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CY ’ ' } ¢ s “ ” Q { Who is Behind the Prosecution of the Militant} | Smith Appointee “Overlooks” {Needle Trades | = oleae Maing | $250,000 Bribe Defense News | . | Who Are Matthew Woll’s Fellow Conspirators? |), Ges SSI SNe | : ae | RESUME OF INSURANCE EXPOSE Loyal Support. 7] y *, _ Je Gay a s ‘ | The d They Are Leaders of the National Civic Fed The DAILY WORKER herewith continues its exposure of |, Tht, Sevotion, of the cloakmakers a 1 Pity i ¢ |and furriers to their unions are being eration! | the “Big Four” Insurance Trust. The “Big Four” is conyposed | expressed in a thousand differen: | ‘ ; : ‘ ‘ | | of the Metropolitan, Prudential, John Hancock and the Colonial| ways. During the past week, no less Woll is Acting President of the Labor Hating | Life Insurance Companies. In previous articles Mr. Harrison bs baa? woehers took advantage ie ; | 2 4 F A of sm jome celebrati Civie Federation. | has adduced evidence proving misrepresentation, fraud, suborna-|conections for the pe energie | tion and misuse of “mutual” funds, There are 40,000,000 Amer. their guests, These little ecolleetions There is a United Front of the Special American Federation | ican workers paying tribute to the “Big Four.” Names promi-|have totaled up to almost $1,000 al- of Labor Committee, headed by Vice President Woll, and the Na- | nent in government and financial circles have peppered the series | ready. ote oie tional Civic Federation, dominated by the most powerful capi-} rap sf | igre rece ap re ee ig Charles M. Pree of . ; talists in the United States. |the Bethlehem Steel Corp., Hai ‘iske, president of the Metro-| News From a Philadelphia House Matthew Woll is the connecting link in the conspiracy. With} politan Life and outstanding labor-baiter by virtue of his mem- ' Party. : him in the Civie Federation is: { bership in the National Civic Federation, Albert H. Wiggin, an Rann vies si one his j | ; , a " 1 Morgan J. O’Brien (former judge,C., of the firm of O’Brien, Board-| Joseph P. Day, New York's super-realtor and many others. | 128 So. Sth Strest, Philadel ia og | New York Court of Appeals), N. Y.|man, Parker, Fox, 120 Broadway. | | * * * 8, Grossman did not forget his peli | Director American Safe Deposit Co. | By CHARLES YALE HARRISON [an additional $400,000 just before |workers in jail and made a collection {| Director, American Trust Company. eo | } ARTICLE XVI. | “selling out to the policyholders”—/ which netted $21.00 for the defense. || Director, Duveen Brothers, Inc, | | The history of the rise of the “Big|and thus saving the company for! SE pecans i Trustee, Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank. | Four” reads like a series of exploits | “mutualization.” After the chips |House Parties at the United Workers | Director, Intertype Corporation. | | fi ‘ain Kidd, Start-| were all in and counted the original Co-operative. \ g | from the life of Capt » ig Director, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. ” jing with a few paltry dollars, these | investors made during the mutualiza-| Meyer Kelles had a party at his The Director, Provident Loan Society of New York. Illinois, too, has been having a taste of tornadoes, killing and corporations have anfassed colossal | tion year 6900 per ‘cent on the|home in the United Workers’ Co-op- | His son connected with same firm at 120 Broadway and making homeless. Here is the front end of what was a store at |sums of money until today that are | hazardous investment of $15,504. erative Building last Saturday night. President and director of Broadway Safe Deposit Co. | Cornland, Ill., in the heart of the afflicted region. multi-billion dollar institutions thriv- “Mutualized” Dividends. | He deciled to. make a collection and International News Ticker Co., Director. | - ing on the credulity and ignorance of| Im 1915 there was an enormous his guests contributed $14.00 to the Director International News Ticker Co. | thé 40,000,000 workers who pay trib- reve | aczense, The Director of Mérris Plan Co. of N. Y. | WARLORDS LAUNCH DRIVE HANKOW; U. S. HELPS ita to thORe lion Sag Nur tea oie oe. Charles Strongwater in the same | seoereal hele —_ Morseeas Cou | In this article we deal with the| The public was beginning to make | Pullding the Sogo tage had a ional ck Quotation elegraph Company. (Continued from Page One) boldened that it seeks to turn work- | two largest tentacles of this octopus;| enquiries about insurance generally te eectta ‘ie riley pag a j | |tion in China becomes less ob ers into slaves, by depriving them of|the Metropolitan and the Prudential) and about weckly payment insurance | giv9" dollar en a his Ga ete jand the superiority of either thejthe right to strike, by smashing | Life Insurance Company. These two | specifically. / | 956 D6 for tin dorccac lb ing | Nanking or Hankow government is unions, and seeking to set back the| companies insure about 85,000\000,/ If the directors voted themselves |" Another collection held in this build- | | established. |labor movement more than a century.| workers’ lives for over 10,000,000,000 | more than a 10 per cent dividend On! ing the same evening netted about | | Ward Sends Protest. “The French bourgeoisie shackles | (ten billion) dollars! . | the $2,000,000 capitalization (13,333 $30.00. eae FRAMED UP FOR PASSAIC MILL IS Protesting against the bombard- jits working class by military laws, | The Metropolitan commenced busi- per cent of the original investment | . * Pt | jment of Chinese by American war-|Germany by taking away the eights | ne oo pent gg taste hes a ie of vy eagoaael an investigation would The Certificate Drive. shi ‘iti | Ameri-|hour day. Italy Fascism strangles| mary” company. ’ + On| surely result, The H Roll of DE ATH OF St AB | FORCED T0 Qu IT Dees Bas Remap eeligaog the Varigtec (ROOM. GeuaoNeaKenEs Whils the | ts natal day it had no ine 80 —nbinalienticn Seeeme the the Gis. Huntiea ‘Thousand’ Dollar | | k by stray bullets, |“cultured democracy” of the United | that petty larceny form of "protec-| popular tune. The stockholders, of-| jung Roll Call Certificate is grow | eet ag Baey Fr. Ward, oe the | States goes plundering Central | tion known as “industrial! siiad ficers familiar with the game know-| rapidly but not hat cua tee : roms |Union Theological Seminary, has| America, South America and China, | ance, ne piaceap apnea toad! jing the trick of handling surpluses dreds of dollars are coming in daily, Murder Laid to Guards | Col Johnson Resigns | written to President Coolidge, asking | executes innocent men, and throttles | in $769.00 ‘Gaune ea roe bigger ar ioe Trang Ai als but the thousands are missing. The 5) a | . A je him to set some definite limit on the | workers, aeapin out’ to the policyholders ai Per) office staff is overworked receiving : In Cab Strike As Policy Fails |activities of American military forces! “But against the forces of counter-| a In print he ps /iipeece Pan share or $28,200,000, ie. for every | money, but if necessary, longer hours 3 | lin China. jTevolution rises the mighty army of | Ucemed inadequa spree “e050, pee parser herag invested they batt fs Fs arranged to accommodate the A deliberate frame-up on a murder| Col. Charles F. H. Johnson, head of| ‘The letter in part says: united labor, tremendous masses of | V°S” Pe once yt 4g Dib dad a \ ce! cate buyers. \ charge involving every striking mem- | the Botany Worsted Mill at Passaic,| “Your spokesman and your state|people awakened. The Soviet Union| ™#king a total of half a million dol-| This is the history of the two great} A new twist in the certificate situ-' ber of the Taxi Drivers’ Union in}N. J., bitter opponent of the workers department repeatedly inform the|is growing stronger; despite the trea- lars. At this stage and for some time | branches of the “Big Four.” Today |ation is that originated by many work- Weehawken and West New York, N.| during their long strike, ardent advo- |American people that our naval/son. of the bourgeoisie the Chinese | thereafter the company biked a purely the same clique of Wall Street finan-| ers, who are buying certificates in J., was arousing the protest yester-| cate of company unionism and enemy¢forces are in China only for the pro-| revolution is making strides forward, | Co™mercial <chterprise with nary a)ciers sit on top of the heap. They|honor of their children. These sre M day of prominent leaders in union| of trade unionism, has resigned from ‘tection of life and property. Yet in| The class-conscious European prole-| thought of ° public service” and “‘so- sold their stock but retained their|being framed and preserved for the labor and legal circles in Hudson | his post. the last two weeks New York papers |tariat is gaining strength. In Eng-| ‘i@l uplift.” It was out to do the/ grip on the directorates and policies | future as a memory of the great county. | Workers’ Enemy. |report two cases of American vessels |land the stronghold of piracy, of | Public good—and it did. ., {of the companies, |struggle now going on in the unions. Twenty strikers are held without) He was vice-president and a direc- |Teplyizg with heavy guns to Chinese | World oppression and colonial horror; P Larilgrd _ ere of yee! miepranehgran Bought Their Way. | This is something that should not pail in connection with the death of tor of the Botany Worsted Co. which sniping while convoying American | preparation for the world struggle | ism it had a most distinguished list} oo. poueht their way out of the|be overlooked by the mothers and George H. Ewans, a strike-breaker. | owns the mill, and he acted as.its|merchant vessels of the two great/are in progress.” of oe Naturally py Wall | Armstrong Investigating Committee fathers, who realize that the fathers Four other workers, former employes | representative during the year that British firms, Jardine-Mathison and Calls For Demonstration, pire Hg hone in at e go ¢|in 1905; they averted investigation of other children ate now spetding of the struck Mac Taxi Service, have| the mill’s workers were fighting for|Butterfield-Swire. The readers na- Closing wi thing,” but notably in this respec in 1915 by instituti “ » | their time in jail. MAKE THE ONE ; | 4 . | ig with an appeal for a world | we find the late Czar Nicholas II with | @ 5 by instituting “mutuality. : been arraigned on charges of con-| » living wage. turally think, and in one case the! semanbttation dgatnat the fase hat | tome cigs aamithrunernalgh apragney ogc Yt VOC Nah cushy days nothing of HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLAR spiracy to murder and released under | ;|newspaper headlines ignorantly in-| sete 8 perialist 'a capital investment of $16,000,000} © 5 FUND GROW. y te , | It was Col. Johnson that Gus Deak : war on China, the appeal déclares: has interest to the defrauded policyholders Sine ae $500 bail. Edward Levy, business i rating |form them, that these were American | * ‘“ reef - tng | (Sixteen million dollars) hob-nobbing | ;. ‘ ; . ¥ and his fellow-workers went in Jan- 4 cael | “Down with the war against China with Messrs, Fiske, Schwab and Hege- | 48 happened to palliate the evils of A Letter From: Meateeal, Conade agent of the Hudson County Bus and uary, 1926, with their demands for | Merc hant vessels, ES : and its imperialist instigators! Long’ ’ | weekly payment insurance, 4 d . . ci Drivers’ U 8 f th ; U. S. Protects British Ships ©} man. ow | 4061 Henry Julien, The taxi drivers ctruck five weeks | Sb0lition of the wage eut and for im. | “A ‘Inter dispatch from Shanghai ve, the Chinese revolution! Down |” Things have not changed much,| Wil 1928 be a turning point? Montreal, Canada. ago for recognition of the union and prared “Woeet oi a meg a states that American and British ad. | with Preparations for a new world however, since the palmy days of the ‘ grt Please find enclosed $10.00 for s P was Col. Johnson’s blunt refusal of |S‘ war! Down with the league of na- | i 39 Miners Killed in Month. ™ Pri a wage inerease. Three weeks ago/ these demands that recipitated the |™irals have reached an agreement |j:9.01 Long live the Soviet Union! Metropolitan. In those days the | Your very worthy cause. Friends, the Weehawken policé hegan fyrnish- tetris _ t esi a ich |for joint action in convoying mer-|y,4 oa by ore ay ace Soh American worker-insurer helped sup-| SCRANTON, Pe., (FP) April 27.\carry on, we are with you and will j ing protection to a hords of strike:| stacy bye Aa ek chant vessels of both nationalities, | chi beeen a te ¥ le against the | dort the late lamented Nicky and to-|—Thirty-nine anthracite miners were do our very best to help you to a suc- Eee breakers and gunmen imported from | ee ee A yet American commerce is but a| gone Te " on bi Peed y he is playing a similar role to the | killed last March, one to every 15,615 | cessful end. We have already sold a New York City. j Bolster Company Union. \small part of that covered by this| ‘olidarity of toilers ail May olf-effacing Albert H. Wiggin et. al.| tons mined. | several $10.00 books that was sent t Guarded By Gunmen. Ewans was killed under myster- ious circumstances, A plainclothes | policeman was riding in his cab “pro- | him while another auto, | tecting” filled with gunmen, followed his cab to furnish further protection. Despite these guards, Ewans was bady beaten up and died of his in- juries. Immediately thereafter the entire membership of the union was arrested and thrown into jail with- out possibility of release under charges of murder. Unionists declare Ewans was beaten up by his guards | in order to frame-up a case against the strikers. Congressman Charles F. X. O'Brien |. Within the past few weeks, a new j attempt to foster a company union has developed in the Botany Mill. ment office disclaims any knowledge of how it started. Officials of the | mill try to pretend it is a spontan-| | eous expression of the will of certain | workers. They do not explain how \these underpaid workers managed to |have the printing done for the call which was issued. They are ignor- j ant of the whole company union plan, so they state. After Strike Economy. With Col, Johnson, Carl Schlachter The women in charge of the employ-| now British merchant vessels on the Yangtse have been constantly sniped at by various Chinese soldiers, but }so far no foreigner has been killed. | Asks Evacuation of Hankow. “Because of the probable conse- quences we ask you to inform the American people whether such use of our forces comes within your original intent and within the definition of \their use which you have laid down las the controlling principle. We ask jyou to inform them by what consid- | }agreement. For at least three years | \first and review proletarian forces!” |Buy The Daily Wor' |Special May Day Issue Globerman Campaign Drives Los Angeles ‘eration of international policy or on) | what grounds of international law or} another vite-president and director,|custom we are justified in convoying | has also handed in his resignation. It| merchant ships of: our own or any| Times to Hysterics LOS ANGELES, Calif., April 27— ‘ To A Million Dollars. Five years later, in 1891 the sur- plus (reserve) was capitalized making the total investment an eyen million dollars, The next year, business still being abnormally good (the company was now doing weekly payment business for the past 10 years), another sur- plus distribution was declared jacking the capitalization up fo the two mill- ion dollar mark. a In 1880 the Metropolitan first un- dertook its first flier into the weekly payment life insurance field. Five years previous the Prudential had in- troduced the plan from England and found the sales easy to make, the te, | W. E. B. Declines to Aid Sacco and Vanzetti | (Continued from Page One) | ers’ education is the desire for a bet- | ter social order. Labor education aims | at the ultimate liberation of the work- ing masses. . .. Workers’ education is distinctly not to"be confused with the numerous existing forms of adult edu- cation. . . . It is not the purpose of workers’ education. to help young stu- dents rise from one class into a higher sical -*To Escape Hard Work Several delegates expressed the to Mr. Berger here, and we will do our utmost to sell the one which you sent to us, Please send receipt to the above address. Yours sincerely, W. ELBAUM. Workers Party Branch In Paterson Explains Fascist Riot on Sunday PATERSON, N. J. April 27.—The Paterson branch of the Workers (Communist) Party has passed a resolution about the Fascist riot there, as follows: impressed by the clear evidence of a|is understood there are to be other |other nationality 600 miles into the a 1 profits unusually high and the pub-| con cv Pl Wie Paterna iBranch. of ther | Redexp, has taken charge of the| changes made in the personnel of the |interior and through the zone of civil | The Los Angeles Times, anti-labor | ic, above all, extremely gullible: pr ot bata ina a bay Moan Workers (Communist) Party of | case for the union men. He declares| managerial staff, and a rule of econ-|war in China, We ask you whether! organ, in a leading article declares | his rights as attorney have been trampled upon by the police and that the strikers are being held illegally while the detectives indulge on a “fishing expedition.” . -. 1882 | Miners D. el. “The Workers (Communist) Party ae | was attributed to the strike. citizens at Hankow.” i faaed tooge be pene peppered by the 1883 PITTSBURGH Np a “27—More knows that this riot was provoked Brazilian Consul Fears) Col. Johnson is to remain as a mem-jj eee rs (Comin entet) Sans 1884 and more demands for the release of | by the fascists; that the fascists were ber of the board of the Botany C Communist International Appeals. | Labor Fakirs Fought. 1885 American Imperialism The United States should clearly such commerce in such conditions| should not proceed at its own risk. | “We submit to you that it would) be far cheaper for the United States, | oth in cash and in international con- | omy inaugurated. No doubt these changes result from the four million dollar deficit which the Botany Mill had last year, as contrasted with a | surplus of over three hundred thou- ‘sand the year before. The deficit |Sequences, to evacuate its sixty-eight MOSCOW, April 27—The Com- munist International has issued a May Day statement appealing to workers and oppreséd peoples thruout Solidated Mills, Inc. and has ‘elected one of its vice-president | This corporation is a holding compa: emphasize its unwillingness to inter-| fo. poth the Bot: ‘ fere not only with the political life | Garticla Ae Fiat a and of the Latin-American countries but | i also with their economic policies and/| the free development of their institus tions,” declared J. C. Muniz, acting, Brazilian Consul-General in WN York in a statement issued yeste: day. \ The role played by ihe State Ded partment in Latin-American business relations can “easily lead to misun- derstanding,” Senor Muniz said. Hungarian Fascists Riot in Budapest BUDAPEST, April 27-—Hungarian uthenberg Ashes Put In Kremlin Wall | (Continued from Page One) workers of all nations emigrate to eek freedom, but soon learn that they nust pass under the yoke of the ‘world’s most ruthless capitalist tyranny. “America is not only attacking the little Nicaraguan Republic, but is also preparing to attack all Latin | America, Our imperialists are seek. ing to destroy the workers’ movement |in Mexico and are taking part in the the world to fight against the im- perialist war on China. “The imperialists are gathering armies and navies to crush the Chin- ese revolution,” say the resolution. “After cruel oppression of Syria, Moroceo, Java, Sumatra, the com- bined forces of the industrial and fi- nancial oligarchies, are planning to blockade China, to turn their can- nons against Chinese cities and to support native reactionary hangmen like Chang Tso-Lin and traitogs like Chiang Kai Shek.” | Chinese War One | “The war in China is already on,” |the resolution continues, “Do not be- |lieve the professional betrayer who that “Labor Unions Are In Red Al- liance With Socialism” because the Central Labor Council and other dis- trict councils have endorsed the ean- didacy of Sam Globerman, independ- jent candidate for the Board of Edu- The Times fears that the unions are “becoming tools of the radicals” hecause of this act. Every conceivable effort has heen made to keep Globerman off the bal- lot; a Times reporter announced that he was not a citizen, and the officials of the Central Labor Council gladly took up the ery in the hope that they would not be forced to endorse a trade unionist running for office in the municipal elections, even to the extent of forming an alliance with the labor-hating Los Angeles Times. When the Times carried the story of “Red Alliance,” these same officials took up the ery of “red” and are seeking to attack Globerman on the grounds that he is a Communist, and there are rumors that 4n expulsion campaign will soon go into effect, Rank and File Protest. During its first “industrial” year the Metropolitan wrote and placed on its books 5,143 weekly payment policies, During the following five years its business in this department increased as follows. 1886 ese e eee eee ol 066,875 And so on up until 1925 we find that the company had 80,883,984 policies for over five billion dollars of insur- ance. This is exclusive of “ordinary” or annual payment insurance which is as great again. The Metropolitan’s assets in 1880 (the year it first introduced weekly payment insurance) were $1,664,122, In 1925 the assets were over $1,854,- 000,000, one billion, eight hundred and fifty-four million. The Prudential, The Prudential Life Insurance Company was organized in 1877— fifty years ago—and capitalized for $15,504! Small start, big ending. From 1877 until 1886, nine years, it did weekly payment business ex- clusively, Its original policies were issued in amounts which ran from remain in the hard-working group?” The conference delegates each bought a fifty cent button for the United Textile Workers strike at Woonsocket. ee Sacco and Vanzetti are coming in daily from local unions of the United Mine Workers of America of West- ern Pennsylvania that are now on strike. During the last week the following locals adopted resolutions demanding that the Governor of Massachusetts release the two labor leaders: Local 624 of Harwick, Pa.; Locals 1855 and 2881 of Avella, Pa.; local 1794, Cedar Grove, Pa. A number of fraternal societies of ® | Avella and vicinity also adopted Sacco and Vanzetti resolutions which were forwarded to Governor Fuller, * * © BUFFALO,--A Buffalo Seco and Vanzetti Committee, organized to pro- test and arouse public opinion against the execution of these two Massa- chusetts labor organizers, was or- | workers of America. America wishes to express its indig- ' nation at the treatment given by the police and by the courts of Paterson to the members of the anti-fascist league in the case of the riot which occurred in Paterson on Palm Sunday. armed to the teeth; that the police protected the fascists and attacked the anti-fascists; that in the trial of the arrested Italian workers they were grossly discriminated against bf the courts. “The Workers (Communist) Party knows what the fascists stand for. It knows that Mussolini destroyed the Italian trade unions; that he length- ened the working day of the Italian workers, and lowered the general standard of living for them. It feels that any spread of fascism in Amer- iea means worse conditions for the “The Workers (Communist) Party therefore expresses its sympathy with the aims of the anti-fascist league, and with this resolution shows its solidarity with the Italian workers tn America and in italy, who are figh' / ~jemmmae. |. -Osmresucannmen senses nigh ing against vicious - Fascist students stai a riot yes-| attack on Chinese workers and in the jeeens $o uh fens ee semetery Sm Even the bureaucracy feels the|$20 to a top of $197. During this Fae, eee shea oat event 80 pont nore tardy nt pel rh {new imperialist war which is being | "Twat uestnet the Chinese people is | "nk and file dissatisfaction with the | nine Ped ere hy had taken in, in Rises Pimeiniies various la- i to break up a mee under the | launched against the Soviets. present political policy of “reward ums ai interest $5,082,931; urech othe: De Fram chairmanship of Ptirie¢ Karl Hohen- | Carry On Fight. preparation for a gigantic new world na friends iad GPEHE hour one. Tae paid in’ dea: Bahn $1 981,111 bor, ch meee r organizations mpsey F es f loe, called for the purpose of form- | ing a pan-European Léague. The Fascist rowdies pelted speak- ers with rotten eggs until finally dis- persed by the police. “We ery: ‘Down with the American | imperialists! Long live the American Soviet Republic! Long live the civil | war of the American workers against, | their capitalists!” / war. Unheard of methods of provo- tion are being employed to goad the | Soviet Union into war. Imperialists Prepare War. “The imperialists are concluding war alliances. They have arranged mies.” An editorial in the Citizen, official labor organ, declares, “The thing to do is to make labor’s po- litical power felt. If the method fol- lowed at present is wrong, if the pol- (26.4 per cent of its premium in- come); had charged $2,661,004 for ex- penses (53 per cent of its premiums and 200 per cent of its death losses) ahd still managed to put away $1,- 040,816 in net assets with a member- and indi were present. The following officers were élected: chairman, James C. Campbell, of the Molders’ Union; vice-chairman, James Battistoni of the Socialist Party; Her- bert Benjamin, of the Workers Par- v for the transportation of troops with |i¢y followed is not satisfactory or ef- ty; William Shainack of the Amalga-| that he ‘or another encoun? Another Flyer Falls. | . * : ’ Re. | fective, it can be changed whenever | hip of 442,671 (1886). Some growth} mated Clothin ‘orkers and Martin SAN ANTONIO, Tex. April 27—|Special Drawings in the rat ls gal ets oe Be lite unions popstalie te eeatial Wed. | 40K « newly. born dahet othing \Vorkers and Martin ter with Gene Tunney. Dempsey is Cadet Grady Farley, flying student of Brooks Field here, was fatally in- jured when his airplane crd#hed near here today. The accident is believed to have occurred while thé aviator was attempting to land: in an aux- iliary field near the airdrome. ‘May Day y Daily Worker | Spring Here Now, Alright. VANCOUVER, B. C., April 27.— The North Pacific sea serpent season has officially opened today. Freder- rifie speed, land, sea, undersea, air and chemical war. Almost every- where they raised to power such no- torious working class foes as Poin- care, Hindenburg, Mussolini, Pilsud- ski and other die-hards, ies ‘and district councils vote so to do. It is with this background that the Trade Union Political Conference is meeting in n few days to work out a political poliey for labor. It is ex- Got the Cash, The stockholders of the Prudential were not wanting in dividends on their rash investment of $15,504. Not mentioning salaries paid to these stockholder-patriots, they began with L, Sperling of the Marine Transport Workers; financial secret » Frank- lin P. Brill of International Labor De- Ids, fense; treasurer, Eustace Reyno ttorney; secretary, Rev. Herman J. at Hahn, pastor of Salem Evangelical Chureh, ; ick Parnell, of Vancouver, reported Smash British Labor. pected to go on record for independ. | modest dividends of 96 per cent per| Plans wore adopted calling for a| return to the bi sy henner sever that he and his brother had seen twe| “In England the struggle of she}ent political action. annum in 1886; then gradually vote|large mass demonstration to bo held |tion dollars to thet Pd ie Buy The Daily Worker | sea serpents each 30 feet long in Howe Sound, off Gibsons Landing, 160 miles west of here. ‘Special May Day Issue masses should not be directed at the Chinese people but against die-hard government which has become so em: BUY THE DAILY WORKER AT THE NEWSSTANDS 4 themselyes less modest, but more ade-| Saturday afternoon, May 7th, the ex- quate dividends up to 1300 per cent/act time, the place and speakers will per annum. Tinally they slipped in|be announced later.