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Maia hoe, Page Foul’ THE DAILY WOR Workers (Communist): Party GLASS TO: TAKE UP PROBLEMS OF CHILD IN LABOR Important Course at Workers’ School NEW YORK, Noy. 22.—The weak- ness of the American labor movement can be truly appreciated if one con siders how little the coming generation, children of the workers. class children receive capitalist and patriotic propaganda in the schools; suffer physically Wages of their parents to the stunting effect on the very of child labor and the demoralizing effect of the! street corner—yet the Américan work- | Ss does nothing on the matter. No real fight has been put up against ehild labor. Hither the working class does not realize what is being done to its children or it lacks leaders among the young workers who will be able to rally the children behind their working parents. Class at Workers’ School. The course in ing Class Children” to be given at the New York Workers’ School, East 14th St., p. m., commencing Nov. 22, is the first attempt by the American labor move- ment to really tackle and solve the problem of the working class child The course wil be treated in a sym-| manner with authorities on/| posium various phases of working class chil- dren’s problems leading the discussion on their particular subjects. Among the instructors will be Scott Nearing, Arthur C. Calhoun, Bertram D. Wolfe, D. Benjamin, Slava Petrovska, Ernes- | tine Evans, Clarence Miller, Miriam Gerbert, Solon De Leon, Sarah Davis | and Eve Dorf. Present Day Problems. After the introduction on Changing Economic Conditions in this Country and the Changing Status of the Working Class Child, the course will take up present-day problems of the. child such as the child In relation to the home, to the street, to the school, to the working class struggle, to chil-| dren’s courts, organizations, ete. to children’s are taken up, such as the movies, the Boy Scouts, the Y. M. C. A., children’s homes, schools, etc.” This will be fol- lowed by a study of the nature of the| child, child psychology, the abnormal | child, physical and mental hygiene, | etc. The course will then conclude with the question of how to work with children and win them over to the working class struggle; them the class struggle; the Pioneers; what books elass children should read; is being done in Soviet Russia for the | children. Pioneers Urged to Enroll. All Pioneer leaders, teachers in pub- lie and private schools, working class parents and sdcial workers should take this course. ing charged only a nominal fee. working BOSTON | International PRESS BALL Friday, Nov. 26, ’26 JACQUES RENARD’S ORCHESTRA STATE -BALL ROOM Mass. Ave., Boston ' | Gents 75c At Door: Gents $1 Ladies 40c Ladies 50c International Press Ball for the benefit of the following papers: The Daily Worker English Daily | ‘The Young Worker Youth Bi-weekly | ymrade | The Young © | Pioneer Monthly | || | Proletar Armenian Weekly Bteenpain a Finnish Daily Il Lavoratore ..., Italian Weekly Fretheit Jewish Daily Vilnis .... Lithuanian Daily | Laisve Lithuanian Daily Novy Mir ...........Russian Weekly | Ny Tid .... Scandinavian Weekly Daily News Ukrainian Daily ++ NOVEMBER 26 influence it has on The working | because of the poor | are subjected | “Problems of Work- | 106-198 | on Monday nights at 8 | Then the various influ | ences to which the child is sibjected | how to teach | the role of | and. what | Pioneers leaders are be- | SUCCESS-SPELLING CONTRIBUTIONS! These are the kind of let- ters that spell success for the |] “Keep the Daily Worker” | campaign: | Nakomis, Fla., | Noy. 10, 1926. Daily Worker Pub. Co., 1113 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago, Il. Dear Comrades: Enclosed please find &heck for $100.00 for the Daily Worker Fund. Fraternally yours, (Signed) Isabella Gauld. |\---————————__ |! _| FROM PHILADELPHIA, PA, TO CALIFORNIA, HELP GHEERS DAILY WORKER In a letter received from E. Peter son, secretary of Nucleus 10-3 of Kansas City, Mo., enclosing a check | for $8.00, he calls attention to the fact that his unit has almost doubled i its quota and that they expect to | to run up their collections to $175. This Is a fine record and a challenge to every unit in the party. Foreign Comrades Break Records. A report has just been received of a fine social gathering arranged by the Lithuanian Progressive Or ganization of Philadelphia at which $44.00 was raised for The DAILY WORKER, Comrades A. Galkus, J. Bender and A. Raumanaskene were in charge of all arrangements and de- fine achievement. Philadelphia also reports that the Young Workers’ Mandolin Orchestra of that city raised twenty-five dol- lars for The DAILY WORKER at a banquet given there recently. Fort Bragg on the Map. From the town of Fort Bragg, California, we hear the wonderful news that they have already raised $166.75 for The DAILY WORKER. Fort Bragg has turned In more than many of the largest towns in the country and has placed itself on the map politically if not otherwise. This splendid record of the Fort Bragg C. E. C. under the leadership | of Comrade J. W. Antilla, is a chal- | fenge to all other units. Who can surpass this splendid record? | WORKERS PARTY OF AMERICA, ' Cincinnati Local. Nov. 18, 1926, The DAILY WORKER. Comrades: Enclosed please find check for $50 which | collected from Max Senior for The DAILY WORKER. He Promised more after the first of the year. This is the second shot. Look out | for the third. We have in our nucleus nine com- rades and we have already sent | $63.47. Watch our percentage. Fraternally yours, M. Esterkin. Meeting of Section 6, W. P. Section 6, Workers Party, will meet his Tuesday evening in Mirror Hall, 1136 North Western Avenue, Manuel Gomez, of the All-American Anti-Im- perialist League, will speak on the | Philippine bse nema Why not a emai bundle of The | DAILY WORKER sent to you regular | ly to take to your trade union meeting? ETHEL AND JOS. VAVAK Teachers of Violin and Piano Telephone SUNNYSIDE 8472 Address 1146 MONTROSE AVE., CHICAGO Spend a Pleasant Evening in the Reading Room of the WORKERS (Los Angeles, Cal.) BOOK SHOP 322 WEST SECOND ST. A labor library is here for your convenience. There is also a splendid selection of books for your purchase, serve a great deal of credit for their | . W. L. Mandolin Orchestra Helps Weisbord Delivers Stirring Speech at Anniversary Affair | BOSTON, Nov. 22.—Boston celebrat- ed the Ninth Anniversary of the Rus- {sian Revolution Sunday, November 14, at the Scenic Auditorium, |hall was filled with members of the Workers Party and sympathizers of the cause of workers’ emancipation. | Great excitement pervaded the au- dience, anxious to hear the main speaker and former Boston comrade, Albert Weisbord, who had so recently come from the great scene of battle in Passaic, where he led the fighting textile workers, He was greeted with long applause, and the singing of mili- tant songs sung by the Passaic strik- ers on their magnificent picket de- monstrations and in their strike halls, ‘Comrade Weisbord’s speech was a paen of praise to the Russian revolu- tion, which has accomplished in nine short years, what the czars in all their hundreds of years of domination, were | |not able to bring about. \Pittsburgh District | to Hold Grand Ball | on Thanksgiving Eve. PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov. 22, —— The Workers Party of this city, will hold Noy. 24, Thanksgiving Eve at the In- ternational Socialist Lyceum, 805. James St. N, 8, Pittsburgh, Pa, Union music and a new dance floor will make the ball attractive. sion ds 50 cents for men and 25 cents for women, This dance is one of a series of dances arranged by the Workers | | Party in District 5, All the proceeds jot these dances will go for district | work, 'New York Gives Talks to Aid Working Class | NEW YORK, Nov. 22.—The Ameri- jean working class has yet to learn that Karl Marx not only made great theoretical contributions to the work- | {ing class movement but that in his |own life he showed the concrete steps and actions that must be taken to | build up a strong labor movement. | Marx.was not concerned with ab- | stract ideas, but with fighting against jand changing capitalism. He devoted | 4 great part of his life to that end. A study*of Marx’s work in the First In ternational would furnish a mine of [seat and understanding for an ap. | proach to. present-day labor problems. bald this reason a study of the First International, Marx’s fight against the ' Ttopians, against Bakunin, his atti- |tude toward the role of unions, his conception of the problem of oppress- fed People—are a .prerequisite with | out which no working class leader can afford to be. William Weinstone, dis | triet organizer of the Workers (Com- |munist) Party and instructor for sev- jeral years in the Workers’ School, will | develop these points in his course, “History of the Three Internationals,” to be given every Wednesday night at the Workers School, 108 East 14th street, at 9:15. This course will also take yp the | contribution of the Second Interna- ‘tonal to the working class movement, as well as its weaknesses. This part of the course is very necessary today, as millions of workers the world over still follow the Socialist (Second) In- ternational and do not understand the | opportunism and chauvinism that per- |vades that organization. Was the be- |trayal of the Second International in |1914 a mistake, an accident, or was it | inevitable and something that will occur when a simWar crisis arises? This is a fundamental question that will be answered in the course, Lastly, the Communist (Third) In- ternational—its principles, strategy | and tactics—will be studied. Tiris in- ternational, which aims to carry out the work started by Marx and the First International, not only makes de- cisions for the world movement of the proletariat, but for the workers of the various countries, enabling them to meet their specific problems. The study, therefore, should be of double interest to the American working class students who aim to help lead | | Fourth Couuesas of U.S.S.R. Meets in 1927 MOSCOW, U.S. 8S. R., Nov, 22.—In response to a call which has been is- sued the world’s largest governing body will assemble in this old-time capital of the czars on April 16, 1927. It will be the Fourth Congress of the soviets of the workers, peasants and Red Army deputies of the Union of Socialist Soviet Republics, The ake vious congress was held in May, 1 Hours—? A. M. to 10 P. M Sundays—1 P.M. to 6 P.M. el. Metropolitan $265 About 2,000 representatives wil meet, equally divided between city and country, altho ths ratio of representa- tion is onendelegate to each 25,000 of the urban population and one to each 125,000 in the country districts, ro? by The large | a grand ball and dance on Wednesday, | Admis- | WHERE YOU TICKETS FOR qh FILM ‘BREAKING CHAINS’ | | | Tickets for the moving picture GAN GET YOUR ; GREAT | “Breaking Chains,” to be shown. here on December 3 at Douglass Park Auditorium can be obtained at the following places, It is an- nounced by the International Work- ers Aid. 1806 South Racine avenue. 3209 W. Roosevelt road. 2409 North Halsted street. 2733 Hirsch boulevard 3116 South Halsted street. 19 South Lincoin street. 1902 W. Division street. 3451 Michigan avenue, 1532 W, Chicago avenue. I. L. D. Cabaret Best 'Thing Since Hec Was a Pup or Czar Kicked Off “Where shall I be jror Hall. |fund—and besides I don’t want to miss the features and jolly entertain- ment. Then, too, the next day’s a holiday and the alarm; clock will. be on a sympathetic strike.” This is what a worker who helped to organize the I. L. Dy demonstration | against Queen Marie told a reporter of The DAILY WORKER, over a fif- teen-cent lunch—fifteen cents each, | understand; it was a feast day. The committee in charge has ar- | ranged many interesting features. Be- sides those we have mentioned ear- |lier, there will be folk dances, includ- |ing a Spanish trio ard the “Bohemian | Dozen.” A more than first-class chef is in charge of the food. In strict confidence, he refused an offer to"be hash-expert to Queen Marie, on class- conscious grounds. You can eat what | the Mooching Queen is théreby de- prived of. Only a thousand people‘can be ac- commodated, so buy tickets early for the blow-out. They will®et you*back but six bits, known in Wall Street as 75 cents, which includes. wardrobe. Tables for all. the theoreticians af the party, And candy ginger to pep you.up, donated by the Sun Yat Sen:branch. Gurley Flynn Speaks in Pittsburgh, Will Expose Queen Marie PITTSBURGH, Pa., Nov, 22.—Eliza- yeth Gurley Flynn the well-known la- ror leager and orator will address an | nternational © Labor fénse mass neeting at, tite Labor.yceum :35 Miller St., Pittsburgh, Bh, Tuesday, Vv, 23, at 8 p, m, The meeting was arranged as a protest against the Queén Marie of Roumania, Comrade Flynn is also ex- pected to tell the story of the Passaic Strike in which she took an active part. burgh where her meetings have al- ways attracted large audiences of | workers, Admission is free, and everyone is | invited, Famous “Heretic” ‘to Speak in Gary, Ind. The famous “Heretic” Bishop Wil- liam M. Brown, who was thrown out of the church because he wants to ‘banish gods from.the skies and: cap! guest of Gary workers Noy, 24 and 25, been to Gary and it will be a treat to |hear him speak at the Thanksgiving | bazaar, which will be held at the Croa- tian Hall, 23rd avenue and Washing- ton street. The affair is being run by, the local International Labor Defense and five prizes will be given away, ithe. first being a $200 Zenith radio, There will lalso be music, dancing and refresh- iments. All Gary workerg are invited to attend. Admission 50 cents, good for both days Of the bazaar. Servants Invited to Join Bay State Union BOSTON, Noy, 22.—Servants in Bay State homes of the wealthy are invited the American: workers, to join a domestic workers’ union This course starts on Wednesday, |Which George W. Palmer, a butler, Nov, 24, at 9:15 p. m. Registration|has announced he {§ organizing. | is open now at the office of the Work- SPalmer suggests that thé union should ers’ Schoool, 108 East 14tlf street, New | seek the five-day week, beginning with York City, room 36, changes in the 48-houF week,. nine- hour @ay law for women, He has called a mass meeting Of servants and | hopes the 5,000 serving Massachusetts | “codfish aristocracy” will join the union, He plans establishing a union employment depot to supplant private | agencies, which charge workers 80 @: orbitantly, Count Karolyi Wins Duel, BUDAPEST, Nov, 22. -— Count Paul Teleki, former premier and foreign minister, has been wounded in the right hand in a sabre duel with Count Emmerich Karolyi, according, to the newspaper Pestinapolo, The newspaper states that Count Teleki challenged Count Karolyi, be- cause he accused him, of being im: plicated in the recent, frane forgery plot, ir vee ‘ y Wednesday | night?” At the I, L, D. cabaret at Mir- It’s for the class prison-|secretary-treasurer, ers’ benefit, for the Christmas relief | Bald-headed row for | The speaker is well known in Pitts- Jing like an ambulating advertisement talists from the earth, will be the | This is the first time the bishop has | \"° large an army and police forces; | KER ‘evvonm) JUNIOR ATHEIST >) LEAGUE CAUSES. SCHOOLS WORRY Bible-Mongers Are Get- ting Scared By L. P. RINDAL, (Worker Correspondent) | LOS ANGELES, Nov, 22—Commu- |nist children, the Pioneers and the Young Workers’ League, have caused school principals some worry in the past, and now the Junior Atheist League has invaded the high schools of the Holy City of Angels, The grown-ups have also organized. The “Devil’s Angels,” 75 members, is a branch of the American Association for the Advancement of Atheism, | William George Henry, 6933. Arroyo Drive, has been appointed the Los An- geles representative of the A, A, A.A. | Henry is also president of the local branch. Queen Silver, publisher and editor of Queen Silver Magazine, is Lectures on atheism are held every second Friday in Lincoln Hall, and every other Friday in Cleveland Hall, | both halls in Walkers’ Auditorium, 730 |S. Grand avenue, School Students Interested. Previous to the election a number of high school students paid the “Dev- il’s Angels” a most welcome visit dur- | ing a discussion of the bible-in-the- school issue. The youngsters got ay kick out of it, as the bible question was before the student bodies at the | time. Parents of six sorority girls, sus- | pended from the Los Angeles high | school, are threatenthg to take the case to court, The gifls violated the school laws concerning secret socie- ties, school authorities claim. Thig is very serious. Respect for laws of god, Moses and hypocritical christians is breaking down, and with it goes disrespect for laws made to glorify | ,capitalism and enslave labor. | Officials Fight Atheism. Well, a Billy Sunday-Aimee McPher- son revival ought to be started at once—and the Los Angeles Times will | | probably stage another oratorical con- | test on the constitution. In the mean- time school principals and officials are fighting to prevent atheist organiza- tions from being formed among Los 4 Angeles students. Anti-Atheist Combination. The Junior Atheist League and the “Devil's Angels” will probably also be fought with money derived from the “fight the devil fund” created by Aimee Semple McPherson. Altho both fundamentalists, Aimee and Rey, R. P. (Bob) Shuler, pastor of Trinity Methodist Church, member of the ex- ecutive committee of the Church Fed- eration and author of “McPherson- ism,” are deadly enemies, on the bible- in-the-school issue they are hanging together like Siamese twins—a union os binding as the “Ormie”-“A’mee” | connections, Aimee’s Tricks Don’t Compare with Those of Sunday, Says Mencken (Special to The Daily Worker) SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 22:—Look- |of what the well-dressed man should wear, H. L. Mencken, the sage of Bal- timore and editor of the American Mercury, was in San Francisco today for a short visit. The best show in the world is at Aimee Semple McPherson’s temple in Los Angeles, he said. Her tricks, however, according to | Mencken, do not @mpare with those of two fellow-evangelists, Gypsy Smith and Billy Sunday, “Her methods are old-fashioned,” he declared, “and would not be accepted by anybody else except the citizens of Los Angeles, most of whom come from the Hinterlands.” Gags Press as Step to Throne of Poland (Special to The Daily Worker) WARSAW, Poland, Nov. 22.—Re- cently there assembled at the palace of Prince Junusz Radziwill leading members of the old Polish aristocracy, some of them relatives of the Haps- burgs and Hohenzollerns. While fear of radical criticism makes them secre- tive as to their purpose, all political |Poland knows that they are. united under the slogan, “The king of Po- land.” It is said that Marshal Pil- sudski is the man they have picked to assume the crown, As a possible preparation for this event, Pilsudski threatened to dissolve parliament if the radicals forced a ‘vote to kill the present gag which the dictator has placed on the press} By dissolving the diet Pilsudski could gov- ern by decree until the next election. Raids Blamed to MacSwiney Faction, | DUBLIN.—The authorities of the \Irish Free State are disposed to view jand serve a good cause at the Work- jers’ Lyceum, 2733 Hirsch Blvd., on |now for the seventh month, WITH THEY CONDUCTED - BY TH Youth Committee for British Relief Will Give Dance December 4 Workers are urged to have a good time and serve a good cause at the Workers Lyceum, 2733 Hirsch Bulvd, on Saturday, Dec. 4 where a dance will be given for the benefit of the British striking miners, by the Youth Committee for Relief of British Min- ers, Many good things will be staged so come, P Workers are ‘advised to ‘ask any- body for tickets for this affair which will entitle you to win a gold wrist watch, Don’t miss it for your own good and for the good of the minefs on struke now for the seventh month. Youth Dance for’ British Miners We will count the days for you, if you only wish to have a good time | Saturday, December the 4th where a dance will be given for the benefit of | the British striking miners, Many good things will be done for you and by you, if you come. | You are advised to ask anybody for | \tickets for this affair which will en- title you to win a gold wrist watch. If you can’t possibly get them before that day, we willysave some for you that evening. | Don’t miss it for your own good and for the good of the miners on strike | Youth Committee for Relief of Brit- ish Miners, Liberal University Students Will Send Delegates to Russia | By a Worker Correspondent. NEW YORK, Nov. 22, — Student | Council of New York which is com- posed of 16 liberal organizations in universities and colleges here, has launched its nation-wide campaign to send a student delegation to Soviet Russia next summer “to study the so- cial and political experiment in So- viet Russia.” he delegation will also enlighten both student and pub- lie ‘opinion by an unbiased, impartial report of what has been done, on its veturn’ from Russia. Last summer eight students went ‘o Russia, from Columbia, Harvard, Indiana, Michigan, Pittsburgh, Brook- wood and New York School of Social Work. They reported that “the So- viet’ government is anxious to have American ‘students visit their coun- try and bring back an unbiased ac- count of existing conditions there.” Bunco Party at Hammond. A bunco party and dance will be given by the Hammond, Ind., Young Workers (Communist) League Satur- day, Dec. 4, p. m., at the Workers’ |many ‘changes. | district organizers. Y. W. Sport Alliance of Detroit to Give Dance on November 27 DETROIT, Mich. Nov. 22.—The Young Workers’ Sport Alliance of De- troit affiliated with the Labor Sports Union, is holding a dance Saturday, \Nov. 27, 8 p.m, at Landstrom Temple, \Leland and Moran Aves. | Music will be furnished by the “So- ciety Syncopators,” one of the best girls’ orchestras in Detroit. All kinds of refreshments will be on hand for the dancers, The Young Workers’ Sport Alliance is one of the most active workers’ sport organizations in this city, hav- ing a soccer team in the Detroit- American Soccer League and will play Sunday afternoon, 3:30 p. m. at the | f | Northwestern Field on Grand River jand West Grand Blvd., against the Holland United. Besides the soccer team, the Young Workers’ Sport Al- lance ‘thas a basket ball team in train- ing at the gym the club has for its members once a week. Young Workers’ League Plans Registration It is almost ¢ year now since the last registration of the Young Work- ers League membership. The last registration was taken prior to thet reorganization of the League. Since that time the League has undergone The doing away with the language units, concentrating up- on factory work, participation in strikes has made us progress in the right direction, It is for this reason that the na- tional industrial committee of the | League’ is taking a new nation-wide |registration of the membership in’ or- *\der that more than ever before they can be drawn into mass activity. Reg- istration blanks are being sent to the The blanks come in three colors. One'for the unit, one for the district industrial organizer and one for the national office. By January 1st the complete registration must be completed. Get busy. Fall of Top Kills Two Young Miners SHAMOKIN, Pa.—Two young miners met death under similar conditions in mines near Shamokin, within a period of two days. Joseph ‘Miller, a mine laborer, re- siding at 316 Clay street, Brady, was killed at 9:50 o’clock this morning, when a fall of top hit him on the head. He was aged 22 years and unmarried. The other victim was Anthony Broskie, of 45 Sherman street, Sha- mokin, who was killed Saturday at noon at the Henry Clay colliery. A rock breaking from the top hit him on the head. It was just two months ago that he received his miner’s cer Sticate. Hall, 518 Fiélds avenue. Admission is 25 cents, This ig the first social affair by this newly organized unit. A group of Chicago comrades are making ar- rangements to attend. Those wishing to go with this group, call Valeria Meltz, Séeley 3563, DENVER, Nov. 22. — An alleged $2,000,000 swindle by forging bonds Was uncovered here today, according to police, with the arrest of G. A, Coe, 39, belleved to have come here from The is JUST It's something new and vitally Distribute 25,000! 15e a copy; 10¢ a copy i the recent raids on police barracks as an activity of the extreme seotioh of ‘the republicans under Mary Mae- Swiney. It is an easy way of annoying ‘the government, a# the civic guards are unarmed, The trouble is thought to be embarrassing to the faction of ‘de Valera, who has been agitating for la reduction of what he maintained was 1118 W. Washington Blvd., Chicago, Enciosed find lenge of Youth” to Bend isssses WILL BE OUT IN JANUARY IN PHILADELPHIA There are only two places to eat— HOME AND AT Hartung’s Restaurant 610 Spring Garden St. * Home Open from 6. a. m. Cooking. to7 p.m. Challenge of Youth Why Every Young Worker Should Join the Young Workers (Communist) League By SAM DARCY With 13 Illustrations, OFF THE PRESS! necessary in the work of revolu- ‘tionary youth. This pamphlet tells in simple language what the Young Workers League is and why young workers should join it, the condition of the working youth of this country and deals with their problems as no other book or pamphlet has done’up to now. It analyzes Order a Bundle Now! in bundles of 5 or more. Send your order with a cash remittance, ——— —— —— USE THIS BLANK — — ———__. The Young Workers (Communist) League of America, . copies of “The Chal- —