetery. His son had had little to eat, and he felt that at least he would try to give him the tree he had been crying for “like hit |friends had.” The jobless worker | The District Bureau of District, 19} Carolina District VPenies Pardon To JailedNegro LL.D. Calls oe Protest Resolutions on the McDuffy Case MINNEAP For the thir LIS, Minn., Jan. 13.— time the Minneapolis State Pardon Board has denied a McDuffy fram roaded to prison afier les than 10 minutes deliberations before Judge Mathias Baldwin in the dis- trict court in Minneapolis. McDuffy Cloud penitentiary. The International Labor Defense. which has been fighting for Me- Duffy's release, forezd the officials inv: d in th to appear be- fore the last session of the pardon board, pardon to Ernest Yegro mechznic, and ra is now in § he three members of the tdon board have expressed their elief that McDuffy leased. One of these, Two of t pa ney Pete: said that even if the “con’ nm” wrung from McDuffy by torture, were true, he should heve received no more than 90 days on the work farm. Yet the pardon board has refused to act to free McDufiy. The I.L.D. has asked for a flood of protest resolutions to the pardon board here. Upholds Case Against ILD (Specisl to the Daily Worker) CLEVELAND, Ohio, Jan. 13.—The Appeal Court yesterday «confirmed the sentence of ten days in jail and costs against Yetta Land, Interna- tional Labor Defense attorney, cited for contempt of court by Judge Green for defending the case Mrs. Goodman, who was a the relief struggles here |, m had sought to have submitting to the s' tion program of the bosses and their city government. The action of the Appeal Court in confirming the sentence against the LL.D. attorney evoked great in- dignation among the workers who have packed the court daily since the opening of the hearing last Wednesday. Tho indignant worke! staged a protest demonstration be- fore the ccurt. 1 concession to the , the court in confirm- ing the sentence against Yetta Land, at the same time reversed the sen- tence of Davis, lawyer for the Small VETERANS TO WIN PAYMENT OF BONUS Local Ex-Servicemen Rallies Will Precede Mass March to Washington—Rank and File Movement Seen Gaining Strength By Wendell Goodwin, Esiter ef Vete Uniting all veterans, fight for the bonus, the is prepared to lead the ington, to force Congress ns’ News Negro and white, in their further Workers’ Ex-Servieemen’s League veterans in a mass march on Wash- the immediate c: to authorize payment of the bonus minus all inter: ——- * In rt to persuade 3 i Nee rank an away from Nore Uities |i: > ee bled War he Depart- meni of J and police departe ments, thro’ it the country. Pressure Must Be Exerted ew with this writer, C. B. Cowan of Ex-Servicem battle for th enk and Lenin Rallies <2 e Providence, Charlotte, Superior to Honor Leader’s Memory ory of V wide leader of the Our will be held here at most Workingmen’s of reaction tion against is not only Yorking Woman,” will be the prin- but is growing sharper. cipal speaker. The me-ting is Ss a means of div the pected to be the biggest of it of the veterans. The rank ever held here. d file movement is now gaining CHARLOTTE, Mill hands and this imrortas join in the wo tion of the life and work of Vi: imir Ilyitch Lenin on Jan. 21 at a mass meeting which will be held in the Good Samaritan Hall, Boundary and Caldwell Streets. The meeting will begin at 7.30 p.m. SUPERIOR, Wis., | Choral music by and strength and ovr bi N Resol bers of Congr will not gi‘ pressure that is be! be fully organized “The Workers League have that will Ex-Servicemen’s a common program all of the forces of at all; our , | ers’ Club, a mass recitati all veterans of oll letic exhibition _and dan opinions and from all vali comprize the cultural pro; City Rallies Pianned the Lenin Memorial mecting which} tye workers E will be held here under the aus: League is urging all v. of the Communist Party on Jan. 21 ramiies and friends to mor at & pm. at the Vasa Temple. front of Brooklyn Borough Hall, Eleventh and John Streets. Hatters Strike For Pay Rise InPhiladelphia PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 13.—Em- ployees of the LaSalle Hat Com- 26 and march to ers of Post 204, ick Avenue, where the of three rallies, prior to the march on Washington, will be held, The current issue of the Veterans SS will be on the s be Jan. 20, will Many amongst the suc. a special ‘ominent vet Suc. Pennsylvania Workers Acti bi = West Side Sears stores for many of the I. L. D. assigned quotas for | CSlechits Ges NOMAL welnee vires, | SHOR MAMAgEMER,, cotamltted At geste, yohamently Hrotsst agaitet (AIL To eet ae Met eee members of the Academy, the In- | the Weekly is also urging all work- | Such action of discrimination, and | to be fulfilled by Feb. 1, as follows: é | stitutes and hosts of other scientists | ers’ and farmers’ groups and indi- | will do all in our power to arouse Denver, $25; Colorado Springs, $5; ae somebody squealed and De- | and writers of international reputa- | viduals to secure greetings for the | public opinion against this, until | ee Patrick J. Sullivan nabbed ; | Welsenburg, $5; Trinidad, $5; Fort | tion, have protested in a telegrem first anniversary issue, which will| such time as your stories will re- | Morgen, $5; Durango, $5; ‘Gallup, | to the Swiss Federal Government 2 published on March 1. Home Owners Association, who also | Pany, 100 in number, are on strike had been cited for contempt of court | here for a 20 per cent wage increase and fined $500 and costs, ‘The | under the leadership of the Hatters charge against Davis grew out of|Local of the Needle Trades Work- his insistence during an eviction |€TS Industrial Union. trial before Judge Bear that wo The strike started on Friday after ers had the right to at! al| the owners of the pianf, refused Score Italian Fascism McKEESPORT, Pa., Jan. 13.—A resolution vigorously protesting the roristic cppression of the toiling scind this act of discrimination |New Mexico, $10; Helper, $10; Salt Judge Boote paroled the worker againss the extradition of the well- Any worker or farmer who will known Reichstag member, Heinz take part in the anniversary cam- Neumann, at the demand of the | Paign by securing either member- Hitler government, for his return Ships for the Farmers’ National to the Third Reich. Educational Association, greetings | The text of the telegram is as for the anniversary issue, or sub- | follows: | scriptions from friends or relatives “The Vigilance Comite declares | on the farm is urged to write today in the name of its six thousands | to the Farmers’ Weekly at 1817) members, all anti-fascist intellectu- | South Loomis Street, Chicago, Ill. als, that it is very much aroused for ail necessary material and sug- at the threatened extradition of | gestions for carrying on this work. Heinz Neumann. It hopes that the | Federal government will continue to | maintain the liberal Swiss tradition | of free asylum for the political ref- ugee, Heinz Neumann, without any | qualifications.” | (Signed) Alain. author; Rivet, professor at the Museum de France; | Langevin, member of the Institute; | Fournier, Institute Cour: Farm Strike Leaders Cleared of Charges: BRIDGETON, N. J., Jan. 13.—In- dictments against eleven leaders in the Seabrook Farm strike of last summer were quashed, as southern | New Jersey workers continued the mass pressure which forced Prose- cutor Tom Tusso and Recorder Creamer of Cumberland County to beg for a chance to save their faces, and resulted in the release of Wil- liam O'Donnell from Cumberland County jail a few weeks ago. Case Company Workers To Take Strike Vote RACINE, Wis., Jan. 13.—Produc- | tion workers of the J, I. Case Com- pany, manufacturers of heavy ma- chinery, decided to take a strik vote on whether they should come out for a wage increase. Jack Duller, organizer of Wiscon- sin Industrial Union, No. 1, inde- pendent, states that 1,524 of the 1,590 workers in the plant are or- ganized. The workers were on strike for a month last March and won a 15 per cent increase. WHAT’S ON Superior, Wis. Daily Worker Comm. is holding an @aflair Feb. 3 at Vasa Hall, lith and John Ave. Good program, refresh- ments, dancing. Philadelphia, Pa. Kirov Memorial Meeting, Jan. 14, 8 p. m. at Girard Manor Hall, 911 Girard Ave, E=nct_Taaclmann film smuggled cut cf Gs:many will be shown for first in North Phila, at this meeting. Adm. 25c. Auspices: Mill Loses Blue Eagle, But Workers Lose, Too WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 13.— Removal of the Blue Eagle of the Clinton Cotton Milis, of Clinton, 8. C., was all the remedy that the | National Recovery Administration | could find for discrimination by the company against hundreds of | workers who came out during the | general strike. The Clinton workers are part of | the many thousands, now unem- | ployed, whose fate Francis Gorman, | leader of the United Textile Work- ers, placed in the hands of the gov- ernment. KIROV MEETING IN PHILA. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 13,—The situation surrounding the assassin- aiton of Sergei Kiroy, Soviet leader, and the stern steps taken by the proletarian dictatorship against the | enemies of the working class, will | be analyzed by prominent speakers at a Kirov Memorial Meeting here tonight at Girard Manor Hall, 911 Girard Avenue. The meeting is ar- vanged by the United Workers Or- ganizations to expose the widespread attacks against the Soviet Union by terrorist attempts on the lives Soviet leaders, and slander and ies in the capitalist press. egainst the Negro people. Pennsylvania Groups Will Hold Conference On Problems of Youth PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 13.—A rep- resentative conference of youth or-, ganizations in Eastern Pennsyivania | will be held here on March 8 and 9 to discuss and adopt a program of | united action on the social, econ- |omic and political problems which | confront the youth of America. A preliminary conference has been arranged for Jan. 30 at the | Y.W.C.A, at 18th and Arch Streets. | The initiative committee arranging the conference indicates that the conference will have the character of a real united front. In includes representatives of the Young Com- munist League, the Young People’s Socialist League, Y.W.C.A. organi- zations, the Anti-War Committee in the National Guard, Negro groups and others. Reading Workers Will Hear Reports Tonight On National Congress READING, Pa., Jan.’ 13.—A mass mecting to hear the reports of the delegates from local organizations to the National Congress for Un- employment Insurance will be held tonight at 8 o'clock at the R. V. V. F. A. Hall, 612 Franklin Street. The ma:n reports will be made by A. E. Brown of the Unemployment Councils; Rose Bush, section organ- izer of the Communist Party, and Mrs, Mary B. Nelson, member of the Socialist Party. Police Arrest, Quiz, Threa ten Leader of St. Louis Jobless ST. LOUIS, Mo., Jan, 13—Samuel R. Dukes, executive secretary of the St. Louis Unemployment Council, was kidnaped by detectives and held incommunicado for 48 hours in an effort to block the Council’s plans for mass picketing at the relief sta- tions here for the passage of the Workers’ Unemployment and Social Insurance Bill, H.R. 2827. He was placed in the police line- up end introduced to the members — of the City detective bureau as “a | éamn Communist who likes to fight phasized in a statement by Captain Wetzel of the Central District Police Station, who told Dukes that the police would fire on the next relief demonstration he led, and would single him out for the first. shot. Orders were also issued to the police to drive Dukes out of town or bring him into the Central district police station every time he is seen on the streets. Released, Dukes expressed his de- termination to coxiinue his militant leadership o° ih- fight for unem- ployment retici and social insur- | Lake, $10; Rock Springs, $7; Tor- ington, Fert Laramie, $5; Fred- erick, $5. Celebration Is Planned In Chicago to Observe Release of Hillsboro 14 CHICAGO, Jan, 13.—The splendid | victory at Hillsboro will be cel>- brated in a Hillsboro victory revue on Friday, at 8 p.m. at Forester’s | Hall, 1.016 North Dearborn Street. Because of tremendous mass pres- sure, fourteen workers arrested in an unemployment and charged with criminal syndical- | ism, were released. The program of this affair, which |is being sponsored by a number of | Chicago cultural organizations, in- | cludes the first showing of a new movie, “Tombstone Graft,” which depicts the life and struggles of Hillsboro miners and events leading to the trial. The exciting and hu- | morous story of the trial will be told | by several of the defendants—Jan Wittenber, John Adams, and per- haps one or more of the Hillsboro miners, | Virginia Workers Take Up Jobless Issues | LURAY, Va., Jan, 13—One im- mediate and concrete organizational result here of the mighty National ance was the formation of a local of the United Farmers League here. So enthused was Lester Ruffner, Luray’s delegate to the Congress, that immediately upon his return he called in all his neighbors to a meeting for discussion on the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill H.R. 2827 and the decisions of the Congress. He was assisted in the discussion by several other dele- | gates from the Congress. | Soviet Friends to Hold Rally Against Hearst (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Ill, Jan. 13—The Friends of the Soviet Union have called a mass meeting for Wednes- day, at 7:30 p.m. at the North Side | Turner Hall, 820 North Clark Street. Among the speakers ‘vill be Profes- sor Shumann and Eugene Bechtold of the Chicago Workers School. There will also be other prominent speakers, This meeting is to coun- after he had in solidarity with the piceded for a job to make good the loss, | The judge also ins court aids to heip find Servocky a job. The court aids listened po- litely, of course, but they hadn't | {the faintest idea where to get a job for Servocky. And Servocky, no doubt, will sink back into the hun- ger and misery from which the | hand of the police momentarily lifted him. The J.L.D. enncunced today th: it would car 2 fight on the ser tence against Yetta Land to the State Supreme Court. ‘ucted Funds Sent to Victims Of Fascism Confiseated By Spanish Authorities demonstration | Congress for Unemployment Insur- | Tom Mooney’s Relea Js Demanded by I.L.D. In Wire to U. S. Court An immediate decision setting | Tom Mooney iree was demanded of | | the United States Supreme Court in a telegram sent to that body last week by the International Labor Defense. | | The Supreme Court is to decide | whether it will grant a hearing on the writ of habeas corpus brought by Mooney. Mass pressure on the court, organized by the I.L.D.,| | forced it a short time ago to agree jto review the death sentences against Clarence Norris and Hay- wood Patterson, two of the Scotts- | boro boys, following the filing of a writ of certiorari by Walter Pollak and Oswald Fraenkel, attorneys for | the LL.D, The LL.D. is urging all working class and sympathetic organizations | to shower similar demands on the | court, | p Shaan Start a competition with your comrades to see who can collect more greetings for the Daily Worker on its Eleventh Anniver- sary! Money sent directly from the | United States to Madrid for the vie- tims of Spanish fascism, is being regularly confiscated by the govern- ment, the International Labor De- fense was informed by cable last week. The organization is therefore urging all sympathizers of these victims and their families, to dis- continue sending money to Madrid and remit to the national office of the International Labor Defense, Room 610, at £0 East 11th Street, New York City, which cables funds to reliable connections in Paris for distribution as soon as these funds are received. A special solidarity week, begin- ning today, to aid the victims of Spanish fascist terror, has been an- nounced by the International Labor | Defense. The organizations appeal especially to unions and fraternal groups to assist the campaign and collect funds. CHICAGO ELECTION RALLY WEDNESDAY Samuel Lissitz, workers’ candidate for alderman in the Twenty-fourth | | Ward, will be the main speaker at | an election mass meeting Wednes- | day night at the Workers’ Culture Center, 3223 West Roosevelt Avenue. CLEVELAND, Ohio, Jan. 13— Twenty-thousand copies of the spe- cial Lenin memorial edition of the Daily Worker, to be published on Saturday, Jan. 19, will be ordered by the Cleveland District of the Com- munist Party, and preparations are being made for thorough distribu- tion, Great interest is attached to this | year's Lenin memorial mecting in Cleveland, to be held in the Public Auditorium Baliroom, Sixth Street and Lave Aevenue. Seventy thousand leaflets and Cleveland to Dis (Of Daily Worker Special Issue | speaker. | teract the vicious anti-Soviet cam- | 3,000 posters have been distributed tribute 20,000 American Federation of Labor members, workers in concentration Shops, to the members of the Un- |) employment Councils and the Small Home and Land Owners Federa- tions. Mass organizations are to march in with their banners William W. Weinstone, member of the Central Committee..of the Communist Party, District organ- izer of Detroit. will be the main land district chairman. organizer, will be John Williamson, Cleve- | to consider the demand for the v n Ise ions of the Dod inerease pr ed by a co i ¥ Picketing started on Friday and meeting of Dodecani Greek workers at the Polish Hall, 934 Market Street, here. will continue daily. A compromise offer for a slight increase has b2en rejected by the workers. Limited! Autographed! Orders Are Now Béing Taken - Ready February 1 HUNGER | and |; REVOLT: Cartoons by BURCK e A REVOLUTIONARY HISTORY OF THE WORLD CRISIS De Luxe Edition ON 100 COPIES | ® CHAPTERS BY: Henri Barbusse Langston Hughes Earl Browder Corliss Lamont | William F. Dunne Joseph North | Michael Gold John Strachey Clarence Hathaway Seymour Waldman Marguerite Young e | Ts 4 O@ Check or Money Order must accompany orders. e | Only 100 copies are available. Money will be re- turned to those too late to secure a copy. .s New York POSTPAID | DAILY WORKER - 50 E. 13th S\ Admission ‘s 25 cents at the door. Unemployed workers with cards ‘cial invitations have been issued to| need pay only 10 ents, the police.” The sinister purpose of this introduction was further em- United Workers’ Org, of North Phila | ance, despite the terroristic police , paign carried on by the Hearst press to advertise the meeting, and spe- delphia, threats, and the Chicago Tribune, ‘ Jee N