The Daily Worker Newspaper, May 21, 1929, Page 2

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BASTONIA: I, L.D, | 4 DEFENDS PICKETS Three Convicted; Four Acquitted on First Day; All Bailed ar Preparation Maneuvers DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1929 FORGED T0 QUASH YONKERS GASES Five Workers Freed After I. L. D. Fight (Continued from Page One) key—the workers have every right in the world to hold meetings, he blandly declared, and in the future FIGHT CASE ON BRUTALITY ISSUE Is lie 3 (Continued from Page One) 30-day term in the workhouse, will, be released in a few days pending the appeal of the case. Young Pioneer Dismissed ae permits would be granted for such | |yeit the meantime, Litshite has Ottia etings. He ordered the case dis-| been transferred to the Tombs from -GunsGuard NewOffices Sear ah ee : where he was yesterday awaiting Funds to kers Shoes W.LR. As Buy St Both the magistrate and the trict attorney were evidently recit- ing their parts as per instructions. Shalkan, Henrietta Cooper and transfer to one of the islands to serve his term in the workhouse. | I. L. D. Active. The New York District of the Ins ee Wright were arrested when police, Photo shows 12 year old Victor Schoenbach, one of the victims ternational Labor Defense last night GASTONIA, at the behest of officials of the Otis) of the baseball magnates’ greed, who caused the death of two and issued a statement condemning the Elevator Company, revoked a per-| injury of scores who attempted to escape tho rain. The ball owners | brutality of the police who on Sat a. sai { it mit and broke up a May Day meet-| deliberately prolonged the game beyond 4% innings, to avoid making 7 charged into a demonstration. As Set ae oer ie ES Cane = Pes ing near the Otis plant on May 4.| good the fans’ rain checks. Schoenbach was hurt in the crush to | of workers outside 26 Union Square, means any being clubbed or bayonetted by pre Photo shows wreck of the plane of Lt. Edward Meadow, who was killed in a crash during the mimic air battle over Ohio between the “Blues” and “Reds”, maneuvers in preparation for the coming imper- A week later, despite the refusal of the police to grant a permit, a escape the rain. ged and manhandled many of them and arrested 27 men, women . « 7 ialist war, protest meeting was held in cos | and children. The statement also both parad pemerteken lars Fa ete eer ee eperation with the New York oi: MINER CH a! denounces the sentencing of Benja- which mear ! ° < trict of the International Labor De- min Lifshitz, acting district organ- possible by i] § AUTO MART Torrio Takes Over All PLEDGE SUPPORT fense and Wright was again ar-| izer of the Communist Party, to 30 dinance 1: |Capone’s Power in City rested, together with Zimmerman. F days in the workhouse. The Inter- meeting of | ae é ‘ | Roth were threatened with violence i national Labor Defense defended all cil during e |Politics in Chic ago) by the police and when Cooper went | eee r those arrested and is now appealing strike, “br 3 st hae F to the police station to see that they ae re | Lifshitz’s case, seven work h t | CHICAGO, May 20—Johnnie Tor avevetmoetheatenthe., too. ans ar Propose $119,000,000 _ Tne statement, signed by Rose others bei jvio, old-time gangster leader and rested. The charges against them District Att’y Tries to aaron, secretary of the organiza. ostponed ACN ny . former chieftain of “Scarface” Al} . were unlawful assembly and disor- i ili 5-Year Credit tion, declares fal. Need Foreign Markets |capone, now in prison in Philadel-|A.F.L. “Organizer” Is |deriy conduct, : Bribe Militant Viena, The C. Hollov Savs a6 . phia for carrying concealed wea-| S: tn . : The New York District of the In- (Continued from Page One) BERLIN, May 20—A new plan s . Totherow. 1 nd SEM Gener al Motors pons, is seen as the new leader of | Exposed in Clev eland ternational Labor Defense, through which went patina each Thurs- ffered by the German government, “No better vindication of the were found not guilt parading. DETROIT, Mich, May 20,—|the gang Capone commanded, He; 4) o cnthusiastic meeting which|its attorney, Irving Klein, took Go. afternoon, on the mining situa-| Sid to be with the approval of S. spirit of the sign, ‘Down With Walk- Bertha Tompkins Sn ead | SS ato samufge.| Wil continue, it is said, to carry on) 27 Spee aE meee Wecricharge of the defense and enlisted |{) “arethen asked the miners'|Parker Gilbert, United States|er’s Police Brutality,’ which so in- i/ ver were convic arading ive mnited States auto MANUrAC-|+he political work of Capone, chas- Pen Cl ae af jeer adi ad the workers of Yonkers to defend!)-°., what he thought of the in. | Teparations-general, for the large- furiated the parading police last without a per Wallace turers avoid any flat statement that |/ing away rival candidates to the |/”).“cveand toad worters PecBes their right of free speech and as-| .° : scale financing of trade with the So- Saturday, could have been givem z the home bu ig market is approach- present administration in Chicago their support to the newly organized At preliminary hearings junction. viet Union with the aid of $100,000,- than the behavior of these same po- was found gui lee 4s semblage. noe feat han eee antan, Tenianes es ation point, the last) during the next elections. = eal of the Amalgamated Mood! th, ‘Yonkers Court gave abundant | |... Mineriet aoe thought 000, 18 credits secured from the lice in brutally assaulting workers The I. L. D. Defeni week’s automotive field development| Meanwhile a fund is being raised). oy the union at the meetin, indication that it intended to crush) Minerich tole an at he thought United States was announced by the | demonstrating outside of 26 Union Aas, Pr ee ge : : “|ameng gangsters to effect Capone's |Jmne® Khe unio e meeting. | 11) efforts of the Communist Party (he same about the injunction as/ nited Press correspondent here to-|Square and arresting 27. This ac- All these convicted Wo wire {Clearly indicated the battle, is now /rotegag by the usual’ factica, Brief talks were made by Jack't) roach the Yonkers workers. The he did when he made his speech to gay, |tion is entirely in keeping with the fined; but all appealed and the In- peing drawn for export trade. | 7 Rose, organizer of the union, and| swadon change of front, performed |the miners and would say what Bal ‘ ae behavior of the police on many pre- ternational Labor Defense, which Ie HE. SaRUGL TenORE. Coantouk: jTom Johnson, organizer of the ., awkwardly, is believed to have |thought. He offered to be respon- 1615 reported that negotiations he-| 55 ‘Gocasionay partidularly where defending all c: in Gastonia, bail-| dave ah didcad' P< Sldan Juss crest |Trade Union Educational League,|jcon due to the vigorous stand sible for everything he said, but in- | tween Soviet officials and German| oes are on strike to improve ed them out for $50 each. ee ee nee See and the floor was then thrown open | taken by the I. L. D. with the sup- sisted that if he were called to speak | government officials is now pro-| 110i. Iabor conditions. In the re- Prosecutor Mason made a vehem- dent of General Motors, is this state- | for discussion. Worker after worker | ort of the workers of Yonkers. he would speak as he saw fit on the | ceeding on this basis. | cont» déganmakerat atvkeswhd at ent attack on Carl Reeve, Southern representative of the International ment: It is recognized that the curve ~ OFALLON CASE |deseribed the terrible conditions of |the Cleveland restaurant workers, mining situation. The district attorney then faded |extension of approximately $119,-\teria workers, the The proposed agreement envisages | present in the struggle of the cafe- slugging of Relief, declaring him the guilty of development within the United and of the need for organization. out of the picture, with a vague | 000,000 in German credits to the So-| pickets by the police and wholesale party for all the picketing. The States must neces ily flatten out | In the middle of the discussion, promise to see about the speech | Viet Government and it is anticipated | arrests in an effort to crush the £4. D. a sore thorn in the side, —as a matter of fact it already has | x |Spiejel, business agent of the local later. He never came back. |that negotiations will be concluded | strike have become everyday occur- of the fre:neup m here, for —as the years progress. The op-| Decides Roads Must Be | cooks and Waiters Union, affiliated Minerich is a national executive by the end of June. | rences. without it, convictions would be portunity for further progress in all) |to the American Federation of La-| board member of the National} The plan, offered by the German] «The New York District of the Given More Profits much easie: and more numerous. overseas countries, however, is and| bor, asked for the floor. It was Miners Union and was organizer in| government, is said to include: International Labor Defense de- i NANKING REGIME A med strikers are guarding Nh EO be great for many} (Contiwudd fromm Page One) bia and ae launched oe the Se eee districts for the] (1) Extension of $119,000,000 | nounces the brutal attack of the every night the newly erected head- Years come. | eg 5 fcay irade against the new union. He)_ union, He was a vigorous cam-| swdits to the U. S. S. R. for pur- Tammany police last Saturday, their wae aad s 7 {ation of $850,000. The commission . rs bie A fi 4 Ms y Pi at Y: quarters of the National _ Textile pees feign pete Ure aatiter| panealiy into the valuation | V8 quickly howled down by the! Rival War Lords Open paigner for the opposition ticket) chase of industrial products in Ger-| slugging of defenseless men, women W orkers Union and the W orkers In- ey ef eae 5 aatine jeasure | question avid. defended Sta va liations crowd and ‘member after member of | Hostilities against the Lewis machine in the/many. (2) Credits re-payable in|and children, and demands an im- ternational Relief, and will shoot © 4 ae nag P | adlawful under the 1920 transporta- his own union took the floor to point |period from 1924 to 1928, and took | five years. (8) German government mediate cessation of this deliberate all night intruders trying to rush @nd bus ‘ out that Spiejel and his outfit have| an active part in the drive of the | would guarantee German industries | persecutio1 of the militant working the place and destroy it, as has been plainly threatened by the mill own- ers. The p y used relief station and strike headquarters were at- tacked shortly after midnight sev- eral weeks ago, and chopped to bits by a masked mob of mill owners’ thugs. Build Own House. The strikers rented several places, so did the relief station, qnly to be evicted from them, and finally strik- ers with their own hands erected the present headquarters. It was epened Saturday with Vera Bush, Fred E. Beal, Carl Reeve, Melden, Hendricks, Sedell, McLaughlin and Martin speaking to a crowd of 3,000. Musical program and a dance fol- lowed the speeches. Workers came as far as from Clover, S. C., in| trucks for the dedication. The W. I. R. committee today is- sued an appeal for shoes. The strik- ers are beginning to walk around with their toes out. The first group of tents are ex- pected to arrive shortly and will im- mediately be set up. They will be Pitched on a hillside adjoining the union headquarters which is sur- rounded by pines. Furniture Ruined. The strikers’ furniture is being utterly ruined by the rain which has been pouring down on it for the last week. Some of the strikers have moved their scant belongings under the house, where the house is built high enough to allow this. In one or two cases, they have moved the| things back on the porch. The depu- ties keep a steady watch ‘and im- mediately throw the furniture back into the roadway. The strikers’ bed- clothes and mattresses are in most eases soaked by the rain. They are all fading and are now practically worthless. The whooping cough epidemic among the strikers’ children is con- tinuing, while the amount of pel- Jagra cases are also on the increase. The W. I. R. sick committee is at- tempting to cope with the situation but finds itself in need of more medicine. At present those who are ill with whooping cough are being given a concoction of syrup of honey and flaxseed. To purchase medicines, tents and food for the striking workers, more funds are needed. Send a donation at once to the Workers International Relief, Room 604, 1 Union Sq., New York City. Anaconda Copper Now Has 95 Per Cent of the Chile Copper Company Anaconda Copper Co., the monster which has swallowed up most of the copper mines production in U. S., has extended its grip on Chile Cop-) SS. Fritz Open, chief engineer of the Adam Open Co., the Germany Com- pany recently acquired by General Motors, has been going through an intensive investigation of the local General Motors plant. General Motors has purchased Vauxhall Motors in England and Jas. D. Mooney, president of the General Motors Export Co. revealed that General Motors with $100,000,000 yearly European business is the ifth largest industrial organization in Europe. Approximately 20 per cent of the production for the first quarter of the year has gone into export fields. Figures compiled by the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce show that 51 per cent of the entire American truck production during March went to foreign lands. Race Equality Among “Reds” Only, Brown Tells Cleveland Labor CLEVELAND (By Mail).—‘“Only the Communist Party and the Com- munist International recognize the equality of the races, and the Soviet Union, is the only government, which, in a practical way, has} worked out this equality of the races,” ex-Bishop Brown told over 400 workers at the meeting of the Workers Inter-racial League here. He spoke on “The Race Problem and the Necessity of Organization.” The speaker pointed out that “the workers cannot be emancipated under the present system.” He ad- mitted that when a bishop in Ar- kansas he had had antiquated ideas which held that Negroes were “in- ferior” people, who must be treated as such by the advocates of white supremacy.. “I believed they were destined to be bootblacks here, but given an opportunity to polish the golden haloes of the whites i ‘heaven’,” he said. i The old ideas, however, are. de- liberately fostered by. the capitalist class, he argued. “Since I have turned from christianism to Com- munism, I recognize the equality of Negro and white workers,” the fight- ing ex-churchman said in an appeal to the workers to support the Com- munist movement. A five dollar bill was donated by a Negro worker towards expenses of publication of the speech. Pro- ceeds of the meeting were sent for the relief of the Negro victims of the southern toraadoes: Pervis Dixon, president of. the Negro’ Workers Relief Committee, was chairman of the meeting. Sadie Van Veen urged membership in the Workers Interracial League, and a considerable amount. of literature was sold at the meeting. ATTORNEY TO BE DISBARRED Recommendations that Attorney in} | tion act. | Current Reprodiction. The railroads contended must have larger valuation based on enhanced prices which have been in effect since the world war. This “current reproduction cost” factor vas considered but given little weight by the commission, which based its figures on 1914 commodity costs, plus present value of land, property and actual cost of addi- tions made by the roads since 1914. The commission’s valuations of all reads aggregate approximately $23,- 000,000,000, made up from an $18,- 900,000,000 figure, as of 1918, plus the cost of later extensions. According to the new valuation made possible by the supreme court, the figures may be 50 per cent | higher. | Judges Not Courageous. Justice McReynolds, in reading the majority opinion, said the court |did not find it necessary to decide |how much weight should be given to “current reproduction costs” of rail- road equipment. It is enough, he said in effect, to find that the con- gress directed all relevant factors of valuation be taken into consid- eration and that the commission did not give any weight to “reproduc- tion costs.” Therefore the decision leaves in the air the controversy as te whether “original costs” or “repro- duction costs” shall be used as a rate base, except that the court has ruled that congress has directed con- sideration of all factors. In spite of the diplomacy of the court in not ruling flatly that rail- roads must be valued as the rail- roads desire, it is generally under- |steod end accepted that the Inter- |state Commerce Commission will |hereafter value on the “current re- |production” or highest valuation ;plan and that rates will rise cor- | respondingly. “Pravda” Points Out | Militancy of Bombay Workers in Striking MOSCOW, U. S. S. R., (By Mail). the Communist Party of the Soviet | tnion, writes that the general strike in Bombay shows that all the at- tempts. to throttle the growing working class movement have failed. Hardly were the leaders arrested and the trade unions closed down on their own in Bombay and elect |new leaders and organizers, mostly workers from the factories, This means a new step in the de- velopment of the revolutionary proletarian movement in India. The first step of the new central com- mittee of the textile workers’ union was to proclaim a general strike of all textile workers which aimed at per Co., the controling power in William B. O’Connor be disbarred | countering the plans of the capital- South American west coast copper|for bankruptcy frauds and that | fields, according to an announcement of the board of directors, The Ana-| conda has just bought up enough|Were brought before the Appellate | more of the Chile Copper Co. stock, which it already dominated, to give it 95 per cent of the votes. | Anaconda registered a profit last en percent decrease in production,! d after all taxes are paid. | The Anaconda this year will get 000,09 out of Chile Copper. Samuel J. Orge be suspended for two years for ambulance chasing Division in Brooklyn yesterday. OPEN BARCELONA TEST BARCELONA, Spain} May 20. of $90,000,000, in spite of a King Alfonso, De Rivera’s puppct, | opened the Universal Barcelona Ex- position today at an elaborate cere- mony which was witnessed ty a group of fascist visitors, ists and opening up the struggle not ‘only for better conditions of life for the workers, but for complete in- ‘dependence from the exploitation ‘and oppression of the ruling classes in India and from British imper- ‘ialism, sp! hostile 4 clase’ Sogrscoais'Sd"9F0- oxed clasnen and pro- letariatw—Marm { | | ' ‘me they | “| | | | rest has to co: Sl done nothing to organize the bulk of the Cleveland vestaurant workers, confining themseives to organizing a few cooks and waiters in the higher class hotels and downtown restaurants, On2 cook told how he had applicd three times to was not adrtj because he han- pened to ba,working in a small Greek 1roszivrant. w!ich th> union officials told him was “too sali for them to bother with.” Spierel attempted to defend his policy of organizing the Negro workers in separate locals, but was then forced to admit that no attempt was being made to organi! the Negro food workers even in separate locals. A Negro worker took the floor and showed that Spiejel lied when he stated Negro workers would not join the union, and that Negro work- ers were unorganized because no ef- fort was made to organize them. At the conclusion of the meeting over a score of restaurant workers signed applications for union mem- bership. The Cleveland local of the Amal- gamated Food Workers was or- ganized May 5 and already has a membership of well over 100, The union meets the first and third Fridays of each month at 226 West Superior Ave., Room 306. Night workers meet the first and third Sundays at 10 A. M. at the same) place. The union urges every Cleve- land food worker, no matter what branch of the industry he or she works in, to join and attend the union meetings. Austrian “Socialist” Rent Betrayal Leaves Workers Indignant VIENNA (By Mail).—The indig- nation of the social democratic rkers at the treachery of their leaders in the question of the ten- is’ protection law is still grow- ing. It is now announced that at the last national conference of the Austrian social democratic _ party —The “Pravda,” central organ of over one-third of the delegates had the war lord’s manner of declaring withheld their votes in the voting on the tenants’ protection law. The tenants‘ organization, which has 300,000 members and is under social democratic leadership, is holding.a national conference, There were stormy demonstrations at this when the workers commenced to act conference against the social demo- cratic treachery, It is expected that the conference will oppose the new draft law. The May Day demon- stration of the Communist Party was a protest against the tenants’ rrotection betrayal: The opposi- tional metal workers and the strik- ing building workers took part in the Communist May Day, demnon- stration as a protest against ‘the at- titude of the social democratic lead- ers. CAUSE HIGH MILK PRICE The just’ publishéd Columbia graduate research project for the Port of New York Authority states that inefficiency and competition be- tween railroads causes high price of milk in Long Island. Both Brook- lyn and Queens now receive less than 20 per cent of their milk by rail, the statement says, and the by trucl SHANGHAI, China, May 20.— | War between Marshall Feng Yu- | hsiang and Chiang Kai-shek, powe! |ful rival war lords in the Kuomin- | tang, is now a certainty and has even broken out already, according to |the latest dispatches. | A last minute effort is reported | vent open hostility going even so far |as offering his resignation. as dic- tator in order to prevent warfare ‘which would mean the collapse of the Nanking government. on a definite campaign for the cap- |ture of Nanking, his advance troops | left wing in the United Mine Work- ers of America for spreading the |strike and for militant mass picket- ing, For Mass Picketing. | It was as a representative of the Save-the-Union Committee, the or- the unioa enG| to have been made by Chiang to pre- ganized left wing of the U. M. W. |A., before the National Miners |Union was formed, that Minerich |went to Ohio to assist in making the strike effective in that region. |The case of violating the injunction |to the miners, who responded so heartily that the mines in question would guarantee the remaining 15 per cent, covered by Russian notes to the industries. (4) | would secure $100,000,000 credits, Holland, to finance the transaction. ‘was understood, may be expected in June when the German Foreign Of- fice Representative, Consul-General Feng is reported to have started was based on a speech that he made | Schlesinger, returns from Moscow. We have neen nbove that the first step in the revolution by the work- repayment of credits to 60 per cent class. and the Soviet would guarantee to| strongest terms the sentencing of 25 per cent. German manufacturers | Benjamin Lifshitz to 30 days and |mostly from the United States and| Conclusion of the agreement, it! We also condemn in the the refusal of Magistrate Goodman, | Who made no secre’ of his venomous - Germany | prejudice, to stay sentence pending an appeal.” FOREST FIRE IN N. J. LAKEWOOD, N. J., May 20.—An- area of three square miles was burn- ed off and the hamlet of Herberts- ville was threatened, but saved by | a backfire, in a forest fire last night* and today on the edge of the Lake-. | wood-Point Pleasant Highway at’ already menacing Hsuchow-Fu near | were closed down by mass picketing | tng class is to raise the proletarint | Point Pleasant, N. J. Volunteer fire the southwestern border of Shan-|in defiance of the injunction. ees the Pattie ak deutiense kee companies fought the fire eight | tung. ae aoe yar Me tee 5 Maxx (Communist Manifesto) hours. : session of Peking-Hankow Railway as well as the Lunghal line and are, May Day Greetings consolidating their position in Honan * Tare | ——m in preparation for a concerted at-/ SAN MATEA, CALIFORNIA, | LAST FOUR DAYS! veld \E. I. Peterson —"A picture one ; | ve Movanesl ligne attank HARTFORD, CONN. Should not fait to Dynamic! Vivid! Realistic! ing in the south an ‘eng’s army | ” attacking from the center and north | pam er aie WORKER AS GOOD AS A TRIP TO RUSSIA! | the fall of Chiang seems assured UN-| Fric Shaman FIRST SHOWING IN AMERICA! J less the imperialist powers inter- T, Janson | vene. HL Benyson 2 comprehensive | Chiang, attempting to prevent the 7 Torngroist Seen complete break-up of the Nanking | 37 Baller RED CAPITAL government and urged on undoubt-| 7 "37 intimate gepects edly by the British and Yankee im- perialists, is reported to have sent a telegram to Feng, asking him ta ae eet ae come to Nanking and offering him | a Dennel & safe conduct, which offer with the |'s’ Dohin i fate of other war lords who had ac-| 37 shustern | cepted “safe conduct” fresh in his yy" Brooks | mind, Feng refused. \z. ava Klein | In the meanwhile British and) 3; Pagan American warships are riding in the | a R 2 harbor of Canton with their guns |“* Gon of life in Mos- cow, giving a vivid iden of conditions under which workers live - M TODAY A SOVKINO FILM A Penetrating Close-Up of the Seething Soviet Capital —and on the same program— conduct of official life of o ready to train on the city, while | Gould EMIL JANNINGS as HENRY the Vit | severe fighting is reported to be| Peason A Brilliant Characterization. raging Seles the Gaptasese, snd LOWELL, MASS. in “DECEPTION” -Directed by Ernst Lubitsch gsi forces, | K. Sook ipa | J. Karsonas . | LONDON, May 20. — The “Ob-| 4, Britzko ’s” correspondent at Shanghai F. Greska FILM GUILD CINEMA 52 W. 8th St. (ust wes) Spring 5095 of 5th Av.) Cont, Daily, incl. Sat. & Sun. Noon to Midnite SPECIAL PRICES 12 to 2---35 cents 12 to 2-85 cents ) server's’ |reported tonight that junior gener-|G Gobstaob els in the army of Marshal Feng | Yuh-siang had issued a proclama- DETROIT, MICH. i tion demanding the dismissal of |S. Brenner General Chiang Kai-shek, head of NEW YORK CITY the Nanking government. | The proclamation, the corre- |B. Presman |spondent said he understood, waa | Georme Garbor |G. Myers war. It was generally believed that | J: aes |Feng’s forces would be superior to | N. Buenn Chiang’s troops in case of conflict. 1 peg * * * Report, Feng Declares War. Nari |. LONDON, May 20.—The Daily |G, Teman | Mail’s correspondent at Shanghai |, Fibzot | said tonight that Marshal Feng Yu- |, Skillis Siang had declared war on the! s, Babitz Nanking government headed by | Albert Auffant Chiang Kai-shek. Evan Cohen The outbreak of one of ths|&, Redcust “greatest of China wars” is expected | Sarah Peksen momentarily, the correspondent said. | Dober Both sides have concentrated troops} A, Aaunch | in Honan and Shensi provinces or on| A, Popck the borders and are accelerating | M. Kaufman |military preparations, the dispatch! p, Kreshner said. |S. Zimerman | The Daily Mail said Chiang Kai-| B. Semmedsten shek called a meeting of the war| y, Yorshepky |council at Nanking last Saturday | Kosoffesky and decided to move his forces |against Marshal Feng. A. Schneider A. Ginsberg A. Romarchuk F. Rance A. Goldman A. Goldman G. Madew GG. Craberti JC. Pitronyalo Saturday and Sunday . Weekdays rection: on Starting this Saturday, May 25—“PAWNS OF DESTINY"—a poignant drama of a woman caught in the web of the Ri Revolution; featuring OLGA CHEICOVA, the noted emotional artiste —Just Off the Press! | RED CARTOONS 1929 A BOOK OF 64 PAGES SHOWING THE BEST CARTOONS OF THE YEAR OF THE STAFF CARTOONISTS OF THE DAILY WORKER a [ Fred Ellis Jacob Burck With An Introduction By the Brilliant Revolutionary Journalist PRICE Joseph Freeman Sold at all Party Bookshops or Daily Worker, 26 Union Sq. K. Choperscn J. Kurenchik E. Martiniak 0. Swostianoff P, Kamachek S. H, Zymboluk B. Kall Women Workers and Young Workers! Join the Ranks of the Struggling Workers! at, at oes truggle 1) - nial People) Po Na

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