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THE DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1927 ~ igo | NAVAL BASES UP FOR DISCUSSION AT CONFERENCE Japan, Britain Compromise teach GENEVA, July The United States delegation to the tri-partite naval conference will present counter- proposals to the Anglo-Japanese sug- gestions for an agreement as 18.- put Red Raids” in Holland East Indies; Fear the Independence Movement BATAVIA, Dutch East Indies, ly 18.—Dutch s here have announced a new Communist plot to subjugate the isla nds of Holland,” and have started a series of arrests of dis- isfied native leaders and offi- of trade unions. Exploitation of the native pro- letariat and peasantry in these is- lands is very severe, and the re- pressions of the native petty bour- imperialist offi- FARE 80 geoisie makes it somewhat of an ally of the werkers. A deep seated independence movement is on foot, in which the Communist Party ph an important role. The Dutch officials make periodic raids on working class centers, and con- duct a perpetual “Red Scare.” of forth ‘yesterday upon the basi 500,000 ‘tonnage basis for both United States and Japan. Th is objectionable to the United and is 100,000 tons | mise proposal co S on @sunter-proposals naval bases whic Great Britain. The tonnage is intimatel will bring up naval bases is an attempt to place Britain in a defensive position in the conference. h Britain and Japan Agree. the question of naval Great| On the other hand the agreement Britain has a string of bases through- | between Britain and Japan on total out the world so close together that | ¢Tuiser tonnage is considered a blow ships much lighter than the ones used jagainst the United States’ represen- by the United States can be effec-| tatives who have been striving to in- tively utilized for her navy. Britain | duce Japan to line up against Britain. has proposed that cruiser tonnage be| The present Tanaka cabinet in Ja- reduced to 7,500. With sueh cruisers |P@n is in favor of a revival of the she can traverse the seven seas, | Anglo-Japanese alliance as if consid- whereas the United States would find |¢rs that such an alliance will enable her light cruisers crippled and unable | it to share jointly with Britain the to proceed to the Far East because |¢xPloitation of China, while the of the great ¢ nce between nayal| United States will yse its immense bases. Hence to raise the question of | Power to reduce, in the course of a |few years, even Japan to the position of a vassal state. The agreement between B&jtain and Japan has ‘unquestionably placed the United States in a sorry predicament {as far as the conference is concerned, because Hugh Gibson stated that any As a Doctor | agreement or compromise reached by. | the two powers would be satisfactory S es It to the United States. That utterance was made when any sort of agree- ment seemed hopeless. Now Gibson’s By B. LIBER bluff has been-called and he is striv- With 64 Pencil Sketches by the author. ing to save his face. This interesting : new volume is the |Ella Reeve Bloor in Heed OFS DORE BS Hitch Hike for Daily can be recommend- ns to every worker. | Bila) Reeve Bloor, hiteh hiking from critic says: | St. Louis to Chicago, will pass: be powder ead ae up Indianapolis, Ind. e total o} u i misery that a Pe ano | Dayton, Ohio. is able to observe In a Columbus, Ohio, great city as dramati- Lima, Ohio. Fort Wayne, Ind.» South Bend, Ind. at cally gs anything I have read.” $1.50 Postpaid. | The DAILY WORKER PUB. CO.) 33 First St.. New York. BUY THE DAILY WORKER AT THE NEWSSTANDS Attractive O for New Readers of the Bc“'y Worker | \]| Wolf afterwards sent in a |] |the city for $63,128.62 which included |] $25,000, which was the Untermyer These valuable premiums, worth $2.50 each, can be secured FREE With Every Annual Subscription to The DAILY WORKER | °. | through payment of only $1.50 with 20 Coupons clipped from the Newsstand Edition on 20 different days. | Offer GOODWIN No. 2 (Ansco) Any One of These Splendid | Ne 1 CAMERA Books Regular Price $2.50 Each Worth $2.50 | Takes an Stamdard Roll “weer | Film. Pictures 24x34. ‘This | model is finely finished and STORIES, PLAYS | complete in every detail. é Has two finders for Vertical REVELRY | or Horizontal Pictures, Off Adapted for Time or Snap- x. 9 by Samuel Hopkins Adams | shot exposures. Hig-hest 9 | quality Meniscus lens. With regime of Heraing, Hughes, eacwe ss book of’ instructions Coolidge. An inside view of | «HERR AERIS BA ies Ore eae A ia emg ages American political life. i Offer ELMER GANTRY No. 3 by Sinclair Lewis | The famous author of Bab- bitt has given a fine rendi- | tion of the hypocrisy and Soin leigel sham of the American clergy. | Offer EMPEROR JONES No. 4 by Eugene O'Neill and other plays Includes the popular lays “Gola” and “The First Man” De aeaenataaaaea a MARXIAN CLASSICS “CONOMIC THEORY OF THE LEISURE GLASS by N. Bukharin Thoughtful Magkist read- | ers will tind in this book a guide to an understanding of the ideologists of the mod- ern bourgeoisie, The book is written by the foremest ...Marxian theorist of the day. No. 5 i] a | Offer COUPON 7-15-27 otter LITERATURE AND xo. ¢ REVOLUTION ILY WORKER ‘ DAILY Ww« by Leon Trotsky 33 First Street, : ' A brilliant criticism of | New York, N, ¥ present day lterary group- | ngs in Russia, and a dis- | Inclosed herewith you will find Tr of the relation of art | eee ho es oD, RE ee cine e: elo e dollars for a Offer MARX AND ENGELS by D. Riazagov months’ subscription No. 7 dollars with my NEWSSTANDS A striking account of the lives and theories and prac- tical achievements of the founders of scientific social- ism, by the Director of the Marx-Engels Mstitute. COUPONS. Please send me Offer No, een coe msn re irae Se mena nme These Offers Are Good Only Until August 31, 1927. {L|shall was attorney for a stool-pigeon | ffers | HYLAN DENOUNCES: SMITHUNTERMYER OST DEAL \Wall St. to Back Smith' | If He Comes Across that the} | a9] “While it is a possibility Morgan interests will let go of “Al’ |Smith in 1928, in favor of the Re- |publican nominee in the meantime | |they are using Smith all they can} jto get a fare boost through his Tran-| jsit Commission.” So spoke former | |Mayor John F. Hylan in an exclusive} interview given yesterday to a Daily] ; Worker reporter. “If Smith wants the democratic | nomination in 1928 he will have to jsatisfy Morgan and Company who} |repesent the majority bondholders of} |the I. R. T.” | | “Untermyer is in sympathy with! the traction bondholders, and in par-| ticular with the majority bondhold-| jers of the Interboro. In that respect| he is lined up with the Smith-Morgan | |crowd,” said Hylan in reply to a ques- |tion. | “Then you think that Untermyer is a Smith man,” he was asked. “No—Untermyer is an Untermyer} jman.” “What is your opinion of the so-} |called unification plan which is be-| jing so ardently advocated by Unter- myer?” he was “asked. | “This unification fallacy,” he re- |plied,” is only a smoke screen to take} |the place of additional ‘service. It is| |part of a scheme to hoodwink the| New York straphangers so that they} |will not see the major move, which is| jto fix an exorbitant value for the worn out old junk which the traction interests call rolling stock. When the traction attorneys have fixed what} they call a ‘fair valuation,’ the stage | will all be set for an increased fare.” Smith Used Lindbergh. At this point the former mayor pointed out that it is part of the} |Smith policy thru his so-called public} \service commission to. boost fares whenever possible. He pointed out! that during the Lindbergh reception | |the Smith traction crowd up-state |took advantage of the public hysteria ito put over a ten-cent fare in Al-| |bany; Troy, Watervliet, Schenectady, | Cohoes and Buffalo. This possibly explains Governor Smith’s warm re- ception to Lindbergh. Smith awarded the trans-Atlantic flyer the medal of | |honor—a cheap price at that, | $25,000 “Fee.” | When asked about the $25,000 fee| |which Untermyer received from the \I. R. T., Hylan said, “The firm of | |Guggenheimer, Untermyer and Mar-} \to prohibit the city from appropriat- |ing the necessary money to put busses ‘on the streets of New York to re- \lieve the congested condition in the ‘subways. This firm got the injunc- |tion but did not dare to enforce it.| The firm of Hays, Hershfeld and} ill to} |share in the deal. Now the Hayes |firm was an antagonistic litigant but | Marshall and Untermyer took the money and under the dual contracts |the city footed the bill. As those con- | tracts run for forty-nine years, at the \expiration of that time the taxpayers | will have paid in interest and com- |pound interest over $200,000.” | When asked what the solution was |for the overcrowded subway condi- tions, Hylan replied, “The only rem- |edy for the transit condition is to put jon more trains and more cars. Let \the workers demand a municipal bus ‘system in every borough of the city. Let the city continue to build more | subways.” “These bunk investigations are merely smokescreens to cover up Untermyer’s personal and business ambitions and to foist a fare boost on the people of New York.” ‘Ohio Miners Faced With Double Fight (Continued deotogs One) offer, and are making preparations to open the mines. They admit that the. work will proceed slowly, but they expect little trouble. They are being aided by another section of the min- ers’ union, according to report. James Kunik, leader of a so-called insurgent group in the Bellaire district, is ready to support Daugherty, and to make a compromise, This shows that treach- ery is being practiced in the miners’ union. It is clear that if Lewis does nothing—but lets the situation slide, such men as Daugherty and Kunik \a trial in civil courts and his demand Suppression of Labor Movement in China (Continued from Page One) pillaged on Saturday morning at 10 o'clock, by French police and Russian white guard officers assisted by @ detachment of municipal police. _The raid was under the joint supervision of the French and the Nanking ban-| .dits of Chiang Kai-shek. The search | did not yield any evidence for the counter-revolutionaries and conspira- tors against the Soviet Union, so the| police came back at night and it is) likely that they brought with them forged documents to be used as manu- factured evidence against the officials of the bank. After sealing the pre mises and arresting the Soviet citi- zens, Stoyanovich and Golianovsky at the demand of the Nanking despot, Yang-hu, a general known for his SECRETLY DEPORT GHINESE SEAMEN | Grase Clotier, Wynantskill, N. Y. 2.00 | Joseph Burck, Wooerhsville, N. Y. .50 J. Stasiak, Wooerhsville, N. Y. 2.50 Anton Kawchak, Albany, N. Y.. Stephan Chapko, Troy, N.Y. ..2.00 Fannie Panasiuk, Waterolict, Bs Br eee i 1.00 John Butynski, Cohoes, N. Y. ..1.00 What the Daily Worker Means to the Workers More Encouraging Contributions to Our Emergency Fund. Company Liable to Pay Heavy Fine (Feftrated Press.) As it seemed that a habeas corpus S writ was about to free the 38 Chinese | James Butynski, Cohoes, N. Y. 1,00 seamen strikers illegally detained on| Wm. Chamulack, Cohoes, N. Y. 1.00 50 Ellis Island, were dumped into the|T Rackochy, Cohoes, N. Y. ... bloody reprisals at Nangpo, Shanghai and other places a statement was | issued to the effect that evidence! was found proving that the arrested men were engaged in Bolshevist pro- paganda. ‘ The prisoners were handed over to} a special military tribunal, noted for its summary dealings with Communi- ists. Koslovsky, general counsul of the Union of Socialist Soviet. Repub- lies at Shanghai, ‘insisted that the | bitrarily to arrest Soviet citizens and hand them over to special extraordi-| nary courts. Koslovsky demanded was satisfied and +he prisoners hand- ed over to the civil authorities. White Guard Provocation. The illegal segrch and seizure: and arrests are the result of the agitation carried on by the imperialist bribed white guard press that is indulging in the most disgraceful provocation against the workers and peasants of China and the Soviet Union and is part of the general imperialist con- spiracy against the Chinese revolu- tion and the Soviet Union. * * * Wuhan Political Crisis. HANKOW, July 18,—There is a protracted political crisis in the Wu- han government that is slowly ap- proaching a solution. Many observ- ers expected the final solution of the coup which was being carried out dur- ing the last few weeks. However, the final achievement of the coup against the Communists has evidently been postponed for a time. M. Borodin, advisor to the National- ist government, left Saturday for Ku- ling, a well-known mountain resort near Kiu-Kiang. His departure is be- ing explained in various ways. Some see in it Borodin’s disagreement with internal policy recently pursued by the. Wuhan government. timate Borodin’s departure as consent of the Wuhan government to demands of Feng, the so-called Christian gen- eral who has gone qver to the counter- revolution, that Borodin be granted leave of absence. Apparently the majority of the Wuhan government has definitely de- cided to “separate themselves” from Communists. It is reported that the members of the Central Committee at Wuhan actually passed resolution re- garding the removal of Communists from all posts in the executive com- mittee of the government, the execu- tive of the leading organs of the Kuo- mintang and the army and to deprive them of membership in the Kuomin- tang. The scoundrels and agents of Chi- ang Kai-shek, the traitor and of Feng, in the service of the counter- revolution who are in a majority in the Wuhan government are afraid of the wrath of the members of the Kuomintang so they assert that these measures against the vanguard of the revolution, the Communists, are only temporary, pending the final solution of the question at the third congress of the Kuomintang. It is proposed to carry through these counter-revolutionary resolu- tions at the next session of the cen- tral committee which is scheduled to meet today or tomorrow. Today the political committee of the Kuomintang adopted the following resolution: 1—To within a month’s time call plenary session of the Cen- tral Committee, to discuss and decide questions submitted by presidium of the political bureau. 2—Pending con- vocation plenary session the Central Committee to prohibit actions and speecles contrary to the principles and policy of the Kuomintang. 3.— To send to the Soviet Union a delega- tion to be appointed by political com- mittee of prominent members of the Kuomintang to discuss methods of cooperation. Others es- Try to Deceive Masses. These measures are considered highly deceptive and a mere smoke- screen raised so that the fury of the masses at the counter-revolutionary acts of the Wuhan government will | will finda ready ear among the min- ers. Relief for tre miners must be or- ganized. If they know that the labor ‘movement will stand behind them, they will be exposed to no temptation at the hands of the coal operators. But \ if they are allowed to starve, then |there is no doubt that they will+be brought to their knees. It is the duty of the labor movement to get behind the striking miners—and to do it guickly. Otherwise the siren voices of the Daughertys and Kuniks will lure the miners—to their destruction, Whether the coal operators are bluffing or mean earnest will be dis- closed tomorrow. Lee Hall and G. W. Savage, district officials, are now in Bellaire, where they expect the first attempt to be made. ) not overwhelm them. So strong is the respect for the Communists and the admiration for hold of a Holland-American liner bound for Rotterdam, Sixteen had al- ready been deported. To save the men from a frame-up on possible mutiny charges the Chi- nese Seamen’s Institute, through its attorney Hugo Pollock, is cabling Edo Fimmen, secretary of ‘the International Transport Workers’ Federation, set- ting forth the facts here and asking him .to investigate the employment methods of the steamship company. United States Senator Copeland and |Silas Blake Axtell, attorney for the| |International Seamen’s Union, were} among the persons who had been in- military authorities have no right ar-|tovocting themselves in the case of | ae a ; |these oriental workers since they were | A™erikas Zihna, Chicago, Ill. ..6.00 beaten and jailed by the Hoboken po- lice as they were leaving the S. S. Rotterdam. Had Right to Quit. Axtell, a well-known authority on mavine law, said the Chinese had the right to quit the ship. “The Seamen’s Act,” he explained in a letter to Pol- lock, ‘maintains that all seamen, in- cluding Chinese and Hindoos, may de- mand half their wages and leave for. eign or American ships for the pur- pose of reshipment.” The purpose of this provision of the LaFollette act, continued the attorney, is to equalize costs of operation, by compelling for- eign shipowners to replace crews at American rates of wages. Fifteen dollars a month was all the Chinese were getting in the “black gang” of the Rotterdam. the Dutch strikers, whose place they were tgk- ing, had been paid $38 a month. When the Chinese found they had been tricked into being strikebreakers they decided to quit, and carried out the plan in Hoboken, Company Is Liable. Each of the guilty parties responsi- ble for the imprisoning of the Chinese will now be under fire by their friends here, First there is the Holland- American line, that is subject to a fine Leon Apostol, Cohoes, N. Y. . | K. Brashka, Cohoes, N. Y. ... 50 50 Leon Zavoisky, Waterolict, N. Y. .50 |B. Panasiuk, Waterolict, N. Y. . see tee Waterolict, Michael Halajko, Troy, N. D. Petrychi, Troy, N. ;W. Moskaluk, Troy, N. Y. |G. Dutehak, Cohoes, N. Y. 00 | M. Massey, Moline, Ml. ........ 3.00 | Sylvan Bruner, Pittsburg, | Kansas ++ -10.00 Jos. Hubal, Cleveland, bss B00 M. Maslanka, Jamaica Plain, MANS) 8 cies wil Shin's soe ev a cog 2.00 E, A. Duchan, Cleveland, Ohio 40.00 Celia’ Paransky, Pittsburgh, Pa. 28.75 |J. M. Lindain, West Vancouver, | B. C. Canada Mrs. T, M. Nagle, Erie, Pa. . Amal Food Wor. Bakers Local No. | 164, Bronx, N.Y. 0.05 6; 25.00 | Hungarian Wom. Wor. Club, Cleveland, Ohio ........... 5.00 Core P. Wilson, San Jose, Calif. 1.00 Suitcase, Bag & Portfolio Makers 2 Union, New York City ...10.00 N. Comar, San Bernardino, Ua eae clench dics a fay) 12.00 Andrew Sarja, (collected) Fort oS 3 2 Fa ae 11.5 Miss Osasta, (collected) Minneapolis, | PUR oars cy et ccs. 4.01 Arthur E. Paterson, Napa, ? California 2 -1.00 A. Pazarskas, Chicago, Ill. 12.50 | List No. 4029—M. Rifkin, Unity | Camp icy. ais die eat se Ne 29.00 | M. Helander, Plentywood, Mon- SOBA ce spa wey oS te 10.00 Ingeborg Monsen, Loesch, Mon- PROBE easy POPCORN EG 1.50 Tom Skroza, (collected) Hartford, Conn, | A. C. Miller, Williston, N. Da: E. W. Kanel, Rochester, Minn. . .2 2 Ingvald Nelson, Minneapolis, ad | LR GOR aig Ree iy Da a 1.00 John Kiiskila, Hancock, i) RR ee ee ee gr ae 4.00 Sarah Rosenthal, Canton, Ohio . of $1000 by the immigration bureau| H. ibni Y 4 i 2 for each of the 30 Chinese sailors of Liat Meme a ait on the original 84 who have not turned|P, G, Panagopoulos, Denver, : up. Thirty times $1000 is $30,000, a| | Colo... Rk 1 06) pretty pennj:for the erring steamship! K. A, Karr, (collected) Cleveland, company to pay and one that it will higy Sovees oc cage oe 21.00 try to evade paying when the 60 day/ Council No, 1-U. C. W. H., Newark limit expires. Attorney Axtell says} Weriasic ee eee aes < 5,00 that in practice, he does not believe| Amal Food Workers Bakers. Nocal that the steamship companies ever pay No. 1, New York City ...... 4.00 these fines. But an effort will be made to compel the Bureau of Immi- gration to stick to its rule. Punished on Ellis Island. Then there is punishment due to the immigration authorities who held the Chinese on Ellis Island, without charges. The seamen were taken off the hands of the Hoboken police and held prisoners on the island as “an accomodation” to the company. Sec- retary Davis of the Department of La- bor has written LaGuardia, promising to investigate the affair. ~ Every obstacle qossible had been placed in the way of Attorney Pollock when he was working for the men’s release. Assistant Commissioner Uhl on Ellis Island refused to let him see the Chinese, because it might “start a riot” and because it was said he did not~have the names of any of his clients, When Pollock produced a name the authorities denied the man was there. Don’t Forget the Sustaining Fund! Fight Dangerous Death Traps at Rail Crossings NIAGARA FALLS, July 18.—The local section of the Workers (Com- munist) Party is arranging a huge protest meeting at which demands will be made for the elimination of dangerous railroad crossings in the working-class sections of this city. The recent tragedy in which the family of Samuel Pawloff an active member of the Workers (Communist) Party and of the Plumbers Union was wiped out at an unguarded crossing in the heart of the workers residen- tial section, has aroused the workers of this city and foreed even the City Council to make a gesture of protest. the determined anti-imperialist stand of the Soviet Union that the reaction- aries dare not immediately break with all the traditions of the past and go openly over into the camp of the enemies of the national liberation movement. The mass demand for action against. Nanking is constantly rising higher and threatens to engulf the Wuhan reactionaries so they have to proceed with the greatest caution in their assaults upon the Communists. BUY THE DAILY WORKER AT THE NEWSSTANDS Thousands of workers among whom they lived, filed past. the seven cof- fins’.in which the dismembered re- mains of Comrade Pawloff’s wife and six children were laid. Over a thous- and attended the funeral at which Herbert Benjamin, District Organizer of the Party, made a short address in which he pointed out that this work- ing-class family had been sacrificed even as are thousands of other work- ers throughout the country in the in- terests of greedy corporations who care nothing for the lives of workers. Have Paid Your Contribution to the Ruthenberg Sustaining Fund? E. J. Olekowsky, Chieago, Ill. ..1.00 Joe. Bogdanowich, Kansas City, Kansas 15.00 Walter Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. ..5.00 | A. Gabelis, New ork City ...... 1.00 J. A, Dominicks, Akron, Ohio . Martin Horvat, Kenosha, Wis. Lith. Wor. Wom. Alliance, J. Gradinick, Chicago, Ill. .. -4.00 Sarah Victor, Detroit, Mich. ..81.77 Celia Paransky, Pittsburgh, Pa. 12.14 K. J. Malnisrom, South Berel, TOA aig eval cena -2.00 John Pauler, Milwaukee, Wis. .. . 1.0 Tom Stergis, (collected) New York L231 Paap vi at pap epee W 6.00 F. V. Mohn, Los Angeles, Calif. 1.00 List No: 4901, N.'Y¥.°C. . 2... 2, 3.00 Z. C. Mershon, San Francisco, AN Sta toe 2.50 L. Silverman, San Francisca, Caljfornia Port Amboy, W. Street A Friend, Flushing, , row it may ~ NATIONA 1118 WEST WASHINGTON I U. S. Oakland, Oakland, Calif...1.00 Ukranian Fraction, Bayonne, Ds Wis Selene iba Nicer og 9.00 A. Hudyma, Lebanoni, Pa. ..3.00 A. Friend, Vancouver, B. C. FRIES aie erga 2.00 ; Wm. Philipus, Grand Rapids, cole: RE areata ann fe Renan 2.00 Arthur Kasik, San Francisco, | Oe Coc eee ese ar 5.50 Elizabeth Fox, Chicago, Ill. ....2.00} M. J. Owens, Cleveland, Ohio ..10.00 12.15) - 2.00 | Rochester, N. Y. .......... 5.00 | Convention Elections Soon! Have You One of These in Your Dues Book? Buono 211 If not, YOU CANNOT VOTE! See your Nucleus Secretary today. Tomor- For Assessment Stamps, Inquiries, Remittances, On Sale of Stamps, etc., write to: Nicaragua Delegate in’ Washington Defies U.S. | (Continued from Page One) | clash between the marines aiid they liberal forces of Gen. Sandino im which press reports indicate © 50; Nicaraguans were killed and severali hundred wounded. “Speaking as a delegate from Nicaragua, and in behalf of the Nicaraguan Federation of Labor,” declared De La Selza, “I want to say that if the United States marines do not depart from our country, they will have to destroy ultimately thd entire population.” Council Reports. Barno Stops Haitians. The Haitian delegation to the Pan» American Labor Conference were ar rested yesterday as they sought to keave* the country, according to a eable-gram read at the Conference today. The delegation consisted of labor leaders and seven Haitian editors, and their arrest was ordered by President Borno, who declined to les them leave the country. Borno refused recently to admit |Senator King (D), of Utah, to his {eountry. The labor delegation com- prised the same elements that had } invited King to the country, it was | said. The executtve council rendered a report on conditions of labor in Latin America, which it believes to be im- proving. There is mention of the part of labor in the Mexican oil crisis, the invasion of Nicaragua by the United States, the fight against labor by the governments of Cuba, Venezuela, and Columbia. No solu- tions are offered. The congress will try to decide on an immigration policy to recommend to the govern- |ment in regard to Mexican workers crossing into the United States. The officers of the congress aret | William Green, President; Luis N. |Morones, Vice President; Matthew Woll, Treasurer; Chester M .Wright, English Language Secretary; San- tiago Iglesias, Spanish Language Secretary. OF COMMUNISM By BUCHARIN :and | PREOBRAZHENSKY { | IN A NEW CLOTH-BOUND AND COMPLETE EDITION | \ Just Received from ENGLAND | The authors were commis- | sioned by the Russian Com- munist Party to write a com- plete and simple explanation of Communism, The student | will find this book a gem of Communist teachings. It is the only edition con- taining the complete text— printed on thin India paper to make a. most attractive ik for your library and for s use. | $1.50 Cloth Bound | The Daily Worker Pub. Co, 33 First Street NEW YORK. GET ONE NOW 14-Karat Gold Emblem Q (Actual Size and Design) SCREW-CAP TYPE $1.25 Sent by Insured Mail for $1.50 Qn Receipt of Money by aJimmie Higgins Book Shop | 106 University Place New York City In Lots of 5 or more $1.25 each. No Charge for Postage. ) be too late. iM L OFFICE BLVD. CHICAGO, ILL.