The Daily Worker Newspaper, July 30, 1924, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Four TALLENTIRE DONS FIGHTING TOGS TO BATTLE MARS Noted Orator Starts on Anti-War Tour “Tt am starting out again on the same kind of a campaign that brought me a threat of jail in Alberta, Canada, in 1914,” declared Norman Tallentire, noted revolutionary orator, as he pre pared to start on an anti-war speaking tour that will take him from St. Louis, Mo., to Seattle, Wash. | Comrade Tallentire is known from coast to coast agitates. As a platform orator he} ranks high with the best in the radical | movement and his work as an organ- izer is excelled by few. The tenth anniversary of the World War finds the capitalists unable to get their rotten system in working order and they are again marshalling [Zino | s an agitator who |* iE . |munist party to its delegation, Editor’s Note.—In today’s issue of the DAILY WORKER we publish that secfion of the report of Greg- ory Zinoviev, chairman of the Com- munist International to the Fifth World Congress, dealing with the question of the tacties of the United Front. It is as follows: oar er CHAPTER VIII. Tactics of United Front. Roots of United Front. OW, comrades, I come to the ques- tion of the tactics of the united N |front, to the most debated question in our ranks. In this respect, too, I am fully in agreement with the in- truction given by the German Com- in which the German party declares that now is not the time to discuss the tactics of the united front as a ques- tion in itself. I am in complete agreement with this; the tactic of the united front remains correct. The question should be put concretely, for every country separately, in ac- their fleets and increasing their armies, preparing for another orgy of blood letting. The Communist Inter- national has inaugurated a _ special anti-war campaign, starting July 27th and winding up on August 4th. Com- rade Tallentire is one of the Workers Party speakers engaged in telling the American workers the truth about the late war and why they are going to have another unless they get rid of the capitalist system. “My first fight after I crossed into the United States in 1914,” said Tal- > lentire to the DAILY WORKER, “was! over the inhuman hanging of Frank Little. On my arrival in Salt Lake} City, I co-operated with Jim O’Hare and Grover H. Perry, both of the I. W. W., the latter a grandson of the admiral who blasted Western capital- ist civilization into the Mikado’s em- pire from the threatening guns of the United States warships. His grandson would blast capitalist civilization off the face of the earth. “I joined the Mooney agitation in 1916 and spoke to hundreds of labor unions while working at my trade. From August, 1918, to August,+1919, I toured the country for Mooney under the auspices of the International Workers Defense League and spoke cordance with the prevailing. con- ditions. Nevertheless, there are a few gen- eral things to be said on this subject. Historically speaking, how did we fare with the tactics of the united front? Looking back on the road that has been traversed, we can see that to the Communist International as a whole in 1921-22, the tactics of the united front meant the realisation that we have not yet won a majority of the working class; secondly, that the social democracy is still very strong; thirdly, that we are on the defensive and that the enemy was attacking (by the way, it should be observed that»last year’s strikes, for instance in England, were mostly of a defensive nature, as was the case also in the other countries); fourthly, that the decisive fight is not yet on the order of the day. Hence we ad- vanced the slogan: “To the masses!” and later to the tactics of the united front. I have already pointed out, comrades, that there was a time in the Communist International when we were virtually nothing more than a propagandist society, without being aware of the fact ourselves, After the first skirmishes, the actual cor- relation of forces had become clear, at a monster demonstration in Denver on July 28, 1918, when 7,000 workers met to demand justice for Mooney. But for the treachery of the labor fakers and their sabotage of the great mass movement for his release, Tom Mooney would not be today behind the bars of San Quentin.” Comrade Tallentire was one of the leaders in thé great general building strike that shook San Francisco and i Bay districts during July and August, 1921. In 1922, while attending a conven- tion of the Communist Party at Bridgeman, Mich., he was arrested and is now under bonds awaiting trial. Comrade Tallentire’s lecture will be “Ten Years After the World War.” After ten years Morgan is trying to! mortgage Europe, and the political henchmen of the capitalists are run- ning around in circles while the work. | ers are gradually gaining strength, | and under the leadership of the Com- munist International getting ready to strike a death blow at war by abolish- ing the capitalist system which is the sole cause of modern wars. Comrade Tallentire’s list of dates follows: St. Louis—July 30th. Kansas City—July 31st. Omaha—August Ist. Denver—August 3rd. Salt Lake City—August 5th. Los Angeles—August 7th. San Francisco and Bay District— August 9th, 10th and 11th. Portland—August 13th. Tacoma—August 14th. Seattle—August 15th. Vancouver—August 15th. | PARTY SPEAKER STARTS ST. LOUIS TO SEATTLE ANTI-WAR CRUSADE NORMAN TALLENTIRE, Balloon Race Tragedy? MARSEILLES, France, July 29. The British steamship Leicestershire re- ported by wireless today she had picked up the French balloon Zodiac No. 1284 off the Baleiric Islands in the Mediterranean, without finding any trace of the crew. This is one of the sixteen balloons which set out for the Grand Prix yesterday. Nine are missing. NO PLAYGROUND IN CICERO; In the Tribune of July 22 a plea was made by Oscar Wolff to the parents: Keep the children off the streets. Keep them in the playgrounds, said he. It sounds nice. I wish we had it. But in the town where I live there is no playground, and our mothers can’t take care of us because most of our mothers have to work, be- cause our fathers do not get enough money for a living. Where shall I play? In sum- mer time no playgrounds to play in. In winter not enough schools to go full time. They claim too many children and not enough room for all of them. Where shall I play? Why plea to save their lives? They are too many for the schools. Lovise Pxixorrno, (Nine years old) From the town, of Cicero, Cicero is the town as Tun Daty which the} jensky, the well-known Russian au- Western Electric Company runs,| thority on economics, has been ap- Worker has] pointed acting Chairman of the Chief shown. The big bosses made a big | Concessions Committee, playground and put a high fence around it so that nobody could play there unless he had a key. Only the Western Electric work- ers, and mostly only the big bosses of Western Electric’s shops here, can use the playground. The children, as Louise Pellegrino says, have no place but the streets to play. ee ae Se “OUR GOVERNMENT” In any state, county, city, town, or school you are told by crazy fools that: “This isa free coun- try.” How do you get that way? They said it’s a government of the people, by the people, for the peo- ple. But it is a government of the crooks, by the crooks and for the crooks or the millionaires. By Frank Vaentine, Cleveland, Ohio. Economist for Concessions, MOSCOW, July 28—Mr, Preobra- |tegical manoeuvres. and along with it came the conscious- ness that we are still in the minority, that the social democracy is strong, that we are on the defensive, and this was, historically speaking, the origin of the tactics of the united front. Distortion of Slogan of United Front. But comrades, history plays pranks with this slogan as indeed it does with many slogans. We adopted the tactics of the united front as the tactics of revolution at a time in history when the struggle had become protracted. Some comrades in our own ranks interpreted it as something totally différent, as the tactics of re- volution, This became revealed grad- ually. At first it seemed as if it were a question of nuances or of statistics. We understood the tactics of the united front as preparatory work for the revolution. But in some places it was misinterpreted as the idea of substituting the tactics of revolution by peaceful, evolutionary methods. We perceived these tacti¢s as stra- THE DAILY WORKE 1922, I delivered a speech before the Enlarged Executive on the question of the United Front tactics, in which I said: “The united front does not in the least involve political concessions or diminish the dependence of our Party. It means that our independent Communist parties must formulate their slogans with a view to expe- diency; the slogan of the ‘Workers Government’ is a pseudonym for Soviet Republic.” I was at once taken to task, and I must say that I could not at first see on what grounds I was assailed. For instance, com- rade Ernest Meyer attacked me in a speech before the Fourth World Con- gress in connection with this ques- tion. Comrade Radek tried to act 4s mediator, although he did not entirely associate himself with my formula. My mistake consisted in that I did not see at once that it was a question of opportunist misinterpretation of a good siogan. I did not think of the fact that by formulating the slogan Some comrades endeavoured to-interpret them as an alliance with the social democracy, as a coalition of all “labour parties. Recently a communist party passed a resolution “not for publication” in which it declared that all this is ex- cellent; let it be a strategic manouvre, but we must not speak of it so fre- quently and so openly otherwise our opponents will use it against us. The resolution literally says the following: “In this connection (united front) we must take care not unnecessarily to reveal to our opponents the sense of our revolutionary strategy.” Com- rades, I regard this as naive childish- ness or reformism. I rather think it is the latter, for people who speak in this fashion are not children. The greatest weakness revealed by our party is that when it is proposed to them to adopt some revolutionary strategy against our most cunning enemies, the social democrats, they immediately endeavour to make this strategy profound, to explain it from} the Marxist standpoint and to convert} it into a complete theory which turns out to be un-communistic. What Constitutes Revolutionary Strategy The Bolshevik party has had to make many manoeuvres during the revolution. The genius of Lenin con- sisted to a large extent in his skill in the use of strategic art. It is the good fortune of our party that in the execution of every manouvre, we knew exactly what we were driving at. This enabled us to execute our manoeuvres. We wished to fight and we desired the victory; we wished politically to destroy the mensheviks and the social-revolutionists, and to this end we directed our political manoeuvres. The trouble with some of’our sections in the Comintern, young or otherwise, is that firstly they consider every strategical ma- noeuvre inadmissible, and secondly, where they do apply they take it too seriously and endeavour to convert it into a “profound” system. This ac- counts for 90 per cent of our troubles. We are surrounded by enemies; by he shrewdest of whom are the it has transpired that some parties some comrades to not understand and do not wish to understand that tactics of the united front are to the Comintern nothing but a method for agitation and the mobilisation of the masses. To this I must add that some of the blame rests also upon myself, for being somewhat too yielding in this respect. tion in detail. so sharply, I may have made it dif- ficult for the comrades to agitate for this slogan; in a word, I could not see at once why this sentence has roused so much opposition. Workers’ and Peasants’ Government One word on the Workers’ and Peasants’ Government. An attempt was made to misinterpret the slogan of the Workers’ and Peasants’ Goy- ernment too, as a government by all the Labour parties and by some peasant parties. What is the origin of this slogan? It is pretended tiow that this slogan was to serve for a whole period; that it implied the al- liance of “all” labour and peasant parties in the framework of bourgeois democracy and other puppets of fis kind. As a matter of fact the slogan is connected with the Russian revolu- tion. What was the meaning of this slogan in the Russian Revolution? It was a pseudonym for the proletarian dictatorship; no more and no less. When after the July days of 1917 we saw that things were moving, that the workers and soldiers were with us, and that we could win over some of the peasants, we were confronted with the question of formulating ‘the goal of the struggle in the simplest and most attractive way. The slogan of the “Proletarian Dictatorship” would not be ‘so intelligible to the masses. How .was the illiterate Rus- sian mujik or soldier to understand these Latin words: Proletarian Dicta- torship? “It was then that we trans- lated these words into Russian. We said: you are a peasant, a working- man, a soldier. Do you see the clique which governs. We have the power, we have the weapons! Won't you set up a Workers’ and Peasants’ Govern- ment? We simply translated the Latin into the Russian for their benefit. The peasant, the worker and the soldier were not boufid to understand the meaning of the term: Proletarian dictatorship; but they readily under- stoodsthe meaning of: “Workers’ and Peasants’ Government.” Things went so far that some parties interpreted this slogan as a government by “all’ labour parties in conjuction with some peasant parties and thus convert it into its very opposite. This had to be combatted in the most determined manner. Formula of United Front © \ You know the many discussions that took place on the question: united front from top or from the bottom, and so on. I believe we can formulate the question in the follow- ing manner. United Front from the bottom. Permit me to deal with this ques-| Properly speaking, these tactics Are On the 11th of June,!always necessary, perhaps with the Workers’ School Grows. The summer activities of the work- ers’ school have met with an enthusi- astic response from the membership. All the classes have had a large at- tehdance and great interest hasbeen! shown throughout the organization for the educational work of the move- ment. One hundred gnd twenty-five students have been registered for the party training course by the various branches, and this course has already convened on Monday and Wednesday evenings with a large and earnest group of students from the various branches and federations. Two cldsses in public speaking have already been organized and another is in the pro- cess of formation. All branches are urged to send their quota of students at once to the Party Training Course and the Public Speaking Course, and to re- mit their $10 educational fee with- out delay to the Workers’ School. All party jakers and all mem- bers who aspire to be party speak- ers are urged to join the Public Speaking Course at once on Tues- day evening at rty Headquarte Instruction in English, voice pro- duction, current events and political problems. Sunday Evening Vetcherinkas. The Workers’ School has estab- lished headquarters on the first floor of party headquarters, 20 Hast 12th street, for office, reading room and lecture room. The garden has been opened up for use this summer and will be used every Sunday evening for a social gathering for members and students of the Workers’ School and all those interested in the educational activities of the movement, NEW YORK PARTY ACTIVITIES Anti-War Week Demonstrations. ‘Twelve monster open air rallies will be held in New York ity during the anti- war week, to commemorate the 10th an- niversary of the world war, in which tens of millions of workers were killed, wounded, and maimed in the interests | Branch, of imperialism. Beginning with Mon- day, July 27th, at a mass demonstration on 110th street and 5th avenue, prom- inent speakers will sound the call for an organized class struggle against capi- talist wars, and bring the message of international communism to the masses of workers. The meetings will culminate in a demonstration on Monday, August Fe at Union Square and 17th street, :30 p.m. The open air demonstrations will take Place as follows: Wednesday, aug 30. h St. and Avenue A—Speakers: Sani N sin. nt and others in Ukrainian ‘olish, Thursday, July 31. 13th Ave, and Und. St,” Brooklyn— Speakers: Simon Felshin, Ben Levy, N Sparer. 163rd St. and, So. Blvd.—Speakers: H, Winitsky, Joe Padgug, Kate Gitlow, and others, Friday, August 1, Rutgors Square—Speakers: Ch, Krum- besa Margaret Undjus, Landy, and others. Grand St. Extension—Speakers: P. Cosgrove, A. Bimbo, Ch, Brower, and others. Stone and Pitkin Aves.—Speakers: Rebecca Grecht, Ben Lifshitz, George and others, Sidkind, 116th St. and Lenox Ave.—S re: Rose P. Stokes, Carl Brogaky, J. Peaking, 25th and ermaid Ave., Coney Island—Speakers: Jack *Statchel, George Primoff, Joe Brahdy, and others. Monday, Anuet a Union Square and 17th St.—Speakers: Jullet ‘8. Poyntz, ‘Winitsky, Chas. ‘Srumbein, and others. Cc. C, ©, to Lay Election Plans, Plans for the coming election cam- paign of the party in New York City will be laid at the next meeting of the ‘ity Central Committee on Friday Pa Sy | Ist, 8 p. m., at 208 B. 12th stree oom 2. All delegates must attend. ‘The enti membership of Local New York “must zed for & successful campaign. the next 0-6, C. mating .C. C. me will mean that the entire local is pree paring for active participation in the TOuner problems of importance wil lems of im ce be taken. up. Remember the date: me day, August Ist, Send in that Subsoription Today. Penne ene sm et ater R viev Takes up the Tactics of the United Front exception of quite rare moments of direct civil war, when it may» be necessary to fight with arms against workers on the counter-revolutionary side; although I may say, from the ex- perience of’ the Russian Revolution, that even at such extreme moments we succeeded in carrying out the united front from the bottom. At the moment when Kerensky was marching on Petrograd, we mobilised the masses from the ranks of the social-revolu- tionary party, against the orders of their own government, and got them to fight shoulder to shoulder with us. The united front from the bottom is always appropriate, because it gives the facility for the actual mobilisation of all the really revolutionary work- ers. United front from the bottom as well as from the top. This is another matter, and it arises fairly frequently; not always, but fairly frequently, in those countries where we are in the minority. I believe that no one even of the “extreme left” will deny that in countries like England, Austria, Belgium, where we have a small minority, the tactics of the united front from the top and from the bottom should be applied, of course, with all the safeguards and guarantees against it being appried opportunist- ically, and to apply them as a method of agitation and mobilisation of t%e masses, and not as a method of poli- tical coalition with the social democ- racy. The third case is that of the united front from the top only. Here, I be- lieve, we must say: Never! Unfortunately, this method was all too frequently applied in practice. It was 80 easy to write an open letter to the social democrats to conduct long and protracted negotiations with the leaders over the question of a pro- gramme. This was the line of least resistance. Consequently, this question we may sum up as follows: United front’from the bottom—nearly always; united front from the top—fairly frequently, and with all the necessary guarantees as to the tactics of mobilisation that would facilitate the revolutionising of the masses; united front from the top alone—never! (Radek: Hear! Hear!) Even Radek says: Hear, hear. Now what were the actual developments? At the Fourth Congress the resolution of the Workers’ Government was adopted. Here again I must frankly admit—and revolutionary comrades should always admit mistakes—that some mistakes were made in the draft- ing of this resolution, too many con- cessions were made to the right, which were immediately taken ad- vantage of by the “right” as meaning a political concession. \I allude to the following sentence in the resolution of the Fourth Congress on the Work- ers’ Government which I drew up: “In opposition to both open or masked bourgeois-social democratic coalition, the Communists may put up the united front of all the toiling masses, and a coalition of all labour Parties both in the economic and political field, for the fight against the power of the bourgeoisie, and for its final overthrow. As a result of the combined fight of all the workers against’ the bourgeoisie, the whole machinery of State must pass into the hands of the Workers’ Government and by this the domi- nation and power of the working class must be consolidated.” On “Compromises.” I remember how the commission worked. I will not say that all the good paragraphs come from me, and EET MRR END Party Activities Of Local Chicago $< BRANCH MEETINGS Wednesday, July 30 — Roumanian 2254 Clybourn Ave. Thursday, July 31—Anti-Militarist Mass Meeting, Wicker Park Hall, 2040 W. North Ave. pagendinavian Karl Marx, 2783 Hirsch ve Thursday, July 31—11th Ward Italian, 2439 S. Oakley Bivd. Friday, August 1-—Ukranian No. 2, Pullman, 10701 Stephenson Polish North Side. 1902 W. Division St. Lithuanian No, 41, 4138 Archer Ave. Greek Branch, 722’ Blue island Ave. ANTI-WAR MEETING Thursday, July 31st, 8 P. M. at Wicker Park Hall, 2040 West ‘|North Ave. Farmers Killed. LIMA, Ohio, June 29.—Three farm- ers, one the father of seven children, were almost instantly killed toddy when the boiler of their threshing engine in the wheat fields of the Donevon farm, a quarter of a mile north. of Cairo, near here, exploded Another, Charles Harpster, 50, of Du- pong, working nearby, was probably fatally injured. MITCHALL’'S ‘NTERNATIONAL ORCHESTRA Union Music Furnished For All Occassions Write for appointments to M. MITCHALL, (Teacher of Saxophone’ 1640 W. Congress St. — Chi PITTSBURGH, PA. DR. RASNICK DENTIST all the bad ones from others. But my mistake consisted in having made concessions in style. From the stand- point of political agitation and stra- tegical manoeuvring which were sub- sequently interpreted, as political manouevring, this postulate cannot be regarded as incorrect, it is quite ad- missible. In 1917, Lenin wrote an article “Ofi Compromises,” in which he dealt with the possibility of a pact with the men- sheviks and social revolutionists, on the question of forming a government responsible to the Soviets, In that article he wrote: “We have now reached such an abrupt and unique turn in the Russian revolution that we may, as a Party, offer a voluntary compromise, of course not to the bourgeoisie, to our direct and principal class enemy, but to our immediate opponents, to the “legding” petty-bourgeois—democratic parties, to the social revolutionists and mensheviks. “By way of an exception, and in view of peculiar circumstances which evidently will continue ‘only for a very short period we can offer a com- promise to these parties, and it seems to me that we must do so. “On our part, the compromise means a return to our pre-July demand: “all power to the Soviets,” a government of social-revolutionists and menshe- viks responsible to the Soviets. “Only at the present moment can such a government be created, per- haps in a few days or in one or two weeks, and become consolidated quite peacefully. It could ensure, with con- siderable probability, the peaceful progressive march of the whole Rus- sian revolution, and very great chances for big steps forward by the world-wide movement for peace and the victory of socialism. “Only for the sake of this peaceful development of the revolution—an opportunity extremely rare in history and extremely valuable, an exception- ally rare opportunity—only for the sake of this opportunity the bolshe- viks, the advocates of the world-wide revolution, the advocates of revo- lutionary qethods, can and must, to my mind, agree to such a compro- mise.” Further on he says: “The task of a truly revolutionary party consists not in an impossible repudiation of any compromise, but while going in for all the compromises inasmuch as they are\unavoidable, to remain loyal to its principles, to its class, to its revolutionary task, to its cause of preparing for the revolution and of educating the masses of the people for a victorious revolution.” (Article “On Compromises," Sep- tember 3, 1917). Strategical Manouvre, Not System. That, Comrade Smeral, was just a strategical move. He spoke of an “honourable coalition.” Such a form of words is permissible in agitation. I had occasion to write in a similar strain in those days. Did Lenin intend to become reconciled .to mensheviks and join a government of “all” work- ers and peasants parties? Not in tte least. It was merely a_strategical manouvre. If, however, one imparts more meaning to this phrase, if one makes it a method, if one means in all seriousness, that it is possible to form a coalition with workers’ parties which only call themselves workers’ parties and in reality represent bour- geois third parties —that leads to opportunism. The strength of the communist and of the other alleged workers’ parties is certainly very great. If these workers’ parties were real workers’ parties, not according to their composition, but politically, and we could form a coalition with them, we would become unconquerable in Europe. But these parties are work- ers’ parties only in name. It is, there- fore, nonsense, it is a sin, it is counter revolutionary utopianism, it is op- portunism to talk of coalition with all workers’ parties—that is, workers’ parties such as ourselves, and those which call themselves workers’ parties and are actually bourgeois parties. For a number of comrades the tact- ics of the united front was not only a question of the agitational methods of a party, which knew what it want- ed. It did not foresee at first that a bible, an opportunistic bible would be ‘made out of a strategical manouvre, although in my first theses I referred to the dangers of opportunistic inter- pretations. But that is what was done. (To be continued Tomorrow) Wednesday, July 30, 1924 WORKERS PARTY OFFERS TICKET TO CAL'S STATE Need Only 1000 Names for Ballot Place . BOSTON, July 29.—The Workers Party of the Massachusetts district has nominated a full ticket to run for state offices and has chosen the work- ers who will run as presidential elec. tors for Foster and Gitlow. The ticket is as follows: Governor—Thomas F. Conroy, Wor- cester. Lieutenant - Governor — Edward R. Stevens, Boston. ‘ Secretary—Winfield A. Dwyer, Bos- ton. Treasurer—Albert Oddie, Brockton. Auditor—Victor Romond, Lawrence, Attorney-General — Edith Rudquist, Boston. United States Senator—John J. Bal- lam, Everett. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS. At Large—George Kraska, Win- throp, and Michael M. Plepys, Boston. District 1—Robert Zelms, Boston, District 2—Charles Hedrick, Boston, District 8—Hyman Levine, Brockton. District 4—Wm. Martilla, Worcester. District 5—Benjamin Levine, Lynn. District 6—O. Saari, Norwood. District 7—Harry J. Canter, Boston. District 8—John Louko, Norwood, District 9—A, F. Konikow, Boston, District 10—S. D. Levine, Boston. District 11—Eva Hoffman, Dorchester. District 12—Michael Moore, Newton Upper Falls, District 13—J. T. Task, Boston. District 14—Emma P. Hutchins, Bos- ton. District 15—E. J. Sinisalo, Fitchburg. District 16—Wm. Janhonen, Gardner, The following were selected as al- ternates: H. S. Bloomfield, Worces- ter; Lewis Marks, Boston; Wirna Sointu, Walpole. It requires only 1,000 signatures to place this entire ticket on the ballot. Nomination papers will be sent to every branch and every comrade will be urged to get signatures of regis- tered voters in this state. These papers must be rettrned by Septem- ‘BUY AT LOW |Your DRUGS PRICES THIS WEEK’S SPECIAL $1.50—3 tubes Pepsodent Tooth Pi $1.00 596 aste ... T6o—3 cakes Cuticura Soap... EMS TABLETS SAL = FOR CONSTIPATION 25 CENTS AUSTIN-MADISON PHARMACY 1 MADISON STREET at Austin Bivd. We Deliver Free : Phones: Oak Park 392, 571, 578; Austin 4117 ‘We speak and read: Lettish, Polish,’ Lithuanian, etc. Night and Morning to keep them Clean, Clear and y Write for Free “Eye Care” or af Beauty” Book Marine Co., Dept. H.S.,9 B. OhioSt., Chicago JAY STETLER’S RESTAURANT Established 1901 1053 W. Madison St. Tel. Monroe 2241 Chicago Res. 1632 S. Trumbull Ave. Phone Rockwell 5050 MORDECAI SHULMAN ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 701 Association Bullding 19 S. La Salle Street CHICAGO Dearborn 8657 Central 4945-4947 WAR! HE AR ! Earl R. Browder, Editor “The Labor Herald” Max Shachtman, Editor ‘The Young Worker” Manuel Gomez, Chairman THURSDAY, JULY 31, 1924, at 8 P. M. “THE NEXT jak on WAR AND THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS” WICKER PARK HALL, 2040 W. North Ave. ADMISSION FRED. Auspices: Workers Party and Young Workers League, Local Chicago ‘ ‘eaweah

Other pages from this issue: