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= = a = — ~ _ meee Tees - [(OOVER PICKS WORST INEMY OF FILIPINO "EOPLE VICE-GOV «RNOR TO HOLD IOWA /SCHARRENBERE ELECTION CONV, BETRAYS MONEY |AFL Chief Has $3,000 Job from Governor VETS! FIGHT Fli:H WAR PLUYS AUGUST FIRST! | NCE Despite Kept a Mee waned PATRIOT m US As WALLS 1a oosevelt’s Policy Is “More Exploitation, and | No Fair Dealing” for Struggle July 24.—The | ] pe y N FRANCISCO, Cal. July 24. SIOUX CITY, is Book Favors More and Empty Heads,” His Ideal Murder; “Full Bellies NOW INFLARE Zit oe Press Learns oi Communism | qi | ¢ Ri Communist Party is replying to the | —' ‘om Mooney, from San Qu CANTY ) } E Tr Investigation Committee and |has sharply criticized the role ary Paul Scharren nia Labor Federati ed by Secr of the Ci (A.F.L.), in supporting Gov. ¢ ks of the bosses the the att govern- election by ment developing campaign to an ever larger extent. Cc. ee WASHINGTON, July 24—As a/and bombing planes. E NTHUSIA ST aly Worker ti tueeTanets Odio. All Fish Committees Can’t Stop Jobless from The Communist Farty is now oon-| Tome, who denied Mooney’s pardon A arent ‘ : hears s a rker > : cts . qQ sider’ e placing o: | plea. ieee Pointe hs, Filiping speoples | Wile Rowavelis Sina). appoint ae é Sirs--1 amn a focent ouvert to the Becoming Radicalized, He Saj lin all the states of the West and|. Not only did Scharrenberg assist ers | osevelt vice-sorornor of the fel the ost Meee mee fom) But Only Organized |communist system of government . cae Middle West. The State Ratifica-| in side-tracking a resolution censur- hree | ds. "| gime, there is little doubt that his] Struggle Can Win [ad management of industry and 1 New York. | tion Convention of Iowa; ealled by| ing the governor that was about to There is not a more outspoken|approval will then be rushed 8s ‘ understand why the Communists To the Editor of the Daily Worker:— . the Communist Party, will take|pass the San Francisco labor coun- d more. vielonadtinperihitee tn the hitetuek, psa oon have not increased in numbers On the frenzied run to stop the radical thoughts which are rapidly | place on August 17th at 2 p. m., at|cil after the Young decision, but of | 2 i imperialis he | through, : lee 3 Chicago, ll. | faster. I had my political opinions | streaming into the minds of the working class as a result of this rotten |508%4 Fifth St., Sioux City, Towa. | sinee then the executive body of the an | ‘ted States than Nicholas Roose-| The demand for independence in| Editor Daily Worker:— ded by the daily press and | system. They employ not only the intellectual brains who for money be-| The C ist Party call |State Federation has endorsed "Tit, His policy is to treat the F the Philippines grows stronger each| I used to be very patriotic and | ™ulde y the daily press system. ‘ey employ not only the intellectual brain y e Communist Party calls upon § 3 t . dus. 5 tha Dutch and Bi tage Rae tees th 4 2M A eee , {thought that the Communists were | tray humanity. But also the so-called leaders of the oppressed workers | working class and farmers organ-| Young as a friend of labor! : BO Pe nederore trast the tetany andlstiche Wilerac cidleadern ari ag ey zeumious. Tim different mow. |, crazy bunch of gadicals until I'|of the A. F. of L. and thelr kind to help them in thelr vicious work. izations and workers in the factories| When Scharrenberg was opposing eek. | 1 Murderers treat the Indian and! of the Filipino misleaders such as |To¢ good to be true. Thanks to the | 04 some stuff in a standafd daily These ifead Pfle ores 3 | 7 hi ifi the anti-Young resolution before the try. | itch colonial peoples, Quezon, Osmenia, Roxas, Osias and|Communists and to the Daily ead some s' u in a standa daily | hese mis lea le iS the wor kers | to elect delegates to this ratifica- the a oung if e ry: R 1 ae | z ; "hy, | a paper that was knocking the Com- | are always ready to serve the rob- |tion convention. The election cam-|San Francisco Council, John Mooney, in- pa peu Beth sh ee who have been cooperating with | Worker for the true education. | unists pretty hard, I thought it ber class. But this rapid growing VET READY T0 paign in the State of Iowa is today|Tom’s brother, accused him of lis- eer | ¢ Fhillppings in which he usxex |Stimson to deftet ary real-movea|| I've been thinking things “over |¢-.> sug concluded that it was just |xedlealism ia inevitable, | more important than at any other|tening to his master’s voice. Schar- FABRE GC CARER Aa THEI Meeiee ter. tues Deoarinbie od eee ee finally ‘come to the | bunk and lies, so I decided to look | In 1918, when I was drafted into | ltime. Besides the growing unem-|renberg is a Young appointee to the gue | i; ae Bia Brcnavait dn Kia Soteee Hoe HUA cthete ka ven oen an us world does not /for the truth about the Commu- the United States army and was ployment of the working class in| State Harbor Commission, drawing ie ryan eee ermine tit | onan cede cee eee et two classes of people, one /nists, with the result that I learned |sent to France to fight a war for | | the industrial centers, the conditions | $3,000 a year from this post, in ad- AEM NEEM: Metustriie aie cetera re PROG ae eT TREE eee Lee ee eee cee a | the truth. the rich, I then had no idea why I of the farmers in the State of Iowa | dition to the salaries he receives as ber pf capense Sliruisins the second the Philippines, with business at a {the other class whieh is the over-|"" Communism Higher Stage. was going to war, I was no rad- is deplorable. The sagging price | secretary of the State Federation pn. f 2FHeE should be an era of ef |very low ebb, The drop in theprice|whelming majority snd owns noth-| 1 couid plainly see that @ Com-|ical then. Because I was working SOVIET U $A of wheat and other agricultura) | and editor of the International Sea ym) | RED. The ed fair play jof agricultural products, such asjing, (It can be proven that itowns | ist government is an improved |at that time and I had no time to| 8 UND oducts is pauperizing hundreds of | men’s Journal, organ of the nearly m- | .25 alien to the Filipinos as to oth- | sugar, copra, hemp, etc., has hit the | nothing.) c stem of government, that will think of radicalism. When I came bre thousands of farmers and placing |dead “International Seamen’s Un- as grees says this new dictator |great mass of Filipjno peasants _. Want Human World. — abolish poverty and crime and raise | back I obtained a job and was work- | 2 them off the land. The Communist | ion” that lines up with the owners Hy | the Philippines, “The Dutch and|hard. Thousands of them are more} This is indeed a beautiful world. |+1,. people fo a higher state of |ing until 1925, when machinery re-| All Vets Out On Aug.|party election campaign platform | against the Marine Workers Indus- m- | Uglish consider the Philippines a | impoverished than usual, and literal | It, too, wants to be liberated; it, too, | civitization. placed me. | First! latandsconctherbagia of struggle for |triel Union. pig ..| 1 example for thelr own exploited |ly hundreds are being driven off|wants to live, This world needs | Te the daily papers would tell the| I was driven out of that industry | UTSt: the interests of the poor farmers and| Young has harnessed severa? oth- toples snd would like to see this |their land. This procass ‘will be|the working class; it needs labor, |ieuth ghout the Communists’ sys-|and not so soon did I get another Rrecklyi, Nu Y. |the exvloited working class. ler “labor” leaders to his wagon for poles Biiiod oui Hs seer Mule aenee.. Yi ne mare vicious and|for labor is life, Nothing moves |tom for thirty days they (the Com- |job. After walking around six |Dear Editor: \ sialiaaaNe |the close race he expects in the ORR peeks Oca terre ie at bea Merl VSL ane ne ig| Without labor, Everything without) munists) would poll ninety per cent |months I got a job and ina short| ‘T often wonder why Communism | August republican primaries. Then Hfisry Gosia Gown due sentecdiana |b Felat On THe OGTEn ake IO NERe HOMER peice Wee aueaalAt therwate.in the 2080 elections, |time I waa out of it, After tiveland qveryihing pertaining to it is| NETROIT TOIL § ‘he meets Buron Fitts, the Los An- a Abe whocadeene ce Ge mauniee line Seca eee engender lee ata EE REG Now, why do they tell such lies |months looking for a job I obtained jfeared and hated. Did this country | "ite |gelos district attorney and Mayor d . Bee ea eamen ie SPO Ne AUrNGE Ie FOF: SWO Welds, “ie, BUnEn about the Communist system? The |another job. But it is almost two |not have a revolution once, and, in |James Rolph, of San Francisco, a jasses, use machine guns, bombs independence. didn’t believe in god hated himself T used to think that anyone who | answer is this: h clares that all men are equal if | You would like to know how I get | The Communist de- | years now that I am out of a job. fact, the wohle world at one time or another had revolts? veteran hand-shaking politician who i) [sister-in-law of Secretary of, State | and weed else, thet ne WS |they are given an equal chance, and along? Well, I had some money|” But 1 believe that none can com: ; ; J ms of money to the Ruselan more IT wane T have atterded many Com (with their system there is no rich, |saved. I tried to exist on a scanty pare with the revolution in Russia nate The San Francisco labor council s BUDE OF money. ©. the Rusa An Gon |b Wak. ve atteneee many 0m \favored class; the government and |diet. But it is six months already | (the Soviets). It is the only coun-| DETROIT, Mich, July 24,—De- | has_ since petitioned Young to re- ee aa MONARCHISTS IN ‘ISH WAR SCHEME Involve Easley, Woll In Fish Committee archists in the United States and | that among her proteges was the secret monarchist agent, George Djamgaroff. “Before I had time to check fur- ther on these new, startling devel- opments, Congressman LaGuardia addressed the house of representa- tives and denounced the documents as forgeries, They Were False. munist meetings and will say that | I’ve seen real human beings, wonder people go “wild” at the men- tioning of the word “Communism.” a society befitting the same. wants to be a “heaven on earth” for human beings, class. No |} This world needs Communism as It} for the working Organization Necessary. | I must mention that I’m not a! the masses and not for the exclu- |sive benefit of a few rich men. trouble to learn the truth about the |My brother did. |Communists will soon join them, proved that he knew they forgeries. | that all I had saved was gone. And | lif it was not for my brother I| |would have +o commit suicide. I| the |have not paid rent for six months. | industry is run for the benefit of A worker who will take Lives On Bread Only. I live on bread only and nothing | jbeside, and what it is going to be I don’t know, After all my brother | were jis not more than a workingman. jhave already applied for a job all over, I —J. A. try in the world today that can say it has, that is, on the average, no selfish, greedy or otherwise cor- rupted individuals, of which there are plenty in these United States and other so-called civilized coun- tries. I note that a lot of fanatics are inclined to believe that the Com- munist Party in this country is com- posed of nothing more or less than scribing the economic crisis grip- | °P¢" the Mooney case. ping the capitalist world and the | bosses’ efforts to place its miseries jupon the backs of the workers, the |Communist Party, in a leaflet dis- |tributed throughout the city, calls upon the workers here to demon- |strate August 1 against the imper- | ia! war and interventionist plots jagainst the Soviet Union at Cass for the Unemployed!” the leaflet tells of the fierce attack the auto |bosses have launched against the jauto workers, and the answer the workers must give to this attack— strike struggle. Workers’ organizations, trade ynion groups of the Trade Union Unity League and Councils of the Unemployed are rallying their “That afternoon I calléd upon|member of the Communist Party One Forger Flees. even applied to Mayor | foreigners. Well, I for one, am no|Park, Second Blvd., at Temple. (Continued from Page One) tration, and the department of state | in particular are the leaders of the | international drive for war against the Soviet Union, Mobilize August Ist, Workers of America must mob- | ilize in full force August Ist to pro- | test this program of big business, and its state department its eon- gressional committee, its police and spies and forgers and pampered white guard reactionaries. Robert Kelley of the eastern divi- sion of European affairs of the state department and told him that I had learned that Mrs. Loomis was contributing money to the Russian monarchists and that before pro- ceeding with further investigation in that field I thought I had better see Secretary Stimson and inform him of, these facts. Mr. Kelley looked very grave and said that certainly the secretary should be in- formed and that he would make an just now. part. light a fire so big and so strong that every man, woman and child That’s all about that I’m too enthusiastic. I wish I were a man that could in the whole world would feel, that everyone would be transformed, that everyone would march forward to the objective, until this cruel and inhuman system is wiped off the face of the earth and the Dictator- ship of the Proletariat established went prowling on his own after the name of the man who got him into all of the trouble, the fellow who ordered the printing job done. After the fuss started, Wagner He dividual in the Russian daily news- paper that he was named Yassova, hot. f All sorts of people investigated Walker, but in vain. |foreigner, and I want to say that Under the slogan, “Not a Penny T know that I am not the only one that lives such a miserable life. | There are millions of working peo- ple in this country. Now is it a found out from friends of that in-| wonder why and how radicalism is growing so rapidly in this country? ith radical ideas. the Party, |I am a devoted believer in the Com- munist Party, and there are plenty |more like me that sympathize with IT am an ex-serviceman that was in the last war when I was only 15 It is not as those money-greedy | years of age (of course you under- | and left for Europe when things got | capitalists want to have that the |stand I was full of patriotism), but Bolsheviks threaten this country |I understand what that means now. | It is they who|I am a painter and work for myself Wagner, mostly police spies and! spread radical ideas in this country |and I want to tell you it’s tough. Russian monarchists. Wagner point-|through their corrupted system. What the Party needs is bigger | |for Armaments; But Every Dollar members for a huge demonstration on International Anti-War Day. Just Off the Press! THE PARTY LL ORGANIZER ed to the private interpreter for mel; Hy and better demonstrations, for it | Bachman, Gregory Bernadsky, who} appointment for me to see Mr. Stim- |in every land. Dunne Ejected. | i son. We talked generally about the —EX-SERVICEMAN. |B ; — | surely pays to advertise, I for one | ; When Bill Dunne yesterday Mr. Kelley i d sits all the time back of the row) ,, |didn’t know the Party existed until | ; showed his credentials and de- dscns On Be pare Ansan jof congressmen advising and coach- NEWTON T0 SPEAK IN I saw a demonstration at Union | Special Issue manded admittance to the commit- tee room as a representative of the Daily Worker, the organ of the Communist Party, he was ejected by two cops at the order of the | secretary. He came back to the door | of the committee room and stated, ) loud enough so all could hear: “I represent the Communist Party or-| gan, the Daily Worker, and demand to be allowed in the room.” A couple of police threw him out, Spivak got on at 11:40, and had only the period until the noon re- cess. Half of what he had to say was ruled out, and the witness de- nied the right to speak, on the ground that it was hearsay—this after the vaguest and most far fetched hearsay has been gladly ac- cepted from Woll, Leary of the N. Y. World, Wood, and Whalen. Spivak’s lawyer pointed out accep- tance from Whalen of hearsay “evi- dence” given Whalen by a police lieutenant that Spivak tried to bribe Djamgaroff. In Spivak’s statement (not al- lowed in evidence) the points thus ruled out of the record by the Fish Committee include these: Djamgaroff’s Spies. “Djamgaroff’s statement to me that he had a vast espionage sys- tem getting information from high sources, was verified by the fact that he learned that I had the docu- ments.” Previously Spivak had described how he found the duplicate proofs of the Whalen forgeries in Max Wagner’s print shop. These proofs are the documents referred to. Spivak continues, in the state- ment barred by the committee: Easley Had Forgeries. “T started digging around in ac- cordance with the instructions*from frequently offered similar alleged documents and that when they were investigated 98 out of every 100 were found to be forgeries, and that it was his impression, from what he had heard of the Whalen docu- ments, that they, too, were forger- jies. Mr. Kelley asked me to return jat 3 o'clock that afternoon so that |he could make an appointment for me with Mr. Stimson, so that he could tell Mrs. Loomis ‘to cut loose |from these Russians,’ to use his ex- act words, “Would Embarrass.” “At 3 o'clock promptly I appeared at Mr. Kelley’s office, He informed me that he had taken the matter up with Mr. Stimson’s first secre- tary and that Mr. Stimson knew that Mrs. Loomis was giving money to the Russian monarchists, of whom Djamgaroff was the Ameri- |can leader. Mr, Kelley said that most, likely ‘these Russians were imposing on Mrs. Loomis,’ but that, nevertheless, should this fact be published it would undoubtedly provs jembarrassing to the state depart- ment. I told Mr. Kelley that I had no authority to decide not to print a story, but that I would convey Mr. Stimson’s message to my editor land let him decide, Mr, Kelley said: ‘I am sure the secretary will ap- preciate that.’ Labor Department Knew, “T next called upon Hugh Ker- win, in charge of the conciliation de- partment of the department of la- bor, who, I had learned, had seen the forged documents before Wha- len issued them to the press. I asked Mr. Kerwin bluntly when Mr, Easley had shown those documents which Mr. Whalen had released to the press. Mr. Kerwin said: ‘Oh, | | | (with a gestur> of crossed fingers) with Whalen, and proved it by show- | ing a police reporters’ card given by Whalen to the Djamgaroff spy organization, which calls itself “The A.-B.-C. News Service.” He also boasted that Mr. Easley was his | very good friend. | Offers Type as Proof. Max Wagner, the printer of the | forged letterheads, met a decidedly | hostile committee of congressmen. | He had to prove everything. As a printer of 25 years’ experience, he identified the letterheads on Wha- | len’s forgeries, shown to him by | the committee, as having been printed from his type. The commit- | tee scoffed at his recognition of the | type. | He offered to produce the type for microscopic or other observa- tion. And a recess was declared, then | another witness put on, and Wagner went under guard to his shop, and | came back with the type, also with a bill showing when and from whom he bought said type! When ex-Police Commissioner Whalen was on the stand, he testi- fied that the police never investi- gated Wagner, as he was regarded as an “unreliable character.” But Wagener testified yesterday that as | soon as Spivak began to visit around | —evidently after Spivak had gone to Whalen to tell him (as has been | previously reported in other issues | of the Daily Worker) that there was evidence of forgery, men came down from police headquarters and wanted to know everything. They took samples of his type. The in ference was obvious that Whalen | did not admit this investigation be- ecuse he did not like to have it: ing them, as one of the white guard | spies who came into his shop. This Barnadsky was later sworn in as interpreter for a shady in-| dividual who said he had been a/ H member of the Cheka in the civil war period in Russia, and helped to send spies to U. S. to work in Amtorg. Djamgaroff everything, repeated the story about.the bribe, but admitted that he had secret agents in Moscow | and was in touch with all “anti- Communist work.” he was leader of the monarchists. Djamgaroff Advises Fish. Djamgaroff sat in the secret ses- sion of the Fish Committee held at noon. Various Amtorg employees tes- tified, and were not allowed to say much. The congressmen wanted mainly to know what they were do- ing in the Soviet Union before they came. At the last moment, before the} committee adjourned to leave town for its trip to the industrial cities of the West, the attorney for the Amtorg got in evidence part of the expert evidence, showing the Whalen documents were crude forgeries. with names misspelled the same way in letters supposedly written by di ferent persons, dates hopelessly mi: ed (Grafpen getting a letter in Mos- cow when he was in Berlin), offic and slogans of the Communist In- ternational all tanc!ed up, ete. Most of these facts have been made public before by the Daily Worker. H. Newton, of the American Ne- gro Labor Congress, subpoenaed by Fish, was given just six minutes, They wouldn’t let him talk, but only answer questions about Communism. iz Congress | scheduled +o speak, a mas meeting ae A |has been arranged by the A.N.L.C. s | testified, denied). rriday, July 26, at 8 p.m, at Whalen 1| the Mar: erine | Square one time. | I wonder where the 100 per cen- ters could deport me to? I suppose PHILA, JULY 25, 8 P. M. oa a! \they will say my nut is cracked or PHILADELPHIA, July 24.—With | agers erbert Newton, National Organ-|‘"at 7m misled, dag ina: wes er of the American Negro Labor | oni yeu qorlo Russiat? I tald and Atlanta defendant |1im T didn’t belong there and that I was going to help make these United States the same as it is over there. e Workers Hall, 121 Gath- | Sincerely, —J. P. C. Calling upon Negro and white | ‘ed that | Workers to attend the meeting and | common oppressors, a leaflet issued He denied that| trengthen the fight against the| by the A.N.LC. SPECI NUMBER OF THE APPEARS MIDDLE OF JULY Principal Contents: Living conditions of the workers and peasants of India Capters from the history of British im- perialist rule in India CONTENTS— Organization Letter from the Communist Inter: national to the Communist Party of U.S. A. | (An indispensable guide in effective organizational work i for every Party member and every revolutionary worker in trade unions, etc.) | Problems of Shop Nuclei | Shop Nuclei at Work on May Day Demonstrations Shortcomings of Party Fractions in Language Work Experiences in Keeping New Members The Role of the Party Units in the Class Struggle | Fundamental Directives for Recruiting Drive The Work of our Trade Union Fractions Red Sundays With the Daily Worker Correspondence from the Nuclet ONLY 10 CENTS PER COPY SPECIAL OFFER: PARTY ORGANIZER & COMMUNIST (1 yr.) only $2.00 (original price $3.00) Send All Orders to WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 East 125th Street New York City i } | Order, Sell and Distribute SPECIAL BUNDLES--SPECIAL EDITIONS OF THE Baily 38: Worker to Mobilize the Working-Class on AUGUST FIRST my editor to get to the bottom of | about six weeks ago.’ Basley, raid the whole thing. In the course of | Mr. Kerwin, frequently appeared in the investigation I learned that | Washington with various bits of in- International Demonstration Against Im- perialist Wars and for the Defense Struggle for freedom of the revolutionary workers and peasants of India FARM IN THE PINES one Ralph Easley, secretary of the National Civic Federation, had had these forged documents in Washing- ton six weeks before Mr. Whalen issued them to the press and at the same time that those documents were offered for sale to the Wash- ington correspondent.” In his testimony on the stand, Spivak stated that Horan of the Universal News Service told him that the Whalen forgeries were of- fered to him six weeks before Whajen made them public. Spivak protected Horan’s name at his re- quest until Whalen dragged it into the Fish hearings and attempted to discredit both Spivak and Horan with the story of their trying to bribe Djamgaroff. This was Wha- len’s barrage against the story of his own relations with the forgers of the documents, Spivak’s statement, suppressed by the Fish committee, continues: Stimson Family Pays Djamgaroff. fermation and: trundled it around to the department of labor and to the American Federation of Labor, the vice-president of which, Mr. Mat- thew Woll, was a great friend of Mr, Easley’s.” Easley Silent. Spivak then tells how he came to New York and called on Easley, who would neither admit nor deny anything. He said he did not know Djamgaroff. Spivak went directly, a ten minutes’ trip, to Djamgaroff’s office, and the white guardist said: “I know you have just come from Mr. Fasley’s office.” Following this, a Captain Maines, Djamgaroff’s assistant, tried t> ex- tract information from Spivak, Djamgaroff tried to have the pub- lishers of the Graphic suppress the story, threats were implied to get Snivak as a “Red,” ete. When Spivak interviewed Djam- garoff, befor’. the monarchists’ chief spy knew that he had the Situated tn Pine Forest, near Mi Lake. German Table. Rates: #16— 418. Swimming and Fishing M. OBERKIRCH Box 78 KINGSTON, N. The Labor Sports Union is anxious to buy a cheap, second- hand car. Any comrade or sympathizer who has such a car or knows of one is asked to communicate immediately with the Labor Sports Union, Room 309, 2 West 15th St., New York. Ask for Si Gerson. R14 y Lone eenaeneteenastestetannetnnioae= Demand the release of Ios- ter, Minor, Amter and Kay- mond, in prison for fighting for unemployment insurance. WORKERS’ CO-OPERATIVE CAMP WOCOLONA WALTON LAKE, MONROE, N. Y. (50 Miles from New York) Electricity, running water in Sports, swimming, boating, bungalows, mass singing, eamp- ing, dancing, musical and cul- fires, comradely atmosphere. tural programs : oo: oo: ot of SOCIAL PROGRAM Excellent Orchestra $21 PER WEEK Aeroplane Rides RESERVATIONS WITH $5 DEPOSIT 'TO BE MADE AT New York Office: 10 East 17th Street; Gramercy 1013 | “In the course of further digging, I learned that a Mrs, Henry Loomis, proofs of the forgery, Diamearoff told Spivak that he was “like that” MONROE, N. Y., Phone: Monroe 89; Jilurtrated with numerous originalphotographs Text for the first time both in English and in German. Place your order immediately with... or with NEUER DEUTSCHER VERLAG Willi MUnzenberg, G. m. b. H., Berlin W 8, WithelmstraBe 48 Do You Know? Our firm = delivers milk to you only with union drivers, of the Soviet Union Special Editions will be printed Saturday, July 19 and Saturday, July 26, — Prices for special bundles of regular editions or special editions $8.00 per thousand, and $1.00 per hundred Cash Must Be Sent With Orders L OUT ORDER BLANK FILL OUT ORDER BLANK Kindly send me the following order of Daily Workers: seeeeeses Daily Workers dated,...... eer eee reeeey + Special Edition, Saturday, July 19, 1930 Special Edition, Saturday, July 26, 1030. Enclowed find B..+sss.seceeeeeeseeeeeessdm payment for aame. ADDRESS