The Daily Worker Newspaper, June 23, 1927, Page 2

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Page Two WARDEN SAYS HE WILL STARVE KANSAS CONVICTS Hunger Revolt Treated With Still More Hunger LANSING. Kansas, June 22.—-“Let them .”" is the callous sentence n convicts driven to revolt in Kan prison mine. “We had just such a mutiny here last year,” says Warden Hudspeth, “and the convicts threatened to eat the mules in the mine if they did not get better food.” Warden Hudspeth is used to having his shot-gun-guarded miners use the last desperate measure of a cornered man and barricade themselves in their underground werkhouse. Will Kill Them. The men can’t get out, and if they don't surrender they can die, and that’s all he cares about it. He states flatly that conditions will not be made any better, indeed, the prisoners will he lucky if they are not made wo The only reason he does not cut off the water is because some guards are held below, prisoners of the prisoners. Lights are cut off. Kansas’ prigon is like all others, a nest of petty graft, and a place in which the food becomes unbearable in the summer. The present hunger re- volution among its inmates came about when some of the men asked that Kansas’ new law leg: ng cig- arettes be applied to prisoners, as it is in many other state prisons. Tired of Bad Food. They thot the use of a little cheap tobacco would break the deadly mo- notony of contracted prison fare—but the warden thot that the full penalty of puritanism, however rejected by the | present generation in Kansas would make the convicts better, or kill them, one or the other; he refused the cigar- ettes, and the “mutiny,” scarcely more than a hunger strike, took place at once, Simultaneously with the outbreak of desperation below, and the war- | den’s calm decision to starve all his $28 miners into submission, extreme measures of repression were under- | taken against all sympathizers above ground; A fanciful “plot” to set fire THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY,,JUNE 23, 1927 ! Mayor Walker Wins Fascist Honor; Told It Is for “Achievements” the fascisti have made another hits, and the art of vapid speech- making more expertly t other municipal chief in States is the latest recruit. He has just been made a “Com- mendatore of the Order of Saints Maurice and La the decora- tion being made bj; der of Mus- solini and the figurehead king of Italy, Victor Emanuel. The Italian ambassador came all the wey from Washington to tie a green ribbon about the neck of the mayor. On the ribbon was suspended the insignia of the or- der, a golden crown with a blue and white cross. In making the presentation the ambassador told Walker that “it was a special re- cognition of outstanding achieye- ment.” Other New Yorkers who have won fascist honors are Elbert H. Gary, Otto Kahn, and Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Co- lumbia University. Deadlock Still Grips 3 Power Conference (Continued from Page One) than absolute equality between the British and American navies, ship for ship and class for class, such a treaty is foredoomed to death from non- ratification by the United States Sen- ate. A canvas of senatorial opinion made this certain today. Without re- gard for party considerations, Demo- crats and Republicans alike declared that the basic principle of Anglo- Big | RALLY TO THE DEFENSE OF THE SOVIET UNION! URGES THE WORKERS (COMMUNIST) PARTY (Continued from Page One) nese waters, against the will of the| | Chinese people, the war is actually on,| out the land, the masses of the Amér- jean people have begun to register their protest in Hands Off China meet- without an official declaration of war.|/ings, and in Anti-War meetings. convert. In Europe, the attack against the| Spontaneous Anti-War Committees Mayor “Jimmy” Walker who |) Soviet Union is being openly prepared.| and Hands Off China Committees knows cabarets, ene latest song. ||Only one thing can stop the world|have sprung up. in every industrial ‘from being plunged into this new and| and rural cepter of the country. more terrible blood-bath before the; The workers and farmers of the | summer is over, and that is—the unit-| United States must rally behind these ed action of the workers and farmers | movements; must broaden them and WOOD MESSES JOB MAY BE FIRED AS PHILIPPINE CZAR Leader of Ohio dang! Slated as Successor rf ! Sinclair Has Hard Time Getting Himself Jailed | For Selling His Novel | BOSTON, June 22.—The local courts have again evaded an at- STRIKE OF 1,400 CITY ENGINEERS |of our country and of the entire world. In all our land there is not one worker or one farmer who has any- | thing to gain by this new war. In the whole mass of our people, there is not }one who has any quarrel with the peo- ple of the Soviet Union or with the |people of China. Only a handful of | Wall Street bankers and their mili- |tarist tools are interested in driving our country into such a war. Thru- Junite them into a mighty protest, Governor General Leonard Wood is | movement which says so that our gov- Slated to lose his job. | ernment must hear and heed: The usual bunk about “demands of | “We demand the withdrawal of our health” is being handed out and in- battleships and marines from China!) judiciously swallowed by newspaper “We demand the recognition of the | teporters, But ever since Colonel Car- | Peoples’ National Government of mi Thompson, Ohio buccanneer, “in- Hankow! sas =e the Philippines for Har- “We demand the recognition of the/ ev Firestone, rmbher magnate, and tempt to make a test case of their right to act as judges of current literature. Judge Creed in the municipal court yesterday refused to grant a warrant for the arrest of Upton Sinclair to Lieut, David Hines. of the police department, who had bought a copy of “Oil!” which has been banned because of alleged “immoral passages.” The judge explained his refusal to issue the warrant by stating that the case of John Gritz, the book clerk who was arrested for Will Protest Tonight at | Labor Temple Subway engineers, members of the | Union of Technical Men, have called a | protest mass meeting tonight at La- | bor Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave. Their demands for a hearing con- sistently ignored by John H. Delaney, chairman of the city’s board of trans- | portation, tonight’s meeting may re- sult in a decision to lay plans for a strike. Soviet Union! “We want no war!” FIND ‘SACCO GAP" 1S PROSECUTION FAKED EVIDENCE Link in Frame-up Chain Inserted as Afterthot BOSTON, June 22.—(FP).—The “Sacco cap” that was supposed to be jone of the crowning pieces of evi- dence against the Italian radical has | been weighed and found wanting by| |George Branting, son of the former socialist premier of Sweden, who | came to America for the sole purpose | of studying the famous international | |labor case. | Thayer and Cap Governor Smith Held Responsible for Arrests (Continued from Page One) | Rosenfeld being released when brot to the 30th Street Police Station. { Workers Are Angry. | When officials of the Joint Board | heard of this, they complained to the | police, who, after expressing a great deal of doubt, arrested Rosenfeld on a charge of simple assault. When many of the strikers were informed of this amazing procedure they expressed their opinion about how differently the police act towards the left wing. The left wing workers are usually charged with felonious as- sault, while in this case, they first left the foreman go, and then held him on a minor charge. A. Kramer, another striker was at- tacked yesterday morning on 25th St. between Sixth Ave. and Broadw: He managed to have his assailant, Louis Klien arrested, When brot to This cap was a star exhibit at the|the 30th Street Police Station ne was American naval parity had been de-|+.:31 At the Brockton police station] identified by Sam Wienick as one of finitely fixed at the Washington arms conference in 1921, and that it will after Sacco’s arrest he was compelled | the gangsters who attacked him Mon- to pose in the cap for the assistance|day morning on Sixth Ave., between of identifying witnesses. The cap was| 22nd and 23rd Sts. At that time he |said to have been picked up at the/had his head smashed, six stitches not be sacrificed at Geneva. The unity of senatorial opinion on this point assures support for the state department in the rejection of the British and Japanese programs at Geneva. The British program: of “tinkering” with the Washington treaty and lowering the tonnage and armament on cruisers would relegate the American navy to a position of jmurder scene. Judge Thayer in his/ being necessary to sew his wound. to the twine factory was “discovered” decided inferiority, while the Japan- by guards and dozens of men beaten |ese proposal of a naval building holi-| |1924 opinion, denying the first mo-| |tions for a new trial, cited the cap} as strong circumstantial evidence of | Sacco’s guilt. But Branting has probed into the facts. He finds, first: that the cap was not discovered till 24 hours after | the crime. And since from two to three thousand workers from the| International Furnishes Bail. Charged with felonious assault, Klien was released on $2,500 bail fur- nished by the International officials, Samuel Markowich, right wing at- torney represented him in court. Fifty-one strikers who were arres- Cal Coolidge, and criticized Wood in his report to the president, the re-| moval of Wood has been certain. Ruling eleven million people in the | faee of their determined opposition is a difficult job and it takes a shrewdet volitirian than Leonard Wood to do it. His tactics have only stirred the | Filipinos to a more insistent demand |for immediate independence, and he has failed miserably in carrying out lthe tactics of American imperialism in the islands. His attempts to divide jthe Moros and the Filipinos and rule, {have only crystallized the sentiment for indepenglence. Moros Queer Wood. The series of revolts which have | recently taken place among the| Moros have clearly indicated ' that | American imperialism must fire Gov- ernor General Wood and get a new | Philippines agent. The rich rubber lands of the Philip- pines (located for the most part on the island of Mindanao) are inhabited | by the Moros. And the United States wishes to retain them at any cost. (The Bacon bill, introduced in the} House of Representatives would have | jgiven the northern islands their in- | |dependence and maintained a brutal | semi-feudal rule over the southern} yubber-producing islands). Wood's failure to successfully carry out the job assigned to him probably means that Colonel Carmi Thompson will become governor-general of the islands in the near future. Thompson is a member of the Ohio gang. | Reports from the middle west state that Wood is on his way to the Black | Hills to “confer” with President Cool- selling the book, has not yet been disposed of. PLUMBER HELPERS GAIN MORE WAGES: SINCE STRIKING Backed Plumbers’ Fight in Brooklyn By ART SHIELDS, Federated Press. Plumbers’ helpers did not lose by taking a chance and striking in sol- idarity with the journeymen in the Brooklyn walkout lately ended. The first pay envelopes since the men) went back show wage increases of 50 cents to $2 a day. The helpers’ gains are not guaran- | teed by any agreement. The new American Association of Plumbers’ Helpers which called the strike has) not yet won recognition, But a large! percent: Would Paralyze Construction. A walkout would completely tie up all construétion work on the Fighth Ave.-St, Nicholas Ave.-Washington Heights subway line. $32 per week is the average pay of the 1,400 engineers belonging to the union, An annual minimum sal- ary of $2,160 is demanded by the men. Thess highly-skilled technicians are the only group deprived of sick leave, all other municipal departments being entitled up to one month’s absence. Discrimination is also charged in the matter of working hours during the months of July.and August, when a six-hour day prevails among other city departments. Extra Work Minus Pay. Several hundred field men have been working an extra hour daily for over a year without additional pay, according to the union officials. They demand either a return to the reg- ular working schedule or pay for the extra time. John H. Coughlin, Secretary of the Central Trades and Labor Council and Hugh Frayne e been asked to at- tend tonight’s meeting. An invitation has also been extended to Delaney and e of the Brooklyn bosses ; have cficeded the compromise scale other members of the transportation | of $6 a day finally set by the union, and others paying $4.50, $5.00 and $5.50 a day. board to appear and defend their pres- ent tactics. ” Were Badly Underpaid. The old scale was only $4,00 a day, a ridiculous wage, less than half that paid to steamfitters’ helpers who do work requiring, about the same| amount of effort and skill, But the old $4.00 scale is pretty ded, even in Manhattan where the strike did | idee. ted last Thursday, were fined $1: each | when brot before Magistrate Rosen- | up with clubs, one shot, and others confined to their cells. The most out-| spoken of those known to have com- ned about the food are in soli-| dark cells, eanwhile the newspapers are praising the hard-boiled governor and discussing the “unreasonableness” the convicts in expecting cigarettes as | tho that were their only grievance. Protest Cal’s Unfair, Unsportsmanlike Ways Of Snagging the Trout RAPID CITY, S. D., June 22.—In behalf of the Isaac Walton League of America, Edward G. Taylor of Chicago today lodged a protest at the executive offices here against Presi- dent Coolidge’s use of barbed hooks and worms as trout bait. Taylor called “slaughter” and urged “in the name of good sportsmanship” that the president use barbless hooks so that those fish which he conld not cat could be thrown back into the stream. “The only exeuse for a man to u ‘worms would be if he was starving,” Taylor said. SACCO and VANZETTI SHALL NOT DIE! THE LEFT WING IN THE GARMENT UNIONS By Margaret Larkin. A new pamphlet of interest to every militapt in or out of the trade unions. Giving the history of the valiant struggle in the needle trades-—briefly and clearly. Issued by the Joint Board of the Cloak, Skirt, Dress and Reefer Makers’ Unions. 10 CENTS. On American Labor read also: THH THREAT TO THE LABOR VOM NT iy Wm, F. Dunne 8.15 LAGOR LIBUTENANTS OF AMERICAN IMPERIALISM re By Jay Lovestone $10 EEL WING UNIONISM iy David J. Beposs THR WOMAN WORKER AND at Fin ge UNIONS Theresa Wolfson 81.78 iis or JONES 51.50 The Daily Worker Pub. Co. 33 First Street New York day would leave the United States in| such fishing | | } { i the world insofar as cruisers are con- cerned. Turkish President to of} Visit Constantinople, Boycotted Since 1919 CONSTANTINOPLE, 22 June }of Kemal Pasha, President of the | Turkish Republic; to the old capital of the Sultans and the Caliphs. This which is a hot-bed of anti-Republican intrigue, after an absence of eight years, is regarded as a possible chal- lenge to the reactionary elements in the coming Parliamentary elections. It is timed to take place while the | foreign Embassies are out of the city for the summer season, and is to be ‘of a strictly unofficial character. Re- publican Turkey has not forgiven the | allies for their attempt to throttle} the young Republic at birth, and the| fact that they still sabotage Angora, the capital of the Republic, retaining | their Embassies in the old capital, is} keenly resented. It is notable that Soviet Russia is the only foreign power which has es- extended its hearty friendship to the Republic. | Nothing For Flood Victims. | WASHINGTON, June 22,—The | government’s surplus at the end of the fiseal year on June 30—will be | higher than the previous estimates, |the treasury announced today. Tax jeollections for the year will total $2,246,419,000, about $264,830,000 above last year. Collections for this 000. But Coolidge refuses to call a session of congress for flood relief. | Rule Scott Had Unfair Trial. when the state supreme court today granted his plea for a reversal of the verdict of the Cook County criminal court which held him sane and sen- tenced him to hang for the slaying of Joseph Maurer, Chicago drug clerk. The reversal states that he did not have a fair trial. Imaginative Cook About Out. third position among the navies ¢ | visit of Kemal to Constantinople, | tablished its Embassy at Angora, and | | approximately $681,000,000, slightly | month will reach $495,760,000, ex- | ceeding June of last year by $52,400,- | | SPRINGFIELD, IL, June 22. —| Russell Scott again dodged the noose | Slater & Morrill and the Rice &| Hutchins shoe factories a ‘few yards away had been beating up and down) the public roadway on which the gar- ment was supposed to have lain the case becomes peculiar. It is difficult to believe the cap could possibly have | |rested there 24 hours without being ‘picked up. Official Planted It? | The “finder” of the cap was an) | robbed and whose executives were in- |terested in getting a speedy convic- | |tion. After another 24 hours the com- | pany turned the cap over to a Brain-| ltree policeman, whose name the de- | |fense now has. | The “Sacco cap” was either a fraud | jor a mistake, in the opinion of Tim- jothy Collins, Bosten Globe district re- |porter, who arrived on the scene a {half hour after the murder. Brant- ling has Collins’ story. Collins got the | police facts at once. There was not a word about the cap the first day,| nor the next and not till several weeks later. The “Sacco cap” appears to have been an after thought of the prosecu- tion—a link in the frame-up chain inserted at a late day. Urges “Literary Clearing House” Oliver M. Saylor, author of “The | Theater and the Cinema in Soviet | Russia,” in a letter to Henry S. Can- | by, critic and writer, has suggested | the formation of a “clearing house of literary information.” | Saylor pointed out that this is neces- bluth in Jefferson Market Court ie eons ig ad es ; , June wo day | {pease will be held here July 3 and 4 for the benefit of the workers |press. It is being held jointly by 17 labor organizations. The program will include nationally known speak- ers, sports and games arranged by |the Labor~Sports Alliance. Also dancing, food and refreshments. The special feature will be a soccer game between a local and a Mansville, Ohio team. The picnic will be held at the Ro- chester Picnic Park. Admission 26 | cents, Needle Trade Defense All Workers Will Be There. All workers sympathizing with the Left Wing and Progressive Move-| ment in the trade unions should at- terday morning. Give Money to Union. Four members of the United Coun- cil of Workingclass Housewives who were arrested on the picket line last Monday were released yesterday. | They were given a choice of two days in jail or a fine of $5. They chose the latter. On their release they do- nated $5 each to the strike fund of the union. Speculation is rife here as to the/ official of the Slater & Morrell shoe} They are Mrs. Bombkin, mother of political import of the expected visit| factory, whose payroll had been) three children; Mrs. Tabochnick, mother of one child; Mrs. Sarah Cohen, mother of two children and Mrs. Clara Kushner, mother of two children. Shop Chairmen Meet Tonight. An important meeting of all shop chairmen will be held tonight at 5 p. m. in Stuyvesant Casino, 2nd Ave. near 9th St. The General Picket Committee and |the Women’s Picket Committee will meet in Stuyvesant Casino at 2 p. m | today. Greek Meeting Tomorrow. | A report of the Washi:@rton “con- | vention” will be given to the Greek fur workers at Bryant Hall, Sixth Ave. near 42nd St. tomorrow evening, The speakers will be John Pappanius and George Piredicudas, Greek dele- ;gates to Washington and Ben Gold, |manager of the New York Joint | Board. | Sugar Co, Must Pay A jyry in supreme court, Long Is- land City, today awarded David |sary in view of the fact that “under existing conditions less important books frequently are given interna- tional currency to the neglect of more important works.” | Dies After Accident. | After a sixteen-hour battle for his life, Harry Hendricks, thirty-six, yes- | terday captain of lighter No. 57 ef the | Booker Company, died in St. Vincent’s | Hospital, S. I. He lost his leg last Maloney, 30, of 67 East Twenty-sev- \enth street, Manhattan, $12,000 in his |suit against the Federal Sugar Refin- |ing Company of Yonkers. Three years ago, Maloney, an elec- trical engineer, then living in Long Island City, was employed by the Westinghouse Electric Company and working in the sugar company’s plant when he touched a live cable, suffer- |ing a shock which has left perman- ent effect, he asserts. The exposed night when his foot caught in a haw- ser as the lighter docked at Mariners’ Harbor, 8. 1. | | Maine Labor Condemns Prison | LEWISTON, Me., June 22, (FP).— The Maine State Prison was scored |at the convention of the Maine Fed- eration of Labor here for failing to ebey the law requiring the labelling | of convict goods that compete with | free labor. The federation is demand- | cable, he said, should have been in- |sulated. | Maloney sued for $50,000. The case was tried before Justice Mitchell May. Baker Bosses Enjoined From Using Union Label While Workers Strike The Messing Bakery Co. was yes- “|tend the grand concert which will) FORT WORTH, Tex. June 22.) Formal appeal action rig the case of | ing that Governor Brewster have the Dr. Frederick A. Cook, recently de-| Prison labor commission enforce the | nied probation in the U. S. Circuit |/aw. Joseph B. Eaton of Portland is Court at New Orleans, will be taken | President and Howard C. Woodside of before the United States Supreme | the same city is secretary and legis- | terday in Brooklyn supreme court en- joiwed from further use of the union label on the products. | A strike in the shop of this firm and also in the Pechter Baking Co. |has been on now for several weeks, Court within a few days, H. C. Wade, day. Dr. Cook, “Discoverer of the North Pole,” is serving a 14-year term in Leavenworth Federal Prison in con- nection with oil promotion schemes, He had obtained a “probationary pa- role” from Federal Judge Thomas C. Wilson here and the government won an appeal to the Circuit Court. Cook’s attorney, announced here to- | lative agent of the federation. | niall | Still Looking for Nungesser. CHICOUTIMI, Que., June 22.—The search for Captains Nungesser and Coli, ill-fated French trans-Atlantic aviators, took a new twist today with the scattering of handbills by an air- plane over thé northern woods con- taining tructions in French to the fliers to \pffect their rescue. | but the label has been used without | interruption, The union has announced that it will now attempt to put a stop to Pechter’s use of their label in view of the strike 'SACCO and VANZETTI SHALL NOT DIE! 20. take place on July 16th in the Coney Island Stadium. This affair will not only be the finest musical event of the season where prominent artists will appear, but it will also be a monster demon- stration of New York Workers against the betrayal of the Sigman- Forward-McGrady clique. The 25,- 000 workers who will pack the Sta- dium, will be the answer to the united front of the bosses, Sigmans, Mc- Gradys, gangsters and police to break the strike of the furriers. The proceeds from the tickets goes for the striking furri So buy your ticket immediately and thereby help win the strike. : . ° . Here Is The Answer. We have previously announced in the press that the Independent Workmen’s Circle Branch of Trenton arranged a picnic for the Defense in answer to provocations of the Sigman clique. The picnic was held last Sun- day, June 19th. Two Hundred ($200) Dollars was realized which was for- warded to the office of the Furriers Relief Committee. More help is promised to the Furriers in their struggle. * . * Cloaks and Awnings. | Brothers Kessin and Moskowitz found it impossible to get work at their trade as cloakmakers, so they were compelled to go~ awning makers instead. Although they are in a new line of endeavor they have not forgotten their old union and for- warded §5 as a donation from their first earnings. Let us hope that soon they will be back in a bigger and better Cloakmakers Union. * * ’ More Help. The Shirt Ironers Progressive Group forwarded $15 through Brother L, Klein as a first installment on a pledge of $1.00 a week per member donation until the fight is over, This Group has already made it- self highly conspicuous by its fine work for the Defense and their ex- ample serves to show what can be done where there is a will, not last nearly as long as in Brook- lyn. Few Manhattan bosses are at- tempting to hire men for less than |Cal., with a loss of two lives. $4.50. It was useless to continue a help- ers’-only strike after the journeymen went back, say President C. E. Miller and Organizer J. F. Walsh of the new union, The strike was a great aid) to the journeymen and they expect | the latter to support them now. An! encouraging letter from Thomas FE. Burke, International Secretary of the / | plumbers’ union says their applica- tion to join the international will be laid before the next meeting of the general executive board. | Building Union. | Meanwhile the helpers are cgnsoli-| dating their organization. A monthly | paper, the American Plumbers’ Help- | er, is now being issued from the head- | quarters at 136 East 24th St. It is| a snappy 4+page tabloid. | Bare Prof’s Research) Bureau as Propaganda Organ of Rich Crooks. WASHINGTON, (FP) June 22.— Repudiation of the views advanced by Richard T. Ely’s Institute for Re- search in Land Economics and Pub- lie Utilities is asked of the Ameri- can Institute of Economics, now hold- ing a four week summer session in Ely’s Chicago headquarters. Ben- jamin C. Marsh, head of the People’s Reconstruction League sponsors the request, pointing out that the co- operative bedy is giving national | publicity to the Land Economics In- stitute. j “Presided over by Dr. Ely and sup- ported largely by gamblers in real estate and corruptionist public utility magnates who try to evade Senate investigating committees, the Insti- tute of Land Research is merely an- other dodge to disseminate mislead- ing information and fool farmers and the publie~generally,” Marsh warns. Look for Naval Seaplane. | SAN DIHGO,:Cal., June 22.—In- vestigation was under way today of a report an United States naval sea- plane had fallen into the ocean off Laguna Beach, west of Santa Ana, On Co-operatives THE CO-OPERATIVE MOVE- MENT IN ITALY By E, A, Bloyd ATS WORKERS’ NON-PROFIT CO- OPERATIVES By James BE. Wiggins —1.00 LENIN ON CO-OPERATIVES 105 Women WOMAN WORKER AND THE TRADE UNIONS By Theresa Wolfson LTS WOMEN AND SOCIALISM By August Bebel tl WORK AMONG WOMEN —.35 ORIGIN OF THE FAMILY, PRIVATH PROPERTY AND THE STATE Friedrich Engels ~ 60 Religion FOUNDATIONS OF TIANITY By Karl Kautsky MY HERESY Bishop Wan. Brown’ —3.00 EC aint oad 's. CHRISTIAN- Bishop Wm. M. Brown PROFITS OF RELIGION By Upton Sinclair —Paper $1.00—Cloth 1.50 CHRIS- 4.00 ae American Imperialism THE AMERICAN EMPIRE By Scott Nearing IMPERIAL WASHINGTON RF, Pettigrew ——Paper .25-—-Cloth 1.26 DOLLAR DIPLOMACY f By Scott Nearing & Jos. Freeman The DAILY R PUBLISHING COMPANY « 34 FIRST ST. NEW York 00 $1.00 INSURES YOU FOR 6 MONTHS: Thru an oversight, the words: “to be continued” were omitted at the end of the leading article in the June issue of “THE COMMUNIST”: “PERSPECTIVES FOR OUR PARTY” by JAY LOVESTONE, but we tip you off now so that you can rush in your sub and be sure of getting the concluding instalment of that important article in the July issue. Pin $1.00 to your name and address and you are pro- tected for 6 months against missing the fundamental analysis of American problems published monthly in “THE COMMUNIST” 1118 WASHINGTON BLVD,, CHICAGO, ILL. Se aaamamaaamamanaaamanenmaaaannnonneanmannaaanmnanmanamannaa’ $1.00 INSURES YOU FOR 6 MONTHS—$2.00 FOR 1 YEAR. 1S LIKELY SOON | ~maeenr sen |

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