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Page Four THE DAILY WORKER ‘Tuesday, Apra ‘vo, ‘vwaw WORKERS PARTY OF CHICAGO IN MAY DAY GALL Secretary Abern Invites All Workers Martin Abern, secretary local Chi- cago, Workers Party of America, has sent out the following letter of in- vitation to the United Front May Day demonstration to all unions, co-oper- ative societies, workers’ sick and death benefit societies and working class political parties: Dear Sirs and Brothers: You are for the 8hour work day; you have fought for many years to attain the Shour day. Many unions are to- day again struggling against the open-shop bosses in an effort to hold or get the 8-hour day. Did you know that May Day is the day when the great strike for the Shour day In America was called, and that victory for it is symbolized in May Day? Further, in 1889 at the International Labor Conference, the American delegates moved that May ist be made an International Labor holiday, and it was so done. So, brothers, May Day is of particular interest and importance to American workers. May Day, 1924, will be celebrated thruout the world by the workers and exploited farmers. In America, May Day must this year be a de- monstration of the solidarity of the workers against the open-shoppers, Injunction and exploiter’s govern- ment, and a signal for the workers to organize. their unions more’ strongly. Against Capitalist Government. Teapot Dome scandal has ex- posed the corruptness of the capi- talist Republican and Democratic parties. It is hopeless for the workers to place .any faith in the bosses’ parties. It is paramount today that the workers and ex- ploited farmers organize a political party of their own, a mass Farmer- Labor Party, and then aim to oust the. corrupt capitalist Republican and Democratic parties from power and to replace them by a Workers’ and Farmers’ government. In Chicago, we are going to cele- brate May Day and try to further the campaign for the formation of a mass Farmer-Labor Party. We workers’ fraternal organizations, want all unions, co-operatives, workers political bodies and any other workers’ organizations to unite their forces for a successful STRANGLER AMERICA WILL “MEDIATE” FOR PEACE IN HONDURAS (Special to The Daily Worker) WASHINGTON, April 14.—The United States has assumed the role of mediator to end revolution in Honduras, it was learned at the State Department today. Acting on the request of central American powers, the government ordered Sumner Welles, American Commissioner to the Dominican Republica, to proceed immediately to Tegucigalpa to act as mediator. In a special communication from the department today it was said that “Welles wae ordered to offer the friendly assistance of the United States government In finding a solu- tion to bring about establishment of peace in the Honduran republic.” Welles left San Domingo Wednes- day aboard the United States scout crulser Richmond. The exact time of his arrival in Anapala, port of Honduras, is not known. He will fly by airplane from Amapala to Tegucigalpa immediately after the Richmond makes port. When Will Papa Wood Follow Grafting Son? Washington Wonders (Special to The Daily Worker) WASHINGTON, D. C., April 13.— President, Coolidge’s acceptance of the resignation from the Army of Lieuten- ant Osborne Wood has aroused con- siderable comment here on the whole Philippine controversy. itary Governor General Leonard Philippines. Seyeral months Lieutenant Wood is the son of Mil- |stores. CO-OPS FAIL IN TRUSTIFIED U. S., NEARING SHOWS Economist Lays Down Some Hard Facts By SCOTT NEARING. (Federated Press Staff Writer.) Consumers’ co-operatives undoubt- edly have their uses. They train work- ers in co-operative activity. They teach them the art of economic con- trol. They save money. But as a substitute for an organiza- tion of producers, and as,a structural basis for immediate social progress, they will not qualify. Yet there are millions who now believe in the possi- bility. Have they a reasonab!e ground for their beliefs? There are several momentous qies- tions which the advocate of the peace ful consumers’ co-operative revolu- tion must answer. 1. The beneficiaries of the present order—the steel trust, Standard Oil, etc.—already control the coal, iron, joil and timber reserves. How can they be induced to part wtih them? Control State Machinery. 2, These same. masters of the pres- ent order also control the machinery of the state. If the co-operative asso- ciations, formed according to law, real- ly threaten these interests, will the co- operatives not be outlawed and their property confiscated? 38. The co-operatives, according to the theory, will be the employers of jall the labor— in mines, factories, Will they permit it to or- To seléct workers’ councils ganize? | Wood, whose regime has precipitated |to direct the works? | the present acute discontent in the 4, As they proceed in accumulation ago jot property will not the co-operatives | young Wood confessed that he cleared develop into defenders of the present up no less than $800,000 by speculat- system which protects their property jing in oil and other shares on the/and defends them in their right to New York Exchange. This looked so direct prpduction? shady to most observers here that his | 5. By what method will the transi- |father was compelled to grant him a tion be made from the present order? leave of absence for two months. But | Will those who now dominate econom- |the opposition to the Wood policies ic life voluntarily surrender their pri- jin the Philippines forced the Gov- vileges? jernor General and the War Depart-| |ment to ask for the lieutenant’s resig- those who advocate consumers’ co- nation. Many Filipinos Governor General himself will ne of the most attractive claims of operation a a method of building the believe that the new society, is that their plan can be be put into operation here and now. forced out next, despite the fact that There are three reasons why this must the Coolidge administration is sup- be denied for the United States. porting him to the limit now. It has been repeatedly charged that Lieu- tenant Wood made this huge sum of! money by allowing many Chinese In the first place, the great bulk of American industry has no direct con- nection with the consumer. Farms produce wheat and cotton and cattle coolies to be smuggled into the Phil-|which are manufactured in their fin- ippines and by permitting free play ished forms before they reach the con- and an open road to the gambling sumer. The bulk of the manufactur- end, we are calling a United Front May Day Conference to which we ask you to send representa- NEGRO AND JEWISH GIRLS BEAT SOCIETY ~ BELLES IN CONTEST (By The Federated Press) FLUSHING, L. Iy April 44-—“Oh, but they are not in our set,” said the society girls of the local Green Twig society, and then called off the popularity contest conducted by thewsociety in the Flushing Evening Journal. The contest was to ad- vertise a ball at the state armory April 25, the winner to be queen of the ball, The only “society girl”, in the running was elghth, while all the leaders worked for a living. One of the leaders was a Jewess, another a Negro girl. So interested persons went to the Journal editor and tried to bribe him to throw the election to a Green Twig candidate. When he refused, the society called off the contest. The story has made. the village the interests of the foreign-born Local business men have come to the rescue and started the contest over again with the promise that it will be free for all. Latin-American Labor News By BERTRAM D. WOLFE. (Staff Correspondent of the Fed. Press) Santo Domingo. The first election since the United States marines occupied Santo Do- mingo took place under American supervision. The Party of Alliance under General Velazquez won an overwhelming victory. The party gained 90 per cent of the municipal representations and 25 of the 31 seats in the lower house of congress. I interviewed some Domincan exiles, as to who this new president Velaz- quez might be, and the most merci- ful answer I got was, “He is a poor hapless wretch that has consented to be the instrument of Yankee impe- rialism in the island.” The other remarks will not bear printing. The election was conducted under supervision of the U.S. navy and the real boss of the island continues to be the American commissioner, Wells. Those of the patriot party that were not in exile or in jail did not dare go near the polls. Argentina. The Argentine labor movement is rallying all its forces in an attempt to block the armament program that is preparing Argentina for war with Brazil and Brazil for war with Ar- gentina, The war and armament propaganda is being fomented by American interests who sell niuni- tives. This conference will be held Wednesday evening, 8 p. m., on April 23, 1924 at 180 West Wash- ington street, Room 200. Be sure you send a delegate from your or- ganization. North Side Turner Hall. Preliminary plans for the May Day celebration have already been made. A hall has been rented; North Side Turner Hall, 820 N. Clark street. The meeting is called for Thursday, May ist, 1924, at 8 p.m. Speakers and program are to be arranged for by the commit- tee. Please let us hear from you on your action relative to the partici- pation in the United May Day Con- ference and celebration. Celebrate May Day, the Work- ers’ day. Help organize the party of the workers and exploited farm- ers against the capitalist parties and capitalism. Hoping to hear soon from you, 1 am, Fraternally yours, Workers Party, Local Chicago, W. P. of A, Martin Abern, City Secretary., 166 West Washington Street. Fears for Her Money. LARNED, Kas. April 14.—Mrs. Mary K. Eggleston, charged with plot- ting the deaths of two persons today, leclared the accusations were part of @ conspiracy to get her money. | houses in the islands. This was done, |ing in the heavy or key industries of course, with the knowledge if not with the open permission of General Leonard Wood himself. It is said the Administration pigeonholed the Frear and Ladd resolutions for an investiga’ tion of Wood’s regime in the Philip- pines for fear that it would disclose graft, corruption and bribery on the part of the Wood family working hand in glove with such criminal agents of the Department of Justice as the convicted agent Canley, which would be even far more black than the revelations about Jesse Smith, Mannington and Daugherty in Wash- ington. Trachtenberg Tour Tuesday, April 15, 8 p. m., Detroit, House of Masses, 2101 Gratiot Ave. Wednesday, April 16, 8 p. m. Det- troit, House of Mai » 2101 Gratiot Ave. (Russian Trada Unoins.) Thursday, April 17, Grand Rapids, full details to appe: ater. Friday, April 18, 8 p. m., Chicago, North Side Turner Hall, 820 N. Clark St. Saturday, April 19, Milwaukee, full details to appear tat Sunday, April 20, Gary, Ind., full details to appear later. How many of your shop-mates read THE DAILY WORKER. Get one of them to subscribe today. Ht As near as I can figger out, there’s Russian gold all round abont. And when it comes to influence, it comes in chunks both red and dense. ‘The daily papers like to tell that Russia is all shot to hell, that it has Pail Epics “bY Bill Lloud if you would knock down any “ism,” and make the people view it cold, to it's surely a bum steer. | say it's getting Russian gold. I think It looks to me most awful queer, that folks to turns out machinery that never gets to the consumer at all. Most of the coal and all of the copper and iron ore go into manufacturing and not to the consumer. Therefore, in all of these industries, an organization of producers comes a great deal closer to the actual functioning of society than an organization of consumers. In the second place, merchandising is so highly organized in the United States that consumErs’ societies find it almost impossible to compete with the chain store and the department store. American Co-operatives. Meet. Third, the margin which the Amer- ican worker still enjoys above his ac- tual needs makes him indifferent to the savings which a co-operative gan promise. He prefers to invest his sur- Plus in some business and climb the tions to both sides and who realize that the power of Argentina, Brazil, and Chile now represents the only obstacle to Yankee imperialism in South America. A U. S. naval mis- sion under Admiral Vogelsang in Brazil is reconstructing the army and navy. A similar mission is in Peru. The Argentinian labor movement is conducting a propaganda not. only against the armament competition, but alsd in favor of a unity of Argen- tina, Brazil and Chile against the real enemy, American imperialism. Chile. The Chilean Federation of Labor by an overwhelming vote has re-affirmed its allegiance to the Red International of Labor Unions (Moscow). It voted to publish its daily paper jointly with the Communist Party of Chile. Peru. The reaction in this Yankee-rid- den country of Peru is.still in full swing. The exile of Haya de la Torre and Velazco, leaders of the stu- ladder of “success”. The co-operative movement has gained a firm footing in Europe. Dur- ing the same period it has met with widespread failure in the United States. Perhaps these reasons ac- count for the difference, Workers Fired By. Los Angeles Bosses Seized As Vagrants By MAUD McCREERY (Staff Correspondent of ‘the Fed. Press) LOS ANGELES, Cal., April 14—The serious unemployment in Los Angeles resulting in hundreds of men arrest- ed for vagrancy while tramping the ‘streets seeking ‘work, is being aggra- vated by wholesale layoffs in large plants and shops. At the time tliat persons desiring telephones are kept waiting eight and ten months for instaHations after making application and are being put off with the excuse that the company is too busy to get around to them, = |the telephone company has in one day laid off 305 men in the installation and trouble departments. Rumor is construction depart- It’s quite the thing in journalism, | ment are to be laid off. The Goodyear Rubber Co. has laid off 300 men and so has the Jocal Ford assembling plant. Layoffs are also reported in the Southern Pacific rail- road shops and other plants. which this gold is sent have such a struggle paying rent, that folks who tap Aladdin’s lamp, can hardly buy a postage stamp. It must be I ain't red enuf to get in on this Russian stuff. In vain for gold I search my jeans when I would like a plate of beans. My cup of Java looks sky-high, when Russia’s pay Recently a committee from the chamber of commerce left on a trip east to boost Los Angeles and encour- age an added influx of climate and job seekers. It is estimated that 4,000 persons arrive here daily, This is train arrivals and does not include those coming by motor and on the hoof. spavin and paresis and several new and strange diseases, that it has sprains and dislocations and should be kicked by allied nations. But if you read along a while, you'll ‘wonder where they got their pile. The papers tell you that they give to all the radicals that live, to liberal and to pacifist, to all progressives on the dents movement has been followed by the expulsion of 26 students from the University in Trujillo, who have also been ordered to leave the city in question. Two professors resigned their posts in protest, and the work- ers, by a general strike, prevented the expulsion of the students from the city from being carried out. The Argentinian student movement has protested and the Mexican move- ent-is now considering a similar protest. More than 200 papers have thus far reprinted the story ot the exile of Haya de la Torre. Cuba. A new revolutionary movement is brewing according to Garcia Velez, till recently minister of Cuba in Great Britain, but néw in New York trying to “brew” it. The present president of Cuba, Alfredo Zayas, is a creature of the American state de- partment, elected under supervision of the American marines and lending his name to disguise the real govern- ment of the American commissioner in the islands, General Crowder. Painters’ Strike For Dollar More . *, In Movie Capital LOS ANGELES, April 14—A thou- sund members of the Pain’ and Paperhangers’ District Council are on strike here for a $9 a day wage scale, an increase of a dollar a day. There are approximately 2,200 men in the couneil district, which includes all of Los Angeles county, but 1,200 of these are working in which have granted the new scale. Six cities in the district are working un- der union shop conditons, Twenty- two shops in Los Angeles ‘stand- ing pat as yet against the and have announced open shop rule. The trade is fairly well org: and the list, to fighting Bob and Foster too, check goes right by.. Upon the Krem- all with notions that is new, to|lin I can’t call, when I can’t buy no rs who are up to date, to all| bed at all. I’m gonta ask the Tribune those that our papers hate. |seribo how I can get a Russian bribe. How many of your shop-mates read THE DAILY WORKER. Get one of them to subscribe today. “eos te Rea i strikers are confident of victory. The $8 scale was obtained in 1920 by mu- tual agreement. 5 CANNON EDWARDS DEBATE HAILED AS AID T0 CAUSE First Free Discussion Of Big Labor Issue To the DAILY WORKER: James P. Cannon’s debate with Forrest Ed- wards brought into the open a dis- cussion that has been smouldering in dark corners since the I. W. W.. put their ban on Communist discussion in their papers some two and a half or three years ago. This vital issue —of the necessity of revolutionary Political action by the working class will not down, even in the I. W. W., and we hope that the open discussion that began in Turner Hall last Sun- day will be continued. The fact that Turner Hall was crowded and that large part of the audience was composed of wobblies shows that the rank and file of the class conscious workers are not wedded blindly to abstract doctrinaire concepts. The wobblies—in spite of an official anti-political stand by the organization—wanted to hear what a Communist had to say. “Liquidate” Talk Is Bunk. One ghost which Cannon laid bare was the idea that the Communist Par- ty wanted to “liquidate” or “take over” the Industrial Workers of the World. Cannon is the first to agree that the I. W. W. is a strong proletarian force in a number of important industries in which the migratory workers are the dominant element. This is espe- cially true of the lumber industry, and in several seasonal industries of California they have been such an ag- gressive union force that a hundred brave class war captives are now ly- ing in San Quentin and Folsom peni- tentiaries. True, speaking of Ameri- can industry as a whole, the Indus- trial Workers of the World are a de- cidedly minority element. American industries are either unor- ganized'or in the hands of the A. F. of L, But where the I. W. W. is an ac- tive force for bettering the immedi- ate. conditions of the workers—and not a mere dual union—it has the sympathy and support of the revolu- tionary political movement, Need Disciplined Party. The Communist’s message to his wobbly friends present was that mere industrial action is not sufficient for revolutionary purposes. The Russian revolution was accomplished by seiz- ing the state and using its armed forces to repress the bourgeois counter-revolution. The German rey- olution failed—in spite ‘of strong in- dustrial organization—because of the lack of a powerful disciplined Com- munist party to seize power in the time of crisis. Cannon might have added, had he not been restricted by the limitations of the subject, that the Italian syndi- alists—comparatively strong, as they ‘were—had their organization smashed by armed force—mlitary-political di- rect action of the Fascisti. In the final test mere unionism went down before guns. a Folded Arms Not Sufficient. Revolution in an industrial country requires industrial action. Industrial action is so absolutely necessary for the achievement of power by the working class that the Communist Party is devoting itself to the task of strengthening the trade unions thru amalgamation and by the developing of a revolutionary ideology in their rank and file. But the Communist Party realizes that mere unionism is insufficient, that revolutionary _polit- ical action is equally vital, that the folded arm policy, tho it can stop in- dustry in places and at times, cannot stop machine guns and flame throw- ers which the capitalists use to crush the working class. In short, the Communist program is a complete revolutionary program that takes count of all the factors nec- essary for the conquest of power py the workers. It welcomes the oppor- tunty to dscuss its principles with the Industrial Workers of the World ‘and with all other valuable forces of the American labor movement. M. W. P. Mellon Bill Saves Plutes $434,720,000; U. S. Facing Deficit (Special to The Daily Worker) WASHINGTON, April 14.—The Mellon plan tax bill reported to the senate slashes $434,720,000 in revenue from the present law whereas Secre- tary of the Treasury Mellon said it would be unsafe to cut taxes more than $320,000,000. Senator Smoot, of Utah, estimates that the bill would yield $595,000,000 in surtaxes and normal taxes and $927,000,000 from corporation taxes, This would make the total annual in- come tax $1,522,000,000. Miscellaneous - internal revenue taxes would give $756,914,000 and or- dinary receipts $473,177,000 more, making ordinary tax receipts about $3,247,091,000 while the budget bureau has estimated that the government needs $3,298,080,444, deficit of $50,989,444, This leaves a FOR SALE Wel lished tailoring and fur pen Suen Te Werke” At [lotifieal for the workers Most |, GREETINGS FROM OUR NEW HOME, Let’s Make It An Incentive For More Determined Work Than Ever. Of more importance than the 10,000 new subs campaign, and Hke it, sure to bring more of power and strength to the militant labor movement, is the greatest news that we have at last moved into our own home. The resolution made when THE DAILY WORKER was started that it would soon have a printing plant and building of its own has been fulfilled. We hope our readers will realize the importance of this accomplishment and what it means for the advancement of the in- terests of the working class. ) When the decision was made to spend the money raised in the DAILY WORKER campaign for a building and printing plant, rather than withhold it to meek possible deficits in the running of the DAILY WORKER, the decision was based on the belief that the militants in America after having sacrificed greatly to make the DAILY WORKER possible would work to the utmost to make it successful. For the ‘WORKER there is only one road to success—a high circulation; thou- sands, tens of thousands of subscribers. Aloig that road the DAILY ‘WORKER. must go, impelled by the willing and strenuous work of its supporters, First Victory Won; We Face the Second Struggle. From the first that support was forthcoming. Thousands of sub scriptions poured into THE DAILY WORKER ofiice, tripling the circula- tion of the Weekly Worker. Now the second and a more difficult test is at hand—can the militants maintain the struggle, continue to work determinedly after the first excitement and stimulation has passed over? THE DAILY WORKER has spent the fund raised to make its establish- ment possible. The money has been spent to make the permanency f the DAILY WORKER possible. From now on the DAILY WORK- ER must pay its bills with the money it receives from the sale of sub- scriptions, Was THE’ DAILY WORKER management justified in placing its faith in the continuous militant support of the class conscious workers? We say that confidence has been and will continue to be justified. What do you say? Pe Pe FES age ) SAY IT WITH SUBSCRIPTIONS. Saturday was moving day and only special mail was received. For that reason the Honor Roll is smaller than usual. But one of the special letters received Saturday went a long way to make up for the others that were delayed. Comrade A. W. Haarvitt has a long record of achievement in behalf of THE DAILY WORKER but his efforts in securing renewals is a particularly good example to show others’ what can be done to boost THE DAILY WORKER. Comrade Harvitt’s record in securing renewals from those whose subs expired in April was 1000 per cent. The subscriptions of 24 Toledo subseribers were to expire. Harvitt secured nearly renewals from 22 and 8 month renewals from the other 2. Harvitt’s letters carry so much logic we just can’t keep them out of print. Here’s his letter: I suppose you are wondering about the renewals and whether they are coming at all. I am arriving at the tape before the bell rings and ‘will get the subs in before they expire. Enclosed isa check for $180.80. This will hold the record for re- newals and 2 for 3 months. I am sending in a bag of 22 yearly renewals and 2 for 3 months. For the time being I am carrying some of them on the book as they were not all able to pay. I am collecting on the install- ment plan. The method of proceedure brings home the bacon and you can get most of them for a year. This insures the readers getting the paper regularly and the DAILY WORKER office is saved much work and correspondence. We are still 100 per cent and we mean to stay there. the other towns? How about Pratestally yours, A..W. HARVITT. * HONOR ROLL. New subs turned in by DAILY WORKER boosters since the last ~ POWER COLUMN was published. NEW YORK CITY: Sally Spiegel .. S. Pollack ......... J, Brahdy. ..... A. Feinstein ....... Vi Saarkoppel ......--.nrcoocieorsecccnseseeed CHICAGO, ILL:: Erick Wickstrom S. T. Hammersmark.. ... R. Amrich .... BROOKLYN, N. Y. H. Samuelson J. Weiss A. Bimba CANTON OHIO: H. Scott DULUTH, MINN. Geo. Fredson E. Carroll M. Zevin CLEVELAND, OHIO: G. Zebrauska Neil Hovar N. Shaffer PITTSBURGH, PA. L. Rosenthal .. an Chas, D, Trimajstic .-nceoccevswesseeee ST. PAUL, MINN.: Chas. Kocian . vonteyshintaentanmapes 1 BRANTWOOD, WIS. Alex. Koski MANSFIELD, OHIO: Otto Dietrich .. IRONWOOD, MICH. Toivo Alho NEW YORK MILLS, MINN.: K. E. Heikkinen. .... MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.: 8. C. Georgian . LOS ANGELES, CALIF.: BR yh peace NCEE. LUSCAR, ALTA, CAN.: Roy Reid .... FARIBALT, MINN. F. J. Hallet ZEIGLER, ILL.: Wn. Bartsch ....... aocasansedls Baseesansenecen COLLINSVILLE, ILL. S. “Masules SPRINGFIELD, ILL.: J. H. Mitchell ..... BUFFALO, N. Y. P, Hansen . ROCKFORD, ILL.: John Turnquist. WASHINGTON, D. C. §.'R. Parlman NEW HAVEN, CO: John Blank .. W. CONCORD, N. H. R. Bjorbacka ELIZABETH, N. J. W. Elashaky ................. CENTERVILLE, IOWA: JO8. OBRNICN in esc csesceen COKEBURG, PA.: J. Winowich NEW LONDON, CON Herman T1VOMeM ....-.ecacecensemememl JERSEY CITY, N. J.: Henry Silta ..... KANSAS CITY, MO. Geo. Meyler VERONA, N. J.: 1G, PROMO oases idieieeiccl JOLIET, ILL.: Jerry Fetich ... congnertnndeenececenseneeed, 4 |CANADA: W.- Antherren _.psssscncetossconmeicecl LONGCOVE, ME.: Kalle Leppomen .eccsscssecessssesesen ROBERTS, MONT. Matt LOM eavenseciecenscneesercasempete : Just Look At This Town If You Are A : . Feeling Optimistic ANDERSON, Ind., Apr. 14.—Houses are scarce in this town, it is re- ported to the DAILY WORKER, most of the dwellings are in the hands of real estate sharks and speculators who hold the houses off the rental market and force up prices. Every- one must buy at the a price set, ir- respective of the hou real value, and many buyers find themselves so badly “stung” they forfeit their hous- es by default of payments. Only 60 per cent of the workers here are employed. Factories have slackened production, At one factory 15 carpenters winter averaged only 40 cents per hour with a nine hour day, There are many women in Defeated Hiram Is _ Yapping Against _ Jap Immigration (By The Federated Press) WASHINGTON, April 14. — Col- lapse of Hiram Johnson as a. “prog: ressive” standard bearer in Michigan, Illinois and Nebraska was followed by the California senator's return here, where he addressed the senate in favor of an Asiatic exclusion amend, ment to the immigration bill. His talk against the admission of Japanese to this country was made during the early afternoon, when ordinarily a talk from him would be enough to fill the press gallery, On this occasion not more than half a dozen correspondents remained to hear his views. Hiram got Daugherty to make Wm. J, Burns head of the U. service, How many of your shop-mates read THE DAILY WORKER, re them to subscribe today, Get one of a ——