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| and sulphur mines end a railroad Page Two Macha a do Anno WEINSTONE IN REPORT ON SIXTH WORLD CONGRESS Calls the War Danger “Central Task” (Continued from Page One) of social democracy as a means of deceiving the proletariat and of steering the discontent of the mosses into the channels of the bourgeoisie. Analyzes Fascism. The program points out the uni- versal nature of fascism, combatting the idea that it could not develop in highly capitalistic countries and showing the relation between im- perialism and the bankruptcy of parliamentarism and facism, as an instrument for the suppression of the revolutionary proletariat and for consoldiating the bourgeois or- der; likewise it deals with the Nep and shows similarly its general ap- plication in various degrees and forms depending upon the industrial development of the country. It clarifies the question of tactics and outlines the methods of work of the Communist Parties for the achieve- ment of leadership over the masses for the revolutionary struggle. The program is of particular im- portance for the American move- ment, which has too little tradition of Marxism and internationalism. It is the law of millions of the poor and- must be made known to every member of the Party. This will be a poWerful instrument for the de- velopment of its proletarian cadres, for raising their ideological level, for enabling them to share to a much more powerful degree in the formulation of policies and in the leadership of the Communist move- ment. Estimate of Present Period. The unanimous adoption of the program at the Congress, without serious differences, demonstrates the one will and one ideology of the world Party. Th® central question at the Con- gress was the estimation of the in- ternational situation, the estimation of the third post-war period of the general crisis of capitalism. The Congress pointed out that the third period was characterized by the fact that the productive level of world economy has for the first time exceeded the pre-war level. On the basis of this increased productivity, we find the growing contradictions, the sharpening up of all class relations, of the anta- gonisms among the capitalist pow- ers, chiefly the Anglo-American rivalry, and between the capitalist powers and the Soviet Union and between the imperialist states and the colonial mas smovements. third post war period shows the precariousness and decaying char acter of the phase of partial stab- ilization which is leading to huge explosions within the capitalist sys- tem, which is marked by the Left- ward drift of the masses, the be- ginning of the counter-offensive of the working class, the growing lead- ership of the Communist Party over the mass struggles of the workers, the more treacherous role of social reformism, the ever-increasing par- ticipation of the state in the strug- gles of the workers, etc. Role of American Imperialism. The role of the United States in world economy was given the great- est attention by the Congress. The Congress showed that the general crisis of capitalism and the grow- ing contraditions of capitalism were drawing the United States ever closer into the world and were consequently réacting upon the class struggles in this powerful imperialist country. The transfer the economic center of world economy from Europe to the United States is involving the United States The! ontraditions | | Petty Bootleggers to Prison; Pazzle, Find the Grafting Police? Thirty-two convicted bootleggers arriviny at North Milwaukee, Wis. These are convicted, but the big rings allied with the police of Chi run the dope rings, also their unces Intention to Spread _sKER, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1929 go and other cities, a tors, are not here. official prot They haven't even been arrested. NOT HANG SELF; WHITEWASH LRT. Story of Beating | (Continued from Page One) {borough detective, and Thomas Blake, inspector, coaxed on by Lee} M. Hutchins, I. KR. T. lawyer, denied | that they had beaten Schindler, Dr. nd the men like Rothstein who Witness Persists in the!: Terrorism of His Police in New Persecution The brazen greed of the textile factory owners of South Carolina, which makes them somewhat of a nuisance even to the rest of the business men who run that state and ts government, is illustrated by an ticle in “The Textile World,” page 82, issue of Feb, 23. The article, written in a self- righteous, complaining manner, say: that there is “an attitude of criti cism and oppression of the very in- dustry which has meant so much to SAY TAILOR DID ‘Southern Mill Owners Want HIS GOV'T, U.S, No Restrictions on Slavery "Y UNDERSTAND ONE ANOTHER WELL Brags of 12 Victims in in passing by the mill owners’ licity. But the greatest wrath is dis-| played in the article against a bill | calling for the “analysis and in- |spection of cotton products and |dyes, starches, sizing and finishing compounds, soaps, detergents,” and other products used in textiles. Prison Cells The bill provides for a tax of one cent a spindle to finance this inves- | HAVANA, Cuba, March Serve |tigation, which might, in the event |Promising a “stable government” to |that it were run without graft and |foreign interests in Cuba, President |bribery, which it never would be, Gerardo Machado today announced, possibly interfere with some adul- more and more into the .general|headed by Muste. crisis of world capitalism. On the basis of this situation the class struggle i nthe United States is growing sharper, the technical revolution being carried out in the United States, the huge trustifica- tion and rationalization is leading to “murderous speedup of labor to an unparalleled exhaustion of human power,” provides the basis for greater struggles on the part of tke . proletariat, for the increasing radicalization of the masses and its leftward currerit, opens up perspec- tives for the development of a mass Communist Party in the United States. Degree of Stabilization. The estimation of stabilization of the third post-war period is becom- ing a central question of issue with- in the Communist International since the congress. This was shown by the recent discussions within the Presidium of the Communist Inter- national, in the German Party as well as in all sections of the Com- munist International. The presidium correctly rejected the viewpoint of Humbert Droz and Sera as being in conflict with the viewpoint of the Sixth Congress, and must reject every viewpoint which sees greater harmony within the capitalist sys- tem, which challenges the conce tion of the transient chyracter of stabilization, the growing precarious- ness of the stabilization as was well brought out in the recent speech of Comrade Stalin before the presidium of the CI. The events since the world co: gress have all confirmed this estim- ation of stabilization. The struggle in the Ruhr and Lodz, the begin- ning offensive struggles of the work- ing class in the United States, the increasing role of the Hy Party in the United States as the leader of mass s re proof of the -orrectness «f the vicwpoint of the Sixth World Congress. Tactics During Third Period. ternational follows from this’ estim- ation of the third post-war period. Social reformism becomes a greater _menace in this period. The central task in this period is the fight against the growing war jdanger. The necessity ‘or linking up all our activities with th cen- tral demand, the treacherous role of the social democracy in its close co- operation with the bourgeoisie com- pels a modification vf the united front tactic, not its rejection, but a modification of its form, for the necessity of adopting the slogan of “the united front from below,” neces- sitates the sharpening up of the in- dependent role of the Communist Party as a leader of the masses. In the present period the fight for the masses becomes a leading slogan in each of the sections of the Commu- nist International. The nece: fighting for the influence amo} masses against the social democracy, against the influence of social re- formists, both its “Right wing” and its “Left wing”; (the “Left” phrase- ology of a section of social democ- racy is of particular danger in all countries.) In the United States we | see this in the maneuvers of the so- \cialist party in the so-called anti- Woll movement and in the formation lot the Left social reformist group Hoover Enslaved China, India Workers, Aided Sacco Murder Herbert Hoover, chosen by big business as president of the United|Gompers of A. F. of L,, Owen D,!toward the Right and conciliatory groups in the Soviet Union were ab-| States, made his money by imperial- ist mining ventures in Burma and China. As chairman of the Burma Corporation, Ltd., he controlled the largest silver lead producing com-| pany in the world, smelting works, lead, silver, zine, and iron mines, railways and other property Burma, India. Employing 20,000 Indian workers under conditions described in Bri- tish official documents as “compul- sory free labor” or practical slavery, Hoover was finally asked to resign. The imperialist British government feared a political uprising if such conditions continued. Women work- rs in the mines were earning less 8 cents a day. Ze Enslaved Chinese. Tn Chinese mines, Hoover operated with 40,000 workers under guard. Soldiers were employed to stand over the miners with bayonets. In earist Russia, Hoover owned copper where peasants and convicts were - forced to work under cossack guard, for the czar and for Herbert Hoover. In 1921, when jobless workers in n States numbered about Hoover as secretary of appointed a commission f in} |“to study”. employment. Samuel Young and other representatives of big business made the committee | which brought in worthless recom- mendations about “employment of- fices.” Nothing was done about un-| employment. As food administratcr, Hoover re-| jected, the recommendations of the} \Interstate Commerce Commission made after the mass protest at war |prices of food. The I. C, C., finding ‘the Big Five Packers making. three |times the pre-war profit on food, | asked for price limitation. Hoover | refused. Helped Murder Sacco, “No one can rightly deny the | |fundamental correctness of our eco-| nomic system,” declares Hoover. So he stood by Gov. Fuller over the jmurder of Sacco and Vanzetti. | Among his campaign supporters | |were Andrew Mellon, representing ‘coal, aluminum, oil and power in- terests, and W. W. Atterbury, anti- finion president of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Hoover is an “expert” on rational- ization, speeding up of workers, mass production and all efficiency schemes. His declared aim is’ to undersell all other imperialist coun- tries, and especially to drive them out of the Latin Amrican market, OU AN 8 In this period greater care must be given to the every-day needs of the working class. Naturally we must broaden out the revolutionary horizon of the working class but we must ‘do it on the basis of connecting up the revolutionary goal with the every- day needs of the masses. We must give strenuous support to the most| \ insignificant demands of the masses. We must strengthen the position of the Party in the factories, in the |workshops, and particularly in the large enterprises. Fight Against War Danger. The war ,danger must be fought not by a constant cry of war, not by saying “War is coming, beware,” but by connecting up the war dan- ger with the intensification of la- bor, the speed-up system with ra- tionalization schemes, the treachery of the bureaucrats, etc. Greater attention must be given to our Party in accordance with the new tasks of the third period, of | greater self criticism, of the estab- \lishment of iron proletarian disci- |pline, of greater proletarian democ- |racy and more Bolshevik centraliza- tion of the absolute subordination lof the Minority to the Majority in the various sections of the Commu- nist International; to the deviations Negro peoples of the United States, the slogan of self determination for the Negro people in the South and chauvinism as well drew attention to the development of an industrial political army the Negro people capable of assuming the leading role among the peoples. The Congress developed the work }of the Eighth Plenum on the war combatted the prevalence of white | Kennard, medical examiner, and Dr./|the progress of the state,” and that Kearney of Lincoln Hospital, also|“this attitude is expressed in the coached by Hutchins, related that| form of several astounding mea- |they found no signs of beating on |sures which have been introduced |the body. linto the state legislature.” Wulf, who asserts that he is only | Mild Factory Laws. |too glad to testify, was not called a « .. |by the district attorney's office dur-|_,A"d What are these “astounding teration of the product, prevent | some tax dodging and expose the rate of exploitation. “Insult and Industry.” | Against this rather mild regula- tive activity, which the Carolina | |legislators were perhaps intending in an interview with representatives of the press, that the persecutions recently resumed against the Cuban revolutionary workers «uid their leaders will continue unabated. After relating that twelve of the victims seized in the recent police jing the hearing yesterday afternoon. | After the district attorney’s office |had announced that the case was | closed for the day, the reporter of the Daily Worker learned that Wulf measures?” Regulations of rather |to use in the regular way of saving less importance than those which do not prevent the mill owners of other states to crush labor outrage- ously, set up wage standards of $15 |the rest of industry from the effects tof too great swindling on the part | of the greediest competitors, and \certainly for their own good, in the to $18 a week and profiteer at will,|shape of easy jobs to give away, |terror are in prisons awaiting long term sentences, the “Butcher.” as the president is known to the Cuban working class, declared that the sentence of death “would not be danger, laying down the precise|had been called to the district at- | tactics to be followed in combatting torney’s office at five o'clock yester- lit and focused the attention of the|}day afternoon. He was evidently entire world proletariat on this de-| drilled for hours in an effort to cisiv> task of the present period. | make him withdraw his testimony Situation in Soviet Union. for three hours later Wulf had not In the reports on the Soviet Union Yet returned to his home. ard in the Program, the Congress | Wulf states that about 7 o’clock | registered the growth in the produe- | Yesterday morning he followed a| tive force of the Soviet Union, de-| an into the turnstile at Prospect clared as a law for the proletariat | AVe- station, and apparently for no |the possibility of the development Teason at all saw two men jump on of socialism in one country or in| Schindler, One of them, Henry | several countries, pointed out the | Sherrock, beat him with his fists developments in the direction of the | Violently and then led him into the | building up of Socialism, the im. | Change booth. There they stripped | provement in the conditions of the) him of nearly all his clothes, look- working class, the internationalism |ing for evidence, beating him when | Jof the working class of the Soviet he offered resistance.. Wulf testi- Union and of its Bolshevist leader- | fies that they found nothing but ship and correctly rejected the ap-|£10 and some change. When Schin- | peals of the Trotskyist groups for | Jer attempted to call up his home reinstatement to the Communist In- |? notify his wife, the detective ternational. It endorsed the thesis | Pulled the recpiver from him and wi 80 E ithin the limits of the market. One of these measures requires days’ notice for a shutdown. Another would limit the number of looms per weaver to $6. Neither |injury, the mills are required to| |has much chance of passing. and|pay for the privilege of subjecting |Cuba and the government of the only a small slap is given to them |themselves to such intrusion.” X-U, S. SOLDIER COMPLETES TOUR John Steele Organizes Anti-Imperialists (Continued from Page One) who was arrested the same day that Paul were taken Crouch and John Trumbull up for organizing a |asked against them. That would be |too severe a sentence even for their jattempted treason.” Their “treason” |being that they defied his tyranny. Referring to the relations between the Textile World declaims: } . “it represents the most per- jnicious type of intrusion into pti- jvate enterprise. To add insult to United States to which Machado, at — ——— the time of his election promised i that if he was put in office there ‘Workers School will |would be no more strikes in Cuha, Give Course in Negro jhe Butcher said, “Cuba and the Problems Imperialism |United States understand each per- 9 \fectly as far as their governments : i nae ‘are concerned.” Two important courses offered bY Machado further implied that the the Workers School this Spring term secret police were preparing new | will soon begin. “History and Prob-| wholesale arrests of the workers and lems of the American Negro” WEL ate ener. i ee oieneoe to rf - ie 4. | try wipe out all opposition on vee 2 ligand oe SU Hue gach 4f the: growiseasevolation: prs x I iali lecture | ary movement among the Cuban | course, “American Imperialism” wi Wronahnicthes ‘and peda cneaaante; foe aren on: Batanday: Ae) 8/80, pean! Machado’s meek figure is ridicul- in symposium form. | “hid jous: there are many more than of the 15th Party Congress for the hit him on the head a few times | ;from the line of Leninism in the ec fiatiigt : ‘yanks of the Party. On this basis it|T@Pid industrialization of the Soviet ‘ Union. was pointed out that the main dan-| ©? s ; ger in the present period was from} The attention of the Parties to the Right, this danger is connected | Youth work, the necessity of sup- up with the continued partial stabili- |Porting and enlarging the mass fea- with it. Wulf appealed to city policemen | who had been attracted by the cries | to defend Schindler from the plain- clothes men, but they refused, say- Communist League, knows imperial- | These courses are being given} ism and life in imperialist armies |SPecifically to prepare militant work- | completely. He made his lectures |&'S for two specially important tasks interesting by citing personal ob-|Which now confront the working) servations and experiences. class: (1) for the struggle against . *, one i When arrested at Hawaii, Steele | Ame:+:an imperialism and for the twelve prisoners in the vaults of the Butcher’s fortress prisons tho many of his victims go in never to come out again. tion of capitalism and the growing | luence of social democracy pene- | trating the various strata of the} Communist parties; in the pressure brought by social reformism upon all Parties. Right Danger and Trotskyism, | In the previous period the so- called ultra-Left tendency was the main danger, répresented chiefly by tures, was stressed as well as the need, for intensification of work among women, as a result of the whole process of rationalisation and the drawing in and exploitation of women in industry. Need for Unification. The Congress took up the prob- lems of the American Party, showed business.” told Wulf to “take off his giasses” and that he would beat him, too. | Wulf told him to go ahead and ar- jrest him, but the thug did nothing. | The city policemen later testified jthat they had seen no beating and |Police Comnussioner Whalen de- Note From Crouch. ing that he shculd “mind his own ,,, sf A ‘e) fight against the war danger; (2) American imperialism on the Amer- The I. R. T. detective uae in ce ee for the struggle for the emancipa- ican working class, on the colonial The fact that he was in the hos. tion of the Negro race and for build- e pital when the formation of the img up a powerful working class|gro race and what must be done in |Communist League was announced movement of Negro and white work-|the struggle against American im- saved him from a sentence of prob- ers in this country. ably forty years, such as Crouch iwas first given. | peoples and upon the oppressed’ Ne- perialism and imperialist wars. These The course in “History and Prob-|ourses begin Saturday, March 9th lems of the American Negro” will and Friday, March 15th respectively. |go into a detailed analysis of the Workers are urged to register at its strength in the conduct of mass | The tactics of the Communist’ In-* Trotskyism. Trotskyism has exposed |Struggles and its weaknesses and | \with the case. elares that he has nothing to do The detective also , 3 said at the hearing that he found itself as being inverted Menshevism, right errors and helped to strengthen | id as opportunism covering itself with | the American Section of the Com- Left phrases. The Trotskyist current | Uist International. _It emphasized still continues but must be fought | ‘the necessity of eliminating the) ideologically, organizationally and | factional struggle, stressed the need | with all means at the disposal of |of greater energy in organizing the the proletariat because it has be- | Unorganized, of giving greater at- come a magnet for counter revolu- | tention and suppers 0 the fight tion because it attracts all the|#@#inst American imperialism in |11 slugs in. Sehindler’s pockets, but , was unable to produce any. The |I. R. T. detectives are commissioned by the state of New York and are jraid by the company, functioning in | somewhat the same way as the coal | |and iron police of Pennsylvania. ; . It is believed that the I. R. T. is After arrest, as a measure of per- | Negro problem, discussing the indus- | secution, Steele was put in the in- trialization of the South; Negro’ mi- sanity ward, stripped naked and |gration to the North; the farm ten- watched continually by a sentfy sta- |antry problem; racial movements of tioned inside the door. Neverthe- | the Negroes, and the program of the less, he got a message from Crouch |Communist movement for the Negro and Trumbull, who were in the gen- | problem. The course in American eral prison. It was passed through imperialism will emphasize the re- a hole in the wall. jlation of the U. S. to world politics; * When his shoulder healed he was | American imperialism in Latin \existence of Right and conciliatory colonial peoples in China, pointea ‘out the growth of the revolutionary enemies of the Soviet Union and is a menace to the life of-the first workers and farmers republic. i In the United States, Trotskyism, | while making its attack against the} policies of the Communist Interna- tional and the American section from the “Left” is opportunism conceal- ing itself under Left phrases, has | formed a bloc with Right elements and must be fought determinedly, \ruthlessly, as an anti-proletarian |ideology, inimicable to the life of is 2 ‘9 shich |@0ing all in its power to bury the Latin America (a weakness which a i the Party has earnestly sought to | °8S° with the body, with the help |correct since the Congress, ete. etc.) |°f the whitewashing process of the ; ; district attorney’s office, er comes OF the Cat isn Mire. Behindlon a aniail end | toric, ‘munist International is indeed his-| It showed the power of the world revolutionary vanguard. The American section with the guidance | ‘and direction of the Communist In- | S¢hindler worked steadily for seven ternational, under its iron discipline, will become a mass bolshevik Party will lead the proletariat to revolu- | tion, to Communism in the United States. our Party. ' | But the main fire turns toward the! Right. This current manifests itself | in all countries. The events since | the Sixth World Congress are proof of the correctness of the viewpoint of this historic gathering, that in the third period we would see a growth lof the Right and conciliatory ten- dencies. The events in Germany, withittg¢he |Party of the Soviet. Union itself, within all sections of the Communist International are proof of the neces- sity of conducting a sharp “ight jagainst this Right ideology, the ideology of social democracy which | finds its way into the ranks of our movement. The Ruhr and Lodz strikes showed that the Right cur- \rent stands for pascivity, for the ‘nullification of the leading role of the Communist Party. The attitude ‘of the Communist International to- jward the Brandler group and con- jediatory Ewert group in Germany, solutely correct. ongress and American Party. The open letter of the Communist International to our Party shows the tendencies within our Party, shows the existence of the right danger which the entire Party must fight The Congress will also be known for the attention whica it gave to the colonial question and the Negro problem in the United States. Drew the lessons of the revolutions of the mass movement in India, drew the attention of the Communist Inter- national and_ particularly to our Section, to Latin Americas, laid down the correct tactics tu be followed in the struggle for linking up the co- proletarian movements in the im- perialist nations, The Convention must welcome the attention which the Congress gave to the Negro problem, particularly to bringing sharply to our attention the powerful revolutionary forces of doubly oppressed miflions of Negro masses in the United States. It brought forth also a slogan of vital lonial mass movements with the, COMINTERN IN CALL TO LABOR Fight Opportunism for World Communism (Continued from Page One) basis; the Second International gave a basis for mass organization of the | workers, while the Third Interna- tional rejected the opportunism of | the Second International and com- | menced the task of establishing the ; world proletarian dictatorship. “The ten years’ existence of the Comintern have been ten years of heroic struggle of the workers | against capitalism, The Comintern | |has suffered ten years of hatred from imperialists and their social | democratic allies. The bourgeoisie ‘and their allies have used every method against the Comintern: | white terror, fascism, lies, coalitions | with social democrats; but nothing has prevailed against the Comin- | tern. The past ten years have exposed the illusions concerning stabiliza- | tion, capitalism and peace. The after-war contradictions have in- tensified. Conditions are accumu- lating for new imperialist wars, par- |ticularly between Great Britain and \the United States of America, The revolutionary movement in the colo- nies is extending; unemployment is growing; the class struggle in the capitalist countries is intensifying. “Capitalism is approaching a new war which will end in catastrophe for capitalism. The first world war ended with the establishment of the proletarian dictatorship of the So- viet Union; the second world war will produce world proletarian dic- tatorship. Workers Leave “Socialists.” -“Capitalism has a loyal ally in social democracy. The last ten years shows that social democracy has broken with the traditions of Marx and become a bourgeois workers’ importance for the libecation of the | process of radicalization. | party, therefore the workers are G& thin woman, was told of the death of her husband, she cried: “He did not WS put in the general prisoners’ | kill himself; they killed him.” | years in one shop and was on his ‘ay. to work when he was beaten by the detectives. He leaves three small children, the youngest six | {months, the oldest six years. The | family is known throughout the apartment house on Home St. Bronx, as a hard-working family, | barely getting along, but leading a} happy existence, There is absolutely | no reason for Schindler having Killed himself other than that he | was so badly beaten on the head | that he lost his mind. seaving social democracy and swing- ing to the Comintern through a “The Comintern was born, grew | and was strengthened into a world Communist Party in a struggle against deviations within its own ranks. In the last ten years the Comntern has continually liquidated right and left wing deviations to- ward opportunism, “The struggle against deviations means the Bolshevizing of the Com- munist Parties. Without Bolshe- vization the Parties will not be able to produce real Party leaders, ca- pable of leading the workers to vic- tory. ba “On the Tenth Anniversary the workers are developing from the de- fense to the attack; class antagon- isms are intensifying; a new_rev- olutionary wave is rising in thé col- onies, and the Soviet Union is grow- ing strenger. The forces of the world revolution are growing. The Comintern appeals to the workers of the world and the oppressed peo- ples to join the struggle against capitalism and for the proletarian dictatorship and world Com- munism.” by Jay Li 43 East 125th Street ORDER IMMEDIATELY! For Your Ruthenberg Memorial Meetings RUTHENBERG ; COMMUNIST FIGHTER AND LEADER FIVE CENTS PER COPY (REMIT POSTAGE WITH INDIVIDUAL ORDERS) WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS |sent to a cell in his regimental bar-|America and in China; the effect of ‘racks, where he saw the spy, Cor- | — —————_—___--—__ poral Fisher, who was being used to frame the others. He said, “If | I get close enough to him there will \ . —The Soviet Filn be one less corporal,” and for that | barracks and followed by one sen- | try with a shotgun and a corporal | ith a pistol whenever taken any- | where after that. | Afteré65 days an investigation | cleared him of charges, but he per- ceived a plot to frame him up as Pershing was framed. Pershing was given a five-year sentence. Fight to Escape. Steele realized he had to do some- | thing to get away, and went “ab- | sent without leave” for two months. When he returned to duty, he was put on guard, and met Crouch and Trumbull, who told him they were being defended by the International | Labor Defense, of which he had not | See yet heard. To protect himself from a frame- up by the officers, Steele collected proof that some officers were pros- tituting their wives for $25 a night. Continuous Retiormancey, “Dally STARTING THIS SATURDA PULAR SPECIAL for Week Days! 12 to 2 once, ‘Louis Gartner 5 NOTARY PUBLIC 2365 BROADWAY, New York City (Entrance N. W. Cor. 86th Street) — First Floor — OW is the time te have your ‘ederal and State Income Tax Re- turns prepared and filed by experts full supply of forms on hand.. ———— a LAST 2 DAYS! » Evie of Proletarian Heroism! 52 W. EIGHTH STI, (bet. 5th & Gth Aves.) — Phone: SPRing 5095 (incl, Sat, & Sun.) from 12 to 12. PRICES q m.. .35¢; 2 to 6 p. m.. 500 HOMECOMING” Yi A powerful, honest drama of war prisoners in Siberia, Steele tried to get discharged and was refused by Colonel Mitchell. He told Mitchell to go to hell, and wrote an article on army life to the Daily Worker. ‘He was at once arrested for this, and about a month later} < discharged. The ex-soldier used his discharge money to trail the spy, ‘Fisher, whose real name he found to be either Goldensmicht or Golden- schoon, Fisher was sent to the U. S. after his perjury against Trum- bull, Fisher gave him the slip in Detroit. Fisher had already told him enough to show that he had lied at the trial. After doing what he could for Crouch and Trumbull, imprisoned in Alcatraz, Steele began to tour for the Anti-Imperialist League. He has a vast fund of information collected from over 70 army posts and will soon have an article or a: ticles on army life in the Daily Worker. Special articles, features on SEND OVESTONE Nise York City 26 UNION SQUARE Special Women’s Day Edition of the DAILY WORKER to appear on MARCH 8TH International Womens’ Day will appear YOUR BUNDLE ORDERS NOW - |. by telegraph, air mail and special delivery. RATE:— $6 per thousand—$1 Per hundred DAILY WORKER NEW YORK CITY