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BRITISH COLONIAL|Zewis Induces Convention to Approve Ouster of Jailed POLICY HAS NOT BEEN WEAKENED|, revocation of the charter of District 26, Nova Scotia and the expulsion Threat of Feces in Mes- sage to Indians (Special te The Duty We ly Worker) LONDON.—Three weeks before he assumed office, Ramsay MaeDon- ald sent a message to India deal- ing with the attitude of the British Labor party toward the Indian colon- ial problem, is message has now been pub- lished and one paragraph of it has been loudly approved in Tory circles while among the left wing labor elements it has come. in for much criticism. The paregraph in ques- tion is as follows: i “I can see no hope in India if it es the arena of struggle between constitutionalism and revolution, No party in Great Britain will be cowed. by threats of force or by policies designed to bring government to a standstill, and if sections in India are under the delusion that that is not so, events will very sadly disappoint them.” This is the expression of the tra- ditional British colonial policy and with J. H. Thomas holding the Colon- ial portfolio the most rabid imper- ialists now see no cause for alarm because of lack of firmness in the labor party colonial policy. The message in its entirety reads: “I watch sometimes with no little anxiety the progress of affairs in India, During all my _ political life I have anchored myself firmly upon the conviction that if progress ig to be well rooted it can only be carried on by what is called political or con- stitutional ways, “We have seen in our own gen- eration all sorts of revolutionary *“ movements which seemed to be suc- cessful, and which have broken con- tacts with the past, but in the end, after much physical suffering and the creation of evil tempers and a vicious spirit, they have had to re- turn to pick up contacts that have been broken; and to apply the very principles they had rejected. “I can see no hope in India if it becomes the arena of a struggle be- tween constitutionalism and revolu- tion. No party in Great Britain will be cowed by threats of force or by poliies ‘designed to bring govern- ment to a standstill, and if sections in India are under the delusion that this is not so, events will sadly dis- appoint them. would urge upon all the best friends of India to come nearer to us, rather than to stand apart from _ us, to get at our reason and our “I deplore the evidence of a back- ward spirit in some sections here, but let no one misread the causes and effects. When appeal is made to revolutionary methods, whether those methods are an active or a passive force, reaction toward the opposite extremes is bound to come, and men and parties of the most sin- cere good-will are hustled off the stage, while two forms of reaction, that of the right and of the left, kick and tear and sweat against each other until the failure of both has been demonstrated, “I know that the sieag-2 and good-will should be mutual. My ap- peal is, therefore, not only to the Indians, but to the British authori- ties as well.” z The reference to “policies designed to bring government to a standstill” is interpreted here as a warning to non-resistant followers of “Mahatma Gandhi and his policy of non-coop- eration. Gandhi is now serving a six-year sentence for leading tte non-cooperative movement that ser- iously hampered the British admin- istration. MAX BLOOM’S RESTAURANT 3546 ROOSEVELT ROAD Telephone Crawford 2450 ED. GARBER (QUALITY SHOES For Men, Women and Children 2427 LINCOLN AVENUE Near Halsted and Fullerton Ave, CHICAGO S. LIGHT 2445 LINCOLN AVE. Best Qualities at low prices We Aim to Please Everybody pee SAVE YOUR HEALTH Eat at the Tolstoy Vegetarian Restaurant 2718 W. DIVISION ST. THE DAILY WORK ER Page Three District No. 26 Officials INDIANAPOLIS, eded in having the report of the (Special to The Daily Worker) Ind. (By Mail.)—President Lewis has again suc- resolutions’ committee defending the from office of the officials of that district, carried, after several speeches were made for and against the report, Mr, Le wis spoke fully for an hour and a half during which he bom- barded the Nova Scotia miners with all the gas bombs he could muster. He denounced Jim McLachlan and President Dan Livingston, heads of District 26 for favoring revolution and the overthrow of the capitalist system, He flourished documents signed by the secretary of the Red Trade Union International, greeting the United Mine Workers of America and regarded this expression of international solidarity as treason to the miners union. When he got thru waving the red flag the majority of the delegates were in a state of frenzy, and the vote against the No Scotia miners was a foregone conclusion. William Green, Secretary-Treasurer, wound up the debate. After he got thru talking and before the delgates could be again “phycholo- ed” by the progressives debate was shut off and the vote was taken. pproximately three hundred dele- gates stood up in behalf of the Nova ge the heads of those who now stand cotia miners. The debate revealed the total lack of class consciousness on the Pe of the administration leaders. fever was there a word uttered in condemnation of the brutal action of the British Empire Steel Com- pany by the Lewis supporters. They had no protest to make against the Fags of soldiers, police and armed stool pigeons. No, their wrath was roused against the violation of the sacred contract which. was stained with the bload of the steel slaves of the British Empire Steel Company, the same pirate concern that the miners of District 26, were toiling for. The Lewis machine almost wept tears over the dangers to property involved in allowing the water to seep into the mines of this company. Think of it! Millions of dollars worth of wealth belonging to the capitalists might be destroyed! What of the steel slaves, the brothers of the min- ers who were clubbed and bayoneted? Let them suffer, they were members of another union and solicarity in the eyes of the Lewis machine means solidarity with the capitalists and not with the workers. White John L. Lewis was prancing back and forth on the stage at Tom- linson Hall and being applauded by the capitalist press for his success in holding the radicals in check, Jim McLachlan was behind the bars in a Canadian prison for defending his class at the expense of his freedom and Alexander Howat was preparing to face a grievance committee of the convention for similar conduct in The defenders of the money power versus the defenders of human rights and the rights of the working glass! The debate on the report of the resolutions committee was continued from the previous afternoon session: Alexander McIntyre was the first. to take the platform and read docu- ments to support his contention that the deposed officials of District 26, @ wage reduction. He was followed by John P. White, former International president and dollar a year patriot during the war while the miners were paying him his salary. His speech consisted chiefly in a eulogy of himself and a sketch of his life from humble sur- roundings to his present prosperity of which he boasted. His language was cautious and perfectly “sane.” He declared he would be derelict in his duty did he not come to the as- sistance of his friend, John L. Lewis, whose acts were criticised. He de- nounced Jim McLachlan and his as- sociates, and urged that the conven- tion continue to support the con- bs tag of the present administra- or. Delegate Joe Morris, president of District 18, and a former radical, in fact was elected in Iowa, because of his radicalism, outdid the old line re- actionaries in heaping condemnation Daugherty Dicks Scurry Vainly for Answer to Borah (Special to The Daily Worker) SEATTLE, Wash.—Its a hard life being a department of justice dick here in Seattle. The boys in this branch . ost hein ee oe a vestigation have assigne the task of getting evidence that the Soviets are planning a revolution in America:—this to give Secretary Hughes an answer to Senator Borah’s aémand that he present evidence of re- theard by news! en express- Mg po ve the evidence that the Soviets were plan- ning the overthrow of the American it, so he asked Attorney- herty to get it, and he partment of justice to get ity und jus ge they didn’t have it in Washington, so “its up to us fellows here to get it, or on something, anyhow.” Average N. Y. Wage $27.97 Eby ng Nipbern wage in New York state in ember was $27.97, says rep- resents a gain of 33 cents over the ‘or progress in the labor movement. He went so far as to defend Tom Lewis, now a mine owner, declaring that capitalist flunkey’s integrity was assailed when he was president of the union and turning around to John L. Lewis, said, “and John when you took over office the first thing you did was to sell them out.” There was some applause tho the statement was made ironically. Morris challenged the Nova Scotia miners to leave the U. M. of A. say- ing that they were a liability, rather than an asset. He reiterated that the Nova Scotia miners remained at work while the miners in the United States were on strike tho he knew jquite well that there was a law in Canada prohibiting under severe pen- alties in calling of a strike until an appeal was first made for a Concilia- tion Board. Delegate William Deck, reminded the platform and pointed out that despite the use of the red bogey in order to poison the minds of the dele-| gates against the Nova Scotia miners that they were not expelled from the. union because of any demand they made for affiliation with the Red In- ternational. He urged the delegates not to allow a dictatorship to be set up in the Uinted Mine Workers of America that would allow John L. Lewis or any other individual who happened to be in office of president to get rid of his opponents at will. Delegate William Deck, reminded the officials of the union that they were only the servants of the miners and not their masters, ij Thomas Kennedy of the resolutions committee stressed the illegality of the Nova Scotia strike. That was the red thread running thru the adminis- tration attack on District 26. They did not abide by the sacred contract even when it was violated in spirit if not in letter by the second party to the contract, the €oal operators. Delegate Freeman Thompson, read from a speech, an extract, delivered fought relentlessly against. accepting | by President Frank Farrington of District 12, on the Kansas situation in which he declared that some years ago, the then president of the Indiana miners, Van Horn by name, ordered the miners from a certain coal com- pany to cease work and the Interna- tional President, Tom Lewis ordered them back and was sustained by the International Executive Board. John L, Lewis at the following convention made a motion censuring the presi- dent and the executive board for their action and the motion was carried. This is the same John L, Lewis, de- clared Farrington, who now crushes the Kansas miners for a similar act. John L. Lewis in reply offered the defense that this occurred fifteen years ago. Since then the laws of the union have changed. And so has Mr. Lewis it seems. The Lewis machine has success- fully weathered the Nova Scotia storm. The next and chief test will be the Howat case. Many Frozen to Death as Cold Wave Sweeps over Northern Greece ATHENS—More than 150 per- sons have been frozen to death as a result of 20 degrees below zero weather which prevails thruout Pagauatts Greece, according to mes- 8a; ere today. The dead indude a detachment of 100 Mussulmans, which was buried in snow in a mountain pass when caught in a terrific blizzard. ‘Many railways are snowed under roo aigurted of cattle frozen to leat Recognition Meeting in Boston BOSTON—The workers of Boston will demand that the United States. recognize Soviet Russia at a mass meeting to be held in Pa; Memorial Hall, 9 Appleton St., Sunday, Feb. 8rd, M. Wicks, lecturer and edi- tor, will make the principal address. He will answer the accusations hurled by Secretary of States Hughes against the first republic of labor. Finest Dance In New England. BOSTON.—Local Boston of Friday evening, Feb. tr at the ‘Dud. y , Feb. 1, a - ley Street ta House, The dance ill be a glittering affar, attended by all the notables and Eager rtoletariat of 4° town. music than | will be the finest obtainable in New higher . Factory workers averaged ian in New York City and non- fac! workers $33.40. only $19.24 in ; $4.00 less in the rest of the ei stat : fi England. 3 Membership Drive Meeting At Worker’s Hall, 1347 Boston | ti ~ |GONGRESS WOULD REVIVE SERFDOM ‘AS ALIEN STATUS Lineberger Bill Now Before Congress (Continued from page 1.) Justice at any time that it is to, the advantage of both himself and the country to be allowed to locate or go elsewhere.” These two provisions taken to- ax gether mean that every foreign-born worker here or who may come here in the future will, for a period ‘of seven years, be under the absolute control of the Department of Jus- tice, These foreign-born workers will be assigned to certain industries and cannot leave those industries without the consent of the Depart- ment of Justice. No scheme of indus- trial slavery could be devised which would more effectively serve the in- terests of the employing class of this country. No more effective strike- breaking agency could be set up than that which is set up under the Line- berger bill. The bill goes even further in its provision directed against all for- eign-born workers. Those now here and those coming to this country in the future must immediately declare their intention to become citizens. They must take out their first citizen- ship papers within three years or they will be deported. They must satisfy a committee of the Depart- ment of Justice that they can speak English. If at the end of a seven- year period they have not completed their naturalization they are to be deported. The Lineberger law also provides the machinery to enable the Depart- ment of Justice to keep track of all the foreign-born workers in this coun- try. In writing this provision Repre- sentative Lineberger evidently in- tended to give the foreign-born work- ers something to be thankful for, for, in a cynical way, he has provided that during Thanksgiving week of each year the foreign-born workers must report to the Department of Justice and register. Those who know of the attitude of the Department of Justice toward foreign-born workers as shown in the 1919-20 raids in which thousands upon thousands of foreign - born workers were herded into prison, starved and mistreated by the agents of the Department of Justice, will realize what it means to the foreign- born workers to be made the wards of the Department of Justice for the period of time until they become citi- zens of the United States, One exception is made in the Line- berger law to. the rule that foreign- born workers who do not become citi- zens within seven years shall be de- ported. Representative Lineberger provides that a foreign-born worker who is over 65 years of age may re- main in this country even if he does not learn English well and become a citizen, with the proviso, however, that he may remain only “so long as his actions are acceptable to the De- partment of Justice.” The section of the law which ex- tends the new rules to apply to immi- grants to all foreign-born workers | already in this eountry, reads as fol- laws: ‘All aliens in the jurisdiction of the United States at the time this act becomes effective shall comply with the provisions of this act and all other laws and regulations govern- ing aliens and prescribing methods for becoming a citizen of the United \States, and shall become subject in every way to the penalties and pro- visions thereto and of all other laws upon the subject.’ the} bo Threatens Whole Labor Movement. The Lineberger law, if it is passed by Congress, will sound the death- knell of the whole organized labor movement in this country. If the employing class of the United States .can create an army of industrial serfs attached to certain industries, who must annually report to the Depart- ment of Justice, who cannot move from place to ent for their Ii dustries to which they are assigned, wages can be forced down to the starvation point, hours of labor can be increased, organization can be pro- hibited and the employers rule su- eeee over the lives of not only these ‘oreign-born workers but of the na- tive born alike. With such an army of serfs it would only require an or- der from the Department of Justice to move them from one industry to another in which there is a strike of native born workers and thus break that strike, It would seerh almost inconceivable that such a law could be seriously to the Congress of the in} States, but that it is seriously meant is by the score of other laws of a similar character, all in- tending to enslave the foreign-born workers and them the native- 7. Congress will undoubtedly pass arn Mather 2 ira ae, cere ae y r move- ment of this country. The organiza- tion of and foreign-born work- ers to against these slave laws is one of the most important tasks’ of the hour, 5 The Workers Party of America has the way in its call for the organiza- for the Protecti Board of Education Whitewashing Itself In’ Fake Probe While Kids Face Death In Firetrap Buildings Informal! reports of the first day’s investigation of the fire- trap school buildings which THE DAILY 'WORKER expose forced the city to begin show that an effort is being made to whitewash the board of education which has been so criminally careless of the lives of the children in the factory districts. The informal report is by Mr. Burns, business manager of the board of education, which is investigating itself in co-opera- tion with the fire department ,and the building committee. “Not Alarming,” Says Burns. “Conditions are not alarm- inz,” insists Mr. Burns, par- roting his chief Charles M. Moderwell, president of the board, who said the day before the investigation that “there is no cause for alarm.” -Mr. Burns said that four schools had been visited in the first half day, but he would not publish any facts about the survey. If it were found advisable, Mr. Burns finally yielded, the investiga- tion will be made public, later. He said he had not yet given a writ- ten report to the city of the condi- tions in the schools visited but that conditions were not alarming. When asked whether inspecting four schools in half a day was not “quick work” Mr, Burns said he did not think so as the schools were close together. No Fire Escapes. While this whitewashing was go- ing on The DAILY WORKER vis- ited another school and FOUND NO FIRE ESCAPES, as told below. Such neglect of common safety precautions, imperilling the lives of the children unfortunate enough to live in the poorer districts where the schools are worst, will not go unchallenged by The DAILY WORKER, The sons and daughters of the workers must not be in daily peril of death because of the callous pol- icy of an indifferent school board. Labor Unionists genre wi Many trade unionists who read the articles in the DAILY WORKER on fire trap public schools have said’ that they will bring the question to the attention of their locat unions and ask them to pass resolu- tions in favor of a school building program that will assure “every school child a seat in a safe school. Nick Dozenberg, member of Lodge 478 of the I. A. of M., and A. Over- gaard of Lodge 390 of the I. A. of M., said that at the next meeting of their unions they would call the attentiof of the membership to the present sit- uation in the schools and ask them to pass resolutions on the subject, Lovett Tinker im ates an of the Chicago Defender, said that he was glad to see the DAILY WORK- ER call the attention of the people to the school situation. “In the colored districts of the city for the most part we have comparatively modern schools because the districts in which the negroes of Chicago live are new districts. We have, however, a pecu- liar situation and need. In the schools in the colored district most of the teachers are white, and the parents uf the colored pupils do not want to see the introduction of colored teach- ers and thus the gradual introduction , 0. -im Crow schools, White Teachers Indifferent The white teachers, are, however, for the most part indifferent in the performance of their duty. The disci- pline in the colored schools is poor as a result. Recently, on the South side there have been fights between the teachers and the pupils in two schools. In the Wendell Phillips school ony last week a group of pu- pils fought with and beat up the prin- cipal of the school. Rose Karsner, director of the Friends of Soviet Russia, and of Workers Germany, said: “From the facts revealed by the DAILY WORK- ER it seems that Chicago could learn something from ‘darkest Russia.’ There the schools are housed in the finest buildings available.” Worse Than Jails Harrison George, who has been in a dozen or more jails and prisons of the untry, said: “The school children Ghicago seem to be in much the same situation as the in prison, Both are housed in rot- ten buildings, and the children are just as helpless to do anything about it as are the prisoners.” “By fighting for better schools for the kids of Chicago the DAILY WORKER has already justified its ex- istence,” Bob Minor, cartoonist and editor of the Liberator, said. “That the workers’ children will get the worst of everything from a school board that does not have a_ single worker on it is to be expected. Since the workers of Chicago are the vast majority of the people of Chicago, and their children must go to the public schools, the workers should be members of the school board, and the rest should be educators, “If you will notice the capitalist papers of Chicago, you will see they are devoting most of their attention on the question of unsafe buildings in the city to the theaters and other vately owned buildings. It is p! that they don’t want school taxes rae) to pay for new buildings,” he added, Visit Ogden School No fire escapes were found in the Ogden school at Chestnut and State streets, visited in the course of the DAILY WORKERS’ own survey, yes- ion of Councils on} terday. This is not in a particular! Road, ae New York City Thurs-|of Foreign-Born Workers, Every workine class district. Most of the day, ‘Jan, 81, 1924, at 8:30 P. M. | labor i er oan every organiza-| pupils who attend the school are, The following will address | tion of foreign-born workers, every | however, the children of workers. The the berigeds ee gaa Mondon and Eston of labor should building was erected in 1884 and, in- Castrell. musical program. | join in united front movement | stead of being improved, has steadily Come and bring your ang mass Petitions | deteriorated since then. £ iy to. Washington the wickets of thinke ‘ the . Tollowing ae 0 0 are : FOR RENT ile een meets #08 foreign-born, preg ww Rape a Mey Reventon Furnished steam heat. 2703 | a1¢ ; tie passage of] in fire drills, everything is all right Ave., slave laws, in his school, Three fire 7879. H. Robin. — — ie, were at the lant \ , ' \ i aan who are, week and made three minor sugges- tions. One of the suggestions was that old bricks should be removed from under the stairs. What the others were he would not say, There are no fire escapes in the entire building. The clothing closets are mere holes in the wall. Should a fire break out while a room full of children are getting their clothes, panic and tragedy would result. The only exits and entrances to the build- ing are two stairways about four feet wide. hs Lunch In Dirty Basement In the basement is a recreation room where many of the children eas their lunch on cold days. The floor was covered with scraps of paper and remnants of food, The walls, once painted white and red, are filthy with grease. From the garbage can in one corner rose a terrible stink. A bench ran around three sides of the room, that was the only provision for a “lunch room.” The boys’ toilet, in the basement, is a dark, dank place. On the top floor, the hall is used as an assembly room by placing loose chairs in school assembly rooms are wooden platform. The fire depart- ment has repeatedly said that loose chairs in school assembly rooms are a big fire hazard but, in many schools, like the Ogden school, they are still used, The school has seats ‘for 700 and has 750 pupils, The DAILY WORKERS’ own in- vestigation will continue, Amalgamated Hits at High Rents Demanded of the Working Class “Landlords demand such high rents in working class districts that there is little money left to buy anything else,” says Frank Rosen- blum, organization department, Am- algamated Clothing Workers, “The workers are unable to spend any- thing on clothing. This is particu- larly true of workers on part time. Their rents do noc go down with | slack work and they have to econ-| omize on clothes. “Our unemployment statistics in the garment trades bear this out. There is so little demand for cer~ tain grades of clothing that our union suffers from unemployment as high as 7% to 10 per cent in what should be.a busy season. The high grade clothing is holding up well, showing that the prosperous middle and upper classes are not affected. But the lower grades of suits and overcoats of which huge quantities are usually made at this time are in little demand. The workers have no money to buy them after they have settled with their landlords.” Birth Control Wins In Court. Birth control advocates have won a second victory in the Chicago courts. The case arose over the re- fusal of the city health commissioner to permit the local organization, headed by Mrs. Benjamin Carpenter, to open a proposed parents’ clinic. Judge Harry M. Fisher has now over- tuled the motion of Assistant Corpo- ration Counsel Frank M. Paden to set aside his previous judgment, which was in favor of Mrs. Carpenter's pe- tition for a writ of mandamus com- pelling Health Commissioner Her- man N. Bundesen to issue a license for the clinic, Attorney Paden had previously ap- rong to the Appellate court and ater moved at the request of Arch- bishop George Mundelein to reopen the case to present further evidence. Teachers’ Union Aids Germans. NEW YORK.—The executive board of the Teachers’ union decided to co-operate in the work of relief for the starving German workers on these three conditions: 1. That re- lief go to the starving German peo- ple. 2. That this relief be given without any political discrimination. 8. That it ie administered thru the Teachers’ Union of Germany. It was. also decided to appoint a commit- tee to take charge of the collection of funds for this purpose. LOST.—New Galosh for right foot at Ashland Auditorium Sunday night. Party making mistake kindly see Lydia Beidel at Lenin Memorial Tuesday night, the 29th, in same hall. | We are with you,” -|MILLION VIEWED — NICOLA! LENIN LYING IN DEATH “Lenin in Thousands of Hearts,” Says Eulogy (Continued from Page 1) in the temporary mausoleum ex- cavated under the walls of the Krem- lin fortress, Tens of millions of his fellow citizens in the workers’ re- public assembled in services in his honor, outside of Moscow, thru the length and breadth of Russia. “Lenin is dead but he lives’ in thousands of hearts today”, says @ eulogy agreed upon by the federal congress of soviets. The body is still lying in the tem- porary mausoleum, awaiting decision about its final disposition. s+ © * Cable Sympathy. “Our sympathy to the Soviet Union over the loss of world’s greatest labor leader. Close up your ranks. cabled a mass meeting of Chicago workers to the president of Russia, Kalenin, at Mos- cow. This same meeting also cabled to the Communist International as fol- lows: “We. grieve with the workers of the world over great loss to inter- national labor, Lenin is dead, but his ideals will live with us.” The cables were signed by Chicago Workers’ Memorial meeting, M. Stolar, chair- man. A musical program was given by Alexander Kaminsky, formerly of the Petrograd Imperial academy, and actors of the Workers and Peasants’ theater of Chicago. The meeting was called by the Society for Tech- nical Aid to Soviet Russia. Chicago Holding Lenin Memorial Meeting Tonight Thoysands of Chicagoans will crowd into Ashland Auditorium to- night in honor of Nicolai Lenin the departed leader of the world prole- tarian movement. The list of noted speakers includes William Z. Foster, C. E. Ruthenberg, William F. Dunne, Robert Minor and Martin Abern. Arne Swabeck, dis- trict organizer of the Workers Party, will preside. Moving pictures of the life of Lenin and revolutionary songs by the Freiheit Singing Society will feature out the program. Admission is free but no seats are guaranteed to anyone who doer not come early. Big Philadelphia Me The militant workers of Philadel- phia will voice their grief at the death of Lenin and express their sym- pathies with the Russian Proletariat a a huge Memorial Mass Meeting Saturday evening, February 2, at the Musical Fund Hall, 8th and Locust street. The following speakers will address the meeting: Ludwig Lore, Editor Volkszeitung: W. W. Weinstone, Eastern District Organizer of the F. 8. R. no Epstein will speak in Russian, and M. Olgin, Philadelphia manager of the Freiheit, will be chair- man. A large Russian Orchestra will sup- ply appropriate music. Twin City Memorial Other Lenin memorial meetings will be at: Minneapolis, Richmond Halls, Sun- day, February 3, at 2 - m., with James F. Cannon, W. S. Wiggins, as- sitant county attorney; Norman H. Tallentire, speaking, and H. D. Kra- mer, editor of the Minneapolis Labor Review, presiding. St. Paul, Labor Temple, Sunday, February 3, at 8. p.m James P. Can- non and Norman H. Tallentyre, speaking. Detroit, Arena Garderis, 5810 Woodward avenue, Sunday, February 3, at 2 p.m. Speakers: Dennis Batt and C. E. Ruthenberg. The Ukranian and Russian choir will sing the Rus- sian revolutionary funeral march. New York, Madison Square Gar- den, Monday, 8 p. m. William Z. Foster and C. E. Ruthenberg, speakers, Warren, Ohio, Hippodrome, Sunday, February 3, at 7 p. m. Speakers in English, South Slavish, Polish and Finnish, The Land for the Users! PITTSBURGH, PA. DR. RASNICK DENTIST : Rendering Expert Dental Service for 20 Year 645 SMITHFIELD ST., Near 7th Ave. 1627 CENTER AVE., Cor. Arthur St, In Wednesday’s issue of Special Lenin Wednesday’s Daily Worker will give over a large part of our space to special articles and interesting features bearing upon the life and work of Nicolai Lenin. This will, in fact, be a LENIN! MEMORIAL EDITION, that all workers will wish to keep as a memento of the passing of the world’s greatest leader of an oppressed class rising to victory. There will be a special article by Karl Radek and Leon Trozky, as well as contributions by American Communists. ts All comrades in charge of the Lenin Memorial Meet- ings, or others who wish to order Lenin Memorial Issue of THE DAILY WORKER, should mail or telegraph their orders at once. Orders later than Tuesday night, Jan. 29, cannot be filled. eatures in THE DAILY WORKER we special bundles of this a RET on: =~ tenabennae