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Eiteeco Nuclei 15:16 4 Page Four i ee. CAMPAIGH TOURS ic. E. Ruthenbers General Secretary of the Workers | (Communist) Party, is starting off his | big election campaign *tour with a} méeting at Buffalo on October 14. The meeting will be held at Workers’ Hall, 36 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 town and be sure to come to the meeting themselves and| bring their fellow workers, The com-| plete tour follows: Wednesday, Detroit, Mich, House of the 2101 Gratiot Ave., | 8 p. m | Sunday, ¢ St. Paul, Labor Temple, 416 nklin street, 2 p.m. | Sunday Minneapolis, Moose | Hall, 43 South Fourth street, 8p. m. | Inform your shopmates, neighbors, | and friends about these meetings. Bring them to the meeting to hear :| presentation of the issues of the elec-| tion campaign from the standpoint of | labor. H. M. Wicks. H. M. Wicks, labor speaker and can- didate for governor of Pennsylvania on the Workers (Communist) Party ticket, is now engaged in campaign tour covering a large num- her of cities in Pennsylvania. His sub- ject is: “What Do the Elections Mean to the Workers?” The rest of his tour follows: ON, Thurs., Oct. ainian Hall, 14th Hail. Oct. Miller Si ui . Malta da. 8 30, PITTSBURGH, Pa 8 p.m. Labor Engdahl to Speak at Campaign Meeting of Greek Workers’ Club| gdahl, Communist can- um; 3 J. Louis didate for United States senator from | am- Hlinois, will be the speaker at a paign mass meeting arranged by Greek Worker Club, for Sunday afternoon, Oct. 31, at 768 W. Van? Buren St., at 3 o'clock. Sponsor Joint Affair Chicago Street Nuclei 15 and 16 are the sponsors of a get-to-gether concert and dance to be held Satur- day evening, Oct. 31 at Freiheit Sing- ing Sociegy Hall, 3837 W. Roosevelt | Road. Lots of fun is promised and | the young pioneers are preparing much of a rousing entertainment. The admission is 50c. Weisbord to Speak { to Newark Workers NEWARK, N. J.. Oct. 26.—‘“The} Passaic Strike and the American Workers” will be the subject of a/ talk to be given by the leader of the Passaic textile workers, Albert Weis- bord, at the Labor eum, 704 S 14th St., Newark, on Friday, Oct. 29, $ p. m, The meeting is under the | auspices of the Workers Party Every body is welcome Don’t keep It to yourself, tell it to the world on the worker correspond- ents’ page of The DAILY WORKER. election | 4 Workers (Communist) Party | Portland Organizes United Front Drive for Daily Worker PORTLAND, Ore., Oct, 26—At a meeting of the party, district organ- izer, central executive committee and officials here plan was made for a United Front Keep The DAILY WORKER Campaign of all sympa- thetic workers’ organizations. An im- "| portant affair that will make possible the raising of the largest sum yet sent from this city was also planned. It was decided that from now on migratory workers of the party, such as loggers, must keep in close touch with party officials and report condi- | tions in camps and other places of in- dustry, They must notify the offici- als of his location and report for ac- tivity. New plan for future officers were elected, and a activities discussed. |Street meetings have been addressed | , Secretary of of Internal by the district organizer, and much literature has been sold. Harlem Dance Proceeds Go to Help Our DAILY NEW YORK, Oct, 26.—The crowd coming to the entertainment ce given by Section 4 (Har- ille) of the Workers Party, this coming Saturday Oct. 30, at the Hungarian Home, 350 East 8ist St., elping The DAILY WORKER l as getting the grand treat of t lives, as the proceeds are for The DAILY WORKER and for the educational work of the section. Every one of the numbers on the program is something unique, to men- evening, Workers’ will b ,| tion only the exhibition folk dancing, the mass speaking chorus of 50 peo- |ple, the quartet, the workers’ or- chestra, the solo singing as well as chorus singing by the Hungarian Workers’ Singing Society. This splen- did program is to be followed by dancing. All this for the very low fée of 50 cents for tickets bought in advance, and 65 cents at the door. Will Appear-in December. WILL OBSERVE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION’S BIRTHDAY IW MARY U. S. CITIES The following cities have already planned observances of the ninth an- niversary of the Russian Revolution, Nov. 7. The tentative schedule includ- ing date and speakers follows: Philadelphia—Nov. 5, Gitlow. Pittsburgh—Nov. 6, Gitlow. Detroit—Nov. 7, Gitlow, at Armory. Rochester, N. ¥.—Nov. 5, Wolfe, at Labor Lyceum, 580 St. Paul. ‘Akron, Ohio—Nov. 6, Wolfe. Cleveland, Ohio—Nov. 7, Wolfe. Buffalo, N. Y.—Noy. 5, Ballam, Work- ers’ Forum Hall, 36 West Huron St. Erie, Pa.—Nov. 6, 8 p. m., Krum- bein, Forward Hall, 25th and Peach. Toledo, Ohio—Nov. 7, Krumbein. Canton, Ohio—Nov. 8, Whiteman. South ‘Bend, Ind.—Nov. 7, White, Workers’ House, 1216 W. Colfax. St. Paul—Nov. 6, 8 p. m., Bedacht. Minneapolis, Nov. 7, 1 p. m., Bedacht, at Finnish Hall, Western and Hum- boldt. = Duluth, Minn., dacht. ‘Superior, Wis,—Nov. 8, 8 p. m., Be- dacht. Kenosha, Wis.—Nov. 7, 3 p. m, Ger- man-American Home. South Chicago—Nov. 7, 8 PB. 9616-22 Commercial avenue. Chicago—Nov. 7, 8 o'clock (speaker and place to be announced). New York Gity—(To be announced). St. Louis, Mo.—Nov. 5, Engdahl. Kansas City, Mo—Nov, 7, & P. My Engdahl, Musicians’ Hall, Omaha, Neb.—Nov. 8 Engdahi. — / Nov. 7, 8 p.m. Be- m., The Drive For $50,000 to KEEP THE DAILY WORKER / ‘ Total Including Oct. 21—$9,951.34 DONATIONS—OCTOBER 21. ILLINOIS— Shop Nucleus No. 14 (collected from employes in Daily Worker departments) $797.92 hicage. svseve 8,00 Alex Bittelman, St. Nucleus 22, Chicago . . 5.00 Mike Lawrence, St. N. 22, Chicago 5.00 Waino Kekkonen, St. Nucleus 22, CThicage overs casconagy Karl J. Maimstrom, Moline coon. 1.00 Je in dih aaa 2.00 MA’ Russian Educational Society, Worcester sobs a» 36.25 MICHIGAN— Vasil Dancheff, Pontiac .... 5.00 CARPETS RUGS 2635 W. North Avenue, 2408 W. North Avenue, 1618 W. Chicago Avenue, 1600 W. Roosevelt Road, The Best Place to Buy Your MINNESOTA— Leo G. Walewitch, Minneapol 5.00 A. Anderson, Rochester 1,00 E. W. Kauel, Rochester . 1.00 Arthur Mohr, Rochester 1.00 NEW YORK— New York City . 400.00 oHIO— S. Hartley, Cleveland 5.00 Nucleus No. 11, Toledo 2.00 WISCONSIN— P, Barbato, Madison 50 J. Berger, Madison 2.50 Joe Corona, Madison 50 Jan Husen, Madison S. Lieberman, Madison LINOLEUM FURNITURE — Is at Comrade OSCAR I. BARKUN’S 4 STORES | | | | Phone Humboldt 4983 . Phone Seeley 5400 ad Phone Humboldt 6941 | Phone Monroe 6264 : |CHICAGO WORKERS WORKERS PARTY ENTERS |Buren and Marshfield ‘streets. CANDIDATES IN STATE | | ELECTIONS THIS YEAR friend of 'Geng Debs; Carl Press, and class war prisoner. In a number of states nominations have | ritati a’ | been filed by petition while in others the | Tovititlons Saye ee ye eons | Petition campaign is still in .progress to | nist) Party, I. W. W., and the Chicago place Work: (Communlst) Party cans | didates officially on the ballots. | Nominations officially filed: Michigan. The following canidates willl appear officially on the ballot In the Fall elections to be held Tuesday, Nov. 2: Governor, William Reynolds. , | Conon » Harry Kishner. By BERTRAM D, WOLFE, Daniel C.» Holder. | Congress, 13th District, William Hollen- | gar of Stata; CamnwioKr: | ‘round the circle—trom New York to Arnold Zeigler. |Log Angeles, from Los Angeles to Cyril Lambkin. Feaceaye. $s q Phedb a hth |Seattle, from Seattle back to New I have just made an enermous swing | State Treasur: Attorney Gen Auditor General, ey | York. In my tour I covered 10,000 Pennsylvania. | miles and addressed many‘thousands | The following were the candidates|Of American workers and farmers in noniateds ; | about 25 cities. Governor, H. M. Wicks. | Affairs, Max Only One Force. | Jenkins. ‘ i | "*Dieutenant-Governor, Parthenia Huts.| In all this long trip and in all these United States Senator, E. J. Cary. | centers of progressivi: n State Legislature, 1st district, | pied vapor teactio! Ernest Careathers and Anna Weisman. | I could find only one active force mak- Second District, Mike Blaskovitz and|ing for progress and struggle. In a Celia Paransky. | e Maragaret Yeager. | Country whicp is so obviously in the Susie Kendra and Seventh District, Eighth District, THE DAILY WORKER Peter Skrtic. Ninth District (city of McKeesport), William P. Mikades. For Congress. Thirty-fourth District, Sam Shore. State Senator, 42nd District (all north- side wards); William Schmidt. Colerado. Governor, William Dietrich. United States Senator, James A. Ayers. Secretary of State, Nelson Dewey. State Treasurer, Leonard Forschler. Superintendent of Public instruction, Helena Dietrich, State Auditor, O. McSwain. Massachusetts. Governor, .ewis Marks. Lieut. Governor, Albert Oddie. U. S. Senator, John J. Ballam. | ‘Treasurer, Winfield A. Dwyer. Auditor, Emma F. Hutchins. Attorney General, Max Lerner. Secretary of State, Hurry J. Canter. Illinois. J. Louis Engdahl, candidate for United |States Senator from Illinois. |" S. Hammersmark, for congressman from 7th congressional district. Mathilda Kalousek, congresswomar for 6th congressional district. Elizabeth Griffin, congresswoman tor 1st congressional district. New York. Governor, Benjamin Gitlow. Lieutenant |Governor, Franklin P. Brill. Attorney |General, Arthur S. Leeds. State Gomp- |troller, Juilet Stuart Poyntz. (Manhattan) Assembly, 6th District, Benjamin Lif- schitz. Assembly, 8th District, Rebecca Grecht. Essembly, 17th District, Julius | Codkind: Asembiy, 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, Eimer T. Allison, control of big business today that we have a strike-breaker as ‘president of the United States, a shady<banker as vice-president, a multi-millionaire as secretary of the treasury pilfering the treasury entrusted to his care, a sen- ate in which are seated 20 millionaires and to which seats are being sold at one, two or three million dollars a throw, and a government whose courts and military forces are used to smash all organization in the basic industries —I could find only one force earnestly and seriously contesting with the bosses their control of ‘the govern- ment machinery, and that force was the Workers (Communist) Party. Scanned City Papers. In a vain attempt to find out some- thing about the political ang economic situation of each town, in which I spoke, I read carefully the endless reams of print paper put, out by all of the great capitalist dailies that I could lay hands on. My reading included such dailies as had a reputation for being friendly to labor or labor's en- dorsement, or such dailies as the Seat- tle Union Record, which had once been controlled by the labor move- ment, But in all my reading | could find only one daily in the entire United States that was presenting anys sig- nificant information to the workers and farmers of America and any real id in their struggle for the solution of their most immedi: roblems or (Bronx) Asembly, 3rd Dist., Elias Marks. As- sembly, 4th District, Isidore Steinzer. Assembly, 5th District, Charles Zimmer- man, Assembly, 7th’ District. Joseph Boruchowitz. Congress, 23rd District, Moissaye J. Olgin. (Brooklyn) Assembly, 6th District, George Primoff. Assembly, ‘23rd District, Fannie War- shafsky. Congress, 10th District, Bertram D. Wolfe. Senate, 7th District, Morris Rosen. ' Conrecticut. Governor, William MacKenzie. Lieut. Governor, Edward Mrasko. Comptroller, John Gombos. Secretary of State, Jane H, Feldman. Treasurer, H. Wolfson. Ohio. Canton, Stark County State Senator, 41st District, Car! Guil- lod. State Assemblyman, 2ist District, Peter Pichler. oe FARMER-LABOR PARTY CANDI- DATES SUPPORTED BY THE WORKERS PARTY: OHIO Allen County Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, Edwin Blank. Representative to the General Assembly, Corbin. N. Shook: Sheriff, B. K. McKercher. County Audi- tor, C. E. Thompkins. County Commis- sioner, Karl W. Frey. County Treasurer, Frank Clay. County Recorder, L. Landis, Prosecuting Attorney, Cari 8. Blank. Clerk of the Courts, Robert J. Kelley. WASHINGTON J. L. Freeman, candidate for United States Senator ‘of the Farmer-Labor Party. Minnesota Governor, Magnus Johnson. Secretary of State, Charles Olson. State Auditor, S. 0. Tjosvold. State Treasurer, Thos. J. Meighen. Attorney General, Frank E. McAiliste. R. R. and Warehouse Commissioner, Thos. Vollom. Clerk of Supreme Court, Minnie Ceder- holm. Congress, 3rd Di Dis Sth D August Gagen. ;' Thos. V. Sullivan. , Albert G. Bastis. Congress, 6th Dist., Joseph 6. Himsl. Congress, 7th Dist., O. J. Kva' Congress, -. William Carss. Congress, Knud Wefald, 10th Dist., Ernest Lundeen. Washington Farmer-Labor Party candidates for the state legislature are: Skagit County—S. C. Garrison, state senator; G. 8, Bever, representative; Holl Abbott, representative; William Fisher, representative. King County—M. J. Miller, representa- tive from the 42nd district, Seattley J. Smith, representative from the 41st trict, ‘Seattle; Samuel Abrams, _re| sentative from the 45th district, Se Pearce County--J. Singdahl, county sessor, Tacoma, North Dakota State Representatives from District 41: P. J. Barrett, Sanish, N. O.; A. C, Mil~ ler, Williston, N. D.; John KJjorstad, Wil- liston, N. DB, 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 REQUI , Congress, ly oie. ih for final emancipation; at daily was The DAILY WORK sien Deduces: Formula. I could almost reduce’it'to a math- ematical formula: The strength of the labor movement varies directly as the circulation of The DAILY WORKER. Wherever the circulatith of The DAILY WORKER is big, there the labor movement is healthy; there the labor movement is militant; there it By JOSEPH BELL. AM a dentist practicing for the last twenty years and I kriow that the reason workers suffer from «bad teeth is because from childhood on they haye not been taught tostake proper care of them. f : The kindergarten and primary school is the place where dentists should be engaged to repair teeth and teach how to keep them in good or- der, The schools, tho being controlled L.| by the government and municipalities, of the U. 8, A. do not do it/at all, or do it very poorly, The great majority of the children grow up to be wage earners and can not afford to pay the high fees required by skilled dentists. On the other hand children of the rich and high government officials who serve the rich have their téeth Labor Defender: for November Keeps up Memory of Martyrs Keeping fresh the memory of some of American labor's brightest and most militant pages igyone of the tasks set itself by the Labor Detender, and its November numbéf, just off the |press, has accomplished it very suc- cessfully, The number gontains stories on the Haymarket riot, the Centralia conspiracy, the Everett, massacre, the murder of Joe Hill, anda special sup- |plement containing a begutitul picture of the deceased Gene Debs at the | height of his powers with an apprecia- |tion by James P, Cannon, printed in a |form suitable for framing. Among the contributors to this number are such well-known names as Luey B, Parsons, Ralph Chaplin, William F, Dunne, Charles Gray, Voltarine de Cleyre,, Charles Ashleigh, James. .P, Cannon and others. seh The price per copy is only ten cents and the magazine is beautifully com- posed and illustrated. Subscriptions for a year, at one dollar (a special offer of 13 month» is now offered for one dollar) can be sedifred by writ- ing to 23 8, Lincoln atipet, Chicago, Mlinols, > ORE TO HONOR THE fe MEMORY: OF DEBS NEXT SATURDAY A Debs’ Memorial meeting under the auspices of the International Labor | Defense will be held on Saturday, October 30, 8 p. m., in Temple Hall, Van The speakers announced so far, are James P, Cannon,, executive secre- tary of the I. L.-D.; Ralph Chaplin, poet, class war ‘prisoner and intimate Haessler, managing editor of the Federated the socialist party, Workers (Commu: | Federation of Labor to send speakers, The organizers of the meeting desire to give every section of labor an | opportunity to pay a tribute tothe great working class fighter. Reflections on a 10,000 Mile Tour has a friendly alliance with the farm- ers, and there is some sign of strug- gle, of understanding and of forward movement. Wherever, on the other hand, the circulation of The DAILY WORKER is small and the workers depend exclusively upon the great poi- son press, there the labor movement is weak, befuddled, bewildered, pas- sive, in retreat or disintegrating. Has the News. If I wanted to know what was going on in the world, even in big cities; at least if I wanted to know more than the results of the Dempsey-Tunney fight, the world series. and the kind of pie that Queen Marie had eaten for her dinner, I had to find copies of The DAILY WORKER on my trip. Back issues soon began to mean as much’ to me as current numbers, and when I saw the appeals to “Keep the DAILY WORKER,” I suddenly thot what an arid-desert the American la- bor movement would become if this one oasis of thought, activity and struggle were to suddenly be dried up. The United States without The DAILY WORKER! The American la- bor movement in this year of retreat and defeat and class collaboration and ,betrayal without The DAILY WORKER! No daily, no struggle; no daily, no information from the work- ers’ point of view; no daily, no gen- uine labor movement! Such were the inevitable conclusions from an at- tempt to imagine the United States at the present time, when all other progressive forces are so weak and timid and beaten and afraid.. ““Keep The DAILY WORKER.” And so I said to the comrades every- where, “Keep The DAILY WORKER.” It is our. only weapon! Build The DAILY WORKER. It is the only hope of the American labor movement! Circulate The DAILY WORKER. It is the only antidote to the poisons being poured into the air from press and pulpit and into the minds and hearts of men by the great daily rep- tile press. Does it take sacrifices? It is worth any sacrifice. All struggle requires sacrifice. The labor move- ment requires sacrifice. Without The DAILY WORKER there will be noth- ing left worth sacrificing for. Rally to its defense. Give to your utmost. Make the entire labor move- ment realize its importance and give to their utmost. “Give till it hurts’— till it hurts the bosses, the false lead- ers and the most powerful capitalist system in the wrold. WHY FAM A COMMUNIST fixed by the best dentists and the latest scientific methods. The re- sult is that workers either walk around their whole life with bad teeth and consequent bad health or the great majority of them receive poor treat- ment at the hands of unskilled and dishonest doctors. Why did I join the Workers (Com- munist) Party? Because I have real- ized that good health, good teeth, just as all good things in life, will never come thru the Republican, Dem- ocratic or any other party which is run in the interest of big business and big politicians, ; Only a party of wérkers, having for its purpose the overthrow of this government of capitalists and the es- tablishment of a United States gov- ernment of workers and poor farmers, is able to care for the health and pros- perity of the worker. Heretic-Bishop Will Speak at Gary Bazaar GARY, Ind., Oct, 26.—Bishop Wil- liam Montgomery Brown, known as the “bishop-heretic,” guthor of “Com- munism and Christianism,” will speak here at the Grand Bazaar to be held November 24 and 25, it is announced by International Labor Defense. This will be Gary's first opportunity to hear the famous bishop, The bazaar is to -be held at Croatian hall, 23rd and Washington streets, Organizations and individuals are urged to contribute articles and cash to the bazaar to ald in its success, Adama Fabrici, 1956 West 13th ave- nue, Gary, is treasurer and will ac- knowledge contributions, Admission is 50 cents for both days. Transfer “Knicker” Case, JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., Oct, 2%.— The now famous “knicker” case, in which Mrs. Frahma Allen séeks to en- join the Jeffersonville school board from keeping her nine-year-old daugh- ter, Virginia, from attending the Port Fulton school here because she wears knickerbockers instead of dresses, was ordered transferred for trial to the Floyd circuit court at New Judge James W. Fortune, «Copyright, 1926, by Upton Sinclair) Tex They were on an old familiar trail now, and Bunny ‘knew the landscape by heart. “It’s all very well for a feller to go off in his study and figure out how the world ought to be; but that don’t make it that way, son. There has got to be oil, and we fellers that know how to wet it out of the ground are the ones that are: doing it. You listen to these Socialists and Bolshevikis, but my God, imagine if the government was to start buying oillands and developing them —there’d be more graft than all the wealth of America could pay for. I’m on the inside, wheré I can watch it, and I know that when you turn over anything to the government, you might jist ais good bury it*ten thousand miles deep in the earth. You talk about laws, but there’s economic laws, too, and government can’t stand against them, no moré than anybody else. When gov- ernment does foo! things, then people find a way to get round it, and business men that do it are no more to blame. than any other kind of men. This is an oil age, and when you,to try to shut oil off from production, it’s jist like you tried to.dam Niagara Falls.” It was a critical moment in their lives. In after years Bunny would look back upon it, and think, oh why had he not put his foot down? He could have broken his father, if he had been de- termined enough! If he had said, “Dad, I will not stand for buy- ing the presidency; and if you go in with Mr. Roscoe on that deal, you’ve got to.know that I renounce my inheritance, I will not touch a cent of your money from this day on. ‘Ill go out and get myself a job, and you can leave your money to Bertie if you want to.” Yes, if he had said that, Dad would have given way; he would have been mortally hurt, and Mr. Roscoe would have been hurt, but Dad would not have helped to nominate Senator Harding. Why didn’t Bunny do it? It wasn’t cowardice—he didn’t know enough about life as yet to be afraid of it. He had never earned a dollar in his life, yet he, had the serene conviction that he could go out and “get a job,” and provide for himself those comforts and luxuries that were a matter of course to him. But the trouble was, he couldn’t bear to hurt people. It was what Paul meant when he said that. Bunny was “soft.” He entered too easily into other people’s point of view. He saw too clearly why Dad and Mr. Roscoe wanted to buy the Republican conven- tion; and then,.a few hours later, he would go over to the Ras- cum cabin, and sit down with Paul and “Bud” Stoner and “Jick” Duggan and the rest of the “Bolshevik bunch,’ and see too clear- ly why they wanted the oil workers to organize and educate themselves,"and take over the oil wells from Dad and Mr. Roscoe. i VI ; Bunny went back to Southern Pacific and just as he was finishing his year’s work, the convention of. the Republican party met in Chicago, a thousand delegates and. as many alternates, and as mgny newspaper correspondents and, special writers, to tell the world about this mighty historic event. The convention listened to impressive ‘“key-note” speeches and smoked enor- mous quantities of tobacco and drank enormous quantities of bootleg liquor; and meantime, in a room’in the Blackstone Hotel, the half-dozen bosses who controlled the votes sat down to make their deals. In the millions of words that went out over the wires concerning the convention thename of VerronRoscoe was never” mentioned; but he had his suite adjoining that hotel room, and he made exactly the right offers, and paid his certified checks to exactly the right men, after’a long deadlock and the taking of eight ballots, amid wild excitement-on the convention floor, the support of General Leonard Wood began suddenly to crumble, and on the ninth ballot Warren Gamaliel. Harding of Ohio became the Republican party’s standard-bearer, College was, over; and Gregor Nikolaieff went up to San Francisco to ship on one of the vessels of the “canning fleet,” which went up to Alaska to catch “and pack salmon. Rachel Menzies and her brother joined thtée' other’ Jewish students who had equipped themselves with a battered Ford car, to follow the fruit-picking; moving from place to place, sleeping under the stars, and gathering apricots, peaches, prunes and grapes for the canners and driers, Bunny was the only one of the little group of reds” who did not have to work all summer; and he was the only one who didn’t know what to do with himself, In the old days, when he and Dad were drilling one well at a time, Bunny would pitch in and help at anything there was to do; he was only a “kid” then, and the men liked it. But now he was of age, and supposed to be dignified; the company was of age, too, a huge machine in which’every cog had its place, and thust not be interfered with. Bunny could not even cultivate the plants at home without trespassing on the job of the gardener! He had resolved to study some of Paul’s books; but he had never heard of anyone studying eight hours a day, and he couldn’t take Paul’s job for part of the time, because he wasn’t a good enough carpenter! 4 F It was a world in which some people worked all th and others played all the time. ‘To work all the time hog an and no one would do it unless he had to; but ‘to play all the time was equally a bore, and the people who did it never had anything to talk about that Bunny wanted to listen to. ‘They talked about their play, just as solemnly as if it had been work; tennis tourna- ments, golf tournaments, polo matches—all sorts of complicated ways of hitting a little ball about a field! Now, it was all right when you needed exercise and recreation, to go out and hit a little ball; but to make life work of it, to give all your time and thought to it, to practice it religiously, read and write books about it, discuss it for hours on end—Bunny looked at these fully grown men and women, with their elaborate outfits of “sport clothes,” and it seemed to him they must be-exerci a kind of hypnosis upon themselves, to make themselves believe that they were veally enjoying their lives. ‘ : ys (To be continued.) ALBERT WEISBORD Leader of the Passaic Strike will speak for the first time under the auspices of the het Communist Party at the Final Election Campaign eeting . Thursday, October 28th, 1926, at 8 p. m. at CENTRAL OPERA HOUSE ; 67th ST. & 3rd AVE. . A BRASS BAND WILL PLAY REVOLUTIONARY music Other Speakers are: . BEN GITLOW—Candidate for Governor WM. W. WEINSTONE—Candidate for Congress 20th Dis, A. TRACHTENBERG—Canididate for Congress 14th Dis, JACK STACHEL—Chairman. Admission 25° Cents Auspices: WORKERS (COMMUNIST) PARTY DISTRICT TWO