Three publications of special interest to Labor were of news last week.
Industrial Solidarity, official organ of the I. W. W., was suspended for lack of funds at the organization’s Chicago convention. To replace it, Industrial Worker, ‘ more popular I. W. W. weekly, will be moved from Seattle to Chicago.
The Daily Worker, Communist daily published in Manhattan, appealed for 5,000 new paid subscriptions to see the paper through “the most critical period in its history.”
Unemployment, an occasional, bitterly anti-Capitalist magazine published by the League for Industrial Democracy (directed by Socialist Norman Thomas), proudly issued its fourth number, an nounced that sales of three previous numbers published since Thanksgiving Day last year, had totalled 315,000. The magazine is sold for 10¢ by unemployed persons in 70 cities. They buy their copies for 5¢, are allowed refunds on all unsold copies.
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