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a entitled to vote only 65 did so. PAGES FROM HISTORY OF THE TOM MOONEY “RED SHIRTS” IN INDIA COMBAT FAKE ELECTIONS Militant PeasantMove- ment Denied Right to Vote BULLETIN Members of the revolutionary Red Shirts of India were fired upon by police as they were picketing polling Places in the village of Katlang and urging workers and peasants to boy- cott the imperialist elections. The sympathy of the people towards the movement may be seen by the fact that in one district where 1,251 are ‘Tribesmen are again intensifying their struggle against the supporters of British imperialism in the north and attacking British planes met with the fire of tht revolutionary tribes. The seriousness of the sit- uation is indicated by the visit of the Viceroy to the territory near Afghan border. PESHAWAR, India, April 12—Poll- ing booths were picketed by more than 5,000 “red shirts” in the North- west Frontier Province, preventing the casting of votes in the elections held yesterday. When the polls closed at Charsadda only one vote had been cast. ‘Truckloads of traders and money lenders were attacked and their oc- cupants beaten. ‘The “Red Shirts” began organizing more than a year and a half ago at the time of the famous Peshawar mutiny against British imperialist tyranny and have kept up a con- tinuous fight which, for the most part, consists in militant demon- strations against British institutions and agents. It is primarily a peasant move- ment, and has engaged in many sharp fights against mass starvation that threatened to wipe out vast sec- tions of the peasant population. It has led many militant fights against payment of rents and taxes and fights to hold from British imperial- ist agents the products of the soil. Outlawed by British imperialigm and its agents among the Indian capitalist elements, the “Red Shirts” fight against the “supervised” elec- tions, Women suffer more from war and war preparations than the men. Read about it in “Women five cents. Help Build the Central Comm. Library Comrades can help a great deal in building up the reference library of the Central Committee by bringing pamphlets and books and back numbers of periodicals, particularly the Inprecorr and the Communist International, to Room 903, Work- ers Center: Pamphlets and books which are out of print are partic- ularly needed. By ROBERT MINOR THE. (Conclusion) Ro? the important thing is not the actions of this or that individual so much 4s the historical role of the Mooney case in the development of the class struggle, and the organized instruments of the workers, the trade unions and workers, The socialist party still coldly refused to have anything to do with the Mooney case. No response | came from Hillquit, or from Algernon Lee, or any of the present leaders of the socialist party except, I think, a formal acknowledgement of receipt of a letter to the National Executive Committee. Later, when Alexander Berkman, the anarchist who was a leading figure in the defense of Mooney, was indicted for mur- der by the San Francisco Grand Jury as a means of striking at the defense organization, and to make a conviction of Mooney easier, Hillquit did consent’ to act purely as a lawyer to oppose the extradition of Berkman. It is interesting to note that the attitude of Morris Hillquit, who was willing to be a lawyer but not a political defender of the Mooney group, with the sly covering up of his political role, later showed its real essence when Hillquit voluntarily went before the Grand Jury to ask the indictment of Communist editors (myself included, with Wm. F. Dunne and Moissaye J. Olgin) in New York City. * 6 But the movement around Mooney constantly grew and became a tremendous mass volume. The entry of the United States into the world war and the clamping down of the police war-time terror caused much of the revolutionary opposition of the workers to the war to find a channel of expression through the Mooney Defense movement. There were 54 or- ganizations affiliated to the American Federation of Labor which, in spite of Gompers’ efforts to stop them, openly affiliated with the International Workers’ De- fense League. The masses of the membership of the socialist party were already with us and just as the Gompers’ bureaucracy decided that they could no longer withhold an official word in favor of Mooney, the socialist party bureaucracy sent John Spargo to California to “investigate” the Mooney case. I met Spargo when he came to San Francisco and soon learned that he hadn’t the slightest intention of “investigating,” and this trip to California was merely a blind to cover up the intention of the social- ist party leaders to put through a formal endorsement of the Mooney defense as a means of answering the flood of attack that was being heaped upon them by the rank and file. Even before this, the fiercely belligerent attitude of the rank and file of Jewish trade unionists had compelled the leaders of the Hebrew Trades to endorse the defense of Mooney. Wits pees the revolutionary party of the | * -1 WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1932 Editor’s Note.—The Socialist Party is MAKING MANEUVERS IN REGARD TO THE MOONEY CASE, Facing contradictions between its claim to be a party of the working class and its increasing role in the present economic crisis as a fighter against every interest of the working class—its role as strikebreaker in the mine fields, the texr- tile fields and the needle trades, its treacherous support of the police against the unem- vloyed and its hardty concealed co-operationwith the police and capitalist prosecutors in present-day arrests and jailings of militant workers—the socialist party leadership is reaching for new means of securing the confidence of the working class. Among its ef- forts are—pretenses of building “also” unemployed councils, and, among other things, maneuvers to make itself appear as a “defender” of the most famous of American labor's living martyrs—Tom Mooney. It is common knowledge around the Mooney Defense Committee headquarters in San Francisco that the socialist party national office has put an ultimatum to Mooney— that if he will refuse to associate himself with the International Labor Defense they are willing to make Mooney their vice-presidential candidate, but that if he does not they will ‘drop” his case. The author of this series, Comrade Robert Minor, member of the Central Com mittee of the Communist Party, personally knows more of the Mooney case than any other man. Tom Mooney writes in his recent pamphlet of how Minor rushed to San Fran- cisco and took over the leadership of the defense: “For two long and discouraging years Minor exposed the frame-ups. His meager wages,,.. barely kept him alive, the ‘labor leaders’ vilified him, his co-workers on the Defense Committee slackened up their efforts, some quit altogether, but Minor kept plug- ging away. His tremendous efforts during the darkest days of the Mooney-Billings case need only be contrasted with the tactics of the labor leaders’ who obstructed the defense, to indubitadly damn then.” From “Tom Mooney Betrayed by Labo: r Leaders” —by Tom Mooney. i to defend Mooney, so grudgingly given by the socialist party bureaucracy, its whole role was nevertheless the Tole of killing the mass movement to the extent pos- sible. Always the socialist party press was the hard- est to get any space from. Always the socialist party officials gave only so-much “support” as they could not avoid if they were to retain their hold upon their members. . ‘The Russian proletarian revolution in November, 1917, electrified the working class, especially the masses of membership in the Socialist Party, and crystallized the revolt against the treacherous burocracy, whith could defend itself only by being, temporarily, “for” Lenin, as they became “for” the young California la- bor martyr as soon as they could no longer hold back the masses from his defense. At the same time all factors of the Mooney defense began pouring into one mighty flood of revolutionary feeling and action. The general strike at Seattle was most intimately connected, both by the personnel of After the official “endorsement” of the movement the leading rank and filers in the strike, and in the sense of political heritage, with the mass movement that had been worked up in that city beforehand for the Mooney defense. The same thing can be said of the Winnipeg general strike. And it is an interesting fact that out of the great movement later built up by Foster, under the name of the Trade Union Educational League (now the Trade Union Unity League), practically every leading ftigare in this movement led by Foster had previously been a leading figure in the mass movement for the defense of Mooney. The movement reached such pro- Portions as very nearly to result in a general strike in 1919, in spite of the treachery of certain members of the leadership. There was a very bitter struggle in the Southern Illinois coal fields, precipitated by a/ Strike for Mooney’s liberation. The Mooney movement resulted’in the biggest left wing convention of trade union delegates that ever menaced the Gompers’ bureaucracy in the Ametican Federation of Labor. I refer to the great convention of the Mooney defense movement in Chicago in 1919, which was ditched, sabotaged and destroyed by the | MOONE Y treachery of Fitzpatrick, Nockels and others who worked through the weakness Ed Nolan, who had been a co-defendant with Mooney and who had be- come “tired of the fight.” Bice Why this excursion into the past history of the Mooney case? ss Because it is necessary now to look and see what has led up to the present role of the socialist party. At the end of 1919 came the split in the secialist party, with the two left wing conventions in Chicago, out of which grew the formation of the Communist Party of the United States of America. And in these conventions in Chicago—every single figure of the so- cialist party who had played a leading role in the fight for the defense of Mooney was to be found as a lead- ing figure in the split from the socialist party and the formaiion of the present revolutionary party of the working class, the Communist Party This is true with the one exception of Eugene V. Debs. Debs was sent to prison and the cruel treatment of | the aged leader practically destroyed him physically Debs went to prison declaring: “From the crown of my head to the soles of my feet, I am a Bolshevik. Debs remembered Tom Mooney as one of the staff of campaigners who accompanied him on the “Red Special” train in the socialist party campaign of 1908, But the socialist party burea: with the kind as. sistance of the United States p: m authorities who gave them every possible access to Debs, succeeded in confusing the old man and preventing his joining the Communist Party. Seymour Stedman, the “Caliban” of the socialist party and its vice-presidential candi- date in 1920, was instrumental in wheedling Debs. | Stedman appeared as the leading figure in aiding the | prosecution of the revolutionary workers in Detroit by means of a parallel civil suit. But, aside from Debs, every other single figure in the struggle for Mooney in these dark days, when the club and the gun and murder indictments were the penalty for being for Mooney, has ceased to be a figure in the discredited, reactionary social-fascist organiza- tion now headed by Morris Hillquit and the Reverend Norman Thomas, and now more callously than ever busy at strike-breaking and helping the American capitalist rulers to place the burden of the economic crisis on the working class. | | It is necessary to remember these things if we are correctly to guide the movement to victory in the freeing of Tom Mooney. It is necessary for the work- ers to know that those who whispered to the prosecu- tors and police chiefs in 1916 in order to “clear their skirts” of the young Red labor leader, Tom Mooney, and who have continued that course through sixteen | more years of treachery and strike-breaking, cannot do anything else than betray the struggle for the liberation of our working-class martyrs. | requited by May Day Preparations in Full Swing Thruout States Preparations for May Day are going on rapidly all over the United States. Conferences are taking place one after the other, in which thous- ands of workers are represented. Ac- cording at hand, May Day is going to be a day of mighty struggle against the menace of a new world robber war, for unemployment insurance, for immediate relief, for defence of China and the Soviet Union. ta ee PASSAIC, N. J.—A successful May Day Conference was held here on April 1, eighteen organizations were represented with 26 delegates. Plans were laid down for a May Day Dem- onstration to take place at Hudson and Market Street, in the afternoon, followed by a parade throughout the working-class district. A revolution- ary program was arranged for the evening at Pollack’s Castle Park, Rover Road, Garfield. Leaflets in different languages will be issued calling upon the workers to demonstrate, An executive committee of 1% was elected to carry on the preparations. ° IRONWOOD, Mich.—A well at- tended “United Front Anti-War May Day Conference” was held here on April 6th, with delegates from many mass organizations. A main demonstration was planned to take place in the Farmers Market Square at 2 p. m, in which workers from Ashland, Marenisco, Wakefield and other small localities are to partic- ipate. After the demonstration the workers will march to Palace Hall by way Vaughn Street and down Suf- folk Street. A dinner is to be served between 5 and 7 o'clock. The even~ ing program will begin at 8 o'clock. Preparatory meetings are to be held at the following places: Marenesco, Town Hall, Wednesday, April 13th, at 7p. m.; Iron Belt, Wis., Saturday, April 16th at 1030 a. m. Plymouth Hall, Tuesday, April 19th, at 7 p. m.; Gile, Wis. Thursday, April 21st, at 7 p. m.; Bessemer Old Washington ie, 70,000‘May Day Dailies’ Ordered Already By Only Three Different Districts! The May Day Daily Worker, with an 8-page tabloid filled with workers’ School Lot, Saturday, April 23rd at 1p. m.; Ironwood, Farmers Market Square, Monday, April 25th, at 6.30 p. m.; Newport, Thursday, April 26th, at 7p. ma . CLEVELAND, Ohio—As parts of the preparations for May Day three indoor meetings will take place here, arranged by Section 3 of the Com~- munist Party. The schedule for the meetings is as follows: Holton Hall, 8126 Holton St., Jewish Center, 14101 Kinsman; Hungarian Workers Home, 11123 Buckeye Rd. All these meetings will start at 7 p. m. sharp. Che 8 PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—The Police Department is doing all in its power to prevent a successful mobilizetion of the workers for May Ist. This wek they refused the Young Com- munist League a permit to parade on April 22nd, The official reply of the chief of police was: “We haven't sufficient cops to give you guys pro- tection.” However the workers are deter- mined not to follow the bosses to go through with their terror plans and are making all arrangements to have @ real mass open aid demonstration and march on April 30th, and an indoor mass meeting in the Market Street Arena on May 1, at 2.30 in the afternoon. ‘The May Conference which was held April 8th adopted a resolution demanding that the City Hall plaza be granted to the workers for May First and also decided to reconvene on April 21st, in the Girard Manor Hall, to make final arrangements for the demonstration. All working-class organizations not represented in the April 8th Con- ference can send their delegates to th April 21st Conference, WARREN, Ohio.—With 25 del- egates from 16 mass crganizations, an Anti- War May Day Conférence was held here. It was decided that all preparations for May Ist must be carried out under the following slogans: “Against imperialist wari For the defence of the Chinese peo- ple!”; “Immediate freedom for the Scottsboro boys!”; “For Federal Un- employment Insurance!”’; “Defend the Soviet Union!” Tt was decided also that the cen- tral May Day demonstration shall be held in Court House Park, followed by @ huge parade through the main streets and the working-class neigh- ‘hoods; that scores of preparatory meetings shall be held in various neighborhoods before May Ist, that eo. g 10,000 leaflets shall be issued for the May ist meeting, and that anti-ar literature shall be sold at all meet- ings, particularly the special edition of the Daily Worker. demonstration on May 1st was plan- ned, Organizational measures were adopted to draw in the demonstration all unemployed and part time work- ers, ex-servicemen. Negro workers and women workers. U. S. FORCED 10 NEGOTIATE WITH CHINESE SOVIETS Seek Release of Mis- sionary Agent of Imperialism BULLETIN A Peiping dispatch to the New York Sun reports that Chinese Red armies in Fukien Province, South China, were converging on the city of Changchow. Fear was expressed in the dispatch that the Kuomintang could not defend the city against the Red armies. Changehow is on the mainland, directly opposite Amoy. Mission- ary agents of American imperial- ism are reported in flight from the city. The British have sent a warship to Amoy in a move for direct arm- ed intervention against the revolu- tionary struggles of the Chinese masses, The Japanese are reported pre- paring to resume their attacks in the Shanghai area. Bia eae) American imperialists in China were forced to recognize the exist- ence of the powerful Chinese Soviet governments by the dispatch of em- issaries to the Chinese Soviet dis- trict in Honan to negotiate for the release of Rev. Bert Nelson, a mis- sionary agent of American imperial- ism, who was captured by the Chin- ese Reds several months ago. A Shanghai dispatch reporting the ne- gotiations states that the Soviet Government of the district has re- fused to release Nelson at present because of valuable knowledge he has picked up during his captivity. Tt says: “During his captivity Mr. Nel- Son has become an authority on the Soviet governments of Central China, but is not permitted to send out any of his observations.” The dispatch admits that Nelson is well treated, and “allowed consid- erable freedom of movement and permitted to wander in the moun- Order Deportation | of August Yokinen As Party Member Repudiated Race Hate, Seized by Gov’t NEW YORK, April 14—Mere mem- bership in the Communist Party is sufficient ground on which to deport @ worker from the United States, according to the running made a few days ago by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals in upholding the decision of the Department of Labor in the case of August Yokinen, de-| ported on the ground of his mem- bership “in a Party which advocated the overthrow of the gdvernment by force of arms.” Yokinen was expelled from the Communist Party in March, 1931, after a public working-class trial in New York, in which it was proved that he had absorbed the poisonous propaganda of the bosses about the “inferiority” of Negroes. Yokinen had failed to fight for the right of Negro workers to enter the Finnish Club and had even stated that he did not care to associate closely with Negroes. At the trial, he admitted his crim eagainst the working class undertook to prove that he would overcome this attitude of white race superiority, The day after the trial, and un- questionably because Yokinen had repudiated his white race patriotism, he was seized by immigration officers and his deportation was ordered. The case is being fought by the Inter- national Labor Defense. ‘The judge who has ordered Yoki- nen’s deportation has pointed to the Act of Oct. 16, 1918, according to which a foreign-born worker who joins the Communist Parity is sub- ject to deportation, The attem pt to deport Yokinen and to enforce this ruling against him is an attack of the bosses against all foreign-born workers and therefore against the entire working class, WANTED VOLUNTEER SOLICITORS FOR THE MAY DAY DAILY WORKER 100,000 COPIES WILL BE SOLD! Every worker can give « half-dollar to SAVE THE DAILY WORKER! Every workers’ group can give $5 or more to the Daily Worker! Every worker can get # commercial ad for the Daily Worker! Every workers’ gro ‘an order » bundle of May Di Workers! Every ‘worker and every workers’ group can pay for » greeting in the MAY DAY DAILY WORKER! ‘Bot Bye we need solicitors for subs., “ If you can devote some of your spare time to this important phase of building wp the only workers’ daily newspaper in Engtish— GET IN TOUCH WITH YOUR LOCAL DAILY WORKER AGENT, or write the Notional Office, tremendous extent of the disaster | was directly due to the misuse by .|the Nanking government officials of | taxes extorted from the peasants for dyke repairs and other flood control measures. RS Upton Close Predicts That China Will In an article in the Cosmopolitan Magazine for May, Upton Close, bourgeois authority on the Far East, repeats his prediction that China will go Communist. He admits that the Kuomintang Party is discredited before the masses and that only the Chinese Communists have shown themselves capable of leading the national revolutionary struggle against the imperialists. He writes: “What of China? In the past the only uncompromising teader- ship and resistance to the invader emanated from the Communists. The nationalist leaders who had armies, fortunes or careers to save are discredited. We may expect a Communist oligarchy to dominate the productive central and south- ern regions of China and to ally with Russia, The League, America, have ‘let China down,’ Better go back to Russia.” It is this knowledge that the Chi- nese Communists are offering the only organized resistance to the plans of the imperialist powers to| carve up and partition China that lies behind “the great interest in the Communist threat” shown by the League of Nations Commission dur- ing its “investigation” visit to Han- know. The League of Nations is the organizer of the robber war against China! Close admits that the Japanese have the backing of other imperialist powers in their bestial butchery of the Chinese masses: “In Tokyo before Sept, 18, in the capitals of Europe and in Geneva MEET FOR HUNGER MARCH IN LOWELL LOWEL, Mass—A meeting was held in Odd Fellows Hall in Lowell by the Unemployed Council. The attendance at this meeting was| very good. Workers who last week attended the” “socialist” meeting | were present and endorsed the State | Hunger March denouncing the role | of the Socialist Party. The chair- | man was Jalo Snellman, a young | worker and Manuel Perry, youth or- ganizer of Column 3 of the March spoke on the purpose of the March. Preparations are being made for a United Front Conference for the Hunger March, The newly organized Labor Sports Union club, Interna- tional A. ©. has endorsed the March. The Lithuanian Sons and Daughter ® mess organization has also en dorsed the Hunger March. An unemployed youth committee has been organized in Lowell. Out Again on April 7th! WORKERS’ VOICE (Weekly Organ of the Revolutionary Trish Workers’ Movement.) | the Coercion Act. Subscription Rates: 6 months, 3s 44; | 3 months, Is, | Order from your Newsagent, or from: WORKERS’ VOICE 206 Pearse St., Dublin, Ireland a One of the papors suppressed under q Go Communist afterward, I gained the conviction that the Japanese military clique would not have moved at this time without sub-rosa encouragement from £urope.” A faithful servant of American im- Perialism, Close attempts to cover up the role of American imperialism in forwarding the present robber war on China and hypocritically presents the United States as standing for the unity of China. He admits the) growing antagonisms and intrigues between the imperialist powers over the division of the loot in China, and sees the European powers in an at- tempt to isolate the United States. He declares that the Japanese im- perialists are preparing to challenge the United States for domination of | the Pacific and warns that Japan “has thrice made war before declar- ing it.” He speculates on the probability of the Soviet Union and the United States fighting on the same side in a world war, which he admits has already begun in China. He pre- dicts a revolutionary upsurge in Japan itself as a result of the strain CASE _ Page Three . ROBERT MINOR ENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MAN- MENT, CIRCULATION, ETC. RE- QUIRED BY THE ACT OF CONGRESS UST 24, 1912, Worker, published daily at ¥., for’ April 1, 1982. ate of New York, County of New York, ps Before m notary public appeared Emanuel Levin, who, havi: duly sworn according to law, deposes says that he is the Managing Editor of the Daily Worker and that the following is, to the best of his knowledgo and belles @ true statement of the ownership, m: agement (and if @ daily paper, the circu lation), ete. of the aforesaid’ publication for the date shown in the above caption, the Act of August 24, 191, embodied in section 411, Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse of this form, to wit 1, “That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor and business ‘manager are: Publisher, Compro- datly Publishing Co., Inc., 50 ¥. 13th Editor, none; Managing ‘Editor, Ema Levin, 50 E.'13th St.; Business Managers, none. 2. That the owner is: (If owned by = corporation, its name end address must be stated and ‘also immediately thereunder the names and addresses of stockholders own- ing or holding one per cent or more of total amount of stock. If not owned by a corporation, the names and addresses of thé individual owners must be given. if owned by @ firm, company, or other unin- corporated concern, tts name and address, a6 Well as those of ogch individual mem- ber, must be given.) Earl Browder, 50.2. 13th St.; Morris reenbaum, 50%. 13th St.; Dr. A. Markoff, 60 E. 13th Bt. 3. That the known bondholders, movt- gagees and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of totel amount of bonds, mortgages or other secu- rittes are: (If there are none, so state.) None. 4, That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names and owners, stockholders, and security holders, if any, contain not only the of stockholders and security holders as they appear upon the books of the company bub siso, in cases where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of ‘the person or corporation for whom such trustee is acting, {8 given; also that the said two paragraphs contain state- ments embracing affiant’s full knowledge and belief 8 to the circumstances and con- ditions under which stockholders and secu rity holders who do not appear upon books of the company as trustees, and securities in a capacity other that of @ bona fide owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association, or corporation has any interest direct or indirect in the said stock, bonds, or other securities than Qs 80 stated by him. hold 6. That the average number of copies of each issue of this publication sold or dis- tributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the six months preceding the date shown above is 36,987 EMANUEL LEVIN, Managing Editor Sworn to and subscribed before me this 18th day of April, 2932, MAX KITZES. (sean) Notary Public Bronx County, N ¥: (My commission expires March 30, 1934.) on the already shaken position of Japanese capitalism, the continued catastrophic deepening of the crisis and the additional burdens imposed upon the already frightfully ex- ploited toiling masses of Japan. The prospect of a revolution in Japan, he holds forth both hopefully and with dread; hopefully yecause is would weaken Japanese imperialism as a rival of the United States, with dread because if successful it would destroy Japanese imperialism and bring about the triumph of the so- cial revolution in Japan, WHERE ARE THE OTHERS? Up to April 18, these branches HAVE contributed to the MAY DAY DAILY WORKER! YOU MUST ACT QUICKLY! sands more to come! But there are thou- The MAY DAY DAILY WORKER will be the most important issue of the workers’ paper proletariat. GET YOUR ORG in this critical time for the ANIZATION TO ACT NOW ON A MAY DAY GREETING! Miscellaneous Organizations, 38-—Total Contribution Freihelt Gesangs Ferein Branches, Daily Worker Clubs, 2 Friends of the Sovict Union Branches, Workers International Reltef Branches, 3 . Toor Branches, 5 1.W.O, Branches, New York City, 23 1.W.O. Branches, out of New York, 1.W.O. Scheols, 25 Women's Councils, New York City, 1 Workers Clubs, 22 T.U.U.L. Untons, 20. a International Labur Defense Branches, 15 Crechoslovak Club, 1 . Armenian Clubs, 3 . Bulgatian Club, 1 Chinese Clubs 2, Esthonian Club, 1 Finish Clubs, 32 Greek Ciub, 1 Hungarian Club, 1 Japanese Club, 7 Jugosiay Clubs, Lettish Clubs, 2 Lithuanian Clu Polish Clubs, 4 Rumanian Clubs, Russian Clubs, 13. Slovak Clubs, 6 South Slay Club, 1 . Seandinayian Clubs, Swedish Club, 1 Spanish Club, 1 Ukrainian Clubs, Italian Clubs, 0 German Club, 1 SEE THAT YOUR CLUB WILL BE SBL1.83 Br cveck ase 1.13 54.16 9.90 44.00 - 156.05 + 89.00 217.92 10 4, out cf New York, 5 127.57 116.63 15.50 24.50 5.00 3.68 LIST-. ED IN THE MAY DAY DAILY WORKER