The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 10, 1928, Page 4

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} } ‘ } Page rour Boston STRIKE OUT OF SYMPATHY FOR QUSTED WORKERS Sigman Visits Boston; Trip Is Failure BOSTON, (By Mail).—The month of August was a month of great events in Boston. The conference of shop chairmen and committees called by the National Organizational Com- mittee, which took place on Aug. 21 was so successful that the Interna- tional clique leadership fell into a panic. For days did this clique contem- plate the breaking up of the con- ference by intimidating the workers, * warning them against going to {he conference and threatening with dis- charge. At the end, shop after shop disregarded their orders and came to the conference. Fif shops, which represent about 75 per cent of the garment industry of Bos- ton responded to the conference. The spirit of this conference was one of enthusiasm, devotion and hope. Every worker present felt that he is contributing and he is ready to contribute all the time for the building of a new and powerful union. The speeches, the actions taken all breathed with new con- structive readiness to build. The mass meeting of Cloak and dressmakers held on August 28 where hundreds of workers endorsed the decisions of the conferenco to build a union of cloak and dress- makers was another knock to the in- ternational clique. The new union is now the subject of discussion on every corner and every place where cloak and dressmakers gather. This constructiveness and spirit of enthusiasm has also been trans- mitted to the shop. Shop after shop is telling the business agents of the international that they refuse to recognize officers who were afraid to face an election; they refuse to recognize a union which practices discrimination, yellow dog contracts and machine control, and the inter- national is powerless against the de- termination of the membership to build their union. The policy of terrorizing the workers thru the imposing of fines and thru discharges from jobs met. also with failure in Boston. Solomon Farbush, who was fined by the » chairman of the membership meeting with five dollars for making a re- mark to the dislike of the chairman never paid this fine. The cloak and dressmakers of Boston realized that the imposing of fines by a chairman of a meeting was a challenge to the entire membership; they accepted the challenge and when brother Solo- mon was discharged from the job per order of the self-appointed Joint Board officialdom the cloak wand dressmakers came to the picket- line to his defense. In the case of the Cohn and Jacobson & Worth- more, where one of our workers was discharged, twenty-seven out of the thirty operators in the shop went down in sympathy with her. This shop was the greatest surprise to the clique. A shop where the for- mer president of the Joint Board ' and a former vice-president bf the international are working, a shop where the workers have taken little interest in the work and life of the union, expected that not a word would be said in the defense of the discharged workers, but they were mistaken. The workers of Cohn and with the discharged worker and only Jacobson came down in sympathy after two days of persuasion and intimidations did the clique succeed in getting some of the workers to go back to work. Today there are eighteen of the workers out on strike and the strike is as lively as ever. The Boston cloak and dressmakers are not ready to fight for the in- ternational. The most die-hard right wingers realize the injustice com- mitted by the international clique all thru these years. They also know that if a fight starts in the shops the pressers, the cutters and every other worker in the shop is going to suffer and they refuse to take up the fight for the internation: against their own brothers whom they know as the best union men and women. The determination of the workers to build their union, the answers that the business agents receive from -the workers in the shops, the shop- meetings held every night in the headquarters of the N. O. C., the re- sponse on the picket-line in the de- fense of the locked out workers— @verything is working against the ¢lique, a terrible demoralization is setting in their own ranks. Every worker, right or left, feels that the ‘tight which the international started ‘n Boston, is not a fight for the good of the cloak and dressmakers of oston and the latter are, therefore, veluctant in taking up the fight against their brothers and against hemselves. This situation was quickly re- ported to the president, Mr. Sigman. Ale rushed to Boston to save what-| ever can be saved. He was present) at the last meeting of the Joint) Board, where the members told him what they think of him and his’ Sight, His visit did not change the Cloak a 7 | T tu Air Mail P lots While the I dollars as a rewe air mail pilots risk th ves da into the newspapers unless t fate of Pilot Paul Wheat killing Wheatley and sixpasseng ) THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1928 as Earharts gather glory and Amorican imperialism, thout getting their names ed. Such was the plane, POLICE TERRORISM OF NEGROES By GEORGE PADMORS. “Three thousand Negroes in Har lem are ready to go to jail. We are ready to make any kind of sacri fice for freedom,” was the militant ultimatum issued by E. B. Knox, act- ing president of the Universal Negro Improvement Association, to the Tammany hall “‘cossacks”, who have launched a campaign of police ter rorism in Harlem. Despite every effort to suppress the growing militancy among the Negro masses, especially those ele- ments which assemble at the open air street meetings to hear speakers inform them as to the only way for emancipation, through their organ- ized strength and power, the patrol- men are openly interrupting speak- ers and breaking up meetings under the dirty pretence of regulating traffic. This form of terrorism has be- come so pronounced that today cer- tain speakers are looked upon as “marked men” and every effort is being made by the blue-coated bul- lies to frame them up. Among these militants are, Willi- am Grant and Pedro Suner. Because of their open radicalism, the police have succeeded in getting them in- volved in the case of Clarence Donald, a victim of polite brutality which nearly led to a riot in Har- lem, some weeks ago. Near Riot in Harlem. On the evening of July 22, 1928, a man named Clarence Donald, 36, living at 328 Seventh Ave., went to the home of one Zerlena Clavis, 559 Lenox Ave., near 139th St., where it is said, a dispute took place. She raised an alarm and Donald ran to the street where he was chased by Policeman Kuberl. Donald, seeing that he was cov- ered by the constable, raised his hands to surrender. At this time another policeman, named De Stella, came to the assistance of Kuberl and while Donald had his hands up start- ed to beat him brutally with his night stick. This savage and cowardly act drew the attention of passersby who protested against the police conduct. A woman shouted, “Shame on you, the police have no right to be beat- ing up an unarmed man like that!” As she said these words, De Stella turned away from Donald and made an attempt to slap the woman. Her male companion immediately rushed forward and landed the of- ficer a square blow in the face, throwing him to the ground. Stabs Donald. By this time, Charles Brown, a detective, got an alarm and hurried to the scene. He drey his pistol but the crowd which ha@ gathered pre- vented him from using it, by closing in on him. He then pulled out a knife with which he stabbed Donald, who was struggling to free himself from the grip of Kuberl. No sooner is act been committed than the crowd became infuriated and be- gan to land blows on him and patrol- men Young and MacFadden, who had joined the fray. Somebody telephoned the 135th St. station and Captain Burnell, with a squad of men rushed to the scene where they attacked the crowd with their fists, feet and night sticks. Armed With Machine Guns. There were about 150 officers armed with machine guns, service pistols and rifles, The fire depart- ment assembled engines across the street and warded off the crowd dressmakers do not see any reason to fight their brothers. Realizing his failure, Mr, Sigman is now forced to send his best “friend” Breslaw to save the situation. Mr, Breslaw is due here soon, Whether he will suc- ceed, remains to be seen; we are confident, however, that the cloak and dressmakers who have learned from the experience of the New York workers realize that a fight against their brothers in the-shops means a fight against themselves; we are confident that they will not fall into the trap set for them by the Sigmans, Shlessingers, laws and the rest of the clique. The Boston cloak and dressmakers are determined to build their union. -—EMMA YANINSKY. Bres- | IN HARLE with water, while the ambul a 1 to the Harlem hosy and fro with by the police clubs As the ht progressed, thou- sands of Negroes congrega t the corner of 138th street and Lenox avenue and took up the cause of the civilian element against the po- ice, who were i criminately beat- ing up men, women and children. While the struggle was going on, Donald was hurried off to the 135th street station in an automobile where he was beaten so badly that he h: to be carried to the Harlem hospital for treatment ona stretcher The Hearing. The case against Donald was first called on July 81st, but was ad- journed until August 14th nm he was sentenced to 10 days by M trate Dodge at the Heights ( t, is trial was a typical farce to which workers are daily subjected. Donald was able to offer three witnesses who refuted the charge of disorderly conduct, but the judge ac- cepted the complainants’ word and convicted the prisoner. The trial was a real Tammany “burlesque” with the poor Negro as the ‘ goat.” Sunner, one of Donald's witnesses, having dared to deny the charges of Patrolman Young was immediately arrested after he left the stand and charged with assault. Torture Grant. The same thing happened to Grant, who told the court he saw Patrolman De Stella on the night of the riot wound Patrolman Kuberl with a kick in the groin which he had aimed at Donald but missed. This charge enraged the police so that they were determined to take it out on Grant. They took him to the Wadsworth ave. station and later to the 128rd street station where he was beaten up unmerct- fully and burned with cigar ends and matches, in an attempt to get him to make “a confession.” The next day they charged him with robbery and brought a white taxi driver, named Herman Ellis, a police “stool-pigeon”, to swear that Grant had robbed him on the morn- ing before the riot. Grant was brought before Magistrate Bushell scape- ‘in thé Harlem court and placed on $5,000 bail. Interviewed in the lock-up, Grant said that he was the victim of a frame-up. “Some weeks ago, I had to report a cop named Blankey of 135th street station to Police Com- missioner Warren and Inspector Ry- an for breaking up my meeting. They are therefore trying to get me in jail so as to keep me from talking to my people.” Attorney John Smith, 26 Court- land street, who represented the men told the court that the arrest of the witnesses was the most high handed and outrageous intimidation he had ever heard of. Protest Mecting Called. The Negro masses in Harlem are in a state of revolt against this open and flagrant campaign of police ter- rorism. All sections of the popula- tion, even the most reactionary ele- ments, are voicing their protest. Richard B. Moore, national or- ganizer of the American Negro La- bor Congress, when interviewed stated that his organization has rec- ently issued an appeal to various or- ganizations and prominent race lead- ers to stage a monster protest meet- ing in Harlem and to organize the broad masses of the workers to con- tinue to fight vigilantly against this unwarranted police assault, which the authorities are carrying on to crush the militant spirit of the Negroes, so as to make them easy pawns for capitalist exploita- tion. DEMAND MISSIONA RIES SKIP. APIA, British Samoa, Sept. 8.— The withdrawal of white Christian missionaries from British Samoa has been demanded by the Mau, na- tive radical political society. The organzation has also decided | to take no notice of the order of a | special British commission which would prevent all members of the u from holding office, Hs Ca.No Gls MAIL CARRIERS OBSERVE YOUTH © Chopin ARE DRIVEN 12 DAY THIS WEEK HOURS A DAY THROUGHOUT U.S, ‘Spies Watch Men at | All Times to Hold Many Meets (By a Worker Correspondent) Continued from Page One | May I call your attention to the | conference of youth to fight the 1m- | ‘, sa liatt oh Aston perialist war was held at Berne, /SPonre Dees TIES invence vane Switzerland, under the direction of speed-up system that ever existed? | Ka1] Liebknecht. I refer to the U. S. Postal System, | Mestings. Bcheduled) under the control of politicians and) The Young Workers League has administered according to their own| issued an appeal to all its members For instance, the recant ex.|t0 make the International Youth os i & Day meetings this year more suc- pose at Biloxi, Miss. Merit and) cosstul than ever. The following seniority are supposed to be the calendar of meetings has been ar- main factors for advancement. How | ‘anged 2 ‘ : ever a politician can overcome these| District 1—Quincy, Sept. 1; Nor- obstacles for the benefit of his man. / Tir ce "Sent. 12; Lowelly Sept, Substitute carriers, when ap-|14; Lynn, Sept. 15; Peabody, Sept. pointed, must themselves buy a com-| 1g; Lonesville, Sept. 17; Worcester, plete uniform and all incidentals. | Sept, 10; Fitchberg, Sept. 11; Gard- Their time is no longer their own. | noy, Sept. 12; Washua, Sept. 13; They are soldiers in a huge slave | providence, Sept. 15; W. Concord, army at the beck and call of their | sept. 145 Boston, Sept. 16; Fall | Young Worker League whim. wood, Sept. 11; Brockton, Sept. 12;) | Productions of the Week IN CHOPIN OPERETTA |HIS evening, at the Shubert The- | atre, the Shuberts will present | |“White Lilacs,” a romance with | music, based on the life of Frederic Chopin. Guy Robertson, Odette | | Myrtil and DeWolf Hopper are the principal players. Others include | Allan Rogers, Grace Brinkley, Er- nest Lawford, Charles Croker-King ‘and Maurice Holland. Harry B. Smith adapted the book from the | German of Sigurd Johannsen and |also wrote the lyrics. The music is | by Karl Hajos. Many of Chopin’s compositions are interpolated. pater eae | | “The High Road,” Frederick Lons- | dale’s new comedy, will open to- night at the Fulton Theatre with a cast headed by Edna Best, Fred- \erick Kerr, Harbert Marshall, Al- fred Drayton, H. Reeves-Smith and |Hilda Spong. Odette Myrtil, one of the prin- * cipals in “White Lilacs,” a romantic play with music, based on the life of the great composer, Frederic Chopin, which will open tonight at the Shubert Theatre. * * Max Marcin will bring his new production, “Trapped,” a melo- |drama which he wrote in collabora- | ion with Sanivel Shipman, to the | National Theatre esday. The |east includes Felix Krembs, John | |Miltern, William Ingersol, Calvin Thomas, Janet McLeav, Edward | engagement during a spring vaca- tion, supetiors, controlled by the magic of | River, the “for the good of the service.” Sept. 14. Sub-carriers are required to be in attendance, on shifts at times of about 12 hours, regardless of whether there is work to be done or not. Skillful manipulations of sched- | ules do this. | Mail carriers in small stations, | which territory is being rapidly “im- | proved,” are required to make that | extra effort of loyal American citi-| St. Louis, zens, in maintaining schedule in face | Sept, 23. of adverse conditions, Having no re- couse but to follow instructions even | after a refftsal of help was given, the mail c few stre man by the “hard ridden” by the same superin- ier is forced to miss a| Minn., s of his delivery and if|Sept. 15; Belden, N. D., Sept. 14;|¢f the French musical farce, “Un severely punished. Some-|Culu, Wis. Sept. 16; Ontonagon, nt is given a mailman by Mich., Sept. 9; Lawler, Minn., Sept. 4 7 % es a hint in given! ja Umelle|i6, Bovey, Mian “Gene 16; Paynes. Nathaniel Lief. ‘The east includes Superintendent to ville. Mich., Sept. 9; Makinen, Minn., do so, should he be caught he is| Sept. 15. Sept. 15; New Bedford, Woods and Mary Robinson. | | * . * | District 2—New York City, Sept.) Myron C. Fagan will present his 14. own play, “The Great Power,” at District 2—Philadelphia, Sept. 28;| the Ritz Theatre, Tuesday night, District 4—Buffalo, Sept. 16. | with a cast headed by Minna Gom- District 5—New Kensington, Sept. | bell and John T. Doyle, and includ- 18. |ing Alan Birmingham, Helen Ship- man, G. Davidson Clark, Conway Wingfield and Walter Walker. oe) Cleveland Meeting. District 6—Cleveland, Sept. 16. District 8—Waukegan, Sept. 13; Sept. 16; Chicago,, The Shuberts have decided to ad- | Vance the premiere of ‘jeir new mu- | District 9—Superior, Wis., Sept. | sieal farce, “Luckee Girl,” to Sat- 16; Duluth, Minn., Sept. 16; South |Urday evening, September 15, at the Range, Mich. Sept. 13; Cloquet,|Casino Theatre. “Luckee Girl” is Sept. 16; Eben Junction,!@n adaptation by Gertrude Purcell |Bon Garcon.” | Maurice Yvain, lyrics by Max and The music is by | Billy House, Irene Dunne, Irving | Fisher, Harry Puck and Josephine | Drake. District 10—Aguilar, Sept. This lassez faire attitude on the part of Mr. West may have an ulter-| ior motive after all, a suspicion that does not seem altogether ground- less when the siren’s spouse falls in love with the sister of his wife’s latest acquisition. This animadversion brings on the usual complications which seem to have imposed too heavy a strain on the playwright. Despite the ability of Miss Boland to sustain interest in spite of an author, the audience is more inclined to yawn than to chuckle after the curtain falls on the first act. Miss Boland displays as much knowledge of human nature as if She owned a string of boarding houses in the thespian belt. A. E. Matthews, much to the re- gret of the clients had only scanty opportunity to display his histrionic tendent. If he does not take the hint) Pueblo, Sept. 11; Leadville, Sept.| the superintendent will “lay” for|12; Canon City, Sept. 14; Lexing-| him. | ton, Sept. 10. 10; | +e * MARY BOLAND GOES THRU “HEAVY TRAFFIC” AT THE The postal service has, I believe, | the greatest system of espionage.| New Haven, Sept. 15. Inspectors, foremen, appointed from | the ranks according to the strength of their political affiliations, spy upon the men. Spying galleries are found in many stations; some are| disguised as ventilators. | : JG. | COAST FURUNION WANTS CHARTER Wants Affiliation to New Union LOS ANGELES (By Mail).—The six-month-old furriers’ union here, at a membership meeting held re- | cently unanimously adopted a reso- lution to request a charter from the new international fur workers union recently established in New York. The resolution, signed by the lo- cal union secretary, J. Sonnenshien, | states its position as follows: “Whereas: The fur workers of the city of Los Angeles have organ- ized themselves into a union; and “Whereas: In organizing they! thought it best to join with their brothers in other cities of the United States and Canada; and “Whereas: They have tried their best to get a charter from the now | defunct International Fur Workers | Union of the United States and Can- ada; and “Wherea There is in process of formation a New International Fur) Workers Union, that is assuming the duties and responsibilities of the | defunct International Fur Workers Union; and “Whereas: The New International Fnr Workers Union is ready to unite all existing fur workers’ locals working in the trade and is w'lling to issue a charter to the local in Los Angeles; therefore “Re it resolved: That this local of the Fur Workers Union of Los Ane-les at its regular meeting as- xembled on August 27. 1928. heartily endorses the action taken by the lo- cals in New York, Brooklyn, Boston, Toronto and elsewhere to organize themselves info one International Fur Workers Union in the United States and Canada: and “Be it resolved: Tht we inin the New Internationai Fur Workers Union, as one of the progressive lo- cal, and demand that we be issued a charter so that we may take part in the effort to build the New In- ternational Fur Workers Union; and “Be it further resolved: That we send to the provisional exeevtive committe, who are emnowered to aet for the international, for this cherter: and “Re it further resolved: That? w~ publish this resolution in agyv of the labor press that mav be willing to print seme, and to all locals thet are now affiliated with the provisional executive committee.” PARIS. Sept. 8.—Gen, Hasse~ | Tewfik Badr Pasha. cousin of Kin~ | Fuad of Egypt. died a few minute | after a heart attack in a taxicab o | Grand Boulevard. | EMPIRE LIKE A FIRE ENGINE. Crities predict a short life for | “Heavy Traffic,” now at the Empire 'Theatre but the presence of Mary | CONN. LEFT WIE Boland in the cast guarantees it a ACTIVE AT MEET | merry one, until the end of the first act. The play is by Harry Richman out of Frohman to use the vernacu-| |lar of the race track. Mary Boland, who played the leading role in “Women Go On For- ever” brings weight and vivacity to the story of a fickle siren who is afflicted with. kleptomania; she looks with a proprietary eye on every pulchritudinous male that comes within range of her vision. Mrs. Malcolm West is the man- snatcher who is able to indulge in | her amorous predilections by virtue _of a philosophical husband who looks for the release of Tom Mooney and | 0m matrimony as only something a W. K. Billings be unanimously little more binding than marriage adopted. The other two received a | non-concurrence, which was followed Nicaragua Jingo Lauds by a long discussion, after which a A br ken silowing | U. S. Marine’s Gun Rule | —— | vote was taken with the following | results: On the Recognition of the Soviet Union, 5 voted for and 64, Adolfo Benard, conservative can-| against. On the Labor Party, 11|didate for president of Nicaragua, voted for and 62 against. arrived here yesterday on the Span- William F. Hearing, left wing | ish Royal Mail liner Manuel Arnus, delegate, in announcing his candi-| with a statement deriding the influ-| dacy as Vice-President for the Fede- ence that Sandino, revolutionary ration, was to withdraw his candi-| leader of the Nicaraguan. workers dacy in the threat that a resolution and peasants, has had on the elec- would be introduced condemning him | tions. | for his connections with the Com-| Toward the United States, he as- munists. Hearing refused to with-| sumed an attitude of complete ser- draw, and just before the voting vility, praising the marine rule of took place there was whispering all the U. S. imperialists which has| over the hall, “Don’t vote for Hear- | killed hundreds of Nicaraguans on ing, he is a Communist.” In spite | native soil. of this, Hearing received 41 votes, | out of 105. | CONCESSION FAILS. A resolution signed by the “so-| LIMA, Peru, Sept. 9.—Negotia- cialist” delegate from Bridgeport by | tions between the recently formed name Brewster, was introduced con- | German-Peruvian Companyi and the demning, in an indirect way, Hear-| Hartmann interests for the taking ing and his associates. |over of the Hartmann concession No attempt was made to endorse | have failed. The concession included Smith, for president. | colonization and railroad construc- J. W. Moore was again elected as | tion. | Sycere | the president of the federation, with his henchman Eagan, as Secretary| FORD PLANT IN BRITAIN. | for the State. LONDON, Sept. 9.—Henry Ford No conerete proposals for the or- | is expected to gain a lead on British ganization of the 89 p. c. of the un- | automobile producers when his new | organized workers in this state were | plant at Dagenham, Essex, will be made. completed in ab District 15—Hartford, Sept. 14; Fight Reaction at State Federation Meet Continued from Page One of the Soviet Union, All of these resolutions were rend before the entire convention, and in the Resolutions’ Committee report, it was recommended that the reso- lutions on child labor, for the or- ganization of the unorganized and COMPLETE TOUR SOVIET RUSSIA (Last Tour This Year) Sails: SS. MAURETANIA October 17 WORLD TOURISTS Incorporated, 69 FIFTH AVE. New York 35 DAYS of Interesting Travel Free Russian Visas prowess. Others who stood up well under the ordeal of supporting Miss Boland are Reginald Mason, Edward Crandall, Robert Strange and Leo Carroll. -As an effort to amuse the popu- lation it. is one third successful, essmakers Enthusiastic for New Union, Correspondent Writes y Operetta Heads New YOUNG WORKERS AT GMT, CAMPS GET AN EARFUL YWL Distributes Many Bulletins (By a Worker Correspondent) Members of the Young Workers (Communist) League in the Citi- zens’ Military Training Camp in | Fort Sheridan, have published a | bulletin, “Camp Holiday Rebel,” which was distributed by mail to about 400 Citizens’ Military Train- ing Camp. students. | The “Camp Holiday Rebel” ex- posed to the CMTC students the role of the CMTC and the preparations | for a new war. It urged the stu- |dents that since they are already |in the CMTC camp, to utilize their military knowledge in the interest |of the working class. Through this | bulletin the students got the Com- munist position on war and mili- tarism, and were urged by, the league members to fight for the workers against the bosses. All the CMTC students who came |from factories with the idea that |the CMTC will give them a vaca- tion became immediately disillu- sioned during the first week of their stay in the camp. As a result of our Communist agitation which created some de- moralization in the camp, drilling during the last four days was com- pletely abandoned. In order to counteract the influence of the Com- munist League the camp authorities |forced the CMTC students to sign a pledge of allegiance. At first the |students refused to sign, telling openly to the officers, that they | signed for war, but after two hours the authorities succeeded’ to force the students into submission and made them sign the pledge under the threat that they will receive dis- honorable discharge and inform same to employer—which means they will lose their jobs. Upon the finish of camp, the students who came from factories said that this |is the last time that they will go to camp. 7 KEITH- ALBEE REFRIGERATED —— CAM COOL AND COMFORTABLE 42nd St. and Broadway 3rd Worx EO FIRST TIME AT POPULAR PRICES! ARCH SELWYN presents DAWN with SYBIL THORNDIKE as Nurse Edith Cavell “MAGNIFICENT’—Eve. Sun, “POWERFUL"—Eve. World and on the same program: MEMORIES OF CONFLICT Photographed on Battlefields of Europe. | CHANIN’S46th St. W. of Broadway HUDSON West 44 81. Evenin; Mats. Wed. with GEO. OLSEA and HIS MUSIC “aNtex’” THE LADDER IN tts REVIGED FORM? ea. W. 48 St. Evs. 8:30 CORT “yts”" weal se Sat. Money Refunded if Not Satisfied With Play. Sat. Byes, at 8:50 Mats. Wed. and Sat. 2:30 “Goin’ Home” “Vivid and unfailingly exciting.” igon Smith, — World, The: Central Pk. W. CENTURY 2 St. Eve 30 Mats. Wed. and Sat. MARY DUGAN You're in the fight when you write for The DAILY WORKER. THE TRIAL OF low, Workers Party States of America. Levestone, the achievements of ating Convention. splendidly done. AcceptanceSpeeches Just Published FORTY-EIGHT page pamphlet con- taining the acceptance speeches of William Z. Foster and Benjamin Git- ident and Vice-President of the United Included also is the nominating speech delivered by Bob Minor, Editor of the Daily Worker, and the closing address by Jay Executive Secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party, summarizing Each pamphlet carries a plate with the latest photographs of Foster and Gitlow PRICE 5 CENTS In lots of 100 or more 80 per cent off. National Election Campaign Committee ‘ 43 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK, N. Y. All orders must be accompanied by payment candidates ,for Pres- the National Nomin-

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