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Published by the DAILY WORKER PUBLISHING CO. Daily, Except Sunday 83 First Street, New York, N. Y. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By mail (in New York only) :' By mail (outside of New York): $8.00 per year $4.50 six months $6.00 per year $3.50 six months $2.50 three months $2.00 three months Phone, Orchard 1680 Address all mail and make out checks to THE DAILY WORKER, 33 First Street, New York, N. Y. J. LOUIS ENGDAHL PRE Editors | DAILY WORKER For WILLIAM F, DUNNE |mising anti-imperialist character, By WILLIAM F. DUNNE. TH imperialist front against China is being formed. | The tremendous sweep of the Chi- | nese national liberation movement, its | broad mass base, its continued vic-| tories, its remarkable ability to con; | | solidate and organize itself, the rapid ’ . |rise of the labor movement and the ing but a stern, extension of organization among the peasants, and finally, its uncompro- | 18; ming the Imperialist Front Against China THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 10,1927 | | ent which advocates aggression open- ly. After reciting a number of a leged beatings of missionaries, et person has been killed and lists th injured as Americans) he says: ye the risk of .prophecy, one} would venture to sey that noth- sharp lesson will re- store order in China and make it an/| abode fit not only for foreigners but} for the Chinese.” i (ho makes no charge that a singl § 6 | HERETIC. BISHOP CONTINUES ON HIS UCCESSFUL TOUR \Laber Defense Sneaker Fills the Halls CHICAGO, March 9,—Beginning 4 itending to force a united front of the | BERT MILLER... ....-:0e0see000 Business Manager | imperialist powers for armed inter-| Entered as second-class mail at the post-office at New York, N. Y¥., under | vention in China. | the act of March 8, 1879. Rivalries still exist and will con-! tinue to exist and their importance The correspondent characterizes the} _ tour of the important cities of the national liberation movement as “Box-| West, ‘Bishop William Montgomery | erism” and says that it is “compli-| Brown has just concluded a number | cated by Russian assistance and direc: | of highly successful and enthusiastic | tion.” | meetings in Salt Lake City, Denver, Pn Italy Lines Up With England Against the Soviet Union — Indisputable evidence of the efforts of the British foreign | office to increase’ the tension in its relations with the} Soviet Union and its further progress in doing what it denies most | vehemently—organizing a Baltic-Balkan bloc against the Soviet Union—has been furnished in the last two days. Sir Austen Chamberlain, British foreign minister, in an inter-| view in Geneva, has characterized the relations between the two| countries as “very bad” and intimated that only concern for other | nations which might be involved prevented a break with the Soviet Union. In plain English—Chamberlain was speaking the language of diplomacy—this means that Great Britain has not as yet lined up a sufficient number of countries to back whatever plan she has in mind to follow the severance of diplomatic relations. The second incident, in which the hand of Great Britain is quite apparent, is the ratification of the Bessarabian treaty by | which Italy acknowledges the right of Rumania to this Russian} province. The Italian government has avoided endorsement of this pact since 1920 and its acceptance of it now coinciding with the remarks of Chamberlain and the known fact of agreement between Italy and Great Britain means the former country will back Rumania against the Soviet Union as part of the general | scheme of the British foreign offiee.. Italy has been drawn into} the anti-Soviet Union bloc. There is a second consequence of the agreement with Rumania | and that is that the breach between Italy and France, the creator | of the Little Entente—Rumania, Jugoslavia and Czecho-Slovakia— | will become wider. Nor will Jugoslavia look with anything but | enmity at the agreement between Rumania and Italy which she knows means no good to her ambitions to dominate the Little Entente. The new agreement therefore, altho it strengthens the British | Advertising rates _on application, must not be under-estimated but the | general interests of imperialism, faced | ment by the probability of being swept com- | pletely out of China, are becoming | | paramount, | ‘HE preparations for actual armed | invasion of China by a combina-| tion of powers with Great Britain the most aggressive at the moment are be- c ming more brazen because of the in- | jability of the Chinese militarists (Sun } Chuang Fang, Chang Tso Lin, Wu} | Pei Fu, Chang Tsung Chang) to stop | the advance of the Kuomintang} forces. No day passes without news | of an increase in and new activities | of the imperialist forees in China. | The troops commanded by these} imperialist tools are, it is now clear, | unable to offer any serious resistance | to the people’s armies. It perhaps would be more correct to say that} these troops are unwilling to fight against their own people bearing the | standard of Sun Yat Sen. Britain and Japan especially have depended upon the. militarists to do the fighting for them. For a certain | period this method worked well but) the collapse of Sun Chuang Fang, the demoralization of the forces of Wu Pei Fu, the dissatisfaction even among the Shangtung troops of Chang Tsung Chang (hitherto re- garded as impervious to Kuomintang | governs, was rampant. The implications of the above state- | s are clear. The imperialist rs will raise the slogan of “law powe | and order for foreigners and Chinese’ as an excuse for war. | It is well to examine carefully the | charges of violence against civilian) foreigners made at this time. The/ |record shows that right from the time | of the Hongkong strike in 1922. up} to the present that civilian foreigners as a rule have been perfectly safe in| even in the most remote sections of | China. The exceptions to this have) occurred when the banditry of the} militarist leaders, now crushed out in the provinces which the Kuomintang | HE hundreds of missionaries, commercial representatives, etc., who with their families are now in Shanghai, have travelled there from \the interior of China without serious | mishap although they may have suf-) fered some personal discomfort. But whatever their discomforts have been | they are neglible compared with such ; outrages as the bombardment of | Wahsien where some 2,000 Chinese} | were killed by British cannon, the un-/ provoked shooting of strikers and | |students in Shanghai by British po- | lice and the recent unexampled public | executions of workers and students in| \the same city. | propaganda) is evidence that little can be expected irom these former allies of imperialism. They have taken the Kuomingtang cure. ‘OTHING has been more disgust- ing than the inspired stories by the various correspondents of the imperialist press. These individuals have lauded Chinese militarists like The Chinese know that the im-| | perialists of all nations are involved | jin these affairs. If they were to take | life for life they would be more than! | justified. Doped | | The most amazing thing in connec- | emanating from Shanghai and penned | tion with the Chinese national libera- tion movement, and a result of its) consciousness and discipline, is the! tolerance with which the Chinese conducted anti-Soviet Union bloc, creates a whole new series of | Chang Tsung Chang, they have|have treated nationals whose govern-| contradictions in western Europe and the Balkans, only a few of which we have mentioned above. jpraised his savagery and eulogised| |his swordsmen as they struck the | thousands. heads from “agitators.” They pre- The anti-Soviet Union front has grown in size by this latest | dicted the collapse of the trade union | maneuver but it is doubtful if it has gained in real strength by | and nationalist movement in Shanghai | ments have massacred them by the/| | | TMPERIALISM, be it British, Ameri- | can, Japanese or French, has no/ case against the Chinese on this| |eause for his expulsion from ‘4 yf i Shi. | after the mass murders but lo and} reason of the new antagonisms, or the revival of old ones, which teahold,, wesw luaie Grom colar aie | patches, there were 300,000 workers |on strike instead of the 100,000 which |they “estimated” and the beheadings | simply gave the movement a new im- | petus, Far from being paralysed by terror it has brought about. One thing is certain—it is that Italy’s imperialist policy of driving toward the east, backed by Great Britain, is a policy which can end only in war uriless stopped by revolution. The Balkans and the Far East, and there is a direct connection between British policy in China and in eastern and southeastern Europe, are the spots where a world conflagration can begin. United action of the working class and the colonial peoples of the | the sturdy Chinese’ workers and| ‘students have forced the chief of po- lice who was responsible for the exe- eutions to flee Shanghai and .start in world alone can prevent its breaking out or extinguish when it ithe general direction of Mukden. Nor | ground. \ | But the publicity campaign against | China will continue for the reason | |that imperialism must get out of {China in the very near future or, ‘n | desperation, launch an.,, offensive \against Kuomingtang and the masses | i which it leads. | | As the Communist International |says in its recent appeal to the work- | China: | and Los Angeles. In the latter two cities, Bishop Brown held a number | of meetings which were very well at- tended by workers anxious to hear his famous talk on “The Power of the Workers,” according to information | received here today. Leader of International Labor Defense Bishop Brown, who is a member of the national committee of Interna- | tional Labor Defense, under the aus- pices of which the tour is being made, | is known throughout the world as the “Heretic Bishop.” His booklet “Com- | munism and Christianism,” a radical interpretation of religion and the labor movement, was the’ immediate the church, and has been translated into a dozen langueges and distributed in hundreds of thousands.of copies. Wherever Bishop Brown has held a meeting, the halls have been packed | with workers eager to hear him speak on the labor movement. His meet- ings for the I. L. D. for which he has spoken many times in the East and Mid-west, have aroused great in- terest in the West and there is every indication to assure the continued success of the tour. His coming meetings for the I. L. D. on the present tour are as follows SAN meeting at California Hall, Turk and Polk streets. March 12, banquet at Califronia Hall.. OAKLAND, CALIF.: March 13, meeting at Ahmee’s Hall, 13th and Hasson Streets. PORTLAND, ORE., March 16. TACOMA, WASH.: March 17, Masonic Hall, 712 St. Helens Ave. SEATTLE, WASH.: March 20, | Moose Temple, 8 p..m. VANCOUVER, B. C.: March 21, Wesley Church. SPOKANE, WASH.: March 23. ST. PAUL, MINN.: March 26, Labor Temple. MINNEAPOLIS: March 27. Women’s Party Fakes Delegation to Fight Maximum Hour Statute NEW YORK (FP.).—Women> ad- |vertised as unorganized workers in FRANCISCO: March 11,| | “The New Yorkers,” an intimate revue recently produced at the Inti-| mate Playhouse in the Bronx, under | the title of “1928,” will open tonight jat the Edyth Totten ‘Theatre. The _book is by Jo Swerling, lyrics by /Henry Myers, and music by Messrs, | | Schwartz, Fairchild and Schwab. The cast includes Jean Sothern, Milt Col- |lins, Charles Bender, Roberta Gale. “Machiavelli,” an historical drama jof the Italian Renaissance, has been | |Selected by Professor George Pierce | Baker as the next production for the Yale University Theatre. The} play, based on the life of Niccolo} | Machiavelli, is by Lemist Esler, | Sacha Guitry and his wife recently | |seen here in French repertoire, will | |return here next season, according | to the Woods office, for a more ex- | | tensive erlgagement. “Roses,” a new musical comedy | featuring Karyl Norman, (“the Cre- | ole Fashion Plate”), has been placed |in rehearsal by Frank L, Teller. Al- | bert Cowles and Jack McClellan sup- |plied the book, while the lyrics and |music are the work of Sam Lewis,| |Joe Young and Abel Baer. Nancy| | Welford and Lew Hearn are promi- | }nent in the cast. | | “Menace,” a play of the Orient, by | Arthur M. Brilant, is scheduled for | the Forty-ninth Street Theatre, Mon- | day, March 14. In the cast are Jack |Roseleigh, Pauline McLean, Eva! | Casanova and Wyrley Birch. The Heckscher. Theatre Guild, a |children’s organization, will present ‘ances Hodgson Burnett’s “Little | Princess,” a dramatization of “Sara 'Crewe,” on Saturday afternoon, | March 26, at the Heckscher Theatre, Fifth avenue and 104th street. The cast is composed entirely of children: | | Ca _AIUSENENTS In “Night Hawk,” Roland Oliver's tense drama, now being revived at the Frolic Theatre, Joseph von Strenberg will direct “Underworld,” the photoplay of gangster life written by Ben Hecht. George Bancroft and Evelyn Brent have been cast for important roles. The Fifty-fifth Street Cinema, a new film art theatre, is planning to show, as its first picture, “The Mar- riage of the Bear,” the latest re- lease of the Sovkino, which produced “Potemkin.” |new PLAYWRIGHTS theatre | 52a st. Thea., 306 W. Hg ap 7393 «| A New Play EARTH By im Fo Basshe “LOUDSPEAKER” Resumes March 14, \PLYMOUTH West 45 st. Eva. 8:30 1 Mats, Thurs.&Sat,, 2:30 | Every Eve. ( WL HROP AMES’ Thea, 7th Ave. Mats, Thurs. & 50th St. ath 86 THEA. West 42nd St. Twice Daily, 2:30 & $:30 Earl Carroll Sg” HARRIS ¢. Thurs.) & Sut. Mats. | |Gibert a T OF PEN. | igumives. PIRATES “Zaxce Thurs, ts. & Ev am EARL ‘carrot. Vanities: ers of the world to stop war on} d: sat | < |New ‘York city were taken to the WHAT PRICE GLORY \Neighborhood Playhouse 466 Grand St. | Drydock 75 |Bvery Eve. (Except Mon.). ea RS: et WALLACK’S West, 42nd Street. Evenings 8:30. | Mats, Tues., Wed., Thurs. and Sat. ‘What Anne Brought Home A New © IED Teo IC H. Woods presents nedy Drama |Phea., W. 42 Sti CRI M E. \Bves, 8:30. Mats. ! Wed. & Sat.'2:30 jwrite James Rennfe & Chester Morris, ivi ~ 6 AY. 458 Civic Repertory Sef: Watkins ‘1761. EVA LE GALLIEN + ERB NE begins. | will he be safe if he gets there. Un-| T Wonkette eee Tae legislature in Albany by the Nation- Mats. (exc. Sat.) 50c-$1. Rives. 500-43 | Tonight AE aren ata |doubtedly a little squad-of “Dare to | S°'V% a e ts of | al. Woman’s. Party to oppose a short- | sn CRADLE SONG |Dies” have been instructed to drop be se eae Ri igh Soate vind 09 work week law. The same group | ROA DWA 7 Il oth ‘k until this bloody tyrant wa vf en was bi ht t ti | Peace Talk and War Preparations. haa tea oa ioe his eniettea Biimiadd ay epee As ae reels. the’ state fobs acibes some | ROADHURST W. 4485: Eres 850 Mats Hed bat 230 ‘Th e L A D D E R : ; : | eo! g the | cs ‘ et steer ain Sone Now in its 5th MONTH The U. S. naval department is to begin to elevate the guns of SQ MULARLY, the foremen and |r, ‘preparation for the bloody attack | $0” which formulated the cotnprom- | ———— WALDORF, 50th St, East of Theatre Guild Acting Company in ise law under consideration. | PYCMALION superintendents in the Shanghai Bway. Mats. WED. and SAT. !upon the Chinese people, the capi- the battleships Oklahoma and Nevada at once. The British government has protested, claiming that this is | alin _ ism and to this the American government offers no exception. _ Michigan Students Are in violation of the Washington arms pact but the protest has been | disregarded. In the meantime work on the new cruisers author- ized by the last congress will be started. The above news gives us the proper estimate of the sincerity | of the Coolidge disarmament proposals. No one but the ever hopeful liberals could see in the proposed conference anything but | a grand gesture intended to pacify the sections of the population | upon which the burden of militarism falls heaviest. The invitation to the arms parley was declined by France and} Italy but Great Britain and Japan will be present. We thus will be afforded the ‘spectacle of the representatives of.the three great imperialist rivals meeting in solemn conclave and discussing disarmament while in the shipyards of each nation, as in the United States, the work of building new battleships and making old ones more efficient proceeds right merrily. | The imperialists talk peace but peace to them means simply that there is no open war in progress between imperialist nations. Little wars like the invasion of Nicaragua, preparations for imper- ialist aggression in China, slaughter of. revolting tribesmen in| Syria, these do not count. But it is for aggression against colonial peoples as well as against one another that naval guns are elevated and new built while hypocrital parleys are held to fool the masses. , not peace, is the outstanding characteristic of imperial- Senate Authorizes Bonds, | ALBANY, N, Y., March 9,—The Attacked With Tear Gas Bombs by Police hy today ANN HARBOR, Mich., March 9.— ‘hreé persons injured was the toll of a free-for-all battle between police and 500 University of Michi- gan. students. The outbreak followed the Michi- gan-lowa basketball game _ which Michigan won, thereby giving it the undisputed claim to the big ten con- ference championship, The student first surged up the street to the Arcade theatre. Sing- ing, yelling, hooting, they rushed to- ward the entrance but were turned back, as the management had a cor- don of police waiting for the attack. The Majestic theatre then was se- lected as the next objective. There the students were met by a force of policemen armed with tear gas. The students hurled bricks, eggs, sticks and all available objects but the tear bombs proved too effective _ and another retreat took place. senate judiciary committee today re- ported favorably the resolution pro- viding for .a Constitutional Amend- ment to authorize New York City to issue $300,000,000 in bonds for new subway construction. It is scheduled for speedy adoption in the legisla- ture and will be submitted to the voters at the elections this fall. | Pleads Guilty of Kidnapping. THOMPSON, Ga., March 9,.—War- ren T. Sprague of Staten Island, N. Y., pleaded guilty in Superior Court today to the charge of kidnapping Georgia Lowe, 15-year-old school girl, with whom he made a sensa- tional love junket to Florida, Daddy Will Sue. Edward W. (Daddy) Browning an- nounced today he is going to sue {Frances Heenan (Peaches) Browning for annulment of their marriage. Browning admitted that his attor- neys are gathering evidence for the annulment suit and that it will be filed within short time, |factories who made the mistake of being loyal to the imperialists and} militarists instead of to the people, | who co-operated with the murderers, are now, according to dispatches, be- |ing given'a taste of their own medi- | cine which, begause they are cowards and mercenaries, will have the effect | increase \of further weakening the support they | against the Chinese masses and the} can give to their masters. The imperialist press correspond- ents are of course enraged by these unexpected developments. Their fine humanitarian instincts which, could | tolerate the mass murder of s@fdents and workers fighting for national liberation by degenerate assassins turn to revengeful frenzy when the masses strike back. , But the anti-Chinese propaganda coming from Shanghai and other cities can be explained only by the vagaries of newspapermen. Some of the recent dispatches, notably those to the British press, | bear all the marks of a deliberate at- tempt to incite and justify war on the Chinese nation by an imperialist com- bination. The London Spectator pub- lishes an article from its correspond- talist provocateurs are trying to de- | stroy the , feeling of solidarity | lamongst the toilers with the heroic | | struggle of the Chinese people.” ‘HIS is the reason for the deluge | of fake atrocity stories and the! of general propaganda} people’s government. Murderous mili- | \tarists who execute students and workers by the hundreds are praised | but the masses led by the Kuoming- tang who are smashing the militarists are described as the most fitting tar-| gets for the fire of imperialism. } If there is a joint invasion of China, | and if it meets with some success, it | will be followed by an attack on the Soviet Union and the rise of a reac- tion still blacker than that which now hélds the workers and colonial peoples in its grip. The slogan of “Hands Off China” must be made a reality by foreing the withdrawal of all armed forces from the land where the flag of freedom, snapping in “the, sweet wind that blows from the south,” as the Chinese say, is driving imperialism to. frenzy. RELIEF IS STILL NEEDED IN PASSAIC REGION; MOST OF THE WORKERS NOT YET RETURNED PASSAIC, March 9.—Alfred Wae-| enknecht, chairman of the General Re- lief Committee, Passaic Strikers, is- sued an appeal today to organized la- bor and all sympathizers with the Passaic strikers in their long and ar- duous struggle for a union to con- tinue contributions for relief until such time as most of the workers are back in the mills. It was pointed out by the relief chairman that of six thousand Botany strikers only 1,200 have been taken back so far. “This leaves 44,800 who are still waiting to be called back. Some of these have temporary jobs, and are therefore able to look out for their families and selves, but most of them are not able to secure outside employment and must depend upon relief until such time as they retarn tion has bee necessarily slow. This means that though the strike is over, we must still face the serious question of unemployment, As long as the textile workers are unemployed they must be given relief. We must tide these workers over this unemploy- ment period if we are to be successful in building a union in Passaic.” More Chain Papers, LYNN, Mass., March 9.—Freder- ick M. Enwright, publisher of the) Lynn-Telegram News, announced to- day that he was starting a chain of papers in Boston, Worcester, Spring- field, Hartford, Conn. and New York City. All, will be afternoon publications. The Boston paper will be started first, within six weeks, Enwright stated. to the mills. This is also true of the workers from other mills, It is not that the employers are not willing to/ take back their old and experienced workers, but rather because of the very effectiveness of the big strike jthe mills were crippled and resump-! Karachi it was announced today, Planning Aero Flight. LONDON, March 9.—The British government is planning a non-stop aeroplane flight from London to Pi Organized labor, represented by the state federation of labor and) |] Week Mar. 14—Brothers Karamazov . W. 52 St, Evs, 8:18 149th Street, Bronx Opera House j4%th , Street, | Consumers’ League, Have tried to get | | protective THRA. GUILD Mats. Thurs. and Sat. 2:15 Ned McCobb’s Daughter Week March 14 Phe Silver Cord John Golden 1 .of B'y |Circle the Women’s Trade Union League} and welfare organizations like the | a,straight 48-hour law for women passed to replace the 54-hour statute | now in effect. Pop. Prices. Mat. Wed. & Sat. Rosalie Stewart presents “DAISY MAYME” Read The Daily Worker Every Day Labor’s argument against the Wo- man’s Party position on restrictive | legislation is chiefly that the organi- zation aims to sweep away women’s standards instead of seeking similar legislative aid for, men} workers in, their zeal to make both sexes equal—as far as the law goes —on the job. | Hints V. F. Calverton In Lecture at C. P. Hall | “In spite of the bankruptcy of | the socialist: party of the United : i} States,” declared V. F. Calverton, Small Wages of Chicago vir ot “The Mote Quarter 4. speaking on “The New Negro,” at | the Workers’ School, 108 E. 14th Report _ Just Issued 5° Surfday night, “there is no ae .,, doubt that the Communist Party CHICAGO, March 9.—The Social} would join with it to fight some Service Review soon to be published fundamental major issue.” here by the University of Chicago Calverton’s lecture, which was an will have figures ‘on the smallest : amount a family can live on.” academic discussion of the early The statistics were obtained by the pi = Nel ge cit Na late Dr, Leila Houghteling in a spirited comment from the floor. study of “the income and standard large number of speakers, active of living of, unskilled laborers in Chl:|: ctrtuas ehne Calverton het neclccted cago.” In full reports from 423 of sisted that Calverton had neglected dpb to emphasize the necessity for im- boards families studied she learned) mediate struggle for the Bye Seventeen family heads in 1924 tion of the American Negroes as wage workers, side by side with earned less than $1,000, or less than $18 a week; ninety between $1,000 Dissolve Injunction, SCRANTON, Pa. (FP)—A Lack- awanna county court injunction against Local 119, printing. press- men, was dissolved when the union reached an agfeement with the Scranton Printing Co.,. which took | out the restraining order. Three non- | anion men whose discharge the union jhad demanded, were taken into the organization and the shop is again 100%. 2 % More fer Stationary Engineers. °* NEW YORK (FP.).—Engineers in. office and apartment house. buildings gain 50 cents a day, with a new scale of $8 in a new agreement made pub- lie by Tom Bagley, business agent of the+steam and operating engi- neers’ union, nies ty as Roll in the Subs For The DAILY WORKER Picture Postcard. In memory of Comrade | On Bonds Not to Riot | their emancipation as a race. The lecturer, besides being a con- and. $1,199; 207 between $1,200 and) tributor to “The Nation” and “Cur- $1,499; _ eighty-nine between $1,500) rent History,” also conducts a and $1,799; thirteen between $1,800 | column for “The New Leader,” a and $1,999, and seven between $2,000 socialist, weekly. and $2,399. Calverton has also contributed to the magazine scetion of The DAILY Entire College Put WORKER. f Want Woman For Regent. ALBANY, N, Y., March 9—Re- publican women of the state started to have a member of ! sex elecled to the board of re- to fill the vacancy caused by Alexander | NORTHAMPTON, Mase., Maveh 9—The entire student body of Aim-) herst college, alma mater of Pree dent Coolidge and present resident | 8 of his son John, was put on good be-| the death~of Charles 1. havior for a year today by Judge | of New York, John D. O'Donnell, of district court. | At the same time the judge suspend. | Cal May Go West. ed fines of $25 edch imposed on; WASHINGTON, March .9.—Presi- George F’. Richards and Rollo A. Bay-|dent Coolidge exped¢ts to establish nes, members of the freshman class,|the summer White House “in the charged with disturbing the ‘peace. West” this year—the term ombrac- G.E.Ruthenberg Printed on good buff stock; contains « fine photograph of ©. E, Ruthenberg set off with wide border, The side used for address gives a brief o' fy line of the history of his life. ¢ 10 CENTS EACH. } Order in lots sufficient to cov- er your mncetings—-to Perea your friends, (We steeest you do this\at once as only a imited number were printed for spectal me- morial ocvasions,) ORDERS FILLED ON, RECEIVED. DAILY WORKER PUB-\ . LISHING COMPANY” | AY They were arrested during a riot,|ing all the territory between Michi- } gan and Utah, it wa’ announced at Read The Daily Worker Evary Day ‘ the Whit’ House today. \ 33 First St. New York. |.