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Page I Four THE BAILY WORKER, NEW } YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1928 ‘Big Steel Comber RESETAR, LIMA, Tammany Hall’s § Silk: Hat | Ca ndidate Starts Hanis Cawnnign FOR MILITANCY Ghurch Also Linked Up in Case By a Worker Correspondent) WORKERS ARE | “Billie” Permits Polly Walker “TREATED WORST. 2 uae he IN HOSPITALS save-cse. | Favor | Cohan in risking the investment nec- Jessary to put his new musical com- edy, “Billie,” on the boards of the +|Erlanger Theatre. Despite what . Pay . Patients; conniseurs of sartorial perfection Different in USSR _ |say by way of criticism of the quan- — | tity of rouge used to attract atten- | (By a Worker Correspondent) tion to her lips, the fact remains aah i Wwatiee alone would justify Mr.) and a Were Out to Get Woodlawn Class War Victims Audience Cold t IN ARTHUR HOPKINS PLAY. KIDNAP GAME IS NEW FRAMEUP BY ALLEN-A BOSSES Seab Disappears; Is Firm’s Trick (By a Worker Correspondent) PITTSBURGH, (By Mail).— In our paper, The Daily Worker,|that Miss Walker is singled KENOSHA, Wis. (By Mail).—The | The case of Milan Resetar, Peter not long ago, there was a good ac-|out for attention from the small attempt of the Allen-A mill bosses Muselin and Tom Zima is one of the | count of trained nurses in hospitals.|@army of pulchritudinous females to frame the striking hosiery work- hardest fought case: the history They work a 12-hour day, but are|Sathered together by the star- ers here was scored on Thursday by of criminal law in Western Penn- | not yet strangled dramatic impressario, for Alfred Hoffman, an organizer of the sylvania. It has already been fought thru the criminal court of Beaver county and has been argued in the Superior court of the state and is booked for argument in the supreme court. This a typical c prosecution one of the la: independent companies, is by steel the Jones and Laughlin Steel Company. The case was conducted on the steel companies side by W. D. Craig who is the head of their trust company in Woodlawn, while the judge, W. A. Tammany hall is trying to hide the stench emanating from its activities by the selection of a perfumed candidate for Governor of New York, Franklin D. Roosevelt. While the big bosses of Tam- many Hall are pocketing millions in graft, it will be Roosevelt's job to divert the minds of the work- ers by loo ocent and pure. Photo shows Roosevelt passing thru Poughkeepsie on his way to New York, surrounded by his henchmen and camp-follow ers. ~ McConnell, who sat on the beach in the case in the Beaver county crirg- inal court is well known to be a tool of theirs, and it is also well known that he was elected and put into of- fice thru votes cast under the most | ~~ Sine APPLY FOR ONE JOB ney who was the real prosecutor ,be- hind the prosecution, has served sev- eral terms in the state senate of Pennsylvania as one of ¢he pliant tools of the steel company:and is well known as the “J. & L. state senator from the Beaver district.”| (By a Worker Correspondent) “Out of Work”—these three words At 11, only 60 had been interviewed and I found myself still waiti POLICE BREAK UP RED MEET IN OHIO class-conscious enough et demand the 8-hour day. I have just been ill in a hospital | Se0isie. for three weeks and I have realized} Critics rarely wrinkle their eye- | not only the work of the nurses, but | also the class distinctions between’ viewing a George M. Cohan play. private patients and patients in the | They confine their remarks to snap- wards. Private patients can afford | | py observations on the acceptability to pay three or four times as much | to the male, of the female side of as ward patients, and they get more|the cast or in praise of the musical than three or four times as much | jingles that find their way into the care and attention. | home via radio and graphaphone. No Questions Answered! | And much tho this critic would The ward patient is usually ad-| |like to draw some kind of a political mitted only after a long wait in|/¢88n from “Billie” he must con- the cliniotronmia here Hac manen a| 1688 that he spent most of his time} [hard bench, watches the slow-mov-|huckling, when he was not ton- ling handa‘of the big clock and-wone| costs, eocep ange cn nO Saxe) ; apy eae “i with the conditions under which the, ders if he can get back his job when ‘ : ke at oduce the splendor |he is well again. How much will he|jive in. cue. Great be in debt when he comes out of the | hospital? Where can his wife get| the money for rent and food? How} long will it be before he can work again? The young doctor is in a hurry and cannot stop for explana- | |tions. The nurses are in a hurry| |and move the patients along as if) in our great rich American! cities. On the whole the acting in| “Billie” is excellent. Snappy songs,| ; wisecracks and jokes, even tho many of the latter are hoary with age. One actor who pleased me very the delectation of the petty bour- | brows or bite their ears while re-| Zita Johann gives a realistic performance in “Machinal,” Sophie Tradwell’s dramatic play, now in its second successful month at the Plymouth Theatre. Warden, which had a long run in |Berlin. Marie Armstrong Hecht adapted the book and lyrics, “The Common Sin,” agreeable musical sounds, plenty of Play by Willard Mack which was the latest this week, will come to the Forrest Theatre next Monday evening. |scheduled to arrive in New York| Federation of Full Fashioned Hosi- ery workers. A strikebreaker, Harold Hendrick- son, was kidnapped by masked men on Wednesday and, after tar had | been poured over him, was released. In line with the mill owners’ policy of trying the frame the strikers in order to break their strike of un- precedented duration, as evidenced in their hiring of men to bomb the mills several times, the union lead- ers are certain that the latest show of violence has been perpetrated by |the mill owners on the scab Hend- rickson in a desperate attempt to lessen the union’s prestige among the workers. Simultaneously, Hoffman has made out an affidavit against Wil- liam Trout, who only recently left the mills for his home in Reading, |Pa., it is believed, accusing him of |knowledge of the bosses’ bombings. Hoffman quoted Trout as making the following remarks: “T can tell you all about the bomb- * i Ss aly i views were 2 p ‘ much was Val Stanton who bur- ‘i 0 He studied law as a student under|mean a great deal to us. To some) § mdgenly Toes bares ci ae Amter and d Hacker ATC they were cattle going to the| |lesqued Sir Alfred Huntington, much| Richard Bird has been engaged to set IM EL eo EEG Dah a og the judge in the case, McConnell,|it means one thing, to others an-|tinued and I could see that of the Arrested slaughter house. The patient is ad-/t) the disgust of fellow-worker St.|Play opposite Alice Brady in “A Bale Teds ast enh ncn cone one who has shown himself, in this case,| ther. To a boss, it is positive; to 00 interviewed about three remained | mitted to the hospital ward. He is|john Ervine of the New York| Most Immoral Lady,” the Townsend|l! the stuff that’s being framed up as one of the worst of red baiters, | a worker, nega T am out of fc es jer que enone. Daas Continued from Page One | dressed in a hospital gown and put) World, who still seems to be under| Martin play which Brady and Wiman |" You Background of Case. |work” to me is negative for it) At noon, another girl came OU .0 yoke from the hall tetnel ae | to bed. His own clothes are checked, | the impression that he is on the| | will put into rehearsal next week. | _ Even greater courage and convic- ) ieee the View riot only the backing means worry and trouble are limit-| interview-us and now, plus the pedi- ter mounted the platform and be.|t#ken away and locked up. | Strand in London, and not on Broad-| |tion of the necessity to continue the of one of the most powerful rivals “is ie RE ee Aan NER poe ied already been asked 2. t9 speak to the workers, de-| Visitors are allowed only at cer-|way, New York. Making people| Harry Davenport, Hale Noreross| strike to a successful conclusion is Gf the United States Steel Co. the] 7" 36 ee tego avec n ERE ONCE Tea told to remove ‘nouncing this action, The workers | tain hours, on certain days, twice a|laugh at the expense of a British @"d Leo Stark have important |the result of the Allen-A bosses’ at- J. & L. Steel Co., using all its indus-| }0TK department Store, adver eir hats to be further inspected were giving him a great ovation| week. Nurses mean to be kind, but|lord may be cheap stuff since it is|TOles in the support of Jane Cowl|tempt to break the strike by trying } ‘rial power to control the votes|#0F Salesladies. Naturally aE general appearance. This girl when the police, again rushing up| they are always too busy for any |dead easy, but this unregenerate foe|in “The Jealous Moon” which opens to frame up the strikers. which make and unmake members| Plied. But I was not alone. In called 75 girls, and out of these, /to the platform, repeated their bru-|little extra service. The patient in|0f British imperialism likes the stuff|in Baltimore on October 15. —DAGOR. of the state legislature and the| the Women’s Devartment there wore three or four were chosen who were tality of a few minutes before,|the big ward knows everything that |" matter what Pulitzer’s sanctified| a \ state senate but also has the neces-| More than 500 applying and in the sent into a testing room to be tested dragging him tc the floor and ar-|happens, how other patients are| importation thinks. men’s department, many more still.| mentally and were then told to wait. sary power to make and urlmake the resting him. anes away for operations and) As a laugh-producer “Billie” is} career of members of congress and “Salary Expected?” It was ly 1:15 and I was’ Immediately after the arrests the|brought back again, smelling of |certainly an addition to the gayety | Senate of the national’ government Applications were filled out. One ‘till wa No breakfast; I had |police exploded the tear gas bombs|ether, nauseated and groaning in|0f Broadway. —T.. J. OF. md of the courts. But in the course question to be answered was ‘‘salary Wanted to be the first. No lunch; I in the hall, causing the indignant |the hours that follow, how a patient | oe this case we see the hand of the) expected.” Here I found myself in WAS afraid of losing my turn. rorkers to rush in pain for the ex-| dies with the screens around his bed|__ With his twenty-fifth opus, ain OUSON we eae ee | Tae TESTS Ours q artment of justice coming in, in) quandary, what should I say? I At 2 p. m. No. 15 was called and its. In the scramble that followed | and how that patient’s relatives are | New Moon,” safely established in i Sat Presents person of Henry J. Lennon, “red” | know that when so many are’unem- I was interviewed. 1 went into the the police struck brutally about| admitted to see him when it is not| the Imperial Theatre, Sigmund, .openTsON CMYRTIL Spee F ak | a C ert of the department of justice,| pJoyed, the boss can play one against |room with the other 10 or 12 of the| them with their riot sticks, severely | visiting time. Minutes se ike | Romberg is completing the score) | ploy play ‘ : s em like hich will be| '" @ musical romance of Chopin we also see the hand of the cham- the other. Here it is the boss’ “elite,” for these were the selected Wounding many of the militant|hours and hours like days. At last| °F ® New operetta whic e | | GUILD Thea., W. 52nd St. of commerce, the courts of Al-|tools, the managers, ete, who ac-|ones of the crowd. workers. Women and children were |he is discharged, weak and stil in| Produced by the Messrs. ee | WRITE LILACS met eny county, uae melee aot complish this for him. Finally at 2:30, I see Miss Hyde cue and scores were badly in-|need of care. He must get a job peut ‘Three Poot Little Girls,” ei ke ee ee ery turn of the case w I noticed that many girls around and am smilingly, quietly told that |e Be quick 98 possible, though he ds : S Int i d UUalslimy trial of the numerous Pa |e were filling in the space with there was nothing doing now, but| pena lan, More Meets. | |not yet strong enough to work, |» Herman Feiner and Bruno Herdt- | CASINO Sth 8.48'way, Even, $:20] trange nteriuce v] 5 : +. . . S| rres Ve 2) | bi eine sear en ei se and $15. I decided to leave it Berane oe t to return ae lacrerpelk iGacunGan, tity ah contin i'l ee the private patient has every poh aarnaa ar cara ba er MUSICAL COMEDY HIT | John oan Te Ana reise ank. or so, I could be employed. jr ; i: |consideration. His physician takes | attention E der, Robert C. Simpson, who was) about twenty minutes lat a 3 ‘hold meetings in Martins Ferry. | abe the workee?” | EVENINGS ONLY AT 6:30 > i 2 . . eons government. | Woodlawn, and sae OF ea eaLe & T left discouraged, of course, but/|'The next meeting, which is scheduled | ime to talk with him and to make|Paid by / | } Bc tis cotition os such not| man collected the applications, ask-|then T began to reeall the atories|to be held on October 14, ell head|#*¥angements for him to have a|Physicians are public servants, and | IVIC REPERTORY 148t..¢tnay. H who thru his p : ing each girl to stand as he did 50, told me by the other job-eecken : seeiues room and a private nurse. He is|#T@ assigned to duty in this or that Hap } only acted as snoop and spy but also| 7%. : y the other job-seekers and/ dressed by Scott Nearing, Commu- ; hat district. It is| CENTURY Thee... Central Pi. W. | 500, $1.00, $1.50. Mats, Wed. dSnts230 noting her height and appearance. '{ jost my di : ‘ s ¢ New |#dmitted at once and shown to his| factory, this or that district. is 62 St. Eves. 8:3 7 ; Tused his office as legion commander Then he returned in 10 minutes call-|rppie et y personal discouragement. nist candidate for governor of New brocmiualt? he were at 4 hotel expected that they will do their ut- | Mat.> Fri. (Col. me) & Sat. ‘a 30. EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director is isc | Jer ora “ ” 1 i pa Se ing the names of those who were ment, Teer eeerconr abe: Seman hit jclub. His clothes are put away in| Most, not for private patients who | | NN Y DA Y Today—Mat., “Hedda Gabler. fl t Lae Se ciate the blactey anal Eo wanted. I was one of those. I/ One woman told me her toy ih | his closet and in his bureau drawers, |COUld pay them extra fees, but for | Tonight: “The Cradle Song.” j reas ane the teu Klux Klan and 8W also that those girls who were which is not very different tome LZVestia Devotes Page |The nurse and the orderly do every-|the workers whose health is s0/ ™~ tne susteal Comedy Sensation "~ | PRT" pve, *Wonlesne Genttensn, similar 100 per cent paytriotic mud- sitting next to me, and who hed that told by many others. She had to Concession Question |thits possible to make him miore|Vitally important. in Soviet |Het™- CAMEO At capnctey | rei. nes eacne ; silivand know nothing organizations| ®Sked for $18, were not wanted. So!heen deserted by her husband. He comfortable. His friends may come| Best of all, a worker in Soviet | Aes we | Sat Mat! “Liimvliation an Vorage.” inorder to get a conviction, thou-|/1 went farther and found myself in had been a hard working man, but) MOSCOW, Oct. 9 (U).—The|‘2 See him at any time of the day| Russia, when he is ill, receives from) ¢ 7 Sa sul Raves |Sat_ Eve, “erhe Would-Be Gentiomn.” sands of whom still remain wrapped) May's department store at 0:45 @ had lost his job and could not find newspaper Izvestia today devoted an| 0” ¢vening, until 9 p. m. They bring|the fund for social insurance an SHIPS 99| GRLANGER THEA, W. an on in the mists and fogs of the well-/™- An application was handed me. work, so that rather than be a bur- entire page to interviews with of-| und sem his flowers which stand on | amount equal to his otdinary wage. mtaied hae ee n gS ; vas No. 151. By the time I left : is Me | the bur i Mat: Wednesda ‘ imbwn brand of stupidity for which I was No. 151. By the den or see their sufferings, he had ficials and prominent economists the bureau and are reflected back| He is not haunted by the fear known) | WORLD PReMipnE = | Mat: Wednesdays & Saturdays, 2:50. they are only too well known and Someone was No. 628. deserted her and the three children, | with the intention of showing the|j" the mirror. And he knows noth-|to every worker in a capitalist coun-| Sensational Submarine Wartare: | Ccoife M, Cohan’s Comedians renounced. The hand of the church Pedigrees. Perhaps he was a coward, but is possibilities for profitable invest-| ‘2% of the other suffering in the|try, that he will be ill, lose his job, |: im Oe Poheua iereee oe comes in in the person of John B.| I wrote up my pedigree accord- there no end to courageous empty |ments in Soviet territory. The in-|S@™e hospital. He thinks his own|get into debt, grow old or die with-| RAYE you | Creag Stee Smelhanich, priest of the Serbian] ing to the questions asked and then’ suffering? Now she must support terviews include conversations with|/S noUgh. When he is well enough | out providing for his family. Noth-| THE LADDER “BILL TE Gatholic Church who appeared as a waited. At 10 a. m., girls were her family. She was looking for Germans, Austrians, Swedes, Amer- ie leave the hospital, his physician, | ing is taken from the worker’s own Kea as REVISED FORM witness in the interest of the steel called numerically for an interview. |a part time job so that she could be ieans and Frenchmen who now have|{@7/¥ and friends all urge him to|earnings to make up the insurance || CORT ae Weds «eat vs 620 fmpanies’ prosecution. We thus see sai home when the child |take time for convalescence. And he |fund. Industries, businesses, insti- vey | LYCEUM Thea. W. 45 St., Even.8.20 comp: pr : State: ani hich if } t, will e children left for) concessions in Russia and in each di i Pn . Money Refunded if Not mieariia|| lats., Thurs, & Sat. 2.30 all the reactionary forces linked up) States, as it is one whic Ost, Wi | School. In the evenings she sews|case the concessionaires calender tutions, subscribe to the fund, which With Play, | WAL iWithis prosecution. mean that our party must go under- for others ata hi shia By ita les Nga ace cen il Different in U. S. S, R. provides the sickness, old age or eer TER HUSTON Fe Arak Have Sxppect ground in its activities. Standing| per ‘family. subsist He hag bong ere OF the policy adopted by the] In Soviet Russia today medical|death benefits for all’ workers, ins Pals img aha AS Tes Aen a 1 ve 4 4 ‘ . y Sis' p 2 0 s 3 Case Must Have Support. behind the prosecution in this case married befon aa € had been | government. jeare is socialized. That means that —JOHN STEWART. ‘ELMER THE GREAT’ tWhile this case has been loyally’ are the railroads, the coal mine own-| husband had been emel wet her | Sergei Araloff, head of the for-| i A supported in the past by the workers | ers, the big steel companies and een employed as an cign department of the Supreme| yMOUT! well HUDSONThea.. W. 44 St. Eves, at up to now, especially by the South trusts who are using the chambers bare ee Be ae fad | Eeonontie? Council, was one.ict) the | sees ae | Hn Tk eS ee funniest play. the Nugenks Slavs, the International Labor De- of comerce, the Kiwanis Clubs, the could not do many authorities on foreign capi- }} have written fense of the Pitisburgh district is state police, the department of jus, td manual work any more. falista viniterviewed “by. Tevential Bis | Martin Beck Biohtasae,wea sao | PY REQUEST” , once again asking the workers to tice, the church, in fact as pointed! | .* nd ay there was the young representations were entirely fav- [} NITE HOSTESS come to the assistance of these, out above all of these have openly | Mish school graduate who had heard orable.to the entry of foreigners. with ELLIOTT NUGENT workers who are in the front line| come into this case in order to stop °, lot and naively believed that a akan PRB Ge doa Bea trenches of the class struggle, if at all possible the growth of the high school education is an assur-| PAVING WORKERS WIN. AcceptanceS eeches Stages, by, Winchell out, | coawnys46th StF eosin against one of the most ruthless Communist movement in Western ®"¢e against hunger. She had strug- 7 ¥ i | Pp Mate. Wed. & Sai Be. she ant ath Ntaiia.« Rell aA his | Zled thru school and now was t.|_ PLYMOUTH, Pa. —- The paving |f} S ] Thea, 41st & 7th Ave. SCHWAB and MANDEL'S Seo te cttire: country, tha/ Rernayleamia «Mellow. readen, Chie eae tea Oh ah await- | workers of this city have won their |f] J . National tretings 8209 AL SMASH | entrenched steel companies. The case cannot stop until every avenue ti shel could | siya don en? iniekomen. ia” waaee net ust Published Mats.: Wed. & Sat, 2.30 p. m. Civil Liberties has been helping in|} has been closed and every effort Rot even get a job as a saleslady.| >: : J O ‘ oun ce What good did 9. fifteen cents per hour. The new] GEORGE ‘ this case and they have rendered) made to stop these workers from id it do her?—she asked| vote is to be fifty cents an hour. | ve a Fe ae } valuable aid in the defense of these going to the work house where they, ™¢- Lapel SE fia va paisa || FORTY-EIGHT page pamphlet con- x “THE WAR SONG” _with GORGE OLSEN'S MUSIC. + workers. This case, if the superior! already have been sentenced—Mus- How many more could I quote, on | and remembered again that they are | taining the acceptance speeches of RiikcAlnee VICTOR HUGO" CARL LAEMMLE'S x is upheld, should be taken to! lin, Resetar and Zema. to five ns f ee on, ab I was told many stories? | the troubles of my class. | William Z. Foster and Benjamin Git- | “Man Who Lau hs” ‘Talking Motion Picture { the supreme court of the United —W. J. WHITE. orgot my own troubles as Maik , | Se aughs | 6 9 preme court 0: ited | acter nla Meditate ares DOM Gn me a Bake low, Workers Party candidates for Pres- \Broadway with Conrad Velde LONESOME Bee eee ee Hebe and Vice-President of the United nea ate Loe Hele eiees Acts'| with Gloag an & Uarearn, teat cl. A be mse! ; States of America, ne eee exps: | BEN BERNIE fipscveit Orchestea OCTOBE | You're m the fight when you 'B.S.MOSS' a ibebrpae Lage ae 2 ea Included also is the nominating speech write for The DAILY WORKER. OLON F Cont’ T'to “Ti p.m. | delivered by Bob Minor, Editor of the Daily | Worker, and the: closing address by Jay Levestone, Executive Secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party, summarizing the achievements of the National Nomin- ating Convention. COMMUNIST The Socialist Party Offers Itself —by M. J. OLGIN | Communist Speakers Covering USS. William Z. Foster, presidential eandidate of the Workers (Commu- * nist) Party; Benjamin Gitlow, vice- presidential candidate, and Bertram | Oct. Monday, Seattle, 15, TO ALL OUR READERS: PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTIZERS Do not forget at all times to mention that you Min’ Wash. In addition to these three tours, Juliet Stuart Poyntz, Communist D, Wolfe, national agitprop director | candidate for attorney general of Bae sty Ges ; 4 | aid candidate from the Tenth Con. |New York state; William Patton, ||| AMerica’s Fight for World Hegemony. ||| Each pamphlet carries a plate with the gressional District of New York, candidate for governor of Iowa, ||| and the War Danger latest photographs of Foster and Gitlow and “Mother” Ella Reeve Blocr, vet- eran Communist speaker and agita- |tor, will speak at different cities throughout the country. will speak at the following cities in splendidly done. their election campaign tours: Foster—New Orleans, Tuesday, Oct. 9, Atlanta, Ga.; Thursday, Oct. —by JAY LOVESTONE | | The National Miners Union—A New Con- ! PRICE 5 CENTS M1, Norfolk, Va.; Friday, Oct. 12,| Poyntz—Tuesday, Oct. .9, Omaha;| ception of Unionism— i are a reader of The DAILY WORKER. Fill out this Richmohd, Va.; Sunda), Oct. 14,| Moines; Tuesday, Oct. 9, Omaha; —by ARNE SWABECK In lots of 100 or more 80 per cent oft: coupon stating where you buy your clothes, furnish- | Washington, D. C. | Wednésday, Oct. 10, Sioux City. | ‘ ings, ete. ‘ Gitlow-—Tuesday, Oct. 9, San|_ Patten—-Monday, Oct. 8 Des American Neer BE ys octtay”’ Set | Moines; Tuendny,’ Ock 0, Omaha; icing ee Problem National Election Campaign Comm; Name of business place .......sssessessseccascsseeseneence 10, Phoenix, Ariz.; Thursday, Oct.| Wednesday, Oct. 10, Sioux City; y N PE paign Committee i 11, Tucson, Ariz.; Sunday, Oct. 14, Saturday, Oct. 13, Council Bluffs; GATORS oo e ccc ecccccsnccoccccscsccoceconccccon: 43 EAST 125TH STREET , NEW YORK, N. Y. Sunday, Oct. 14, Omaha; Monday, Latin-America and the Colonial Question Oct. 15, Sioux City. —by BERTRAM D. WOLFE Tuesday, Oct. 16, Wednesday, Oct. Houston, Te Fort Worth, Tex.; Your name necoe i7, Oklahoma City; Thursday, Oct. | Bloor—Tuesday, October 9, and AdATONS “oc crccvcvccccecccccccccccsccceccsescesepecemccos ‘48, Tulsa; Friday, Oct. TN ona ema aiden oe the Books and Self-Study Corner : to ‘fansas; Monday, Oct. 22, Omaha; | Kansas coal fields, Arma, Kan.; All orders must be accompanied by pa: ‘ day, Oct. 23, Kansas City. | Thursday, Oct. 11, Kansas City; paymen Bert SNicadey, Oct, 9, Daluth; |Friday, Oct, 12, St. Joven, Ma, |, WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS, 43 E. 125th St., DAILY WORKER | Wednesday, Oct. 10, Superior, Wis.; | Saturday, Oct. 13, Council Bluffs; 83, FIRST STREET NEW YORK CITY | Thursday, Oct. 11, Minneapolis, | Sunday, Oct. 14, Omaha; Monday, Minn.; Friday, Oct. 12, Minneapolis, | Oct. 15, Sioux City. \ New York City,