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Page Two THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 26, 1927 WAR NEARER AS |Thousand Farmers Fail Tene’, Parnes roid ARRESTED FOR JUGO-SLAVS ASK ““conomenee..... SEDITION: 1. L. D, rty has again been emphasized by e ui | statistics announced by the U. S. De- partment of Agriculture. This time , the department shows that 123,000 / APPEALS FOR AID | American farms have changed hands | mscetnee | by foreclosure of mortgages during | | the past year. | Want Benito’s Intrigue i Beside the loss of f: through | BERLIN, March 25, — The war|industry made a record of 170,000} clouds hovering over the Adriatic farms sold or traded, threaten to take on a darker tinge! In the Dakotas and in Montana the again, following reports from Bel- defaults of payments which led to} grade, that the Jugo-Slavian govern- | foreclosures were from 6 to 7 per} Coal Kings Wage War On Active Unionists (Continued from Page One) ing up of persecution here, State police are being rapidly mobilized for strike emergencies, expecially in Fay- | Appeal to Coolidge Puts Anti-Salooner In Prohibition Job WASHINGTON, March 26.—The anti-saloon league leaped once more into the saddle of federal prohibition enforcement today, with the appoint- ment of Major Roy A. Haynes, its close associate and a former govern- ment dry chief, as “acting commis- sioner” of prohibition. Secretary of the treasury Mellon announced the elevation of Haynes after one of the most determined fights waged for a federal post in recent years had forced intervention from the white house, scrambled slates for the new bureaus of cus- ment is preparing a circular note to the powers in which it will charge Italy -with feverishly preparing for war and demand that either the pow- | cated. ers or the League of Nations investi-| gate these preparations because they present a grave danger to the neigh- boring countries and the peace of Europe. Wants Italy Looked Into. These reports, together with the inclination of Jugo-Slavia, to throw open its own borders for international | investigation only if Italy is investi- gated at the same time, reveal a con- siderable stiffening of the Jugo-Sla- vian attitude over night. Since it is believed that Mussolini will never aceept such an investiga- tion, the League of Nations would again be placed in a very embarrass- ing situation. It is therefore expec- ted that the powers will do their ut- most to prevent Jugo-Slavian action. Italy Spends Most. The Jugo-Slavian parliament ac- cepted the military budget today, which the war minister. announced had been cut by one third. The Jugo- Slavian budget, it is said, provides for but twenty per cent. of the total for..military expenditures, while the Italian military budget is said to total twenty-eight per cent. King Alexander of Jugo-Slavia is going to Paris Saturday to discuss the situation with his ally, France. Dragging In Germany. ° rine . | ette county. cent of all farms, while in Georgia highs gs and South Carolina the worst of the 28 Arrested for Sedition Southern farm depression was indi- | PITTSBURGH, Pa., March | Workers of Pennsylvania are appealed ‘to by the International Labor Defense 25.— SPECTRE OF WANT HAUNTS EUROPE: GERMANY’S PLIGHT |Millions of Workers on Brink of Starvation By MANUEL GOMEZ. ESSEN, Germany, March 6. (By} Mail).—Unemployment, the . spectre that one sees everywhere in Europe, is most awful in Dawes’s Germany. ;At least 2,000,000 workers are un- employed thruout the land. Some 4,000,000 more are working only part |time. It is impossible to spend a {week in any German city without | having unemployment impressed up- on your mind as the outstanding fac- | tor of- the present industrial situa- tion. Dawes and Unemployment. Unemployment is at its worst in| those parts of Germany where the | to come to the aid of 23 of their fel- lows, all either convicted of sedition or arrested within the last few weeks | on charges of sedition, They are all in danger of either being railroaded to the penitentiary, or deported. | Judges Go Slow. | The Horack case is before the} courts, on appeal. He was arrested | with nine others in 1923, tried three} years later by a hand picked jury and convicted in defiance of the evidence. ‘The Papcun case is similar; Papcun| American Supplies for |* Political strike such ax has been was arrested while organizing a local | of the miners’ union in the coke re-| gion. .In both of these cases the judge is taking his time. | On November 11, last year, the} Woodlawn workers interested in or-/| ganizing militant union and co-opera- | tive forces were arrested and charged | with sedition. They had been fight-| ing the Jones & Laughlin local gov-| ernment, and were most of them ar-| rested at a pienic in the previous July. | |They sued for false arrest, and the | | prejudiced court turned them down.| It was during this trial that the post- | ;master admittedshe had been censor-| ing The DAILY WORKER. | The Department of Justice sent| |men to the mining town of Harmar- ville and while the company was pay- ing off its workers, they stood at the Berlin is in an uncomfortable posi-| “rationalization” schemes which are | tioh because England and France per-| the axis of Dawes’s Germany have sist in trying to draw Germany into| had their widest application. In ad- the present disturbed situation in the| dition to Berlin, the areas principally Balkans. | affected are Westphalia, the Ruhr The British Ambassador called on territory, Saxony and central Ger- Herr Stresemann today to obtain|many,—including all the centers of Gérman co-operation in settling the|heavy industry, I have addressed Balkan quarrel. meetings of workers. in all parts o This is the first time that the al-|this territory. At every meeting a lies have called upon Germany to par-| large part of the crowd was made up ticipate in a joint action with the! of unemployed. big powers. | Talk to almost anyone riding in Stresemann reserved his decision|the third and fourth class cars on but, it is believed, he will accept. {the railrohds, spend a few minutes —_—_—_—OC | with one of the many jobless work- Read The Daily Worker Every Day|ers who hang around the depots |pay window and questioned them as |to whether they subscribed to Com- |munism and if they read The DAILY | WORKER or other papers which have radical tendencies. Then they arrested 2 workers, an Italian, and a Slovak, and are now {holding them for deportation, though |these workers do not belong to any radical organization. Five days later, on Feb. 15, a Lithuanian, who was to speak at a meeting of the Lithuanian Literary Society, was arrested and put under $5,000 bail, for merely hav- jing in his possession some pamphlets. | Attack Communists. CURRENT (Continued fri Page One) mate number'of Americans alleged to have been killed in Nanking. Any-| body at all acquainted with the in-| side workings of the newspapers can | port is a fake, purposely sent out to stimulate public feeling in favor of intervention. The Tribune of yes- terday stated that: “Reports of casu- altiés are conflicting, but one Briton | was known to have been killed, one wounded and a Japanese, injured.” | VENTS | casey go tell at a glance that the whole re. | dustrial districts, is a city of the job: 1 = - The last arrest so far, on March 16, waiting for a chance to carry a suit-/is that of a Hungarian worker who Joc fhings with the Secre-' was gepting subscriptions for Uj tary fof a local’ trade union, and offi-*Ejore, ie Hungarian paper. At the cial figur¢s no longer satisfy you as| time of this writing, he is still in jail to the seriousness of the situation, ‘with the court demand $5,000 bail. It City of, Jobless, | seems that the main attack is centered This city of Essen, in the heart of /on the Communists, both by the gov- one of Germany’s two greatest in-| ernment and the steel and coal barons rho expect a strike of the coal miners less. The big Krupp works, which|on April Ist. formerly employed 40,000 men, now}! The last convention of the Pennsyl- employ 10,000. While the decline of|vania State Federation of Labor con- Krupp’s is explained by special demned the Flynn Sedition Law and | causes, it is impossible to separate Passed a resolution which instructed them from conditions in general. The | the Executive Council to take organ-| steel industry as a whole, the en-|izational steps in preparing a cam-| tire metal industry, eyen the fever-| jishly busy coal industry, are working | As! The Tribune correspondent in Shang- hai admitted that the reports of ‘loss| '** . of foreign life in Nanking were un-| With greatly curtailed payrolls. confirmed, ‘0% bs appears that the original report | Production, brought was sent out by Reuter’s News| £peed-up methods | America, about under the/ imported from Agency. The Amertcan consul in Shanghai took cognizance of the “r paign against the law. Fight Decisions. | The workers must understand that | {often as not, reduced employment | this law is not only against the Com- | goes hand in hand with increased | ™munists, but it is against any and all| | militant workers who are willing to| fight for their rights. The workers Such methods include not/™ust make up their minds to fight e-|only Fordized specialization, stand-| against this law and mobilize the rank port” but*evidently did not believe it, @?dization, the conveyor system, etc.,| Nd file to force the labor officials to} Among the worst offenders against the Chinese, is the Hearst Agéncy, | Universal Service. This lying propa-| The German masses may thus be} ganda agency stops at nothing in its| divided into two groups: one that! mad desire to embroil this.country in, works long hours under speed-up | a War against the Nationalist rev-| conditions; another that has work) olution, Hearst is using the methods | for only a few days a week, ‘or not} he practised in Cuba before the at all. Spanish-American war. “You fur-| It is significant that the Com-} nish the news” he cabled to his Cuban| munist Party of Germany has had to correspondent “and we will furnésh|take up the aemand for a return to the. war,” Those blood-thirsty im-|the eight-hour day! This demand, perfalists care little if hundreds of|echoed by wide numbers of Social thousands of human lives are blotted Democratic and other non-Commun-| out in their greed for new conquests. | ist workers, is the central point in — e © jthe class struggle against Dawes’ UNT FELIX VON LUCKNER, | “rationalization” in Germany. who commanded the German sea) vaider Sea Eagle in the World War, Hoover and Mussolini was a guest at the Advertising Club ~ Swap Compliments last Thursday. Had an American organization received the count any, time between the years 1917 and) WASHINGTON, March 25,—Amer- 1920, they would soon see their quar- jean and-<Ktalian milifarists swapped ters in ruins and patriotic morons | complitients -yesterday afternoon. doing an Indian war dance over the| when @ message from Premier Mus- wrockage. The officers would be | solini was read at a luncheon given | lucky to escape a coat of tar and today by the Nation Aeronautical As- feathers. People were arrested by! sociation. Ff stool pigeons during the war for sug-| The message. read by Commander gesting that a few Germans may not} Silvio Scaroni, Air Attache of the be’ assassins. * bette | gratulated the “American people” on | Italian embassy at Washington con- | but, also lengthening of the workday, | fight against this law, It must be re- For Eight Hour Day. ;membered that with the tremendous | expense involved in these cases and| with the exorbitant bail which the group of militant workers (there are only a few and who are burdened), have been standing, they — are financially becoming exhausted and it is the duty of all workers to come to the defense of these workers who} .are fighting in the blackest and most | reactionary spot in Pennsylvania or| the United States against the steel, oil and railroad barons and coal oper- ators backed by the government and the labor officials. The backing must | come not only financially but by huge mass protests to the local and, state |government and also donate to the “| International Labor Defense, 807 Me- | Geagh Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa. Tobacco Workers in - Organizing Campaign Editor, Daily Worker.—The cam- paign to organize the tobacco work- ers of New York and vicinity was for- mally opened last night with a special | meeting arranged by the organization | committee of the joint.advisory board which had originally been elected from jeach local union to act as such in few had their necks tickled by| the remaikable efficieney: of their conjunction with the executive board a patriotic rope for opposing the aviation. war. Thousands were jailed for the! Secretary Hoover, Secretary of War same reason. Now a count boasts of | Wilbur and Postmaster General New his exploits, sinking American and | returned the compliment by congrat- British ships, before an audience of| ulating Italy-én her advance in avia- American rotarians. He thanks| tion. America for helping Germany after having defeated her and the audience | declared that he was a jolly good A dice game was raided and 16 fellow. Now, cannon fodder, get}men arrested at 16 State street, veady for the next war, but take good! Flushing, Queens, within 150 feet of care not to get hurt! Join the Y.| the Flushing police station, early M. ©. A. or the Knights of Colum-| yesterday, bus and go into training for the) _————— | business of selling, cigarettes to the. ALBANY, N. Y., March 25—The| “heroes.” ¥ | Westall bill, providing for a new! | form of government for Westchester BUY THE DAILY WORKER county, will be passed in the senate | AT THE NEWSSTANDS today, Grap Game Near Police. | ense ab sea. 4 a {of all locals, and the chairmen and | committee of all shops. | If attendance and enthusiasm mean |anything then this organization work will undoubtedly bear good results and | with the small shops falling in line | with the union, better conditions for | the tobacco workers may be hoped | for—F. J. Van Pra Soldiers Die at Sea of Flu. SAN FRANCISCO, March 25.— Fifty-five “flu” patients, from the aymy transport Chateau Thierry, were convalescing in Letterman Hospital here today following the arrival of the plague-ridden transport from New |toms and prohibition and upset the program Assistant Secretary An- drews has been developing for two years, OIL LOBBYISTS ORDERED MEXICO TREATY BROKEN Rebels May End Tax WASHINGTON, D. C., March 25, —Coolidge has ended the anti-smug- gling treaty with Mexico at the be- hest of the oil interests. This termination of the anti-smug- gling treaty “is the step demanded some weeks ago by the’ Doheny-Sin- clair-Mello# oil lobby in Washington. They declared that only this threat to the security of the Calles govern- ment would bring about a settlement of the oil law dispute. It was their guess that Calles, rather than face a revolt backed by the forces that run the Coolidgé-Mellon administration, would yield oh the oil law, and would permit a comercial negotiated, or dictated to him, which would in fact nullify the Mexican con- stitution as to the oil claims of Amer- ican companies, Weasel Words “Upon due consideration,” says Kellogg’s announcement, “the gov- ernment has concluded to terminate the treaty at the expiration of the year (Mar. 28), and has accordingly given the appropriate notice to the government of Mexico.” that unless Calles shall quickly agree to a treaty of commerce under which the American 6il companies will be granted what they want, the arms embargo may be lifted at any mio- ment, *e The White House spokesman, when asked the real meaning of this ac- tion, said he had no comment to make on the termination of “a small treaty with Mexico covering the subject of smuggling.” Oppose Intervention On the day before this blow was struck at the safety of the Mexican government, a petition was delivered to Coolidge and Kellogg, asking them not to lift the embargo on arm ship- ments into Mexico. That petition was | signed by 362 prominent citizens, in- cluding Dean Brown of Yale Divinity School, E. M, Borchard, professor of law at Yale; Dean Helen Taft Mann- ing of Bryn Mawr College; President Glenn Frank of the University of Wisconsin; Dr. Avelia Reinhardt, president of the American Ass’n. of University Women; Dr. John Latane, professor of American history at John Hopkins University; Mrs. Louis D, Brandeis; David Starr Jor- dan, president emeritus of Leland Stanford University; Wm. H. Johns- ton, former president of the Intl. Assn. of Machinists; Judge R. W. Bingham, Louisville; Edward A. Ross, professor of socidlogy, Wisconsin University, and many other educators and publicists. Louis F, Post and Edward Keating of Washington were signers, . Read The Daily Worker Every Day Baldwin Finds No Civil Liberty in England LONDON, March 25.—Roger Bald- win, director of the American Civil Liberties Union, departed for the Continent last night upon the expira- tion of the two weeks permitted him by, the British Home Office to stay in England, Declaring that as an American citi- zen he had no grounds for complaint in view of the record of the United States government for excluding aliens with “objectionable views,” Mr. Paldwin said, “I have observed the pledge and the empire still »stands. The two weeks’ look I have had at the state of liberty in England cer- pve is worth the price of admis- sion, Read The Daily Worker Every Day Large Auto Export to France. WASHINGTON, March 25.—More than 80 per cent. of the passenger automobiles imported into France in 1926 came from the United States, according to the report made to the Department of Commerce by Trade Commissioner H. H. Kelly, The foreign trade of France in pas- senger cars during 1926 as compared with 1925 on the weight basis showed an import decrease of 35 per York. Four soldiers died of the dis- evbper cont, | | cent. and an export increase of 27 OR Aw ER am treaty to be! All of which vague language means | CHINESE WORKERS: SCORED FOR BAN ON HOSTILE PRESS U.S. Consul’s Report Shows Class Bias WASHINGTON, March 25 (FP)— |Class fears of the radical labor ele- ment in thé Chinese revolution are reflected in the State Department's official summary of a report by Con- sul General Lockhart at Hankow, Mar, 22. “An American newspaper at Han- kow, the Hankow Herald, and also a British newspaper, the Central China | Post,” it says, “have been forced to suspend publication since Mar. 19 by the radieal labor union at that city. The labor union forced the sus- pension of these newspapers by com- | pelling Chinese employes to guit | work. There was no apparent chuse | for this action. No previous warning | had been received and no difficulty with the employes had been experi- | | enced. | This astonishment by Lockhart, at | common in China for years, is modi- \fied by a further statement: | “It is probable that labor leaders | were dissatisfied with the attitude of the two papers toward the labor }eause and that the leaders of the |radieal labor group had decided to close them down. This is reported as |the most drastic action yet taken by the radical labor group and has cre- |ated a sensation in Hankow.” | Favors Northerners | In the midst of a working-class rev- | olution, the anti-labor press owned by \foreigners has gone on undisturbed | |for four months, and Lockhart finds a “sensation” in the decision of the | labor unions of Hankow that they do not care to continue to print foreign- er’s attacks upon their national re- surrection and emancipation! He tacks the word “radical” to “labor” three times in a brief report. This is in sharp contrast to the tone of American reports from the northern }Chinese headquarters, where ex-band- its are never referred to in diplomatic dispatches as “ex-bandits” or “mili- | tarists” or “reactionaries.” Lockhart further reported that the |“loyal’ Chinese employes cf the Brit- jish Cigarette Co. offices in Hankow |had been “spirited away” until the offices were forced to close. Foreign | jemployes, he said, had been “threat- lehed, but have not been harmed.” eee! © | WASHINGTON, March 25 (FP)— China’s Nationalist | government aroused no enthusiasm tn the State Department when its forces captured Shanghai. Secretary Kellogg ° de- ‘clined to discuss the question of pos- | | sible American recognition of the wifiner. Disappointment was regis- tered on official countenances. Sym- pathy of Ameridan officialdom has been with the Northern militarists all along. It has made numercus protests to the Nationalist foreign minister, Eugene Chen, when American inter- ests were affected by the acts of the revolutionary forces. It has not re- ported any serious protests against Jooting and violence by the Northern | soldiers. « | Minister Sao-ke Alfred Sze, ac» \eredited to Washington by the Pe- ‘king Bovernment-that-was, is still acting as envoy for China. Read ‘The Daily Worker Every Day ‘Mississippi Supreme | Court To Rule On Jim Crow Case Of Chinese JACKSON, Miss.—Among the ap- peal records on file in the office of the clerk of the Mississippi supreme | court is one on the March term doc- | ket which presents the Chinese color line question for decision. | This is the case of W. F. Bond, state superintendent of education) against Joe Tig Fung a minor son of | Joe Tig Fung. The case is from the} cireuit court of Coahoma county and ins to the statutory » racial classification of the Chinese in rela- tion to admission to the public schools of the state. | The case grows out of the expulsion | of the Chinese youth from the Dublin Consolidated school in’ .Coahoma county which the record shows: he had been attending for some time. A short: time prior to the filing of his mandamus petition Joe was notified by the Dublin school trustees that he would not be permitted to attend that school further. Judge Alcorn sus- tained the petition and the school authorities took the appeal. Students Will Study Southern Conditions, Surveys of conditions under whieh | Mississippi women work are to be made by students of the State College for Women. Nearly 70 girls have enrolled for the first studies to be made in the university town, Colum- bus, Students seek first hand answers to the problems of 6000 women in Mississippi, working over 10 hours a/day at a medium salary of $8.60, says the New Student—national col- lege student publication. The sur- HL yet crop situation is men- as another re student 8 ol i Tee PE Pol | The Manager's Corner AN ACKNOWLEDGEMENT, During the week of March 21 to 26 the New York com- « ‘rades arranged a series of benefit performances of Pygmal- ion. Thirty odd ¢omrades took these tickets for sale. Due to the systematic efforts of these comrades we managed to sell out completely and to net several hundred dollars for The DAILY WORKER, \ This affair and the results obtained marks a new policy for The DAILY WORKER. It demonstrates.that it is pos- sible to secure valuable support painlessly.. It shows that we can easily exploit the very natural desire of our comrades to see a good play and at the same time reap some benefit for The DAILY WORKER. We are planning more of this. The next play which is being given for the benefit of The DAILY WORKER is Michael Gold’s /Fiesta,” the new Mex- ican revolutionary play, during the week of April 11 to April 16, We ask our comrades to keep these dates in mind tn pre- paring their future plans. We ask also that other cities copy the tactics so successfully followed in New York. There.are plenty of plays, amusements, movies, ete., which could be bought out cheaply in order to bring a profit to The DAILY WORKER. In connection with the Pygmalion performance we wish to acknowledge particularly the good work done by: Frances Gross, Celia Samarodin, William Hayden, Z. Sherron, Sam- uel Leibowitz, L. E. Katterfeld, Rose Rosen, Dora Luskiv, Rae Heimowitz, Dora Spiro, A.\ Rosenblatt, Milton Weich, L. Hirschman, W. Wolf, Efein Woleneth, M. Feingold, Minnie Zurav, Fannie Unterman, E. Purztay, Bertha Jagen- dorf, Grobois, Olga Garshin, May Helfgot, J. R. Brodsky, Caroline Drew, F. Cammer, I. Spivack, M. Kelmansky, Mollie Yaroshefsky, Rae Horowitz, Hermie D. Huiswoud, Robert Macklin, Anna Spector, Carrie Freemorgan, E. Eisman, Walter Reptio, Sidney Buck, Pauline Berzon, Gussie Turick, Rae Herbst, Lillian Michael. BRITISH WORKERS PROTEST AGAINST TROOPS IN CHINA Intervention Scored In Manifesto LONDON, March 25.—Workers thruout England are\ protesting against intervention in China-and de- manding the withdrawal of British troops and gunboats. A circular letter demanding that foreign powers keep their hands off China has been signed by representa- tives of all of the large trade unions. Pointing out that troops have been |sent to China at the instigation of | British bankers and that Chinese workers have been savagely exploited by foreign capitalists, the’ manifesto declares, “We call upon Britain to bring ba¢k the warships from China, or cease interfering with the efforts of the people of China to form any government they choose.” All Unions Protest ; The manifesto is signed by A.,E. Rae, Trades Union Educational League; J. S. Garden, Labor Council, N.S, W.; F. A. Armstrong, Clerks’ Inion, J. Howie, Coachmakers; A. Middleton, painters; J. Stewart, Elec- trical trades; D. Duncan, A. W. U. Central; J. Ryan, meat industry, N. Jefferey, meat workers; T. Fauling- ham, boilermakers; W. Bright, “brick- layers; D. Rees, miners; A. Sherwin, hotel, club and restaurant workers; J. Maclay, ironworkers; T. H®@Bell, printers; D. McLelland, blacksmiths. ——_—- ALBANY, N. Y., Marth 25.—With- out opposition, the sembly today passed the Westall bill, providing for a new charter form of governnient for Westchester county. COURT WON'T LET WM. J. BRENNAN TAKE HIS OFFICE Progressive Miner Cut Out; Isaacs Wins | SCRANTON, Pa., March 25.—Wil- liam J. Brennan, former president of the Scranton-Wilkes-Barre district union of the United Mine Workers, loses his election appeal against | Rinaldo Cappellini, whom he opposed }in the biennial campaign of 1925, Brennan ran on the John Brophy tick- et] last year for secretary treasurer. | “ Running Mate Wins. Brennan charged fraud. In turn- ing down his appeal, however, the referee appointed by the court, gave a decision in favor of Brennan's run- ning mate George Isaacs, who oppos- ed Cappellini’s vice president, Michael Kosik. Isaacs is declared the duly elected vice president of District 1, The ruling gives the remaining term of the job till August 1 next to him and orders the district union to pay his back salary from August 1, 1925, at the rate of $3,125 a year. In ad- dition, the entire costs of the appeal of Brennan, Isaacs and other asso- \ciates are assessed against the dis- trict treasury. Appeal may be made. Isaac's Chance Improves. The «decision has a bearing on the | polities of this second largest U. M. W. of A, district. Isaacs has already \filed for vice president in the 1927 elections against the administration candidate and the decision ‘that he was unfairly, defeated the last time is expected to aid his chances this year, Campbell is also a candidate for international board member this year. LECTURES and FORUMS’ SCOTT NEARING \ 4 Saturday afternoon lectures r at 2 P.M. THE PEOPLE'S INSTITUTE At Cooper Union (8 St. & Aster PI.) at 8 o’clock Admission Free Sunday A. Wakefield Slaten: re T day, Mar, 29—Dr. Robert Cush- ‘aan, Murphy! Bird Islands of Peru.” Friday, Apr, 1—Byerett r= rr Wii Is the M With Modern [dea in Modern Thou a Sadan 'T MANHATTAN TRA’ by Poon Ay, & 22d St, at 8 o'clock, Single Admission, 26 cents, Reduction for Course Tickets, - » Mar, 28—H Peterson: Moneabert and The World of iu- sion. adame Bovary” and “Don Quixote.” i Scien » Mar. 30—De, Bes ' Senin Metap sical Poets.-“Sohn Donne. The Poetry of Sense and Spirit.” x Thurs., Mayr Questions People opher to Answe' of Nature Be & Sat, Aprs 21 Psychological Geometries of BEuchdean Geometry of Dean atter echanism bI-K. G. soanid nae ane a Philos~ ‘an the Course | Read The Daily Worker Every Day d4th sr 1 $sunpay 5 P. M.—Pioneers of the Race DR. G. F. BECK A Great Chinese Sage-—LAO-TSU ADMISSION 25 CHNTS 7:15 P. M— “ EDMUND B. CHAFFEE “Business and the Chureh” ADMISSION FRED 8:30 P. M— _ SCOTT NEARING “Where Ie Civilization Going? BEGINNING THIS SATURDAY Post-War Europe MARCH 26-—~Germany and the Dawes Plan. APRIL ‘ance and the Franc, APRIL taly under Mussolini, APRIL 16-—-The Soviet Union, Workers School 108 East 14th Street. FED FOR THE SERIES $1.25, TOMORROW NIGHT WILLIAM F. DUNNE will speak on “FREE STATE vs. REPUBLIC IN IRELAND” * The editor of the Dail Speaks on the future of the ise revolution ‘i at the WORKERS SCHOOL FOR' 108 E. 14th St. 8 ment of the russels Brees Against Imperialis: anti-religious center of WN. Y, CHAMBER MUSIC HALL, CARNEGIE HALL — SUNDAY evening, MARCH 27th 8 o'clock ill speak wills) on “Religion, Not Theolog y, Is The} ' i |