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INTEREST MONEY ON BRIBE BOND T0 HARRY DAUGHERTY Evidence is Sead Graft Trial Implicates Harding A $2,125 check representing coupon interest on $100,000 in bonds was sent to Harry M. Daugherty, former United States attorney general, by the late John T. King, Connecticut! politician, according to testimony in- troduced today by the government at the Daugherty-Miller conspiracy trial. The government was attempting to show ownership by Daugherty of $100,000 in liberty bonds, part of the $391,000 “fee” alleged to have been received by King for putting through the $7,000,000 claim for return of German owned property of the Amer-| ican Metal Company. | Record of the $2,125 check was) ‘American Workers to Aid Housing Plan in The Workers’ Republic According to the yellow press and the trade union bureaucracy, the American workers are not interested in what is going on in the Soviet Union. But facts speak otherwise. According to a statement made by W. S. Millson, secretary of the newly organized Building Cooperative, an bers and $100,000 capital, though only a month in existence, hundreds of let- ters are pouring in from building trade workers all over the country, to help build houses in the Workers Republic. * Some of those workers are single but some have large families. Letters of inquiry have come from Los An- geles, Cleveland, Chicago, Philadel- |phia, Pittsburgh, Minneapolis and | other cities. The next meeting of the Coopera- | tive Building Group will be held on Surfday, Feb. 15, 3 p, m., at 143 East | 108d street. missing from the Midland National NEW JERSEY BUS organization with one hundred mem- | expressing a desire to go to Russia THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1927 BOND CAMPAIGN PASSES HUNDRED ~ THOUSAND-MARK ‘Dinner Guests Applaud Portnoy’s Report Over one hundred thousand dollars | has been raised by the “Save-the- | Cloakmakers’. Union” bond commit- tee since it was organized two months ago. | | According to Julius Portnoy, treas-| urer of the New York Joint Board, | of the Cloak and Dressmakers, who | was a speaker at the dinner arranged by a group of liberals at the Cafe Boulevard on February 8th. | This remarkable response has come direct from workers thruout the) |country, and it has come with a) | spontaneity which shows how well the! | progressive trade unionists realize \that the struggle for democracy in |the garment unions is the fight of the whole labor movement.” Right Wing Sobotage. New Boxing Scandal! Commission Probing ||. Two-Contract Graft ’New York’s latest boxing scandal reached the boiling stage today. Jess McMahon, who has been the matchmaker of Madison Square Garden for the past fifteen month, | was subpoenaed to appear before the State Athletic Commission at Friday’s meeting. | | He will be questioned regarding | his knowledge of a double contract in the recent contest between Charles (Phil) Rosenberg and Bushy Graham. ‘he commission is probing the | complaint of Billy Parr, manager of Graham, that the defeated Utica hbantamweight was paid off with 5 per cent of the gate instead of the official challenger’s allowance. , Instead of $7,909, Graham's man- ager alleges he is to get less than half of that sum. The commission evidently intends to use the comical championship contest in question as an opportun- ity to discourage double contractd in this state. It is a recognized fact HOUSANDS MEET INOPENING OF WAR ON 0, ROSALSKY Union Labor Rallies to) Denounce Sentences (Continued from Page. One) | begun serving terms in the peniten- jtiary.” j Ben Gitlow Cheered. | A number of prominent speakers talked on the various aspects of these particular cases which made them of| deep concern to the whole labor move- | ment. Ben Gitlow of the Amlaga-; mated Clothing Workers was greeted) {with enthusiasm as he arrived to speak at each hall. S. Liebowitz of| \the Fur Workers’ union was another} |speaker; H. Koretz of the cloak-| }makers; A. Goretzky, manager of | | Pressers’ Local 35 of the Internation- al; M. Lipzin of the Amalgamated) Clething Workers; in addition to} Louis Hyman and C. S. Zimmerman. All of them showed that unless the HAW news about a certain hawk w precincts of the beef city. R capture or killing of the bird pigeons in the loop. Squads of paraded through the streets wi | ings of the financial district w venturesome bird. Hawks of o scooped up in the mad chase fo | | umn upon column of paper. Pi hawk-mad, , Mind we don’t want you te if The DAILY WORKER offic But not have tried our luck. thing once in-a while. Maybe Some time ago Chicago wi complete hunting paraphernalia. available corner of the.capitalist papers. Pag The Manager's Corner ‘KS. as treated to an avalanche of thich had invaded the sacred ewards were offered forthe which had killed a number of babbits in the financial center th shotguns, field-glasses, and The roofs of the tall bui'd- ere lined with hunters for the ill kinds and description were r the prize which was offered. And the Chicago press lived through a veritable orgy of ad- venture. The feathered intruder furnished material for col- ictures of hawks covered every The entire city was » think that we fellows in The DAILY WORKER don't enjoy a game of this kind, or that e had been located in the loop, we might not have gone out to look for the noble bird our- selves, or that if we had a shotgun at hand, some of “us might when it comes to filling up @ paper with that sort of stuff, as many papers do, call a hat. You may take a slam at us for not indulging in this sort of we err in the other direction. But we do maintain that it is not the purpose nor the function Bank, the Daugherty Qhio bank, it! ai i hat th tom ‘has b . , ny . | “Time and again during ‘our long, that the custom has been quite gen- | workers of every trade united in x patie bps A ae We reer oe penseating thal 25 weeks strike”, said Mr. Portnoy,| ¢fal in championship matches. lbringing about the release of these, Of @ newspaper to fill its columns with material which has no tate President Harding with’ ta STRIKE iS NOW “the right wing felt confident that — ———— striking cloakmakers who had re-| other than an amusement value. We maintain that such a “house of revelry” or the “green| |we would be unable to raise money| ceived such unprecedented sentences, policy is an insult to an’intelligent reader, and implies that house” which Daugherty and Jess Smith shared in Washington at the! time, it is said, some of the worst of the graft deals were put through there, were the high lights in yes-| terday’s proceedings, Harry’s Butler Talks. The intimacy between former At-| torney General Harry M. Daugherty and the late Jess W. Smith, his con-, ftidential aide was testified to by Wal-| ter Miller, butler. Smith and Daugherty lived alone in a house in Washington for nine months in 1921 after Daugherty took! office, the witness said. Miller said) he was employed by Edward B. Mc-! HAVING EFFECT ‘Bosses Policy: of Driving | Now Breaking Down~ (Special To The DAILY WORKER.) JERSEY CITY, N. J., Feb. 9.—The service on the Hudson Boulevard busses has been curtailed. When the 400 bus drivers went on strike last Saturday afternoon the bus owners promised to continue normal service by running them themselves. | enough to pay benefits and therefore) | our strike would be lost. Every time! we fooled them, and we managed to {have the money on the day it was | needed, “We are going to fool them again | now in this attempt of theirs to ex- }pel us from the union—or as they call it, ‘take over our affairs’. We are able to manage our own affairs. We have, with our loan fund, raised enough money so far to take care of the families of those who are in jail, and to pay for bail and for lawyers, and the other expenses of our fight; and we will go right ahead doing it.” Subscribe For Bonds. DRESS SHOPS NOW RECOGNIZE JOINT BOARD AUTHORITY Arrest Four Gangsters For Cohen Sheoting (Continued. from Page One) The agreement niade with the Dress every worker in all parts of the coun- try would suffer greater persecution by the courts in future strikes. those who read the paper, do s do you think?—BERT MILLE. ‘0 for amusement only. What R. A shower of bills and coins was the workers’ answer to this challenge, and in a collection which was started spontaneously by the members at the} mass meetings, a substantial . fund! was begun to carry on the campaign | |for release of the prisoners. | | Ben Gitlow roused the meetings to} 7 a pitch of enthusiasm by stating: | Vanzetti Emergency Committee has be: “If we had a Labor Party in Amer-| Woods, chartered accountant. — ica, instead of just a republican and! The committee’s chief activity was democrat party, Rosalsky would have {to put on his hat and coat and\take {a trip to Palestine. Sigman Orders It. “The public accounting answers all| +charges and insinuations that the or-| ganization did not publish its finan- Lean, Washington publisher, and) went to work for Daugherty when) McLean loaned his house to Daugher- ty and Smith. Smith afterwards committed suicide, or was murdered, | about the time the graft revelations! began. Harding Dined With Them. The butler admitted under cross- examination that many high govern- ment officials visited the house where | Daugherty and Jess Smith lived. On one occasion, he said, President and’ Mrs. Harding dined there. Charts Bond Sales. The schoolroom atmosphere of the court, caused by United States At- torney Buckner’s famous blackboard, on which he traces the intricacies of the bond movements, was heightened when the prgsecution distributed to| They succeeded for a while but now they have broken down under the strain. Some of the bosses have been driving the vehicles eighteen hours a day. . Boulevard commissioners have been unable to effect a compromise be- tween the strikers and the employers. They hope to bring them together at a meeting during the week. The drivers demand $45 a week under a three-year contract, an increase of $2.50 a week. , Edward Levy, business agent of the drivers’ local, announced yesterday that officers of a number of unions have oidered membership to boycott the line during the strike. ‘ | Contractors’ Association by Sigman Many people at the dinner sub-| after he had expelled the Joint Board and others promised to help in this) that no business egent may enter a way later on. Louis Hyman’s explanation of the! of the Association. Therefore when situation in the International Ladies 4 business agent of the Joint Board | Garment Workers Union was a reve-| goes to a shop and talks to the work- lation to many of those at the dinner | cig inside, the employer is not only who knew nothing of the old style’ recognizing the right of the Joint trade union bureaucracy. Hyman’s! poard to represent the workers in presentation was lucid and convineing| complaints, but is also nullifying the and coupled with Portnoy’s data on) agreement made by the International. expenditures it gave those present an’ «The Joint Board will continue to excellent bird s-eye-view of what the protect the workers in the shops ac- controversy means to the labor moves cording to the provisions of the old ment. ea | arreement,” Mr. Zimmerman said in Shop Chairman Speaks. discussing the settlements. “The A last and most effective speaker workers will not recognize the agree- at the dinner was I. Brauner, chair- ments made by Sigman which was no man of the Shop Chairmen’s Council,) ore than a sell out to the employers scribed for the cloakmakers bonds) and the Dressmakers’ Union, provides | !shop unless accompanied by a clerk | “Judge Rosalsky, who claims to be the real leader of the Jewish nation, | has been doing whatever Sigman asked him to do to the clokmakers,” said Gitlow. “During the strike the | bosses wanted long sentences for the strikers, but it is only now, after the} split has come in the union, and Sig- man has taken charge of the New York situation, that sentences of many years have been given. Sigman, Beckerman & Boss. “Sigman has formed a united front with Beckerman, the forwards, and the officials of the A. F. of L. to beat the progressive forces in the unions. The manufacturers are more than wiling to join this alliance, because they know Sigman won’t enforce the | cial situation,” states Robert Dunn, treasurer of the committee. “It is sufficient reply to untrue assertions | that money taken in was not properly spent and accounted for.” The re- port is being sent to the Sacco-Van- zetti Defense Committee in Boston. The accountant’s statement is: “I have examined the accounts of the Sacco-Vanzetti Emergency Com-) mittee from the date of commence- ment of operations August 7, 1926, to January 25, 1927. I received all the information and explanations I de-, manded. Any contributor not receiv- ing an official receipt should com- municate with me. In my opinion all disbursements made during the period were for proper purposes. “In my opinion the above state- the jurors a number of charts. These also dealt with the alleged passage of liberty bonds of large denominations from the hands of Richard Merton, German financier, to the credit of Daugherty, Miller, John T. King, late Connecticut politician, and Jess Smith, late right-hand man of the former attorney general, Defense objection to use of the charts was overruled. The prosecution is tracing the $50,- 000 in bonds alleged to have been the share of Thomas W. Miller, former alien property custodian, for, aiding in approval of the claim, Virginia Mullen, former employe of Symposium Raises Over Two Thousand Towards Greek Communist Daily The campaign to establish a $5,000 fund to be raised here for a Greek Communist daily in New York City opened well with the pledging of $2,300 (of which $1,088 was immedi- ately paid in cash) at the dinner and symposium at Palace restaurant. The symposium was ,arranged by the loeal daily EMPROS. campaign committee in order to discuss ways launch @ workers’ paper, but the 150 the Federal Reserve Bank, Philadel- phia, testified that Vincent A. Carroll, Philadelphia lawyer, in Feb., 1923, ex- | changed $20,000 in bonds in the deal participants in the discussion were not satisfied with the talk only and went into action to collect money. The $20,000 necessary fund, as de- and means why, where and how to, for .others which the government) cided by the Chicago conference on showed were traced to Miller’s brok- Dec, 25th, will be oversubscribed be- | pep sot tray to Wilmington, Del., and fore May 1st and the EMPROS will New Yor! ys | ily hi 4 Metae i CiillercTettty. Ne ee Charles Herman, another employe | Objects To Gag Rule. of the Philadelphia Federal Reserve! who made a few impromptu remarks and told of his recent visit to Presi- dent Sigman in an effort to bring about peace in the union. “President Sigman told _me the members of the union were ®t to be their own minds”, said Brauner. “And then he accused me and all the other members of the Shop Chaip men’s Council of being Communists. “Why, that’s ridiculous. As I told him, I am a democrat and a Deputy Sheriff into the bargain. And I | showed him my badge to prove it.” | Mr. Brauner said, that as usual Sigman paid no attention to his state- | ments, and probably still reiterates {the “Communist” charge about him as he does about all the members of the progressive group. Guests Impressed. The guests at the dinner felt that | Sigman had a formidable array of ‘adversaries in the “left wing”, judg- ‘ing by the representatives who were | present, and many expressed a wish ‘in an attemst ‘to gain-centrol.” Four Gangsters Caught. Four gangsters, who shot and ; Wounded Samuel Cohen, of Local 35 |as he was coming away from a picket trusted to vote; they did not know] line on Monday, were arrested late |" last night and were held at the 54th , street Police Station, without bail, charged with felonious assault and with carrying guns. Cohen was wounded when three men jumped out of a sedan on 57th street and Broadway and fired three shots, narrowly missing several girls who had been picketing with him, and striking him in the right foot. Police pursued the machine, but were unable te catch the gangsters. Witnesses gave the police an excel- lent description of the men, however, since they have been seen elsewhere in the garment district attempting to break up picket lines and terrorizing workers who picketed shops called on strike by the Joint Board. They will be arraigned tomorrow. Rosalsky Again Postpones Sentences, forty-hour week and other points in ment, which is in agreement with the |the agreement, and is willing to Sell’ hooks of the committee, is drawn up {out the workers.” to present a true and correct view Resolution of Protest. — jof the income and expenses for the The meetings expressed their 4P-| period and the balanca of funds as at proval of the speakers’ statements by the close of the period. |passing unanimously the following (Signed J. B. COLLINGS WOODS. esolution: a hao a Chartered Accountant WHEREAS, sixteen cloakmakers Member American Institute of who have been members of the Cloak- ‘Adconnbaits makers’ union fer many years were 299 Madison seeua; taken away from their homes andy). York, N. Y. 2 families and sentenced to long terms ean 27, 1997. i H " . el, 19et. “ eee abot Sangre The audited financial report states ee kek sir Tape ¥ during the that the income was as follows: Sac-| WHEREAS, these Sanvitinns dave co-Vanzetti Conference Committee 7 Leogioie' vile’ balance from International Labor De- been the result of a wide-spread cam- ferise, $517.49; contributions, $792 bees and | provocations on the part Madison‘ Square Garden meeting, e officials of the International $5,450.92. Totaling $6,761.15, together with Beckerman and the for- a ska: ibn Madicon diane ward clique who planned to have these Gane nibetinn $6 186 21 "a workers sentenced with the hope that ; they would thus be able to" break Bplaace Pane ee down the power of resistance of the cloak and dressmakers against their, attempt to force their discredited leadership on the Cloak and Dress- Will: Aid Zionist. Z7RUSALEM, Feb. 9. — General Sir Wyndham. Deedes, former chief secretary of the Palestine government, makers’ union, and SACCO-VANZETTI EMERGENCY COMMITTEE ISSUES STATEMENT OF ALL FUNDS RECEIVED AND SPENT Full accounting of funds taken in and spent by the New York Sacco- en made and audited by J. B. Collings the promotion of the Madison Square Garden protest meeting against the denial of new trial to Sacco and Vanzetti. Hotel Workers’ Ball to Be Held at the Lyceum, Lincoln Birthday Eve. The great event of the season foi the radical labor union movement: of New York, the annual grand ball and reception of our hotel and restaurant workers’ branch will be held this year at the Lyceum, Third avenue and East 86th street. Those who haves tended these affairs in former year know what they are, a continuous whirl of hilarity and fun from evé- ning till morn, a complete abandon- ment to the most perfect enjoyment and amusement ever offered. This year’s ball will be no exeep- tion to this rule, and the spacious halls of the Lyceum are ideally fitted for such affairs. Two first-class: or- chestras will. keep the dancers’ legs uw Beside this the Tyrolean Pleas- ure Club “Enzian” will giveeX folk tions of Tyrolian by their own band. As usual, a num- ber of famous Broadway attractions will help to promote merriment-and the committee has promised a num- ber of sensational surprises, never seen on any affairs of this kind. All in all, this year’s grand ball and reception of our hotel and res- taurant workers’ branch, on February 11th, eve of Lincoln Day, promises to be one of the grandest, most enjoy- able, and most memorable ever held by the branch. Just drop a line to the committee at 133 West 51st street, New York. Don’t miss this affair! nt Paralyzed. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Feb. 9.— Emory Titman, 37 years old, whe weighs 587 pounds and is believed to be the second heaviest man in the G . WASHINGTON, Feb., 9. — Charg | to hel; re concretely in this fight - WHEREAS. th ‘orkers who | Will shortly go to the United States| United States, was stricken with a Bank, corroborated Miss Mullen’s tes- | . & to help more coi iy ie Judge Otto Rosalsky again post- S, these workers who id ait pager is F siege A ‘i # ng re ler: | tor democrac: the trad 7 7 “ ‘ > the Zionist organization there. lytic s oday me timony. ing that republican leaders of the! for de y in the le unions. poned sentencing Oscar Newman and have never been convicted of any ' 4! ton. Es | paralytic stroke today in his home in Sophie Hillman, stenographer in the alien property custodian’s office in Washington, previously had testified to records showing that Carroll was | | | \sin, today rejected the recent invita-| por All Michael Gold, William|&8V¥¢. 9 Yeason for extending their |.°™ see * oe * emplcyed by the department and re- be | bor en, ie rold, Jam aig til . thi unjust imprisonment is a matter of, = m - ceived $47,000 for services rendered, | ti" to the Wisconsin insurgents to/Gropper, Samuel Ornitz, Eugene| Be eae clene vag Md Duishin Hob GAY th UN cloakinakets'] RESERVE LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY EVE TO GO TO Delbert Gallagher, assistant cashier, for Laird, Bissell and Mead, brokers, of» Wilmington, Del., testified con-_ cerning the receiving of the bonds) which the government alleges went into Miller’s brokerage account. Throughout the bond tracing, Aaron Sapiro, of Chicago and San Francisco, counsel for Miller, objected,to the evidence as irrelevant to the charge of conspiracy. house were trying to revive “cannons ism” by the party caucus which “binds and gags” members, Rep. George J. Schneider (R) of Wiscon- return to party regularity. Aquarium Nearly Destroyed. The famous New. York aquarium at Battery Place, with its priceless collection of fish, sea animals, and water fowl, was saved from destruc- tion by fire today by the quick work of ninety firemen of the fireboat companies. Among the guests were Art Young,| Paxten Hibben, Lucy Branham, Ro- Max Bernstein yesterday, although they have been held in the Tombs since |bert Dunn, Boardman Robinson, Fioyd Dell, W. E. B. DuBois, Har! Lyons, Samuel Ornitz, Hannah Ficke| jering, Genevieve Taggard, Liston | Oak, Lewis Mumford, Rose Pastor Stokes Arthur Leeds, Mr. & Mrs, Phillip Wittenberg, Louis Boudin, |Carlo Tresca, Minna Harcovy, B, Brodsky. Members of the committee who were unable to’ be present were Henry W. L. Dana, Elizabeth Gurley |John Purroy Mitchell and eight. land Flynn, Charles Erskine Scott Wood, and Cedric Long. last Friday awaiting’ sentence. He jail until he finds it convenient to call them again. Relatives who have | been waiting anxiously to know the fate of these men, who took part in| pickéting during the cloakmakers’ strike, were turned away and told) that the men would be sentenced on Friday, “probably.” Passaic Open Foram and offense have been placed behind pri- son bars for the one crime of defend- jing their union in the struggle for | better working conditions, and their Roll in the Subs For The DAILY WORKER. anion but-to the labor movement as ‘a whole. Since the retention of these workers will undoubtedly lead to further persecution of other workers | for union activity, | THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that we, the workers assembled at a} protest demonstration at Cooper! Union, Webster Hall and Manhattan! | Lyceum, on Wednesday, February 9, at the call of the Joint Board of the GRAND RECEPT the Haharba Apartments here. His condition is serious. Two months ago ‘Titman suffered a slight stroke, ION AND BALL of the HOTEL AND RESTAURANT WORKERS Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers at THE LYCEUM, 86th Street and Third New York City, on FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11th, 1927 Avenue, ( oie « dance adh steps to their national tunes played ocean ven tantenrantancantanveanvanrantastanvanvascunianvanvenvancenvandenit Pr ¥ P | Cloak and Dressmakers’ union, ex- TWO BANDS! two BARE posed I a lize: . |press our most vigorous protest eb Pema viz i ideas a se age Dole bv 7 . od yr ‘ . Classes Start; Grecht against the imprisonment of our fel- | JACK ROTH AND HIS ORCHESTRA, formerly Original Memphis Five ; ; Radio Race Criticism |low-workers, and we most vigorously BAVARIAN PEASANT BAND, in their Native Costumes. 5 —— and Ballam to he Heard |condemn the activities of Sigman, | ' ALBANY, N. Y., Feb. 9.—Senator | Beckerman and the Forward, who are|{ Dancing at 8 P.M. Unusual Entertainment. ; , ‘ Thomas F. Burchill, New York demo-| The next Open Forum of the Pas; directly responsible for their imprison- | Admission: Genta; $1.00. Relies: - 506. ore es erat, today introduced in the legisla-} saie Workers School will be held Sun ment and are now exerting every pos- | é taste ie EES cere ae ' ture a bill amending the Penal law|day, February 18th at 7:30 P. M. in sible measure to have other workers AUSPICES INTERNATIONAL CATERING .WORKERS’ CLUB. DAILY WORKER BUILDERS OF NEW YORK to be held at ' YORKVILLE CASINO (Main Ballroom) 212 East 86th Street, near Third Avenue. he present” among thom baingd LOUIS ENGUAR(, COLE SEARING. . id. oN = ‘ 1G BERTRAM _D. B. WILLIAM F. DUNNE, VERN SMITH, Tort OFVLAHERTY, ROBERT W. DUNN, MICHAL GOLD. ax well ‘ae. the leading figures in the local labor movement. * The banquet will he accom daseloen’t x f a panied by concert numbers given by an by making it a misdemeanor to de- nounce, criticize, condemn or discrim- inate against any race, religion, creed or color in radio programs. the Workers Home, 27 Dayton Ave,| placed behind prison bars, and | Com. J. J. Ballam will speak on the BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, | > “Latest development in the American that we plelge to beginning a wide- ~~~ labor movement.” Admission free.. | spread campaign to arouse public | rete opinion against the unjust imprison. | | ment and do all in our power to free \the imprisoned cloakmakers. SAVE THIS VALUABLE PRIZE COUPON A Copy of Red Cartoons of 1927, Worth $1.00 for 50 Cents With 50 of These Coupons CUT THIS OUT AND SAVE IT. RED CARTOONS OF 1927 is even a finer collection of the most recent cartoons of the well-known labor artists—Rebert Minor, Fred Ellis, K, A. Suvanto, Art Young, Hay Bales, Jerger, Vose and others. Tach picture is large enough to be framed and mounted. The book includes in all $4 of the finest cartoons Notice to New York Readers Dyrcotavay vt who are still on our mailing list, who would rather pur- chase The DAILY WORKER at the news stand every day, will help us very much by notifying our office of their names. It requires an $s in Manhattan and the Bronx, rate zone. Help The DAILY WORKER to save money. Fill out this blank and return it at once. DAILY WORKER, 33 First Street, New York, N. Y. Please take my name off the mailing Russian Workers of _ Newark to Meet Sun.; | Talk on World Topics | NEWARK, Nod. Feb. 9—The | Russian Workers Club will give a lec- ture on “A Bird's Eye View of World | Politics” at the Russiam Labor Ly- The ban of the ¥. et will be followed b: fee ed by # dance in the beautiful malireem EVERYBODY WILL NE THDRE. — Don't fail to come \ ‘ list \as I want to buy The DAILY WORKER at the newsstands. }ceum, 150 Court St., on February 13, of the past year. This wonderful volume is not for sale. ‘Tt is” Monday (Washington's Birthay Ev.) eb, 21, 1927 at 2 P. M. The lecture will cover) at? P. Mo=Dancing at 9.P. Of. A offered only to those who help us to build the Daily Worker, : % * he following topics: What is hap-. COMBINATION TICKETS FOR BANQUET AND DANCE 41.30 ‘ : ; | ‘ a TICKETS FOR DANCE ONLY. Se, Fy : NAME .,....++6+++-$+.+. ADDRESS ..... caging eit g Neuer ee | DAILY WORKER ‘. iat < anne ee eee Prey of American Imperialism. #@ 33 First Street ‘ New York, N, Y.