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ruary 6,.1924 WPONOR OF LENIN 000 Workers in Big Demonstration By STANLEY BOONE (Special to The Daily Worker) DETROIT.—Detroit workers, with jetroit to pay a special tribute to nin, 6,000 men, women and children assembling in Arena Gardens behind ‘the combined Russian and Ukranian horuses in a memorial service with- ut precedent here. Hundreds were jturned away. C. E. Ruthenberg, secretary of the ‘Workers Party of America, and Den- nis. E, Batt, editor of the Detroit Labor News, organ of the Detroit Federation of Labor, were the speak- ers, if: one side of the platform ligh@olayed on a portrait of the leadf/;, draped in red and black, Out- he: 4 from the By bse pei aimee the dee: tangle of unquiet- faces, i ast Where the gallery cut upward to the roof, Ruthenberg followed Batt on the program and was greeted with three successive choruses of applause that he had difficulty in quieting. Out- bursts of emotion came again and — when the spéakers were telling of Lenin and his place in history. Former Revolts Were Blind. Ruthenberg. traced the efforts of the world’s exploited millions, since the ancient Greek slave state, to cast off oppression and achieve freedom, first pointing cut that a knowledge of this background was essential to an understanding of Lenin's life. Previous revolts had been emotional and blind, he said. Slave and serf revolted when their suffering grew unbearable. It was Lenin’s work to adjust revolutionary effort not only to desire and principle but scientific plan. The point was stressed by Batt that, whereas Lenin saw effects take place in his own life-time at least equal to those seen by Napoleon, ashington, Caesar and Alexander, the effects with which he had to do were not dependent on the presence of his own personality. Lenin, the Marxian, could not give his life to a j y’an which he did not believe would { ive him. | Need of Communist Vanguard, ‘ his immediate revolutiona- \| ry tactic was hinted in the slogan that swept Russia, “All Power to the Soviets”, Lenin saw that there must also, be developed a revolutionary vanguard in a Communist Party, a body of the most enlightened men and women of the movement, to ad- vise and to guide and to lead and to \\garry their discipline to the point of iy racing” ordered, Ruthenberg said. And now we could turn to any country of Ey or Asia and find there, weakens in England or Bulgaria, the party of Lenin leading the struggle of the workers toward the ideal of freedom: It was so in Japan and China, “And we must not forget that here in America we have a Communist Party, the Workers Party, the party of Lenin...” Join Workers Party! Those present who felt deeply the ‘tgnificance of the gathering, the pur- ‘fose and the admiration and the hope which had brought them together, could do no better in passing out the door to their homes than apply fer membership in the Workers Party, by filling out an application that they | might “obtain there, Ruthenberg added. He defined also the purpose { of the Communist International and its relationship, in Lenin’s mind, with ] the Russian Revolution and the revo- lution of the workers eve! against capitalist exploitation perial states, As Comrade Batt explained, Ru- thenberg’ concluded, Lenin began early in his life to plan and work for the revojution, To this ideal and this gen he gave his great intelligence, Is at courage. He was always a soldier on its fighting front, demand- ing, planning and looking toward the dictatorship of the proletariat. Let the thousands who were present fol- low in his footsteps. Finnish band played intermit- P tly, sometimes an accompaniment tothe voices te magnificent choirs. Full throated human voices and sounded brass opened and closed the services with The International and the Funeral March of the Rus- sian ‘Revolution. “Long Live The Revolution”. A resolution, read sf Edgar Owens, district’ organizer the Workers , chairman of the meeting, writ- the Detroit Lenin Memorial ef hand clapping, conv to the Central Executive Committees of the Communist International and the Communist Party of Russia the fol- lowing condolence “in the loss of our beloved leader”: “We, the workers of Detroit, do on this solemn occasion offer our heartfelt tribute to the memory of the great leader of the internation- al pha Dos, a Viadimir Iyitch Ulianov,—Lenin, In accord with, the conscious workers of the world , We express our sorrow for the loss of our beloved and incomparable »\, leader ard pledge ourselves to ' struggle pinaconin 8 for the vic- tory of the ers’ revolution, Lenin is dead, But his as sipreates in Commun- ist Interna’ 1, live and are lead- Hes the toiling masses of the wor'd freedom the yoke of bao talist slavery. to the ‘\ memory cf Lenin! Long live the -} wor'ers’ revolution!” y im- Se ge THE DAILY WORKER Tt is in full as follows: Farmers INTERNATIONAL FARMERS’ COUNCIL General Secretariat. Moscow, Staraya Ploschad, Boyarsky 8rd Floor, Room 69 No. 43 To The Daily Worker: Comrades and Brothers: World Farmers’ Council Sends % Greeting to the Daily Worker General Secretary Dombal, on behalf of the International Farmers’ Coun- cil, has sent the greeting of the world’s farmers to THE DAILY WORKER. The International Farmers’ Council. is the and Workers ef All Countries, Unite! Dvor December 10, 1923 dead | toiling classes of town and country throw off the first in the history of international farmers’ organization. The aim of this “Farmers’ International” is to fight for the emancipation of the millions of people working on the land from the yoke of capitalism. The peasantry, altho they represent a great force, comprising hundreds of millions in all parts of the world, are unable to bring about their own emancipation, be- cause they are not in a position to capture the industrial centers and manage industry, on which primarily depends the existence and development. of modern society. Only in union with the working class, which alone is capable of taking possession of the cities, centres of culture and the adminis- tration of industry, can the peasantry secure the satisfaction of all their just demands and requirements. Therefore, the representatives of the farm- ing classes of forty nationalities of various countries, assembled in October 1923 at the first International Farmers’ Conference in Moscow, adopted the following chief slogan of our organization: “Peasants and Workers of all countries, unite!”, and 8 ecg a resolution to fight the capitalists and land- owners in fraternal union with the working class for the establishment all over the world of Workers’ and Peasants’ Governments and an international union of workers’ and peasants’ republics. Only in common) efforts can the yoke of the capitalist parasites. Only in collaboration can the workers and farmers guarantee to mankind peaceful laber and prosperity. ‘We greet. your labor organ in the name of millions of organized farm- CANADIANS CRY TO GOVERNMENT IN BANK CRISIS Ask New Laws to Pro- tect Deposits By JOHN ROBUR (Staff Correspondent of The Federated Press) OTTAWA.—The: pressure on the Canadian government to take some steps to give small depositors secur- ity in the banks is increasing. A deputation representing the deposi- tors of the Home Bank, which failed, waited on the cabinet and@not re- eeiving an assurance of action to satisfy them, left with a promise to renew the campaign in parliament. The deputation asked the govern- ment to pay the losses itself, or loan the banks as a whole $17,000,000— half to be used to pay the depositors and the other half to be invested to earn a fund to repay the government loan. A $12,000,000 Failure. The Home Bank’s $12,000,000 failure, involving heavy losses of “imprigonment or’ death if 80} j, here | erg ‘qm various parts of the world, and hope it wilt help bri union between the workers and the farming classes in the interétst of com- mon victory. With fraternal greetings, about a savings to people of small means, has Owens Writes on Question of Social Equality and Negro To The DAILY WORKER: The capitalist newspapers of the United States constantiy state that Negroes must not be accorded social equal- ity. Whenever Negroes make a stand for civil rights and equal accommo- dations in places of amusement, hotels, restaurants and on public conveyances the capitalist papers, such as the Chicago Tribune, assert that Negroes are fighting for social equality. The bugaboo of social equality is always mentioned by the southern capitalists as the one condition’ that must not exist between Negroes and whites. (They mean Negro and white workers, however.) The late President Harding said in his Birmingham speech on the Negro problem, that there must not be and cannot be any social. equality between Negroes and whites. Social equality does not exist among all white people nor all Negroes. Neither does it: exist be- tween Negroes and whites, Every person, regardless of rave or color, Tributes to the Daily Worker The DAILY WORKER has re- ceived a letter as fojlows: Endicott, N. Y.,,Jan. 31, 1924. To The DAILY WORKER: Again) I notify you to discontinue DAILY WORKER paper to my ad- dress, I feel itis a disgrace to any home to have it found there. Such hideous pictures and reading matter in nothing” but fault finding and ad- The} Page Five Jews Are Urged to Colonize in Soviet Russia (By The Federated Press) | NEW YORK.—Colonization of |Jews in Soviet Russia is to be en- couraged by. an organization of Jew- }ish labor and relief organizations in America. At the head of this move- ment are the “Ort’—a group de- voted to furthering manual and agri- cultural labor among Jews in Russia —and the All-Russian Jewish Public committee. is free to choose his own friends. The son of J. P. Morgan will not marry the daughter of his father’s butler, despite the fact that all are white; neither will Mr. Rockefeller's vocating something to create dissat- isfaction among the workers. You might give that stuff to for- An attempt will be made to raise a Russian Jewish loan to finance the A t colonization of Jews on free land of- eigners and other ignorant class of fered by the Soviet government for people of which you should be this purpose. It is proposed that the ashamed but the world in general joan be guaranteed by products of laugh you to scorn. And we must all prt up with! the many disagreeable things you! bring to pass thru the labor union. | Yours truly, R. C. MAXWELL, Oe te: 6 (EDITOR’S NOTE: We quite agree with the writer that to send N. Y. Lawmaker such an individual a publication that | @ appeals to reason comes under the | heading of “cruel and unusual pun-| NEW YORK.—Assemblyman Stan- ishment.” We have heard from this|ley of Geneseo, N. Y., has introduced Person before, He lives in the com-|a bill into the state legislature to nul- pany-owned shoe ‘town of Endicott,|lify the laws protecting women from N. Y., where everything from the|night work in industry. the agricultural communities. Work Daily for “The Daily!” | Night Work for Women, Goal of GENERAL SECRETARIAT. DOMBAL, Polish Communist Party Greets “The Daily” To THE DAILY WORKER: Comrades: The Central Party of Poland has instructed me to congratulate you heartily on the acquisition of a new and powerful weapon in the struz- gle for Communism and revolution in America—the establish- ment of the first communist daily in the Anglo-Saxon world. For the last few years we gle with the greatest attentio: spite of the enormous differ- ence between Poland and America, a number of ques- tions which occupy you are also playing an important role in our revolutionary work. ‘We are; since the establish- ment of the United Polish Re- public in November 1918, an ILLEGAL party. But altho our enemies have CONDEMNED “ to egatty. we are taking advantage of ev i act PUBLICLY and to PROPAGATE AMONG THE MASSES THE IDEAS ers congregate—in trade unions, in co-operatives and in educational or- ganizations, After a period of forced illegality, you have.sueceeded in establishing a legal Communist Party in the form of the “WORK- ERS PARTY.” Our enemies have j hitherto prevented us to follow your example—we must therefore continue the struggle FOR THE WORKERS’ RIGHT TO HAVE A LEGAL COMMUNIST PARTY.~ In this struggle we take advantage of the experience gained in the pro- longed struggle against czarism. Two figures will perhaps give you a clear idea of our present position: 2,000 Communists are incarcerated in Polish Republican prisons. At the recent parliamentary election j 126 thousand votes were given for the Communist candidates in the few {constituencies where the Communist i lists were not annulled. Two Com- jmuplete were elected to the Seim. | Another question, in which we are as much interested as vou, is—THE CONQUEST OF THE TRADE MINIONS which are under the leader- iship of reformists and of traitors to ‘the working class. On this field too, we have profited by the experiences you have aconired under the leader- ship of comrade FOSTER. In spite of a considerable industrial development, Poland is an agrarian country, most of its 30 million in- habitants. being peasants. We have brought forward the slogans of SOLIDARITY BETWEEN THE URBAN PROLETARIAT AND THE POOR PEASANTRY and of the WORKERS’ AND _ PEASANTS’ GOVERNMENT. Therefore, we fol- low with the test interest your struggle for the establishment and develonment of a mass party destined to unify MILLIONS OF WORKERS AND FARMERS. Poland is an cere country which contains, be: the purely Po- lish population, a number of national minorities annexed by force— Ukrainians, White Russians, Lithuan- ians, Jews and Germans who are scattered thruout Poland and partly. inhabit territories acc: to a demand for full ALITY on all the fields of social life, but also a demand for their full RIGHT TO SELF-DE- TERMINATION including ration from the Polish State, espec for Ukrainians, Russian: peas iesye But hich belonging to has also adopted the slogan WORKERS’ oFSOLIDARITY RE- LESS OF NATIONALITY. bo advocates the establish- ment an N PHALANX bo: lish strong], a Fp gS gy emigrated to America to adopt this Me nae also another and a con siderable ce in common with vou: we are as yet without a DAILY and have a strong desire to have such an organ. But our dif- ities are not same as yours. Our movement, in spite of all perse- forward, not NATIONAL E = ordinary international solidarity, because you are a section of our common international front, but also to the fact that, in pe aN li Sec ce heel OF COMMUNISM wherever work-| Committee of the Communist have been following your strug- n. This was due, not only to cutions, is strong enough to maintain not only one but several dailies in jthe main proletarian centres. But - our enemy, the Polish government of | capitalists and junkers, has pro-, hibited all Communist publications. ! The Government knows full well that jif we had a legal press, this would spell ruin to the entire social-demo- cratic préss and to the treacherous social democracy altogether, on which the bourgeoisie places all its hopes in the struggle with the work. | jing class. | Thus, comrades, you ‘can see that altho physically the whole of capi- |talist Central and Western Europe, Separates us, we are after all mem- bers of one family. We assure you that every success of yours gives joy | to us in this country. | THEREFORE, 1 EXPRESS ONCGE~ MORE OUR HEARTY CONGRATU- ; LATIONS ON THE APPEARANCE; OF THE FIRST NUMBER OF YOUR “WORKERS’ DAILY!” H. WALECKI, On Behalf of the Central Com- mittee of the Polish Communist Party. Labor Federation Directory Work of Hammersmark The Labor Union Directory and Buyers’ Guide, edited by Sam Ham- mersmark for the Chicago Federa- tion of Labor, is now available, and contains a mass of information for those who want to patronize mer- chants’ who sell union label goods. Hammersmark, who is now the ad- vértising manager of the DAILY WORKER, has made many additions to the directory issued last year. The unions are listed in alphabet- ieal order, under the title of the national and international unions, except in cases of iabor and federal unions not connected with interna- tional unions, which are listed alpha- betically under locals affiliated — di- rectly with the American Federa- tion of Labor, The local unions of international junions are arranged in numerical order, Unions not atfiliated with the American Federation of Labor are listed in the same order, but in a separate section, ‘he directory is complete and ex- act and is the only official directory of the Chicago iabor movement. — The directory is of 136 pages and contains information every active trade unionist needs and can secure from no other source, Farmers Pledge Themselves to Work of Lenin MT. VERNON, Wash. — The un- timely death of champion must spur us on in his work, says the git County unit of the Western Progressive Farmers in the following resolution: WHEREAS, The best way to honor those who have given ir lives for the emancipation of la- bor is to freedom with increased vigor, therefore. be it ’ RESOLVED, That we. members of Skagit County Unit, West- }orthlyg ion hereby “ , in session our sorrow at the untimely death of labor’s greatest cham: we pledge ourselves anew to the labor’s greatest continue the struggle for it task before the producers of | pect to print Sipplas announcements| Mrs. de Bouchel is suing on the erica, the abolition of all forms | of local unions. will be $1 an| grounds Candler promised to marry of exploitation, and the estab- |ineh, 60c for half an inch card. Take|her and then withdrew after the lishment of.a workers’ and farm- | this matter up in your next meeting. | wedding invitations had been mailed ers’ republic. _ Your local should have a ‘weekly dis- (Signed), play card as well as the running an-| Watch the “Daily Worker” for the |) JOHN. H. WEPPLER, nouncement under date of meeting. |first instalment of “A Week”, the MRS. FRED D. WOOD Jota the “I want to munke THE!{y'the brillant young Russian writer, , y young. , |DAILY WORKER grow” club, lury Libedinsky. It start soon, K i ¢ hue ’ brought to a head an agitation for banking reform which has been in progress for some years in Canada. In the last couple of years other banks hay had to accept heavy losses to their shareholders and one large bank had to merge with an- other to prevent catastrophe. There are two main complaints against the Canadian banking svs- tem; that it does not provide safety for savings, and that it has monopoly tendencies. In 1917 there were 21 chartered banks in Canada, each hav- ing branches thruout the dominion. Today, allowing for mergers author- ized but not completed, there are only 14. Proposals for reform include guar- antee of deposits and establishment of an independent board to control banks’ loan policy. e &.# @ Higher Tariff Asked. OTTAWA. —The manufacturers of Canada are in no way disposed to | yield their vested rights-to protection by tariff duties. Last session the Canadian parlia- ment reduced the duties slightly, on goods coming direct to Canada from Great Britain, and already the Can- adian shoe manufacturers are crying out against the invasion of their mar- ket by English shoes. The bogey of the Canadian shoe men used to be American footwear, but now the English maker is the enemy. A speaker at a shoe trade convention |in Montreal the other day demanded that the government put up the duty on shoes. Your Union Meeting Every local listed in the official di- rectory of the CHICAGO FEDERA- T,ON OF LABOR will be published under this head on day of meeting free of charge for the first month, afterwards our rate will be as fol- lows: Monthly meeting—$3 a year one line once a month, each additional line, 15c an issue. Semi-monthly meetings — $5 a year one line published two times a month, each additional line 13c an ‘eect tings—$7.50 a year ee meetings—$7. one tine & week, each additional line 10¢ an issue. FIRST WEDNESDAY, Feb. 6th ‘Name of Local and Place of Meeting. Clothing Workers, 1564 'N, Rober i. St. RS SL. W. Ape Perish, $09 W: Washington St. Belt Line Federation, 624 and Halsted. Brick and Clay, Vilinge Hall, Lansing. Carpenters, 12 Garfield Bivd. Carpenters, Western and Lexington. Carpenters, Ashland 5443 8. Carpenters, be ge Hall, Lake Forest Carpenters, 151 Ww. ‘ashington St. Carpenters, 505 8. Si No. 38 Ws State St. Carbonters, tute 8. Melated Si. 4 113 8, Ashland Bivd. food), 1619 N.- California. (R, R.), 127 N. Francisco ( Enatneores Se. Chi 11408 ‘Michigan Av stu0s Mich v. cago Ave., 9130 = * ve, 91 . mm Firemen and i ZE3E = ofS82s88SE.322 cx . Harrison St. nd Blvd. 5016 N. Chicago and Weat- ly Worker for a month free member of any local union change of date or place meeting of locals listed here. Please watch for your local and if ive Farmers of Wash- |not listed let us know, giving time | world,” and place of meeting so we can kee: this daily announcement poriglete nm, and jand to date. ‘On Tuesday of every week we ex- Ave, 7 p.m. | 4th and University | the stated all meetings) Wa in Reno, daughter marry her father’s chauf- feur. The white teamsters or street car employes of Chicago do not and had better not attend the socia’ functions of the Chicago capitalists at the LaSalle and ‘Blackstone hotels, A white worker cannot even enter by the front door at the Hotel LaSalle. Negro stock yard workers do not fraternize or associate with the Negro bankers, realtors or profes- sional men, A Negro worker would be unani- mously black-balled if he would have the audacity to try to join the Appotomax Club composed of Negro busihess men, real estate sharks and would-be capitalists. People in a restaurant, on a street car or attending a theater do not engage in conversations with each othersif they are not acquainted, re- gardlesg of race or color. Men are often arrested for speak- | ing to women whom they have never | been introduced to. No one except | a foot will go to another person’s | private party or residence unless he jor she has received an invitation. Social equality is used like the mythical “public,” by the capitalists and their lackeys to confuse and obscure the real issue, Negroes, however, must demand | every right enjoyed by every other | citizen, including their constitutional right and also their natural right in public life to go, eat, sleep wher- ever they please and above all, to to love or marry whomsoever they please, regardless of race or color. In_ private life of course, Negroes should go, eat, and sleep wherever they are invited. Tf it is all right for a southern white man to associate with Negro ‘women and young ladies, in my opin- ion it is doubly O. K. for Negro men to associate with white women and young ladies. What is good for the goose is still better for the gander.—GORDON OWENS, Chi- cago, New York Pledged to Raise $100,000 for German Relief (Special to The Daily Worker) NEW YORK.—The drive for Ger- man relief. under the direction’ of the New York branch of:the Friends of Soviet Russia’ and Workers Germany 28 meeting with at success in the various !cal tions At a recent conference of the F. S. R. and W. G. delegates from more than two hundred unions, fraternal groups and political organizatons pledged to raise $100,000. Already the New York branch is well in its way to raise that sum. One of the most successful means for raising funds for the German workers it has been found since the , paign for $100,000 was started is f pe collection. The workers in the shops and factories are always will- ing to help their comrades in other countries. It is epanced to have a house to louse tion carried on very soon by which means the F. S, R. and W. G. hope to raise considerable money and acquaint the workers with the plight of their fellows in Germany. This King Offered to Sleep on Cot on Her Front Porch ATLANTA, Ga., Feb. 5.—Asa G. Candler, millionaire Coca Cola king, have been megs to — Reng sleep’ porch of Mrs, zi de Bouchel, according to a le read in court here during Mrs. Bouchel’s breach of promise suit. ‘The letter, Mrs. de Bouchef said,|} Candler while she lev., obtaining a di- voree, in June, 1922. He was ni to visit her, she said, and a if the hotels were crowded was written he would be satisfied to sleep on|\, her porch, “I love you better than all the Candler declared in an- other letter read in behalf of Mrs. de Bouchel. Submission of evidence was com-|/ pleted Monday. : grocery stare to the church is owned by the great shoe producing firm of Endicott-Johhson Some radical who knows what kind of a mental bankrupt R. C. Maxwell is, and who is not bur- dened. with a tender conscience that. rebels at causing pain to low forms of animal life, evidently has placed the gentleman on the mailing list of The DAILY WORKER. Owned body and soul by the cor- poration that owns the town in which he lives, Mr, Maxwell in his ignorance. resents the efforts of The DAILY WORKER to make this world a better place to live even if in. doing! so creatures of his type will be automatically benefited. The DAILY WORKER is under no ne- cessity to creating dissatisfaction among the workers. The dissatisfaction is created by the capitalist system and we simply direet it’ along lines that will pro- duce” the Best results and bring about a condition where dissatisfac- tion will be eliminated with the elimination of. the capitalist system which, along with other evils, pro- duces such types as Mr. Maxwell.) No Embalming Fluid for Daily Worker. Comrade Michael T. Berry, of Lynn,’ Mass., an ‘active participant in the revolutionary working class movement in America for over thirty years,) and still active in struggies, likes ‘The DAILY WORKER, «He writes: “Congratulations on The DAILY WORKER. It is a fine con- tribution to the cause of the pro- letariat. Long may it live and prosper is my wishes. It has the Spirit; it talks in a way that leads one to believe that it is in no way connected with the coffin trust. It has a spirit and a vim and may it never tire until its mission is real- ized.” aily Worker” for the of “A Week,” the great epic of the Russian revolution, by the brilliant young i lury Libedinsky. It will For Recognition of Soviet Russia! soon, | Stanley would like to see, women }laborers work after 10 p. m He |wishes to see New York revert to the days when nighthood was in flower. Another Stanley once wrote a dis- tinguished book called “In Darkest Africa.” The Stanley from Geneseo apparently wishes to write a sequel, entitled “In Darkest Albany.” The State Federation of Labor is taking measures to see that Stanley’s inten- tion is thwarted. Watch the “Daily Worker” for the first installment of “A Week,” the great epic of the Russian revolution, by the brilliant young Russian writer, Iury Libedinsky. It will start soon. Lenin Portraits Show your loyalty, love and respect for the greatest leader of the revolutionary workers and adorn the walls of your room, clubs and meeting halla, with a portrait of Nikolai Lenin. The price is within anyone’s reach: Single copy, 8x11 inches 25 cents. Single copy, 14x17 inches 65 cents. Radical discount for quantity orders. Agents wanted. [Literature Dept. Workers Party of America 1009 N. State St., Chicago, Ml. Phone Spaulding 4670 ASHER B. PORTNOY & CO. Painters and Decorators PAINTERS’ SUPPLIES Estimates on New and Old Work 2619 MILWAUKEE AVE., CHICAGO GRAND CONCERT For Defense and Relief of Those Expelled by the Perlstein and Sigman Machine — AT THE — ASHLAND AUDITORIUM ASHLAND AND VAN BUREN ST. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10TH, 8 P. M. Solos by Minna Isaeva .. .......Soprano Sam Amtek . . ........Violinist Nita Abrastzova . Freiheit: Sin . Soprano Speakers: Alexander Bittelman, Sec. Jewish Federation of the W. P. Earl Browder, Chairman, Man- aging Editor of The Labor Herald, ging Society Auspices of the Needle Trades Section of the T. U. E. L. Everybody ‘Welcome—DON’T MISS IT—Admission 25¢ subscription campaign Chicago militants start: campaign. be there. S BY MARCH That will be the minimum results of the great to be carried on by ing February 10. On February 7 the DAILY WORKER Boosters in Chicago: will meet to lay out plans for the Every militant in Chicago should COME Thursday, February 7, at 8 P. M. RUSSIAN TECHNICAL SCHOOL 1902 W. DIVISION STREET everyone in Chicago who has the welfare of THE DAILY WORKER at heart will be there, 1,000 New Chicago Subscribers by Mar. 10!! - Valuable Prizes Will Be Given to the Individuals and Branches Who Secure the Greatest Number of New Subscribers. { \evsnnnmmay cr Set Aeky 4 i; : 8 e ¢ nee!