Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
e Four iRUTAL SPEEDUP IN POWER PLANT, OWNED BY CITY Workers Made Slaves, Correspondent Says In “the power house of the New} York City Children’s Hospital on} Randall Island, a most intense ex- 2S and inhuman speed up stem constitute the order of the eg The workers, especially the non- civil service ones, live and work un- der conditions equal to peonage or serfdom. They are paid the meager sum of forty-five dollars per month. are given the cheapest and non-nu- tritious grade of food and are con-| tinuously brow-beaten and driven} around by the arrogant and egoistic When Arthur Glof_and his wife, arrested for picketing in connection R, TERROR AGAINST 14 Communists Jailed in Los s Angeles (By a Worker C Correspondent) LOS ANGELES, Calif. (By Mail) —The wholesale arresis -by Acting Police Captain William Hynes, head of the “Red Squad,” were laid be- fore the police commissioner yes- terday by Dr. E. P. Ryland, exe:u- tive secretary of the Church Fed- eration, in behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union, Arrest Even Children. During a period of two weeks, starting en Sunday, Oct. 7, at least 14 Communists (14-year-old children |and grown-ups alike) were arrested both mliitant workers, were n with the strike against the Allen | GOAST WORKERS: EW. YORK, WEDNE DAY, Nov. 7. 1928 PVA RS EEE NES A ERE DUA TE NOMI = i) “TELLS OF POLICE MILITANCY OF | AN A WORKERS RISES - IN MIDDLE WEST Sentiment for Workers Party Increases By PAT’ DEVINE. Sentiment in Minnesota, Wiscon- sin,end upper Michiean is growint ranidly for our narty and its candi- dates, Everywhere one goes one | finds the militants who had for some | time been discouraged, hecomine | enthusiastic for the cause of emanci- | pation. Scores of speakers are touring the district coneretizing this sentiment | ‘into orgenizational resrits for our |Party. The platform of the Work- | er (Communist) Party has met | with an unprecedented resnonse. | Allan Dinehart Stars i Belmont Theatre A playing at the Belmont Theatre: It is called “Girl Trouble” and is written by Barry’Connors, who has ® reputation along Broadway fur turning out entertaining little farces. The play is about the love affairs |of Jimmy Lockhart, played by Allan Dinchart, who was the leading man in Mr. Conners’ first play, “App'e- |sauce.” It shows how Jimmy avoids the members of the fair sex, who are constantly following him around. His hate of women reaches the ex- treme of his writing a book called “The Silly Season” that has a Scho- penhauer conception of the female section of the population. When he was seventeen years of age Jimmy had married a circus ac- robat, which marriage was annulled MUSING COMEDY ITLDLY amusing comedy is now | n “Girl Trouble” at the! JUDITH ANDERSON } SHITH'S CYCLE POLICE WHEEL INTO CHILDREN Two Girls Hurt; Al Lauds Officers (By a Worker Correspondent) PHILADELPHIA, Pa. (By Mail). —Police butchery of working ‘class children has the full support of Tam- many Al Smith, General Motors can- didate for president. Preceding the delivery of his ‘speech here recently, Smith had him- self paraded thru the streets. At one point in the line of merch, a group of school children swarmed into the gutter in order to get a better slant at the brown derby and the seven-day smirk. A motorcycle boss sergeant. A. Hosiery Company, in Kenosha, Wis., rather than pay the $100 | nd jailed for distributing “Red” | thousands of copies being soli all DS ee ee ee Who pl hi rs | bull, clearing the way for the Wall Shovelling and wheeling coal and| fine, they preforred to go to jail. The two workers wanted to take | Propaganda among the U. S. sailors | over the district. a ‘val girl meets. oor hero, Fin roeiays the role of Nina ‘Leeds / street toady, deliberately turned hit? ire boxes, their children with htem, but the authorities stepped ii d tor mevines, boy scouts “and girl| Communist literature exwosing thi le carnival girl meets our hero,/in “Strange Interlude,” Eugene ¢ on ashes, cleaning out hot fire boxes » a ‘epped in and tore puleek 4 osing the | ow-a professor of applied sychol- | O'Neill’ machine and ran into them, knock: oiling, wiping and scabbing on the| the children from their ari The jail sentences against the work- _ scouts, in public schools and at the | role of the renublican and democratic Nagy a sis bral eae ae eill’s drama at the John Golden |ing down two small girls. ° They dock workers by unloading the coal) ers are indeterminate, which means that they will be kept behind | University of Southern California, | parties and the treechery and vacil- |i") Stu onc Mae Cy 1a An OVk Theatre. were carried’ to the hospital whe-e boats are some of the many jobs| the bars as long as the boss-controlled courts wish. Photo shows | cte. lation of the socialist and farmer likiel basin De tin & Netsibutad to|DHIMAH IN RECITAL AT’ examination revealed their injuries figld by the non-civil service em-| them with their three children shortly before they were taken to It is charged that a number of | labor parties is being received every-| 11°" audience. It is well after 11; CIVIC REPERTORY THEATRE Were of an extremely serious nature. ployees. workers were held in jail from 26 where with a svlendid resvonse from | r |p. m. when mamma gives her bless- im i .| “It was splendidly done and the These lowly paid monthly workers hovrs to eight days—incommuni- |the workers of the Northwest. who | ™ Wit ae ate aes bie diac lac pe rare police have my thanks and apprecia- live on the island and are there- cado. That means that they were |have militant traditions and desire ane Oe aren ”, icp prep te ted the glib governor ‘Sob : hes vieliant 2 : vy an independent political party of ;2b!e to go home feeling happy. present pext Sunday evening, at the | tion,” commented the glib govel fore ever subject to the vigi uh not permitted to see even an attor- vy To make it possible for the play lafter his gas attack calculated. to gaze of the bosses or the stool pige- ons, One of the lowest and | conspicuous and obvious stool pige- ons in the place is reputed to be receiving seven and a quarter dol- SOVIET PROFESSOR! ney. Several victims of the October police terror are out on bail, the amount of which was fixed at from | $1,000 to $7,500. Being unable to their own. To carry on this work in a |thorough fashion we need money. | Time after time we have had to dis- | appoint hundreds of workers who de- to continue for the required length \of time, there has to be the usual complications that are expected in every farce comedy, The present Civic Repertory Theatre, a pro- gram of dance poems, assisted by Etille Saiken and Blanche Evan. | with Geraldine Chanin at the piano. | One of her popular numbers horn-swozgle Philadelphia workers. Later he retired to the Delaware estate of his millionaire crony, John |J. Raskob, “They had a mighty big jars a day for playing the role of | (The author, of thie fascinating |Iaboratory being busily engaged on| make arrangement for bai, four |%ied to hear the Communist posi P88 i8 no exception. One of the |"Gopi's Complaint,” dedicated tothe | Peomet ins ts kaneis id et ated aadas, description ofthe great worn in| the last.stages of the producticn of | workers. are still. in jail, as far as |tion because of lack of funds with | women who is trying to force her | memory of the Anglo-Indian dancer, | | handled it,” Smith. added. Class collaboration is not yet Agricultural Research now being another book, and, having inquired) the writer knows. The federal au- | Which to send speakers. attentions on Jimmy hides under | Roshanara, will again be presented | Sen Achine visible in this power house. The boss | carried out in the U.S. S. R, is an where I was staying, at once offered | thorities are trying to deport a| Touring District 9 is like touring | Fis bed when ‘he is preparing for /by Dhimah. i aap amet fod seizes every opportunity of demon-| English agricultural research work-| me his rooms near by. Humber (cf CouanNes Europe, The Mesaba Iron Range, | Sis bath. This ‘is a sample of the ss strating his economic supremacy; or ¢78 who recently went to Leningrad| ye algo asked one of his staff, Dr. jzest of the play. Those who like in his own words “to keep the men where they belong.” When not within sight or hearing of the boss one hears many inter- esting exclamations. Some cursing the boss, others damning Tammany Hall, still others cursing the whole Department of Public Welfare and PROFESSOR VAVILOV at the 1... +5 meet everywhere. bare justice, are eaverly looking to|¢@njoy the play without any great . e oe ; a some philosophic-looking work- time I was introduced to him) j, ae i bial int one Pate as the only force putting | €ffort on their part. American Premiere Sovkino’: Masterpiece er exclaims: “O, Lady Welfare what | was spending day and night in his| 7 “Ris cee “a The eran out scene ey | forward their real views and aspira-| In addition to Mr, Dinehart, who "| { awful crimes are committed in thy Seneuititat pete esd an | Defied Legion, Klan ltionas | We are sinabledo measure up (does his utmost to make the play at @ a same!” Inhuman and terrible tho overthrow of capitalism and forever rt of the people are eng ater Dal; ” to their demands thru lack of funds. | interesting, other members of the \ hese conditions are, they neverthe- | abolish unjust and tyrannical | 0" oy cation haces tit kh ox Boss Police The $10,000 Election Campaien |cast are Dorothy Hall as the circus, |] 2md Production of SM. EISENSTEIN, the Director of Potemkin less serve a useful purpose. F They methods. \ oan ae paca ri Sie e fs Bowe carry . 3 Drive comes at the vrover time. With pie boa ned the nee aa DYNAMIC ‘ DRAMATIC are fanning the flames of discon- bd bd id is ‘ontinued from Page One * ‘ ‘orgie e Hall as a vamp ‘ thing tt | Prices, Mats. 0c, aoe are developing a clas (Written for the Worker Corre- recently as 1861 that serfdom "Was | with violation of the criminal syn- mora mupbare ae ec ad oats tea te eabtinke ous lite lates Actas Be spe eas ie Beavis as | ve. $1.00; ‘ont i| consciousness, a class consciousn: spondence class at the New York | legally abolished we cannot fail to/ dicalist law. fifty per cent. / Our District wxec-|The play is presented by Richard Neues Thee of the on . aig Ra ees paleaiant ‘chat will ultimately precipitate the | Workers School.) realize that the agriculture is in an Young Communist Attacked : Hesigas 8s The Little Carnegie Playhouse iy y IN SEARCH O “TT, jor a holiday. He i an? was introduced by an Esper- t friend to Professor Vavilov, the world-famous agricultural botan- ist leader of Soviet agricultural ge- search. an Esperantist, eo ie THE | IA” CREW By Professor Samoiloviteh. I. Peerage ] FEEL incapable of reporting all that was accomplished by the Krassin expedition, for all that we lived thru aboard our ice-breaker was extremely stirring. Why was the Krassin chosen to undertake the rescue of the Italian expedition? A few days after the a few), to provide the Krassin with 2,500 tons of coal, to'provide nour- ishment for 150 men for a few months, to procure warm clothes, valenki (warm boots), shoes, skis, arms, ammunition, to recall thou- sands of details indispensable to a polar expedition of such-great im- portance, and to finish this work, all of it in three days? Yes, that was made possible, L. P. RINDAL. Rol, who, like the Professor, knows English thoroughly, to show me whatever I wished to see and to look xfter me so long as I cared to stay in Leningrad. Such hospitable treat- | t of an obscure English agricul- st was typical of the reception I U.S. COMMUNISTS entirely backward state, The headquarters of the Young “Three-Field” System Workers League in Los Angeles was The “three-field system,” of which |Taided and many Communists mis- in this country only a few traces| handled. Six comrades were ar- ve, is*in Russia the chief 1 ode | tested in Philadelphia at open air of cultivation, ESE cs aie A great part of the cultivated |_. Mother Com Si rncnne in area is still divided into the strips| Phoenix was held in spite of at- which 200 years ago were also char- acteristic of England. Add to these facts two others—only one twentieth of the area offthe U. S. S. R. is cul- tivated and only one+ -fifteentn is in- | habited, habited, and it will be seen at once | Penell factory. the enormous scope for improvement | 5 in agricultural production, At the| At the Madison Square Garden same time the magnitude of the .ask |°@lebration of Navy Day by can be appreciated, patrioteers and 100° per centers, Young Pioneers who were dis-| Klansmen and the police. In New York, police gave our speakers or the workers gathered to FOUGHT TERROR tempts to suppress it by Legionaires, | hear them trouble on several occa-| | sions, especially in front of the Zagle | producing three-cuarters of the iron | ore produced in the United States. is |a veritable breed’ng ground for dis- content. Lack of finances keep us from carrying on activity as w? should. ’ Poor farmers, who have been groping around for a medium | thru which to carry on a fight for | utive Committee decided at its last |meeting to endorse the drive; to |urge the workers thruout the coun- | try to “Give till it hurts.” We need | “Dollar Bullets” with which to carry | on the big Communist push. The American Legion here tried | to stop our street meetings but an intimation that we would fight this | American Legion gangsterism te the end, has given us temporary breath- ing space. The Lesion will again | try more determinedly then ever. We witi need funds to meet this new on- slaught, Success to the Ten Thousand Dol- lar Campaign Fund. The North- | west looks to the rest of the country | | for support. Shall we look in vain. their entertainment along that line will undoubtedly rave about “Girl Trouble,” although it must be an- nounced it is not as good as Mr. Conners’ other two plays, “Apple- sauce” and “The Patsy.” In other words, the audience can relax and Wolfe to ch Course, ‘Historical Materialism’ | at the Workers School Bertram D. Wolfe, director of the | Workers School and editor of the Communist, who has just returned from a nation-wide tour on behalf of the Communist Platform and Ticket in the Election Campaign, will give a course in “Historical Materialism” on Thursdays from 8:30 to 9:50 p. m This course will interest stu- dents who have already made some at Tan 146 West 57th Street other Theatre in the world. and Modern IVIC REPERTORY | ws. sions ve 50c; $1.00, $1.50. Mats, Tues.&Sat2.30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director | Tonight, “The Cherry Orchard.” Thurs. Eve. “Phe Would-Be Gentle- man,” Eve., Fri. “phe Cherry Orchard.” ions in June.” ‘Would-Be Gentle- , Ith Ave, & 59th St. vs.8.30 Mats.Tues.&Sat. GUY ODETTE DE WOLF | ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPBR 1p a musica! romance of Chopin There is an entire evening's entertain- ment in the Eine Pong Court, Ball Room, Bridge Room, Art Gallery — — — CiRele 7551 CAMEO *3,2X NOW —American Premiere— Emile Zola’s FEAR A Startling Tragedy of a Woman's Unfaithfulness. THE THEATRE GUILD Presents FA UST i * ; tudy of Marxian Theory to a sys- ‘Thea. W. 62nd St, last radio message was received from’ 5) 11-5’ to unwearying rapidity, to| Communism is essentially the re- tributing leaflets against the war|Se®d Money collected to the Na- ‘ oft na oe s stagh é ai i | GUELD: teste Bs sats i" pig, tate COLNE Na eneral help, to that exeeptiona! en- sult of the application of scientific laaveesseaca:aivestedy Seneuan ts | Comal Election Campaign Committee | “emule Study of Communist pac S| 30 tion w e Italian. consal at Len- siesm with which we were all method to the analysis of society, - at 43 E. 125th St., New York City. | S°Phy- nd I advised him that the to carry on the search for eriled expedition was to send ized. We worked in a fev ion, without eating or sleeping. Some of us could hardly remain on and |the workhouse and subjected to| it-is natural therefore for the Com- | brutality when they refused to munist Government to have enlisted | promise to give up their Communist the aid of Russian agricultural | activities among the children of Red blooded Communists and mili- tants will give the answer by topving | this drive and rushing dollar bullets | After taking up such questions as “What is society, on what does its growth, decay depend, what is the SAM Theatre, 42d St., West H. HARRIS of B'way. Eves. 8.30. Matinees, Tuesday & Saturday, 2.80. MUSICAL COMEDY HIT Strange Interlude John LOLnan ‘Thea, 58th . . | ,: erful Soviet ice-breaker into UR os oa nienttute # * j telation between the various groups | B. of Bway a r z ‘ sion susta s 3 3 ok n dozens of cities where our \evolution to be explained,” e | | Mr. Spano informed his govern- court of these states were not S0/ cour i ment by telegram. But neither did I remember very well the night be- Professor Vavilov’s Work. |comrades had rented halls for cam- course will go into a refutation of the Rescue Committee of Ossoviak- fore our departure. é See ne Vavilov ee the wad al paign rallies, the fascist lackeys of ey about ene! some bk bere |the bourgeois critics and opponents “LAST WEEK! on” ; ! ert 4 In the salon of the Krassin were ‘Wo institutions in Leningrad; the |the ruling class intimidated hall| for discrimination against a of the proletarian sociology of his- HAVE YOU Beal des A taarted secth Ng gathered all our friends, our rela- All-Union Institute of Applied Bo-|owners who returned the rent for | lutionary party and ruled us off the | torical materialism and will con- | SEEN THE LADDER that the Oscoviakhim had formed an tives our comrades. Our dear A. P, ‘any and the State Institute of Ex-|the halls, telling the local comrades | ballot. clude with the application of the} IN ITS REVISED. FORM? | eS RES Italia Committee ofwRescue in Mos-| Karpinsky, President of the verimental Agronomy. The State |that they could not rent their halls| In the 15 states where the Work-| method of dialectic materialism to| CORT Matjnees, Wed. & Sat. cow and that Comrades Ounchlikt Academy of Sciences of the U. S. S. Institute dates irom Tsarist days, HM 8 for Communist meetings. but is now being improved and ex- ers (Communist) Party is not on the | the problems facing the working | Money Refunded Tt Not Satisfied Extra Matinee Election Day. W. 44th st. C - Z rey vance) ‘; | With Play. GER THEA. or R., was among us. We had many 5.3 4 ’ Besides these many instances, and | ballot, the difficulties of getting a class today. ERLAN i ake caine Bad: - Kameneva were taking part in atte pe pape talks, I’ spoke ‘ded; the All Union Institute is a/cthers too numerous to mention, of | working class party officially recog- CHANIN'S 46th St. W: Tot way Tinta, Tuesday & Betton, This committee undertook its work | last, but I no longer remember what recent institution, and is in a stage | “illegal” suppression, the ruling nized as legally entitled to put its : f poe at 825 George M,Cohan’s Comedians ied reniatkable' energy. \ With as-|1 said. of active growth, class has been served with customary | candidates before the workers, im- |i] Read the November Pireiccbntompert sates with POLLY WALKER tonishing rapidity it organized the I know above all that I was sure A few enthusiasts, about 1925,|subservience by their politicians in nrged upon the gcvernment the need | city and state offices. In Nebraska, posed by the ruling class, are so great that they were not overcome | ff MUSICAL. SMASH in Mr. cone Newest Musical Comedy ees TeDLGy, se Ore ntaes : t y Election Iss il oe wae Moa ce eS an reacting for such a centralized station, and| Oklahoma, Washington and Mon-/ for this - election. The Workers | | a jue OO D N EW a7 B J L L J E ” tired that the Nobile group was| edge ee aaeuinncd hey ig it were in 1924 it was established under | tana, the secretary of state refused |(Communist) Party has accom- | with GEORGE OLSEN'’s MUSIC. to the northeast of Svalbard, the committee decided that it was in-| dispensible to send a more powerful ice-breaker into this region, where the ice conditions rendered all other vessels impracticable. The Committee charged me with the task of convoking a special com- mittee to decide which of the ice- breakers, beside the Malygin, ought necessary, our lives, that we would do all, so that our Soviet Union would be proud of us. We knew that we were going to undergo an international test of the strength of our nerve and of our tenacity, and we took into account the fact that our goal would be difficult to attain. ‘The speeches came to anend. After shaking hands we remained alone. Vavilov (who was already in charge of the thirty-year-old State Insti- tute). Last year its budget amounted to 1,300,000 roubles (about £130,000). The primary object of the All- Union Institute is the betterment of all kinds of agriculture crops: its | secondary object the introduction | and testing of new ones. The work is proceeding \to place the Workers (Communist) Party on the ballot after the Party ments there. Due to mass protest | and pressure brought to bear by mili- |tant workers, the State Supreme | on | had complied with all legal require- Court of Montana reversed the de- | cision of the secretary of state and | growth and the intensification of our |ruled that the party had fully com- | plied with the law and therefore | zation of she unorganized, against they could not find any excuse for | the war danger, against the evils of plished a real achievement in get- ting on the ballot in 34 states, and in waging a ‘trenuous and wide- spread campaign, reaching many | thousands of workers never propa- | qandized so effectively before, lay- ing the basis for organizational | continuous campaign for the organi- LABORUNITY SEE FRED ELLIS’ fine cartoons showing Why You Should Vote for FOSTER and GITLOW! —ALso—. MARTIN BECK THEATRE, Bh St. Sth Ave. Eves. 8.30. _Mats, Election Day and Saturda: Party NITE HITE HOSTESS Mats, cane of wickness, acel- * unemployment for 'Thea., W. 44th St. Eve. 8.30 LITTLE Mats., Wed., Election Day and Saturday,’ 2:30 GODS of the LIGHTNING well PE he ced de & Harold are Hickerson. Keith-Albee a - see R Broadway | win sue canot to be sent. After a detailed con-|Only a few close relatives, from | thorough lines. For example: the de- | 44 « a i ipeagtapal ebb aint st. | ARTHUR LAKE . ; . * . 5 the “d d Reds” off th |th apitalist system, and for a For the Candidates of the Work- he tn the hand f th ‘kers, thi at sideration of this question, the Kras-| whom it was it was very painful for | partment dealing with wheat hhas | oeetctat bello sac ati in Netoane | ean and Pa ia government ing Claes eapensen to 1 at ane by the state “IRENE RICARDO sim was unanimously chosen as the v most powerful of all. The Rescue Committee, which rallied to this de- cision with a rapidity necessary un- der the circumstances, gave the or- der to prepare the ice-breaker for Resarture. siduechgrid: Tee sImost chemical, botanicat, and genetical, is | the A. F. L, Convention— COMMt JNIST An infinite number of urgent dis- impossible to take to sea with the 2/80 in progress. Some of it is “fine Expelling Progressive Carpenters || eaLle—e—e—e—eE—e—e—e————eeeene patches were exchanged - between amassed cargo in disorder on the earch, some of direct practical | by MIKE ROSS i. Moscow and Leningrad. One was deck of our ice-breaker. But what ‘™Pportance. Th D AIL Y — Greetings to Soviet Russia's 11th ae forced to be literally seated at the was to be done? Time was precious. New Cultures. (Z Annivetaarya= CONTENTS— . : telephone night and day. ‘The [t was necessary to proceed, I was i Pa a atenrianseeesenerenee ate eS SEO) Ueuabaah Rahat Wodkg ‘ i preparatory work began. ‘The ex- sure of the success of our expedi- | tint eg gre mene for dousi oe by EDMUND GRANTZ —The Sixth World Gongress of the Comintern pedition was placed under the direc- tion of a committee of three: Samoil- ovitch, Orass and Tchoukhnovsky. The first was named chief of the ex- pedition. We faced very great difficulties in the chartering and the repairing of the ice-breaker, which had been destined for the dry-dock. thanks to collective work, to the co- operation of social organizations, of aie organs of the Communist Party, of the trade unions and of the gov- | ernment, and above all thanks to the | workers of the port,of Leningrad, we succeeded in putting out to sea five days after we had received the | order to prepare the expedition. I. However, | us to sep e, accompanied us as far as Kronstadt. Ill. VEN those who are not sailors can tion. To our experienced sailors, who were, nevertheless, apxious, 1 said, “You will see, everything will be alright!” However, we did not count only on chance—all measures had been taken to face storms. I was not mistaken. From the first day the conditions of naviga- tion were very favorable. On the fourth day the Krassin arrived at Belt and on June 24 we arrived at| Bergen to take on coal. At the coast of Denmark we re- Ceived some foreign from which we learned with what interest the European press followed every step taken by our Krassin. In Norway the population showed sym- pathy with us; during our stay in | Bergen we were acclaimed more than once. Everybody attributed great) newspapers, | ‘wenty specialists, and has col- | lected 20,000 specimens, probably the | best collection in the world. The varieties are being fully de- seribed and monographs prepared. A great deal of other research work, | ka and Oklahoma the Spread ticularly interesting as it seemed ypical of the Russian outlook. In such a huge territory as the U.S.S.R. there are examples of every kind of climate with the sole excep- tion of the extreme tropical (there is ncthing to compare with Ceylon). Accordingly it should be possible in some parts of Russia to grow al- most.every kind of plant. Expeditions therefore are being sent by the State Institute of Agri- cultural Botany to Abyssinia and South America for the purpose of collecting agricultural plants. | These are then distributed in ap- propriate areas of the U. S. 5. R. q (areas of analcgous climatic con- ditions) in ordér to test their possi- bilities in Russia, * Oe of the best meth work is to see that placed in the hands of as many workers as possible During the period’ of the Election Campaign we will sell the DAILY WORKER at $6.00 per thou- sand. No meeting or NAME . ADDRESS, mpreme | in’ these United States of America, in these United States of America. without a bundle of DAILY WORKERS. Order Now! <—« . Please send me...,...++.-.coples of The DAILY WORKER at the rate of $6.09 per thousand, ods of carving on election the DAILY WORKER is campaign rally should be | The Institute is in contact with by TOM O'FLAHERTY Chinese Labor and the Militarist Factions— by CHEN YANG, of the P. P, 2 Statement of the T. U. E. L. on | “Peace and Prosperity” in the | Anthracite— | by B. K. GEBERT The Seamen’s Clubs and the M. } W. P, Lo by GEORGE MINK Marine Workers Progressive | League on the Pacific— * by LEONARD EMERSON Aspects of Class Struggle Abroad The Red Interngtional— by HARRISON GEORGE The English Trades Union Con. gress— by HARRY POLLITT Review of Events— Textile News— by International Comm. of Pro- paganda and Action et enw LABOR UNITY is a monthly, il- lustrated magazine for militant and the employers. 1 Anthony & Howland NOVEMBER : —Against the Theory of ' by. Joun PEPPER ‘ —Eugene Victor Debs —Self-Study Corner —Books by Jay Lovesrone —The Workers (Communist) Party in the South by Wo. Z. Foster d {On Threshold of the Twelfth Y ear- * by MorssavE J. OLGIN by ALEXANDER TRACHTENBERG ~ - Order ne “Decolonization”? WHEN I recall today these days of importance to the appearance of the other Russian stations and many ij hasty preparation, it is difficult | Krassin in Polar waters. “Now, one foreign ones. for me to believe that this work was | can be, tranquil,” they thought, “for | Apart from polities, therefore, the really accomplished. In fact, to find the giant Krassin will help every- Russian worker by the very size and | ~ men to form an almost entirely | body.” geography of his country is f ‘vced to trew (for the ice-breaker only had ie a world outlook. ol ‘To arrive not later than , 1 am attaching a remittance to cover workers. Published by The Trade Union Educational League at 2 West 15th Street, New York Cty. Single copies 20 centa (in bund- les 15 cents). Subscription rates 1.25 for six monthe. (To Be Continued.’