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SAN Perea IRIN er THE. DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1927 Sofia Explosion Shown To Be British Job (Continued from Page One) vicious campaign against the Soviet Union, accusing it of the explosion That the notorious Zinoviev “let- ters” were forged under the direction of the British tories was also admit- ted at the trial. The forgers Vel- dart and Gumanski, both agents of the British t Service, received SO-pounds for the Zinoviev “letters.” Captures British Spies. MOSCOW, July 11.—Twenty-five spies in the employ of the British Se Service have been captured at according to Tass, the of- agency of the Soviet Leningrad. ficial news Union. The men arrested include a num- ber of white guard officers. deal resources of the Red Army. SELECT JURY FOR TRIAL OF POLICE CHIEF IN. CANTON @ANTON, 0., July 11—At two p. ‘m. today five jurors were tentatively ‘seated in the trial. of S. A. Lengel, former Canton chief of police, charged ‘with complicity in the murder of Don R. Mellett, Canton publisher, here last July 16. Differing from previous Mellett trials both state and defense counsel have agreed to accept for jury duty, persons who have formed an opinion regarding the case. Oneman is already serving time for Milling Don Mellett in what he con- fesses was a plot between underworld characters and, the police officers to stop the exposure of graft which Mel- lett was printing. La Guardia to Investigate Chinese Case. Congressman F. H. La Guardia will today investigate the charges made in connection with the holding at Ellis Island of Chinese workers seized by Hoboken police when ‘they left the steamship Rotterdam which brot them from Holland as strikebreakers. ANEW NOVEL fachatt Wi re $2.50 Cloth Bound Other Novels by Sinclair MANASSAS—A’ story Civil War. —Paper $1.00—Cloth $1.50 THE JOURNAL OF ARTHUR STERLING —Cloth $1.50 THE JUNGLE —Cloth .50 THE METROPOLIS—A story of New York. —Paper $1.00—Cloth $1.50 THEY CALL ME CARPENTER —Cloth 1. of the DAILY- WORKER Publishing Company 33 First St., New York They , ‘were employed to discover the chem- | yy; BRITISH MOURN DEATH OF FREE STATE MINISTER. 1 Federal Court Holding Daily Staff on Bail (Continued from Page One) photographing foreign-born ALF. L, INSURANCE SCHEME BASED ON WALL STREET AID and of wor ome of the other directors are Mrs. Alfred J. Brosseau, president of Saceo-Vanzetti Hearing Before Fuller (Continued from Page One) waited at the state house. William G. Thompson and Herman Erhman, coun- tel for the defense, accompanied the witnesses. the D. A. R., and Captain George I . : * | Darte, adjutant of the Military Or- Chicago Sacco Protest. pias der of the World War, and Major Wol H 1 f Oe te 11.—More than Thi ooing yalic Amos A. chief of the Chemical | }\ ad OT | 1,000 workers living on the north west O’Higgins Imperialist of | * el etalon cl Matthew Woll He pe vaR ah rg le peng toe Deepest Type inspector general of the New Company Vanzetti protest meeting Saturday faa F d Paul V. McNutt, dean of — sax | Right, held under the auspices of the DUBLIN, y 11.—Iveland is in ajthe Indiana University School of} By CHARLES YALE HARRISON. Sacco and Vanzetti Conference. state of feverish excitement t Law. The creation of the Union Labor) F, W, Biedenkapp of the I. L. D. following the death of Kevin .0°H All. Against Mexico. Life Insurance Company is Matthew | spoke urging united action to free the 3, known as the “Irish Mussolini”) The “Key Men of Amer which | Woll’s newest venture into the com-|two imprisoned workers. A collection nd the most outspoken imperialist of is thus seen as a kind of interlock-| pany of finance capital. In @ person-/ netting $50 was made. the agents in the council of torate of the most reaction-| ally signed announcement calling at- * * the te government. The identity of those who inflicted some apprehension is felt that the incident may vive guerilla war- fare between the militant republicans and the imperialists. there sympathy for O’Higgins whose co! blooded execution policy left a r: ling sore in the hearts of thousan of revolutionary nationalists and the e atives of the young na- tionalist fighters he sent to face the firing squad because they refused to surrender their principles in return for a bribe from the British govern- ment. Several capitalist governments have sent condolences to President Cos- grave. London is considerably wor- ried. O’Higgins was their most reli- able tool. Others might consider a} more compromising attitude on the question of the oath of allegiance to the king but O’Higgins was for the treaty lock, stock and barrel. It was recalled that during the re- cent elections, while speaking in the | County Monaghan, O’Higgins was} taunted with his part in the execution | of 77 Republicans. His retort was | typical of the man.” We cut your) ils’ he roared. “We drew your fangs | you curs! If necessary we will exe- cute seventy-seven more.” When news of O’Higgins’ death reached Cosgrave the latter called an extraordinary session of the cabinet. Tho a new reign of government ter- ror is expected it is not likely that| the Free State will be able to suc-| cessfully carry out reprisals in view | of its weakness with the masses which was exposed in the recent elections. When O’Higgins attended the im- verial conference in London last Octo- | her, he carried a letter from President | Cosgrave which recommended, O’Hig- gins for the parley in view of the fact that he did not participate in the 16 rebellion. last week supporting the British naval poliey. DETROIT, July 11.—The twenty- fifth annual convention of the Ameri- can Institute of Banking opened in this city today with nearly 5,000 delegates in attendance. An era of national prosperity was predicted by Paul M. Detwiler, presi- dent of the institute in an interview. Detwiler believes the country is now entering a new cycle of improved conditions. The program today consists of en- tertainment for the delegates. Discuss Voikoff Murder. CHICAGO, July 11.—“Why Peter Voikoff, Soviet ambassador to Po- land was killed,” will be discussed by an able lecturer Friday, July 15th, at \8 p. m. at 2147 W. Chicago Ave., ' Slovak Workers’ Home. | This lecture is postponed from July §th due to the Sacco-Vanzetti protest meeting on the earlier date. In addi- tion there will be shown a series *of |stereoptican slides depicting the re- cent events in the Chinese revolution. Admission is free. Develop Passenger Air Lines. The development of passenger air lines is seen as the result of a plan| agreed upon by the Daniel Guggen- heim Fund for the Promotion of Aeronautics which will tour Charles | A. Lindbergh in his Spirit of St.) Louis to advance the project. The loans will be made to existing com- panies and must be used to purchase YOUR CONVENTION STAMP ing payment. ——= 0100 your unit organizer has none— your unit organizer has not sold them— your unit organizer has not sent in the money for them— your unit organizer is not pushing the sale energetically— NOTIFY THE NATIONAL OFFICE! It is the only way to finance the Convention and prevent youffrom losing your right to vote. Money must be sent in today—50c to the National Office WORKERS (COMMUNIST) PARTY OF AMERICA 1113 W. Washington Boulevard, Chicago, Ill. SECRETARIES: Be sure to mention invoice number when mak- D000 1010. ' veg teeta en ere Or=I0 Today! 50c to the District Office th penalty is not yet known. 4% is little | ti bor hating groups in thi heavy stress on its prop-| American militarism and It fights vigorously aga YY movement or organiza- tion which might hinder the annexa-} and the rest of Cen- 1 , or the subjugation of It campaigns for the break- of relations between the States and Mexico, and for nt of arms to cler rebels in Mex a recent “Daily Dz in a Sheet” states: they nt to all of its members wherein it| a share tention to the opening of the com- pany for business, Woll resorts to the usual practices of insurance sharks in snaring customers. He “Every policy in Union Life Insurance Company participating; that is, it returns the profits to the policyholder.” Woll Like Old Line Liars. In making this statement Woll) places himself in a class with the} the is al and ye-| three hundred odd life insurance cor-| ‘o, as for in-| porations who deliberately lie when| 599 people here. met in protest of the e A |Zemoval of Sacco and Vanzetti to the What is com-| death house. say that a premium refund is of the profits. Kansas City Protest. KANSAS CITY, Mo., July 11—Sev- eral hundred people here attended a Saeco-Vanzetti protest meeting calling | upon Governor Fuller to immediately release the two imprisoned workers. The speakers were D. E. Burkhardt and the Rev. Joseph Myers Wolff, | editor of the Labor Bulletin. Asks For Unconditional Release. OMAHA, Neb., July 11.—More than A resolution was adopt- “Withdraw “The differences between the gov- that of Mexi ligious issue. con: aN agencies. ructed smoke screen erected by ll-organized Socialism and Communism. They are not due to the question of oil titles. | That is another cleverly constructed smoke sereen erected by the same! monly called a dividend in insurance’ eq calling upon Gov. Fuller to release COo™Memoration of the Ruthenberg| Recognition.” parlance is nothing more than a re- fund of the excess rate charged when /| op ane nob-due tu re-|in all cases it is merely a fraction oe ee lof what the policyholder is entitled to. Impartial observers of the insur- ance graft know that life insurance! tes are more than 100 per cent too h for the present American death xperience. However, -Woll says,| |“The rates of insurance for the time at is but a cleverly Movement to aid conviction.” 1 : eee cea part, “We|t® build the Workers (Communist) | ernment of the United States and| the rates are originally fixed, and pequest the governor of Massachusetts | Patty and defend its central pearl \to intervene and give justice to our The DAILY WORKER, against court, | persecuted fellow-workers, who have devoted their lives to the cause of| labor, by releasing them uncondition- | ally from all penalties of this unjust Baumes Law Useless as| Juries Do Not Convict! “Withdrawal of recognition at this being are on a par with those charged | time would mean revolt in Mexico| PY other life insurance companies. | and the quick overthrow of the Calles-| 1he Purchaser of Union Labor Life | Communist regime. If the embargo| insurance will benefit little by Woll’s| on arms is removed the overthrow | £2™¢ ; almost would be overnight and the} Fiske Boosts aWoll. Socialist-Communist scheme to con-| \ Maley Fiske, president of the Met- trol Mexico would be squelched for| *Politan Life Insurance Company, the time being at least.” | and arch-defender of industrial in- Calis For Cash, | surance which is considered in in- It is part of the ‘tay fetched Hei a. | surance circles as one of the most ganda of the “Key Men” feat The | callous insurance swindle-stunts is He was at Geneva) | dated Sept. 12, 1923, for $2,500 made | grand dragon. Sremorm mormon so r08 Liberal president of Mexico, Calles, TU an TE ies oo, ene new scat is a Communist. In spite of these exaggerations and | plain yntruths in the service of im-| perialism, the big corporations seem} to feel doubtful as to their need of Marvin and his “Key Men.” They have been badly swindled recently by | self appointed and high priced} “Patriots” and Marvin in a statement to the press yesterday bewailed the fact that corporations have been nig- gardly in their support, and that the Key Men are not as well off finan- | j cially as they might be. CHECK FROM KLAN DRAGON EVIDENCE AGAINST JACKSON INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., July 11.— |The name of Governor Ed. Jackson | was brought into the D. C. Stephen- son scandal today through the sub- mission for publication of a check out to Ed Jackson by the former klan The check, made public by Lloyd O. Hill, attorney for Stephenson, is | regarded by Hill as first definite proof that “Steve” at last is going to “tell all.” Stephenson is trying to get out of the state prison where he is serving a life term for the Madge | Oberholtzer murder. A Attached to the check was a little | slip bearing these words: “This check is the first one-fourth of the $10,000 given Jackson person- ally for primary expenses.” The name of Ed Jackson appears on the back of the check, indicating it had been cashed. The name is writ- ten in some handwriting strikingly similar to that of the governor. Stamps on the cancelled check are \those of the Union Trust Company and | Indiana National Bank of Indianapolis ‘and the Federal Reserve Bank of ‘Cleveland, 0. The check was drawn | on the First National Bank of Colum- | bus, 0. | During the first investigation of | political corruption charges, last fall made by Thomas H. Adams, Vincen- nes publisher, Floyd O. Christian, of Noblesville, said that when he was with Stephenson as attorney in the jail at Noblesville, the former grand | dragon showed him a check for $2,500, bearing identical writing to the doc- |ument reported today. Stephenson, then was sorting out incriminating papers against promi- nent state politicians, according to Christian. I. H. Hull and his wife, both of Anderson, told newspaper men at that time they had photographed a check for $2,500 bearing the same writing, along with other Stephenson- ian data, at the request of the former grand dragon. Marion County prosecutors were conferring today to determine future steps in the probe. OSAWATONIE, Kan., July 11.—“I {surance for the State of New York, | surance business. | of this new venture in class collabor- pany. Fiske says, “The working people are becoming capitalists thru sav- ings, investments and life insurance. They have formed a large life in- surance company which is going to do old line life insurance on scentific (sie) principles with adequate, ample capital, and under competent ad- PING. 4" : In view of the fact that only 10 per cent of all life insurance poli- cies are ever paid on for their full face value, the balance being lost thru forfeitures; and in further view of the fact that the Union Life will operate on the “scientific” principles laid down by Haley Fiske who is em- ployed by Woll in an advisory capac- ity, the worker who insures his life in the A. F. of L. outfit will be jump- ing out of the frying pan into the fire. Will Workers Fall? But the majority of workers have been so pap-fed on life insurance propaganda that they will think that Woll and his associates are their life- long benefactors. Mr. Beha, the superintendent of in- has applied for the first policy to be issued by the Union Labor Life in the state. Woll says in his com- munique that this signifies that the company has the endorsement of the superintendent. This is without a doubt true,.but it means nothing. It is a known fact that Beha is the creature of Haley Fiske and his as- sociated insurance financiers. It is Beha who has condoned the big busi- ness interlocking directorates and the rotten conditions which generally un- | derlie the so-called mutual life in-| Good Business Stuff. | Woll is the creator and president ation. He now shows that he has nothing in common with the class he} ‘thinks he represents. His hobnobbing with Haley Fiske in the Nationsl Civic Federation has now blossomed }ceived from Workmen’s Circle Branch One Week Left. Less than a week now remains to} juries who will convict when they prepare for the Coney Island Sta-| realize that a conviction dium Concert which will take place | this coming Saturday evening. The concert, the best of the season, will be broadcast throughout the en-! tire East by the powerful new station | WCGU. The New York Symphony) Orchestra of 100, conducted by Erno} Rapee, internationally-known musi-} cal virtuoza, will provide the musical | program. Alexis Kosloff, famous ballet master, formerly of the Rus-; sian Imperial Theatre, and now pre-| mier danseur of the Metropolitan | Opera House,, will appear in person with his famous ballet in A. Boro- dine’s “Prince Igor.” Rita de La- porte of the Metropolitan will take the principal female role. In addition, Ben Gold, manager of| the Furriers Joint Board will address the vast audience on the present situation in the Furriers Strike. The lawyers of Mineola will also be there and will discuss “justice” in Mineola. If you have not provided yourself with tickets, dg so immediately and assure yourself*of a good seat. Tic- kets are $1.00 for general admission and $2.00 for reserved seats. In case of rain the concert will be held the following evening July 17. * * * Crotona “Yaten” Do Their Work. We have already announced that a group of “yaten” are doing good| work in Crotona Park. For the holi-| day week-end they did not leave to camps and resorts but stayed in the city and continued their work in Crotona Park. The result was $125.00 forwarded to the Defense Office by| Brother Kleinman. Nathan Rubin. | stein made all the appeals. | * * * Gives “Sick Benefit” For Strikers Brother George Kaminsky for-| warded $6.00 sick benefit that he re- 272 of which he is a member. | Harlem Progressive Youth Club. | The Harlem Progressive Youth| Club forwarded $25 on its pledge of | $100 with promise to pay balance by beginning of week. * * * | More Voluntary Taxation. | Eleven of the thirteen workers of| the Daintig Mfg. Co. (Ladies! Knickers) decided to tax themselves | with $1.00 per week. The first $11) into a real, profitable business con- tract. In addition to the fat salaries he is now drawing from his various labor jobs, he will horn in on a life insurance president’s salary. The officers of the new company are conservative job holders in the A. F. of L. but the board of direct ors are the ee clique one finds be- hind all big) business enterprises. —— Act Sinclair Play to ’ | pee Aid Class War Victims feet LOS ANGELES, Cal., Joly 11— Upton Sindlair’s “Singing Jailbirds,” a drama in 3 acts and 13 scenes and directed by Paul Spier, will be played for the fimst time in America at Ga- mut Club Theatre, 1044 South Hope St., on July 15, 16 and 17, incl., under the auspices of the I. L. D., Cen- tralia Defense, Sacco-Vanzetti Con- ference and the Cloakmakers’ Relief Conference. Tickets for sale at the following places: The theatre, Birkels Music Store, 446 S, Broadway, Civil Liber- ties Union, 1026 Cal. Bldg., 2nd and Broadway, Cooperative Center, 2706 Brooklyn“Ave. have no comment to make,” This was the statement of Gov. Ed Jackson, of Indiana, today when told of the $2,500 \check being held for publication in Indianapolis purporting to be in con- nection with the D. C. Stephenson case, Governor Jackson is visiting relatives here. PHILADELPHIA, July 10,—Liquor drinking in churches promised to be the main topic of discussion at the remaining sessions of the Baptist Young People’s convention here today following charges that the younger generation was using churches as a cloak for their parties. was forwarded to the Defense Office and they ‘will continue to do so until the Furriers win their fight. All class conscious workers should respond to this sort of voluntary taxation by pledging at least $1 per week until! the strike is won. Nitgedaiget Collects $371. An appeal for the defense was made in Camp Nitgedaiget which. resulted in a collection of $371. Introduce Alabama Bill To Curb Floggings; Ban Masks in Streets, Roads BIRMINGHAM, Ala., July 11.— Proposing to end the reign of terror that is being caryed on by masked and robed men, suspected of being members of the Ju Klux Klan, a bill will be introceced in the Alabama State Legislature Tuesday to bar the wearing of masks for other than legitimate purposes, according to the Birmingham Age-Herald. No arrests have been ade in con- nection with the series of brutal floggings that have occurred in Ala- bama recently. The bill would make it a misde- meanor for any one to appear on Alabama highways disguised by a mask. If the perpetrator of a crime is found advocating the anti-mask law the offender would be guilty of a criminal act carrying with it a | as repairs are to be started on Monday. minimum of five years imprisonment, WORKERS IN PHILADELPHIA JOIN THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST THE WAR DANGER ¢ PHILADELPHIA, Pa., July 11.—, An intensive campaign for the de-! fense and recognition of the Union of Soviet Republies was launched here at the demonstration against the new war danger held in Maple Park) Grove. The gathering was addressed) by J. Louis Engdahl, editor of The! DAILY WORKER, just returned from|] J the Soviet Union. Albert Weisbord} Pittsburgh Joins the Anti-War Danger Drive (Special to The DAILY WORKER) PITTSBURGH, Pa, July 11.— . Louis Engdahl, editor of The DAILY WORKER, will open the leader of the Passaic strike acted as chairman. “The war danger today grows out of the new attack planned by world imperialism against the first workers’ republic,” said Engdah!. “That at- tack is also directed against the workers of this country because any success won in the new war against the Soviet Union will encourage the employing interests to greater on- slaughts against the workers home.” The success of the hands off China campaign in Philadelphia is one in- dication that the hands off the So-| | viet Union drive will meet with con- siderable success. The demonstration here was also || local drive against “The War || Danger” at a meeting to be held |] Tuesday night, at the Labor Ly- |] ceum, 35 Miller Street. Engdahl will also address a |] gathering of the membership of the Workers (Communist) Party. Wednesday night, at the Russian Hall, 1522 Fifth Avenue to develop the campaign. “ENGINEERS UNION SECRETARY SAYS | Birthday Anniversary with a pledge} COT HIS $2,500 Found Guilty Tho Tried \to Argue Wasn’t Bribed the attack that is now being made | upon it by its enemies. CLEVELAND, July 11.-—Gen. Secy. C. E. Lindquist, Brotherhood of Lo- comotive Engineers, has been found Needle Trade Defense Pourth-Term Offenders teri. a hewlett oe aman Public opinion is so hostile to the|ferred by the committee of 10 which so-called Baumes laws that it is be- | has been investigating the financial coming almost impossible to find | 2¢tivities conducted by the grand of- ficials of the brotherhood. ‘The vote means life|Was 388 to 68 for conviction. The imprisonment for the accused, even! &eneral charge was mismanagement tho the jury may be of the opinion |°f brotherhood funds. that he is guilty. This was revealed| It had been planned to try Pres. when district attorney Banton issued! W- B. Prenter first but he pleaded ill- a statement recently to the press be-|"¢S8 Which seems to have developed moaning the fact the law is becoming |mto pneumonia. Prenter is 72 and so unpopular as to be well-nigh in-{ effective. Banton quoted two specific cases in| general sessions where the jury re- fused to convict the accused in spite of the fact “that the police record and indentification in each case was com- | plete.” Progressive labor opinion holds that this law may be invoked against radicals jn the time of a crisis, just the “criminal anarchy act was passed after the assassination of Mc- Kinley and used against the Com- munists in 1919. The reports showed that between July 1, 1926, when the laws became effective, and July 1, 1927 sixteen prisoners were sentenced to prison for life as fourth offenders. There are 470 indictments pending. Musician Broke, Kills Self. David Montagnon, a former direc- tor of the St. Louis Symphony Or- chestra committed suicide by drinking lysol Friday. afternoon it was learned yesterday. Poverty was the cause of the act. Of late Montagano was so poor that he slept in hallways. He toured the country fourteen years ago with | Mme. Melba and was well known in the illness combined with his disgrace | before the convention may prove fatal. The trial of 1st Vice President L. G. |Griffing was scheduled next and that }of 2nd Vice President H. P. Daugher- |ty to-follow. All are under the same | general charges. # | Wild Graft. | The charges arose out of investiga- |tions by the committee of 10 which jhas been at work since the convention began June 6. It became evident im- |mediately that the convention meant {business when it took out of Presi- ‘dent Prenter’s hands the naming of ;the committee and proceeded to elect \itvinstead. Delegates had come to Cleveland gunning for bear after the jusual 7 per cent dividend on the pre- | ferred stock of the B. of L. E. Invest- ment Co. had failed to materialize this year. They found what the com- |mittee described as unexampled ex- ' travagance, mismanagement, careless- {ness and neglect of duty and a finan- |cial maze of banking, investment en- terprise, realty speculation, industrial \risks and jeopardizing of pension and insurance funds that passed the abili- {ty of the committee to unravel with- | out expert assistance. | Three trustees were put in charge jof the financial end of the brother- Taupe H ciroles, hood, The offices of president, 1st - ‘and 2nd vice president and secretary, eo pgs gai fs ‘held by Prenter, Griffing, Daugherty y vas put to : ; whrk kodky under orien thom Barsugh (oe Lindquist, were abolished. President Connelly’s office, Queens, | ; s Passes Blame. 3 to make temporary repairs to the! Lindquist’s defense at his trial was Rockaway Beach Boardwalk, which 2 claim that he hed been largely a was damaged by fire on Thursday | Tubber stamp for the other 3, that the morning. The repairs are necessary |had protested in vain and then “gone in the section from Ninety-Fourth to along” on the financial roller coaster Ninety-sixth Streets and were ordered | because he saw nothing else to do and 80 as to allow of the use of the board-| that the whole thing started under the walk over the week-end. Permanent| late President Warren S. Stone with |Prenter following Stone’s lead. Re- garding the $2,500 he was accused of pocketing, gether with Prenter, Griffing and Daugherty, for agreeing to the sale by the brotherhood of the Equitable skyscraper in New York City, Lindquist admitted receiving his | $2,500 but said he and the rest had | kept the money intact for the con- vention to act upon. Austro-AmericanTreaty Paves Road for Further Penetration of Capital VIENNA, July 11.-—The heavy in- vestment of American capital in Austria has just culminated in a commercial treaty between the two countries which provides that for thr next’ eight years the minimum duty permitted by its customs laws shal! ibe imposed on the imports from | America to Austria and vice versa. The éuthors.were commis- | It is pointed out that Vienna re- sioned by the Russlan Com- | mains, now as always, the ideal tran- Bie ad Wuglé ekplawenien sit point for the distribution of of Communism, The student American goods for consumption in all find thig book 2 Bem o | / the states of the old Austrian Em- It 1s the only edition con- pire. Export of American auto- taining the complete text— mobiles and motorcycles has shown a oe aly a marked development in the las‘ several years. American imports of | Austrian goods have been limited ABC| OF COMMUNISM By BUCHARIN and PREOBRAZHENSKY IN A NEW CLOTH-BOUND AND COMPLETE EDITION . Just Received from ENGLAND to make a most attractive book for your library and for class use. as porcelain ware, leather goods and so-called luxury articles in which there is very little competition from American industry. The new commercial treaty pro- viding for this “favored nation” treaty on tariffs was signed here yes- $1.50 Cloth Bound The Daily Worker Pub. Co. 88 First Street Ys bai BUY THE DAILY WORKER AT THE NEWSSTANDS practically to finished articles such | f | SOAS NE oe ae AC RURRA RRERSTIN