The Daily Worker Newspaper, April 12, 1927, Page 4

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Page Four THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1927 THE DAILY WORKER CcHICACO ELECTION PROVES FAILURE OF THEORY LABOR SHOULD “REWARD OR PUNISH” OLD PARTIES Published by tie 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): 68.00 per year $4.50 six months $6.00 per year $3.50 six months d ‘i ths ‘ r $2.60 three months $2.00 three months __istaged by the “celebrated” American | the Landis Award were members of ‘political parties. But its pages will | the Dever Campaign Committee and also record the monstrous joke of the | that Dever is controlled by big busi- present official political policy of the | ness. a8 trade union bureaucracy of reward- | Thompson Cut Wages WreblAm. 2. DUNNE {°'°""**sorresseersne ‘ing friends and punishing enemies! The other committee of trade un- ee ea Pars Business Manager translated into practice. When con-|ion officials endorsed Dever claiming ———~—= | sidering, however, the thousands of| he was a union man, a friend of Entered as second-class mail at the post-office at New York, N. ¥. unde? workers who ultimately become the| labor, that during his term of office the act of March 3, 1879. | victims of such jokes, the situation| no injunctions had been granted Phone, Orchard 1680 By ARNE SWABECK. {more alleys, and accomplished more The recent Chicago elections will| public improvement than any other undoubtedly go down in history as | mayor ever did. the closing chapter of one of the They charged that 27 members of Addrees all mail and make out checks to THE DAILY WORKER, 33 First Street, New 3. LOUIS ENGDAHL i k, N.Y. FS RUNES TENE erpARPeS yather stands out as a dismal trag-| against labor, and that business men =: Advertising rates on appliestiot| aay, ‘ |had confidence in his administration em ae Told On Each Other | and had, therefore, kept up the gen- Recriminations of which such in-| eral prosperity. ‘vectives as crooks, rats, skunks, ete.,} They charged that Bill Thompson were amongst the most moderate | had been placed on the unfair list and Stop the War on China The international murderbund is getting ready for war ON used added filth to the stinking at-| that he had helped to cut down the | China. 172 warships are patrolling the Chinese coast, anchored! mosphere of the whole campaign,| wages of thestreetear men, and so in the harbors and steaming up and down the rivers. These invectives hurled may all be | forth. There are 35,000 foreign troops in Shanghai alone andj true. At least the “sovereign” Amer- | Labor Votes Sold ts ant sot Pata wi ein e _ ican voter seems long ago to have; The monstrous joke of this elec- sp agati piel a us ley his will make a total of two sol accepted the possibility of it being | tion campaign should now be clear . fs i | so—witness the record turnout of | to all, The great mass of-labor be- According to Thomas Millard, now China correspondent for | almost 1,000,000 votes cast. | ing fooled by its leaders has come to the New York World, the imperialists are considering two plans _ The Workers Voted |occupy a miserable position. Their for the invasion of China: r This record vote clearly indicates | votes were Pa ay as Laat 1). T scupy the principal ocean een andl vivee noete aa the extensive degree of working class | by one set of labor leaders or another ( i sage y sith ns OOERE ee 4 m rvs “S| participation in elections. That this | to support their favorite candidates. far up the Yangtse as Changshi, above Hankow. This is in-j participation is not,at all on a class| The policy of supporting friends tended to place the principal river and industrial districts of basis or as a conscious section is|and punishing enemies has no con- China under foreign control. even more certain, The trade union| nection with working class issues. It 2 » Ore: pate. ae Reet oe ‘hi | movement had its full share of the|is not a class policy and is therefore (2) Complete occupation and “pacification” of China neces- general mud stinging. Class issues | not a labor policy. It is no longer, sitating an army of half a million to a million troops and war- were entirely obscured and after the| and for that matter never was, a dare over a ten or fifteen year period. net result of the weeks of feverish | question of friends of labor as a The DAILY WORKER for weeks has been warnings its read- peiaMagtin ae as the rank ¥ file | Seca Hee ue Eadie o pestenct apr ray “hi rag Hf rite ‘ e =, ‘ rade unionists are concerned, is leaders to be rewarded 0 » ers that war on China was the inevitable outcome of the series meraly-ctha bus’ of tying them ‘mare! mies to be punished, of events culminating in the coldblooded bombardment of and | solidly to the kite of corrupt capital-| It is simply a matter of personal slaughter of the civilian population of Nanking. istic politics. Their votes were de-| friendship between corrupt capitalist “Every deed has its logic” and the mobilization of troops livered to the bosses in the interest | politicians and their tools, the cor- and navies, the ceasel flood of lies and half-truths, the con- of the bosses. , | rupt labor leaders. On that basis the x Ms 5 cans A , Labor Split | vote of the working masses was so- tinual incitement against the Chinese liberation movement and The Chicago trade union leader- | licited and as long as that policy ex- the People’s government indulged in by the capitalist press, ship was divided into two camps,| ists these masses will remain the speaks just as loudly and accurately of imperialist intentions each claiming to faithfully carry out as a declaration of war. the American Federation of Labor) victims. sere : 4 . . | political policy. The Cook County | Great Britain is doing anything and everything possible to) Wane: Slatuers Yeagus: Teal We | A Corrupt Bargain In trade union life a similar cor- rupt practice has already set in. unite around her program of wholesale aggression the govern-| Oscar F. Nelson, vice-president of | Those labor londegs who have the | e capitalist poli- | ments of the United States, France, Italy and Japan. The Amer-| the Chicago Federation of Labor, en- | greatest pull with ’ ican state department, while publicly disclaiming any intention | dorsed “Big Bill” Thompson in the | ticians become the favorites for trade sai ‘ant, 7 :. m Sey | " oe name of the American Federation of | union positions who then have to re- aga action, continues to dispatch troops and gunboats to |), polity lturn the favor and deliver the votes ‘ina. - ; Another “imposing” array of of-|to their political friends at election It is further established that the recent raids on Soviet) ficials headed by Victor A. Olander, | time. Union embassies, consulates, railroad and shipping offices were | Hecratary .0f ue Hiecte gt The - ins Dvir hs cei ini a “i itic a . | eration 0: wabor, endorse Hiiam | comes part and parcel 0! plotted jointly by the American and British representatives. FE. Dever also in the name of the | capitalist political machines which in Great Britain, with the fascist bloc of Italy, Hungary, Rou-| american Federation of Labor policy.|the final analys: are controlled by mania and Poland organized against the Soviet Union under her | John Fitzpatrick, the President of the|the big business institutions. It is auspices, now tries with the formation of a new imperialist bloc Neem vag promi of Labor took the | clear that as Tong “ this policy re- i i ati W 4 a) aT | stum) ‘or lever. mains in practice ere are no pos- to crush the Chinese liberation movement and attack the Soviet P Dever With Landis eihbities of tie “Gels vision: leaden: Union from the east. The Cook County Wage Earners|ship. leading a militant struggle This is counter-revolution on a world scale. League claimed that Thompson had| against the bosses, against the big Even tho United States and Japan, because of their conflict always given the working people and | capitalist institutions for even the “an Rtas: ? . : |all elements of the city a square|everyday needs of the workers, not with Great Britain, do not formally take part in such a monstrous | deal. He had been constructive. He! to speak of freedom from the misery and bloody adventure, they will nevertheless send huge forces to) jaq widened more streets and paved! of wage slavery. China to “safeguard their national interests” and every ship and | —---—— st 5 eer as hse wil weet he sl sen he work. PARTY. WORKERS’ MEETING IN NEW YORK DISTRICT HERALDS SUCCESS OF RUTHENBERG DRIVE Wall Street government in such a situation will place the whole country on a war basis and the few liberties that survived Judging by the last party work- of the party namely: the anti-imper- ers’ meeting held on April 5th which ialist campaigns, particularly against the last war will disappear. The time to stop war is before it starts—now. Every trade union, every workers’ fraternal society, every was the largest in the history of this | war on China, the Sacco Vanzetti de- co-operative, every mass organization whose members have noth- distri¢t and the meeting of leading fense, the struggle against the right : * uA . A « * Party workers held here on Sunday!wing bureaucracy in the trade: ing in common with the financial and industrial potentates and afternoon, the Ruthenberg Drive in j unions, and also the campaign to or warlords, should demand and continue to demand the withdrawal |the New York district will be the | ganize the unorganized, and the pro of all armed forces from China, recognition of the Hankow gov-| greatest campaign to BUILD THE | tection of the foreign born. The a 7. W ZOV-) g Pp: ri 0 ernment and a public declaration by President Coolidge against PARTY ever undertaken by the |three principal campaigns being the war on China by any power or combination of powers. Party in its history. |first mentioned. Let Wall Street government know that the American masses | « hey setlewing were present at the} The section machinery is charged conference: a will not fight its battles and that they have nothing but SYM-\ and all members of the section ex- | every “party unit for the Ruthenberg pathy and admiration for the heroic struggle for freedom waged ecutives, all sub-section organizers, | Drive. by the Chinese workers and peasants in alliance with the masses | party editors, the secretaries of the) A general discussion followed the ofthe Soviet Union. , language bureaus and the members | report of Comrade Stachel in which ; ERS ela, rep a earn . of the district organization commit-|more than a dozen functionaries par- a i i a: tee consisting of representatives of prem Among them were Ger- ting esid all. the departments, work among|joy, Bimba, Schwartz, Dirba, Benja- Boos Pr ential Candidates women, work among Negroes, anti-;min, Gordon, Lifshitz, Moss Eva The hack writers of the reptile press, ever alert to grovel /|imperialist committee, DAILY |Stone and Wm. F. Dunne, editor of before the political agents of the master class are now engaged! WORKER, literature department, |The DAILY WORKER. in-a fierce contest in an effort to anticipate who the two major co-operative department, and the The DAILY WORKER. me * A + i | Young Workers’ League, and also the} Com, parties will choose for their presidential candidates. leasing ‘aud’ the “fadantrial deta Preheat bisa gr cong te -. Governor Al Smith, President Coolidge, William G. Me-| ments. fodie'S wanagedad polttak sles bet Ad6éo, United States Senator James A. Reed and ex-Governor | Reason For Drive. |the handicaps under which the edi- H | Frank O. Lowden of Illinois, are all objects of eulogiums by the) Comrade Jack Stachel, the district | torial department has to fanction, He pen valets of capitalism. The slightest knowledge of politics and organization secretary, reported for | pointed out that the party member- history eliminates all but one of the present outstanding candi- the district executive committee. \ship does not devote enough &tten- dates Comrade Stachel spoke on the loss | tion to the distribution of The DAILY on the democratic ticket impossible, for the simple reason that|Ruthenberg and the importance of in-| ature. He said that now with all the the stronghold of democracy is in the south, the heart of the tensifying every phase of the party | struggles that are taking place, par- protestant bible belt and the seat of the Ku Klux Klan movement. | activity in order to overcome this| ticularly the Sacco, Vanzetti defense, lt is questionable if he could carry a single southern state. Then ines the party has great opportunities of again, Tammany Hall, the political parent of Smith is for Wall Curie peaceable pete, Ses | woRER hn re Street and against the petty bourgeois elements in the democratic —— 2 sts: party in both the South and the Middle West. Democratic .can-| against him. Unless it abandons the democrat party to the petty didates, particularly Wilson, have been able to hoodwink the mid-| bourgeois as hopeless and concentrates on the republican party di¢-class elements, but Smith cannot hope to do it. His nomina-| Reed has no chance to secure the nomination. tion would sound the death-knell of that party and its leaders | There is another candidate, however, whom the capitalist outside of New York know it. \seribblers are not playing up at present. He is not an Easterner, Coolidge is automatically eliminated because of the fact that| but is one of the pampered favorites of Wall Street, also in bad repute with most of the republican party leaders. |ing houses in Chicago and his support by the Harvester trust, The defeat of his man, William Morgan Butler, in his own state make him a logical medium for uniting the two antagonistic of Massachusetts exploded the myth that the president has any! forces in the republican party. That man is Vice-President prestige anywhere. His game is up and the party leaders know’it. Dawes. His candidacy is being cleverly manipulated. In the McAdoo, the heir apparent of the Wilson dynasty, is fast first place there is no public clamor about it. Secondly he plainly fading from the picture and cannot secure the nomination. - |shows his disagreement with the Coolidge farm policy and pre- Lowden is branded as a political swindler and corruptionist/tends to look kindly upon the Lowden crusade among the farm- because of the exposure of his agents who were caught buying| ers, He will, at the proper moment, cash in on the Lowden senti- votes in Missouri in an effort to secure®for hith the 1920 presi-| dential nomination. ‘labor-hater, a strikebreaker who can be depended upon to carry Of the present candidates only Senator Reed of Missouri re- through savage campaigns of suppression against the workers mains a probability. But he will encounter almost insurmount-|at home and fight. relentlessly against any attempt of the op- able difficulties. He has incurred the undying enmity of the) pressed colonials to rise against dollar despotism. eastern section of the democratic party because of his long fight If capitalism's candidate is not Dawes, it will be someone against the Morgan policy on League of Nations and the World| like him, no matter on which ticket he runs, Court. He speaks for the middle class elements of the Middle Within the two old parties there is no hope for the workers. West and Wall Street will unquestionably, organize: its forces) Only a party of labor can speak for us. , ; greatest mud-slinging contests ever | the “citizens committee” to enforce | section organizers,| With the responsibility of mobilizing | Smith is a Roman Catholic, which makes his candidacy | to the party in the death of Comrade | WORKER and also other Party liter-| At the| his candidacy will be interpreted as seeking a third term. He is|same time his business connections with the LaSalle street bank-| ment among the well-to-do farmers. Thirdly he is a fascist, a! | Finnish Communist — Daily Celebrates \ Circus Opens at Madison On oth Birthday Square Garden !This mat CLARE EAMES Afternoon WORCESTER, Mass., April 11—!} Led by “Pahwah,” the white ele- | Preparations are being made by our | phant from Burma, the grand entry} oer eaten Daly BE a geo | will take place this afternoon at Mad- | | (Forwa: or celebration o @ ;ison Square Garden where ‘the Ring- | sixth anniversary on April 16 and 17. Wig Renan & Bailey pes ea | “Eteenpain” was founded six years | an engagement of some four weeks. | oa he vitae F ane ig Performances will be given twice | ers, w joined into the Work- daily except Sunday. a ea atl Party, eed they | Many nee acts have been added to | tos! eir former paper “Raivaaja”|the circus this year. The feature; | to reaction: socialists, i | ‘ c " fas! pratsentaed Pree caue casing jacts of last season have been reju-; a New Wook Cte aad a an sath venated and revamped and the entire | | a Atchiies eRe en ed in the | program rearranged with many new | oe a Pita anne: Wve pend ‘aps and spectacular ideas incorporated in- | the paper ‘was moved to Worcester, | “his yeas ve are with the Ring- | Mass., which is tral loca- | jj i | tion for the ‘elreulation of “Wteen-| Lok phe 2G) Beret be ce meee pelts’? Sida by! aide. With prea one are performers, there are 1,009) ete GE PRS. itassiani? has \rud animals, the largest menagerie! * strupmledtor ths libeetin peg ie in captivity, there are more than 900; In Pirandello’s comedy “Right You rte a a ene aiid he i ~ horses used with the circus, The herd! Are If You Think You Are,” which Hues & bauraeale Sand pociatiat O- elephants includes 42 and camels|opened at the Garrick Theatre last traitors and creating Communist in- Lice siateee th and Lillian Leitzel gee eee treat iareseh ipcant , May’ Wirth and Lillian Leitzel are areal se cok ep ey again headliners with the big show | | apa rane ee sebitee abe as and their acts will again draw the at- | | instigated”: ageinet-"Rteenhain” et tention of all in the vast Garden. Ber- |a certain Finnish preacher, Lillbacka, | Besson eee Bl ay | of Brooklyn, N. Y., behind which were |iione that juggles bears wire i all reactionary forces of Finnish white Teves ch ge Loe oF al she government, ku klux klan, ete. And feoparda: ‘And the Poca Piped and Ethel Intropidi, Ethel Morrison eighteen months ago, a Boston court = SOREEC.: | and Cy Plunkett. gave the decision, by which coe | | pain” is to pay $15,000 to this Fin- ( ts |. he L, iP i ri nish preacher. Since that case has | Broadway Briefs SAGHRER Gab Hen en Bee appealed, the Massachusetts State | : by’ jes | Appeal Court, which has not yet) .The Shuberts will present on April LT eras erate Ree bees | handed down a decision. All Finnish | 21st, in Great Neck, Margaret Lawr- | : |reactionary forces down to the s0-| ence in “Mixed Doubles,” a new com-| Thurston, the magician, wi i | cialist traitors have rejoiced in the | edy by Frank Stayton, with a cast in-/an engagement -at the Cathet Thee, |defeat “Eteenpain” suffered in this|cluding William ville, Marcella tre next Monday evening, instead of | court case. But the masses of Fin- Swanson, John Williams, Roy Coch- April 25 as previously announced nish workers and farmers—have|yane and Russell Morrison. The at- : | flocked stronger than ever to support | traction is due in New York Monday } our paper, so much so, that “Eteen- | April 25th. i | pain” is financially on a firmer basis | than before. | This is sufficient cause of celebra- tion. And Finnish comrades all over jeastern states are expected to gath- jer here to take part in the sixth| | anniversary. An excellent program || i |has been arranged. Main isieakers | | will be Wm. Marttila, business man-| jager of “Eteenpain” and H. Puro, |. "oneaire Guild ‘Acting. Company in | . | secretary of the Finnish Bureau and ftartiv |former editor of “Eteenpain.” | oo Feons ee a aio Opens THIS AFT. “'S'5*s'* special publication, containing GUILD THIGA., W. 62 Bt, vs. $18 RINGLING BROS. CIRCUS Nae eae Be nese RIE deca aaa and JM & BAILEY | brief history of “Eteenpain” and mera - {much valuable material about the RIGHT YOU ARE 2 x IW YOU THINK You Ann PANCAL, | significance of revolutionary news- | papers of workers, has been published. | Week Apr. 18—Mr. | Read The Daily Worker Every may | Cae RICK fats.’ Thurs, fond Sa | : | | THE SILVER CORD | | . Have Big May | Day Meeting Tie LADDER Sts enlist edy, adapted from a French farce by Gladys Unger, with music by Maurie |Rubens and lyrics by Clifford Grey, | will open in Washington next Mon- |day and come here a week later. The east includes Sydney Greenstreet, Helen Chandler and Gavin Muir entered the cast of “The Silver Cord,” ‘i ireplacing Margalo Gillmore and Another production planned by the | Earle Larimore, who take over im- Shuberts will have Mitzi as the star.' portant roles in “The Second Man,” “The Madcap,” a new musical com-/at the Guild. png 10,000 Marvels d Gimbel Bros, od Playhouse te * “Drydock: T3516 lve: . (except Mon.) Mat. Sat, mmedia dell’Arte | i Sa CRIME | mes Kennic & Chester Morris, | ! 1 ric 21M Civic Repertory ot $47..& 168 ‘aster Builde Now in its 6th. MONTH r waa Bikeae WALDORF, 50th St, Kast of |WALLACK’S West 42nd. Stree‘. Bway. Mats, WED. and SA‘. | ata aka te Mats. Tues, Wed. Thurs, and’ Sat. League are! 5 e. Mats. Wed. and Sat. : What Anne Brought Home arranging a huge celebration for May) JED HARRIS Presents | | A New Comedy Drama |1st. The celebration will be held at} ¢ baa! 2 TAMPDEN’S THE A t.Roe |the Labor Lyceum 35 Miller Street, | SPREAD EAGLE (HAMPDEN'S 0! Wee cee? Pittsburgh, Pa. by George §. Brooks & Walter B. Lister WALTER HA M PD E N The celebration is of great import-! at “i ‘AY nce to the workers in the Pittsburgh! EARL in CAPONSACCHI istrict as it can be recalled that last CARROLL Vanities A reg BROADWAY |May Day, J. Louis Engdahl, editor! War] Carroll Thea 72% Ave, & 50th St. VAST We 450% dns Wed Seb 230 | PITTSBURGH, Pa.—The Workers | |(Communist) Party and the Young} Workers (Communist) i of The DAILY WORKER, and A,| —-——- ‘Mats. Thurs. & Sat, 2 \Jakira, organizer of this district,|Sam HARRIS THEA. West 42nd ‘st. | | Twice Daily, 2:30 & 8:30 | Who were to speak at the May Day!| PRICES EVES, $1.10 TO $3.85. H. | meeting, were arrested and served | W HAT PRICE ¢ LO RY | BLY THE DAILY WORKER |five days in the Alleghany County Pe ‘ “ ° | Jail, when they attempted to speak | M2! (exe. Sat.) 50c-$1. Eves, 50c-$3.| AT THE NE SSTANDS after the police had closed the hall! ‘ Ff mi DS: ngagheniecr eee ‘Detroit May Day Has Party Members of Los yon Victory. s | The Communists won a victory at} Gitlow and Browder Angeles Plan Campaign that time over the police, and since) mae! iT i then the police have made a ruling| meats ae tage Rsatoneer snd 9 Boost D aily Worker that meetings can be held with | Preparations for the greatest May / seat . permit and the halls eatntk be Takes | Day celebration ever held in Detroit aie ANGELES April. 1 At @ It is also important from the point| 2°¢ well on the way. The largest | Seneral | saemberehis meeting. for all lof view of the coal miners’ strike Hall in the city has been secured, the | Lia of the Party and Young | which is now going on in the coal! ab asia io with a seating capaci- | Aspire ge Re a givin | mii i y " istrict, (ty of over 5000, . 7 mining region of Pittsburg district. ais aati thas been: becumed aa the sais een and fone - strike against the 4 barons who |PYincipal speaker. Earl Browder who | . ie party were out, have itarted an operands ehd’ ive j Will have just: arrived from ‘a six | Ehe drive for Tho, DALY WORK. reduction campaign. The speakers at, Month stay in Canton, Hankow and ER was taken up in detail, with many \the meeting will he Alex Bittelman ther revolutionary centers of China | hon-Party members of The DAILY land W. J. White, members of the | Will deal with the latest revolutionary WORKER BUILDERS CLUB pres- |Central Executive Committee of the | developments of China. ent and participating in the arrange- Workers (Communist) Party, There| . The Arena Gardens besides being ments. The concert to be given on {will also be Young Workers’ League ‘the largest hall in Detroit is also the Saturday, April 16th, for the benefit, | Pioneer and Jewish speakers, Frank Most beautifully decorated and parti-' of The DAILY WORKER, is expect |Borich will speak in South Slav. cularly suitable for a huge Hands Off ¢d to be a great success and net sew Letters of invitation are being sent | China-May Day celebration. eval hundred dollars, A lout to organizations asking them to| + first class program is being ar- ; Plans for the opening of a member- {participate in the meeting, | sateen that will fit in well with the Ship drive were also presented at SARIN, great demonstration. sc meeting, in connection with the C ist, A ist Di ‘ Over 4000 tickets are in circulation | Party activity in the election cam- pee lecanaped Pent ate and unprecedented sales are report-|Paign, to be carried out jointly with | CLEVELAND,-~An interesting de- ‘ , ‘i ing | th ’. |bate will be held in Cleveland on Ph Ala tg Lilt ci egnahe dP i oe: Wanieerety Lae | About 45,000 coal miners are out on! tee that is agitating the people} ) his of the entire world, “Has the Russian | | r * op orrseg egrglha:oloc | cori Nbthes‘on ‘Wiens’ | Patronize Our Advertizers, | I. Amter, district secretary of the A " | Piao ag RAR | Workers (Communist) Party, will en- Work in Brooklyn | Flora Anna Skin Ointment A general meeting of all women!| fur PIMPLOS, BLACKBADS, |deavor to prove that it has been a |full success, while Sh, Marcus, anar- chist writer and lecturer, will con-| comrades of Section VI, Workers Par- | LANGE PoRws tend that is has not. ‘ty, will take plove Tuesday, April ae reokles, Yash, itching skin, eexema or stubborn ‘skin trouble’ of any kind will be banished by use of FLORA AN SKIN OINTMENT, $1.60, Sold on money back guar. antee, ¥ NEW ‘WAY LABORATORIES 276 Went 45rd St. New Vork City GLE Bait “Workin Nhs fs Mention The DAILY WORKER on ur order, IS i Tho debate will be held at the In-|8 p.m. 29 Graham Ave., Brooklyn. surance Center Building, Assembly | All women comrades of Brooklyn | Room A, 1783 E. 11th St. on Tues-| and Brownsville must attend this very | jday, April 26, at 8 p.m. Admission important meeting. Comrade Mar-| 15 cents, The debate is being held | garet Cowl will give a report on the | junder the auspices of the Workers Communist work among the women, Educational League. » |workers in District IT. | RUY THE DAILY WORKER | AT THE NEWSSTANDS BUY THE DAILY WORKER AT THE NEWSSTANDS

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