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eileen vi gk THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized For the 40-Hour Week For a Labor Party aily Entered as xecond-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N.Y. under the act of March 3, 1879. FINAL CITY EDITION ——————= | Published duily except Sunday by The National Daily Worker Publishing Association, tnc., 26-28 Union Sq., New York, N. Y. SUBSCRIPTION Outside New Vol. V., No. 316 NEW YORK, MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1929 GERMAN SOCIAL | © DEMOCRATS FOR MORE ARMAMENT \ Party Program Urges Bigger Army, No Disarmament Mouth Pacifist Talk Will Help Build Up Reichswehr BERLIN, Germany, Jan. 6.— Complete renunciation of even the pretense of pacifist policy by the German social democrats is dis- closed in the paragraphs of the program which will be laid before the party’s convention in Magde- burg in March. According to the program, whose main features have been made public, the social demo- crats will come out boldly in de- fense of armaments in_ practise, not to, strike against the twelve U. S. battleship Wyoming, one of five of the Atlantic fi maneuvers” off the coast of Cuba, where the exploited Negro worke On Their Way to Put the Fear of Wall Street Into hour day. Tho U.S. has a treaty with Cuba giving the right to intervene at any time, the workers of Cuba are militant, and have put up some terrific fights, and bitterly contested strikes. leet which have gone down to y Cuba ] ON LIBEL CHARGE Faces Lons Jai! Term Be Reopened (Special to the Daily Worker) BOSTON, Jan. 6—The Sacco- Vanzetti case, declared dead by the impeccably-mannered hangmen of | Massachusetts as they tossed the charred bodies of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti in the out- raged faces of the workers of the | world, refuses to die. Once more ‘the courts of Massachusetts are are being compelled to reopen the case in their determination to pun- “winter ys on the American Sugar and Hershey Chocolate sugar plantations can listen to the roar of twelve inch guns, and be scared enough ‘in theory,” and in defense of German} capitalism. | This complete reversal of their | pre-election promisés, to fight arm-j| ament, which began last year with the party’s support of the cruiser bill, will be attempted in the face of the anger of the German work- ing class already aroused over the earlier cruiser issue. | though still cringing a little “i ASK PIECE WORK COMMUNIST FORD UNIT STEEL 00, GETS SUPPORTS PARTY C.E.C. | At the Detroit City membership meeting of the Workers (Commu- nist) Party held on Saturday, Dec. 29, there was presented, in the name jish a militant worker for refusing to accept their edict that “the mat- ter is closed.” Harry J. Canter, who was active jin the Sacco-Vanzetti agitation in this city and was candidate for sec- |retary of state on the Workers os (Communist) Party ticket, is facing a long jail-term on a charge of criminal libel if he is convicted. “Fuller, Murderer of Sacco and Vanzetti.” |Mellon Makes Shady Tax Deals LL.D. Defends Worker \Sacco-Vanzetti Case to’ Patronage and Cruiser Worker as greetings on its TO START WARS Boston Communist Arrives in Washington | and Sets Up “Second White House” Pushes Kellogg Pacts | Bills Divide Time WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.—Presi- dent-elect Hoover arrived today on his special train, with his extra baggage car loaded with Inca gold and other presents from debtor gov- ernments of the United States in Latin America. He will establish headquarters in the Hotel May-| flower, and make it a “Second | White House.” | He was met at the depot by Sen- ator Shortridge of California, and began immediately his patronage and “pork-barrel” negotiations. He will be visited today or tomorrow by Mellon and Gilbert, in regard to German reparations, and will see various administration senators soon, to supervise the rushing through of the Kellogg pacts as part of the war against for which his administration will plunge into preparedn and to Britain | A group of Communits in a con- sumptive sanatorium in Durate, Calif., have sent five dolla as their greeting to the Daily Worker on its fifth anniversary. The let- ter which accompanied the money a follows: \“Dear Comrades: | “We, the Communist group and sympathizers who are at present leonfined as patients at the Jewish Consumptive Relief Association Sanatorium, Durate, Calif, have lsent five dollars to the Daily fifth anniversary. “We feel that it is our duty to jcontinue our activities despite the tact that we are sick. “Many of the patients have been sick for years and unable to work, but they gladly give their ‘last few |nickles and dimes to the only Eng- lish Communist paper in Americ: “We send our reyolutiona greetings to the Daily Worker. Long Live the ily Worker! Long Live Communism! “J, KREITZBERG.” ‘HEBREW TRADES’ AVOID MEETING Make Fake Peace Offer The Reichswehr is the particular object of the social democrats’ so- licitous care and they will do every- thing in their power to build up| this arm of the German forces into a powerful fighting engine. The suciai democratic endorse- ment of armaments is ushered in by a few paragraphs of pacifist sentiments, condemning war, but stating that in view of Germany’s| position they entirely endorse the | need for a greater army: | The armament endorsement urges that the German government make no attempt to evade the restric-| tions of the treaty of Versailles, but also advises the government not to feel obliged to disarm “without consideration of German military The Madgeburg program is fhere- ly the written admission of the pol- icy of the social democratic party in every Reichstag discussion on armament in the pgst year. In the and political practicality.” | piece work. ~BE MADE LEGAL Bosses Turn Down Fake Schlesinger I Demands In reply to the fake “trade de- mands” issued to the employers’ association by Benjamin Schlesin- ger, leader of the company union in jte cloak industry, the employers have replied with a demand that he legalize the sweat shop system of This counter demand was made public by the Industrial Council, the bosses’ organization, after a conference with the scab union heads at the Hotel Pennsyl- vania. «In..an. effort. to stem the tide of sentiment among the workers for the new Needle Trades Industrial Union launched at the convention ended a few days ago, Schlesinger had published a hypocritical “peace Reichstag they have consistently announced their pacifist stand and | then voted for the government’s | war appropriations. | | GILBERT PLOTS © WITH KELLOGG plan” and “trade program.” In the trade program he asked of the bosses a $5 wage raise, in order to create the illusion that his com- pany union was working for the interests of the workers. The workers received his proposal with derision. The bosses, by their action, give evidence that the scab union is so powerless as not even to need the pretense of concessions. They there- fore call on the right wing to legal- of the bureau of the Ford shop | |nucleus,,a resolution appealing for| e ci ae the unity of all Communist forces) WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.—The lat- jagainst the Right danger and Trot-|©St session of the House of Repre- \skyism. 204 comrades voted for|Sentatives, was enlivened by discus- tie eaeolatton, | sion of the Mellon tax refunds sean- | At this meeting, which was called ,“*!- : to discuss the convention theses be-| ‘The report of the Appropriations \fore the party, the representative Committce, which considered Secre- of the Central Executive Commit- tee was Comrade Gitlow; of the Opposition, Comrade Foster. The Central Committee resolution was carried by a vote of 186 to 62, with tary of the Treasury Mellon’s de- mand for $75,000,000 for tax re- funds, brot out the fact that altho Representative Garner of Texas, Democrat, had paid nothing during the Demoer: while the interest was running on the huge $26,000,000 steel trust tax refund, he was now wiliing to ex- 9 abstentions. Comrade Gitlow, |when called upon to express his opinion on the resolution of the Ford nucleus, said that he endorsed whole-heartedly this effort at party pose the whole deal. unification. , | Garner took the floor and accused The Ford tesolution, which calls;Mellon of making secret deals with This placard, carried by Canter during an election dem- onstration conducted by the Work- jers Party on November 3 in front of the state house here, is being jused as a pretext to put this worker jbehind the bars and to stifle all future protests against the murder- ers of Sacco and Vanzetti. 25° Arrested. Twenty-five workers were ar- rested during the November 3 dem- onstration and charged with ”saun- tering and loitering.” They were found guilty in the lower court and appealed for a jury trial. In the |superior court they were fined the maximum penalty of $20 each. | On Navember 5 a charge of crim- inal libel was brought against Can- ter alone by the chief of police. jfor party unity, reads as follows: the largest. corporations, and~par- “APPEAL FOR UNITY OF ALL ticularly with thdse of which he is COMMUNIST FORCES AGAINST |cne of the owners, or of which his THE RIGHT DANGER AND immediate family are owners. TROTZKYISM. Garner accused Mellon of allow- nucleus of the party introduces the publicity. In this way $20,000,000 folowing resolution for adoption by|was given the U. S. Steel Corpora- the party membership meeting of |tion, a Morgan-Mellon concern. He Detroit: |Lrot out that Mellon had allowed “1, In wiew of the menacing war |Cvcr $2,000,000,000 tax refunds dur- danger, of the growing attacks by ing the last eight years. the government and all capitalist Deals With Himself forees against the party, in view of) Ue then cited the refund to the the influence of social reformism Aluminum Company of Amefica of in our ranks, which makes the Right ¢ 04 and added: danger the main danger facing the) "“«This is not all. The Aluminum party, in view gf the splitting at- Company already had been allowed The grand jury, after an “investi- (gation,” brought in an indictment jon this charge. The case came to court December 19, but was post- poned until January 21 when it will “The bureau of the Ford shop) ing huge credits for taxes, without be heard in Boston superior court-| before Judge Fosdick, That the placard carried by Can- ter is merely serving as a pretext behind which lurks a more sinister | attack on the militant workingclass is evident from the fact that no attempts have previously been made to prosecute persons or publications for calling Fuller a murderer. The Daily Worker and all of the Com- munist and left wing press have repeatedly declared that Fuller and lize piece work and to permit them | to publicly dispense with the 40-hour |week, which is not being practiced No Cuts for Germany if U. S. Loses by It WASHINGTON, Jan. 6.—S. Par- ler Gilbert, agent general of repar- | ations, is spending two or three days with Secretary of State Kellogg as his guest. Gilbert recently reieased | for publication a report on his offi- | cial recommendations, which stated | that Germany was wel! off, and could pay the full Dawes plan re- quiremerts, The German bankers and industri- alists deny that such payments can | be made, and ask for a total repar- ations debi not to exceed $7,000,000,- | 000 ‘or $8,000,000,000. They say the next payment of $600,000,000 cannot be made. Would Cut U. S. Payments France, unofficially as yet, asks $10,000,000,000. England and France propose to reduce their debt to U. S. proportionally to any reduction in the German reparetions payments to them. ? A committee of experts meets soon to recommend’ modification of the Dawes Plan, and fix the final amount of veparations. The U. S. yvefused official 1epresentation on it, and will insist on big debt payments from England and France, even if this means trying to hold Germany to the full Dawes plan payments. British Ship Workers to Australia Despite Unemployment There “LONDON, Jan. 6.—A trick way of British capitalism to get rid of some of its unemployed is seen in the $1,000,000,000 migration agree- ment between the British “home” government and the Australian Tory government, For every $375 furnished by the British government, Australia must accept an immigrant worker from Britain, regardless of the fact that Australia has an unemployment problem of its own. The Tory gov- ernment is entirely uficoncerned about the 150,000 unemployed there. The first big project is the con- struction of the $6,000,000 Wyangala dam across the Lachlan river, which is designed to irrigate 1,357,000 i x in any cloak shop. (a oe | An interesting ‘report comes from the “open forum” called by the right wing company union, in Bryant Hall, Thursday afternoon. Schlesinger and other fakers were to address the meeting. A fairly good attendance had turned out to tempts of the fenegade Trotzkyist Cannon group, in view of the most jurgent need of building the party, {the membership of Detroit, which {is the most proletarian section of the membership of the entire party, calls upon all Communist forces within the Workers (Communist) |Party of America to unite forth- |with to eradicate all factionalism, | ‘and to close the ranks of the party ‘against its enemies. | \as a credit $165,117.18, and in abate- his commission are guilty together Then Run from It lee ¥ Explaining in detail the treachery cee ene of the bureaucrats of the former It was learned on his arrival that| ffebrew Butcher Workers’ Union all of the wireless messages from | and the United Hebrew Trades, who the Utah were, as was surmised, called a peace conference with the actnally. censored iy, Hoover, Progressive Butcher and Poultry It was also learned that Hoover | Workers’ Union and then failed to is contemplating, but regards of| appear to confer, the ‘latter organ- direct the cruiser bill around some | fof the senate’s interminable red| tape. secondary importance to the senate| ization issues the following state- campaign and the negotiating over | ment: cabinet posts, a second tour, to} “The union-breaking tactics of take in the West Indies, and to start! the “socialist” union bureaucrats of in February. the United Hebrew Trades and of Se |the officialdom of the former He- | brew Butcher Workers’ Union, their PROTEST FRAME policy of wholesale expulsions and intimidations compelled the progres- | sive elements to form UP OF FURRIERS | of the right wing scab officials from — reducing conditions and standards. ‘Mass Meet for Mineola). “The right wing outfit, having re ‘ been dealt a mortal blow, began to Victims Tonight make fake peace overtures to our organization with the intent of de- ‘A huge protest mass meeting has | moralizing and confusing our rank been called by the New York sec-| and file. tion of the International Labor De- | fense to protest against the frame-| “The and up of the two fur workers who were | Poultry Workers’ Union having in sentenced to serve from two and a| mind the interests of the rank and half to five years in prison in the|file accepted their proposals for Mineola frame-up. The meeting | “peace” negotiations, and offered will be held tonight, immediately | the following constructive program after work, at the Irving Plaza Hall, as a basis for unity: 15th St. and Irving Place. | ““(1) Organization campaign to ‘Among the speakers who will ad-| begin immediately in charge of an and prevent the bosses with the “aid A Real Program. Progressive Butcher orm a union to | defend the interests of the workers | went they ghve them: Jost a fittie with the whole capitalist class of murdering two innocent workers, Christmas present of $623,420, or a grand total of refunds and credits for taxes paid in one year, 1917, of 21,267,426.64. “Mr. Mellon, this grand Secretary , that you hear so much about today, this man who will never perish from the thoughts of the American peo- ple when we are gone and forgotten, this man sits on that side of the It is believed that Fuller himself and other high Massachusetts offi- (Continued on Page Five) WORKERS MUST attend the forum and the union “2, The membership meeting of wreckers wanted to display the the Communist workers of Detroit) size of the crowd pictorially in/states with the utmost emphasis| their scab organ, the yellow “For- that there is no basis in principle| ward.” — \for the continuation of factionalism The size of the turnout had sur-'in the party. It fully endorses the table as Secretary of the Treasury, and if reports are correct that he owns the Aluminum Company, Mr. Mellon, the citizen of Pittsburgh, | Pa., sits on this side and determines ATTEND UNITS District 2 of Party dress the hundreds of workers who | Organization committee in each sec-| nt tonight| tion (5 in each section).¢ (2) Work- s to be given out by the are expected to be pres v at the protest meeting will be Louis| ing Hyman, president of the Needle| Grievance Committee elected by the Trades Union; Ben Gold, secretary-| membership. (3) Organization fund | treasurer of the same organization;|to be raised thru a tax of 10 per Moissaye J. Olgin, editor of the Yid-|Cent to be controlled by the organ- dish Communist. monthly, “The| ization committee elected by the Hammer”; Meilach Epstein, editor! membership, (4) Reduction in ini- the Freiheit; Alfred Wagen- Continued on Page Two f | knecht, Norman Tallentire, S. Lipt-| | zen_and S. Mensaer. The last named British Official Moans S. Milgrom will act as chair- Lack of Russian Trade is one of the two framed fur work-| | LONDON, Jan. 6.—R. J. G. Booth- ers. man, Price 3 Cents \ CALLED FULLER HOOVER PLUNGES Sick Workers VAST AUDIENCE MURDERER; TRIED INTO CAMPAIGN §©7¢¢" 2a7/y" HAIL BIRTHDAY OF DAILY WORKER Lovestone, Foster and Minor Greet Fighting Newspaper Dunean Troupe Liked To Give Three More Performances Shouting, stamping and applaud- ing in a frenzy of enthusiasm, 4,000 workers, filling every nook and cor- ner of Manhattan Opera House, 34th St. west of Eighth Ave., Sat- urday night joined in celebrating the fifth anniversary of the Daily \" rker, central organ of the Work- ers (Communist) Party. The celebration proved to be an eloquent expression of solidarity on the part of the class-conscious work- ers of New Yo with the paper that for five years has been in the forefront of all their struggles. Hundreds of workers were turned because the hall could hold no Speakers Hail “Daily.” Robert Minor, editor of the Daily Worker, in introducing the two speakers of the evening, Jay Love- stone, executive secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party, and William Z. Foster, member of the secretariat of the Party, pointed out the part the Daily Worker had played as the spokesman and organ- izer of the militant working class and predicted that it would steadily grow in power and influence until the day when it would become the organ of the proletarian dictator- ship in this country. Lovestone was given an ovation when he arose to speak. “The Daily Worker is the leader of the working , * class in, all its struggles,” he said. “It exposes mere ly the machin- ations of the American imperialists and their trusted agents, the labor fakers and the yellow socialist par- j ty. Offensive Against Workers. “The capitalists are eys+ywherev. |launching an offensive against the workers. Wage-cuts, speed-up and jevery other form of exploitation are being used to crush the workers. The only way in which we can wage an \effective fight against the attacks jof the bosses and the preparations for a new imperialist war is by building the Daily Worker into a |mass newspaper. And when the imperialist war which is not far off comes, the Daily Worker will lead the American workers in converting |that war into a civil war for the | overthrow of capitalism and the es- | tablisihimient of a Soviet Republic jin the United States.’ Foster, who was also given an | ovation, said: “There were many times during |the past five years when the mem- bers of the staff of the Daily Work- er didn’t know whether the paper would be able to appear the next day. Yet thruout these five years the Daily Worker has taken its place as the voice and champion of , the workers, fighting their battles and exposing the traitorous corrupt |bureaucrats of the American Fed- eration of Labor. | “In the coal strike, in the textile strike the Daily Worker has played ja leading role. And in the building |of new unions in the coal, textile prised the right wing. After ex- cited putting of heads together they decided to call a photographer. When the photographer came and was about to explode the flashlight powder, nearly every worker in the hall pulled out of their pockets, the Daily Worker and the Communist Jewish Daily Freiheit and covered their faces with it, completely spoiling the picture taken and the tempers of the gang on the stage, who ordered no picture taken. Meanwhile all the workers began to walk out, leaving an empty hall. Yesterday’s Forward contains no picture of the “crowded open-for- um” which, the Forward says, “Some Communists tried to disturb.” instructions of the VI World Con- gress of the Communist Interna- tional that putting an end to the factional struggle is the most ur- gent task of the American Party at present. “3, The membership meeting of the Communist workers of Detroit (Continued on Page Five) TEX RICKARD DEAD. MIAMI, Jan. 6.—“Tex” Rickard, the man who made millions out of prize fights, not by fighting but by hiring: fighters and grandiose ad- vertising schemes, died today as the result of an operation. ‘Mussolini Needs Babies > To Swell PARIS, France, Jan. 6.—Italian armies, bigger. armies, armies fight- ing for Mussolini from the Alps to the Sahara, planting the black flag of fascism thru all the provinces of | its rebuilt Rome—such is the dream of Mussolini. Thru the pen of his literary cor- poral Mario Carli, editor of Impero, the ultra-fascist paper, the views of Mussolini on childbirth have just been made public to the workers and peasants of an overpopulated coun- try. Bear children, children and more children, is the fascist message to the Italian masses who are often unable Fascist Armies to support those they already have. “Every Italian woman must give to her country at least one son every two years,” according to the Impero. “A yefusal on this point will be equi- valent to pushing men on the road to polygamy, which,” the writer is hypocrite enough to state, “is con- trary to fascist moral principles.” The moral principles which brutal- ize wemen revolutionists on the exile jails! , The penalty for not submitting to Mussolini’s ideas on childbirth should be “three years imprisonment on one how much he owes the government. Raa hae oes Issues Call “Salvationists” Fight 1 “Do you tiink the government is| In view of the final discussion|Over “Army” Property going to get the best of it when the and the elections to the section con- AJuminum Company of America ventions which are to take place! LONDON, Jan. 4.—The factional starts in to compromise with the | in New York City this week, the |fight in the Salvation Army, a vast Secretary of the Treasury? | Executive Committee of District 2| organization for bringing religious “Here is a man sitting in judg- has issued the following statement:| dope to workers, continues, with ment on large sums of money, mil- “To All Members of District 2: | negotiations being made for the ¥e- lions of doliars involved, trying the | elec- | Signation of “General” Booth, its ° | “The final discussion and ‘! case, if current reports are correct, |tions to the section conventions in| Present dictator—and custodian of of a concern in which he controls wh New York City take place this ll the great property it has ac- or owns, the majority of the stock. | week. It js the task of all mem-|CU™ulated from millions of begging “The Secretary, as I recalls? re- | hers to participate fully in this expeditions from the pennies of the signed as a director in sixty-odd cor- | week's discussion and elections, to PT porations when he went into she express their opinions on the issue| For a time it appeared as tho the Treasury Department. They have|hefore the party, to criticize its|“Army” organizations in. each coun- had applications for refunds. Under | shortcomings, and. to make pro-|try might secede, and this may hap- the law at the present time, he can|posals for overcoming the party’s|pen yet if “General” Booth proves sit down and reach an agreement | weaknesses. To combat the Right| obdurate. with any of them, that is binding |danger, which is the main danger on the American people, accepting |pefore the party, means to prepate ten cents on the dollar for the /the party ideologically and organ- umount due.” jizationally in order that” it may ist Party ix the par- on of by, private secretary to the chancel. |and needle industries it is the Daily lor of the Exchequer, in a speech| Worker that is spurring them on at Peterhead, stated that tho “the |and aiding their fight. first move for resumption of trade; Open With International. treaties between England and Rus-! The evening opened with the sing- sia” must come from the U. 8. S.R,,|in& of the International by the en- there was strong sentiment in Eng. |tite audience. Then followed the land for such resumption. He did/first part of the program of the not comment on the fact that the|1sadora Duncan dancers, consisting U. S. S. R. has always been willing} Of numbers from Schubert and to resume relations, and that it was; Schumann. The vast audience was England that broke them off. held spell-bound ‘by the amazing performance of these young pupils JOBLESS WOULD BE HANGMAN. | of the Isadora Duncan School in PRAGUE, Jan. 6.—More than 225 Moscow under the direction of Irma unemployed persons have applied Duncan, adopted daughter of the for the job of official hangman in {mous Isadora. Czechoslovakia. The last hangman ,, But it was not until the series of has just retired after 30 years on “Impressions of Revolutionary Rus- the job, during which he hanged sia” were performed that the au- lover 500 persons. This barbarity | dience - broke loose. Cheers and will continue in Czecho-slovakia so deafening applause greeted the var- \long as capitalism continues there,|i0us numbers that breathed the — |spirit of revolutionary Russia, and |fulfill the tremendous task of fight- i ling the growing war m id Babbits Prepare Motor | the manifold tasks Yqcing Bein patty Races; Workers Starve in the present and coming strug-| gies. ‘Daily’ to Print Documents the troupe was compelled to come out again and again to acknowl- edge the demonstrations of the de- |lighted workers, A collection was made for. the DUBLIN, Jan. 6.—While unem- | ployment in the industrial centers of Dublin, Cork and Limerick is reaching unprecedented figures, | and the peasantry, especially | along the western seaboard, starves | in ccnditions approaching the fam-| ine years of 1847 and 1867, well-fed business men here are seeking to create a fund of $60,000 to meet the | hell-holes off the coast and in the |¢xPenses of a serise of motor Taces | of the party. which they propose to hold Phoenix Park in July. in WANTED: Stenographer and fil-| ing clerk. Must be capable, Party of the penal islands,” according to Tmpero.. member. Write Box 400, care Daily | Worker, “The district convention must be the expression of the entire mem- bership. The party will be able to fulfill its tasks only if the entire membership _—_ understands these tasks and participates wholeheart- edly in the formulating and. guid- ing of its policies. “Party comrades! Be at your unit meetings to decide the policies Everybody to the unit meetings for the final discus- sion and election of delegates. Attend your unit meeting this week without fail. Fraternally yours, District Executive Committee, District 2. . ' of Trotskyist Conspiracy Daily Worker by Robert Minor and the audience responded generously. To Give 3 More Performances, The Daily Worker will tomorrow Trotskyist renegades in France to, Following the performance a ban- and on successive days publish a the Cannon group of renegades in, Wet was given in honor of the Dun- {number of documents revealing the|America, a letter from Frederick | ¢&% dancers at Cafe Boulevard, 41st |conspiracy on a national and inter-|N, Sard, an appointee of the Aus- St. and Broadway. There it was jnation seale by the followers of trian government, recently received #MMounced that the Daily Worker Trotsky against the Communist In-|at the white house by Coolidge, has arranged to have them give ternational and its various sections. written to Max Eastman and show- three additional performances, Next | Photographie reproductions of some ing his relations with the Cannon| Saturday afternoon a special youth |important documents will be printed. group of “Communists,” together | Performance at popular prices will One of the documents that will|with several letters from Eastman be given. Sunday afternoon there appear in the Daily Worker is a addressed to Cannon or otherwise will be another popular-priced per- |lettet from Uriahns, the renegade establishing the relations between | formance and on Sunday evening the whose despicable anti-Communist |them in the conspiracy against the| dancers will appear for the last work in Germany is famous. Others| Workers (Communist) Party and|time before departing for a tour are: a letter from a leader of the'the Communist International. thruout the country, faa