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— i TH WORKERS PARTY ENTERS CANDIDATES IN STATE ELECTIONS THIS YEAR In m number of states numinations have | filed by petition while in others the | ion campaign is still in progress to @ Workers (Communist) onarty can- 8 officially on the Nominations officially filed: Michigan. The following canidates will appear fficially on the ballot in the Fall Jections to be held Tuesday, Nov. 2: Governor, William Reynolds. Congress, ist Dist., Harry Kishner. Congress, t9h Dist., Daniel C. Holder. Congress, 13th District, William Hollen- auer. ‘ Secretary of State, Sarah Victor. State Treasurer, Arnold Zeigler. Attorney General, Cyril Lambkin. Auditor General, Aaron M. Katz. Pennsylvania. The following were the candidates W. P, ELECTION CAMPAIGN TOURS C.E. Rakhenions General Secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party, is starting off his big election campaign tour with a meeting at Buffalo on October 14, The meeting will be held at Workers’ Hall, 86 West Huron street. Comrade Ruth- enberg will speak on: “What a Work- ers’ and Farmers’ Government Will Do For the Workers and Farmers.” The tour will touch the largest and most important. cities of the eastern part of the country and the readers of The DAILY WORKER should make a note of the time and place of the meeting in their towM and be sure to come to the meeting themselves and bring their fellow workers. The com- | plete tour follows: rH, M. Wicks. Parthenia Hills. Wweretary of Internal ‘Affairs, Max Jen- United States Senator, E. J. , Ist district, Cary. Ernest cond District, ja Paransky. For Congress. Mike Blaskovitz and | Seventh District, Maragaret Yeager. ‘Wednesd Oct. 20, New York a ty, ghth District, Susie Kendra and| workers (Communist) Party member- ir Skrtic. 195. ith ship meeting, Webster Hall Ninth District, William P. Mikades. 8 Thirty-fourth District, Sam Shore. ™~ State Senator, William Schmidt. Colorado. Governor, William Dietrich. United States Senator, James A. Ayers. Secretary of State, Nelson Dewey. Treasurer, Leonard Forschler. intendent of Public’ Instruction, Dietrich. Auditor, 0. McSwain. »ber 31, Phfladelphia, Pa., us ranklin and Colum- Maltimore, Md., Con- 1029 Baltimore 'St., 8 October 23, Pittsburgh, Pa., Federal and Hall, "pal Saturday, Carnegie Music Hall, 8 , Cleveland, Ohio In- Center Bidg., Hall A, 783 East treet Jiith street. |to be announced later. S Massachusetts. | Monday, Oct. 25, "Toledo, Oho, Fota jovernor, '.ewis Marks. nt Hotel, 716 Jefferson, § p. m Lieut. Governor, Albert Oddie. | Oc Chicago, Il, North- U. S. Serator, John J. Ballam. ‘Treasurer, Winfield A. Dwyer. Auditor, Emma F. Hutchins. Attorney General, Max Lerner. Secretary of State, Harry J. Canter. | Ohio. Canton, Stark County State Senator, 41st District, Cari Guil- State Assemblyman, 2ist District, r Pichier, orth and Western Ave! 27, Detroit, Mich., 2101 Gratiot Ave., 4 . 81, St. Paul, Labor 6 North Franklin street, 2 p. m. Oct. 31, Minneapolis, Moose Hall, 43 South Fourth street, 8 p. m. Inform your shopmates, neighbors, and friends about these meetings. | Bring them to the meeting to hear a presentation of the issues of the elec- FARMER-LABOR PARTY. CANDI- /tion campaign from the standpoint of DATES SUPPORTED BY THE labor. WORKERS PARTY: ee sahet's Rebecca Grecht. Allen County | judge of the Court of Common Pieas,| Rebecea Grecht, who has just com- Ed Blank. Representative to the pleted a\tour in Ohio, will cover a ice MeKercnen "County "Auat: number of cities in Minnesota and E. Thompkins. County Commis- | Michigan this October in connection Fart W, Trey. County ereagurer,| with the election campaign of the | Workers (Communist) Party. Com- rade Grecht will speak on: “What Do Clay. County Recorder, L. Prosecuting Attorney, Cari B. \the Elections Mean to the Workers?” Her tour follows: ae ik Landis. Bia Clerk of the Courts, Robert J. WASHINGTON J. L. Freeman, candidate for United | tates Senator of the Farmer-Labor | Kelley. |. Minneapolis, Minn,, Wednesday, Oct. 20, ety. ee Finnish Hall | Chisholm, Minn., Thursday, Oct. 21, PETITION CAMPAIGNS IN | Kar pit ap PROGRESS TO PUT THESE CAN: | & betevtey, Gee. he Worke! DIDATES ON THE BALLOTS: ' Hall. Duluth, Minn., Sunday, Oct. 24, Work- ge Hall. Ilinois. Ironwood, Mich., Monday, Oct. 25, Fin- J. Louis Engdahl, candidate for United | nish Hall. States Senator from lilinois. Hancock Mich., Tuesday, Oct. 26, Hammersmark, for congressman Hall. : y Kausankot from 7th congressional district. i Mathilda Kalousek, congresswoman for 29, 6th congressional district. , Saturday, ‘Oct. 30. Elizabeth Griffin, congresswoman tor u , Sunday, Oct. 31. 1st congressional district. rite New York. H. M. Wicks. Governor, Benjamin Gitlow. Lieutenant Governor, ‘Franklin P. Brill. Attorney| H, M. Wicks, labor speaker and can- — pain eevee Paritén ComP- | didate for governor of Pennsylvania (Manhattan) cn the Workers (Communist) Party Assembly, 6th District, Benjamin Lif-| ticket, is now engaged in an election Sean. co roster! Oi age an ge wpe campaign tour covering a large num- ber of cities in Pennsylvania. His sub- ject is: “What Do the Elections Mean to the Workers?” Codkind. Asembly, The rest of his tour follows: , Wednesday, Oct. 27, iday, , Oct. Julius 18th District, Abra- ham Markoff. Congress, 13th District, Charles Krumbein. Congress, 14th Dis- trict, Alexander Trachtenberg. Congress, 20th District, William W._ Weinstone. Senate, 14th District, Elmer T. Allison. (Bronx) Wednesday, Oct. 20, Asembly, 3rd Dist., Elias Marks. As-~ ‘or. 2nd and Lockout. sembly, 4th District, Isidore Steinzer. Pa., Thursday, Oct. Union Hall. URGH, Sat., Oct. 23. Assembly, 5th District, Charles Zimmer- ¥ RIGHTON, Pa., Tuesday, Oct. man. Assembly, 7th District. Joseph Boruchowitz. Congress, 23rd District, Moissaye J. Olgin. ENSINGTON, Thurs., Oct. 28, (Brooklyn) KENSINGTON, Thurs., 4 Assembly, Sth District, George Primott. | -, Ukrainian Hall, 14th St. Assembly, 23rd District, Fannie War- i shafsky. Congress, 10th District, Bertram | a., Priday, Oct. 28, D. Wolfe. Senate, 7th District, rent ° Saturday, Oot, 30, — Cc . 4 icnights of Maite Hall, TTSBURGH, "Bey unday, re onrecticut. $ p.m. Labor Lyceum, 38 Miller St. Governor, William MacKenzie. Lieut. Governor, Edward Mrasko. Comptroller, John Gombos. Secretary of State, Jane Hw Beldman. ‘didenswadene Lied Asc paead Why Not Become a if B Worker Correspondent? By Uplon Sineair For a Mass Organ Thru peas, ik oars amt every y '” Worker Correspondents The Drive For $50,000 to KEEP THE DAILY aka | MISSOURI— DONATIONS—OCTOBER 15, Nucleus 10-3, Kansas City coo. 3.00 Wate prettes, $5,00/ James C. William, Kansas City . 5.00 | MINNESOTA COLORADO—4 24.10} Chas. McCarthy, Duluth 5.00 Lag oe Local ne 4.00| A: G Arness, Pequot 2.50 miucpby, + ata we 5.00 | Karl Keiplik, Pequot ..... 1.50 M. Zvorvar, Denver 2.60 | NEW YORK— Bellen, Albany ; CONNECTICUT— L. Brin, Alba 00 Workers Party, Bridgeport ....... 5.00 tos Albany 08 FLORIDA— : | pert, Albany 5.00 |S. Mendiin, Miami cenmmunnnnn 20.08! Jacobson, Albany 1.00 B, Shedioff, Miami . srwsennoe Bel Thuroff, Albany 5.00 a | E.R. BL Mann, New York City....... 5.00 Shop Nucleus 17, Chicago » 25.00 | oH 10— Daily Worker Plant Nucleus .. 8.00 |" G. Gesparich, Canton Street Nucleus 22, Chicago .. 5.00 | John Scheidt, Columbus 1.50 | PENNSYLVANIA— ithuanian Working 10.00} beuls Dusit, Houston .. if WASHINGTON— MASSACHUSETTS— B, Bortz, Seattte Solin, Brookline paws, eae Russian Nucleus, Haverhill 26.00/ WEST VIRGINIA— ~ Charles Kariolemos, Wheeling MICHIGAN Poilia, WHECNAG s.cssssescoume K, Field, Detroit PP Hs, ge Ntgesiind epee lyskytyn Detroit 2.00 ay ney Mg a Workers Clu! Finnisl Club, Weet ome 25,00 Workers (Communist) Party CENTRAL COMMITTEE WELCOMES BACK FORMER MEMBERS OF THE ’ BOSTON ARMENIAN FRACTION The Armenian fraction of the Workers (Communist) Party held its na- tional conference in Boston, Sept. 18 and 19. representatives not only of the Armenian members of the party who were affiliated with the bureau of the Armenian fraction, but of those groups which hitherto have not worked as part of the Armenian fraction, The Boston Conference congidered+— the situation among those workers who were formerly members of the Armenian Section of the Workers (Communist) Party and the Armenian Workers Party, and came to the con- clusion that it was’ necessary to end the factional struggle which has di- vided the Armenian Communist work- ers in this country and to unite all the revolutionary workers as members of the Workers (Communist) Party, for united work among the Armenian masses in the United States, Adopt Resolution. * The Boston Conference unanimous- ly adopted the following resolution ex- pressing this viewpoint: the Armenian Fraction of the Work- ers (Communist) Party of America, in its second session, considering that the internal fights (in the class strug: gle front) that the Armenian radical workers in America went thru has gradually disorganized and weakened their ranks. It therefore considers it its duty to request the central com- mittee of the Workers (Communist) Party, in case there are no other ser- ious or prohibitive reasons, to give ef- fect to the following wishes of the conference: 1. Whereas, these comrades (now out of the party) have during the past three years realized more deeply the revolutionary value of the eco- nomic and political battles of the Workers (Communist) Party is wag- ing, apd the necessary discipline therein? 2. Whereas, the economic and po- litical struggle of the revolutionary proletariat urges and demands cate- gorically the strengthening and pres- ervation at all costs of the united front of the proletariat. 8. Whereas, the Armenian Frac- tion of the Workers (Communist) Party must fulfill in the life of the Armenian masses in America very im- portant and immediate tasks in the above stated direction. Therefore, be it, Resolved: That (a) This confer- ence asks the central committee of the Workers (Communist); Party: to invite by an official appeal all those comrades who have been isolated and have committed themselves to activ- ity, to hasten into the ranks of the Bulgarian Language Fraction Urges Aid to Keep Our Daily DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 19.—The fol- lowing resolution was passed by the Bulgarian Language Fraction Bureau of the Workers (Communist) Party of America on the drive to keep The DAILY WORKER at its regular meet- ing of Oct. 10, 1926, in Detroit, Mich. “We wholeheartedly support the campaign to keep The DAILY WORKER, Is Best Weapon. “The DAILY WORKER is our cen- tral organ. Without The DAILY WORKER our party would be deprived of its most efficient weapon in the class struggle. Without The DAILY WORKER our party would be de- prived of the best means it has at its command to speak to the membership and sympathizers of our party's poli- cies, campaigns, organizational work, etc. “It is the most important task, be- fore everything else, for every party member not only to support the cam- paign to keep The DAILY WORKER but to contribute as much as possible to the $50,000 fund to keep The DAILY WORKER. Supports Foreign-Born. “The DAILY WORKER is the only English daily paper that has always given its unreserved support to the cause of the foreign-born workers in |this country, Since its foundation, |The DAILY WORKER has not only | Supported but actually oganized and \lead the major campaigns for the pro- |tection of the rights of the foreign- born workers, “When, last year, the Wall Street servants with Coolidge at their head, | wanted to photograph, register, and | fingerprint like animals all the foreign- | born workers, The DAILY WORKER was the first and the only English daily tit inaugurated a real campaign and fight against this czarist “ukaz” and bilis of the government, “The services that The DAILY WORKER lias rendered to all the for- eign-born workers, and especially to the workers of our nationality, cannot be repaid. So we call upon all class- conscious workers and progressive elements among our immigrants, to give its wholehearted support to the campaign to keep The DAILY WORK- ER, to give and contribute to the fund tor keeping The DAILY WORKER. (Signed) Bulgarian Bureau of the Workers (Communist) Party of America, THEO TSECOFF, Seoretary.” } “The Second Annual Conference of ,|their places in the party and join in P ae | E DAILY W@RKER At this conference there were 1a a party and of the Armepian Fraction in order to carry on a@tive work, and that ” (b) The central committee also proposes to the compades expelled from the party in consequence of the internal fights, to retutn’to the ranks of the party and to prove in practice their devotion to the’ Comiptern as well as to the Workers (Communist) Party of America,” * Resolution Welcomed, The central committee of the Work- ers (Communist) Party welcomes this resolution of the conference of the Armenian Fraction, It calls upon all the members of the former Armenian Workers Party who are not now memibers~of the Workers (Communist) Party and its Armenian Fraction to at once take the work of winning the Armenian masses in this country for the revolu- tionary class struggle under the lead- ership of the Workers (Communist) Party. The central committee further ex- tends to Comrade Sunarian, Demir- jian and Gahanian, and any other comrades who were expelled from the party during the course of the strug- gle within the Armenian Section, the right to rejoin the party with full rights of mémbership,.__ oe A Great Step, The central committee is of the op- inion that the unanimous resolution of the Boston conference marks a great step forward for the unity of the revo- lutionary Armenian workers, It urges all the Armenian workers who were formerly members of the Work- ers (Communist) Party.or who are ready to join in an uncompromising revolutionary struggle against capital- ism, to at once take their places in the Workers (Communist) Party and its Armenian Fraction, Forward to the building of a strong section of the Workers (Communist) Party among the Armenian workers. Forward to the winning of the Ar- menian working masses in the United States for the revolutionary struggle against capitalism, © Central Committee Workers (Communist) Part C. E. Ruthenberg, General Sec'y. Class in Elements of Politics Opens in Lively, Session The class in “Elements of Political Education” of the Chicago Workers’ School, with Comrade Bittelman as) instructor, held its first session Fri- day, October 15, at 19 So. Lincoln St. Largest Class. The class _is the largest in the school, and the comrades were very enthusiastic about the work. Comrade Bittelman assigned the following ques- tions to be answered for the next les- son, eithér orally or in written form: 1. What is the final aim of our party? 2. In what sense do we speak of our final aim as scientific? 3. What is political education? 4, What is the value of political ed- ucation for a Communist? 5. What shall be the instructor’s role in our class? 6. What are the advantages of the study method in our ¢lass com- pared with the pure leeture method? 7. What is self-imposed discipline? 8. Wherein does the’ discipline es- tablished for our class diff-r from the discipline imposed upon the workers in capitalist factories or capitalist ar- my, and what are bend advantages of our system? Students who have not yet enrolled are welcome to come t0'the next class, Friday, October 22nd. + Moscow Doctor to Speak Sat. Night at Workers House ie Dr. Ossip Weinshenk, of Moscow, will speak Saturday night, Oct. 23, at the Workers’ House, 1902 W. Division St., on “Fighting Disease in the Soviet Union.” The talk will be illustrated with posters of the Narkomzdray (Health Commissariat), A concert and dance will follow the lecture The affair is arranged by the worker correspondents of the Novy Mir. The proceeds go for the benefit of the paper, 25 per cent of the clear profit goes for The DAILY WORKER, Be- ginning at 8 p, m. Admission is 60 cents, e ‘Soca’ WORKER t Make Ita wellgly habit, y GITLOW FLAYS A. F. L. ACTION ON ‘AL’ SMITH Donvention Endorsement Is Gross Error NEW YORK, Oct, 19.—“The A. F. of L. convention has made a serious error in endorsing Governor Alfred E. Smith as a so-called ‘friend of labor’ in its national convention,” declared Benjamin Gitlow, Workers (Commu- nist) Party candidate for governor, in a statement to Workers (Communist) Party campaign workers issued today. Pardoning Is Only Claim. “Outside of his pardoning of various Communists convicted for their opin- fons under the antiquated criminal- anarchy law after overwhelming pres- sure from the New York labor un- ions,” continued Mr, Gitlow (he was one of the convicted men so pardoned by Gov. Smith), “he has absolutely nothing of a character friendly to labor to show from his long adminis- tration. Against All Else. “For the rest, Governor Smith’s record includes, the vetoing of the teachers’ salary bill, the proposal for the strengthening of the state con- stabulary and the further removal of the state government from responsi bility to the people of the state. “The Smith-Hughes state reorgani- zation plan would make of the gov- ernor a supreme autocrat and of the New York state government some- thing approximating a one-man dicta- torship. He has increased the size of the national guard and of the state police, Under his administration the milk grafters go unpunished, altho they are tampering with, adultering and profiteering in this most essential of the people’s needs, Recent Attacks. “The most flagrant of all are the attacks of Smith upon labor in recent months, now that he is trying to prove to big business that he will make as good a strikebreaker presi- dent as has Mr. Coolidge; his brutal attacks upon the striking garment workers thru the Smith-man, Me- Claughlin; the recent clubbing of the I, R, T. strikers; the arrests of gar- ment workers in numbers as high as 400 in a single day, with a total which at this moment has passed the 3,000 mark for arrests of pickets in the garment strike; and, most vicious of all, his attempt to force a compul- sory arbitration scheme upon the New York garment workers, which is in- tended as evidence to his powerful financial backers for the national presidency that he would make a good enforcer’ of the Watson-Parker Dill forbidding railway strikes and of a similaf arbitration measure in the coal fields—such is the anti-labor rec- ord of Governor/Smith. Has History Also. “I do not want to give the impres- sion that his anti-labor activities are of recent origin. I remember how in 1919 he persuaded the milk drivers who were on sttike to go back to work pending an investigation and then never did anything on their be- half. In 1922 he tried the same trick in the public utilities strike in Buf- falo, and in the garment workers’ threatened strike in New York he succeeded in persuading the then leaders of the garment workers’ union to accept his fine promises and then appointed the governor’s commission on the garment industry, which dilly- dallied for two years and then made’ a report adverse to the interests of the garment workers on all the es- sential points of dispute. This is Governor Smith’s favorite trick for fooling labor. When they are in a fight and likely to win he gets them back to work and then gives them a commission. The commission takes its time about reporting and then re- ports unfavorably or forgets to report at all. Director of E. T. C. “Mr. Smith is a director of the Elec- tric Transport Co., which is tied up, thru interlocking directorates, with with the New York Central, etc, He is the candidate of Owen D, Young of the General Electric Co. and of the House-of Morgan for the presidency of the United States and wishes to use his governorship and the backs of the New York labor movement as stepping stones to that high office, “The action of the A. F, of L, con- vention is just one more product of their mistaken policy of «their so- called ‘non-partisan political action,’ “This business of ‘rewarding the friends and punishing the enemies’ of labor only results in rewarding labor's enemies, supporting the capitalist parties, ignoring the true champions of labor and preventing the labor movement from creating a labor party of its own, The Workers (Comimu- nist) Party, in the final weeks of the campaign, will redouble its efforts to expose to the New York workers the true record of Governor Smith in la- bor matters, It is a record of con- sistent opposition to the militant ac- tivities of labor and consistent service to the big business interest: Chicago Conference for Pa’ Delegates please take note. patentee 10 We will send sample copies of The DAILY WORKER to your: friende— / send Us name and addresey 9.0 \ lo Re- lief meets Thursday, Oct. 21, 8 p. m., at Room 301, 30 North Wells: Street. | WEEK IN SPORTS | SERIES NETS MILLION AND A HALF, The recent world’s series for base- ball supremacy, held between New York and “St. Lohis, was the juiciest. from the point of view of finance in the history of the game. A cool . million and a half dol- Jars were left at the gates by the enthusi- astic customers. Some of them even stood in line nights for the' pri- vilege of ponying up. Other paid scalpers as high as $20 for §2 seats, So high were the profits made out of~professional baseball this season, that well founded reports are going round that a third major league is to be launched. It is calculated that this would require a capital of 15 mil- lion dollars but the reports have it some New York millionaires are will- ing to come across. Many of the sports writers are boosting the new. league as an attempt by real sports- men to boost baseball, That’s the bunk, It is a pure and simple attempt by real business men to, do, what pro- mises to be, a profitable business, ee Se SCANDAL RUMORS FLOAT 'ROUND WORLD'S SERIES. Colyer’s, an outlaw sports journal, has come out with a sensational story purporting to give the inside dope on an alleged fixing of the world’s series. It points out that betting on the series was extraordinarily heavy—and in many places very one-sided—and that some known gamblers who are re- puted to be on the inside made some tremendous “killings.” The writer is not naturally a gullible person, but he is inclined to, give credence to the rumors. Ever since the “Black World’s Series” of 1919, professional baseball has been regarded as another, fixed sport—and that despite the fact that Judge Landis is paid $52,000 per year to keep jit clean. eee WILLS DEFEATED BY SHARKEY IN “QUEER” FIGHT. Are they already starting to build up an opponent for a bout with Gene Tunney? The answer to this question. also explains the why and ‘wherefor of the defeat last Tuesday, of Harry Wills, by the second-rate New Eng- land boxér, Jack Sharkey, All ac- counts of the fight are unanmous in reporting that in the early rounds, it looked as tho Wills could have flat- Football on same road as pro-base- ball. tened Sharkey at any time he wanted to. Possessing a weight advantage of 40 pounds, and an advantage in height and reach, besides being the better and more experienced boxer, ‘| Wills should have been an easy win- ner, Instead he jyst pawed around, overlooked easy openings, and let Sharkey takestlié offensive. The bout was stopped in the 13th round, and the decisio& handed to Sharkey be- cause of a foul blaw by Wills. The only explanation for the out- come of this fight, is that it was more profitable for Wills to lose than to win. Tunney had declared, immediate- ly after winning the championship, that he would not give Wills a fight. Besides this, six years of futile at- tempts to get a crack at the crown when Dempsey was wearing it, (and which he would’ probably have won) had just conviticed him that he was out of luck insofar as a chafnpion- ship fight was concerned. According- ly, he was willing to “lay down” in the Sharkey fight providing that. the financial /inducements were large enough, Evidently they were. eee SPENDS $250,000 FOR COMPANY SPORTS. What. will be the biggest gymnasi- um, boasted by any industrial plant in the world, is being built at the Haw- thorne plant-of the Western Electric, Figures given out by the company, place the number of workers who last year participated in company athletics | at 6,000. Over 100,000 spectators watched the various games and con- tests—most of them being employes of the company, Company sports, like its more fam- ous relative, company unions, has been developed by the bosses to keep the workers from taking up the strug- gle for better pay and conditions and shorter working hours, boss control is primarily aimed at keeping the young. workers, passive and satisfied. .Company sports has, been developed on a national scale, and is increasingly making its appear- ance in the large,plants’ and factories. It constitutes 4 real menace to the in- terests of the workers, and as such has not been given sufficient attention by the militant labor movement, Tennis Now a Frank Business Proposition n, French tennis, Ss star hat Yeh the “ranks of the ama-" teurs for that et the professionals, In capitalist amateur sports there is just as much commercialism as in professional capitalist sports and Su- zanne would rather be bought and paid for in the open. Young Workers of L. A. Plan a Dance eae . for British Miners LOS ANGELES, Oct. 19.—Los An- geles is busy doing its bit for the British miners, by giving a Hallowe'en masquerade carnival, on Dec. 30, at the Co-operative - Auditorium, 2706 Brogklyn Ave. This dance, which is held under the joint auspices of the Freiheit Jugend Club, and the» Young Workers League promises to be one of the most startling affairs of the season. Every oné interested in dancing, and a rebel good time, will not per- mit himself to miss this masquerade carnival, Besides having loads of red- hot fun, you will be aiding the inspir- ing cause of the British striking min- ers, in their valiant defenSive against the bosses’ Onslaught. You will have every oyyortunity to get rid of your money, thereby easing your consci- ence and pocket both. Hats, confetti, pretty rebel girls, strong rebel boys, a most intriguing 5-piece genuine jazz orchestra. are enuf to lure you to the Co-operative Auditorium, on October 30th. $ Training School of Young Workers Opens Here‘on October 31: This form of, oars On Sunday, October 31, the National,” Training School of the Young Workers (Communist) League will begin its month’s course. Leading comrades from all the dis- tricts in the country will come as stu- dents to this school, The local organization of the Y. W. L. in Chicago where the school will take place, is arranging a reception to the students on Saturday, October: 30, at 1902 W. Division St. ception will be followed by a dance, YOU'LL STAY UP NIGHTS reading the new LITERATURE CATALOG of the Daily Worker Publishing Co. Hundreds of books are described and indexed and the catalog is sent FREE ON REQUEST. 9 For Every Pioneer ae The first number of “THE WORKERS’ CHILD” the English language organ of the Leaders ,of pmmnuniety; Children’s groups oe Bet Published by The Executive Committee of the | hh | Communist International HAS JUST Resolutions— Articles on important “ARRIVED! phases of theory ce practice of Pioneer work— International News— And lots more! : SEND TEN CENTS FOR YOUR COPY Every Pioneer leader and every. Pioneer should subscribe to orsive League member and this new magazine! Send in only FIFTY. CENTS for a VEARBySHBSPRIPTION * Send subscriptions to: NATIONAL OFFICE, YOUNG WOR 1918 West Washington Blydy, Chicago, 10 LEAGUE © The re» t 5 ~ ~