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Page Four eee enamine THE DAILY. WORKER DETROIT, MICH. LABOR FAKERS FOR REACTION Official Labor Organ Endorses Ku Kluxer By WORKER CORRESPONDENT DETROIT, Mich., Nov. 3. = City elections are to be held here next Tuesday. The elections are supposed to be non-partisan, and in the pri- mary elections held some time ago the fleld was left exclusively to the agents of the capitalist class. Labor has no candidates in this election in Detroit, because of the manipulation of the election machin- ery, which eliminates working class candidates unless they are able to make the major campaign in the pri- maries. Denny Endorses Plutes. The fact that labor has no candi- dates does not prevent the notorious | Detroit Labor News, edited by a renegade radical, Dennis E, Batt, com- ing out for the re-election of John W. Smith, a republican politician, and present mayor of the city of Detroit This creature, Smith, is not a mem- ber of a labor union, nor has he ever defended the cause of labor in any other sort of working class or- ganization. Another candidate receiving the en- dorsement of the Detroit labor fakers is Fred W. Castator for city council- man, who has held that position for Some years, and who graduated from the inner machine of the strikebreak- er Mahon, head of the street car- men’s union. He works the game from both ends, and gets the workers going and coming. A bourgeois pill pusher, Dr. Broder- ick, is another of the candidatés sup- ported for common council by the Detroit Labor News. On the list. of labor’s candidates is one Robert G. Ewald who received the endorse- ment of the ku klux klan in the pri- mary elections. He is already a mem- ber of the city council and is seek- ing re-election. Some time in his life he worked and managed to get a card in the bricklayers’ union. No intelligent worker in this city will bother to go to the polls, as it makes no difference which gang of fakers gets elected. Any and ll of them will do the bidding of the scab bosses of the city and in case the workers object they will be jailed and beaten and shot by the minions under one group as well as the other. If you want to thoroughly un- derstand Communism—study it. Send for a catalogue of all Com- munist literature The section membershi which takes in the following Russian, Marx Scandinavian, Lithuan Hirsch Blvd. Every member of the W if he or she wishes to retain (Communist) Party. member belonging to Sectio SECTION SIX (NORTHWEST TERRITORY) Attention! Northwest Jewish, Nucleus No. 6, Ukrainian No. 1, Slovak Ne. 1, Irving Park English, Slovak Jefferson Park, will be held Thursday, November 12, 8 p. m. sharp at the Workers’ Lyceum, 2733 one of the above named units, must attend this meeting, Registration of all members will take place here, for reorganization purposes and assignments, as to where the various comrades belong, will be made. It is of the utmost importance to the successful re- organization of the party in the city of Chicago that every the organizi ion department in behalf munist education, agitation and out a powerful and insured press. That counts for all the Communist papers in this country, of which the Workers Party publishes a great num- ber, in about eighteen different lan- guages, The most powerful and im- portant of these papers for the party is The DAILY WORKER, published in the English language. “Altho the foreign language papers are very helpful and of great service to the party, a necessity, they cannot be compared in meaning and import- ance to the central organ of the party, published in the English language, which organ be believe is indispens- able “We know that none of the lan- guage papers are insured financially and that all of them are in constant financial need, and that time after time have to appeal to the class con- scious workers for financial help In this The DAILY WORKER makes no exception; on the contrary, it is going thru a very severe financial crisis just now. “Only the workers, and no one else but the workers, can and j}must help The DAILY WORKER to overcome this crisis, for The DAILY WORKER is their organ, fights their battles. and consequently depends upon them for financial help. “Realizing the difficulties of The DAILY WORKER, we call upon all our membership, our sympathizers, and also upon all readers of our pa- pers to help us to insure and strength- en our Communist press, which fights the battles of all workers, but espe- cially to help us to insure and strengthen our oentral drgan, The DAILY WORKER, which fights these CZECHO-SLOVAK BUREAU ISSUES | STRONG APPEAL FOR DAILY WORKER The Czecho-Slovak bureau of the Workers (Communist) Party of Amer- | ica called a special meeting for October 24, 1935 to consider the appeal of ing resolution was unanimously adopted by the bureau: “The Communist press is one of the most effective means for Com- | propaganda, prosper and strengthen its ranks with-+— ine of the DAILY WORKER. The follow- No Communist Party can | Bi battles more successfully than the} rest, | “Comrades! Friends! The capitalist press of this country is kept up by the mighty trusts, big department; stores and all sorts of financial aristo- | cracy, whose interests it serves and defends, Furthermore, the capitalist | press gets its big profits from adver- | tisements, two-thirds of which makes | up every issue of the paper. Needless | to say, nothing of this sort is seen in The DAILY WORKER. The DAILY WORKER does not take this kind of help, The DAILY WORKER is the spokesman of the working class, and consequently when in need, it turns for its help to the working class only. Will the help come? “Our answer must be: Lets insure The DAILY WORKER, let us give it all possible and necessary support, whether financial or moral. Let all-of us subscribe to it and read it and let all of us try to secure new subscribers for it. By securing new subscribers for The DAILY WORKER we will not only help the DAILY WORKER finan- cially, but we will also gain more in- fluence and prestige among the work- ing masses of this country. This kind of help would be the best of all, wor- thy of any Communist. “Long live the central organ of the Workers (Communist) Party—The DAILY WORKER. “Czecho-Slovak Bureau, Workers (Communist) Party.” This resolution was also unanimous- ly approved by the general member- | ship meeting of the Czecho-Slovak branches in the Chicago district. Hd Made His Boodle INDIANAPOLIS, Nov, 3. — George Remus of Cincinnati, “bootleg king” recently released from the Atlanta penitentiary to whieh he was sent- enced and fined $10,000 for liquor law violation, it is said was testify- ing for the government in the invest- igation and that his evidence would result in starting disclosures when the jury’s finding finally become pub- lic. Ramus, understood to have amas- sed a fortune thru liquor operations, openly declared he was “thru with booze running.” He is being protected by federal agents from possible harm . at, the hands of St. Louis gangsters under- stood to be on the scene “to get the | squealers.” p meeting of Section No. 6 branches: North Side Polish, Northwest English, Karl ian No. 3, Lettish, Car Shop orkers Party attached to any membership in the Workers n No. 6 attend this meeting. BOSTON, MASS., ATTENTION! Defend and Recognize Soviet Russia! C. E. RUT HENBERG General Secretary, Workers (Communist) Party WILL SPEAK AT THE Eighth Anniversary Celebration of the Russian Revolution on Sunday Afternoon, Nov. 8, 1925, 2:30 Sharp at the SCENIC AUDITORIUM, 12 BERKELEY STREET, BOSTON Other Speakers in English and Russian CHORUS SINGING ADMISSION FREE Auspices Workers Party, Local Boston, and Young Workers League. BROOKLYN, N. CO-OPERATIVE BAKERY Meut Market IN THE SERVICE OF THE CONSUMER. | Bakery deliveries made to your home, FINNISH CO-OPERATIVE TRADING ASSOCIATION, Inc. (Workers organiz: 8th Avenue Y., ATTENTION! Restaurant ed as consumers) Brooklyn, N. Y. Workers Party Holds Successful Rally at | Boro Park, Brooklyn | (Special to The Daily Worker) NEW YORK CITY, Nov. 3—A suc- cessful campaign rally of the Workers | (Communist) Party was held at} Workers Hall, Boro Park, Brooklyn, | in spite of the fact that the first snow | of the season had hit New York City,} and kept Many workers home hugging | their firesides, Sylvan A. Pollack was the speaker, | substituting for Ben Gitlow, who was | unable to attend due to important | industrial matters of) immediate im- portance. - Comrade , J, “Doroshkin acted as chairman, speaking a short time in Jewish in opening the meet- ing. Comrade Pollack in the course of his speech briefly pointed out the rec- ords of James J. Walker, and Frank D. Waterman, democratic and repub- lican candidates for mayor, and then before going into details about the so- cialist party and its candidate, Rev. Norman Thomas, shdwed how its brother parties have and are acting | in other parts of the world, pointing | out such cases as the position of the} French socialist party, on the war of the French government in Morocco, the support of the Bulgarian socialists of Zankov, the Polish Socialists of Grabski, and many other examples of working class betrayal. He then pointed out the socialist party’s recent adherence to the league of nations, and Thomas’ letter in favor of the world court, which he signed jointly with Thomas F, Lamont, the banker, partner of J, P. Morgan. Gitlow was described, as a _ real working class representative, a trade unionist, a fighter in the front ranks of the working class struggle. All the workers were urged to support the Workers (Communist) Party in this campaign, Laborers Get 50c Raise. NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—Salary raises for city workers included in the 1926 budget of New York include 50 cents per day for city laborers, a $100 an- nually for street sweepers. A total of $5,000,000 is added for wage raises with another $1,000,000 set aside for emergency increases to bring mechan- ic’s wages from time to time up to the prevailing rates: for their cate- gories in private enterprises. Filipinos not Yet Conquered. WASHINGTON, Nov. 3, Inde- pendence is as much the determined aim of the Filipino people today as when their little army was being crushed by the American armies, ac- cording to Sen. Sergio Osemna, head of the independence mission, speaking a Filipino flag meeting in Wash- ington, Clyde Kelley Disputes New, WASHINGTON, Nov. 3—Rep. Clyde Kelley of Pittsburg denies the claim of Postmaster General New that post- al rates will have to be increased again in order to meet the increased wage scale which congress gave the postoffice workers at the last session, To those who work hard for their money, | will save 50 per cent on all their dental work. DR. RASNICK DENTIAT 645 Smithfield Street PITTSBURGH, PA. ' ‘CELEBRATE THE GREATEST DAY IN THE HISTORY OF LABOR SUPPORT THE WORLD’S ONLY WORKERS’ GOVERNMENT AND THE ONLY MILITANT AMERICAN LABOR DAILY THE EIGHTH f NEW YORK CITY. Central Opera House, 205 E. 67th St., Nov. 6 in the evening. C. E. Ruthenberg, Moissaye J. Olgin, Benjamin Gitlow. BROOKLYN, N. r. Grand Assembly Hall, 318 Grand St., Nov. 6 in the evening. C. E. Ruthenberg, Moissaye J. Olgin, Benjamin Gitlow. ROCHESTER, N. Y. Labor Lyceum, 580 St. Paul St., Nov. 8, at 7:00 p. m. Ella Reeve Bloor. BUFFALO, N. Y. Labor Lyceum, 376 William St., Nov. 8, at 2:00 p.m. Ella Reeve Bloor. UTICA, N. Y. Labor Temple Hall, 714 Char- lotte St., Nov. 6, atiB p.m. Rose Pastor Stokes. ~ j JAMESTOWN, N.Y. Swedish Br. Hall, 3rd & Main St., Nov. 8, at8 p.m, Rose Pas- tor Stokes. a BINGHAMTON, N. Y. Lithuanian Hall, 271 Clinton St., Nov. 8, at 7 p.m. Al Schaap. BAYONNE, N. J. Workmen's Circle Hall, 725 W. 25th St., Nov, 8, 2 p. m. NEWARK, N. J. Newark Labor Lyceum, 704 S. 14th St., Nov. 6, at 8 p. m. Joseph Manley, JERSEY CITY, N. J. Workers’ Hall, 387 Grand St., Nov. 7, at 8 p. m. PATERSON, N. J. Carpenters’ Hall, 54-56 Van Hauten St., Nov. 7, at 7:30 p. m. BY ATTENDING MASS MEETINGS GREETING MVERSARY OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTIC' Proceeds of All Meetings Goes to Fund TO SAVE THE DAILY WORKER 4 Friday, Saturday and Sunday, November 6, 7 and 8 Look for Place and Date in Your City FAMOUS SPEAKERS DENVER, COLO. Social Turner Hall, 714 Char- f lotte St., Nov. 8, at 7:30 p. m. Wm. Dietrich. SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. California Hall, Polk & Turk St., Nov. 6, at 8 p.m. Tom Lewis. BERKELEY, CALIF. Finnish Hall, 1819 10th St., Nov. 8. BOSTON, MASS. - At Scenic Auditorium, Berke- ley & Tremont, Nov. 8, at 2:30 p.m, C. E. Ruthenberg. WORCESTER, MASS. Belmont Halll, 54 Belmont St., Nov. 7, at 7:00 p.m. C. E. Ruthenberg. - SPRINGFIELD, MASS. Liberty Hall, 592 North St., Nov. 7, at 7:30 p.m. Alexander Trachtenberg. WASHINGTON. D. C. Playhouse, 1814 N. Street, N.W., Nov. 8, at 8 p.m. Bert- ram D. Wolfe. BALTIMORE, MD. Brith Sholom Hall, 1012-14 E. Baltimore St., Nov. 10, at 8 p. m. Rose Pastor Stokes. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Labor Lyceum, 6th & Brown Sts., Nov. 6, at 8 p. m. Jay Lovestone, N. H. Tallentire. PITTSBURGH, PA. Labor Lyceum, 35 Miller St., Nov. 8, at 2 p.m. William F, Dunne. MUSICAL PROGRAMS CLEVELAND, OHIO. Moose Temple Hail, 1000 Wal- nut St., Nov. 8, 2:30 p.m. Jay Lovestone. CANTON, OHIO. Canton Music Hall, 812 Tusc St. E., Nov. 8, in the evening. day Lovestane. BELLAIRE, OHIO. Bohemian Hall, 41st & Harri- son Sts., Nov. 6, at6p.m. Wm. J. White. CONNEAUT, OHIO. - Workers’ Hall, Broad Street, Nov. 7. HARTFORD, CONN. Labor Educational Alliance, 287 Windsor Ave., Nov. 6, at 8 p.m. Bertram D. Wolfe and Sam Darcy. NEW HAVEN, CONN. Hermanson’s Hall, 158 Crown St., Nov. 6, at 8 p.m. J. O. Bentall. WATERBURY, CONN. Garden Hall, East Main St., Nov. 1st, at 2:30 p. m. Charl Krumbein, CHICAGO, ILL. Temple Hall, Van Buren & Marshfield Aves., Nov. 7, at 8 p m. M. Bedacht, E. R. Brow- er. ‘ WAUKEGAN, ILL. Workers’ Hall, 517 Helmholz Ave., Nov. 8, at 2 p.m. Max Schachtman. ; EAST ST. LOUIS, ILL. ' Painters’ Hall, Grand & Page Bind, Mey. & rc wee ROCKFORD, ILL. Workers’ Hall, 511 7th Street, Nov. 8, at 3:00 p. m. Max Salz- man. PULLMAN. ILL. Strumils Hall, 107th St. and Indiana Ave., Nov. 8, at 6:30 P. m. Martin Abern, Nat Kap- jan. FRANKFORT, ILL. Majestic Theater, W. Main St., Bik., Nov. 8, at 2 p. m. Manuel Gomez. SOUTH BEND, IND. Hungarian Hall, 316 South Chopin St., Nov. 8, at 2p. m. Lovett Fort;Whiteman. KENOSHA, WIS. Schlitz Hall, N. Main St. & Milwaukee Ave., Nov. 6, at 8 p.m. DETROIT, MICH. Finnish Hall,~5969 14th St., Nov. 7, at 8:00 p.m. J. Louis Engdahl. GRAND RAPIDS. MICH. Son's & Daughters’ Hall, 1057 Hamilton Ave. N. W. Nov. 8, at 2:30 p. m. J, L. Engdahl. MASS, MICH. Mass Fire Hall, Nov. 8th. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Moose Hall, 43 So. 4th St., Nov. 8, at 8 p.m. James P, Can- non. ST. PAUL, MINA. German Place, 444 Rice St Noy. 8, at 2:00 p.m. James Cannon. DULUTH, MINN. orkers’ Hall, 19 Ave. W. and Nov, ; 1st