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THE DAILY WORKER Saturday, February 23, 1 NEBRASKA C.P,P,A. WORKS TO HALT Fer. P, TENDENCY Dirt Farmers Are for May 30 Page Two | eetsiaiadaieeianaae SINCLAIR MAY| NOT APPEAR AS WITNESS Also Refuse to Give Fall PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS, AND DENTISTS see A Show of Gold In the Mouth Is Unsightly Your teeth can be filled so that no one can tell that they contain fillings, except by careful exami- nation. Poincare Saved by Narrow Margin in French Senate Vote Mellon Hammered by Farmer-Labor PHILA. WORKERS __Man_ Conarese| MOVE TO RESTORE nese! OUSTED MEMBERS sentative Wefald, Farmer-Labor, of Minnesota, denouncing the Mellon tax plan during the house debate, Call on Garment Offi- cials to Stop Disruption MABEL GOREY, STEEL KING'S DARLING, MAY BE BOURBON’S BRIDE PARIS, Feb. 22.—“I admire Mrs. Corey greatly, but I appre- ciate my freedom, at least for the present,” said Don Luis Ferdinand, bourbon prince and cousin of King Alfonso of Spain, referring to rumors that he is engaged to .—By a bare major- ity of 16 votes, Premier Poincare has cleared the last dangerous hurdle which threatened to bring down his government, The cabinet is safe for the time being. There was tense excitement in the senate chamber last night as the vote on electoral laws was carefully ver- said that only 131 taxpayers in Min- nesota were rich enough to benefit more by Mellon’s scheme than by the high surtax plan of the Demo- erats. Of the 124,501 income tax marry Mrs, Mabel Gilman Corey |/;503 pefore bein ipl Sel payers in his state in 1921, 124,370 (Special te The Daily Werker) NU WAY ‘ of New! Bork: ig announced, oin: (Special to The Daily Worker) would gain. more by the Garner ¥/' 4 ve Chance at Immunity Friends. sey the romance bee ||°iie,W% Palpably nervous. He had] GRAND ISLAND, Neb, Feb. 22. |Would | gain’ mor PHILADELPHIA, Pa, Feb, 22. staked the life of his cabinet on the The small conference here of farm- Resolutions calling on the Interna- DENTISTRY - tween the divorced wife of the ||issue that the senate must not change|ers and railway workers is - | yy avho is Secretary Mellon?” asked | tional Ladies’ Garment Workers’ \s an i tn Dai former United States Steel head |/the electoral law as voted by the flection of the "political ehaos. thet Wefald. “He is the man who fixes | Union officials to reinstate without DOES IT, THEY CHANGE THEIR MINDS. |) and the youthful prince has been ||chamber of deputies. 3 obtains in a state where Charlie |the Tate of interest to be paid on|conditions the expelled , members ag many readers of this paper can WASHINGTON, Feb, 22—The || ripening for 15 years, since they The senate had been inclined to| Bryan, the governor and other demo- |%°Vermment securities, of which|were passed here today at a con- y Pm tell you. Come for an estimate. If satis- fied, make a deposit and start your senate Teapot Dome probers today decided to issue subpoena at once for Harry F. Sinclair, lessee of there are outstanding $21,500,000,- 000. The law has given him the right to do this. By fixing the in- first met when Mrs. Corey came here on her honeymoon. Luis was but 19 in those days. He has paid vote certain changes following a re- port of its committee. The Premier had said he would resign if the laws ference of labor organizations pre- sided over by Chairman Neistein of the Joint Board of the Amalgama- crats are filing in the coming pri- maries on both the democrat and Progressive party tickets, Teapot Dome. The decision was reached at a conference between Senator Len- root, Wisconsin, chairman of the committee, and Senator Walsh, Montana, chief investigator for the committee, who returned to Wash- ington today from a brief vaca- tion. IT OUGHT TO BE TAKEN. Before the conference it was in- timated Sinclair might not be per- mitted to testify, on advice of the President's special counsel, Atlee Pomererg, and Owen J. Roberts. Walsh and Lenroot said, however, that they agreed Sinclair’s testi- mony ought to be taken. “We will. have Sinclair on the stand within a week,” said Walsh. discreet court to the former ac- tress ever since, friends said, usu- ally while dancing in Chie res- taurants. THE REPUBLICAN MACHINE BACKS OILY DAUGHERTY Refuses to Desert the Attorney General were not passed as they stood. By a vote of 150 to 134, the laws were passed. What saved Poincare was the fact that the senate did not wish to pre- cipitate a cabinet crisis at the present time, with the reparations situation at a delicate stage and renewed down- fall of the franc threatened. The vote leaves Poincare with free hands to push his financing projects and proceed with the reparations question after the experts report. Texas Booze Agent Slain; Was Too Hot on Officials’ Trail The state secretary of the Con- ference for Progressive Political Ac- tion and some of the railway union delegates are here to capture the meeting in the hope that they can hold a balance of power in the two old parties. They want to put it on record for a progtam of endorsing of candidates on the old party tickets. The dirt farmers here are hostile to this attempt to steal a conference that was not called by the progres- sive party officially but by many indi- viduals active in its ranks, These delegates are heading now or in the immediate future for a farmer-labor party and participation in the May 30th conference. This is understood by the C. P. P. A. crowd and it is making them terest rate on the whole crushing burden of interest-bearing securities upon the backs of the American people. Interest ‘is tax. He has the pawer to increase the tax load on the poor. If interest is placed one- half of 1% higher than it ought to be, that increases the interest load thruout the land more than $500,- 000,000. “Mr. Mellon sits/on the federal reserve board. They fix the dis- count rate and regulate credit. “It is natural that one of the rich- est men in the world, having been placed in such a position of political and economic power, will try to con- quer the one world that is yet left to be conquered . . . to lighten the load of the rich. That is what the ted Clothing Workers. Sixty dele- twenty-eight gates representing unions and fraternal organization: were present, A resolution was also passed call- ing upon Brothers Hirschberg and re- abor izer Golden help bring about the reinstatement of the ex. Birch, president and_secretar. spectively of the Central Union and State Org: to act as a committee pelled members. The controversy in the Interna- Garment Workers’ Union. affects the entire labor move- ment in Philadelphia and is leading tional Ladies’ it into a serious crisis. An executive committee was elec- ted to continue work of conference: and carry on propaganda for rein- work when you see fit. Open evenings until 9 except Wednesdace and Saturday. DR. THOS.H. KELLEY 2758 North Ave., corner California Tel. Humboldt 6214 Ac MATHIEU’S COUGH SYRUP . IS THE BEST MADE y pats a Z 1 itatementana’. th ollecti of | Stops Coughs, Colds and Bronchitis Asubpoena will served GLENROSE, "Tezae Feb, 22-—| even tho lope derclorgeny | allan, Bil ,intende todo, ane] statamen ag ge Por an, Woman or Ch Sinclair in New York today calling Richard Watson, prohibition enforce- nothing’ else: for his appearance early next week when the committee resumes public (Continued from page 1.) reading of Washington’s farewell ad- ment officer and a star witness. in the Nebraska movement. Farrell, Pa., Police Business As Usual. 50c a Bottle. By Mail, 60c. g ‘ the prosecution of 88 alleged liquor SEATTLE, Feb. 22.—Faih to hearings. He will be questioned | dress in the Senate, the following | law violators here, was shot to death Germany Must Pay Hall read Peskidite Galliges atoat Sold by J. B. LENAU, Tegarding stock transactions in | Statement was given out at his office | from ambush early today. Five men Milli . A Loot WwW. P . statement that the country is in a 832 BLUE ISLAND AVENUE Sinclair oil and a reported $1,000,- |in the Department of Justice: are held in jail in connection with} ,@UlLtONS Ut wards *. prosperous condition may have been Tel 000 “slush fund” raised by oil in- “The attorney general went to the | the killing. in Lawless Raid el, Monroe 4751 terests for use in Washington. DOCUMENTS NOT MISSING. . . Committee members said they had not been advised about reports | | Capitol today to hear Senator Willis, of his own state, read George Wash- ington’s faremwell address. He had suggested, when it was some time! Watson had just returned from Cleburne where he had testified in the trial of E. L. Roark, former prosecutor of Somervell county. for Lusitania Claims} WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—Ger- many today faced a bill of $841,000 (Special to The Daily Worker) NEW YORK.—Charging that the raid on Workers Party headquarters partly responsible for the death of W. C. Nogler here. Anyway Nogler got discouraged. Penniless, out of work, and unable to borrow money, he ended his life DR. A. J. CHYZ reagsco line to test- | 820. that Senator Willis was to read| The liquor cases were the most | as part of the cost of sinking the | by the police of Farrell, Pa., is part |by turnin three unlighted gas|} Chiropractic - Osteopath: mo a anee Ca p Rececal Washington’s address, that he would | sensational in Texas, high officials, Lusitania during the war. oF the atatapt to “stop organization de and hing to bed. g ie ? ai ange interior secretary, who leased Tea- | Come up and hear him. including a former sheriff, being ac- In making the awards in 57 cases pot Dome to Sinclair. | Senator Walsh today denied pub- | lished reports that important docu- | ments bearing on the oil case pro- | secutions are missing. He said the “The attorney general occupied a seat in the Senate Chamber. He dis- cussed nothing pertaining to the mat- ter which constituted the basis of his letter to Senator Pepper which was cused of acceptirfr bribes. Watson was the chief witness against the sheriff and others. i, * ” The body of an unidentified man, in the Lusitania group, Judge Edwin B. Parker, umpire of the German- American mixed claims commission, denied 40 claims. The cases to Judge Parker among the steel workers,” the Amer- ican Civil, Liberties union -announced its intention of backing the fight to recover the property confiscated by the police. The confiscated prop- erty included $176 worth of litera- FT CLOTHING, SHOES, ETC. FURNISHINGS Physiological Adjustments 1009 NORTH STATE ST. CHICAGO committee had the original or a | published this morning. kapha di pie tat crushed, Pe gyn! on a Cheie hee ie App between | ture. i hetostatic f every document |after Senator Willis has completed | lonely road near Chicago today by | Charles P. Anderson, American com- “This raid,” Harry F, Ward, chair- * “ that te Sgared in the. inventige- the reading of the Washington ad-|George Buckmeyer, former police- missioner, and Wilhelm Kisselbach, | man, Civil Liberties union, declared, og Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 12 N., 1 P. tion. \. dress, Mr. Daugherty left the Senate |man. Police said they believed the|the German commissioner. flis de. “ig further evidence of the pressure Ss M, to 6 P. M., 7 P. M. to 9 P. M, 6 © |Chamber, shaking hands with Sena-|man was a victim of beer runners. | cision followed the decision in the| brought to bear on local officials by INFANTS’ EARLIER IN THE DAY. WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.— Harry F. Sinclair, lessee of Teapot Dome, may be excused ; from testifying before the Sen- | ate committee on advice of the President’s special counsel in | the oil leasing cases. Tho Sinclair is - tentatively tor Fess on the way out and at once departed from the Capitol without “discussing any subject with any- body.” It was understood at the Depart- ment of Justice that the attorney general will remain at his hotel apartment the remainder of the day. Wallace May Quit; Apparently the body had been thrown from an automobile, Portable Schools Must Go, Declares Chicago. Council With election time only a little way off the committee on schools Lusitania cases, handed down in November, 1923, when nearly $28,- pa was awarded to 278 claim- ants, Youw’re Greater Man Than I Am, Says Calvin to Dempsey the federal department of justice at the dictation of employers and other interests in West Pennsylvania to stop organization among the steel workers.” Longworth Hopes to Jockey Surtax Trade Where Your Money Buys the Most. MARTIN’S 723 West North Avenue East of Halsted St. RESTAURANTS Dr. ZIMMERMAN DENTIST Extraction Specialist 2000 N. California Avenue Phone Armitage 7466 hands Below 44 Per Cent ; | i. i Cal of the city council of Chicago has WASHIN , ae? iss mer fePaalitis s PITTSBURGH, PA. scheduled to appear Monday, Disagrees with ao Gacital Sh po-cenicecced fee hela | dact Cooler Midey cased ae ‘dials io Fic Daas Welds The Radical Inn DR. RASNICK Senator Lenroot, chairman of | on Farmers’ Relief | against. the use of portable schools. | nation-wide Popularity to Jack} WASHINGTON, Feb. 22—Nego- |] i. ah DENTIST the committee, said no sub- The board of education should also | Dempsey, heavyweight champion. | tiations on a new compromise were le place where you can enjoy an poena has been issued for him. Lenroot has talked with Sin- clair by telephone, but de- clined to say what arrange- ment was made with him. Atlee Pomerene and Owen J. Ro- berts, the specia] counsel, are under- stood to have suggested it might be better not to permit Sinclair to test-/| WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—Secre- tary of Agriculture Wallace today j refused confirmation or denial of reports that he was about to resign |from the cabinet as a result of dif- |ferences with President Coolidge }over the administration’s farm re- |lief program. Wallace’s only com- jment on the report was this state- | ment: “T have not resigned.” practice more economy and then they could build more schools by spending less money, say the alder- men, ‘ “During the campaign we told the people every child should have a seat in a school house,” said one alderman, with his eye on re-elec- tion. “We have not kept our prom- ises, We have done. nothing.” Alderman Lyle called the portable Meeting Dempsey at the White House offices, by special arrange- ment, the president said he was Pleased to greet a man probably more widely known than himself. The president added that Dempsey had been before the public longer. Told by his secretary, C. Bascom Slemp, that Dempsey could knock a@ man out with a two-inch punch, the president remarked that was in progress today between House republicans and progressives in a final effort to reverse House action and defeat the Garner income tax plan in the new revenue bill. Republican Leader Longworth has offered to accept a cut in normal in- come tax rates from three per cent to two per cent on incomes less than $4,000, if the progressives will ac- interesting discussion while having a special Mrs. Smith’s own cooked meal or drinking a Russian Tchei- nick (pot) of tea with Mrs, Smith’s own home made cake. Arrangements for services for par- ties, organizations and private gatherings made at any time. Mrs, Smith’s Tea Room 645 SMITHFIELD ST., Near 7th Ave. 1627 CENTER AVE., Cor. Arthur St, T. Brunswick 5991 DR. A. FABRICANT DENTIST 2088 W. DIVISION STREET rf i * . I cept the six per cent rate on incomes ify. Fhe uae bap oncpecy ured ie The reports grew out of a split ear being erected by the board | two inches more than he cared to|above that amount, as proposed . in Cor. Hoyne Ave. CHICAGO, ILL. ciel er’ rol mah ralrger g am, | Which developed during the recent oe education unsanitary make- | experience, the Mellon plan. The maximum sur- 1481 S. SAWYER AVENUE tunity 10 pot sti jconference here of northwest bank. |* i “y Bowler, alderman from the M us Urges P; i gener} ats * i a Sie “aad Phi Rockwell 0202 Oe ee ee Pe ers and farmers’ representatives on aay <3 : ; }cent under the proposed cémpromise. ione Rockwe! 5 Physician and Surgeon Walshe at vat sadyperts gen vores relief measures for wheat farmers Ne lodge eles tech were Sore eg Prof. |The Garner plan as adopted fixes T Benen teas aul ave eee ba eeplerge lane tigator of | and for banks affected by depres- | because the board of education had William Schaeper for |™aximum surtaxes at 44 per cent. - alneosanile bole a lid of secrecy which has covered | the committee’s plans since he left It ig expected that one of the first witnesses to be heard when public} sion in the wheat growing states. President Coolidge endorsed the ris-Sinclair bill creating an expert corporation to dispose of! surplus farm products abroad. His failure said that he requested that port- ables be erected in his district. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Feb. 22— Price of votes in Kansas City has Trade Commission his withdrawal of the nomination of George B. Christian, secretary (2 the late President Harding were being Longworth conceded that the plan must win at least ten additional Drivers’ Union | COZY “ Norbeck-Burtness bill providing f PRE ae eee votes to put it over. : ‘araibhid ith ao nate gy oe i returned today from| 2 fund of $50,000,000 ia lend 6 50 Cents a Vote, Ts WASHINGTON, Feb. 21 Jinan: i BOOKSELLERS, NEWSDEAL- his brief vacation in North Carolina] Sirmers fo enable them to diversify | 47) Politicians Will |‘idates tor the vacancy on the sux, | Bosses Attempt to i LU. and immediately went into conteceere pee OS thers been prinedts oa P Le Cit ov areas Commission, which Presi- Clean U L aundry | AND TOBACCOS nl tomar igs esata other | chould also hive ‘approved: the: Nore ay in Kansas City \dent Coolidge must fill as resuit of Dp : George E. Pashas ' We Bake Our Own Pies 1 to 8 and 7 to 9 p. m. Work Daily for “The Daily!” Special Reduction on | ERS, STATIONERS, CIGARS hearings are resumed Monday will be/ + da“ » | been cut 50 per cent, political work- |*ugested today. After locking out the laundry ’ Bie, New York investigator who re-| 0) $2 Co comeae, rump convention’ | ors charged’ tolay doliewing telac| Benaise Magnus Johnson, Minne-| drivers, the laundry bosses in : LEVINSON’S BOOK STORE ported on stock transactions by attor-|0f Supporters of the Norris-Sinclair ration Wee the ” ity Glactions’ in sova, asked the President vo’ appoint . 24 i 2426 Lincoln Avenue mey general Daugherty. This invest- igator has other evidence also. E. B. McLean, owner of the Wash- ington Post, is under subpoena to tell bill in which Wallace joined. Philadelphia W. P. April. Police arrested a score of men. who they charged with registering. Preiessor Will!am Schacfu, tvormerly uf the Universiiy of Minnesota, Laer J. Oerns, advertising man Brownsville, N. Y., are doing every- thing possible to force the laundry drivers to give up their fight for the right to form a union. The | One-half block from Imperial Hall CHICAGO 3308 W. Roosevelt Road, Chic: (To be continued Monday Any Book Mailed Free. ~ * i more than once under different |0f “Chicago, also was indorsed in| bosses are lowering the price “for sede 4 é more —" , ne F vi ad Holding Imp ortant names. Confessions of four of those | messages received at the White|laundering, but the housewives, the Anywhere on Receipt of Price. from bina an Ve A boca) a ai M eetin g Monday arrested were’ made public. They | House. wives of workers, are in sympathy " Ask Us—We Know Books. in pe ip $1 500 000 ‘saa rs rid f . said they had been paid 50 cents to _ with the laundry drivers, and are 9 |Jack London’s Novels, 69c, postpaid te have boon reieed by cil ix {Special to The Daily Worker) register under assumed names end | Snow Avalanche refusing to send their wash’ to the ; RADY’S Phone ee een. PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 22.Ajgive fake addresses in “workers? > ; seab laundries. The bosses are hav- ooK weak, Well, 1281 we es ee general membership meeting of the | hotels.” Buries Trolley Plow jing a hard time finding scabs, as’ Sinclair Loses Italian Leases. ROME, Feb. 22.—Harry F. Sinclair Joses, for the time being at least, the Italian oil leases he sought here. The Teapot Dome scandal found an echo in the Italian press, a strong section of which attacked Signor Cor- bone, minister of national economy for granting Sinclair's company a ™ ly to drill for oil in all Italian possessions. Signor Corbono accordingly decided not to sign the convention and to sub- mit the matter to the personal con- sideration of Premier Mussolini, who is inclined to favor the Italian oil in- terests. Report Wheeler Resolution. The audit and control committee to- Workers Party is called for Monday evening, Feb. 25, at the local head- quarters, 521 York avenue, near Fifth and Spring Garden Sts. The district executive committee held an important meeting at which pe for extensive work were out- ined. It is absolutely essential that every member of the party of Local Philadelphia shal] attend this meet- ing and hear the interesting report of the new district organizer. Lecture On Russian Schools. DETROIT, Mich., Feb. 22.—Prof. P. Tutyshkin, of the Medico-Pedo- logical Institute of, Moscow, will lec- ture Sunday at 8 p. m., in McCollister Hall, Forest at Cass avenues, on Rus- In former years the price paid by the underworld for fake registra- tions was $1, police said. Poisonous Gas from Defective Furnace Causes Two Deaths Carbon monoxide gas from a de- fective furnace, not ptomaine poison- ing, caused the death of William I. Howland, 77, retired Chicago tea im- porter, and Mrs. Herta Orne, his sister-in-law, a postmortem exami- nation today revealed. Howland’s wife and daughter, Vir- ginia, found unconscious in another and Automobile STROUDSBURG, Pa., Feb, 22.— An enormous avalanche of snow en- tirely buried a trolley snow plow, its two occupants and an automobile with Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Baird, of New York, while the automobile was following the plow along the road between Delaware Water Gap and Portland, according to word received here today, A road gang saw the slide cover the trolley and machine and rushed to the rescue, Mr. and Mrs. Baird were nearly suffocated, ee Dusky Namesakes the laundry drivers are noted for their fighting spirit, and no “goril- | las” can frighten them in the fight vont d are making against bosses and, scabs, One Figure Sometimes | Causes a Good Deal | of Needless Trouble The DAILY WORKER carried 1 news item on February 15 giving Painters Local No. 681 credit for the donation of $430 to the relief of the German workers. Now it ‘happens that no such local exists RESTAURANT A good place to eat. 1010 RUSH STREET Tel. Superior 7079 Downstairs of National Office. RESTAURANT Ben Norske Kafe 2741-45 West North Avenue 3145 Broadway, Chicago, Ill. WORKERS, ATTENTION! We carry Union made Cigars and Tobacco, Pipes, Toys, Magazines, Confectionery and Stationery. Buy Your Herald Teak’, Daily Worker CHAS. RASMUSSEN 2621 W. NORTH AVENUE Phone Armitage 0366. CARL WIRTHMA 1587 CLYBOURN AVENUE Manufacturer of High Grade sia's Educational System under the| part of the Howland home, will re- : but the last figure in the local’s Entire 2nd Floor Me eet lng | Raa minha ae etek ys | OF Country’ Rather | Fer aheal leet cnt emg nr «bom ; ini s Mother an in Sovie! ;| suffering from the of gas A * ; the fe pete Se, Reaee rerio | Of New Horieaiis in Education; . The pa cin . Celebrate Birthday No, 687, meant People are judged by the books pres epartment of Justice. Because of prior agreement by the Problem of the Rejuvenation of Man- kind; The Problem of Religion; The The bodies were found by How- HOUSTON, Tex., F eb, 22.— Russian Workers in Math Pedersen Orchestra Sunday Evenings , read, All the best books, old new, can be obtained from Rendering Expert Dental Service for 20 Year - land's son, William, Jr., on returning Senate not to transact any business ” , ‘ Problem of the Family and Martiage;|from a party. All four were stricken | Twenty-one Houstonians tod cele- SPECIAL BANQUET ROOM Morris Bernstein's Book Shop, i poe ay eased jes, as thea The Problem of the Eugenie School; | following the evening meal. eared the annivetsary of the bith} Thousands to Join a 3733 West Roosevelt Road. Monday. New Problems of Psychology Applied to Educatio NEW YORK, Feb, 22—Twenty per- sons wers injured slightly today when of Gecame Washington with more than patriotic pride, They are all namesakes of the il- Communist Party * Phone Armitage 4706 Open—11 A. M. to 12 P. M, Phone Rockwell 1453. Stationery, Musie and all Periodicals. Come and get a Debs calendar free. , Kate O’Hare to Speak. Swabeck a westbound Long Island passenger | lustrious father of our country altho (Special to The Daily Worker) MILWAUKE! Feb. 22.— Arne|train ran thru an open switch into al all of them have the comptexion and| MOSCOW, Feb, 19.—The drive for Mrs. Kate Richards O'Hare will Swabeck will address the Open Forum Meet us at the Telephone Diversey 5129 dines f the Milwaukee branch of the Work-| tam: Lang tated. eae nontne: | anceatay al the "wy oamataitaas | MOK porte tek hae ee Sie ED. GARBER dd of the aukee branch of the Work-|ton, Long Island. ations run all the , wa: x | munis®, party mn res} { . the lecture reors, of the Lindiar {|e Party at 8 p.m. on Sunday on the thru bollermaker and’ bricklayer to [to by ‘applications from keo000 | Prudential Restaurant |. QUALITY SHOES Samatarium, 525 S. Ashland Blvd, || Subject “What is the Workers Par- Still Improving. porter on a train, : workers and peasants. A cam| 752 NORTH AVE, | For Men, Women and Children at 7:30 Saturday evening, Febru- ery 23. Admission free, ty?” Discussion follows, The forum is held at Miller Hall, State & Avery sts, This is the last Open Forum meeting of the season. WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—Senator for several days, is ly improv it was announced today. / Don’t “Yes, But,” be reerui ue Daily Worker’ ‘Sead te peur cake! wuckare’ wet scription gt once, Pua for 1,000,000 new members all to ited from oe ee ma: un- peasants may The only place to eat, 2427 LINCOLN AVENUE Near d _ Ave.