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> DAILY WORKER, NW ror, SaTUKHAY SEV EMbEn Bosses In Chile, Wal Street Fear Workers Wall Estas!ish Soviet Rule (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) attempted to fool the sailors into ay “settlement” of their demands, Pre-| vious stories declared that the sailors | not only stuck tutely to the de- mand of the withdrawal of pay cuts, but would continue to fight for a levy on the rich to pro unem- Ployment relief; for confiscation of ‘he large landed estates, and for the punishment of those responsible. in the Ibanez-Wall Street regime which was overthrown the latter part of duly, All the forces of reaction, includ- ing the foreign imperialists living in Chile, as well as the rich landown- ers, bourgeoisie, army and navy offi- cers who were threatened with the Possibility of a victorious working- class are franticnily working to de- feat the revolutionary uprising. Inda- lecio Tellez, newly appointed com- mander-in-chief has issued a vio- lent appeal to the exploiting class against “Communism”. The latest United Press” dispatch says: “Communist propaganda was distributed freely but there were no clashes between troops and Com- munists, The Communists to a man have ‘supported the naval mutiny though the sailors have denied they are Communists.” The Universal Service cable from Santiago, Chile, said: “Blood was shed in three principal Chilean cities tonight as Communist agitators, seiz- ing on the revolt of the entire navy and spreading disaffection in. the army, harangued mobs in Valpa- raiso, Santiago and Coquimbo, de- claring the time ripe for establish- ment of a Chilean Soviet Republic.” The same dispatch said that mass- @s were marching through the streets ng It elso reported that “They were met by bands of armed vigilantes—pro- ernment dealt ovt arms when expressed their willineness to they die rather than permit the up of a Communist Thus far the capit this country have printed no offi- cial declarations from Washington or Wall Street, but there is little doubt that the American imperialist navy has dispatched or will dispatch large forces to Chilean waters to help he bourgeoisie of Chile drown the revolution in a sea of blood in the event they are not able to do so alone, setting ernment.” list papers in It is clearly evident that the capi- talist newspapers are trying to dis- tort the facts, printing confusing and contradicting statements. For ex- ample, one of the cables said that most of the Communist agitators were foreigners, and that these same “foreigners were agitating for the expulsion of foreigners. The fact of the matter is that the Chilean Com- munist Party, though ‘small, is rooted in the Chilean proletariat. The agi- tation is not for the expulsion of foreigners but for the wiping out of foreign imperialism—that is, mainly British and American imperialism who have squeezed profits for gen- erations out of the workers and peas- andts and who now dominate the life of Chile along with the Chilean bourgeoisie. The United Press reports that the American capitalists are concerned about the revolution because they know that the masses are suffering from hunger with unemployment af- fecting a large proportion of the workers. “MacDONALD IS. HONEST,” SAY U.S. SOCIALISTS Hillquit and Thomas Want Workers To Forget Betrayal NEW YORK.—The national gov- srnment headed by MacDonald is solidifying its plan of attack against the workers by handing over the most important positions to the most reactionary conservatives. The New York Times tells of the appointment, of Lord Reading to the position of minister of foreign affairs, Lord Reading is one of the richest exploiters in England. “He has in- terests in the City of London (that is, London’s Wall Street) and the City is far more concerned now in safeguarding sterling (British money) than in Continental politi¢s.” Thus, Lord Reading will use all his power to “protect” sterling and his large share in it, strengthening the forces of British imperialism for attack against the British workers ‘and against the Soviet Union. A defetise of Socialist action and the motive of Socialists who become the open lackeys of imperialism is the main concern of the American Socialists, as shown by the attempts of Morris. Hillquit and Rev, Norman Thomas, to cover up the deeds of MacDonald in various articles in the current issue of the Soeialist organ, the New Leader. It is significant that both these “Socialists” who claim to differ on how to. attack the Soviet Union, reach a unanimous viewpoint in the defense of Ramsay MacDonald and the British “Socialists,” “I do not think he (MacDonald) can be accused as a renegade'6r a conscious traitor,” writes Thomas. “He meant well...” ‘Then Thomas goes on to a defense of Socialist action, praising the pre- sent Labor Party opposition. At the same time he reveals why he is so hard set defending the “Socialist” leaders of Britain, “The appeal of Russia is that it is actually getting things done along new lines.” And to keep the workers from following the action of the Russian Revolution, he appeals to the workers to stick behind the betrayers, as revolution is a “terrible price.” But Thomas thinks that when the Socialist lead- ers aided the imperialists to dyivé 10,000,000 workers to their slaughter, and then after the World War helped the capitalists drown revolutionary uprisings in a sea of workers’ blood, that this is not a “terrible price” for, the preservation of capitalism, Hillquit defends the action of the Labor Party throughout its history pf attacks against the workers. And jolie he tries to absolve Mac- ald. He writes: “Yet, I do not believe that he- (MacDonald) was actuated by mo- tives of personal interest or am- bition in sticking to his office?’ (That was Hillquit’s defense when he téok $100,000 from Czarist off. barnos to attack the Soviet Union, he said it was not inconsistent with Socialist action.) “I think he is quite sincere, He erroneously believes that his country is in dan- ger and he is saving it. In the critical hour Ramsay Mac Donald proved to be an Englishman first and a Socialist second.” In short, if Ramsay MacDonald were not erroneous in his belief that British capitalism was about to col- lapse, Hillquit argues, he would be justified in his action. At the same time, the petty-bour- geois legal light of American Social- .| ism tries to hide MacDonald's role, not as an “Englishman” but as a tool of British capitalism. It is not that MacDonald proved “to be an Englishman first” but a supporter of capitalism fitst. This fact Hillquit does not want the workers to know. It is always the cry of the Socialists, as in Germany in 1914-1919, and during the period of the Young Plan yoke, that they were protecting the national interests, thereby hiding their role of protecting the capitalist interests in their respective coun- tries against the workingclass. Hillquit is forced to the defense that there are in reality two kinds of Socialists, that is, the MacDonald kind, and the Hillquit kind. Mac- Donald has openly betrayed the workers and must be discarded, while Hillquit proposes to keep up illusions to mislead the workers. PREPARE ATTACK CHINESE MASSES The desolation brought by the floods and the typhoon is reported to have resulted in a temporary ces- sation of struggle among the various imperialist agents in order to smash the growing revolutionary spirit among the masses of the Chinese workers and peasants in the striken areas, The New York Times corres- pondent announces on August 31 that while the Sino-Japanese strug- “gles and the conflict between the Nationalist and Canton governments have stopped temporarily as a result of the desolation the activity of the Communists continues, The Times correspondent writes: “However, as Nanking government leaders foresaw early this month, a new domestic problem of the gravest, political—and possibly military—im- plication is growing out of the floods, for Communist agitators are already stepping in. “They are taking advantage of the destitution, starvation and other woes of the millions of flood suffer- ers to spread the doctrine of discon- tent, which, as conditions grow worse will almost certainly incite riots, vio- lence and widespread upheavals.” The “new domestic” problem of the Nanking government is the rising militancy of the workers and peas- ants against the imperialists and their agents in the government. The Communists are organizing the mass~- es against the oppression of the butcher government. The Times cor- -| respondent calls the cessation of hos- tilities among the various factions a “blessing.” This “blessing” means only that the agents of the imperial- ists realize that the masses are in a mood for struggle as the result of these “natural” calamities and the imperialists are determined to add further mass slaughter of the mili- tant workers and peasants to the deaths caused by the floods. TRAVEL TO RUSSIA, U. S. S. R. New York—Southampton and London and by Soviet steamer to vena id and by rail a Moscow, we whether our and best service, jee the mont gli tie building up of = new R ok ‘to u Ss 7 Inexs ix done directly through INTOURIST, State, ‘Travel Burenu of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Sta: er HOLMBERG §&. S. AGENCY 2 East 125th Street New York City Council Defeats New Move Of Landlords|¥ In Eviction Cases PONTIAC, Mich—A new system | es been tried by the bosses in evic- “Long live the revolution!” | tion cases. The Pontiac Mortgage & Investment Co. (the company that does most of the evicting’in Pontiac) threw one family out in the street and then before the Unemployed Council knew anything about it ha the furniture put in storage. This move was of no avail, the Unem- | ployed Council was on the job that night and built a camp fire in the | street and had the family sit around | the fire. By this move we were able | to rally 300 neighbors. The comrades who spoke pointed out the type of democracy dealt out in this country and stressed the need for an organ- ized fight against evictions, starva- tion, etd, ‘The police arrived and seeing the crowd said that they could find shelter in the fire house for the evicted worker. The Council conti- | nued the struggle, however, and this worker was put into a new hcuse and his furniture was given back to him. 1,000 HOSIERY WORKERS CHEER WM. Z. FOSTER) (CONTING D KROM PAGE ONE) the need for struggle against the impending wage cuts. The example of the 50 per cent wage cut put over the Rocky Mt. Fuel Co, minrs by the U.M.W.A. of- ficials to aid the coal operators in their rate competition with the un- organized Rockefeller mines was used by the A.F.F.F.H.W. misleaders at the convention, Foster said. ‘The checkoff to be instiutted in the organized union mills is an at- tempt of the employers and the A. FFF.H.W. Officials to tie the yoke of the company union tighter about the workers, The same thing is occurring in other industries, in coal, railroads, etc, where the American Federation of Labor bureaucrats feel the base of their company unionized organ- izations slipping. The arbitration clause that the hosiery misleaders are seeking to in- corporate in the agreement is an- other method of cutting wages, as was shown recently when Dr. Abel- son, the arbitrator, ordered the re- duction of wages by 25 per cerit of many categorise of knitters and leg- Asiees ne Calling upon the workers to pre- pare for stiff resistance to the em- Ployers and the A.F.F.F.H.W. bureau- crats Foster outlined the course of action the workers were to take. To defeat the scheme at the convention, or by @ referendum should Rieve and Co. maneuver to put it through and if that was stolen to. strike in the shops. To meet the firce offensive of the employers it was necessary to set up committees of action in all shops to organize for a general strike in the industry. Declaring that the National Tex- tile Workers Union was ready. to make ready to make a united front with the hosiery workers and to lend them every assistance in their strug- gle against wage- cuts, Foster called for the buliding of the N.T.W.U. Foster told that when the A.F.F-F. LW. officials went to eRading osten- sibly to organize a strike there, they were publicly negotiating for wage cuts in the unionized mills in Phila- delphia. Scoring the Independent Labor Party, of which John Edelman, one of the ledaing Musteites that pro- posed the wage cut, arbitratino and checkoff scheme, Edith Berkman tr'd that Alex McKeown, the Labor Par- ty and socialist candidate for mayor here, was known as the wage cut SCOTTSBORO MOTHER SCORES TRAITOROUS NAACP LEADERS (CONTINUED FROM-PA ONED who made no attempt to conceal their indignation at the traitorous acti ities ef the NAACP heads and other erro and white reformists. meeting climaxed a four-day Mrs. Montgomery in Kansas Cits The local leaders of the NAACP made an attempt to stampede the meeting, but instead of disrupting the defense, they found themselves thor- ought: posed before the workers of Kar: City by Mrs. Montgomery. Time and again Mrs. Montgomery emprasized the treacherous role the NAACP leadership has played in try- ing to hamstring the defense of the nine innocent Negro boys, eight of whom have been sentenced to burn in the electric chair on a brazen frame-up charge. Mrs. Montgomery declared that none of the boys or their parents would have anything to do with the NAACP misleaders. She especially condemned the efforts of these traitors to confuse and coerce the boys into accepting Stephen R. Roddy, klan attorney, who helped the boss court to railroad the boys in the original “trial.” She declared that this fact alone would have been proof of the insincerity of the NAACP. She blasted the lies of William Pickens about “the ignorance of the parents been “kidnapped, corralled and fenced around by the Communists.” She de- manded the right of the parents to say who shall defend their boys. of the boys” and about their having) International Youth Day Meetings . Under the leadership of the Communist League and t Party many or- Mrs. Montgomery told the audience : : ve i having raised a conversation ns will take part in the pata at es dana | ion of the youth and |on a bus in North Carolina between |™ two prosperous looking white men in which they were bemoaning the fact t the Alabama authorities had de- ed the lynching of the nine boys | long enough for the Reds to raise hell over it. She added that if the | Reds are raising hell, she wishes | them to raise enough hell to free the | Scottsboro boys and to end the hell of tenant farm slavery for Negroes in the South. On account of the activities of local NAACP leaders, Mrs. Montgomery was denied the right to speale in be- half of the boys at two of the laryes' Negro churches in the city. In one church where she was perntitted to make her appeal, the pastor attacked the ILD but in spite of this the con- gregation went over his head and | gave her a large collection. She pointed out these facts at the meeting and called upon the Negro workers to rally over the heads of the mis- ' leaders to the mass fight which alone | can free the boys. She clearly pointed out that the fight to smash the Scottsboro frame-up and legal h- ing must be aimed at the entire vici- ous system under which Negro work- ers are enslaved and terrorized in th South. Unless this is done, she point- ed out, other Negro mothers will be forced to see their children ¥, d from them and rushed to the electric chair on the flimsiest frame-up ex- cuses. monsiri m and y prep- So far the | will take place in the eve- ict 1 stor -Bo Norwood Lowell Distr erson, beth, N. J.; J.; Passaic, N. J. Newark, N. J.; Pr ; Linden, N. J.; th Jer- » Pa; N. J.; Balti- gton, D. C.; | | Pa.; Pa; Al-| | Pa. | | | ; Trenton, more, Chests lentown, trict 4 —Bui v.¥., Broad- ditoriur (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) apart; we have a right to do that,” Adam told the burgess. For answer the deputies let drive a shower of tear gas bombs, and the miners rushed the barricade, But Adam couldn't testify to any part of what took place after the answer was made to the burgess, because along with the tear gas came a charge with clubs by the deputies and Adam was one of the first to go down. The doctor took five stitches in his forehead after he had been carried unconscious to the hospital and there were several stitches in the back of his head too. The.-prosecutor is loud mouthed and insulting. “So you told your mob to come on!” he yells at Getto. “I told the miners they had a right to wets through town,” says Getto quietly. “And you and him (pointing at other defendant) tells the burge: youse mean to defy the law!” snarls the prosecutor. “We only. told him that we had.a right to picket,” Getto explains pa- tiently. ‘The prosecutor is a native’ Amer- ican, with a college degree, and Get- to is just a Jugoslay miner who picked up his English and his man- ners among workers, But the con- trast is illuminating. Getto was thrown out of the court- room several days ago when he came in as part of the audience in the Leo Thompson case, and after being into the corridor, he and Taras were arrested and held in jail over an hour for daring to show themselves before their case was called, although no one knew when the authorities would decide to call it. The prose- .cutor keeps his victoms continually on edge; they wer called to appear at the first day of the court session, and they never know when they will be called to trial, and if not appear- ing, their bail forfeited. candidate. CADIZ, Ohio, Sept. 4—The arson AID SOCIETY MASS MEETING working class 205 East 67th LIVE IN A— We have a limited number o: NO INVESTMENT NECESSARY OPENING of the NINTH CONVENTION of the RUSSIAN NATIONAL MUTUAL Saturday Sept. 5, 1931 Good Speakers—Good Artists Speeches of greetings by prominent representatives of various ADMISSION 25 CENTS Tickets can be had at all branches of the Society and at the Novy Mir offices, 35 E. 12th Street, New York City CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2800 BRONX PARK EAST Comradely atmosphere—In this Cooperative Colony you will find a library, athletic director, workroom for children, workers’ clubs and various cultural activities / Tel, Estabrook 8-1400; Olinville 2-6972 Take Lexington Avenue train to White Plains Road and Get off Allerton Avenue OF AMERICA AND CONCERT organizations St., New York f 3 and 4 room apartmerts — OPPOSITE BRONX PARK Saturday 10 n,m, Office open from: ? a. m. to 8 p.m. every day; 9 9, m. to 5 p.m, to 5 p,m, Sunday BOSSES TRY TO STOP MASS DEMAND FOR MINERS’ RELEASE wn, Ohio, case against Walter Latos, Tony | “2° Federal pee ‘ce ay ‘Wallich and Walter Aronovich col- Ohio, Scar eu lapsed when Aronovich, who was aca supposed to have signed a confession ; | n saying that Latos and Wallich had | re set fire to the tipple of the Witch- | 1.5 See Ambridge. hazel mine, denied and repudiated | the statement before the court, and | swore that he had been beaten and | forced to sign at the point of a gun. Aronovich said that deputy she- riffs did the third degree work. | h- Hands Off Chile! (CONTINUED FROM PA ONE) the Ibanez regime and established a provisional government of Montero. While the masses were overjoyed to be rid of Ibanez, the new revolt indicated that they were soon disill d by Evidently the provisional job of deluding the masses by false promise of “tetterment”, over the which turned out to be. wage cuts and guarantees to Americast-imperial- its ism that declare its the new m re with the imperia games This evidently was the reason for the present uprising. in whieh the seizure of the entire Chilean fleet has played a spectacular and-sifpifi- cant role. However, the meager news received here shows clearly-tha},the movement extends throughout the whole country among th workers:and we believe the statement credited to the Communist Party. that the-upris- ing—or at least the m movement—will continue regardless of:,the;out- come of the government’s reported agreement with the-sailors¢ This agreement also clearly shows that the government is reduced, -to, aitter helplessness canfronting the refusal of the aviation corps to go-inte-rction against the fleet and the untrustworthiness of the army—both -beastfully relied upon in previous dispatches by the capitalist presg, Reports indicate that the Communist Party pursues -a thoroughly Bolshevik policy toward the mutiny in the fleet, “The Communists to a man have supported the naval mutiny though the sailors have denied they are Communists.” Indications are that class lines are intensely drawn with reactionary forces mobilizing and arming for the civil war, that. ap- pears possibly against the revolutionary mass movement One must, however, caution against the possible confusion in the stories of the frightened reactionaries and alarmed imperialists about the “Communism” of Sen. Manuel Hidalgo who is reported. in..the..press to be the “Communist” candidate for president against Montero. Hidalgo’s program falls short of a real Communist procram and he recently issued a statement indicating a disagreement with the Communist slogan of Soviets Nevertheless, the American working class which suffers ynder the same oppressors who rre exploiting and oppressing the Chilean. workers should hail with joy the revolutionary mass. movement and the_sojlitary and naval mutiny that seems joined with it as a weakening of. the power of their own exploiters here in the United States. The revolutionary workers of the United States must demonstrate in deeds and-carry out in fact the Leninist principle of active alliance with the oppressed masseg, of the colonial and scmi-colonial countries. Evereywhere let the impe- rialist government at Washington hear the demand of.the American workers of HANDS OFF OF CHILE! Let the sons of American workers and farmers who. make. up the American navy realize that the same bankers who are foreclosing,,mort- gages on their father’s farms and who are cutting the .wages.of their brothers in the factories and starving millions of unemployed of. their own class, are at any moment ready to call upon the United States fleet to suppress the mutiny of their brothers in the Chilean navy and, to. fire upon the Chilean workers! x72 Hands eff Chi MAHON BEWAILS NTWU STRIKERS terests would be protected.” It was forced,-hewever, to to pay even the interest on American -louns; iu by nst the masses, it sought to guarantee-its-pret ile! mind and that is REVOLUTION.” This, although untrue, seems to scare Mr. McMahon quite a lot. “It is un- fortunate that such things (N.T.W. | led strikes) take place,” he wails, and adds that those who call tionary have “respect for neither thé |laws of man nor the laws of God— menaced with blackjacks and pitched | The state has no other evidence. ‘The men are not released, however. and the prisoners are hold to the grand jury. However, bail was re- duced to $2,000 each. McKEESPORT, Pa., Sept. 4—A worker in the Peterson Coal Co. mine in Elizabeth township put in nine hours, digging coal. He earned 40 cents, according to the company’s idea of weighing coal. From this he had to spend 65 cents for expenses, | including powder, lunch bucket, doc- ‘tor, lamps, and other things. He found he owed the company 25 cents for doing nine hours’ work for it. Soviet “Forced Labor”—Bedacht’ series in pamphlet form at 10 cents per copy. Read it—Spread it! ‘Soviet Film “Arsenal” Playing in Chicago CHICAGO, Il.—The Funes of the | Soviet Union and the Ukrainian La- | bor Home is presenting the interest- | ing Soviet film, Arnesal’ at the Peo- ples Auditorium, 2457 W. Chicago Ave. Sept. 5 and 6, 7.30 and 9.30. The picture deals with the events of the Ukraine during the revolution Admission is 35 cents, nemployed with council cards admitted free. One way to help the Soviet Union is ‘to spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor,’” by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. Hammond, Ind.; ne ine, <enosha, Wis.; Granite Tll.; Chicago Heights, m.; West Allis, Wis.; Rock Island, Tl.; egan, Ill olis, Ind.; jana Harbor, Bennile, District 9—Minneapolis, Paul, Minn.; Duluth, rnaticrial Falls, Minn.; Ely, Bemidju, Minn,; Cook, Virginia, Minn.; New York Superior Owen, Iron River, Wis.; Hancock, Ontonagan, Mich; Iron Mich.; Ironwood, Mich.; N nee, Mich.; Soult Ste. Ma- vie, Mich, (border demonstration), District .11—Columbus, N. D. W'iliston, N. D.; Belden, N. D. Frederick, 8. D. District _ 12—Seattle, Portland, Ore, District 13—San Francisco, Cal., Post and Fillmore; Berkeley, Cal., University and San Pablo; Stock- Minn.; Minn.; Minn.; Minn.; Mill, Wis.; Minn.; Wash.; ton, Cal., Hunters Square; Los An- geles, Cal.; Oakland, Cal.,-7th and Peralta; Sacramento, Cal. Plaza} | Park. | District 15—Hartford, Conn.; New Haven, Conn.; Stamford, Conn,; Springfield, Conn.; Bridge- | | port, Conn.; Plainfield, Conn.; | | New London, Conn. District 17—Charlotte, N. C.; | Mill Villages (2), District 17—Atlanta, Ga.; Tam- pa, Fl; New Orleans, La.; Chat- tanooga, Tenn. District 19—Denver, Colo.; Lake City, Utah, Salt INCLUDES :— | Days | | MOSCOW — LENINGRAD— and return 8. 8, Ticket from France THE TOUR INCLUDES STOP-OVERS LONDON AND HELSINGFORS, VALID FOR 30 DAYS—PERMITTING VISITS TO ANY PART OF THE SOVIET UNION AT TERMINATION OF THE TOUR TOURS AS LOW AS— S212 ——SAILINGS—— “No Respert for God Or Man,” He Says (By Labor Research Association) While New England textile strikers are assaulted by the trade press, the employers’ police and courts, the fed- eral government, and the threat of starvation, President Thomas FP. Mc- Mahon of the United Textile Workers of America, a, native of Pawtucket himself, discusses the strike in a re- cent issue of the “Textile Worker,” Official organ of the union, He la- ments the fact that workers in New England follow the lead of the Na- tional Textile Workers Union and contends. that those “responsible for these strikes have one thought in no more than the inhabitants of the unexplored parts of dark Africa.” He writes this with all the fervor end ignorance of a missionary who sees the natives rising in revolt against imperialism, But the president of this A. F. of L. union which claims exclusive “jur- isdiction” over all textile workers has a remedy for our industrial ills. In his own words: “The Encyclical of Pope Leo 13th, of pleasant memory, as well as the one just issved by the reigning pontiff, Pope Pius 11th, of the Roman Catholic Church,“on re- lations between capita] and labor, contain within them knowledge suf- ficient to lead us out of the wilder- ness in. which we now fird ourselves.” In the September issue of NEW MASSES _ SIX OPEN LETTERS, By Michael Gold AMERICAN RACKETEERS IN THE SOVIET UNION, By “BI! Dunne LETTER OF A COMMUNIST DAUGHTER TO HER FATHER FAREWELL TO AMERICA, By Boris Pilnyak Articles and Book Satirical Cartoons and Drawings by Reviews and Posms Well-known and New Young Artists Three Pages of WORKERS ART recording the progress of they ifevolutionary cultural movement in America. For sale at the Workers Bookshop, N. ¥., and all newsstands at lic a copy. Subscription $1.50 a year in U. S. NEW MASSES, 63 West 15th St., N. Y. C. Prepare for the Fifth Annual DAILY WORKER MORNING BAZ MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, NEW YORK”: Thursday, Friday, Saturday FREIHEIT ....~,.; YOUNG WORKER AAR and Sunday, Oct. 3, 9; 10,11 17th INTERNATIONAL YOUTH DAY” SPECIAL .TRIAL OFFER - Twenty-Five Cents for Two Months Subscription (Published Weekly S.S. Mauretania IN HAMBURG OR AND THE SOVIET VI5SA— —— INQUIRE—— WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. 175 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK, N.Y. Telephone ALgonquin 4-6656, 8797 SA | er Name ....-cesesecseseee’ reveeee Address of the young workers YOUNG Post Office Box 28, Station D, New York City, N.Y. WORKER