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Page Six —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—___——. Dail Gost! Prrty WEA. “America’s Only Working Class Daily Newspaper” FOUNDED 196 Published daily, emcept Sunday, by the Comprodalty Publishing Oo., Inc., 50 Bast 13th Street, New York, R. ¥. Telephone: ALgonquin 4-7965. Cable Address: “Daiwork,” New York, ¥. ¥ Washington Bureau: Room 934, Nations! 14th and ¥. 8t., Washington, D. C. Subscription Rates: Press Building By Mail: (exeept Meshattan and Bronx year, $6.00 @ months, $9.50; $ months, $2.00; 1 month, 75 cents. Bronx, Foreign and Canada: 1 year, 39.00 6.00; 8 months $3.00. monthly, Ly conte. Weekly, 18 cents; WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER Japan’s War Moves jaemaee war provocations by Japanese imperialism in the Far East, especially directed against the Soviet Union, figure prominently in the news for the Past few weeks. Yesterday the Daily Worker published the pointed questions of the Communist Deputy Doriot, directed to the French Ministry about the tremendous increase fm arms and other war supplies shipped by French @rins manufacturers to Japan. Today we print a cable Teceived from Moscow telling of the heated provoca- ‘tHons disseminated by the Japanese official press agency “Rengo” and the Japanese newspaper “Asahi” about ‘mm imagined alliance of the Soviet Unoin, the United @tetes and China for war in Manchuria as well as the senard about renting Shakalin Island to the United @tates for war bases, Japan is rapidly building strategic railway lines fm Manchuria, aimed specifically and directly against fhe Soviet Union. Japan’s army is constantly deploy- tmg towards Inner and Outer Mongolia, These latest Provocative inventions serve in advance to lay the basis for justifying « planned and premeditated Japanese armed attack on the Soviet Union. 5 al JAPANESE militarists from their very first blow in Manchuria have had their eyes on the Soviet Union, striving, building, provocating, preparing for war. The firm peace policy of the Soviet Union, plus the rapid building of socialism and the effective mili- tery defense of the Soviet Union, as well as its vic- tories on the diplomatic field, have warded off this War up to now. But now Japanese imperialism, feeling its deepexi- ing crisis, frustrated in its original plans for ryidly exploding a war on the Eastern and Westeru fronts against the Soviet Union, is now becoming more ac- tive than ever. The forcing of recognition by jthe United States of the Soviet Union particularly ‘fxs the war mongers im Japan. They dread this pe: move of the Soviet Union. Now with tne masses Jf China moving against Chiang Kai-shek (prostitute alternately of American and Japanese imperialisms), the Japanese militarists ate becoming uneasy over the resistance of the Chinese Workers and pessants in Manchuria. 6 @ eh oe , a ROP greater slices of territory and to insure their plunder of Manchuria, the Japanese militarists now Seem tbent in deadly earnest to provoke war against \ the ) Avorkers’ fatherland. J Here in the United States we must not forget that \? aerican imperialism is supplying Japan with huge ms’ supplies for this war against the common enemy of all imperialist powers. American imperialism is Tapidly speeding its war armaments, against Japan on the one hand, but just as readily against the Soviet Union once the holy war of capitalism begins against the victorious proletarian revolution. ‘We must increase our anti-war activities, par- ticularly now, exposing Japanese imperialist machina- tions and doing everything we can to stop shipment of. arms to Japan for its rapidly approaching war sgainst the Soviet Union. Defend the Soviet Union! Our Celebration b ae WORKERS in the Soviet Union turn out in large i Masses to celebrate their victories in the epochal \atruggle to establish Socialism. There is mass re- joicing whenever an important industrial plant is com- Pleted, which means more strength to the revolution- ary proletariat. ‘We workers in America also have victories to cele- brate, victories gained in face of an hostile govern- ment, in face of hostile armed forces, victories that re leading us towards the establishment of a Soviet America. ‘The tenth anniversary of the Daily Worker is such * victory. In this victory every revolutionary workers has a share. Daily Worker agents have been clubbed and arrested for spreading the “Daily” among the masses. Workers have given their last pennies to give it the financial sinews. Through the loyalty and devo- tion of the workers, the Daily Worker, central organ of the Communist Party, U.9.A. has grown from a weekly publication into a daily newspaper that is play- ing a major role in undermining the hunger-giving capitalist system. This great victory, the tenth triumphant year of our Daily Worker, will be celebrated by New York work- ets this Saturday evening at the Bronx Coliseum. H Attend this celebration. Rejoice over your victory 4] 4nd the victory of your fellow-revolutionary workers. Report on UMWA Confab on SATURDAY, the Daily Worker printed the Com- » Munist Program of Action in the Mine Field. _ One of the very important and immediate tasks brought out in this program, for the attention of all districts in mine territories, was the preparations for the United Mine Workers of America national conven- tion set for the latter part of January, "The Daily Worker would like to hear promptly from all districts what they are doing in preparing for this convention. $ i OLE RMU ean ts reporting on this phase of activity in the mine fields will stimulate our activity in prepa- ration for this convention, * -We urge all districts to cooperate with us in send- 4nig in reports of every phase of the work in connec- tion with the U.M.W.A. convention, )We want news from U.M.W.A. locals on the pre- sentation of the demands outlined in the Program of Action. We would like reports on meetings for the election of delegations. All such information should be sent in for publication without delay, y 1 9; AY, DECEMBER 27, 1 his Communist e followed the report: throw of nt of a work- ers’ rule. J mn the important For some reason you hav not take step of actually er munis isting ir? the ran! Party. You hope that the Commu , will become more powerful as a leader o es and as a powerful achieving the final victory. But it to us, my: know that if you who are cl you, do not join, if those nearest to the Party do not en- ter its ranks, we are hemmed in by a large body of sympathizers who are not the most vital feeders for the Party ranks. INDOUBTEDLY, many of you already play an ac- tive role in the mass organizations, the trade unions, fraternal organizations, or in shop activity. But this is not enough. We must build the central, directing force of the workers, its revolutionary political party to increase these mass activities. In the ranks of the Party you can function best even in the very fields in which you are now active. By becoming a mem- ber of the Party you receive the political training which can be gained only by Party membership that will give you a more conscious and more effective role in your mass organization and among your fellow workers, You can bring to the Party the thousand- and-one problems that face the workers around .you, help to solve these problems, help to make the Party more closely linked with the masses. You have read many appeals we have made for membership in the Communist Party. Perhaps you did not think this applied directly to you—that it applied to some specific groups of workers or to those not regularly connected with the activities of the Party either through the circulation and reading of the Daily Worker, or in the revolutionary trade unions. . But that is not so. We appeal direztiy’ to you, readers of the Daily Worker, to join t.é Communist Party. You should take this stey how. Do not wait until you are personally invited to join, or until some one hands you an applicesion card. Do not wait for the recruiting campaie;’to reach you. Join on your own initiative and become an active fighter in our ranks. satel KNOW ihat many times there are obstacles real and ipaagined that keep many readers of the Daily Worke from joining the Communist Party. If you tink there are such obstacles we would like to hear about them from you so we can take them up and discuss them with you. The Communist Party to function as the revo- lutionary leader of the workers in all their struggles must get your support not only at election time, or in strike struggles that effect you, or in its various campaigns—but from day to day, through your direct involvement in its political and organizational work. To be consistent reader of the Daily Worker, we know, is to be tied up with the struggles of the revo- lutionary Party, to be interested in the growth of the Communist Party. Some workers feel that, at this time, this is sufficient. They will wait until some future time to join. Is there a more opportune time than now to join the Party? We are on the eve of sharper and more decisive struggles against growing fascism, against the new attacks planned by the Roosevelt regime, against the growing war danger. By building the force which makes possible the Daily Worker, by training your- self in the ranks of the Communist Party, you help to build now the conscious revolutionary leader of the workingclass, the Communist Party. When thousands of workers who should be in the Party do this, the Party is deprived of some of the best and most active forces among the -workers who rightly belong in its ranks. Think this over. Then come into our ranks. Let us hear from you, either with an application to the Party, or on your reasons why you do not immediately join the Party. For Schools and for War “PREE education” — this has always been the boast of the capitalist rulers of bourgeois democracy. But what the capitalist rulers, and their Roosevelt Government at Washington really think about educa- tion is glaringly visible in the latest report of the National Education Association, which reveals the following: 1, Over 2,000 country schools have been forced to shut down for lack of funds from their local gov- ernments, Hundreds more will have to shut down by March 1. 2. The country’s school teachers have been robbed of over $40,000,000 in back pay now owing to them and probably gone for good. 3. More than 25,000 teachers have been dropped “for lack of funds” at the same time that 1,000,000 more children have been added to the school rolls, adding to the already scandalous overcrowding and heavy teacher load, " 4. In many cases the school terms are less than they were 75 and 100 years ago, What do the capitalist local, State and National Governments mean when they rob the children of the workers of the most elementary rights of educa- tion, “for lack of funds”! The local, State and National Governmerits have plenty of funds. But when it is a choice of paying the loans of the bankers, when it is a choice of pay- | ing the interest to the bond holders, and the coupon clippers on time, or else of closing the schools, the capitalist governments, from the smallest village to the Roosevelt government at Washington, always takes one choice—they pay the bankers and close the schools. The Roosevelt government is strangling the. most elementary progress in education, It is going back to the conditions of 75 to 100 years ago. It is growing more and more culturally barbarous, Closed schools, unpaid teachers—BUT ONE BIL- LION DOLLARS FOR WAR PREPARATIONS FROM THE PUBLIC WORKS FUND! Here is the reactionary heart of the Roosevelt gov- ernment laid bare, Unlimited ‘tunds for the banks, for war prepara- tions! Hunger, cultural degradation of the masses! This is the program of Roosevelt, Join the Communist Party 35 EAST 122TH STREET, NEW YORK, N. Y. Piease send me more information en the Commu- nist Party, NAME.. ADDRESS... 5,000 STUDENTS CRY “DOWN WITH GRAU, BATISTA? Demonstrators Join With Strikers Against Terror By WALTER RELIS press of the U. S. that t has its main udents of Cuba contradicted today ly 5,000 students of Ha- a stood in front of the Presiden- Palace shouting: “Down with Grau, Death to Batista, We Want the Head of Carbo.” The direct cause of the demon- stration was the arrest and deten- tion yester of 80 students, among them the leader of the Ala Izquierda, the left students’ organization, Car- vajal of the Normal School of Ha~ Yesterday these students at- Normal School and remoye the dii of the school | the |the G by force... The director is opposed to! any student participation in the man- | ment of the school and is, there- hatcd by all the students. How- ever, the assault was unsuccessful be~ cause @ company of soldiers is sta- tioned just across the street from the school—all the students were ar- rested immediately. In the morning of the same day more than 1,000 six. } dents of the Instituto Havana had demonstrated against the Grau ter- ror. Fear Pro-Grau Banner During the demonstration the em- vigvees of the Henry Clay American fobacco. trust hung a banner outside their offices just across the way from the palace reading: “Tobacco work- ers, support Grau—long live the 80 per cent law.” The students an- swerd: “Haul it down, haul it down.” It remained in position. Then as one the 5,000 surged toward the Henry Clay Building. In haste the banner was dropped from the fourth floor and when it reached the wait- ing students it was ripped to shreds, Back to the palace they went just as 80 striking Woolworth girls rounded the corner with placards: “Down with the imperialist Wool- worth, boycott the 10-cent stores, free the students and worker pris- oners.” They had come from the 10-cent store on San Rafael St., which has opend its doors with scab labor. The police had attacked their demonstra- tion in front of the store. The stu- dents shouted welcome to the 10-cent girls and joind them in shouting: “Down With the Yankee imperial- ists.” Students and workers mingled. A member of the Ala Izquierda stood up on the base of one of the palace pillars and spoke. He pointed out that when the Grau government sent soldiers to break the ranks of the striking Woolworth girls when they attempted to picket it was de- fending American imperialism in Cuba. He spoke also against the fas- cist labor decrees of the present gov- emment, which provide for govern- ment trade unions similar to those in Fascist Germany, Cheers greeted his speech and individual shouts against Yankee imperialism soon be- came the roar of the entire mass. “Porristas, Assassins!” On the balcony of the palace, watching the demonstration were civil and military officials of the government. The students hurled at them: “Porristas,” “assassins.” A student painted on one of the pillars in large red letters: “We demand lib- erty for all students, workers and sol- dier prisoners—A.1E.” (Ala Izquierda Estudiantil). The same student ran around to the front of the palace and painted on the wall: “Down with the government which assassinates work- ers and students.” Just as he finished, soldiers from the palace caught hold of him and attempted to drag him into the pal- ace, His companions ran and noti- fied the other students. A crowd rushed around the palace and freed their comrade as he was being pulled into the palace. But they went to the rearof the palace with their re- leased companion, At this point President Grau came to»the front of the valcony with his hypocritical grin. He began his demagogie handshake in the air, but was stopped cold by angered shouts. He tried to speak, but the jeering would not permit this. Then in des- peration he waved a sheet which os- tensibly was an order for the release of the student prisoners. “Now, now!” shouted the students, “We don’t be- lieve your promises!” Grau was com- pelled to retreat into his machine gun-guarded palace, With Grau’'s disappearance an armored car ar- rived. It drove directly towards the student mass attempting to disrupt the demonstration, However, ranks were kept solid and the car was forced to leave amid shouts of “kill- ers, assassins,” Free Two Students After the armored car left several students. brought notice that two students of the Instituto had been arrested. and taken to the Central Police Station, only a short distance from the palace. The student and worker demonstrators ran ately to the police station, rushing past the two unresisting soldier guards who stood at the corner near the station. They shouted for the release of the two students. As they reached the front of the station, the huge metal doors were bolted. One of the arrested students opened a window and raised a clenched fist ot greeting. The demonstrators cheered and shouted: “Let’s breakin and free them.” They pressed against the tremendous doors. However, in order to avoid further trouble, the door was opened by the police. Some students grabbed their two companions, hoisted them to their shoulders» and marched out of the police station. After a few moments of enthusiastic cheering, the demon- stration moved on the office of the “brain trust” of the Grau regime, the offices of Guiteras and Lunatdes in the Department of the Interior and War. Enroute they shouted for the head of Oarbo and the death of Ba- tista, and on nearing the building of the Department of the Interior they yelled: “Down with Guiteras.” When they reached the building, officials shouted that all the pris- oners would soon be free. They ap- Pealed to the students to be patient, 33 COVERING UP THE EVIDENCE —By Burck NEWS «TEM.—Judge Buenger, presiding at the Reichstag trial—in his summing up of the case— declared that the evidence showed that the Nazis were absolutely guiltless of setting fire to the Reich- stag, as charged by the International Commission of Jurists in London, and world opinion. but only roars of “ivow, Now,” came in return. Traffic was completely stopped. Students mounted the win- . dow sills and spoke. Wound Striker A Woolworth striker told how & fellow striker had been: severely wounded in the chest by the police. She pointed out that Grau was the enemy of the masses of Cuba. One girl member of Ala stood on top of a new Packard parked in front of the office of the Department of the Interior and stated that workers and students hada common enemy, Yankee imperialism and the Cuban bourgeoisie. All this time students were chalking walls and autos with slogans. The demonstrators had hardly been in front of the Guiteras office for a half hour when soldiers began to fire on the students. Some students ran into nearby cafes and made barricades of the tables. Some ducked under a train car and others sought shelter in the garage of the Department of the Interior. Most, however, were exposed to the shooting, which continued intensely for about seven minutes. There were no casualties because the firing was intended only to disrupt the demon- stration. Immediately as the firing ceased the demonstrators reformed, with the participants shouting for a stop to the Grau terror. The soldiers and sailors who had been shooting left the scene. Two sailors, however, had been standing by, waving to the students, with guns resting on the ground. Several stu- dents rushed to the sailors and raised them on their shoulders, while the rest shouted: “Long live the soldiers and sailors who do not serve the ex- ploiters,” “Long live the Agrarian Anti-Imperialist Revolution.” The two sailors took bullets from their belts and distributed them among the students. Foreign News Briefs a Rush Troops to Leticia PARA, Brazil, Dec. 26—The gov- ernments of Colombia and Peru are again rushing troops into the dis- puted Leticia region in preparation to re-open the armed conflict follow- ing the collapse of the “peace” nego- tiations. Ecuador is also mobilizing troops on the border. Departure of three Peruvian de- stroyers for Iquitos was followed to- day with the arrival of a Colombian transport carrying 400 soldiers. Ecuador Students Win Strike GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador, Dec. 26,— Striking students of Rocafuerte Col- lege who barricaded themselves in preparation to defy threatened police attacks, today won their strike when several professors to whom they ob- jected, handed in their resignations. The students held possession of the college and grounds for over a month. Japan Seeks Trade In Turkey ISTAMBUL, Dec. 26.—Japan has concluded an agreement with Turkey, aiming to increase the sale of Japan- ese goods in that country, at the ex- pense of their British rivals. Resign Political Posts VIENNA, Dec. 26.—Catholic priests, elected on the Christian Social (Cath- olic Centre) Party, have resigned ‘their seats in the National Parlia- ment, the provisional diets and the various municipal and community councils. Soviet Balloon To Soar Again MOSCOW, Dec. 26.—Soviet avia- tion officials plan to send the Soviet stratosphere balloon “U, 8. 8. R.” up in January to beat its own world rec- ord of 63,304 feet, and to add to the mass of valuable scientific data gained by the previous flight. Syrian Masses Hit French Slave Pact DAMASCUS, Syria, Dec. 26.—One woman was killed and scores injured when French police attacked an anti- imperialist demonstration by spraying the crowd with hot water from a fire hose. The demonstration protested the terms of a treaty proposed by the French rulers of “Independent Syria,” calling for a 25-year enslavement of the Syrian people in exchange for a doubtful independence at the end of that period. Workers throughout Syria have answered the French de~ mands with protest strikes and many other militant actions. Under pressure of the mass anti- imperialist sentiments, the Nationalist Deputies in the Syrian Chamber op- posed the treaty and were promptly sent home “to think it over” by the French High Commissioner Damien de Martel. U.S. Congress Is Expected to Oppose ‘Intervention’ Pact Montevideo Decisions Seen as Empty Gestures | MONTEVIDEO, Dec, 26.—Skep. ticism that the U. S. Congress will abide by. the non-intervention reso- lution, signed with reservations by U.S. Secretary of State Hull, or the tariff measures adopted by the Pan- American Conference is widespread among the delegates to the parley. For that matter, none of the dele+ gates reriously believe that their re- spective governments will ratify those decisions of the conference considered inimical to the interests of the ruling class of the respective coun- tries. The U. 8. Congress is expected to oppose the resoiution condemning in- tervention by one State in the affairs of another—a resolution aimed di- rectly at the United States and pre- sented by the Haitian and Cuban delegations under pressure of the strong anti-imperialist sentiments of the masses in those. countries. Nor is the U. S. Congress expected to carry out the tariff promises of Mr. Hull. In this connection, the U. 8. bluff was called today by a delega- tion of .Uruguayan cattlemen which visited him. with a demand that the U. S. government reduce its high tar- iffs and modify its restrictions against Uruguayan cattle. Hull intends to stop off at Sen- tiago, Chile, and other South Amer- ican capitals on his way home in or- der to continue through personal talks with the heads of South Ameri- can governments his drive against British trade in South America, U. 8. Consulates to Open Soon in U.S.S.R. WASHINGTON, Dec. 26. — U. 8. consulates to expedite trade with the Soylet Union will be opened shortly in Moscow, Leningrad, Vladivostok, William ©. Bullitt, U. S. Ambas- sador to the Soviet Union, is on his way home to report on his survey for a U. 8. Embassy in Moscow. U. S. Gov't Advised Of Rapid Approach Of War in Europe Confidential. Report Stresses New War Alignments WASHINGTON, Dec. 26.—An eariy outbreak of war in Europe is pre- dicted by. Allen W. Dulles, legal ad- viser to the American delegation at the Geneva “Disarmament” Confer- ence, in @ confidential report to the U. S. government. S The report. stresses the new war alignments in the opposing imperial- ist camps, headed by France on one hand, and Italy and Germany on the other; the secret conferences between European bourgeois statesmen, the growing spy mania, always in evi- dence in times of great tension, and reflected in the recent arrests of al- leged spies in Paris, Berlin, London The Soviet Factory Is A Cultural, Living Center Ball Bearing Plant Has 1-4 Mile Rest, Eating Room Editor's Note—This is the sec- ond of a series of articles by Vern Smith, Daily Worker Moscow cor- respondent, on the “Soviet Factory —Center of Socialist Life.” The first article appeared in Monday's Daily Worker, wie By VERN SMITH Daily Worker Moscow Correspondent IL Before the First State Ball Bearing Plant was built, 98 per cent of the bearings used, though not nearly as many were needed then as now, had to be imported. There was in all the Soviet Union only one little ball bear- ing plant, a ‘Swedish concession known as “SKF.” (That firm has also a plant in America.) The SKF in Moscow made bearings by what was almost a handicraft process, Naturally, from the Swedish con- cession and from more particularly the Swedish and other foreign mak- ers of such bearings, there was bit- ter opposition to the Soviet venture into this field. Soviet engineers made the plans for Sharikopodshipnik,' but since the whole idea and all machin- ery was new, foreign consulation was needed. The Swedish firms positively refused all help. Not only that, but an international intrigue began, which involved American engineering companies also, to prevent any such technical assistance from anywhere. This particular blockade was finally broken through the Italian. firm of RIFF, which is an’ offshoot of the famous motor and’ automobile firm of FIAT. Afterwards other engineer- ing services were secured in other countries. Only the most modern and high grade machinery was bought, mostly German and American, and American methods of straight-line production were used. A railroad track runs along one side of the huge mill bringing raw material which goes straight through the mill, being worked in one process after another; finally all parts are assembled at the other side of the mill, and another railroad track is waiting there to carry away the finished product. Mill Cost 100,000,000 Rubles That mill between the two tracks cost 100,000,000 rubles to build and fill with machinery, but when fully operating on two shifts it can pro- duce bearings worth, 120,000,000 rubles @ year, which is 20 million rubles more a year than the original cost of building the plant. The factory building is an enormous glass windows. It is low, two stories anda: basement, without need for ele- vators since all the machinery is on the one main ground floor. The base~ ment below contains piping and some store rooms and has corridors wide enough for trucks to drive through. The main work room is one series after another of huge rooms with electrically driven machinery in or- derly rows, nearly 5,000 pieces of ma- chinery, so arranged that a bar of steel hits the hot or cold stamping department at one end, is cui up and the pieces roughly shaped into rings, balls, rollers, or some other parts of a ball bearing, then these pieces never retrace their steps, but go from lathe to grinder to polishing and measur- ing and tempering, and finally, each part along its own route through the plant, meet in the assembly room and become one of the fifty different types of ball bearings, What No Capitalist’s Factory Has Above this main workshop is a whole ficor devoted to meeting i 7 on production, International and workers’ struggle abroad their place here. J. Louis PERE ay i = Fi F 5 & & growing in big tubs, big palm trees, ten feet high. Some of the tables have white table clothes at meal times, In the Red Corners are libraries, In the department trade union commit- tee and department Communist Party offices are other libraries, candelabra, wall papers. Plenty of light, plenty of ventilation throughout the mill, and the air is heated in winter time right in the ventilators. Factory A Spacious City ‘The mill and its auxiliary depart- ments cover 120,000 square meters of ground ‘space, or a@ little more than that many square yards. That does not include the dwelling houses, kit- chens, main dining roms, schools, etc., which are attached to the mill and which must be left for other articles, like many other things about this plant, It does, however, include a whole section of offices for adminis- tration, Party, union, etc., in front of the building. A noble staircase wider than two city streets runs from the entrance past these offices and to the upper fioor of the mill, This staircase has also its fringe of potted plants, its slogans on the walls, and busts of Kaganovich, of Ordjonikidze, head of heavy industry, of Stalin and of Lenin, Now, remember that all. this plant came from nothing. In 1930 there was only a swamp here, hiding memories of the wars of Ivan the Terrible, hiding rotting bones of political exiles. Merely building the “Ten Years of Worker Correspondence 39 In Anniversary Edition of “Daily” ‘An article on “Ten Years of Workers’ Correspondence” will be one of the numerous features in the special Tenth Anniversary Edition of the Daily Worker, Jan. 6, The article, written by Gertrude Baessler and Charles Blank, is a popilarly-written analysis of the development of Workers’ Correspondence in the Daily Worker during the ten years of its existence, and shows how letters from workers have proved a posing the “recovery” ballyhoo of the capitalist war preparations, vital factor in strike struggles, in ex- press and in revealing The 24-page Anniversary Edition, 16 pages of which will be in maga- zine-supplement form, will also contain articles on the Socialist and trade union press, the Communist language press, Communist newspapers out~ side of the United States—and the war and fascism. role of the Daily Worker in fighting Reproductions of famous front-pages of the Daily Worker, including the one which reported the death of Lenin, will also appear in the Anni- versary Edition. Cartoons by Robert Minor, Fred Bilis and Jacob Burek will be an effective featuxr ' ° ec Prominent place, ae Libraries, Red Corners, joor many lavatories ue vaenee say Be: Palm Trees Cover . hi ach his own for clothes. In the butfets are palm trees Upper Floor factory was an enormous undertak- : ing oneesed tone WR ee mostly labor, but: it had its too. Once when there was a the | bodies,