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Se _rére craf' Page Four ~ By J. WOOD. In Philadelphia we find working conditions and wages the poorest of any of the cities in the country; also Politically one of the most corrupt, the recent shake up in the police de- partment is a good example of same. The Cer Labor Union of this city claims about 125,000 organized workers in the trade unions. The compositicn of the CLU delegates d job conscious, Their @ges run above fifty and, in most eases, we find them fossilized, as their brains ceased to function over thirty years ago, in behalf of the interest of the working class. Most all progressive proposals and actions are defeated. They are contented to serve as an admiration society or to assist the bosses in the election of their candidates in the political cam- paigns. Council Fails to Function. Building Trades Council, which at one time controlled all the large con- struction jobs in Philadelphia and vicinity, today on rare occasions more than 50 per cent of the work. A few years ago a worker would not be permitted by the steward to start on the job unless he had a paid up card in the organi- zation, while today no one takes the trouble or even seems to care, as to whether the worker has a card This organization also a long time ago has ceased to function in be- half of the workers; but serves as an adjunct to the bosses in getting en- dorsements for their candidates on the old party tickets, Mitten Plans, other collaboration and welfare) schemes. b Local unions in many cases have Ybecome job trusts, they have built ‘Chinese walls around themselves and it is almost out of the question to become members of them. The machine and the business agents of most local unions are only concerned and interested in the perpetuation of their cliques, and “pie cards.” These organizatidns are also being uged by the bosses to keep the work-| ers intact by the many collaboration schemes. Proletarian Kensington. | Kensington is the largest textile! center in the world, and at one time was the most militant and best or- nized in the U. S. The radical vote on election days; sentiment and solidarity by the workers in the strikes have always been of the best. This sentiment is lying dor- mant but can again be aroused. It was thru the treachery of the lead- ership and their policies that these textile workers became disorgan- ized. Now we find but a few locals and a small membership in the U.| T. W. and likewise in the independ- ent organizations. In the last year there have been a number of wage euts and inroads on their working conditions, without struggle on the part of the workers. The new Na- tional Textile Workers’ Union will undoubtedly make much progress in this section. Philadelphia is one of the largest and most important ports on the Atlantic seaboard, ranking second to the port of New York. It is the gateway to the great steel and min- ing regions of Pennsylvania, and in this manner functions as an im- portant link to the industrial export, and an army base of the U. S. to all quarters of the globe. It has played an important role as a war- time port as shipments of ammuni- tion, etc., has indicated in the past and will continue to do so in the near future. Negro Port Workers. The organization.of marine work- ers is very weak, as a matter of fact there is but a small number in the ISU and MTW organizations, while the great mass of them are unorganized. The longshoremen in Philadelphia are composed of 90 per cent Negroes. The majority of them U.E.L. ORGANIZES PHILA. MILITANTS their struggles against the right wing in conjunction with the bosses. also in the building of the new union and better working conditions. We as militant workers must help them to build their union and assist in this work morally and financially, to bring it to a successful conclu- sion. In the metal, printing, shoe, build- ing and other industries we find similar conditions as to powerful organization dwindling down to nothing because of the surrender policy of the labor bureaucracy, their attitude towards the organization of the unorganized. Class-collabora- tion, agreements or lack of agree- ments in the industry, the struggle of the labor bureaucracy against the left wing, the lack of democracy in the unions, etc. Their refusal to deal with and give relief to the unemployed workers. To make a militant fight against injunctions and their refusal to build a Labor Party. T. U. E. L, Program. 1, For a militant trade union pol- icy. (a): Shorten the hours of labor. (b) Fight for higher wages, strike against wage cuts. (c) Against the speed-up systems. (d) For relief of unemployment. (e) Fight against injunctions. 2. Fight against class- collaboration. (a) Destroy the com- pany unions. (b) Abolish the B. & 0. Plan and similar schemes. (c) Against trade union capitalism. (d) Expose class-collaboration theories. 8. Build the trade unions. ganize the unorganized (b) Amalgamation, industrial union- ism. (c) Democratization of the union. (d) Against racial discrim- ination. 4. Form a Labor Party. 5. Organize the left wing. 6. In- ternational labor unity. (a) Close relationship with workers of the Soviet Union. (b) Support the world unity program of the R. I. L. U. (c) Expose the role of the Pan- American Federation of Labor. (d) Support the Pan-Pacific Trade Union Conference. This program in brief shows the tasks that confront the labor move- ment and the burning necessity of building powerful unions, left wing and progressive groups as the only effective means of putting this pro- gram into practice, of taking the la- bor movement out of the morass of class collaboration, and turning it into its proper channel of advancing the interests of the workers through the only means possible, that of struggle. TUEL Influence Grows. The militants, because of their ruggles against corruption and for a fighting union, have been subjected to a bitter barrage by the entire la- whose slogan of bor bureaucracy, “peace in industry,” at the expense of the living standards of the work- ers, is gradually company-unioniz- ing the trade union movement. How- ever, in spite of this attack, the in- fluence of the TUEL grows. If a group has not yet been formed in your union, we urge that you take it upon yourself to immediately form one and lay plans for ca ing out this program. The time is now here when every militant must assume _responsib for the or- ganizing of all progressive forces. The present period of so-called pros- perity is drawing to a close. The next year will see many struggles against wage c and the lowering of workers’ living standards. The task of rejuvenating and injecting a fighting spirit into the trade unions is the task of the left wing, and the task of the TUEL is to weld together all the progressive trade union forces upon a general program of action that will strengthen and build the trade unions into real fighting or- gans of working class struggle. GITLOW DEFIES PO IN ARIZONA; WILL HOLD MEET Continued fro LICE TERROR m Page One (Communist) Party at Richmond, Va., was forcibly pre- vented by the police. Efforts to stop the Communist election meetings at Houston and San Antonio, Texas, show the uniformity of the terroristic mood of the American capitalist ruling class in the season of “free and democratic elections.” But the reaction of the southern ruling class is not the only result of the opening of the Communist election campaign in the south. The the southern states—including the white workers behind even the workers of t working class as a whole in is far he north in organization, and industrialization of the south makes the problems of the workers more pressing than reports of a healthy respon: ever. Everywhere there are ise from the workers of the THE DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1928 Wall Street Militarist BEAT WORKERS AT ARMY SHOW |Many Anti-War Leaf- lets at Show Continued team Page One stomach and told that they would be | stabbed with bayonets if they made a move. | When taken to the night court, | the judge refused to postpone trial for 48 hours, as required by law to jenable defendants to obtain legal | Photo shows Commander |defense. With no opportunity of Charles E. Rosendahl, one of the |™aking a defense, Mellman, Albert men whom Wall Street has selec- |22d Hard were sentenced to five ted as a leader in the coming im- |days in the workhouse. Morris perialist slaughter of workers. |Goldberg was held in jail. The fol- |lowing morning, he was released on |$500 bail furnished by the Interna- oe Rosendahl was a passenger on the Graf Zeppelin, fi pases Sees —_—. |tional Labor Defense, and his case WOLFE REVEALS [He is being defended by Jacques | |Buitenkamp, attornéy for the I. |L. D. ROLE OF TARIFF |The attack on the members of the | the Young Workers (Communist) League engaged in anti-militarist work in New York is significant and | shows that the terror against the Seattle Workers ata Texas, West Vitginia and other | Continued from Page One states is part of a nation-wide | only and there is now no perceptible |c2mpaign directed by the federal | difference between them on this is-|0vetnment. tective tariff, which means a tariff | Statement of I. L. D. to protect the big monopolies. With; The following statement on the Raskob and other finance-capitalists | arrests and torture of members of | furnishing the democrats with|the Workers (Communist) Party change the tariff schedule that | nist) League for participation in| | Secures unlimited monopoly to the|anti-militarist demonstration at big trusts. It enables the capitalists|Madison Square Garden has been jand thus making such large profits! quarters of the International Labor | that they can sell in foreign markets | Defense: | below cost price. “The arrest of the four young “The protective tariff and trust | workers for the great crime against working for new imperialist wars. | leaflets to soldiers, telling the truth | With the great super-profits which |about the preparations for a new result from their protection, the|imperialist war shows that the war- capitalists ure reaching out for new | mongers and their faithful tools, the sion necessitates larger military for-|crush the militant workingclass. ces to protect their investments! “Not content with arresting them, abroad. The protective tariff is in|the police beat these four young reality a defensive weapon of the|workers in the most brutal fashion. | will come up for trial this morning. Workers (Communist) Party and | Aids War Plans, Tells} workers in California, Arizona, | sue. Both actually favor a high pro- | ig money, they would not dare to|and the Young Workers (Commu-| to raise the price of their products, |issued by the New York head-| monopoly are dangerous factors|the capitalist class of distributing | \territories and markets. This expan-| police, will go to any extremes to imperialists. The interests of the|Not even the worst criminals are workers are’ opposed to a high tar-|subjected to such treatment after | iff. But free trade alone is not|arrest, but this is nothing new for enough and would bring no perma-|workers. nent relief for the workers. The| “The three of the workers have whole structure of capitalist society | already been sentenced to jail thru must be abolished, a workers andja legalistic trick, the New York \farmers government established and | Section of the International Labor industry organized on a socialist | Defense will fight to the utmost to ‘basis. Only a revolution can accom-|save the fourth. We ask the sup- |plish this. The Workers Party is|port of all class-conscious workers leading the working class in its pres-|{n this and in other cases in which | This enjoyable combination is at the la good-natured, pleasing piece of | ness, | vention instead of helping. A bour- southern cities thus far reached. The Communist Party has reached the south. It will . pa % er ee same received |PePUtation of arresting end jailing fad Gates W. Hut, ip avcalled|Meon Teneee Siem canes, 1 ara from Ge nt, the so-called |uiterly at loss to understand how liberal” governor of Arizona, and these falsehoods gairied circulation from J. J. Lowe, chief.of police at| ang feel that I have been done a Nogales, oe sade eee grave dajustoe land jaele that’ the National Office of the Workers |truth of the matter be given the (Communist) Party in reply to in- same publicity as theit according quiries as to the whereabouts of /the falsehoods and rumors. Ben Gitlow, the Communist vice-/ «7. J LOWE, Chief of Police.” presidential candidate, were given eos gee ata ee castle eae a qqtitorial appeared in the Arizona was the comment at the Communist | Stat, Oct. 12: headquarters in regard to Governor “Plain Idiocy” Hunt’s telegram. “Where was this| “Unless there was ‘innocent’ ‘liberal’ governor when | more to the atrest of Wm. O'Brien, William O’Brien, the working class |Communist candidate for governor, | candidate for governor, was thrown |at Phoenix Wednesday night than into jail for trying to conduct a pub- |indicated in the press dispatch from | lie meeting in the political campaign |the capital city, the police were against Hunt and Hunt’s capitalist | guilty of gross idiocy. party? What was Hunt doingwhen| “O’Brien is the legally nominated a dastardly kidnapping plot—with|candidate of a legally organized | |suegestions from the kidnappers party with a column on the ballot. He has as much right to present his something ! lent struggles for relief from intol- | lerable conditions and towards the lultimate and inevitable proletarian revolution. |Marines Treat "Em Rough as Zep Lands Continued from Page Cre |state that Japan plans construction of a new giant airship which will |carry guns and bombs and have a |eruising radius of 3,000 miles. It will be by far the largest in the Orient. Construction will be begun jat once, ei * The British, also, according . to Commander Burney, are completing construction of their “R-100,” which j they boast will be better suited to | trans-Atlantic flying than the Graf Zeppelin. Chain Store Divides * | we are fighting the battles of the workers against the capitalist courts. We also ask workers to support the NEW YORK POLICE Two Pictures from ‘Soviet Russia at the Cameo haye an excellent sense of humor. | Only Russians would think of Ak-| hov and Makhov and good-looking Dasha and 4 machine that not only puts the capitalist out of business but turns out laughs every second. Cameo Theatte this week and it de-| serves to stay there for many weeks | to come. | “3 Comrades and 1 Invention” is movie. It’s a bit of the new, happy Russia, where workers are building a new world and where they stop on their job once in a while to laugh whole-heartedly—even at their own expense. Akhov and Makhov work in a soap factory. They want to raise pro- duction above pre-war level. They also want to do away with the neces- sity of buying boxes ftom a bourge- ois contractor. So they -invent a machine that wlil raise production and put the capitalist owt of busi- And what a machine that is, my comrades. It will put you in good humor for the next nine weeks. It produces laughs even faster than it turns out boxes, for Akhov and Makhov are the funniest pait of Edisons you ever saw. And You must see them, Under all the good humor in this eomedy there is some good-natured constructive kidding. For Akhov and Makhov have their troubles. Their comtades laugh at their in- geois plant manager is plotting to hold down production to help the capitalists contractor and the com- rades don’t see it. The local Soviet authorities ate not sympathetic to the new-fangled ideas of our in- ventors, So Akhov and Makhov stubbornly and uproariously, have to get all the way to the district of- | fieials to prove they have a great) invention. | You'll like it all. You are sure to | like healthy, good-looking Dahsa who is easy to like. Both Akhov and Makhov like her very much— in fact that’s where a lot of their troubles otiginate. But so does a pompous little petty government of- ficial but she finally mops up the floor With him. Our Dasha believes in direct action. (It seems the | Soviet movies don’t mind giving the | Workers a hint at what should be) done with pompous petty officials.) | The whole picture is good, whole-| hearted humor. The speed of its} |humor is not as explosive as in American comedies, as for instance in the great films of Charlie Chap- lin. The humor is not as sharp. |But it is warm, and human and} |more comradély perhaps. It has a distinct quality you will have to see) for yourself to fully appreciate. | Alexis Popoff directed. Akhov| I. L. D. by attending en masse our Saturday evening, Oct. 27, in Web- ster Hall, 119 E. 11th St.” annual Proletarian Autumn Revel, | and Makhov were acted by Serge) Iavrentiev and Serge Iablov. And |if Russian names afen’t too much of a problem fot you—Olga Tretia-| =a 2 PHILADELPHIA, PA. Makers Union of the Committee. Greetings to the Workers (Communist) Party Which Leads All the Struggles of All the Work- ers from the Philadelphia Waist and Dress National Organization are unorganized, and only a very|themselves that extreme violence small percentage belong to the I.| was to be the finish of it+was con- L. A. Working conditions are rap-|cocted in this state with the city of- idly declining to a pre-war level.|ficials of Phoenix, the most ‘influ- The officialdom has very little con- trol of the rank and file, and is go- ing more and more to the right. The Negro longshoremen of Phila- delphia have a militant and revolu- tionary tradition. During the years of 1921 to 1923 they were organized 28,000 strong in the M. T. W. of the I. W. W., due to its anarcho- syndicalist tactics, lost control of them in the 1928 strike and since that time there has been no reor- ganization of these workers. At the present time a fine militant spirit and tradition still lingers on the waterfront. The situation in the marine in- dustry necessitates a more vigorous campaign and a more complete mo- bilization of the left wing of the labor movement to build the Inter- national Seamen’s Club whose func- tion is to disseminate propaganda to raise the ideological level of the workers and to lay the basis for the organization of the unorganized of 4 industry, able. There is much than can be said about street car and railroad work- ers. In 1910 street car motormen and conductors were well organized, they showed fine solidarity and mili- taney in their strike, which was in- tionally known. Today these ‘kers have been psychologized into believing that they are part owners the company, by the Mitten Plan. company unions of the rail- roads have also befuddled the work- ’ minds. Needle Trades Progress. Needle trades a few years ago| was a powerful organization, but thru the misleadership of the Si; , Hillmans, etc., these organi- zations have been disorganized until Shere are very few workers left in organization. Today we see exceptionally favor-) ential’ citizens and the American Legion participating so openly as to give advance accounts of the crime to the newspapers? The ruling class and ‘liberal’ governor of Ari- zona, the state in which the tradi- tion of the infamous ‘Bisbee depor- tation’ still furnishes the model for ‘action against the working class, cannot be whitewashed so easily. “As for the chief of police of No- gales, the advance information given out by the kidnapping gang which was prematurely published in the New York Tribune shows that the plan included locking Gitlow up in the Nogales jail at one stage. This rather strong indication . that, Lowe, as head of the police depatt- ment, must have been considered by the pletters as an active figure in the dirty crime they tried to carry out.” The text of the telegram is as fol- lows: | Governor Hunt's Telegram. | “Nogales, Ariz. “J, Lovestone, Executive Secretary | Workérs Communist Party of America: “Regards to wire, I called up long- distance chief of police of Nogales. They know nothing of: the where- |abouts of Benjamin Gitlow. Rumor must be false. | ‘GEO. W. HUNT, “Governor of Arizona.” e.e a \“J. Lovestone, Executive Secretary Workers Communist Party of America: “Article carried by New York Herald Tribune to effect that Ben- |jamin Gitlow in jail in this city ab- |solutely without foundation, Has at no time been in jail here and as |far as I have been able to learn has \not been in Nogales. Have been and waistmakers, also the chief of police going on eleven | making much progress in|years und have not acquired the | case to the people as have Governor Hunt and Judge Phillips. He must of course keep within the same bounds as are required of his oppo- nents, but the dispatch plainly states that he had not spoken more than twenty words when he was arrested. |In other words he was not arrested fot any offense against the law but | because the police did not approve lof his politics. Such practices are vicious. If the police are to be priv- ileged to be the censors of this cam- paign then a republican chief might arrest all democratic speakers or a democrat chief arrest all repub- licans. “The Communist Party is admit- |tedly a party of violence, but fhe time for the police to act against j individuals is only when they actu- ally take part in, or at least advo- cate, such action. O’Brien could not have done any such thing in the |twenty words he nad spoken. It is ‘a plain case of persecution, and such | Large Super Profits CHICAGO, Oct. 16.—A large divi- dend in the form of'a new stock issue has been made by Montgomery- | Ward, an increase of common stock |from 1,285,000 shares to 6,000,000 |shares and the offer of two ad- | ditional shares at $17.50 a share for |each share now held is the form of |the new profit mellon. | In announcing the stock increase | President George B. Everitt stated that Montgomery-Ward have de- GREETINGS TO THE PARTY THAT CAN ALWAYS BE DEPENDED ON TO GIVE LEADER- SHIP AND SUPPORT TO THE STRUG- GLES OF ALL THE WORKERS. —FURRIERS T. U. E. L. OF PHILA. | veloped 200 chain stores in the past | lyear, are planning to open 200 each |year and will continue until 1,500 |towns of over 5,000 population will | be covered and thus establish the | largest general merchandising chain | in the world. GREETINGS FROM radical groups as the Comntunists | thrive on martyrdom, so that even \from the most radically capitalist |point of view the arrest was a ‘blunder and a bad one.” | | | ——————————SE | | PHILADELPHIA, PA. Long Live the Workers (Communist) Party, the Party of the Working Class. —STREET NUCLEUS 2-B. THE CONSOLIDATED PRESS UNION PRINTERS 40 8. 7TH ST.—Lombard 1340; Main 3169 Philadelphia, Pa, GREETINGS TO THE DAILY WORKER JENNIE CLARK T. DECOVNY J. STEMPLE DORA CHILKOFSKY ANNA HAVIS STEPHEN HAVIS FRANK KENEDY LOUIS RADOMSKY J, ANDREWS s | REVOLUTIONARY GREETINGS from THE NORTH PHILADELPHIA WORKERS CLUB | 1331 N. FRANKLIN STREET Philadelph‘a, Pa. HARRY FRAYT LEON BAIN N. KOVALCHUKRAN SAMUEL ORCHSKOV K. BEER B. BACKMAN F. KANNIDY 8. TRECHANUK H, ATTSCHULER SAM BURT S. MILLER 8, SHEINER STEPELMAN B. SANIEF L, ROSENBERG BAILKIE BELKIE R. SCHWARTZ LITWIN } MINNIE+U. TIN —— ® HOSE serious Russian workers | URGE SPREAD OF POLISH STRIKE Continued from Page One | tricts of Poland in order to prevent } reinforcement of the textile strike. They are still trying to paralyze the | strike.” “If the capitalists offer but a lit- tle more than a five per cent wage increase the social-democrats will probably try to stop the strike. The Communist Party and the proletariat of Poland must spread the Loda strike to the whole Polish werking class, especially to the workers of | Dombrov, upper Silesia, Cracow and revolutionary Warsaw must alse join.” CHANNING POLLOCK. ~ Lods Walkout Complete. WARSAW, Oct. 1€.—The second day of the general strike in Lodz which was cailed in support of the 100,009 tezxtile strikers, stil seea all commercial and municipal activities at a standstill. Author of “Mr. Moneypenny”, his} Everything is affected including latest effort, which will open at the! public utilities, such 28 the telephone Liberty Theatre tonight. |service, sewage and water depart- | ments, street car service and al! fac- kova was t i mrade | tories. All theatres and moat of the “eo Pare alone motion pictures called off their per- that smiled so nicely and acted so} Printers joined {tn the | formances. Ancthar Bowles Picture, jwalkout and only leaflets appeared well. | On the samme atid wholly aplendid| canter ieniear DORI ehs a nei ers and editor's themselves. program is another, more serious picture from Russia called “Al i Shanghai Document”. Briefly, it is| alongside of the foreign exptoiters a film record of life in Shanghai,|/and it ends as {t must end—and as that presents a Clear working class |it did—in revolution. Here is a pie- view of life in China from all ang-| ture that fits the program and {s fit les. It is a splendid thing worth|for any workers’ audience. the ten best articles you have read! See the whole program. Here you on China and as human a document | will see our Russian comrades attist- as ever movies recorded. It pre-|ically serious and in artistie good sents class differences, exploitation |humor. They give us further good of the Chinese workers, the develop-|reason to feel proud of their ac- ment of the Chinese bourgeoisie | complishments.—W. C. Tn SUDENG sea The First Soviet Comedy * *# Keith-Albee AME 42nd Street and Broadway “THREE COMRADES AND ONE INVENTION” “A SHANGHAI DOCUMENT” Sensational Film of Recent China Uprisings American ‘remiere EXTRA ADDED FEATURE “KILLING THE KILLER” A Cobra and Mongoose Fight to Death ‘Thea., 7th Ave. & 59th St. vHE THEATRE GUILD JOLSON Hevea Mass, WeaeSat | - Presents ODETTR, DE WOLF | F _ U S T GUY ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER in a musical fomance of Chonih Thea. W. 52na GUILD Eves. 8:30; Ma WHITE LILACS Thursday and Saturda ~ Strange Interlude Sonn GOLDEN hea, 58th EVENINGS ONLY AT 5:30 38th SL&B way. Eves, 8:30 CASINO Mats. Wed. & Sat., 2:30 MUSICAL COMEDY HIT LUCKEEGIRL IVIC REPERTORY 1St.sthav. 8:30 50c, $1.00, $1.50, Mats. Wed.&Sat.,2.30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director | Mat. Today—“The © | Ponight—“The Cher een CEN' Thea, Central Pk, W. ENTURY & 62 St. Eves. 8:30 Mats.: Wednesday and Saturday, 2:30. | Musical Comedy Sensation Thurs, Bvé., “Linvitation aa Voyage.” | Fri. By “Whe Cherry Orchard.” |Sat Mat., The Would-Be Gentleman.” Sat. Eve, “L'tn¥itation au Voyage.” with BILLY B. VAN | NIGHTS (exc, Sat.) and Sat. Mat. $1-§3| “SeeN°” THE LADDER | ERLANGER THBEA., W. 44th 87, ——_ Evenings 8.30 Mat.: Wednesdays & Saturdays, 2:30. George M. Cohan's Comedians with POLLY WALKER IN ITS REVISED FORM? in Mr. Cohan's Newest CORT = Thea., W. 48 St. Evs. 8:30 ‘Comedy gba by path, Det & ae “BI ” joney. Refunded if Not | L LYCE Thea. W. 45 St., Even.8.30 CEUM ™M. Thurs, & Sat. 2.30 WALTER HUSTON in Ring Lardner’s Ringing Hit ‘ELMER THE GREAT’ HUDSON Thess W. 44 St. Byes. at 8:30 Mats. Wed., Sat. 2:30 The funniest play the Nugents have written “BY REQUEST” with ELLIOTT NUGENT cHANtN's46th St. Thea.45St.&8Av.Dvs. Martin Beck (ysis wea’ sate i NITE HOSTESS: by Fang Cate 4 Staged by Winchell Smith Produced by JOHN GOLDEN. '. of Broadwi Keith-Albee eae Y. Showing Mate. Wed! ges Prariri .B. 0.’s THRILLER . ? i Broadway GNcapore Goon” cred S | at 41st St. M Ustelle Taylor — — ae pie OOD N EW: ind 7 Keith-Albec-Orpheum Acts. | with GEORGE OLSEN'S MUSIC. Order Now A Bundle of Daily Workers for Distribution Special 11th Anniversary Russian Revolution, Election Campaign and War Danger Edition—October 27th, Navy Day. —300,000 COPIES— PRICES OF BUNDLES, $6 A THOUSAND | | |