The Daily Worker Newspaper, March 9, 1927, Page 3

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THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1927 Mellon Will Endeavor DENNIS RETURN, | To Gyp Small Investor HO OAH WALL | eee STREET TOOLS U, S. Treasury has worked out a Charge in Nigaragua to NATIONALISTS RUN CONCESSIONS WITH EFFICIENCY Chinese Displace British | Delegates io Congress of League Against Colonial Oppression and Imperialism Names of delegates, countries from which they come and organizations they represent, making up the First Congress of the League Against Colonial Oppression and Imperialism held March 8, — clever scheme, if the banking and in-| vesting public bites, to wheedle it out | of 3,000,000 of the lik erty loan in- | terest. The plan is to persuade holders of second issue liberty bonds, bearing in Brussels: | ‘aahis four and a half percent interest to! In Hankow Settlement UNITED STATES OF AMERICA —National Ass'n for the Advance ||Elot from Washington belie. Sharh in ter dail oatitt Be F ment of Colored People, Prof. Wm. Pickens; John Brown Memorial Asso- A heater cates, bearing three and a half per-| suey: giant 38 ad Mail) — || clation, Prof. Wm. Pickens; American Negro Labor. Cangress,, Richard ||_ MANAGUA, Nicaragua, March &- | cont interest doe th itiphithn ied Lage «|| Moore; American Civil Liberties Union, Roger Baldwin; National Urban || Lawrence Dennis, who was American! The bait by which liberty bond an hovitine te tale cur content|; Leagve, Roger Bald All-America Anti-Imperialist League, Manuel |/charge of affairs in Nicaragua early’ yoidors will be led into the trap is| peas Pig oN ‘a take el een Gomez; Wotkers (Communist) Party, Manue) Gomez. in' the Bropent:revolution, left.tonight ine crter of two months: interest at theapw: Gnome the suauiarwe. we poe: MEXICO—Mexican Confederation of Labor (C. R. 0. M.), Edo Fim- |) for Washington to become the Central ‘the oid rate after the exchange is of the secretaries in several Nation-|| Mens National Peasants Lengue, C. Manrique; All-America Anti-Impe- Rete hy PEEERY TOF the vatate Gepart- | ade. alist ministries a task which they || Tialist Leagus, Julio A. Mella; Associated Trade Union of Tampico; Mex- At the station to see him off were, Close observers think the large le i diti hei . || ican Students’ Federation, Zapata Vena, Diaz Figueroa. ta Michi eee an oe weve holdings will not be much. affected ee ne eI CUBA eprauetation Of Lucey ARPCI Sutamerors B todavia’ Pedsrk tee: Coates PLE lar Nee eat iby: this mavehver,. but that” some Tt is generally known that the Na- || Dr. Ruben Martinez Villena; People’s University (“Universidad Popular Aiatincst Mince Bbewadiena: Hh small investors may be induced to| ; i i iali e, Le ¥ * . “4 a tionalist Government is handling the atten ); All-America Anti-Imperialist League, Leonardo Fernandez crowd of government officials and| ‘de: affairs of the concession through a 1 Ra A cae Provisional Council.» Just how the task is being carried out is not, how- ever, 80 well known. That it has been well done is amply attested by the fact that since the assumption of control by the Chinese authorities, there have been no un- toward events, nor is there any evi- dence that the normal. work of polic- ing. cleaning and administering the small piece of territory has been in any way less well done than it was | while under strictly British control. The same has been true, of course, of the ex-Russian and ex-German con- eessions which, combined, form a Jarger portion of the so-called “con- cession area” in Hankow than the ' British. All this territory, for years | wnder purely Chinese control, has heen and is just.as clean, just as well policed, just as well administered as | it was under purely foreign domina- tion. Departments Handle Details. | The provisional council now hand-| ling the affairs of the British conces- | sion comprises the minister of for- eign affairs, the minister of finance and the minister of communications of the Nationalist government. It | meets onee a week. The details are delegated to four departments: see- | vetariat, headed by Mr. T. C. Woo of | the foreign ministry; finance, headed foreigners. Dennis was the tool through whose instrumentality Diaz was illegally made president. The battle of Jinotega was won by the liberals. An airplane, with Amer- ican aviators, was brought down but succeeded in getting back to Managua last night. Conservatives Scurrilous. General Bartolome Viquiz has been named by the Nicaraguan congress as first designate, a position equa! to the vice-presideney. A conservative newspaper here pub- lishes scurrilous articles against the liberals, and includes the names of several American citizens who pro- tested to the commander of the U. 8. ‘naval forces. It is reported that a second British | warship has arrived at Corinto. The commander of the American warship Tulso, interviewed tonight, said: “T have not been advised that any American marines have been killed in Nicaragua and I co not believe the | rumors.” Dr. Sacasa, in his statement, said: “I have not been informed, except in that form reported by the Ameri- can press. Liberals Confident. “The news in Managua and al! other towns has not been censored. PORTO RICO.—Nationalist Party of Porto Rico, Manuel Ugarte, Jose Vosconcelos, Luis Casabona, Cesar Falcon; Nationalist Federation of Youth, Samuel Quinones; All-America Anti-Imperialist League, Samuel Quinones. CENTRAL AMERICA.—All-America Anti-Imperialist League, Au- gustin Marti. PERU.—Students’ Federation, Victor R. Haya de la Torre; Unionist Party, Victor R. Haya de la Torre. VENEZUELA: Revolutionary Nationalist Party, Carlos Quijano; All-American Anti-Imperialist League, Salvador de la Plaza; Venezuelan Labor Union, Bernardo Suarez. t COLOMBIA: Revolutionary Socialist Party, A. Morales, CHIN tional People’s Government, Hsiug Kwang Sen; Kuo Min ‘Tang Party, H. Liau; Canton Labor Federation, Chen Chuen; Canton- Hongkong Strike Committee, Chen Chuen; Kwangtung Provincial Labor Federation, Chi li Chao; National People’s Army (General Chang's forves), General Lu Chung Ling; General.Feng’s forces, Generals Chu and Lu; Chinese Chambers of Commerce, H. Chai; Students Federation of Kwan- tung\ Province, K. K. Wang; Wahnsien Protest Committee, San Wei Ming and Li Sen Wei; Peking Press Association, Shi Chi Feng; Kuo Min Tang Party of China in America; Kuo Min Tang Party of China in Europe; Kuo Min Tang Party of China in Europe, R. Koe; Kuo Min Tang Party of “hina in Europe, Li Pin Han; Kuo Min Tang Party of China in Europe; Kuo Ming Tang Party of China in Europe, Y. 8. Hsieh; Kuo Min Tang Party of China in Great Britain, S. M. Chen; American Sun-Yat-Senist Society, Chae Ting Chi; Central Federation of Chinese Students in Europe; Central Federation of Chinese Students in Europe; Central Federation of Chinese Students in Europe; Permanent Committee Against the Unequal Sino-Belgian. Treaties; Chinese Students Union of Lyon;. Federation of Chinese Workers in France; Federation of Chinese Workers in Belgium; Federation of Chinese Workers in London, Mo Yau; Shanghai Women's Federation. INDIA: Indian National Congress, Jawahar Lal Nehru; Ceylon Trade Union Council, Stephen Madige Pola; Hindustan Gadar Party, Prof. M. Barkatulla; Oxford Hindoo Union, Bakar Ali Mirza; Cambridge Hindoo Union; London Hindoo Union; Edinburgh Hindoo Students Union, 8, A. WORKER GRAZED THRU POVERTY Five Children UTICA, N. ¥Y.—Want and poverty eaused Guy M. Taylor to take the lives of his wife and five little chil- dren and his own life, several days ago, at his home on Columbia St. Searching, day in and day out for a job, and Being turned down, want- ing to w wanting to live and to! feed his children, Guy M. Taylor, a young, able man only 26 years of age, became a victim of this unem- ployment. trap, Nothing Much to Expect. Investigations show that the Tay-/ lor family of seven were destitute, according to the press, and there was still $11.97 coming to Taylor from his last job in the Bossett Corpora- " “4 * ‘ 4 . “While I d t wish it, the Ameri- ton. 4 ‘at by Mr, C. H, Lei of the ministry of || Raham; Hindoo Students Federation of Paris, Mohamed Achmed; Indian can pti fast fight se ann Pres, In order to justify their position communications; public safety, headed || Bureau of the L L. P., Tarini Sinha; Indian Federation of Central Europe, ident Diaz. in defense of this present defunct hy Mr. H. O. Tong of the finane ministry; sanitation, headed by Mi | (. Y. Lee of the ministry of com- munications. j These four meet daily and hear re- | ports from the subordinates in their respective departments, issue all nec- essary orders, see to it that they are carried out and generally direct the | | administration. Any non-routine gnat- | rvs left for decision by the pro- | is * council, | » Financial Contro! “fationalist. i The financing of the area is now | | beine shouldered by the Nationalist idu, Moni Sen, K. A. Hamid; Hindoo Workers Welfare League, Dr. Bhat; Hindoo (daily newspaper), A. C. N. Nambias; Hindoo Journalists Federation in Europe, Chattopadhyaya; Haiderabad Association (Berlin Section), Dr. Naidu. DUTCH BAST INDIES: Perhimpounan Indonesia, Mohammed Hatta, R. Gatot, Abdul Manaf, Mohammed Nazif. : KOREA: Korean Anthors and Journalists Federation, Li Kolu and Wooilhang; Columbia University Korean Students Association, E. W. Kim; Korean Students’ Federation of Paris, Kim Pob In. INDO-CHINA (ANNAM): Constitutionalist Party, Giao, Ngugen Van Luc, Duch Van Cac. PERSIA; Persian Revolutionary Republican Party, Ahmed Assadoff, ‘Alavi Mortesa. _ PHILIPPINE ISLANDS: Filipino Association of Chicago, A, Almin- iana. SOUTH AFRICA: South African Trade Union Congress, Daniel Col- raine; Natal Native Council, J. T. Gumede; Communist Party of South | Africa, La-Guma, WEST AFRICA: Sierra Leone Railwaymen’s Association, E. A. Richards, : economic system, the tabloid yellow! press blames this crime to a de- ranged mentality aying that the family was’ not at all in its worst “T have all the men I require in the jinterior and could end this war in | three days were it not for American jintervention, The men will not lay down their arms peacefully.” economic position, there still being Dr, Sacaza and his cabitiet all re- $11.97 in the family treasury—and | main here, cheerfully awaiting the re-/ five children to feed and clothe! |sult and hoping for a successful ter- Chureh Feels Guilt, mination of the strife. A flock of churchmen will per- nr: ecaae form, .a quartet will sing, at the pub- | Read The Daily Worker Every Day lic funeral. Rev, Bleakney will lead pe 7 in -service; | ‘ The church, feeling guilty, blames ‘Relates Tactics Used: the community, Rev. Bleakney says: By Si an Machine to “It seems to me a social sin to allow a family to be so destitute, that the i ; | ,» thought ‘Sign Men For Union | {ther cxazed, no doubt oug! | | Dunang Van government directly. Pending the de-} cision *o be reached as a result of the n--~otiations now going forward | } between the Nationalist government i ond the British diplomatic authorities, | |himself foweed to take the lives of | his family and himself. We are all guilty, and I feel as guilty as the Morris Alovis, one of the workers ( that method of finance will continue. | NORTH AFRICA: Committee for the Defense of the Black R |cgerced by Sigmans’ tactics to take | rest,” The entire administration and direc- || Lamine Senghor. Pi aee eee jout a. card and pay @ fine to the re- | Who is This Public. tion’ of the affairs of the concession | MOROCCO: Arab Press, Hassan Mattar. | uctionary machine, finds himself held- Mr, Bleakney does not explain are. at the moment, purely provisional. There have been no changes whatso- | ever in the usval-course of affairs in- | side the British concessions since the | intervention of the Nationalist gov- | ernment. The entire staff of the mun- | igipal office remains the same, save for the British heads, who no longer \ function. The police, now, are all) Chinese, The Indians -who formerly | i were used as traffic officers no longer | are used, The new Chinese police have | heer, recruited from exeess men on | the police roster in the, tw> special | ereas which were formerly the Rus- sian and German concessions. \up by Dubinsky’s agents as a kind jot an exapmile to the rest of the work- ers, Alovis has issued the following statement, exposing the coercion, and repudiating Dubinsky, Sigman & Co, * * * ALGERIA: North African Star. TUNIS; Destour Party. EGYPT: Egyptian NatioréRadical Party, Ibrahim Youseff, GERMANY: Dr. Helene Stocker, Women’s League for Peace; Arthur ‘Holitseher, writer and publicist (Berlin); Professor Alfons Goldschmidt, Berlin; Professor ‘Theodor Lessing, Hanover; Professor Paul Oestreich, Berlin; Alfons Paquet, writer and publicist (Frankfort); Lubinski, labor leader (Frankfort); Lehmann Russbueldt, Secretary League for the Rights of Man; Walter Stocker, member of the Reichstag; Willi Munzenberg, member of the Reichstag; Otto Bachman; Frau Magda Hoppstock-Hutt, Women’s League for Peace; Ernst Toller, dramatist; Dr. Kurt Hiller, writer and publicist; A. Putz, member of the Reichstag; Frau L. Peters, League Against Colonial Oppression; Two delegates of the Laboristal Ide- Uniono Internaciona. ENGIQAND: George Lansbury, ; Whether he means by “the commun- |ity” the workers living around Tay- | lor, who may be at any time in the | same position if they should lose {their job, if they should fail to pro- | vide the meagre pay to keep the wolf from the door. Or the big in- | terests who live on the back of the | workers, the Garys, who crush the | lives of the workers for. profits, the! | Fords, who speed the very soul out {of the workers and send them to | their graves: the John D’s, who send troops into Mexico to kill the Mexi-! can workers for oil. “I wish to state to all members of | Local 10, that I consider Dubinsky and all his hootlickers the most un- |Serupulous bunch that ever had control | of our toca}. Dubinsky, knowing the | poor enonomic circumstances in which \f happen to find myself at the present \time, has through the most infamous jagent who is still on the pay-roll of our local, Fruiling, come to an under- ae at ak employer, that | Janitors’ Union Sign sit! taki ki rd or ¥ will} . Ve he sent down from the job. | An Agreement in Chi. {he sent down from the job. | “Being in dispair, due to my eco-| | nomic conditions; I feel that I have, CHICAGO, March 8. (FP)—Up to jcommitted an unpardonable error $700 a month is the wage of apart- | against all the workers who are fight-| ment house janitors in Chicago under , ing to drive out Sigmanizm and Dub- | the agreement signed by the Chieago inskyzm from our union. I was forced | Flat Janitors union with the Chi- to take out a card and pay part of | ¢ago real estate board, running from ;8 fine Which was imposed upon me, Mareh 1 to March 1, 1981. The aver- because I refused to aid them in| age wage of flat janitors in the Chi- breaking our union. I wish to state! cago union is between $200 and $400 that T will continue to fight side by!a month. About 6600 janitors are |side with the workers of the other included. Their pay is based on the | crafts in oyr union until the Dubin- rental. value of the buildings they (sys, Sigihans, and Ninfos are driven’ take care of, pent of onr union.” " Rumors that Wm. F. Quesse, him- } + = self an oppressed janitor when he, ‘Three Killed by Blast organized the now powerful union, left an estate of over $500,000 at his A | In Coal Mine member of parliament; Independent Labour Party, H. N. Brailsford; Workers International Relief, Helen Crawfurds International Association Against War; Miners Federation, A, J. Cook and S. O. Davies; League Against Colonial Oppression, R. Bridg- man; Ellen Wilkinson, member of parliament; Women's International League for Peace; Plebs League; London Trade Union Council; Labour Party Cagncil for Chinese Freedom; Chinese Information Bureau; Colonel VEstrange Malone; Daily Herald; Manchester Guardian; Oriental New Service; Professor Goode, Manchester; Bernard Houghton. FRANCE: Republican Association of War Ve ns; International Teachers’ Association; eague for the Rights of Men; Women’s Interna- tional League for Pea Unitarian General Confederation of Labor; League against Colonial Oppression; Free-Thinkers: Victor Margueri man of letters; Leon Werth, man of letters; Henri Barbusse, man letters; George Pioch, man of letters; Felicien Chaliaye, member of Institut de France; Professor Langevin; Rene Maran, man of letters; Andre Gide, man of letters; Albert Fournier, member of Paris City Coun- cil; Henri Torres, attorney at law; Moro Giafferi, attorney at law; Venta- dour, secretary of the League Against Colonial Oppression; Mad, Duchesne; Dutilleul, secretary of the Workers Int. Relief 3 Andre Berthon, member of the Paris City Council; Ly Vempsey. Colonial Organizations having their Headquarters at Paris: French Section of Kuomintang, Constitutional Party of Indo-China, Committee for Defense of the Black Race, Inter-Colonial Unjon, HOLLAND; Edo Fimmen, secretary ‘of the International Transport Workers; Henrietta Roland-Holst, writer and publicist; J. W. Kruyt, Workers International Relief; Van Walree; Ld. Visser, Secretary Commun- ist Party; S. J, Rutgers; three delegates of the Dutch Section of the Kuomintang; Four delegates of the Indonesian Nationalist Party. CZECHOSLOVAKIA: Professor Nejedelij; L. Beran, secretary of the Workers International Relief. AUSTRIA: Dr. Raissa Adler, Dr. Leopold Katz. ITALY: Daniel Martini, writer and journalist; Guio ber of parliament; Verri, journalist. SYRIA; National Syrian Committee, Ishan Bey el Dschabri. PALESTINE: National Arab Congress of Palestine. D. Taylor Only One Who Has Béen Commissioned Oe nen Rui Miah axes ar, Police Search For Secret Gang. | lor is the only American composer - NORTH ARLINGTON, N. J,,/ Under commission to write an opera . March <r brain ae ie tor eid ga ree Neyphl vie in yd eg -8n | pany,” tto in today in © ghendoned copper ming for clues clearing. up the ambiguous state- which might lead e Fae aenshak’ ge uk of a weird, black robed cult Pong, ion Sedo Fa al ane New : 4 Unemployed Workers \ Hounded by. Coast | “Guardians of Law” By Wm. S. MURPHY. (Worker Correspondent.) | SACRAMENTO, Cal., March 8.— | It seems we unemployed have broken the law by being out of work. The) authorities are constantly threaten- ing us with arrest when the band 1] of unemployed becomes too large. "You know the charge they make against us? “Idleness!”’ . We dare » not break the law further by begging — it is also against the law for us to even beg. Sed Every morning we call up the bus- iness houses, asking them for work, and you should hear them curse, The police aten to run us out of this city, and there will be no place else to go. The seasonal work will not start up for some time yet and I don’t know but what it will be a pretty good idea to go to jail for a ile. 1 asked a councilman the other day, he said if they fed the hungry they would come from all over United States. they let the unemployed rustle their own grub on a “breadling back of Hart’s restaurant”; and when this draws too many out-of-job workers, the ee have a round-up and drive death last month are silenced by the { Paks wae probate of his will which disposes +. WALSENRURG, Colo, March 8, of barely a quarter of that sum, He |—-Faulty insnection of the face of a/W#s president of the flat janitors [room in the Caddell mine of the Paci-)(1cal 1) and also international |fie Coal Mining Co, resulted in the President of the Building Service t death of three men a few days ago, “mployes International Union at the ‘when a drill in the hands of one of time of his death. hem struck a stick of unexploded ‘dynamite. Corporations Charged On Volstead | “The men were working alone on : Act. | ‘the 1,400-foot level when the tragedy Indictments returned by the fed- | occurred. Their bodies were not dis- ert! grand jury against thirty-three jeovered until an hour later, when a individuals and four corporations lerew above’ noticed that the com.) charging them with conspiracy to pressed air tank from which they Violate the prohibition law were received their power was empty. (opened today by Federal Judge Ro- The men killed were Frank Rivera, | bert A. Inch in Brooklyn and*nine of | Alex Archuleta and D. Shepard. the defendants, one a woman, were Shepard had been mining for 27 arraigned. Miglioni, mem- Prompt Action by Nurses Stops Fire White-clad* nurses dropped their charts and clinical thermometers at years. He had a wife, two children, | cs the Bay Ridge Sanitarium, and two step-children. His wife had’ Ford Mies to Bean Town, this afternoon and, forming a bucket beg: him not to go down to work’ BOSTON, March 8—Bla: ng a brigade, put out a fire which started /in the dangerous mine just before trail from Buffalo, N. Y., by air, a in the linen room of the building. | his shift. began, but he told her they) Ford freight-carrying airplane circled Several minutes later the fire de-|needed the money badly. over the heads of hundreds of spec-. rtment apparatus pulled into the —— tors at East Boston airport this, nal yar the AILY Ss BST 2 tomy ses Mpa l Page Three (GZARIST JEWELS WORTH MILLIONS FOR SALE SOON British Svndicate Puts Diamonds on Display I n ’ sparkling brillia ONDON, March 8 s will be able at Ch Serried ranks laid stie’s salesrooms farch 14 and 16 for the inspection Mf the public and will be sold on the day following. They are part of the historic state jewels of Czarist Rus- According to a brief explanation riven the catalogue, the jewels | were purchased by a British syndi- |cate. They originally formed part of a collection not belonging to any in- |dividnal, but were set apart for na- tional celebrations and court func- tions. They were in no sense the nersonal jewels of the last members of Most of the Wighteenth ’ a TAKES HIS LIFE |them were made du |the Empress Elizabeth jited F Kills Himself, Wife and | the time. the Romanoff Dynasty. Date Back to 18th Century es date from nd y centu and Empress Catherine IT by the accred- the of the ench and Russian jewelers of | One outstanding diamond to be sold s believed to be the Polar , vanked third in the Russian regalia after the Orloff and “Shah” stones. It is a large rosy-white oval brilliant mor munted as a brooch. On the setting is eneraved the weight of the stone, 40 12°32 carats, and according to the old Russian inventory the value was held to be 115,000 roubles. or $125,000 in present-day values, which is one- | fourth of the reputed worth of the Orloff diamond. Dazzling Diamonds Another dazzling piece is the “Nup- tial double rows of fine brilliants in bor- | ders Crown,” entirely composed of smaller stones, and of | sur- mounted by a cross of six large -bril- Nants. There is also a wond a rreen jasper snuff-box mounted with gold borders finely chased with flow- ers and foliage in varicolored gold, in the hor There is likely to be keen bidding | for a style of Louis X rders being ri overlaid ly haskets and sprays of flowers, troph- ies and foliage in white and fancy- | colored diamonds. Keen Bidding Expected diamond tiara designed , the panels and with as | ~heat-ears and foliage, and set with bri olet and oval brilliants. stone, Among the helter of diamond brace- | lets and buttons, clasps, pendants, A white | sapphire forms the largest center tassels, slides and pins there is one beautiful little bracelet dated “Le 23 } Octobre 1815” and inscribed with the | imperial initial “N.” It is betieved to have been given by the younger brother of Czar Alexander, the future | Nicholas I, Charlotte, daughter of Frederick Will- | to his fiancee, jam IT of Prussia. Bootleggers Steal Ambassador’s Wine | Louise LONDON, March 8.—News of a big liquor seiaure, somewhere be-| tween the New York piers and the French embassy in reached here to-night. Six months’ supplies Washington, | of wines, liquors and spirits, destined to the em bassy, have disappeared, and the United States customs officers have advised the French government that they have been unable to trace the consignment, intimating that they believe it is now in the posses- sion of bootleggers. We mourn the death of our national secretary, Comrade C, E. RUTHENBERG We shall continue in the fight for the work- ers’ cause. Section 2 Workers (Communist) Party J, Oblan, Organizer. We mourn the death of our beloved leader. We pledge ourselves to continue the fight for which Comrade C. E. RUTHENBERG gave his life. Warkers (Commanist) Party Subsection 2 C Picture Postcard In memory of Comrade 6, E, Ruthenberg buff stock; hotograph of vet off with side uKed a brisf ont- of his life. TS EACH. uffictent to cov- ngs—-to send to our friends, ou do this at a limited number ad for special me- ORDERS FILLED RECELVED. ON DAY DAILY WORKER PUB- LISHING COMPANY 33 First St. New York. Select Books for Dollar ee Industrial Revival of Soviet Russia, by A. A. Heller. Beautiful cloth bound vol- ume, 241 pps, regularly sold for $1.00, now given away at 25 cents a copy. “If you do not own a copy” of this valuable book, now is the time to get one. How the Russians set about putting their house in order. Every revolutionist should un- derstand the New Eco- nomic Policy introduced by Lenin in the Spring of 1921, 2. Government Strikebreaker, by Jay Lovestone. This book is particularly time- ly. It will give you the proper background for interpreting the role of the government towa the workers. It is your: for 25 cents, while they last. 3. Fairy Tales for Workers’ Children, by Herminia Zur Muhlen, Children love this book. And you will enjoy the splendid handling of working class suffering under capital- ism so that e child can get the full significance of the struggle, Beauti- fully illustrated with full page color plates and nu- merous illustrations ‘in black and white by Lydia Gibson. You can buy this lovely colorful book for 50 cents while the sale is going on. $1.00 dill will bring these three books to you, Fill out the coupon below, pin a dollar to this ad and send to us at once. Daily Worker Literature Dept, 33 First St, New York, N, Y Enclosed find § for .. Name . Street city Btate —

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