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Page Four HE DAILY WORKER TE TE ne The above Is the title-head of a young workers’ paper In Germany. The worker-correspondence movement In Germany Is being developed rapidly, and worker-correspondence forms a principal part of this youth’s paper. HONOR ROLL _ OF WORKERS f AIDING PRESS DONATIONS—JANUARY 8TH BALIFORNIA— 1 C. D. Woodall, Oakland 0... Street Nucleus No. 1 & 2, San Francisco .... cut Street Nucleus No. 8, San Fran 5.00 - 21,00 3.50 clsce _... ONNECTICUT— Lithuanian Literary Soolety, New Britain MICHIGAN— International Branch, Bruo Crossing MINNESOTA— Internationa! Branch, Angora Wm. Block, Minneapolis Pete Ekman, Minneapolis Book Shop, Minneapolis Loken, Minneapolis 3 Fl np BE a2 BoB Liberal A. Minneapolis 6, M Je ih Fraction, International Branch N neapolis ............ ‘Wm. Block, Libera! Book Frank Lunev, Minneapolis A. Friend, Minneapolis Clem Forsen, Minneapol John Goldman, Minneapolis Hilma Lehti, Minneapolis ©. Coover, Minneapolis . Minneapolis W. P., Minneap Minneapolis W. P., Minneapo Liberal Book Shop, Minneap L. G. Walewitch, Minneapol ngaae Faee Minneapolie. x... + Minneapolis W. Minneapo | “Pauline Schwartz, Minneapolis A. Friend, St. Paul St. Paul W. P., St. Paul Rol Winslo, St. Paul ... NEW YORK— Daniel Petrycki, Troy }_S. Tuck, Cleveland . W. VIRGINIA— J. D. Reedy, Bickmore .. a po NABSMyaaF lS aagengy wo & 88 sessassssssssssssss 388888 8 | Third Anniversary of Polish Paper, Trybuna Robotnicza. ‘The Polish Communist weekly, “Trybuna Robotnicza” (Workers’ Trib- tne), will celebrate its third birthday With a grand concert and ball in Chi- eago. The affair will take place Sun- day, March 6, in Walsh's Hall, cor. Noble St. and Milwaukee Ave. Begia- ning of concert at 5 and dancing at 8 p. m. So far arrangements have been made to have Russian, Ukrainian. Lithuanian, Lettish and Czechoslovak singers, musicians and dancers to participate in the concert program. All friendly organizations are asked mot to arrange any affairs for this day, Plumbers’ Helpers Begin to Organize; Seek Affiliation NEW YORK, Jan, 20.—(FP)— Plumbers’ helpers, the only group of building tradesmen in New York out- side of the union fleld, are beginning to organize and have formed the Unit- ed Association of Plumbers’ Helpers. James F. Walsh is leader, with Ed. La- vin of the late subway strike as or- ganizer. Biweekly union meetings and weekly mass meetings are get- ting a good response, The new association seeks admis- sion to the plumbers and steamfit- | the | ters’ international to which steamfitters’ helpers belong, The steamfitters’ helpers, thru their union control, get $9.25 a day, whereas the non-union plumbers’ helpers have to take three to five dollars, or what- ever the contractor will pay them. Tourist Club “The Friends of Nature” NEW YORK, — This Sunday, Jan. 23, we hike to the Palisades. There is nothing finer in the vicinity of New York “til#n thts~ plarsround—of nature with its towering cliffs and wonderful scenery. A good attendance, however, is looked for, as the weather man promises fair weather. Bring your skis and ice skates along. Meeting place, Fort Lee Ferry, 125th St. and Hudson river; time 9 a. m.; fare, 20c; walk- ing time, 3 hours; leader, Will Beck. Non-members are welcome at all times, provided they are nature-loving proletarians. LIEBKNECHT MEETINGS. BUFFALO—January 22, 8 p. m., at Workers Forum Hall, 36 West Huron street. Speaker, Sam Essman, BOSTON—Paine Memorial Hall, 9 Appleton St., Jan. 23rd, 2:30 p. m., S. Bloomfield, speaker. NEWARK—Sunday, Jan. 23rd, 7:30 p. m., Newark Labor Lyceum, 704 So. 14th street, near Springfield Ave. PITTSBURGH—Sunday, at 8 p. m., at Labor Lyceum, Greetings to THE DAILY WORKER Abend, G. F., Cleveland, Ohio Brooks, Esther & David, Washington, *Bartnick, Meyer, Blytheville, Ark. | Blankfield, Nat, Passaic, N. J. .... Garison, John, Bethel, Minn. Cremasco, A. L., Mono Lake, Calif. Emmet, M. E., Cuba, Il. Pe TT LLLLLELLELLLLLLLLLLLL LLL F READ "Imperialism —The Last Stage of Capitalism “te ‘ By N. Lenin Price, 60c in paper, $1.00 Cloth-bound. WiAm indispensable book for the under- 3 ing of the most rerent events In )Zatin-America, China, and the colonial itrics now in the throes of revolt @guinst international imperialism, This lent work treats tho following tonics: enitiation of Production and Monop- } The Banks and Their New Role; Capital and Financial Oligarchy; abort, of Capital; The Division of ‘orld Among Capitalist Groups; The | of the World Among the Great vi ers; Umperialism as a Special Stage i pitalism; Parasitism and the D ot talism; The Critique of Impertal- fom; The Place of Imperlaliam in History. pegs pages published by the Communtet ‘Party of Great Britain. aeepor” Daily Worker Publishing Co. Son and after January 24, 1927, our Literary Sales Department will be located 83 East First Street, New York, N.Y Finnish Workers’ Assn., Monessen, Pa, Gomez, Manuel, Chicago, III. Hinke, John, Portland, Oregon Kapusta, Matt, Towellville, Ohio Kucimic, Paul, Cleveland, Ohio Muhlberg, Alex, Elsinore, Calif. Mershon, Z. C., San Francisco, Calif. Popovich, M., Warren, Ohlo Pincus, Jennie, Conyers, N. Y. Romeyer, Joseph, Jackson, Calif. Wundram, Emil, Everett, Wash. Willlams, J. A., Homewood, III. Yurka, P., Cleveland, Ohio Y. W. L. St. Nucleus, Monessen, Pa. Zanon, T., Menlo Park, Calif. Workers! Memorial Meetings! MILWAUKEE, ATTENTION! LENIN MEMORIAL MEETING SUNDAY, JANUARY 23, 1927 at 8 P, M. FREIE GEMEINDE HALL ‘ Eighth and Walnut Streets SPHAKERS: J. W. Johnstone and T. J. O'Flaherty, Singing by the Russian-Ukrainian Singing Soolety and South Slavic Singing Chorus, Other Features on the Program. ADMISSION 25 CENTS, Auspices Workers (Communist) Party WHAT ARE YOU—SLOVAK OR AN AMERICAN? If you are American read the fighting labor daily paper—The DAILY WORKER, If you cannot read English, subscribe to the only Czecho- glovak workingclass daily paper in the United States and Canada— - ~~ THE DAILY ROVNOST LUDU 1510 W, 18th Street, Chicago, III. scription rates: By mail $6 a year; for Chicago $3 a year. Jam, 23rd Young Comrade Answers to Puzzles How's This Puzzle? Comrade J, Kovacek of Flat Rock, | ‘These comrades have answered the Mich., has sent’in a new puzzle. See) picture puzzle in the issue of Decem- ou can guess what he says: |ber 28th: ~15—13 8—1—4—5—19 12- -|Dear Comrades: 19 14—15—20 5-—16—7-—5—20| I read The DAILY WORKER of 5—14—9—14 jwhich I do not forget to read the To golve this puzzle, write down the fYoung Comrade Section. I saw a pic- alphabet and then put ‘pumbers for|ture of rich people trying to take the each letter as, for instafce, 1 for a,| poor workers’ money, 2 for b, 8 for o, 4 for d, and 80 on:| Rich people think they can get Then find the letters for each number | workers out of the way by taking all in the puzzle. Write us what you get|their money, but the workers do not to the Young Comrade Section,|stand for it, Instead they give them Daily Worker, 1113 W. Washington,|q good hard blow with a heavy sledge Chicago, Uk \hammer, For my part they. should Got a better one? Well, then, send|give them two. it in. | Bennie Caruso, Chicago, Ill. ‘G Join Our Ranks! Remember Lenin! Daily Worker Builders in the Lenin-Drive for 25,000 subscriptions. Win a Valuable Prize - es a ~ EGINNING witn January 21, 1927, Lenin Memo ial Day, the drive for 25,000 subscriptions for The Daily Worker is on. This drive will last ‘until April 23 (Lenin’s Birthday). 25,000 subscriptions for the Daily Worker will place the Daily Worker firmly on its feet and help to bring the message of Commu- nism to thousands of workers whom it has never reached before. Many valuable prizes will be offered for the builders who secure the best results. Prizes To Be Awarded To New Subscribers in Connection With the Daily Worker Drive for . 25,000 SUBSCRIPTIONS A Darts new Going spelt year’s subscrip- tion will re- ceive a copy of the new edi- tion of “Red AULA UUUUEAUUUUCUOOEEEAAUOUOOANGONOONENONGNOOOOOQGQHORREEVVOTOOGOTOUUY ONEQOOORENOGOGOOOOOOGAGLONEEREES?#S¢¢5¢UEMEFEEEUHOEUUUUGOOGTOOOOOOOOOORONOGOGEOEEOOONGEEUH — ! Attend the Lenin Cartoons of = 1927,” with full page reproduc- tions of the work of the following not- ed artists: Fred Ellis, Robert Minor, William Grop- per, Hugo Gel- lert, Cydia Gibson, Art Young, Maurice Becker,'K. A, Suvanto, Hay Bales, F. Jerger, F. G.-Vose, O. R. Zimmerman and others. This wonderful collection of pictures is not for sale. It is offered only to subscribers who send in their subseriptions during the present campaign. v ACH new subeerib- er for a half year will receive a copy of the LITTLE RED DIARY of 1927, the val- uable little book of dates for the year, con- taining useful informe- tion for workers. Thle o publication Is not for Young us an Het of Section Join | Ps PRIZES BANNER to the best city in each district. NOTE. the Sunday Work Communist In award them at the May 1 Celebra jountry. special e' ‘Subscriptions. id di Dear Comrade: The meaning of the picture in the Young Comrade ‘Section is this: The rich are trying to take from the workers everything they can but when the workers are organized they give them with their hammer over the hands. Solomon Kayak, San Francisco, Cal, Here ig the answer to the number puzzle {n the issue of January 4th. The workers own Russia, Ruasia has no child labor, The following have answered the puzzle correctly: Selmi Salminen, Waukegan, II, Louise Pellegrino, Chicago, Ill, Join the Pioneers! For 5 annual eubs (or $30.00 worth) a copy of “Red Cartoons for 1927” and $2.00 worth of liter- ature or $3.00 worth of literature altogether. Free choice of titles. worth $5.00. For 10 Annual Subscriptions (or $60.00 worth) $5.00 worth of literature. Free choice of titles. For 20 Annual Bubscriptions (or $120.00 worth) $10.00 worth of litera ture. Free choice of titles. For 50 Annuat Subscriptions (or $300.00 worth) $25.00 worth of litera- ture. Free choice of titles. al of Lenin for the record sub- scriptions se cured in each city obtaining 25 new subscribers or more. A be given A $100 RADIO of the latest and most improved model to the best district in the country. — Credit will be given for all sub: Comrad All subscriptions should be accompanied by cash. Special offer cards will be printed for each sp r my Vik @ Lenin Memorial, ete, There should be full co-operation between comrades working for the foreign language ing for The Dally Worker. Comra ever allowances are approved for subsoription pe com soliciting The ¢ entitled to credit, Just as well as other com~ ‘The prizes mentioned above fers. We are oftering no gold bric| should bo rt term a ription: ot help to give The Daily readers. se, pn le Or a bronze statue of Karl Marx "XC Bronze med CITIES and DISTRICTS iption: Workers Monthly (Comm ational, Inprecorr, Young Worke: pers and those work~ will receive what- ally Worker, all reasonable of- We are P tions throug! NEARLY TWO MILLION NEED OLD AGE PENSIONS IN U.S.; SURVEY REVEALS FUTILITY OF SYSTEMS NOW IN VOGUE HARRISBURG, Pa.— (FP) — Only commission discloses that private pen- about 90,000 of the 1,800,000 depend-|sions are unlikely ever to touch more ent persons 65 years of age or over | than a handful of the veterans of in- in the United States are receiving pen- | dustry, A vital defect in private indus- sions from their former employers. | trialpensions, the commission finds, The average industrial pension is |is that they are not,really guaranteed, only $485 per year. In most instances the company does This is the fundamental fact on|not lay aside reserves to meet the ob- which a declaration for public old age | ligation of peSsion payments in fu- pensions in America is made by the | ture. Pennsylvania old age pension commis- sion in a special report on The Prob- lem of Old Age. Pensions in Indus- try, Jas. H. Maurer, president of the state federation of labor, is chairman of the commission, The other signers are Mrs, Mary V. Grice, David S. Lud- lum and John F, O'Toole. The study of American industrial pension problems conducted by the WANTED ONE HUNDRED VOLUNTEERS As Ushers, Collectors, Literature Sellers and Taggers at the Lenin Memorial Meeting in Chicago Report to ASHLAND BLVD. AUDITORIUM, Sunday, January 23, 1927 6:00 p, m. Sharp. nnn zes To The Daily Worker Builders The following prizes are offered to those securing subscriptions from others: A $100 Lenin Bookshelf ~ i sityyy) Se "Lo VES S of Communist literature with a handsome bookcase to the comrade with the best record for getting subscriptions in the entire country. A Daily Worker Builders’ Button will be award-__ ed to every comrade who secures an additional es, su bscription to his own. QUOTAS . District 1. Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, l} sienna fe UTEETEUEEE HAGA EEE EEE HEE Ug EEO Maine, Rho scriptions or Island. $1,600 worth of sub. nnual subscriptions, District 2. New York City and vicinity—part of New Jersey. $6,000 worth of subscriptions or 1 annual subscriptions, District 8. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Western New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware and Washing- ton, D. C, $1,600 worth of subsoriptions or 250 annual subscriptions. Buffalo, Rochester, Erle, Pa. and the Weet- ern part of New York State. worth of subscriptions or 100 annual subscripitons. District 4. District 5.° Pittsburg and Western Pennaylvani $1,200 worth of subscriptions or 200 annual subscriptions, District 6. Cleveland and the State of Onlo. $900 worth of subscriptions or 150 annual subsoriptions, District 7. Detroit, the State of Michigan and Eastern Indiana. $1,800 worth of subscriptions or 300 annual subscriptions, District 8. Chicag sou of subs District 9. Minneapolis, VU; Wisconsin, Michigan worth (Upper peninsula), Minnesota. $1,500 of subscriptions or 250 annual subscriptions, District 10. North Dakota, South Dakota, Kansas, Now a braska, lows $450 worth of subsoriptions or 75 afnual subscriptions, District 11. Montana, worth of scriptions, Colorado, Idaho, Wyeming. $260 subscriptions or 48 annual eub- District 12. Oregon and Washington. $900 worth of subscriptions or 150 annual subscriptions, District 1%. California. $1,200 worth of subscriptions er 200 annual subseriptions, District 14. New Mexico, Arizona, Texas. $150 worth of subscriptions or 26 annual subscriptions. District 15. Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississ! Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Kentucky and Tenne: worth of subscriptions or 75 annual subscriptions, Alabama, the r the bere, Dally Wi DAILY WORKER 33 First Street, ‘New York hb ROG tanning jout the a are costly to Worker a steady Renewals will be credited as new subscriptions, * ‘ m jest an nase