The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 27, 1928, Page 3

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(Of the total sum, the republican THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, VEMBER 27. , 1928 TIE-UP FOLLOWS WAGE SLASHING OF MILL BOSSES MayHaveRepercussion Thruout India LONDON, Nov. 26—Six thou- sand workers in the textile mills in Bombay struck today following the failure of the mill owners to live up to agreements signed only a week previous. The mill owners had arbitrarily reduced wages despite the agreements. Alarmed by the prospect of another strike of the duration and tenacity of the last walk-out, which continued uninterrupted for six months, the mill owners immediately asked aid from the authorities. The provocative tactics, which the policc have persisted in using, and which the officials have connived at, in every strike in this country were in full effect today. Numerous attacks by foremen and officers upon the strikers were reported shortly after the walk-out. The strike is expected to have a tremendous repercussion through- out India and violent retaliatory measures may be expected from the government, which is already alarmed by the growth of discon- tent among the masses of workers and peasants in all parts of the country. A hartal, or general passive, boy- cott, of the Simon Commission which is in India for the professed purpose of investigating the gov- ernment, is in progress throughout the peninsula among workers, peas- ants and students. pe TUR, BOMBAY, India, Nov. 26 (UP). Six thousand mill hands went on strike again today after having been at work only a week after the prev- ious strike was settled. The work- ers claimed their pay had been re- duced. Numerous instances of disputes and sudden outbreaks of violence in- dicated the unsettled state of the workers, although the previous strike lasting six months had just been settled. Chicago Plans Big Subscription Drive for Daily Worker CHICAGO, Nov. 26—Nearly every unit in Chicago was represented at the Daily Worker agents’ confer- ence, at which final plans for the big subscription drive were discussed and adopted. It was decided to have a three-cornered competitive sub- scription contest among the sec- tions, units and Daily Worker agents, the section, unit and Daily Worker agent securing the largest percentage of subscriptions to re- ceive a valuable Communist trophy. Sam Krieger, the new Chicago manager of the Daily Worker, and William F. Kruse, the district or- ganizer, spoke at the conference. The entire Party membership of Chicago will be drawn into the cam- paign to build the Daily Worker and to get behind the drive for “1,000 new subscribers in Chicago by January 1.” N. Y. Republican Fund Aided by Wall Street; $867,874 Contributed ALBANY N. Y., Nov. 26.—The New York campaign expenses, ad- mitted by the Republic Party, amount to $867,874. How much More was spent, but not accounted tint we may never know. All of this except $15,000 has been paid up. national committee furnished $539, Six Thousand Indian Worke rs Walk Out in Ne Bresees “ After ‘answering an S OS from a disabled steam-r, 1 Stanford, drowned on their way back to Rye, sized lifeboat. Seventeen English Fishermen Drown After Answe Pe eES3 ring an §. 0. S. Call 2 7 members of the English fishing boat, the Mary England, when their lifeboat overturned. Photo shows cap- “Gas’’---A Story By MOISSAYE J. OLGIN (Episode, 1940) yey minutes past 10 p. m. the radio detector went out of gear. It used to indicate, with an accu- racy of 5 kilometers, the location airplanes. Two men sat in front of the radio detector on the thir- tieth story of the forty-story mili- tary tower, a mechanic and a tele-| phone operator. The mechanic, watching the various arrows and hands cn the face of the detector, drew with a colored pencil the course of the airplanes on a large map where squares were indicated by two letters each. The telephone operator transmitted the letters to the base of the anti-aircraft lo- cated near the river and to the cen- tral airdrome, twelve miles away from the center. Air machines with noiseless engines were ready at the airdrome. Information thus ob- tained served as a basis for mea- sures undertaken against the ene- my’s aircraft, Seven minutes past 10 the me- chanic noticed that something. was wrong with the radio detector. First the indicators began to jump. The apparatus showed an airship six hundred miles to the east of the city; in a couple of minutes it showed an airship two hundred miles to the north. That it was the same ship was obvious from the specific quality of the radio wave. Soon the various indicators on the face of the apparatus began a mad dance that the eye could not follow. The telephone operator in- formed first the airdrome, second military headquarters, located on the fifth floor of the same building. Headquarters replied that other sta- tions were also reporting strange happenings. The order was to await advice from the central radio bureau. 3 And so the mechanic and the tele- phone operator remained seated in front of the large aluminum plate with its various hands, celluloid windows and tubes. And it was so unusual in the midst of strenuous work, when the enemy was so near, to see a reliable apparatus on which so many hopes had been placed sud- denly become insane. Was it pos- sible that the enemy had found a key to this invention, too? ~ * * 'EN minutes before 11 a tremor passed through the room, as if every atom of the apparatus were shaken in delirium. The mechanic and the telephone operator kept on calling headquarters, but only a medley of indistinct voices came in reply. At a quarter past 11 the report of an explosion was heard, and the two men had the impres- sion as if a cutting wind struck their faces. At the very same mo- ment the lights went out. The two men dressed in military uniforms took their flashlights out of their pockets and looked around. The radio detector was dead. All the hands and arrows and wheels were motionless: The white light behind the rount celluloid windows had disappeared. For a short while the men were Mrs. Ruth Pratt, congresswoman elect, returned thanks for her elec- | tion by contributing $10,000. Myron) C. Taylor, of General Motors, anc T.) W. Lamont, of J. P. Morgan and Co., did likewise.. Ogden Mills, one! of the biggest property-holders in| New York, and assistant secretary of the treasury, and Ogden L. Mills, gave $25,000 between them. So the| game of give and take goes. | | i Phe socialist party endo: robber League of Nations, Kellogg peace pact and creates the fllusion that war can be a under capitalism. Down wi traitors to the working class! hese silent. Everything was unusual. They had an impulse to go, but military discipline was in the way. The mechanic said: “Something is happening out The telephone operator replied: “It won't be long before we know |what’s what.” Whereupon the mechanic said: “Perhaps not. We may be blown up any minute.” oe ae 'AY below, at military headquar- ters, a middle-aged man in a WALL ST. STRUTTANG yieeer's Show Profits of Exploitation WASHINGTON, Nov. 26.—Amer- ican manufacturers and exporters are reaping the fruits of their per- sonal Coolidge administration and during the last ten months have been piling up tremendous profits for themselves, according to reports of various government departments. This “prosperity” for Wall Street is especially evident in exports, which fot the first ten months of the year exceed any previous figure. From Jan. 1 to Oct. 31 of this year American capitalists exported $4,026,578,000 worth of goods, or about $100,000,000 over the corre- sponding 10 months of 1927. Of this jount 47 per cent is manufactured products, indicating that ruthless . at accom. panied by nation-wide unemploy- ment, and coupled with the exploita- tion, of foreign markets and an in- creasing struggle against British competitors have added to the pro- fits of the exploiters. It is interesting to note that the American capitalists expect still more markets for their goods abroad due to their support of the Nanking regime in’China and a sharpening fight against the British in South America. They point out that the recognition of China has paved the way for the exploitation of the mar- ket in the east and that Hoover's imperialist cruise will do much to make Latin-American governments give way ‘to the onrush of United States interests, ye jof attack is still unknown. and the movements of the enemy | |three buttons at the’ side of his| \lay a thick black smoke which re- | above. of the general’s uniform was speaking in- to a tube: ‘ “The radio detector does not work. Our technicians ascribe it to outside | interference. There is no doubt that | the enemy is to blame. His method | What | shall be done?” In the receivers over the gener- al’s ears there was noise and sput- ter. e | Two minutes later he pressed desk, one after the other. Two of- ficers entered through a door at the left, and, from the back of the room, from behind a screen, three soldiers rolled in an apparatus in| the form of a wide, low cylinder with | a mirror as an upper surface. | The general said: “The radio de- | tector is out of order. An hour! and a half ago the enemy airplanes were six hundred miles to the east. Counting an average of three hun- dred miles an hour, they must be very close to the city. The moun-| tain batteries have been informed | of the situation. I propose a smoke | blanket over the city. An air man-| euver to divert the enemy’s atten- | tion. In the meantime we issue the | general alarm.” | One minute later the general was sitting over the mirror, watching in it the reflection of what was going on in the air above the city. A silent play of lightning was devel- oping in the dark air. airplanes had risen from skyscrap- ers’ roofs, from fields in the park, from platforms at the river bank, from boats on the river. The ma-| chines spread out over a distance of | two hundred miles on either side of the city. At the same time twenty’ larger machines rose from the cen- ter of the city, flying very slowly | and spreading smoke. In less than seven minutes over the entire city mained almost immovable. The city was masked. Looking from above it would have not been possible to discover the presence of a city. The area would look more like a de- serted field or a stretch of water. Outside the city boundaries lights were gleaming at intervals, lamps purposely placed in woods and un- inhabitated fields to give the im- pression that these were,the cities and towns. As soon as the smoke blanket had been spread, the lighter air ma- chines made their searchlights play. Long white streaks of light cut the air above and below, near and far. Streaks of light crossed each other, receding, advancing. A weird dance of beams of light was going on in the night air. Every beam was a finger stretched into the air to feel an. enemy machine. All this had been rendered unnecessary by the radio detector. Now one had to fall back on the primitive methods of’ detection. z oe te 0% the fifth floor of the military tower the general was watching this play in the mirror of the photo- | reflector. Here he saw in a minia- | ture way what was happening First there was that unclear Two hundred | i | The shore was. waiting with lreddish glow which rises over a large city even when its lights are |half dimmed. Then darkness swept the glow away and the general knew that the smoke blanket had been spread. Then he saw tiny bright needles crossing and recrossing each other in the depths of the mirror. These were the airplanes. The sharp eyes of the man with gray mus- tache were piercing the mirror. As time passed his look became graver, his face drawn. Not a single needle had snatched out of the darkness an enemy machine which in the reflec- | tor would look like a tiny bug. Ceaselessly and restlessly the ma- chines roamed in the air and all the work seemed useless. Something | was wrong. Something like the foreshadowing of fear was creeping into the general’s emaciated chest. First the radio detector, that pow- erful protection of which the father- land was justly proud. Within one hour the apparatus which practically made the city and its environment secure against an enemy attack had been silenced. Then that futile search on a radius of four—five hundred miles, when, according to all information, the enemy flyers must be very near. Was it possible that the enemy had scored new scientific successes? How was it possible to destroy the radio detec- tor from the distance? How was it possible for the enemy flyers to avoid the light of two hundred searchlights? * 8 8 Wirnour moving his eyes from the reflector the general spoke in?) to the transmitter: “Any news from the shore?” its {y Next War masked batteries. Everything seemed quict at the ocean side. And then something happened. One airplane suddenly caught fire like a racket and began to sink leav- ing behind a tail of flame. Then another and another. Within three | minutes fourteen airplanes fell down thru the dark air giving the impres- sion of falling stars on a late sum- mer night. Three of the fourteen were commanders’ airplanes in charge of the squadron. They could be recognized by the greenish tint of their light. Only five command- ers’ machines had remained in the air. They gave the signal: “Ex- tinguish lights!” Darkness ensued. Nothing could be seen in the photo- apparatus. A voice became audible thru the receiver: “There is unusual noise in the air, but it is impossible to discover its source.” The general waved his right hand ina gesture of dejection and pres- sed his thin lips more tightly. Nothing could be done with the aid of machines. Unknown powers were reigning over the city. The only thing that could be done was to warn the population. The central telephone station re- ceived from military headquarters one single word: “Gas.” Soon thousands of wires carried °! the storm, was only partly spared | from house to house the alarm warn- In every street, in every block, thru every floor, crept the awe in- spiring word: “Gas.” we HALE PAST TWELVE a large dark object stopped above the city. It remained suspended at the height of ten thousand feet and was en- tirely motionless. Had it been dis- covered by the searchlights it would have appeared like a round frag- ment of cloud. This time, the air was free of the lo arrows. The air was dark. looked from above like a fi cover of night gloom. The soldier who kept guard on the Stock Ex- change Square noticed at his feet on the asphalt of the pavement a patch of light about two meters in diameter. The soldier lifted his head to see where the light came from. He saw nothing outside the smoke that hung in thick layers above the city. The soldier, an edu- cated man, asked himself how such a strange phéfomenon could be. The patch of light was very bright and from his job of maligning the Bolsh-| seemed to make the asphalt trans- parent. The soldier put his right foot on the patch and suddenly saw/|had his latest honeymoon postponed. | the skeleton of his foot. He stretched|The reason given is that Dolores! his right hand over the patch of \light and the hand disappeared leav- MANY LIVES ARE ‘LOST AS STORMS CLASH ATLANTIC Many Die in Wrecks and Floods os | | Continued from Page One known to have been on four ships which are missing. In addition to the many ships sinking or in distress, floods have jcaused great damage in Holland, Belgium and Germany, where river dykes were swept aside by rapidly rising flood waters. Antwerp’s 300,- 000 population is in danger. The Floods have cut off all drinking water from the city. |river dykes have been broken and many houses wrecked by the in-| coming water. Floods in Holland Floods threaten to add to the| death toll in Hollgnd where portions of Rotterdam and Dodrecht have been flooded by the breaking of dykes. Officials are of the opinion |that the floods already have cost a| large number of lives. Amsterdam reported four ships in distress in addition to a number of large and small vessels which have been rescued. The Isle of Marken is under water and the coast is strewn |with wreckage of life boats and |small fishing craft. | The dykes also have been broken Jat the Island of Sylt, one of the \north Frisian Islands, and rising! rivers in Germany have caused con- siderable damage through the west- ern areas. Damage in Belgium | Shops are closed at Ostend, Bel- gium, and damage is _ reported throughout Belgium due to the rapidly rising waters of the Scheldt and Dyle rivers. Engineers have been sent to the scene of the worst damage with large detachments of |workers in an attempt to halt |further disaster. England, which felt the first fury today as the death toll was in- |ereased steadily by new advices |from various parts of the island. | Floods in Wales and in Scotland | damage. | Many Seamen in Peril Everywhere the storm struck jcommunications and transportation |service were halted or greatly | damaged. The number of ships destroyed or crippled is problematical but un- doubtedly great. Literally scores of distress calls have been sent out— many of them in such rapid suc- as the storm continued to lash the open waters into high forbidding waves. |Played Sex Slander on Workers; Now Himself Has Marital Troubles LOS ANGELES, Cal., Nov. 26.— John Barrymore, matinee hero fresh evik revolution in what is probably |the worst play of the season, has |Costello, whom he recently married, is making @ picture. Barrymore re- The Scheldt| w Strike at Bombay Excavators Liv | | ge Three es End angered Not only are the lives of workers employed in the subway ex tion work in constant danger, bu sengers have been hurt at various viding proper safety precautions. skidded into the subway excavation at Eighth badly shaking up the occupants. t pedestrians and automobile pa times because of negligence in pr Photo shows an automobile which Ave. and 46th Si B2 R, |. MILLS TO CUT WAGES Over 10,000 Workers Affected Continued from Page One workers from fighting off this vic- ious assault of the bosses. Not only are they holding back the workers from decisive action, but they are openly seen as assist- ants to the bosses in forcing the | wage cuts down the throats of the | operatives. In Ashton, R. I., this was clearly demonstrated. As the wage cut no- | tices were being posted in the Ash |ton and Berkley Mills of the Lons- dale Co., the company officials no- tified the U. T. W. locals to come and have a meeting with their workers. Gladly the U. T. W. fakers stepped in, called a meeting and) obligingly saw to it that no more than a resolution declaring that the workers are not in favor of the wage cut was passed. At a time when workers are waiting for the word to come out in struggle, these misleaders are hired to head off any demand to fight that may be brought up. Philadelphia Fakers. Direct aid to the general wage reduction drive by the manufactur- ” | have caused several deaths and great | ers of textiles was also given by {the United Textile Workers’ Union. In Philadelphia, their hosiery work- | |ers’ branch is quietly negotiating with the bosses for a wage cut of union knitters. Guarded press no- tices of these confabs openly de- clare that the purpose is to lower the scale of prices for silk stock- ings so that they are more level | with the prices paid to knitters in |the southern plants and the north however, cession that they could not be an-|ern non-union factories. From $1.24 ng white | <wered immediately. The men who|a dozen hose, the bosses propose to The city live by the sea have worked tire-|cut 24 cents, eld under jessly but against great handicaps | | Workers’ Union, which brilliantly | the six-month New Bedford! Meanwhile the National Textile led | strike, is marshalling its forces to \lead a new anti-wage-cut struggte |in New England. Organizers are |being sent into the affected dis- |tricts. From their national head- | quarters in New York a statement | was issued denouncing in the most | vigorous terms the newly announced | wage cuts. | Union Statement. The statement issued by Albert Weisbord, secretary-treasurer de- clares: “All indications point to the fact that the textile workers in Rhode} Island will put up a fight against, ing only the outline of bones. “Such | fused to comment on reports that he the new wage cuts that the a a thing I have only seen in X-ray was not legally divorced from his|‘°TS 4%€ handing out as Thanksgiv- pictures,” he said to himself. In the meantime the patch moved away to the middle of the square. The sol- dier made an attempt to follow, but sank to the ground. He felt no pain but something had happened. In the | second wife, best known by her pen y \name, Michael Strange. | Barrymore’s most recent part was that of a corporal who married a |Russian princess in “The Tempest.” | The play has been run in only the |rays of his pocket searchlight which more expensive theatres so far. It | ing presents. | Workers’ Union is already in the field and is mobilizing its forces to stiffen the resistance of the work- ers and to fight to the finish against | wage cuts. It will be recalled thet the National W"extile Workers’ he took out with his left hand (the |represents the Russian aristocracy | Union was the organization that put right being unable to move) he saw |as in general noble victims of a few UP Such a splendid battle in New designing and wicked beggars, who| Bedford and forced William Butler that his right foot up to the knee and his right hand were missing. The spots where they fell off showed charred surfaces. Before he. man- aged to give a signal he fell un- conscious. Lowe Weer! wey UP, at the height of ten thousand feet, in a large motion- less machine, a man sat in a cradle of metal attached to the lower sur- face of the machine. With his right hand he moved a wheel while his right eye looked into a large lense protruding from the wall. He gave orders thru a telephone tube at- tached to his chest: “To the right— four kilometers north-west — seven kilometers south—a little ahead | slower—backward—stop,” and the pilot in another section of the ma-| chine steered according to command. Corresponding to the motion of the machine a patch of light down in the city jerkily moved over the square, jumped into a side street, leaped into another to stop near the statue considered the center of the city. There being no light in the air between the machine and the ground, and the streets being almost de- serted, nobody noticed the maneuvers of the patch of light. Then the’ man in the cradle of metal said: “Ready,” and pressed a lever. Immediately a large cigar- shaped object slipped from its place near the cradle and began to move downward. The object was four meters long and one meter in dia- meter. It fell slowly, for small propellers were attached to its blunt side. The propellers kept the sharp end downward and prevented the object from developing speed. Look- ing at it one would think of a fish The National Textile | MEMBERS OPPOSE RIGHTIST MENACE Suvport CEC Against 3 Cannon Deviations Continued from Page One the Party. And for the same rea- son we endorse the expulsion from the Party by the District Commit- tee of District 9 of Vincent Dunne, Skoglund, Coover and Votaw and also endorse their expulsion of fif- teen members of the Party for vot- ing for the opposition.” From Chester, Pa.: “The Ches- |ter, Pa., Street Nucleus of District 3 suvports the Central Executi' | Committee on the expulsion of Can- non, Shachtman and Abern. We support the Central Executive Com- mittee on its statements that an en- ergetic campaign must be waged against the Trotsky opposition with its representatives in our Party the renegades, Cannon, Shachtman and Abern. Our nucleus signifies its intentions to assist the Central Executive Committee to liquidate all counter-revolutionary, social demo- democratic, anti-Bulshevik or anti- Comintern tendencies. We also pledge ourselves to assist the Cen- tral Executive Committee in fight- ing against any right wing danger or non-Bolshevik polici From the Superior, W \District: “The Super |Range sub-district meeting unanimo C. E. C. and D, E. C. ideolog' organizational struggle Tro’ Sub. against as instanced by the ex- pulsion of Cannon, Vincent Dunne and others. It recognizes Trotsky- ism as the greatest danger and con- demns all reservations in this fight. It demands the expulsionof Ohrn, Sulkanen, etc. if an investigation shows that they are open or hidden supporters of Trots Seven-Inch Snowstorm Falls in Pennsylvania HARRISBURG, Pa. Nov. 26 (UP).— Snowfall, ranging from mere flurries to a depth of seven inches in some parts of the state, was reported today, but the state highway department announced all roads open. | The heaviest snowfall, seven jinches, was reported along sections |of the Roosevelt trail. > ito the Mills CONCEAL REAL SITUATION IN BULGAR CRISIS Peasant Disturbances Reported BELGRADE, Noy. 26 (UP).—Un- confirmed reports here tonight said Ivan Michaioff, Macedonian rebel leader, was concentrating forces in Petrich, Gorina and Dupnica in preparation for a campaign against Bulgarian government troops. The same reports said the government was concentrating troops in Sofia, capital of Bulgaria. Other, and also unconfirmed, rumors said numerous citizens of Sofia, especially Jews, were preparing to evacuate because of fear of disorders. SOFIA, Bulgaria, Nov. 26.—Of- of the Bulgarian government are y endeavoring to conceal the situation in which their party finds itself by discrediting reports of Macedonian outbreaks which threat- ened the capital three days ago. Nevertheless, t movement of the igarian es under Ivan Michailoff was, at that time, of sufficient danger to cause sections of the yy to be rushed to defense of Sofia, Feared Peasant Outbreak. The situation was also felt to be of such gravity by Foreign Minis- ter Buroff that he issued an appeal United States to intervene nd save the country from a pea- t revolution. Today the government, besides spreading reports that there are no Macedonian forces threatening the capital, issuing ultimatums to Michailoff demanding that he sur- vender the fortified city of Prebich where he is strongly entrenched. The government excuses its fail- to advance the Mace- n forces on the grounds ‘hat it es to give them an oppor- tunity to surrender of their own ac- cord. is Rumors of disturbances among the peasantry, some of them of con- siderable extent, were received in this city from various outlying sec- tions of the country today. While unconfirmed, credence was given the reports by members of the govern. ment. * * Concoct Loan Story. SOFIA, Bulgaria, Nov. 26 (UP). —Reports of revolutionary move- ments. in Bulgaria were denied to the United Press today by high of- ficials of the Bulgarian government. Valdimir Molloff, minister of fi- nance, said the government had proof that “unfounded reports were spread purposely to discredit Bul- garia and make it difficult for Bul- garia to obtain a loan.” JOBLESS IN NORTH CANADA. NORTH BAY, Ont., (By Mail) — Settlers in northern Ontario face a severe winter this year, with em- ployment at a low ebb. MANY The Workers (Communist)* Party fights for the organization of the unorganized workers. 5 Years of the Daily Worker lead a revolution against them; it| and others to reduce their wage cuts | will be celebrated in |slanders the Russian workers, ani lis so bad technically that it succeeds in getting even middle class audi- |ences only by its direct sex appeal | and its political line. Nearing’ to Lecture in Pittsburgh Dec. 4 | PITTSBURGH, Nov. 26.—Scott Nearing, Communist lecturer, will |speak here on Tuesday, Dec. 4, at |8 p. m. at the Labor Lyceum, 35) | Miller St., on the subject of “The Coming War.” | Nearing will discuss the conflicts |among the various imperialist pow- ers and show how these conflicts are leading inevitably to a new | world slaughter and an imperialist war against the Soviet Union. The | lecture will be given under the aus- |pices of Nucleus 2, Workers (Com- |munist) Party of Pittsburgh. | diving head down to the bottom of | the sea. | | When the torpedo reached the} ground it exploded. Twelve smaller} |torpedog escaped moving in every) \direction. At a distance of several| hundred yards each smaller torpedo} opened, poisonous gas began to es-| ‘cape. . | | When the man in the cradle saw) the explosion thru his lense he gave the order: “Forward!” The machine | moved a mile and it let fall a second torpedo. A third was dropped on) the other side of the river near the large railway depot. | (End of first installment)” d 10 per cent after a six-months’ fight. |ers’ Union is now in a better posi- | tion than ever before to’ continue |the struggle against wage cuts and to insure the textile workers | New England somewhere near a de- cent standard of living. | “Organizers of the National | Union have been sent out, and full preparations have | give battle if the wage cuts go into | effect.” | CANADA PAINTERS GAIN Organized painters have won a raise in wages of 20 cents an hour. Half | will be effective next March, and |the remaining 10 cents in March, 1930. fight all claxs-collab: mes of the bossex th bureaucracy. Fight b: militantly agninst the offensi of the bosses, WORKERS BOOK sHoP ows Se RESET Sar JUST OFF THE PRESS! The Collected Letters of Sacco and Vanzetti lllustrated with photographs and facsimile Extraordinary Human Document including letters to their friends, comrades and persecutors as well as a story of the case and speeches made in court. 414 pages—$2.50 a copy WORKERS BOOK SHOP 26 UNION SQ.. NEW YORK CITY The National Textile Work- | 4 Saturday, January 5th been made to} | CALGARY, Canada, Nov. 26.—| 43 EAST 125TH STREET. ON ORGANIZATION: — A New and Limited Edition All of Lenin’s writings on the subject of organi- zation from 1901 to 1922. An indispensable handbook for every Communist Bound in a beautiful paper cover 75 CENTS WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS Manhatian Opera House KEEP THIS DAY OPEN! NEW YORK CITY,

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