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DAILY WORKER, Page Three THE ‘PRAVD POPE AND A’ SCORES SOCIALISTS | AS CAPITALIST TOOLS Hope Blasted That Soviet Masses Would Reject | One Superstition for Another, Pope Acts Jnity of Church With White Guard Met b: Counterfeiters and the! y Workers’ Derision | MOSCOW (By Inprecorr Press s .—Referring to the furious campaign of incitement whipped up by the capitalist and social democra- tic press in connection with the al- religious persecution in the Soviet Union the “Pravda” writes: One voice was missing in the anti- bolshevist concert of the obscurant- ov religionists, the voice of the “holy father,” in Rome. Despite repeated requests from the- white guardists to interfere, the “representative of God on earth” maintained a long silence, The reason for this was that he hoped that the weakening of the Greek Orthodox Church would to the advantage of the Roman itholic Church in the Soviet Union. He has now, however, been re- luctantly compelled to admit that the masses in the Soviet Union are serious about this religion business and have no intention of rejecting one set of superstitions in order to adopt another, he has, therefore, now broken his silence in order to protect “persecuted religion in Rus- sia.” The “Pravda” points out that the pope is not so much interested in the fate of the Greek-Orthodox “German Workers Will Do Their Class Duty” BERLIN (By Inprecorr Press Service).—Todays “Rote Fahne” re- ve the fact that two days ago a secret discussion took place in the Prussian Ministry of the Interior coheerned proposed measures against the institutions of the Soviet Union in Germany. It was pointed out at the session that any action of the Prussian Min- istry of the Interior would have the support of the Reichs Ministry of the Interior (Severing). It was de- cided to take police measures against citizens of the Soviet Union al- leged to have “co-operated with the ( ommunist Party.” It was also decided to raid the So- ..et trade mission after the neces- Capitalist Press Foams With Lies (Continued from Page One) there are men to do it. “The rapid growth of faetories and other construction work have taken up the urban slack, while rural com- munities are occupied with the trans- formation of the old agricultural system into the collective mové- ment.” The New York Times has been prominent in its counter-revolution-| for all children of the unemployed! | dered the stree ary propaganda against the Soviet Union and the working class. But « rtainly no one did expect it to be »» abysmally stupid and hopelessly i-contradictory. rhe Times is by no means the only capitalist paper that is getting blind- ly nervous. The whole capitalist press, nay, the whole capitalist world are suffering from the same nerv- ousness. This is not casual. This is church or the Jewish church, or even the Catholic church in the Soviet Union, as he is in the fate of the church properties, Like all finance men the pope is the friend of all forms of reaction | and the enemy of the working | masses. Therefore he appeals to the powers to recognize and main- |tain diplomatic relations with the | Soviet Union only on condition that | the Soviet government is prepared | ito guarantee “religious freedom.” As | jit is quite clear that the Soviet Union | | will repulse with all energy any at- | tempts to interfere in its internal | jaffairs, this appeal of the pope is |nothing less than an appeal to cut | off relations with the Soviet Union. The action of the Roman pope who thus supports the Tchervonetz forg- | ers, the bill forgers and the hooli- | ganism of the white officers, will not make the crusade against the | Soviet Union any the more idealistic. | No matter what form the attack of international capitalism on the So- viet Union may take the working masses will always recognize it for what it is and spring to the defense of the first workers’ and peasants’ | state. sary press barrage had created the “right atmosphere,” and a descent on the Soviet embassy was planned. Foreign political objections to this plan were repulsed on the ground | that a revision of Germany’s foreign | policy in connection with the Young | Plan was necessary anyway. | The “Rote F:*ne” declares that | the social democrats are using their | governmental positions in order to \bring about a breach between Ger- | many and the Soviet SUnion and in the upshot war. It points out that war against the Soviet Union means war against the German proletariat which will do its proletarian duty under the leadership of the Com- munist Party. |Ask Teachers To Be Stool Pipeons i} (Continued from Page One) leadership of the Young Pioneers of America did not attend school | Thursday, and demonstrated in front of the Public Schools of New York City for the demands and program ‘of the Young Pioneers of America | and the Trade Union Unity League. |A score of demonstrations were hed ‘demanding free food and clothing |Work or wages for unemployed | | workers. Complete abolition of all} jchild labor under 14 and govern- jment maintenance to all children at present employed. | “Over 500,000 children in N.Y.C. are affected by the present unem- ployment situation in the City of |New York. There has been a great \inerease in the number of children | |leaving school during the past few, Bull Dog for Impe- rialism The above is the imperialist age turned loose by the French- capitalists against the workers and peasants in Indo-China. His name is Pasquier, and his spe- cialty is to torture any worker suspected of agitating to drive the French imperialist robbers the Annamite people. Only lc month there was a revolt against the French oppressors. Like Mr. Davis, whom Wall St. has ap- | pointed as boss of the Filipino na- tion, Pasquier is called “governor- general.” But a murderer by any other name is just as brutal. HUNDREDS JOIN COMMUNISTS ‘March 6 a Triumph for, Cleveland Workers (Continued from Page One) set up for speakers. A meeting was also held on the City Hall steps, where a battle was fought two weeks before, after a declaration of work- ers returned from the mayor's offic | where he admitted that “We can do nothing for the workers.” On the City Hall steps speakers denounced the capitalist city govern- ment and stated that if the govern- | ment was not able to relieve unem- ployment and help the workers, then it was not @ government of the workers and must be destroyed. This met with tremendous applause and cheers of the workers. Although the city government had ordered all its police, fire depart- ment and reserves, and even invited gangsters and thugs from the pool halls to “come to the demonstration and bring your own weapons”—they did not dare to attack the militant workers. Only after the demonstration had been officially adjourned, and thou- sands of worktrs had left the meet- ing place, then the police charged the meeting and injured several workers. This aroused the anger of the workers, who rushed the police and tried to pull them off their horses. Also. when the police or- t cars to run through the crowd, the workers pulled off cars. Aiter all the march and demon- stration, after the fight with the police was all over, then the rene- gades from Communism appeared and attempted to speak to the work- ers. When the renegades both of the Lovestone and Cannon stripe |united their forces and started to | employment Thursday. 12 HOURS A DAY, SPEED 79 UP AND THEN LAYOFFS AT TIMKEN | AXLE SHOP tush Thru Big Order in Short Time With Less Workers by Long Hours, Speed-Up ' Organization Into the A (By a@ Worker Correspondent) DETROIT. — For the first time| the Timken Axle Co. got a big Ford | order for 40,000 axles. This, of} course, meant we could expect more speed-up. And they sure worked for three months preparing the new machinery to get out more produc- tion. This order, the way we are work- ing now, can be made in about four months. We are forced to work) uto Workers Union the Way to Fight This Says Worker from seven in the morning to seven at night. Conditions as a whole here are rotten. Before we used to work in this de- partment nine hours a day and make from $8 to $9 a week. This is the bosses’ way of “solving” unemploy- ment, Throwing more workers on the street and speeding up the It’s the Auto Workers Union us. ‘or —TIMKEN WORKER. Same Misery on Lan (By a@ Worker Correspondent.) Fellow workers, I am an unem- ployed seaman with no place to stay. I want to let you know how after I was kicked off a tanker for kicking about long hours, I was ashore for a week or so, then my money gone out I applied for aid from the Seamen’s Church Insti- tute. I was told there was nothing doing. I’m only a seaman, you see. It was a cold and rainy night, and there was no place to sleep. So I went and laid down in an old | barge and became ill. I went to the | Marine Hospital, Hudson and Jay| St., “the undertaker’s friend.” They | | d or Sea—Organize! sent me to Ellis Island Marine Hos- pital On arriving there I was put in bed, there were many bedbugs in the bed. Nearly starved for lack of food, and the messrooms are infested roaches. Cats run all over the place. A cat will walk in a ward that has contageous cases, then he comes to the convalescents’ ward. If you kick you are discharged “if you are able to walk.” This is what we get after slaving for starvation wages at sea and get- ting ill. Let’s organize in the Ma- rine Workers’ League and end these things. —Sick Seaman. | Miner in Debt to Company—Next Time He'll Fight For (By a Worker Correspondent.) )| HARRISBURG, Ill —I received 10 , copies of the Daily Worker and Ij got two subs for two months and| I will try to get some more. Min- ers here have very little cash, for) |the companies force them to trade in company stores with company serp. any cash dollars in two years. I} {got a big family, it is impossible! Workers for me to get out of the company store debt, Ninety per cent of the Illinois miners are in debt to the company and the company does any- | thing it pleases with you. I am an ex-service man. I fought for “Uncle Sam” in the last war for the bosses, and now I am getting paid with starvation. Next time I Just like me, I haven't gotten | go to fight it will be for the benefit Raymond, and of the workers. aa | | “Service With a Smile” Wiped Off (By « Worker Corresaondent) LOS ANGELES, Cal.—The Stan- dard Oil Company and other large oil companies have started a new policy of working their station at- tendants. Now the companies have installed in all their stations greas- ing and oiling departments and the station attendant must now, when not occupied, help the man in the rear grease and oil cars. That “Service with a smile” is now worn off. These attendants, fooled by the company, used to be blooming fas- cists, but now they are beginning to find out that they are something else besides “shareholders in the oil business ” | —Los Angeles Worker | RIVET CHAINS ON \ - NEGRO WORKERS \the trolley ‘poles and stopped the ]12 Days for Traffic | Law in Chattanooga CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Mar. 9.- With all the organizers in jail, hav- \ing been arrested the day before, |the workers of Chattanooga held a | successful demonstration against un- ne mobiliza- the result of the basic fabrics of the| weeks. Many workers’ children are speak, the workers shouted: “Down tion meeting brought crowds of Ne- capitalist system, which has become|forced to go to school hungry and/|with the traitors. the enemies of the | gro and white workers, and only a more precarious and decaying as an|cold due to the unemployment of| working class!” and soon strong | heavy rainstorm prevented inevitable outcome of the eggrava- tion and intensification of the in- ternal and external contradictions through capitalist rationalization against the overwhelming achieve- ments of socialist construction in the ‘After the employed and unem-|tion. On Thursday, truant officers | j ‘their parents. | “The Walker-Tammany adminis- jtration thru its fascist Police Com- |missioner Whalen, has clubbed and |brutally attacked many workers’ children because they dared fight against. the unemployment situa- hands of workers reached the rene- gades and “escorted” them from the meeting. Several hundred workers joined the Communist Party. Over a hun- dred joined the Young Communist League. The young workers espec- ally militant during the demonstra- ployed workers in New York and were especially brutal towards the|tion, marching in the front ranks other cities throughout the world children who demonstrated in front and first in the fight against re- marching. There were two white and three Negro workers. Gilbert Lewis and another Negro worker, arrested here Wednesday, as revenge against them for organizing the Negro and white workers were immediately railroaded through to} | the chain gang, and put to breaking |rocks, with chains riveted on their) |legs. They are out now, local work- | had staged the brilliantly successful of the schools for free food and| pression. The meeting was adjourn- | ¢!S having paid their fines. mass demonstrations against unem-~’ ployment which is the unavoidable iruition of capitalist economy, the New York Times and other capitalist ; pers all chanted the same worn- « t note of “red riots,” “Communist 1 bellion” and paid tributes to Wha- Jen and his kind for their “splendid work” in suppressing the “Commu- nist rioters” and poked reluctant fun at the demonstrations. But in their united attack on the working class these capitalist journals could never get over their blind nervous- ness, for between lines there were pictures of the strength, the power and the solidarity of the working class in their unrelenting revolution- ary struggle against the capitalist government and system. In fact the New York Times and other yellow and black papers have failed in fooling the workers, but succeeded in fooling themselves. They think they can strifle and sup- «ess the world revolution by lies : id scandals, But they are black- cked by facts. Millions upon mil- jions of workers of the whole world, under the leadership of the Com- munist International, the Communist Parties, the revolutionary trade unions are struggling with increased energy against the bourgeois states economically and politically. They are looking forward to new battles. And when May Day comes, de- spite the intimidation of the capital- ist press, despite the Veterans of Foreign Wars, despite Commissioner Whalen and his cossacks, their ma- chine guns, gas bombs, clubs, tear gas and what they have, despite the reserve forces of the capitalists, the Socialist Party and A. F. of L., the workers in New York and throy out the world will again demonstrate to show their uncompromising strug- Clothing. “As a means of suppressing the growing strength of the Young) Pioneers, the Board of Education has ordered its principals to sus- pend all children and members of the Young Pioneers of America who | were absent Thursday because they participated in the demonstration for free food and clothing. | “We declare that we will fight |against the action of the Board of | Education in suspending many} workers’ children. We will continue | to issue leaflets and hold meetings | in the school and mobilize all work- | ers’ children to fight for unemploy- ment relief., We will not be terror- ized by the action of the Board of Education or the Police Department, “We call upon the workers’ chil- dren to fight for: V1, the children of the unemployed. “2, Complete abolition of all child labor under the age of 16. Govern- ment maintenance to all children at present employed. “3, Immediate feeding centers to be set up in schools for workers’ children, under the control of the unemployed councils. “4, Free transportation to and from school for all children of the unemployed. WORKERS CLASS WITH POLICE IN GREECE. PIRAEUS, Greece, Mar. 9.—A sharp clash occurred between a dem- onstration of workers under the lead- ership of the Communis tParty and the police today. Thirty persons were injured and 150 Communists were | arrested. | gle and invincible solidarity. The jmass demonstrations of March 6 | were only victorious beginnings. Free food and clothing for | jed at 3 p. in., but the workers group- | ed in the Public Square until late at night. ter part of the day, reports of other demonstrations coming in from throughout the world, met with spontaneous speeches and mass ap- plause until late at night. PARADE THROUGH BEDFORD STREETS Strike, Fight Police, Make. Mayor Listen (By Special Wire.) NEW BEDFORD, Mass., Mar. 9. —Three thousand demonstrated at the unemployment meeting yester- day, and hundreds marched against a huge mobilization of police and textile mill company gangsters for three miles from the north and south ends of town simultaneously to the city hall meeting, where a great crowd assembled to join them. The police were forced to admit the workers’ committee to the may- or‘s office. There was a sharp fight near the city hall/at the National Textile Workers Union office, where the demonstrators carried the work- ers’ committee, and the workers put up a strong resistance against police who were slugging girls and women especially. R Arrest Hegelias, Russak. Peter Hegelias, section organizer of the Communist Party, Martin Russak, district organizer of the Na- tional Textile Workers Union, and the textile sole ee Mendes, Mary The charge against these workers, jagainst Amy Schechter, organiz And throughout the lat-|for the Trade Union Unity League, | tentiary. | against Fred Totherow, National | | Textile Workers Union organizer, land others was technically, only “Ob- |structing traffic.” However, the | judge sentenced all of them to 112) \days, or $50 fine. The detectives) and police were particularly brutal, | especially toward the Negro workers, | and beat up Gilbert, | Origin of “Lunacy” Charge. | Judge Fleming declared at the! trial that any one stating that un- employed workers have the right to | the streets is “crazy,” and on the basis of that statement or opinion, ‘lunacy charges have been made) |against Schechter. Local workers raised $350 to release them, and the | prosecutor states that he will press) the lunacy charge, and summon) Schechter before the lunacy commis- sion unless he leaves town. They are also trying to frame a serious charge against Totherow. During the “obstructing traffic” trial the judge openly intimidated at- torneys and bondsmen. EXPLOITER U. S. AMBASSADOR TO POLAND. | WASHINGTON, D. C.—The nomi- nation of John N. Willys, auto capi- | talist, to be ambassador to Poland, was confirmed by the senate. Correia and her 15-year-old daugh- ter were arrested, At the shirt mill, where the police | blocked all exists to prevent the workers from quitting to join the | demonstration, a strike of 500 girls | took place. There will be big protest meetings | tonight against police brutality v: ited on the unemployed. BUFFALO JOBLESS GIVEN O00 DAYS Jury Trial Denied; Workers Join CP (By Special Wire.) BUFFALO, Mar. 9.—A trial was held today of the workers arrested | in yesterday’s mass unemployment | demonstration. The judge, in his capitalist role, was vicious against | the arrested workers. Ruth Will- iams was sentenced to six mont! their | in jail and was given a fine of $50. |fying the revolutionary working Murray Melvin was sentenced to 100 days; J. Donald, Young Commu- nist League organizer, 100 days; Sherer of the Unemployment Coun- cil, 150 days; Larson, 150 days and | Galony, 100 days. The judge refused a jury trial, fearing that a few workers might | get on it and act differently. Law- | yer Weimer, of the International | Labor Defense, made a good fight. | The cases will be appealed. All! were taken to the Erie County Peni- The demonstration had a tremend- ous effect on the workers of Buffalo. Many came to the office to join the Communist Party. A mass demonstration was held in Niagara Falls. Thirty workers | workers force their release. RAILROAD LEADERS OF THE = © UNEMPLOYED. Capitalists’ Revenge Must Be Answered Sia = <5 OF MARCH 6TH CLASS BATTLES Forward to March Jobless Conference 29 n Page Town Hall, and th inued from Page One) e is based on the scratch that Patrolman Albert Talbott re- ceived on his head when he viciously assaulted men, women and children, | under Whalen’s orders, at the March 6th demonstration in Union Square. This is the answer of the boss class to. the right of work defending themselves from the brutality of the bosses’ armed thugs and police. Whalen has kept Talbott secreted (Co: the able Ithough Hall from e and de : support of 2 Union ted body, Ortiz Rubio, president of Mexico in St. Vincent hospital, though Pa-| by the grace of U.S. imperiaiism, trolman Talbott has repeatedly de- | infantry, cavalry and artillery, bution clared there is nothing the matter may think that he’s hanging a Bui fied with with him and he wanted to go home new star among U. S. color I n and go back on duty beating up [ut jrom the diplated conc he te f th other workers who demonstrate and n of his ladder and the ex Ianufacturing Co., fight against capitalism. Ho’ er, nature of the Mexican m ers inside the f to prevent living the life of Riley in the © is not likely to be a fixe them striking and joining the dem- hospital, as part of Whalen’s plot star onstration against the committee representing 2 c McMahon the 110,000 unemployed New York te continue their working class | chair d Council workers who fought for the demand | struggle. delegati interview of Work or Wage: The bail be rushed at| with the Workers Must Force Release. | once f the|speak to t It is very evident that the capi- | Internati Labor De 799 H imme- talist class, through its legal and| Broadway, room 422, tod: now. e station. police machinery, will do everything | Other thousands of do 1 reached a cell before in its power to keep these five lead-| ed for general defense was arrested ers in jail until the might of the) During the hearing before Justice banners h the de- mands f. the court room ¥ yed and Em- They | Townley s an will. be re-arrested and another armed camp. No workers were per- | ployed we heavy bail slapped against them. _| mitted to come into the court-room;| Then more workers were aY- Immediate mobilization of the|only Whalen’s thugs and his capi-| rested f to speak, Herbert workers is absolutely necessary | talist associates were allowed in the | Newton, A how and against this capitalist vengeance |building. The five working class | Isadore Wofs. workers who against the leaders of the unem-| leaders were shackled to one another 2 vere also de~ ployed movement, which is fighting | and were not permitted to speak to . Not one- was for the demands of the 7,000,000 job- | anyone. : admit , even, before the less in the United States. | The case*is set for another hear- es of the town had given their Rush Bail Immediately. ling today at the 57th Street Court, | consent to the police. A call to all workers and friends | between Lexington and Third Ave.,, The workers are very much of the working class in the United! at 9 o’clock. Whalen and Crain are aroused at the class vengeance of States to ately rush bonds, filling the entire capitalist press} the bosses in esting the repre- stocks fun h Liberty bonds | with their poison against the arrest-| sentatives of the worl and stock certificates) for bail for ed leaders and the millions of unem- | . William Foster, obert Minor,| ployed workers whom they represent} (By Special Correspondence) Israel Amter, Joseph Lester, Harry|and who are following the leader-| YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, March 9. the hundreds of other |ship of the Communist Party and the ted throughout the! Trade Union Unity League in the been issued by the In-|fight for work or wages. —As is expected in all such occa- sions, the capitalist press lied braz- enly about the number attending the workers country, a ha: ternational Labor Defense Mobilize Against the Bosses. | March is ae monstration here. At Open Cless R i ate, vas! 20,0 a ed he -ublic UNE UEE HATER Ue Tinea a) Workeral': Mobiliseiin the Mops. (ent spe ce ges Never before in the history 0° | everywhere, for the defense of these | "Ware. ; 5 the American working class, has reread dln ‘ The police had stated that they : ; a8/ class war prisoners Do not let the bes iat the ruling class, its police, its ah . would smash any attempts to dem- : : capitalist class bury these leaders in y euorts and its authorities worked)... . . u% ‘ ./onstrate. But they w evidently : ed jcil for the crime of fighting for ; shes so openly, hand in hand in afraid to carry out their program, the demands of the unemployed— for unemployment insurance, for the five-day week, the seven-hour day— for fighting against starvation and |for the demands of the workers Only the might of the workers, es the arrest and cour tprocedure to- ward the committee chosen by the 110,000 workers in the New York unemployed demonstration statement issued by the I although there were mounted cops, machine guns and about all the po- lice in town. Over one hundred joined the Com- munist Party and joined the consnivine againat the working (2e2inst the capitalist courts, will nee eins wae Giaeele F bina ne Working | save those workers arrested for the | t® Smash ‘he meeting : class. Conferences between Commis- |The Workers Def s on fees Ul halon the ieee ats” |brutality and imprisonment of the fioner Whalen, the district attorney, pogses, All workers must demand setcstaha strict attorneys, have |+14 immediate, unconditional release taken place and continue, to raise| o¢' ai) Gur fighters of March 6 the “misdemeanor” charges against |°r 9 OU Tshters of March ©. the workers, into “felony” charges: | which mean long prison terms. | “The entire we ng class, em- ployed and unemployed, who have taken part in or seen the tremen- dous efforts of the unemployed de: onstrations, m work at once to liberate the leaders and the workers in capitalist clutches since March 6. Workers must realize the necessity for continued struggle to win the| hand, and the fascists lost courage. The E hours and when some lot threw some eggs (which m speakers) from a nearby bank, the lyour shop about the Daily Worker. |°0Wd had to be restrained from Sell him copy every day for a/1orcibly entering the building and week. Tren ask him to become a|S¢tting the person that did it. veoular’atiiweriber. | The entire crowd was enthu 4 crass. and militant. M their jobs to be pr demons Talk to your fellow workers in astic workers struck nt. Paris Commune Meet- ings of International Labor Defense (By Special Correspondence) ROCHESTER. N. Y., March*9.— Over 6,000 workers were present in demand ‘Work or Wages,’ the strug- the demonstration y, the gle for organization, for building th larch 18, Centrai | Jnternational Fighting Day Against unions, for spreading and inten id Third | Unemploymen lanl and others. | With this widened movement, the cla movement. W. Ch struggle is going on stronger in or- i eae moe ena! | ganized n for the demands of ous the unemployed and employed. The the bos Unemployed Cou is planning an for the Ke 5 lopen air m r re the | prison. only for those arrested |bor Detense Kodak factory on Lewiston Aye. at March 6, but the hundreds arrested noon on March 21, in Con- in the many strikes and struggles| March’ of the working class hitherto; the | P4ftalo. N.3 Potash and Winog: frame-up, | Finnish Hail, the Shifrin case, the Mineola case, |°')ommune” the fight to rescue the deportation | Liberty Hall, 8 victims from being sent to fascist | lands and keep them in the country | vention Hall. RITE about your conditions \ for the Daily Worker. Become a Worker Correspondent. a n farch 16, 14th St.. T March 18,,8 is., D. Me, th’ and Wa I Infit St Baily 22: Worker speaker for the Communist Party. In Rochester over 6,000 partici- d in the demonstration; in Erie | in Jamestown, 1,000. All | enthusiastically —partici- | joined the Party. Fields was the DEFEND THE SOVIET UNION DAY! Answer the War Crusade Against the Workers’ COME 'TO THE Mass Demonstration Sunday, March 16, at 2 p. m. at BRONX 17TH STREET AND BRONX RIVER A Mass Pageant “The Soviet Union Forges Ahead” Present DEPARTMENT OF © WORKERS INTER Speakers: WILLIAM MONTGOMERY BROWN Former WILLIAM Z. FOSTER CHARLES SMITH merican Association for JOSEPH LEWIS Freethinkers of America TICKETS 25¢.—On sale at Friends Ausplees: FRIENDS OF THE SOVIET Saturday COSTUME Evening Republic! COLISEUM Dancing until 3 A. M. "VERNON ANDRADE ORCHESTRA BALL Red Dancers and other entertainment ROCKLAND PALACE 155th STREET and 8th AVENUE To reach Hall—Gth or 9th Ave, L. to 1 the Bishop ADMISSION 50¢ IN ADVANCE Advancement of Atheism 75e at the door THE DAILY WORKER READ AND of the Soviet Uni SUPPORT. IP FIGHTS 175 Fitth Ave, FOR YOU! NION