The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 21, 1928, Page 1

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THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized For the 40-Ho For a Labor ur Week Party aily Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. Y.. under the act of March 3, 1879. » - <a oe Ses 2S V. HE WORLD [ot HE Woe ofnive M. at Central Opera House FINAL CITY EDITION Vol. V., No. 362 Published daily except Sunday by The National Dally Worker Publishing Association, Inc., 26-28 Union Sq., New York, N. Y. NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1928 1 In New York, by m je New York, by mail, $6.00, ON RA Outsid TROOPS TO LINE RIO STREETS AS HOOVER ARRIVES Workingelass, Hostile, Will Be Clubbed Out of Sight , WallSt. Drummer Tired Fleeing Soon to House Boat in Florida RIO DE JANEIRO, Dec. 20.— Extraordinary measures are to be taken here on the arrival of Her- bert Hoover, president-elect of the United States? to preserve him from the hostile demonstrations cf the working population. Hoover will | see the workers only from a dis-| tance, with plenty of troops in be-| tween, and none ef them will be} able to get near the agent of Amer- | ican imperialism if the Brazilian | government can help it. The Brazilian cruisers Bahia and Rio Grande Do Sul will meet the Utah off the Isle of Grande and escort the battleship to Rio. Ten policemen will be stationed at every street crossing that Mr. Hoover is likely to pass and troops will line the streets and avenues | from the docks to Guanabara Pal- ace, where Mr. Hoover will stay. Workers Hate Hoover. The Hoover party have had enough of Latin America. The trip, undertaken to counteract the efforts of British imperialism, long en- trenched there, and to stiffen the governments already owned by Wall Street, such as the Leguia regime in Peru, is admittedly only moder- ately successful in the key coun- tries like Argentina, Chile and prob- ably Brazil. In every country Hoover has been received like a vis- iting salesman in a small town by the local rulers, but was absolutely despised and denounced by the workers and peasants of those coun- tries. : 4 Hoover will proceed directly from Rio to Florida, where a houseboat | | King Amannulah, of Afghanistan, whose tribesmen are being incited by the British to overthrow him. Afghanistan lies between the Soviet Republic of Uzbetistan and India. If the British could control Afghanis- tan, they would have a convenient | “back door” from which to attack the Soviet Union. That is why their agents are busy in Afghanistan to- day. GIVE RESULTS OF CLOAK ELECTIONS Furriers “Still Voting Today, at Union While the convention elections in| | the Furriers’ Union are still going} jon, tqday being the last day, the| | locals of the Cloak and Dréssmak-| ers’ Union yesterday made publie) the lists of elected candidates. The | delegates elected by the workers in | both industries are to meet at na-| tional conventions of both unions,| held at the same time, and which are to unite to form an amalga- mated union of needle trades work- ers. The conventions will,open on Dec. 29 in the Irving Plaza Hall, 15th | St. and Irving Place and gfter meet- \ing separately, will go into joint | session then to consummate the amalgamation, The elections of delegates in the ,_ Cloak and Dressmakers’ Union were | naval bill. | CRUISERS AND BRITISH-INCITED = — KELLOGG PACTS =AFCHAN TRIBES | BOTH DELAYED ‘Row Among Senators |Over Precedence Ruins | | Previous Bargain ‘Both for Imperialism ‘Insull Man, West, Gets | Committee Approval | WASHINGTON, Dec. 20.—Sen- | ators King and Norris, filibustering two hours against the 15-cruiser | bill in’ the Senate this afternoon be-| | cause they are in favor of first con- | sidering the other of American im- | Perialism’s two principal bills, the | Kellogg pacts, succeeded in getting | | both bills postponed until after the| | Christmas recesses, when the ques- |tion of which shall be considered | first will arise once more. King and Norris have thus suc-| ceeded in breaking the cloak-room | agreement which all other groups in | the Senate made yesterday, that the |eruisers should be voted on at once,| |and the Kellogg war treaties’ should | j;come up immediately after the re- cess. The agreement to postpone both bills was apparently made only as a last resort to prevent the filibus- ter from continuing until Saturday} adjournment time and thus tying) up all business of the senate. | FAIL IN ATTACK Soviet’ Press Declares Imperialists Want a Base Against USSR Report Revolt Dying British’ Had Plan for} Intervention BULLETIN. MOSCOW, Dec. 20 (U.P).—The rebel attack on Kabul, capital of Afghanistan, has failed and the city is quiet, the foreign office was informed tonight by Lednid Stark, Soviet ambassador to Ka- bul. The attack was made from the direction of Jalalabad, and fed- eral soldiers repulsed the insur- gent tribesmen, the advices said. King Amanullah is safe in the capital. Le MOSCOW, Dec. 20 (UP)—Afghan insurgents, coming from the direc- tion of Jalalabad, failed in an at- tack on Kabul at 11 p. m. yesterday, Leonid Stark, Soviet ambassador to Afghanistan, informed the foreign office by wireless today. The radio station at Tashkent, Asiatic Russia, reported that the circuit to Kabul was reopened at 8 ja. m. today after a break of three | Wall St. Oil Interests Want This Paraguayan River om WORKERS PARTY SPEAKERS WILL ATTACK NEW WAR |Workers to Gather to | Protest Bolivia- Paraguay Fight Clash of Imperialists Scheme to Drag Labor Into World Carnage | | | | World war! soon milli ica and Eng and other na- , will be flung at each other on Jrenched, explosive-torn field§' in North and South America or Eu- rope! This is the danger against which the workers of New York are ‘A scene on the Paraguay River thru which the Standard Oil Company in Bolivia wants an outlet |*sKed to protest, in a great mass to the Atlantic for its oil. So the Yankee imperialists have pulled the strings and their Bolivian puppet icles et te at 8 p. m, are fighting the Paraguayans. The peasant in th2 picture is only one of many who will bear the real Central Opera House, 67th S brunt of the war between American and British im verialists. Third Ave., under the auspices of my PEER OR Es NSS a EAT AEE SES See ae ___|the Workers (Communist) Party of a America. | Reparations Committee This meeting: Zolldws:elosaly Reem | to Meet Soon; Germany - ‘ two other meetings. eaking be- : é tore the “National Defense League” Seen in Anti-USSR Bloc a few nights ago jingo Admiral BALBO, FASCIST PARIS, Dec, 20.—Foreign Min- FL race against Great Britain go on ister Briand received Norman Ar- without restriction, In the name eres mour, Charge d’Affairs of the) | ee of American imperialism, Plunkett Mussolini’s Gangster Ts United states wmbassy this after U. S.-Latin Delegates naval bases galore, oes | Very Much Afraid noon, ostensibly to notify the state | in Solemn Farce “many times fifteen new KANSAS CITY, Dec. 20.—Guard- It was proposed by Chairman|days in the communications with eq by five Chicago detectives, on Borah of the Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee, who pledged he would make a motion as soon as the Senate met January 3 to proceed} with the consideration of the treaty | in open executive session. He indi-| cated he hoped by this motion to get the treaty passed before the) Delay West Report. Final senate action on the nomin- | ation of Roy O. West as secretary |of interior will be delayed until after the holiday recess; Chairman Nye of the Public Lands Committee announced today. the Afghan capital. * British Tnstization. RIGA, Dec. 20.—According to ad- vices received here from Moscow the Soviet press explains the uprising of the tribes near the Afghan-India border as being instigated by the British imperialists to force Ama- nullah to come around to British plans. The desire of the British imper- ialists, according to the reported press articles, was to..everthrow-the government of Amanullah, stimu- lating unrest among the Indian * the request of the Italian consul at | Chicago, Italo Balbo, minister of | the Italian air service and leader of the fascist gangsters, passed thru Kansas City today en route for an unannounced destination in southern California, | Both Balbo and the Italian con- jsuls in the various cities refuse to | state the reason for these unusual | precautions, but it is generally | known that Balbo fears anti-fascist department to be ready to choose two delegates to the committee of experts on reparations. Av formal invitation will be ex- tended through the British ambassa- dor at Washington immediately after a communique on the subject is issued by the Quai D’Orsay to- morrow or Saturday. | It is believed that recent conversa- tions between Chamberlain, Strese- mann and Briand in Lugano cleared th> way for granting the German government certain concessions in the matter of reparations and the evacuation of the Rhineland in re- demonstrations aroused by his . Leruelty to workers..inItaly,_.Balbo ‘urn for adherence to the anti-So- viet bloc. ‘is noted for his assassination, of, i revolutionary workers and his fas-| beg Ranayrs etn ho WASHINGTON, Dec. 20.—It is now being solemnly debated here as | to whether the “conciliation and ar- | hitration” conference of the Monroe | Doctrine Pan-American Union shall | give the “settlement” of the armed | clash between Bolivia and Paraguay | for the death grapple be- tween American and British imper- ialism. kers on the same platform condemned Communism and the Communist movement, which they realize is the most serious threat to their bloody program. War Makes Profits. into the hands of Kellogg alone, or| Another meeting, soberer in color, refer it to a committee to be held the night before last, was that “mixed,” with Kellogg and some |of the military organization of the Latin American representatives in-|metal manufactur of America. cluded. | Actually, it will make not the slightest difference, as every com-| mittee named by the conference is |‘ | weighted with representa |! le neavay |tives of countries which are s tecolonies of U. S. imperialism. They heard General Bullard recount with gusto all the profits sure to pour into the treasuries of the steel rust and munitions manufacturers rom the preparations for the next war. The Workers Party mass meeting will be placed at his. disposal by Yesterday the committee had|ttibesmen. By overthrowing the | cist terror. : gigas ia ertheless the farce of “discussion” |°°MeS a8 congress juggles two im- | Jeremiah Millbank, the eastern | held all day Wednesday, but hecause| | tee ney ne hree to disregard (Present government in Afghan‘stan| When he arrived in Kansas City,| jgoes on, with the trained Latin|Petialistic laws—the appropriations treasurer of the Hoover campaign. | ount was completed the names of|@ letter from Senator Norris flatly the British hoped to open the back | four additional policemen stood| American delegates “proposing” | Pill for more cruisers, a part of the It is believed Mr. Hoover will re- main on the boat much of the time until about March 1, when he will leave the Florida coast for Wash- ington to be inaugurated. SHIFRIN DEFENSE PLANS B16 MEET | those chosen could not be obtained. The names of those elected ac- cording to the locals they represent, were issued by the Joint Board yes- terday: Local 2—J.° Boruchowitz, J. H. | Cohen, B. Kaplan, I. Steinzor, A. Block, A. Wise, D. Krawitz, I. Gut- jerson, Louis Kleinman, I. Brauner, L. Horowitz, S. Zeldin, I. Deutsch, J. Levine, M. Rodgers, B. Rosenthal, Solomon, M. Cinamon, S. Shally, Golub. Local 9—Louis Hyman, Abe Zir- is. lA. accusing West of being an Insull | (Continued on Page Five) | 12 FIREMEN HURT FIGHTING BLAZE Five-Story Building on Fifth Ave. Razed door to the Soviet Union, and thus have a war base for an eventual war of aggression. The mullahs (priests) were con- venient tools for the British agents, who, through them, incited the bor- der tribes to revolt, giving them ammunition and money. net ae LONDON, Dec. 20.—The Afghan- istan legation here reported that the insurrection was now under control, (Continued on Page Fiye) | guard over his car and no one was |admitted to enter the train. Balbo did not leave his co&ch. The Italian }econsul at Kansas City requested | that authorities here and at points jin Kansas take measures to “pro- tect Balbo and others in the party.” When Balbo first arrived in New | York he disembarked in a special tug and made a dash for the Penn- sylvania terminal to avoid a: pos- sible anti-fascist demonstration. The |following day a large mass meet- |ing was held in New York under | the auspices of the Anti-Fascist Al-| BAS EXPLODES London Workers Shot | Out of Manhole | ‘LONDON, Dec. 20 (UP).—An ex- plosion in the heart of the West End district today injured 17 per- sons, including seven who were \gassed, and did great damage with- in half a mile of where it occurred. that Kellogg act alone, and Kellogg | modestly “feeling” that he should} share the “honor” with some Latins. | ‘The amusing scene is even staged | of Charley Hughes “opposing” the | inspired “insistence of the Latin} American delegates” that Kellogg be | the sole arbiter of the dispute. | Hughes quoted as having | “urged that a’ united Pan-American | front be maintained in all matters | affecting the western hemisphere. is | While this marionette show pro-| cceds, cables have been sent to both 5 | cil compani naval race with Great Britain, and the Kellogg war pacts, miscalled peace pacts—an attempt by Ameri- can imperialism to replace the Brit- ish-dominated League of Nations with one controlled by the United States. The fheeting is held as an army of Bolivians faces an army of Para- guayans in a (d'sputed region of South America. American bankers, ‘s and mining companies dominate Bolivia, and order the war, while England and the League of Nations seek to build up opposition Bazaar to Begin at the lin, William Greenberg, Rose Kap- liance protesting the presence of the|A bursting gas main is believed to |Folivia and Paraguay, the sense of | to the United States in South Amer- PICK DELEGATES si jlan, Mania Perlman, J. Achtenberg,} More than twelve firemen at- fascist gangster and terrorist on) have caused the explosion. Continued on Page Two Jica to prevent the huge land steal Workers Center Today | Anna Leibowitz, H. Nudelman, Ben | tached to five fire stations through- American soil, : Eight men were taken to a hos-| eae which the Bolivian “henchmen aa TA eatevense. haa beam! called’ by Hoe Sen eae ect: W- | out: Menhiattan. were injured early Balbo is here as Mussolini's rep-| pital, One was seriously burned |Wall Street are trying to manage. the Shifrin Defense Committee for! anna Schneiweiue S Ravidewite ” |vesterday. morning while fighting FOR CONFERENG jTesentative to the International) when ho was blown from a man- OFFICIALS HELP At any moment this South Ameri- Gigi Siiday at lon. th.,-at" levine ay jehneiwelss, 8. Ravidowitz. | one of the fiercest blazes of recent | Aeronautical Conference recently hole in which he was working. His f 1 jcan war of the champions of U.S.” Plaza Hall, Irving Place and 15th| Ronatr, Weta? penete Max| yeara that broke: out in the five- held in Washington. The Soviet clothing was aflame, | imperialism with the Paraguayans Ge Tia call 40 tha Contevence hashes ma pee Mek story, building at 139 Fifth Ave. Paterson Silk Workers ones 7% invited to this con-| Windows were shattered, a taxi- f | may result in drawing the principals he, tent ott tc yertoun local Ratan Get Coins eek aren enone Attor'S-am. ‘son S "ference, cab overturned and the sidewalks sal) GU | liz the stroeste—United States and unions, shop committees, fraternal) stein, William Zweibon, Harry Seelam. wengen cin. besmeet Prepare for Parley iti i Des ei heh ieep Raa : (eecnen i vine organizations, etc. | Reichel, Harry Lehrman, §. gupko,|*¥° rally buildings, was completely British Air Merger tes a - pore onal | panecomnising that the poliviad The purpose of the conference is) *lenveloped in flames a few minutes] PATERSON, N. J., Dec. 20.—| ortly before noon large quanti- j, ne | Paraguay war bears much the same tote a All seyork of the past | seen — Charles Zimmerman,|*fter the fire was discovered, and| Workers in the sille shops of Pater-| ProSresses as Part ore ore cccapine i the ais.|H0S€ Union Offers to jretation to the next world war that work and activities of the Shifrin’ Jyljus Portnoy, Rose Wortis, M.|the sole job of the fire-fighters was |son are now holding shop meetings | of the War Plans trict. Several persons outside the] Speed Up Workers __ the Balkan situation did to the last, Defense Committee, during the|Krawetz, I, Weisberg, Lena Good. |t? Keep the fire from spreading to and choosing their delegates for the | LONDON, Dee. 20.—The Imperial | police lines were overcome. eas the Workers Party calls a miss whole time of its existence, ~and|man, A. Lupin, Fannie Golos, Em-|®4joining bu'ldings. preliminary organizational confer- | Airways, leading British airplane —_-_— NORTHAMPTON, Mass., Dec. 20,| meeting of workers who own no joil also to prepare plans for future|maYanisky, Lena Klein, ‘Sonia| More than twelve firemen were |ence calied by the local organization combine, announced tonight « mer-| Commission and “Sub” <With monotonous regularity | wells in South America, who have work. It will recommend that due Chaiken, Louis Rosenthal, Clara badly cut by flying glass and over-|of the National Textile Workers|ger with Cobham, Blackburn Air | 9 hosiery workers learn that employ-|"° muniticns to sell to the U. S. ' to the importance of the Shifrin ox, Sarah Dorner, William Him-|come by smoke. Several of them | Union. Lines, Ltd., for operation of African Boss Disagree on Best ers in various hosiery centers are |navy, but who may soon be ordered Readethe 1 1. De take: over full eeias pain Mergen” Aube Lite (were taken to the New York Pore] <The, elections ‘to. the conference, |air. services. | Way to Pack in Crowds timing ,the ‘fficialdom of the|to die for these interests, to stage charge of the defense. At the con-/ Koff, Rose Altshuler, Virginia Allen, pital for treatment. The roof of|which will be held this Sunday This combine is a part of the} ay ack In Crowds American Federation, of Full Fash-|2 gigantic protest against the war ference it will be pointed out the| pauline Gelman. |the burning building collapsed with | morning at 10 o'clock in Oakley series of mergers now taking place| E me ioned Hosiery Workers that a wage |-—against the first battle of sucha reasons why Korn, the czar of the) [ocal 35—E, Kudrinketzky, §.|a crash that was heard for blocks |Hall, 211 Market St, are being | throughout the British empire, with e gong system has faiied to /reduction would be a “fine thing | war, however well hidden as a Bo- Butchers’ Union, recently resigned) Risoff, L. Davidoff, H. Kessler, H.| avound, and only the rumbling of|made according to the ructions the aim of creating world-wide units | ‘Peed up traffic ori the subways, /for the industry.” |livia-Paraguay conflict. from his post. Koretz, L. Weiss, J. Goretzky, Ph.|the wails before the crash saved|issued by the union to its member-|to be used in case of war by the |Secording to Col. William C. Lan-| his news carried with increasing | Good speakers will be on hand to Leaders To Speak. ; British government, Similar mer- |¢@Stet, chief engineer of the Traf- alyze the situation, to explain in Goodman, M. Tuchman, S. Goldstein, the firemen who had penetrated the ship in the official call for the con- frequency as the officialdom take on | 4 The conference will be addressed | J, Levenson, M. Friedman, M. Fleit, building from a horrible death un- | ference. gers have been the consolidation of | fie Commission, because the com- i more and more of the role of effi-|@etail the causes—and the most by the following leaders in the lefts, Schreier, H. Zaroff. |der the heavy timbers and bricks. This conference is a forerunner |Britich cable and communications |P@n‘es do not hire enough trained ciency experts for the mill owners, |Ptobable results in world-wide ear- Donen. Ow Paver we Local 3A. Krawitz, H. David, A.| Sparks from the five-story build-|of the city-wide convention the |under a government commission, the |Pl¢{form men. | _... |Was brought nearer home to the silk|""se—of the Bolivia-Paraguay — - : Frier. ing caused fires in both the adjoin- | union is planning, the date of which chemical trust under Lord Melchett as ti ae eas Bes ea oa hose workers of this and two neigh- | Struggle. Among these speakers Heavy Snowstorm Up |. Lcal 41—a. B. Taft; J. Stone, E.|ing buildings, but these were put |Will be decided at the conference. and the recently completed iron and {2™, is that crowds can be trained poring towns when made public that Will be two members of the Segre Rubin, M. Schechter, B. Fillin. ‘out without much difficulty. An agenda, which shows 2 com- s%ecl trust, specially created to com- If tae ila ahaw/de: ove Y cars the employers of Northhampton, of the Workers Party, Jay State Does Damage © tie furriers’ polling place, in the "yy san eatimated at between |Prehensive grasp of the nesds of the bat American competitors in Latin faster than they do now, a matter Springfield and Holyoke were |Lovestone and William Z. Fosters eee |Joint Board headquarters, 22 E.|cxhn ugg and $1,000,000, een | -k workers, and which promises the | America. which the jammed, trampled and negotiating with the union official-|the New York district ‘organizer of BUFFALO, N. Y., Dec. 20.—An {29nd St., will be open for the elec. 8000000 and $1,000,000. inauguration of a real drive to or-| ‘The opening of the 8,000-mile air |9therwise harrassed Interborough dom for a wage revision.” the Party, William W, Weinstone; eight-inch snowfall today seriously tions from 12 noon till 8 p. m. |ganize all.crafts in the trade, has|route from London to Cape Town Passengers seem to dissent from.) x oithor Oliver M. Bradley, treas-|the editor of the Daily Worker, impaired telephone and telegraph WIS Da SAS ES ec tont >| Col, Lancaster’s idea is that if you : |Robert Minor, and the director of. communications in western New York. A blinding snowstorm ham- pered traffic in Buffalo consider- ably. The trend of temperature here wiil be downward, and_in- creased snow is predicted, according to the weather’ bureau. —% * ri ST. LOUIS, Mo., Dec. y, , W the Union of. Socialist Soviet Re- - x isi i Rend Workers (Communist) Party, Daily orker Agents | publios,. the jolice . today arrested pas pou “ase sdl we The Central Executive Committee of the Workers (Communist) and faster equipment or more trains Charging she mismanaged his af- t 2, to take up the Cha Will Meet Tomorrow || Maximoviteh Litvinoff for forging | ¢°2PPeare’ eet eee Party has arranged the following membership meetings in connection | to reduce the crowds on the plat- firs and secretly entered into a! | vention discussion, will be held An important meeting of all Daily Worker agents of New York will be held tomorrow at 2:30 p. m. at the Workers Cen- ter, 26-28 Union Square. All unit, sub-section and section Daily Worker agents must come without fail. Units not having any agents must be represented by the unit organizer. —— Soviet Union Has Younger Litvinoff Arrested for Fraud PARIS, Dec. 20.—Acting on the direct request of the government of money drafts on the Soviet Trade Delegation in Berlin. Litvinoff is a younger brother of the assistant People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs. Stringent pun- ishment will be meted out to the em- bezzler by the Soviet authorities. MERRIL, Ind, Dec. 20,—The lives of 800 children were endan- gered when a fire destroyed a thea- tre here. - A_ special children’s matinee was being held, U. S. Imperialist Goines, been drawn, un, | So Is Tacna-Arica Fund cee | WASHINGTON, Dec. 20 (UP).— Six thousand five hundred dollars of the funds deposited by the gov- ernments of Chile and Peru to de- fray expenses of the special Tacna- treasury in New York. A. A. Grote, acting disbursing of- ficer of the commission and secre- tary to the United States delega- tion, is reported missing also. MAIL GRAFTERS ACQUITTED. GAINESVILLE, Georgia, Dec. 20 (UP).—Four officials of the de- funct Adair Realty and Trust Co. of Atlanta, were acquitted by a jury of eleven men last night on charges of using the mails to defraud, Continued on Page Three will shortly be started, it is an- MEMBERSHIP MEETINGS FOR PARTY DISCUSSION wih the Party Discussion. These meetings have originally been sched- uled earlier but due to the Party Plenum the final dates are the fol- lowing: Thursday, December, 27th—New York City; Superior, Wisc.; Seattle, Wash. falo, Chicago, St. Paul. land, Kansas City, Los Angeles. The Central Executive Committee desires tions of the Party shall particin: Friday, December 28th—Boston, Philadelphia, Buf- Saturday, December 29th—Pittsburgh, De- troit, New Haven, San’ Francisco, Sunday, December 30th—Cleve- that the widest sec- ate in these General Membership meetings and calls upon every Party member to attend, The place of the meeting in cach city will be announced in the next few days. \have a big enough force you can _pack them in, while the Interborough managers insist that if those on the |present payroll are sufficiently efraid of losing their jobs they will be able to poke the passengers | through the doors without adding to operating expenses. | forms. USSR Institute to Protect Oil Workers MOSCOW (By Mail).--The Coun- cil of the People’s Commissars has decided to organize in Bakv the , All-Union ,State Scientific-Investi- |zation Institute to stndv danverous end harmful sides of the labor in ‘the oil industry, | Neither of them propose better te AS rea GAN naga ah Continued on Page Four | ‘Publicity Stowaway | on Zeppelin Fights | Over Fat Pickings i} i} | | 20 She ae | |contract, the terms of which are ex- cessive and exorbitant, Clarence Terhune, 19-year-old Graf Zeppelin | stowaway, has petitioned in probate ‘court here to have his sister, Mrs | Edna Hall, removed as his guar dian, | James A. Wacchter, Terhune’s at- torriey, asked that a substitute guar- dian be appointed. He said Terhune left a theatre engagement paying {him $2 a wees to return here end straichten his affairs. Negro work in the Workers Party, Otto Huiswood. 6 vit: \Membership Meet of Party Next Thursday | A membership meeting of the | | |Di | Thureday evening, Dec. 27, at the New Star Casino, 105 E. 107th | St., between Lexington and Park | Aves. | The speakers will be Jay Love- stone, for the Central Executive) ; Committee, and Alexander Bit. telman, for the Minority £ th Central Executive Copmit .The doors will open at 70 p.m, Admission will be by mMbership | d only.

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