The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 14, 1924, Page 4

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Ges x, a Page Four SFEN AT MEET Given as follows by the Internation- Jal Red Aid. BULGARIA.—On August 20, the i OF LA FOLLETTE x=: of Zankoff issued the or- : |der to arrest all prominent’ leaders jot the Comunists and he Peasants’ Party. Accordingly in the. recent weeks in the whole of South and Western Bulgaria great raids against |the Communists have been arrainged. |Among the arrested are also the present members of Parliament Grent- | Scharow and Janoff. In the little town of Stanimaka the Communist, Dr. Dexiadis, was ar- rested. Accordng to police state- |ments compromising documents were jfound in his house, The police fur- |thermore reports that a great com- |munist plot was discovered in Lom- |Palanka, that 20 persons were ar- |rested and prgdofs were found for |the existence of connections with + Communists abroad. In the beginning of September jnews came from Sofia that the mem- |ber of the Communist Party of Bul- ‘aria, Michael Daschine, was murd- jered during the day in Samokowa St. Fiery Cross Preacher ‘Speaks at Detroit ‘ By OWEN STIRLING (Special Correspondence) DETROIT, Mich. (By Mail.) The two famous men in De- troit that night were Sen. Robt. 'M. LaFollette and the Rev. Wil- liam L. Stidger. And many were Burprised when it happened. More than 7,000 were jammed in the Arena Gardens, at from 60 cents to a dollar_a head, to See LaFollette and his son, Robert, Jr., go back to ’76. Judge Edward J. Jeffries, of Trecorder’s court here, was ring Master. The speakers all rang the cracked bell. Here’s Trick Pastor. ‘Then chairman Jeffries introduced the audience to someone he said was of importance. The “someone,” he said, was on the platform at that mo- mént, Everyone wondered who it was. Then: “I refer to the Rev. Stidger,” Jef- fries shouted, pointing at the trick preacher of the “Church of the Golden Cross.” And he added at the top of his lungs, “I want you to know him!” much enthusiasm here. The murderer is a member of one of those murderers’ organizations which were formed by Zankoff specially for this purpose. In the end of August— in Sofia the former secretary of the Bulgarian Communist Party, Samo- kow, was murdered during the day in hisroom. Comrade Samokowa had been only recently released “from prison after having served for one year. RUMANIA.—After the Communist Party of Rumania has been pro- hibited, the bourgeoisie directs all its attacks against the trade unions of the workers. All union meetings are attended by a police commissar. A speaker who mentions a political question in his speech is immediately arrested. In this way in the last week of August eight workingmen and two women were arrested in Bukarest, In Braila 600 workers were arrested and transported to Bukarest. . In Bazargic, Kichinew and Plosti all trade union officials and all those were arrested who had participated in trade union meetings. In Arad, the industrial center of Banat, Comrade Margarethe Roth was arrested together with her two children of six and eight\years and her mother, an old woman of seventy years. HERE’S SAD STORY OF BERGER’S INVASION OF KANSAS CITY, MO., ON THE SOCIALIST- (Special Correspondence) KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 13.—The visit of “Comrade” Berger stirred It should be known that we in Kansas City have a LaFOLLETTE TICKET There was applause. Stidger is the pastor of St. Mark’s haughty belief that our traitors and fakirs here are the world’s worst: (Now don’t all speak at once.) ' | i o'r _ on M. E. Church, on Jefferson avenue, Detroit, and is a member of the state committee of the progressive repub- lican party, the party of the Ku Klux Klan in Michigan. On top of his church an electrically illuminated cross revolves over the traffic jam- med avenue. Inside tne church at the services the worshippers, under his direction, whistle the hymns. The church is suddenly plunged in dark- - ness and another electric cross blazes forth in the front of the auditorium, like a Klan cross. A spot light is} turned on Stidger as he preaches. | The Klan in Politics Stidger’s assistant pastor was Rev. Caulkins. But Caulkins resigned to} become campaign manager for Char-| les Bowles, the dark horse candidate | for mayor in the Detroit primaries: | Bowles’ phenominal run, landing him| in third place, was due to the Ku} Kltx Klan. Bowles was so close to| the second nominee he will be a} sticker candidate for mayor Nov. 4. The typical Klan faces were cons- picuous in the LaFollette audience here! In some partes of the audit- orlum they predominated, sitting side by side with union men whom office- seeking union officials have sueceed- ed in turning away from a farmer- labor party into LaFollette’s march of the marionettes. LaFollett himself on the platform, reading his speech from manuscript, was a broken old man. His eyes were ‘so dim he mis-read words. His hands trembled. His foot went down weakly and at the wrong moment when he tried feebly to emphasize a point. He spoke of being elected and inaugurated next November and next March. “How do you know you will be?” Yomeone shouted. Fails to Hold Audience LeFollette, pausing, could only answer, “I feel it in my bones.” “So do we; so do we,” echoed others in feeble polyphomy. And the speech went on. The last third of it was inaudible, more than half way back in the hall, because of the steady tramping of men and | | women leaving the auditofium for affairs more interesting. The meet- ing more than anything else was a me- morial meeting to George Washington Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, such as school Masters used to organize in the little Ted school houses, when our grand- fathers went to school. Local fakirs have started two dual unions in past five months and twice in two years the Building Trades Council has organized and given its cards to scabs in co-operation with the Master Builders—once on the plas- terers, once on the carpenters. Hav- ing seen ‘Comrade” Berger's hog- paunch (which he never got in jail or on the picket line) and having heard his foul and trifling talk, we ympathetically yield the palm to lilwaukee. Tough luck, boys! Our union leaders are unashamed scabs and are paid by the boss—but we don’t have Berger! Sell “Angel's Message” The meeting was opened by a 40-/; minute talk by the local socialist par- ty chairman. He quoted the Bible often in support of his beliefs and finally put on sale, “The Angel’s Mes- sage of Socialism,” founded, we were assured, on the Bible. Berger’s talk was in two sections. The first was an incoherent half-hour yowl on his persecution under the Espionage Act,,,which—and this mad- dened him—violated our sacred con- stitution and American tradition. Think of it! The second half was:a long tale of si woe on the grafting democrats and teapot republicans. English and Ger- man politicians, he assured us, are 99 per cent incorruptible. Americans-and to a lesse extent the French are corrupt. To save our fair land for honesty—vote for LaFollette and the socialists. Never a word of the class struggle. Comparing Meetings. The Bolshevik outlaws in Kansas City can turn out 300 to 500 for our meetings. The widely heralded Ber- ger, backed by the socialist party and the LaFollette committee, backed by every labor faker in the local move- ment (including, it is rumored, Sid Barton, the president of the now dead local of scab carpenters), with notices and editorials in the sewer press—got 380. ... As I passed out I saw a wobbly weeping softly. I touched his arm. He looked up and said: “Say, George, he ain’t possible. For twenty years I’ve soap-boxed about’ these socialist politicians. 1 never knew there was one. He’s a cartoon of himself, ain’t he?” I agreed. He is. Seeing Is Believing. I swear by my honor as a Commun- ist this is a fair and sympathetic re- port. I'd not have believed it myself It is generally agreed here that this|!48t week. I have even left out his tour is probably Sen. LaFollette’s last | Slimy attack on Lenin, lest the reader public appearance, of an energetic or|be prejudiced and fail to weigh well even active character. And many|his “program,” “Honesty—and LaFol- think the campaign may incapacitate | lette.” him altogether much as Eugene yY. ‘Debs’ last tour caused his collapse. ‘THE CAMPAIGN FUND CAMPAIGN! | ternational makes history with a dif- Gollars from you means leaflets to| ferent part of its anatomy. It manures the soil for rebels.” He classified Ber- AAA | ger, Ere is that anatomical part. workers. i: S. ZIMMERMAN X-Ray Gas Given ESTABLISHED 14 YEARS. Examination Is Free My Prices Are Reasonable As Lenin remarked: “The Lieb- knechts and Varlins made history with heart or head. The Second In- Marine Transport Workers. BROOKLYN, N. Y., Oct. 13.—The Marine Trensport Workers’ Industrial Union No. 510, of the Industrial Work- ers of the World, is holding its con- vention at the transport workers’ hall, 158 Carroll St., Brooklyn. Nine dele- gates from various ports of the United States are present. A communication from the German Sailors’ Committee to Protect the Interests of German sailors in America came from Hobo- ken, N. J., asking that fraternal dele- gates be allowed at the convention, Action on the matter is deferred until the delegates appear, Evacuate Mecca. CAIRO, Oct. 13.—Government troops My Work Is Guaranteed| Under King Ali Hussein are evacuat- Extracting Specialist DELAY MEANS DECAY st ing Mecca as the Wahabi tribes ad- vance, The troops have retired to Bahra, midway between Mecca and the of Jeddha, nay ape Only wé| ang Party Activities Of Local Chicago Tuesday, Oct. 3 Polish Roseland, 205 E: Stancick’s Hall. Northwest English, 2733 Hirsch Blva. Irving Park English, 2041 Drake Ave. Ukrainian No. 1, 1532 W. Chicago Ave. Wednesday, Oct. 15. Earl R. Browder's ‘class in Elementary Marxian Economies at 2639 Hirsch Blvd., Pp. m. City Executive Committee meeting at Room 307, 166 W. Washington Street, Pp. m. Execuitve Committee Food Workers’ T, U. E Room 303, 166 W.) Washington St. Italian Cicero Hranch, Cireolo & Gio- vanile Hall, 14th St., between 5ist Ave. and 50th Ct. \ Italian Terra Cotta, 2475 Clybourn Ave, Englewood English, 6414 S. Halsted S Czecho-Slovak No. 3, 2548 S, Loomis Street. 4 Douglas Park Jewish, Liberty Club House, 3420 W. Roosevelt Road. Thursday, October 16. Meeting of Party and Y. W. L. mem- bers in the A. C, W. A. at 3822 Douglas Blvd., 8 P.M. Matter_of ORGANIZA- TION OF SHOP NUCLEI in clothing shops will be taken up M. Abern and P. Aronberg. speaking. South Slavic Br. No. 1, 1806 S. Racine t. Finnish Branch, Imperial Hall, 2409 N. Halsted St. South Side English, Community Cen- ter, 3201 S. Wabash Ave. Scandinavian Karl Marx, 2733 Hirsch vd. 4. 115th Street, meeting of the L. group, 8 p._m., Russian No. 1, 1902 W. Division St. llth Ward Italian, 2439 S. Oakley Blvd. 31st Ward Italian, 511 N. Sangamon St. Rehearsal Freiheit Singing Society, 3420 W. Roosevelt Road. Friday, October 17. Ukrainian No. 2, Ukrainian Education- al_ Society, 10701 Stephenson Ave. Polish North Side, 1902 W. Division St. Lithuanian No. 5, 3142 S. Halsted St. Greek Branch, 722 Blue Island Ave. Saturday, October 18. Labor Defense-DAILY WORKER Bazaar Committee, 3 p. m., at 722 Blue WSland Ave. Every branch of the, party must send delegates to this meeting. Only a month till the bazaar and tremendous amount of work yet to be done. Every branch pitch in, YOUNG WORKERS LEAGUE "LOCAL CHICAGO, Tuesday, Oct. 14. Irving Park neh, 4021 Drake Ave. Wednesday, Oct. 15. Class in | Elemnetary Marxian Econ- omics, by Earl R. Browder at 2612 Hirsch Boulevard. “League members enroll! Marshfield Branch Y. W. L., Taylor and Lytle Streets. Thursday, Oct. 16, All Y. W. L. members attend meeting of party and league members in A. C. . A. Matter of organization of shop nuclei_in clothing shops will be taken up. M. Abern-and P. Aronberg ree North Side Branch meeting, 2409 Halsted St. hi Maplewood Branch meeting, 2733 Hirsch Blvd. Friday, October 17. Area Branch No. 1, 480 W. Washing- ton St., 2nd Floor. (Takes in all members working in area. between Lake Michigan and Jefferson St. west and east and Harrison and Lake Street north and South) ane Branch No. 2, 722 Blue Island ve. (Takes in members working in area beainaing. with Madison and Jefferson west to Wood St., south to 22nd, east to Lake Michigan, north to Harrison, west to Jefferson and north to Madison) Area Branch No, 3, meeting place to be announced later. (Takes in members hat oq area between Lake Michigan and Wood St. east and west and 22nd and 79th St., north and south) Area Branch No. 4, 3322 Douglas Blvd. (Takes in all members working in area between Wood St. and Aus Ave., east and west and Madison and 7%th north and south). Area Branch No. 5, meeting place to be announced later. (Takes in all members working in beginning at Madison and May St. run- Michigan south to Lake St., west to Jefferson, south to Madison and West to May.) Area Branch No. 6, 261% Hirsch Blvd. (Ta: in members working in ter- ritory north of Madison except that of Area Branch Branch No, 6) Saturday, Oct. 18, John Reed ed oa 3 meeting, Douglar Park Auditorium, Kedzie and Ogden Aves. Speakers: Max BiAchtnas. A. Bittelman, J, Louis Engdahl. Freiheit Singing Society, Auspices of John Reed Branch Y. W. L. Saturday, Oct. 18—Russian performance, ‘and DANCE, given by the Society for Technical Aid to W. Division St., beginning at 8p. m. Don't Need Europeans. TANGIER, Oct. 13, — The Riff leader, Abdul Krim, in a communique denies that the Riff army is using THE DAILY WORKER Review of the White Terror in All Capital The court martial of the Second Army Corps in Bukarest sent@nced our Comrade Dobrogeanu to ten years’ of imprisonment, GREAT BRITAIN.—Also in this so called “peacefuly country the white terror is at work. The court in Glas- gow sentenced several comrades to high fines because they had.made speeches’ without permission. In Bir- mingham three comrades were sen- tenced to imprisonment because they had appealed in an unemployed meet- ing to the workers.to conquer the po- litical power. A London court sen- tenced Comfade T, A, Jackson to a considerable fine because he had given shelter to a German communist who stayed in England without per- mission,’ GERMANY.—In Germany the mass trials against revolutionary workers continue. According to the statistics of the Red Relief, the number of trials fought by the Legal Committee of the Red Relief increased to about 18,000, in the time from the 1st of January to the 31st of August 1924. In the months June, July, and August a total number of 1,700 comrades were sentenced to 1,065 years 10 months of imprison- ment (243 years 6 months of hard 000 DOG FRIDAY STOPS BARKING: GOIN GETS TIGHT Hard Boiled Plute to Copy Gen. Dawes (By The Federated Press) WASHINGTON, October 13. — Prof. David Friday, familiar to national labor, 748 years 9 months of jail, 73 years 5 months of fortress) and fines of the total amount of 46,290 gold marks. Before the Supreme State Court in Leipzig alone 13 trials against members of the~ Communist Party and against revolutionary sol- diers took place since May 1924. In these 13 trials 104 years 6 months of hard labor, 47 years 9 months of pri- son, 5 years 5 months of fortress and fines of 30,000 marks were given. In the month of September eight further trials take place before that court. ESTHONIA.—In the middle of Aug- ust 30 communists were arrested, among them also members of the Re- val Parliament. Against the mem- ber of Parliament Kutt an order of arrest was issued. The communist organ, a substitute of the recently prohibited communist newspaper, has been confiscated by the police. The 149 communsts who were arrested in January, have now received a state- ment of accusation of 188 pages. ‘This immense trial against the Communist Party of Esthonia will take place in the near future. JUGOSLAVIA.—The new Cabinet of Davodowit¢h has kept hardly any- thing of its great promises with re- ist Countr oe gard to the liberation of the political prisoners. Up to the present only a commission has been appointed to deal’ with the question what political prisoners might be released on pro- bation. According to a statement of the governmental organ “Politica” there are about 3,000 such prisoners in Jugoslavia (soldiers, communists, nationalist Macedonians, Monteneg- rians, Croatians, etc.) The Labor Party has issued an appeal demand- ing the amnesty of all political pris- oners. ‘Phe best proof that very litle has changed in Jugoslavia since the es- tablishment of the new government is the prohibition of a meeting of the Independent Labor Party in Zag- res at the 10th anniversary of the world war. Furthermore;“the police confiscated all appeals issued by the Labor Party on the occasion of, this day. Workers of all countries! Protest against the white terror! Collect for the proletarian victims of the class struggle! Come. to the aid of the suffering fellow workers! Form in all countries membership organizations of the Red Relief! CHICAGO YOUNG WORKERS LEAGUE ACCEPTS PLAN OF REORGANIZATION By AL SCHAAP Organizer, Young Workers League of Chicago. The decks are clear for action. This is the result of a membership meeting of the Chicago Young Workers League held Friday evening at which Comrade Max Shachtman reported for the National Executive Cammittee of the Young Workers League of America, the plan of reorganizing the league. Over 200 members were present at the meeting and high interest never conferences as an anti-labor and anti- farmer “expert” economist, threatens a lawsuit against A. H, Mulliken, boss’ of the so-called Economics Institute, which has been issuing propaganda against the Howell-Barkley railroad bill. Friday is not sore because the railroad labor bill is being attacked, but because, he—Friday—has been dropped unpaid .from his $12,000 a year part-time job as head of the research .council which was _ estab- lished in the flush early days of the concern, when it was known as the Transportation Institute. This Trans- portation Institute was founded by Bird M. Robinson, president of the Short Line Railroad Ass’n. and by Sidney Anderson, formef renegade progressive congressman from Min: nesota, to help put the Esch-Cum- mins bill through congress and to cut railroad wages. They hired Dr. Friday and a lot of other show- window material, and spent a huge fund, after which it was discovered that no real research studies had been carried to publication. Began To Curse When Robinson could furnish no more cash, it is réported from inside railroad circles, Mulliken, of the rail- road supply firm of Pettibone-Mul- liken, took the concern over, dis- missed Friday and his experts, and turned the institute over to a new crowd, centered around the supply companies and the Santa Fe railroad company. Having changed the name of his enterprise to the Economics Institute, he proceeds to denounce the Howel-Barkley bill in crude fash- ion, and to snap his fingers at stat- istics, ‘college degrees, ex-congress- men and all “polite stuff” in general. Mulliken is hardboiled, and proud of it. Not only is Friday threatening to sue for some $9,000 for himself and staff, but a real statf8tical concern, the Institute of Economics, is prom- ising to sue to prevent the use of a similar name by Mulliken. He has complained to the American Econ- omic Assn., too, against this trifling with its reputation, Mulliken has closed his_Washing- ton branch office. Join the Workers Party! waned. The plan proposed was adopted unanimously. It calls for the reorganiza- tion of the Young Workers League of Chicagy along factory lines. The 14 | Sent to Desert Isle SERAFIM MAXIMOS. OMRADE Serafim Maximos, pic’ tured above, a member of the Executive Committee of the Com- munist Party of Greece, and delegate from Greece to the Ffth Congress ,of the Communist International, has been arrested with other Greek Commun- ists and imprisoned on the deserted island of Skiros. The bourgeois government of Greece is conducting a bitter drive against the Communists of Greece, the world war veterans, who are under the direct control of the Communist Party of Greece, and against the organized bodies of the General Confederation of Labor. Many sections of the Con- federation of Labor are affiliated with the Red International of Labor Unions in Moscow. During the last month the American Tobacco company of Macedonia, in league with the chamber of commerce of Greece, ordered the wholesale arrest of- the executive committe®s of the various branches of the world war veterans, which succeeded in organizing most of the world war veterans on a militant working class basis. Many members of the Communist Party of Greece have been imprisoned with Comrade Maximos. PLAN LEFT WING TO GINGERUP__. THE LABOR PARTY AND FIGHT FOR COMMUNIST SOCIETY IN AUSTRALIA By W. FRANCIS AHERN. (Federated Press Staff Correspondent.) SYDNEY, N. S. Ws Oct. 18,—At a conference of union delegates repre- senting the industrial wing of the Australian labor party, held at Sydney, it was decided to launch a left wing, movement, to ginger up the labor party. ning north to North Ave, east to Lake} The conference demanded that the labor party, when it secures office in New South Wales, should bring about the following industrial reforms: . A minimum wage of $27.84 per week; full basic wage to all workers di ing unemployment, sickness or accident; 8-hour day, including meal time and trave] between home and work; 5-day¢—————____________ week; preference to unionists; aboli- tion of all “scab” and non-union labor agencies, . It was also decjded to work for shop committees in industries, such committees to be elected by all em- Soviet Russia, at 1902|ployes, to voice the demands of the workers, thus forming a common bas- is for the struggle against capitalism; to summon an trade union congress; and to urge all unions to affiliate with the Red International European officers or has been sub-|of Labor Unions and gr ane on the industrial upion basis, = i A A further resolution read: ship of the proletariat.” for “Your Subscribe the DAILY, WORKER, “In con- sideration of the present low intellect- ual level of the labor movement, the left wing movement shall pursue a strong campaign for education, accord- ing to Karl Marx, It shall seel to de- stroy the workers’ faith in the cap- italist system, and to turn their eyes towards the establishment of a Com- munist society towards the dictator- Daily,” branches of Chicago will be consol- idated into six branches. , The city of Chicago will be divided into six working (industrial) area dis- tricts. Members of the Young Work- ers League will join the working area branch in the territory where they work. Twenty Prospective Nuclei. Each working area branch has been assigned to organize a definite num- ber of shop nuclei and within three months it is expected that Local Chi- cago of the Young Workers , League shall have organized at least 20 shop ‘| nuclei. The first regular meeting of each working, area branch will be held this Friday evening. All members of the Young Workers League have already been notified to attend their working area branch meeting. League Problem Met... The following recommendations were adopted at the membership meet- ing for the conduct of work amongst the foreign speaking young workers. It is meeessary to adopt these meas- ures asa result of the reorganization of the league upon the basis of the working area groups as a transitional step to the complete reorganization on the basis of shop nuclei. The plan is, as follows: , 1. City Propaganda Committees shall be set up for all necessary lan- guages. a 2, These committes shall direct all language work in the city. 3. They shall set up all appartus necessary to carry on language work in the ¢ity, or in any special section of the city. 4. These auxiliaries shall be re- sponsible to their respective language propaganda committees. ‘ 5. There shall be no language aux- iliary branches attached to the work- ing area branches. i 6. The language auxiliary shall not be a basic unit of the Y. W. L. ~ 7. All language propaganda com- mittees shall be responsible to, and under the direct supervision of the City Executive Committee. “This plan has also been approved by the National Executive Committee of the Young Workers League of Am- erica. shops and factories where the workers gather to It is there that minds are open to the Thesday, October 14, 1924 ERNEST TOLLER ADVOCATES USE OF ESPERANTO Studied and Mastered L ° ° angudge in Prison By GEORGE SAVILLE. The Congress of Radical Esperantists. recently held in Europe has been attended by 90 delegates from 18 contries un- der the chairmanship of Com- rade Ernest Toller, who has re- cently been liberated from the “republican” German prison. Comrade Toller has studied Esperanto while in prison and has mastered the language suf- ficienly to write in it an essay against capitalistic wars; this has been~published in our of- ficial paper “‘Sennacieca Revuo” (Antinationalistic Review). Officers Are Communists, All the new officers that haye ‘been elected are members of the Com- munist Party, either in Russia, France or Germany, as the majority of the organization are Communists, The new editor, Norbert Barthel- mess of Leipzig, is also the technical director of our co-operative publishing house. This organization has already published translations into Esperanto of the following works: \“The Com- munist Manifesto” from German. “The Communist Documents” from Russian. “The Light in the Abyss” from French by Henri Barbusse who, by the way, is himself an Esperant- ist and member of the French Com- munist Party, also several other works, The “Iron Heel of Jack London” is soon to appear, and the works of Up- ton Sinclair are being translated by Comrade Carl Frading in Rockford, Ill. with permission of the author, who himself is also an Esperantist. To Be Used in Russian Schools, Comrade \ Drezen, vice-director ot the all-Russian Central Executive Com. mittee of Soviets, who is an accom- plished Esperantist and an active lit- erary member of our organization, reported that the Russian Soviet gov- ernment will, as soon as more press- ing matters are disposed off, intro- duce officially the universal language +Esperanto into the public \sthools. Comrade Nekrasov, the editor of our monthly in Moscow, reported that. un- der czarism Esperanto in Russia was only accessible to the inte! lectuals, but since the Bolsheviki have assumed Power thousands of workers have mastered the language and are com- municating by correspondence with their comrades in other lands; there- fore many Communists, and other radicals, are admitting now the im- portance of a common means of un- derstanding to the World’ Revolution, altho formerly they claimed that after the revolution was time enuf to think of such unimportant matters, Have you heaved your brick? You're Hired! Until Nov. 7. Building Bolsheviks—the D. W. B. U. NEW YORK CITY PARTY ACTIVITIES OPEN AIR MEETINGS Wednesday, Oct. 15, Intervale and Wilkins Ave.—J. hace ond 135th St. and Lenox Ave.—J. C. 01 is and C. Chorover. Waskt iS Oct. hi Se ashington and Claremont Parkway— C. Brodsky, Siegle, in Jewish. Rutgers Square—Pollack and Jewish speaker. Oct. 17, ‘Friday, . 110th St. and Titth Ave.—J. 8; Pi bey) and denise speaker. at a in ani one Aves., Brownsvi —Janny Warshofsky, Trachtenberg. Sati 110th St. and th Avenhue—Dr. “A. Markoff, N. Wilkes and Jewish speaker. paign is in th fearn their living. , parties and candidates measures, that stand for concrete solutions of the problems of bread and butter facing the wor! class. most clearly, se example, is in fighter for the middle class. be added to that. It's up to you possible to place _” THESE in the hands of the workers you tories. As vi Hera in. an Analysis LaFollette, by Jay Lovestone, Parties and Issues in By Alexander Bittelman. © ferent parties first reading this pamphlet....., pamphlet deals with the most In lote of 5 or more at e difference organizer and fighter for the workers, an a (Editorial Daily Worker.) ‘THE ABOVE “HITS ‘THE NAIL” on viow tie tonditiina. adtecting the king class. w the 8 affec @ wor! It’s a gem. No worker should go to the polls this year without - Why It Occurs and How to Fight It, by Earl R. Browdor. important issue before the the shops that the workers will see Foster, the union LaFollette, the lawyer and Nothi } reader, to do everything saviseaiae je head. Sell them ee tee 2 | The LaFollette Ilusion—_ of the Political Role of Senator. EI RIOT ssa serscis ccna tie Election Campaign— uta = oe sounnannunosnsnnntnnnnnsonnsnsnsnnensescsssssasseennasssusee TO eennsedncensnannns a8 per cent discount. Place your orders ak shee, IR Soe a SS 1

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