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( Page Two = DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, N' VEMBER 10, 1930 — ADMITS DEPORTING SERIO TO FIRING SQUAD AS AN “ANTAGONIZER” OF THE | MURDEROUS REGIME OF MUSSOLINI United States Government Completely Exposes Its Co-operation With Fascist Murderers Foreign-Born Workers Held for Deportation Denied Counsel In Mo: NEW YORK —That Guido Serio’s deportation is part of the Italian fas- cist government's program to wipe milit who are active in the work- s movement in and out of nd punish severely all Italian as evidenced by the arrests of many workers in Florence and that the United States Government is co- operating with the Italian Fascists, | a statement issued late last night by the ternational Labor Defense de- clared. “In spite the Italian govern- ment’s nt watchfulness and ict cer hip over the telegraph wires ues the I. L. D. state- ment, “a meager words have slipped through telling us of the many arrests in Italy of Communist workers. It has long been evident that the Italian workers movement is preparing an offensive against the black shirts in Italy and that Mus- solini is trying to stop the tide by a savage persecution of Italian work- ers here and abroad. The Serio case is a typical example, and in this at- tempt to deport this worker for a firing squad in Italy, the U. S. gov- ernment has openly cooperated with the government of Italy, as the of- ficial papers of the Department of Labor prove.” Foreign Born Worers Denied Counsel Giving out another section of the records of the Board of Review, which exposes the methods of the immi- gration officials in and out of Wash- ington, the International Labor De- fense points out that foreign-born workers when arrested and inter- rogated by the officials are never permittd to be represented by coun- cil at thir t hearings and that the interpreters are always men in the direct pay of the government, and that later these sessions with the worker in jail is the basis for the deportation. The government record says in its decision to deport Serio: “On May 12, 1930, the examining inspector accorded the alien, Guido Serio a preliminary hearing in the presence of tivo Eri, Pa., police of- | ao he ae THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER WHAT Do You “ cl Sapa Maw iw ¢ 5 y€0R PLAN VNU TA ee ff cat qe ett st Important Hearings | ficers, one of whom acted as in- | terpreter and the other as a wit- ness against the alien.” Serio Found Guilty as Antagonizer of Fascism It was upon this hearing that the entire foundation for Serio’s deporta- tion to face a firing squad in Italy is laid. It is also pointed out that even at & later hearing, Serio was not re- presented by counsel in his defense ery) aN eNO we Ny 2. ue raw toe CANIS 7a Yo CZ MU vague “ CO-OPER a Reo but was questioned only in the pre- | ‘BUILD RESISTANCE ternational Labor Defense, that the Against Bosses Attack Department of Labor is actually sen- tencing Serio to a certain death the Board of Review said: | “Reference being had to this | alien having left his native country on Workers character or an antagonizer as to | NEW YORK.—Protesting the im- | violate the laws of his native coun- | prisonment of the Centralia workers | try and thereby become a fugitive | who defended their union hall from | from justice.” jan attac made by Legionnaires, and | because of fear for his life; it is | not believed that such could be the It was exactly in those years, 1923 in commemoration of the Haymarket | ease during the year of i923 and | 1924 unless the alien was of such |and 1924 when Serio was actively Martyrs who were executed in Chi- | engaged in fighting the fascist terror | cago in 1887, both dates falling on jin Italy and because of that he had | Noyember 11, the International La- jto flee for his life; and furthermore | bor Defense is holding country wide |the I. L. D. statement continues, | meetings for their membership and |“The Department of Labor is not s0 | sympathizers to discuss various ways | stupid as not to know these facts |to strengthen and enlarge the work- |When they are constantly in touch | ers’ defense organization. J. Louis | with the Italian embassy on the | Engdahl and Sam Darcy will attend | Serio case.” ; | these meetings to participate in the The appeal to stop Serio’s deporta- | discussion and make preparations for | tion is now before Federal Judge/the carrying through of the Eight | Wiliam Bondy and a grant for @ Months Plan. |“voluntary departure” is being de- ;manded by the International Labor | Defense, so he can go to Russia and | 2 |avoid the figring squad in Italy. The throughout the United States against I L. D. points out that “now only the intesified persecution of workers | mass protests on part of the Amer- |in this period of unemployment when |rican working class will save Serio |ilitancy is becoming the keynote of Mobilizing For Defense |solini and that meetings should be | Working class, the National Executive |called and a mass movement rallied | Committee of the I. L. D. adopted a |to the support of this militant who | Program of work to be shown as the ‘has given his entire life to the cause Right Month Plan, which will cul- ‘of labor.” minate this coming June 28, the date ‘To mobolize its entire membership | |from death at the hands of Mu-|* ‘ree Section of the American | wee 14 \ Wy, be ATIVE Fa By RYAN WALKER, Sovier Rusis | 15 SHOWING. ME-THAT " ~ Rae '20,000 AT COLISEUM | FOR NOV. 7 MEETING NEW YORK. — Revised figures| show that instead of the 16,000 re-| |ported in Saturday’s Daily Worker | |as attending the celebration in Bronx Coliseum of the Thirteenth Anniver- sary of the Bolshevik Revolution, there were in reality about 20,000. |The crowd continued to arrive sind | alter the DARy story wR Reperted in, workers and peasants held in prison bekaa nc ae eeremanTs build-/in Poland by the ruthless military Gare Geckine. alte rel tFUhgiee| ESE paar lta Ara on & chair throughout the building, | C2-Y Of Megan. Sosnowles and Niel hievan. den, sone were tuned. away j feskt who have been sentenced to The eorkeve ot New York rallied in | 28th, demanding also the release of aoe ii masses to this meeting, even though 2: Pommautlay denuly i. eae Polish diet, sentenced to three years the night was very cold, and the hall fi ing an “employ: td i not centrally located. os aang i cole emai a | | POLE CONSULATE 800 Demand Release of Political Prisoners | i JOBLESS MARCH ON COUNTY SEAT |Place Demands Before | Supervisor DETROIT, Nov. 9.—Over 600 work- ers, employed and unemployed, of Warren Township jammed the Van Dyke Theatre, 9 Mile Road and Van |Dyke, to hear Robert Woods, secre- \tary of the Detroit Councils of Un- jemployed. This meeting was quickly arranged sulate. A crowd of some 800 demonstrators, singing revolutionary songs and wav- ing placards and red _ banners swarmed to the doors of the con- sulate at 151 East 67th St. Pilsud- ski's henchmen had located their of- fices next door to the police station, and squads of cops were launched against the demonstrators. One work- er, Gus Berthair, was arrested on disorderly conduct charges, and the demonstration broken up. Wall St. is lending millions to the Polish fascist government, and re- gards it as its front line against the Soviet Union, NEW YORK.—Demanding freedom | for the 10,000 Polish and Ukrainian | National Textile Workers Union, and | | ON IN LAWRENCE 'Cops Afraid to Arrest at the Meetings LAWRENCE, Mass., Nov. 7.—Edith Berkman, district organizer of the | Sophie Melvin were arrested after a | successful mill gate meeting at the Wood Mill, of the American Woolen | Company. | For the last three months the Na- | | tional Textile Workers Union has car- |ried on organizational work in this mill. It led a strike of women work- |ers against the schemes of the bosses stration, workers demonstrated Sat-|to make them work long hours. The | urday noon before the Polish con- | strike was won. Through the mill committees in the department the | workers refused to work overtime for | straight time. The workers in Law- rence won time and a half for over- time throughstrike struggle. Many are joining the Union, The organizers are always greeted by the workers with applause when they | come to speak to them in front of the mill. Scattered groups imme- diately surround the speakers and eagerly listen to all said. The main points stressed at these meetings is organization of mill committees. Workers Defend Speakers. The police are afraid to arrest the speakers while the workers are out | ANGELES TOILERS DEMONSTRATE AT'NTW DRIVES ARE "ELIZABETH WORKERS — | 9) HOURS A WEEK CELEBRATE NOV. 7TH ELIZABETH, N. J., Nov. 9.—This FOR CHILD SLAVE |an enthusiastic meeting as that held White House Experts |py 200 workers celebrating the 13th] Admit It; That’s All | Anniversary of the Bolshevik Re- } volution. There were about 30 Negro| WASHINGTON, D. ©. Nov. 8.— workers present, and one of them, a | “Fifty hours a week or longer is com- | mon among 14 and 15 year old child~ | member of the American Negro La- | pon working in factories, stores, laun- [bor Congress, although only recently | cries and restaurants,” reports Chair- become a member, gave a fine 30/man Anne S. Davis of the committee minute speech on the situation in this |°" vocational guidance and child country. : labor of the White House conference The main speaker was Harriet Si on child health. In canneries child- verman, on the Five Year Pian for jren under 16 work 10 or more hours Bullding a sotialist ‘industrial in the |= O87) and bore of 16.and 17 some- a ‘ times work 80 or 90 hours a week. Soviet Union. Many. are employed on machinery | that offers a high degree of accidents, and many are employed in occupa- tions in which dusty or lint-laden air, \fumes and poisonous substances cre- ate conditions detrimental to the health of the young worker.” “Almost all the jobs have this in CHEER SOVIETS, < ‘they are unskilled, mechanical and peria opportunity to acquire either experi- ence or skill likely to be of any bene- LOS ANGELES, Cal., Nov. 8—Fif- | ft to an adult worker.” teen hundred workers and jobless| The conference of professionals and packed two haljs here to hail the | bourgeois “liberals” will merely make Thirteenth Anniversary of the vic- |recommendations to President Hover, torious Bolshevik Revolution and the | he will thank them, and nothing will magnificent strides forward of the lbe done. Only the Communist Party jand the militant wnions fight seri- | the organization. in front of the mill. On Novembér| workers and peasants of the Soviet |Union under the Five-Year Plan. TRADE UNION UNITY LEAGUE MASS MEETS NEW YORK.—Masses of workers and all members of the Trade Union Unity League and its affiliations are called upon to attend the following meetings. Reports upon the Fifth Congress of the Red International of Labor Unions as they relate to tasks to build mass unions, will be given by Wiseman and Ballam, who attended the Congress. Wiseman meetings are: Rochester, Noy. 11, at 8 p.m., Work- ers Hall, 580 St. Paul St. Buffalo, Nov. 12, at,8 p.m., Workers Center, 86 Clinton St. Wiseman is also dated in Cleveland district Nov. 13 and 14; Detroit dis- trict, Nov. 15 and 16; Chicago dis- trict, Nov. 17, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and | 25; Minneapolis and 19. Ballam meetings: Baltimore, Nov. 16, at 2:20 p. m. Philadelphia, Nov. 16, at 8 p. m,, Workers Center, 567 No. 5th St. Ballam will also speak in the Con- necticut and Boston districts. district, Nov. 18 A. F. of L. Fakers Ask) Bosses to Discharge All (By a Worker Correspondent) BELLINGHAM, Wash—The Cen- tral Labor Council has issued a state- ment through the local capitalist press that members of the Commun- ist Party are working in the build-| ing and other trades in this city. The A. F. of L, appeals to the con- tractors, the Chamber of Commerce, the police, in fact all local agencies of the capitalist class, even the cap- italist themselves, to cooperate with them in weeding out the so-called radicals (Communists). Conditions are making Commun- ists of the rank and file members of the A. F. of L, and the labor fakers see their pie cards slipping as their members become radicalized through hunger and want caused by unem- ployment, Workers of the A. F, of L., don’t support the pie card artists any more. | Join the revolutionary trade unions of the Trade Union Unity League. —-L. J. A. Labor and Fraternal All notices for this column can be run only for three days includ- img the date of the affair, due to the enormous amount of notices banded in, * + Conference Food Monday, 8 p. m., at. after, which there raction meeting. must attend. | * Workers 16 W. 21 St. will be a general All patry members . 8 Medical Workers to hear report Dele Kation to the Fifth R.LL.U. Congress At the meeting to be held Wednes- lay, November 2, 8 p. m. at 16 W, 1 St. All medical workers are urged io hear the report from the Red In- ternational og Tabor Untons. Alfred Levy Branch 1. Wednesday, November 12, at 6421 Vermont St. (near Dumont venue). A lecture will be given by fomrade Sam, Nessi ae jonal Unemployment Insur~ “eestor at e place Tuesday, 1 p. my i Be » top floor, LL.D. at 8 p.m, T AKE AW AY 6. 0 P. of the fifth national convention of BLECTION MEETIN |Communist* Speaks to | Assembled Workers | DETROIT, Nov. 9.—Last Monday, | Nov. 8rd, on the eve of the elections, |the Republican State Committee | \called a G.O.P. Election Rally for |Brucker and Couzens, with Mayor | |Murphy advertised as the main | speaker, The meeting was held at the Davison Public School, Davison and Jos. Campau with over 1600 workers present. There were many youth and Negro workers present. L. Paul Taylor, personal represen- | tative of Brucker, G.O.P. Candidate for Governor, was speaking on “Why Beer Should Come Back,” when the | workers began heckling him, shout- jing “We Want Immediate Relief,” etc. Not being able to speak as the workers refused to listen to him, this politician Taylor challenged the workers to take the floor and ask questions, Then Leo Thompson of the Young |Communist League jumped to the) platform and started to speak andj | was immediately told to stop talking |by the chairman, a fat-bellied busi- | ness-man. The workers demanded | ‘Thompson's right speak, they refused |to listen to Taylor, starting booing |him down, and the chairman put in| a call for the police. Three police- | |men came to the stage to physically kick Thompson off the platform. As the police wanted to strike Thompson, | the workers jumped to his help. | The chairman and Taylor then | came to the conclusion that it would not be advisable to “have Mayor Murphy embarrassed by speaking to |such a disorderly crowd,” so Murphy left and the chairman declared the meeting adjourned. But the workers refused to leave without hearing |Thompson, So the G.O.P. chairman signaled the police to chase all the workers out of the auditorium. But Thompson broke out of the police's hands and started speaking, telling to the workers to sit down, The workers all remained for another half hour te hear Thompson speak on.the plat- form of the Communist Party, and the meeting adjourned with applause and cheers for the Communist Party. ‘The workers all pledged to vote a straight Communist Ticket. Out of a job? Got spare time? You can earn a little money and take a crack at the system by sel- ling Daily Workers. Come up and we will explain, 35 East 12th St. Party Activities. All notices for this column can | be run only for three days includ- | ing the date of the affair, due to the enormous amount of notices J. Louis Engdahl will be in Boston Nov. 9 and 10; New Haven Nov. 11 and 12 and in New York City on Nov. 13. Sam Darcy will be in Philadelphia Nov. 10; Pittsburgh Nov. 11 and 12; Chicago Nov. 13 and 14. St. Louis |Nov. 15 and 16; Cleveland Nov. 17; Detroit Nov. 18 and 19 and Buffalo | Nov. 20. REJECTS BILL FOR REAL REUIEF Hartford Fakers Turn Down TUUL Demands HARTFORD, Conn., Nov. 9.—The city government was sharply ex- posed in the eyes of thousands of Hartford workers last week when it evaded the issue of real relief for the unemployed workers in this city and gave “short shrift”—as the bosses’ press boasts—to proposals from the Trade Union Unity League for real unemployment insurance in the place of breadlines, soup kitchens and fake promises, The T.U.U.L. demands arose out of the big demonstration and march on City Hall on October 14 when hundreds of unemployed and part- time workers lined up behind the TUUL, At the meeting of the Aldermanic Legislative Committee last Thursday night, the T.U.U.L. committee pre- sented its demands in written form. N. Richards demanded the floor to speak for the demands and sharply attacked the fake “relief” schemes of the bosses and their tools in the city government. After the hearing, the Aldermanic Legislative Committee calmly decided that the charity agencies in the city were “doing all they could to relieve the present unemployment situation and therefore recommends that the requests of the Trade Union Unity League be denied.” Breadlines, blackjacks and bayon- ets for the unemployed is thus the program of the Hartford bosses as of all the bosses and their govern- ment machinery. Workers! Support the Communist Bill for relief unemployment relief. Down with the bosses’ hunger com- mittees! Demand social insurance! Scientific Examination of eye glasses—Carefully adjusted by expert optometrists—Reason- able prices. D.Goldlisn, $n ORTOMETRISTS-OPTICIANS: handed in, ey after the original Odd Fellows Hall was refused to the Warren Township Unemployed Council. After an en- thusiastic discussion from the floor, an Unemployed Delegation of 15 was elected to present the demands of the Warren Township Unemployed Council to the County Supervisor, Licht, The delegation already went to ; Supervisor Licht who rejected the main demands of the Council, after promising medical] and dental service free for the unemployed. The work- ers are indignant at this brazen re- jection of their demands, and are determined to organize a Hunger March to Mount Clemens, the County Seat, with their demands. Unemployment in Warren Town- ship is hitting 9 out of every 10 work- ers, This coming winter the Warren Township unemployed workers and their families are facing a long des- perate winter of hunger and misery. |The only way out is organization and struggle under the leadership of the Unemployed Councils of the Trade Union Unity League of Warren Township, Mich, Portland Workers Hear Bosses Stool System Exposed! PORTLAND, Ore, Nov. 7——One! hundred and fifty workers who never before realized that they were com- rades in misery with those who are in jail here for criminal syndicalism and deportation because of their ac- tivities for workers’ advance, lis- tened eagerly Sunday night while Irvin Goodman, defense attorney for the International Labor Defense, told them what these arrests mean to all workers. | Goodman explained to these work- ers assembled at the open forum of the library how the bosses’ govern- ment paid stool pigeons who did nothing but chase around writing down what workers say against the bosses and their hunger system. One stool-pigeon here, Goodman informed them, has had nothing to do but tell the immigration authorities what was said by workers in 1923, 1925 and 1926. For this the bosses carry him as a lieutenant on their payroll. John Moore and Paul Hunter, de- fendants in the pending criminal syndicalism trials, spoke to the work- ers for about 40 minutes. | USE POSTER IN SHOPS NO. 6 (By A Worker Corresspondent) CHICAGO, Ill—This is from the Sunday Tribune, November 2nd, from “Business Opportunities” Columns, sub-headed “Business Equipment”, “Industrial Posters Are Coming Back—Good posters are needed more than ever to fight Red Propoganda in factories, we have the best set of 52 posters—created for executives for own use, etc, ete.” movement against the criminal syn- dicalism laws, against deportation of| the foreign born and for the right | of workers to join the working class party, the Communist Party, and the| revolutionary unions, Tel. ORChara 4783 DR, L. KESSLER SURGEON DENTIST Strictly by Appointment 48-50 DELANCEY STREET Get your organization be- hind the Daily Worker Drive for 60,000! Cor. Widridge St. NEW YORK Sy6nan Neve6unua DR. A. BROWN Dentist We Invite Workers to the BLUE BIRD CAFETERIA GOOD WHOLESOME FOOD Fair Prices A Comfortable Place to Eat 827 BROADWAY Between 12th and 13th Sts, 801 Kast 14th St. Cor. Second Ave Tel. Algonquin 7248 Phone: LEHIGH 6383 ‘nternational Barber Shop ‘M. W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (det 103rd & 104th Ste.) Ladies Robe Our Specialty vate Beauty Parlor Boulevard Cateteria 541 SOUTHERN BLVD. Cor, 149th Street Where you ent and fee) at home Vegetarian RESTAURANTS Where the best food and fresh vegetables are served all year roun 4 WEST 28TH STREET 37 WEST 32ND STREET 225 WEST 86TH STREET AU Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant | 658 Claremont Parkway. Bronx The I. L, D. is building for a mass|~ ¢ 5 after the workers were in the mill the police stopped Berkman and Melvin on the street and took them to the police station, where they were charged with disorderly conduct, blocking traffic (the work~- ers stand on the porch while the mill gate meeting goes on), breaking the city ordinance, speaking without a permit, etc. They defended themselves at the trial. All present in the court room laughed when the policemen were cross examined. Still, Sophie Mel- vin was found guilty on one charge, that of speaking without a permit. The other charges were dismissed. The sentence was $5 fine. The final warning of the city marshal, after the trial, in his of- fice, to both textile organizers was “Keep away from the mills’! The Union here is out to organize the workers. Mill gate meetings, distrib- ution of leaflets, is and will be part of its activities. The Daily Worker melts a million steel wills into one battering ram to smash the boss system. On to 60,000. Be a Daily Worker worker daily. ously against the conditions under which children starve, mentally and physically, so that the bosses can make more profits. Many were turned away because of lack of room in the halls. With great enthusiasm, resolutions | were passed greeting and pledging defense of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics, Other resolutions {demanded the release of the Imperial | Valley Prisoners now serving three to 42 years for organizing agricultural j workers and the freedom of Emma | Cutler now held in solitary confine- | ment for demonstrating August First | against imperialist war. Don’t miss full circula- tion tables each Wednes- day in the Daily Worker. “For Al Kinds of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hil} S55¢ District Conference _| 7 Hast 42nd Street, New York Sunday on Shop Paper | Editing, Circulating | Sversters! Eatronize NEW YORK.—In line with the | S E R O ¥ being planned of all comrades active || Estabrook 3215 Loheaettall Y. in shop paper work, where the situa- tion will be eviewedr section by sec- tion, and plans for future work laid. The conference will include represen- tatives from all sections and all units, It will be held on Sunday, Nov. 16, at 2 p. m. on the fourth floor of the Workers Centre, 50 E. 13th St. | DEWEY 9914 | Office Hours: 9A M9 P.M Sunday: 10 A. M.-1 PM. DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave. U Sta., B.M.T. At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, N. Y. 46th St. GLOBE "ywayltosss an ae THE CAT CREEPS with Helen Twelvetrees, Raymond Hackett and | Hamilton | aad & Bway Now ALL TALK AND SOUND THE GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST with Ann Harding, James Rennle & Harry Bannister THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR IT A COMEDY BY ZOE AKINS SAM H. HARRIS Then., 42d St. W. of B’y Evening 8:50, Mats. Wed. & Sat. ND AY WONG EDGAR WALLACE’'S FORREST THEA. 49 W. of Bly. Evs, 8:60. Mta, W, & 8. 2:30 DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST | 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not eonnected with any Theatre Guild Productions "| ELIZABETH, . THE QUEEN GUILD wy. ia. Eys, 8:40 Th.&Sat. 2:40 ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK 7#™A. 45th St. West of Broadway Evs, 8:60. Mts. Th, & Sat, 2:50 7 —-MELROSE— EGE1ARIAN STAURANT 1 Dair’ Yu 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD, Broas (near 174th 31 PRONBD INT it, Station) ‘ERVALD RATIONAL | | ara st. and |! ven | BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK Vegetarian “LOWF!! SHERMAN RKO ini Radio's RESTAURANT acts | “THE — AY OFF |) 199 SECOND AVE. UB HIPPODROME with Marion Nixon Bet. 13th and 18th Bts, Strictly Vegetarian Food ~~ NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RKO—ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW! | JEFFERION HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA THE HIT YOU HEAR ABOUT 44TH STREE THEATER Eves, 8:40, — 3140 ats. Wed. Sat. 300 Balcony Seats, $1, All Performa: nce! “UP POPS THE DEVIL” A Genuine Comedy Ait with ROGER PRYOR MASQUE 45th St. Thea.,,W, of B'vay Evenings at 8:50 Mate, Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 IVIC REPERTORY 14th St. 6m Av. Evenings 8:30 ' fog, $1, $150. Th. & Sat. 3:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE. Director Tonight . “THE THREE SISTERS” ‘Tom, Nngi HE THREE SISTERS” BSeatstwkeadv.atBoxOff.&T’ nall,113W.48 oe phoned 1600 MADISON AVE. Lewis & Ames Billy Dooley&Co, Alexander and Santos: O'Neil & Manners Phone: UNIversity 6868 “hone: Btuyvesant 38816 John’s Restaurant | SPECIALTY: FTALIAN UI ale A place with atmosph: soa ATM | 302 EK, 12th St. = New York Primrose Semon i — Matt Shelvet's Advertise your Union Meetings Dance Parade here, For information write to Edgar Bergen ‘and Co. || The DAILY WORKER Tempest and [[RNUTE ROCKNE ||) potheN ea Dept. a ee “FOOTBALL \ ast St. New York City