The Daily Worker Newspaper, September 17, 1928, Page 4

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oe — Packing House ,,orkers Know UVSSES, POLICE FRYING TO FRAME QHLER, OTHERS THE DA'TLY WORK uw YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 19 Communisis Fight for Them, Says Correspon dent SPEED UP OF GAR Five New Plays This week - - PLUMBER HELPER MEN 1S CAUSE OF 27%e Comedy Opens Tonight pei EGATES SENT MANY ACCIDENTS TO GONVENTION HIS week will see five new pro-| ductions on Broadway: “Cross Lay Off Many; Risk Is Unions Organized in | Motorman’s Several Cities 9 - More Victims of Imperialist “Air Consciousness’ My Heart,” “Lucky Strike” and| “This Thing Called Love,’ sched | uled for this evening, Jack! Dempsey-Estelle Tayior “ihe | Big Show,” tomorrow night and| Schwab and Mandel’s new musical “The New Moon” for Wednesday. the how, Workers to Union (By « Worker Correspondent) By-a Worker Correspondent) (By a Worker Correspondent) KANSAS CITY, Kan. (By Mail). CLEVELAND, Ohio (By Mail).—| Patterson McNutt will present: | ake yearly national eanvention of With the heari r Hugo Oehl- A vicious plan of speed-up and staff| “This Thing Called Love,” a comedy o _ eaten ee %f Nelson S. Yocum, E. B. East- |reduction is now being inaugurated|by Edwin Burke at the Maxine El- Hae cAECAS GIR Node ee vood and is, charged with in this city by the local ion|liott Theatre tonight. . Minor Wat- pier ae ae nd Kansas State interests, the Cleveland R.R. Co..|son and Violet Heming are featured liege aed aed | The American Association of | Plumbers’ Helpers will send a dele- gation to this convention. Brothers tarting e court who own the sole rights of trans- and the cast includes Juliette Day, |portetion in the city and suburbs.) Malcolm Duncan, Ruth Garland and house, charges such as the syndicalist law ers there have organized a union. ails wo : |The new plan was put into effect Bruce Elmore. senctlay fi ea Sea eae Debris of a home-made plane, built and piloted by L. W. Dugger, of Kansas City, Mo., which lon’ the 40th ons Rubia. Aver tie eerie Wa a as ich se Regi re sehapete crashed to the \eurth recently. Dugger was. burned to déath. The passengers were seriously injured: “Broadway” of this city. j ; ; Boe oe) eaten ere rere clean et ne om | —___ — ee ; i § Another opening for this evening delegates. munist Party. } : = : Articulated or two car trains i; “Cross My Heart,” Sammy Lee’s A mass meeting of plumbers? While only these four are indicted MINERS HNION jmounted on three trucks, with @1 musical show, which opens at the helpers will be held prior to the for the violation of the synd st q FOSTER ee GITLOW Sete re tah ca 0 cand Knickerbocker Theatre. The cast | depactare of oe aerigeed ba a code of the state there are six J abies seeker Nasanies includes Lulu McConnell, Mary antic City on Wednesday, Sept. 5. ithers who are charged with va- Iss S p | eae the otmer, have eon introduced. engl Lawlor, Eddie Conrad, Clarence NN aia baal Sb 7 arains’ y’ a) q ie bo be ners PTT z i , | cago, i“ a ie plumbers elp- See 2, ereinst. whom. other William Z. Foster, Workers (Communist) Party candidate | were necessary to operate a two-car NondaGiao) bata: ie ances uae * ; r in, but the new cars will require 84 their orchestra. Harry Tierney! star of “This Thing Called Love,” | or of a similar character will be In Philadelphia, the Plumbers’ | tion. Our hopes are not based on any conventions. Only by organizing mi for president, and Benjamin Gitlow, vice presidential candi-| only one. At present a conductor Wrote the score and the lyrics ave by la new play opening tonight at the! telpers Union is makin, reat rought. The persecution and) Adopt Militant Plan of : an i rides on the rear car instructing|Joseph McCarthy. Daniel Kusell is! Maxine Elliott Theatre. Honiyae UA delovetion etl he cer ‘he frame-up of militant workers ‘4 + date, are now on the first lap of a nation-wide speaking tour | |,, passengers how to use the trea-|Tesponsible for the book. lio the Called ‘Anecaieden Gcneene and Communists was carefully Class Struggle which will bring them into every important city in the United | dle doors with which the new cars| ou Ne planned by the company and gov- are fitted. Afterwards, the company When the raid Vaudeville Theatres when the car riders “Lucky Strike,” a comedy by H. ernment officials. R. Irving will come to the Biltmore Continued from Page One States, winding up with a monster mass meeting in Madison | declares, are on the Sacco-Vanzetti meeting, greed for more profits have followed Square Garden, New York City, on November 4. acquainted with the new machinery] this evening for a limited run of PALACE | strongly on the jobs can we achieve which was held under the auspices a policy of closing so-called unpro- only one conductor will be necessary. | two weeks. Eddie Dowling, late star of|our aims. of the International Labor Defense, | ductive mines, speed-up production This means that a considerable “Honeymoon Lane,” assisted by Kate| Plumbers’ helpers come to the it Shawnee Park in Armourdale, | cutting wages, establish the open FOSTER TOUR GITLOW: TOUR number of the men will be thrown| Tuesd: i t the Majestic, Smith and James F. Hamley; Lucille; mass meeting. Bring your fellow Kansas, the police had about a doz- shop and exterminate the union. In out of employment to swell the large} Tuesday evening, a’ wt yus?| LaVerne, in a condensed version of helpers along. —A. P. H. Sam H. Harris and Albert Lewis Mts. Wed. & Sat. Money Refunded if Not Satisfied ‘With Play. en spies, stool-pigeons from the this the operators have found : : numbers that are already roaming | 8 Pog St Ape , *§ In”: Gast | ——_—____—. BMG iscces, aiid’ detectives all | plete: support from thats eviataahe Tuesday, Sept. 18, Aberdeen, Wednesday, Sept. 19, Duluth, |the streets of this “city of homes.” will present “The Big Fight” by the dleys cua Un Geen) aaa Soa note ae clad in overalls, planted in the corrupt tools—the Lewis machine. | Wah. an arrangements: to (be ck hoon Hall, corner 21st | Motormen’s Risk. oe point Srepeee ae a sisted by Edna Mackay; Buck and| Members of the Gloucester, N. J. irewd. At the same time hicher Old Union Smashed. Spouses. j Ave. & ist Al ith th y car’ MP ODs SOOT Tees Peers 8" | Bubides; “Tote”; Mas vioe pre he us: n Smas i vey, le Ree ong with the new cars comes 1 Other play . Bubbles; 3 argaret/nolice force recently began the cir- pompany officials and police in | In district after district the union| oe STAG ae Reco | Thursday, Sept. 20, Virginia, |the announcement from the company| stelle. Taylor. | fither players i | stewart, with May Day with Beulan\tulation of petitions throughout the Blain clothes, headed by Beatty, cap-|has been smashed. Working condi-| OM». Swiss, Os "ol Sen Francieco,| in” ‘Small Auditorium, City | that five minutes will be cut off the}, Vinton and William Ric. | Stewart. city to obtain sufficient signatures Sees volice/force, were hiding | Jon? have: been lost. “The numbers ey ee ee a ee nae |running time on the Euclid Ave.|¢ 14: HIPPODROME —|to have placed on the November curing the meeting in the b of unemployed coal miners has grown Calif. Civie Auditorium, San Fran-| saturday, Sept. 22, Bismarck, N.| line askin ok wi, is ‘i Berea G6 mecting ‘was ta ever 209.009. In complete collab-| cisco. Dak rel ea denote redsel TMin 4 fre to Wa acdmioeronk, Al Van, with his gang; Bob Hall; | election ballot the question as to oe ae ane Pa ned ration with the coal operators the| Sunday, Sept. 23, Los Angeles, ates ae an at McKenzie siabecatine a pele Na “The New Moon,” a musical | Orville Stamm and Billie, Alexander | whether the police force shall have ree teen ica | Lew! chine pursued this reac-|Calif., Whiting Woods, Rosemont, 07 won ua reed ; comedy, will open at the Imperial/and Peggy; Ray Huling and|an 8-hour day. {een policemen in unifornt descended (77, Slee GL to. dete | Galle Sunday, Sept. 23, Belden, N. D. it is almost impossible at the ee ve Cao 0 Ke \“Charlie”;, The Colleanos. The) ~—~ ~~ pon the meeting and began the ar- |, Nees a ee oe . ne aint ™* “*\ present to make the schedule time| Theatre, Wednesday. Oscar Ham-| © b oa pee Josephi i ‘ he ane 6a NSS ‘these 200,000 unemployed coal min-| Tuesday, Sept. 25, Salt Lake City,|Final arrangements to be an-|/ POTN aes one of traffic and|merstein 2nd and Frank Mandel are |feature photoplay will be “Manmade | 7osephine Davis, Jazz Tips Hender- Pak B. West ers out of the industry. This ir|Utah, W. 0, W. 168 S, W. Temple | nounced. : ber of automatic traf-| responsible for the book, while Sig-| Women,” starring Leatrice Joy and S°M ~ 8Y) u Oehler and E. B. Eastwood were | face of a situation where unemploy-| st. 9; Mca the large number of a Ps Sa oR. Wanker 7 and Dottie Lucke, Bobby Joyce and he first ones to be arrested, then ment prevails everywher Py Sees reat Monday, Sept. 24, Plentywood, tic signals that the carmen have to|mund Romberg wrote the musie./4- B- : Marie Hisgen. ‘Olive Olsen; the ala Sekeg Meas eae n a eee = or ne: ee Thursday, Sept. 27, Denver, Colo.| Mont. Farmer Labor Temple, Plen-| contend with. Lately many serious|The cast will feature Evelyn Her-| BROADWAY Bio’ Teoupe: | The taatake> pistes as on ™, ouhe corrupt Lewis clique sold out Tabernacle Hall, 20th & Lawrence | tywood. |accidents have occurred owing to|bert, Robert Halliday and Gus Shy| Hughie Clark and His Gang, fea- play will be “Freedom of the Press” a ae h egan ? round 2 eomplee to the Neuen ii drive | Sts. Wednesday, Sept. 26, Great Falls,|the high speed at which motormen| and will include Max Figman, Wil-| turing Hig Gus ‘Apeech sia, ee eve atone: the audience. Among the arre of the coal operators. Strike after) Friday, Sept. 28, Omaha, Neb.|Mont. Final arrangements to be| have been forced to operate the cars.|liam O'Neal, Marie Callahan and | ; = 2 were mothe h their children, strike was defeated by their treas-| ¢ As ‘ | ; * i { Be cece wih fhelr children, | strike Wat sleronved by thelr tress-/Son Theatre, 1éth & Farnam Sts, | announced. on an eight mile stretch of Euclid] Rdward Nell. | shal See a eas They eae ie bal against |,,>turday, Sept. 29, Kansas City,| Friday, Sept. 28, Spokane, Wash, | Avenue, three-fourths of which lies — neferred the protectin: metho (| themselves by siening ef separate M0. Musicians Auditorium, 1017/Final arrangements to be an-|in the busiest section of the city. ferred the protesting mothers to| themselves, by, signing pf separste/ Washington St Be aS This running time is only forty-five CALIFORNIA RED | he company official who evidently tore of ‘one company’s mines| Sunday, Sept. 30, Chicago, Ill.) Sunday, Sept. 80, Seattle, Wash, minutes from about 7 p. m. to 5 < A onducting the raid. Cae ee permitting the rest to operate Final arrangements to be an-|Final arrangements to be an-|# ™m. What with a stop at every ! sce er bo ny to exclude Ameri- Caper ehopie next by, cigaing, wep | UOuRoe nounced. second block, and traffic signals 1 KEITH. Tose ah kets Gnd arrested only) .rote districts, leading to the crim-|_ Monday, Oct. 1,'St Louis, Mo.| Monday, Oct. 1, Portland, Ore,|that only alternate every thirty- | : CAMEO NO W! hose ‘who looked like foreign-born +101 isolation of the Pennsylvania|Final arrangements to be an-|Final arrangements to be an.|{ve or sixty seconds, and an inspec- ALBEE . gabe When the arrested were and Ohio strikers while the other|Rounced. | nounced tor hiding behind a telegraph pole 42nd St. and Broadway brought to the jail they were|‘.,. +. is . | y, 4 yi gee ‘ | with a watch in his hand, you can : a0 a : districts were taken out of the fight.) Wednesday, Oct. 3, Indianapolis,| Tuesday, Oct. 2, Astoria, Ore.| “2 % #3 : } Wh charged with vagrancy and released Lastly, this corrupt clique coma | Ind. Final arrangements to be an-| Final arrangements to be oe Lice cep mee aan, peat ia Foster, Gitlow, itney 4 4 bg ’ ’ ender a $500'bond. Meanwhile the| sisted its dastardly wrecking policy| nounced, apa |has to take to keep the car on time on Ballot volice, the county and district at-\hy abandoning the Jacksonville! Thursday, Oct. 4, Cincinnati, O. Thursday, Oct. 4, Oakland, Calif. oie keep ie ie Hts ae are V S Hneys: were busy in formulating /seale, cutting wages in Illinois an¢|Final arrangements to be an-|Final arrangements to be an-| cig hsfo Me’ Paiou ne won| LOS ANGELES, Sept. 16—||| @@ : ee the charges. |Indianapolis, betraying the Penn-| nounced. nounced. es Nee a a Sli ffering fi ‘a belated er | : Fagor ‘ . hand in hand with the R. R. com-|Though suffering from rsday on it became|sylvania and Ohio strike and en ' 4 i tart the campalen of the ‘Workers kmown that Hugo Ochler, district | tirely destroying the union in those] 099 St; ent any 2o SnceUne upn tne ane. catenins Panty te neo 4k ell Authentic! | Sensational Submarine | Warfare! | WORLD GGgatizer of District 10 of the)fields | udents From Insurance Gog. swing. About 1,000 names have al-||j|_ ACTUAL! an Sind Ships" | PREMIERE ‘orkers (Communist) Party, and Agents o! ses. A group insurance and retirement| cay. ai i = Pes % ‘ - - é dy been obtained for the peti- |'= Nelson S. Yocum, E. B. Eastwood|, These black reactionaries and | Far North Attend | fasmeds pian procmnded tha sponding Wt’ atta deuce usa ante (UMAR ae a ee jaan and Sam Kassis were indicted under | bosses’ agents who comprise the Leningrad School | up. The insurance plan was intro-|\ the ballot, while @ similar num- wats. Wed: and’ Sat. 2:30) Have you THE LADDER the criminal syndicalist law. perale of tho Lams mace eee | |duced following the declaration of| 12, have heen obtained for Anita| £4 01n’ ome a IN ITS REVISED FORM? Hugo Oehler made tirade | lly and in the various districts) the rt of Ohio declari : i idate | Th Bve. 8: Saict the government in which he have wrought a terrible destruction.|_ LENINGRAD, Sept. 16 (UP)— | umeonatitutional the closed shop cone | Whitney, the Communist candidate CORT ta Weer eet ee | unconstitutional the closed shop con- . | tract then existing between the Car- His} men’s Union and the R. R. Co. jafter the local courts had declared \legal an award of twelve cents per Speed-Up Order | hour increase in wages granted by £640. S. eenator. | “Vivid and unfailingly exciting.” Boris Susman and Arthur Dick, | candidates for the state assembly in the 66th and 78rd Districts respec- tively, are expected to go on the ballot without great difficulty. The opening gun of the Los An- geles campaign was fired Tuesday evening, Sept. 4th, when Comrade Anita Whitney of Oakland, candi- Said that Sacco and Vanzetti were The United Mine Workers has now|Qne of the strangest schools in the Miidered by the capitalists and | ee practically completely exter- world has been functioning in this their government, and that the|minated. The desperate efforts still] city since 1926, It is the so-called workers must organize in order to ane te ay She Lowy me ie erie Ree egeeye, Sameer 20) A: Pent further securrencen, This |°%,12 the check-off in Tlinois and dents, about 40 of them women, rep- : ititions, according to tne had | UDI of other jsolated spots is/ resent 31 different nationalities in- (By a Worker Correspondent) | an arbitration board. This was in boiled government officials, who re-| wernitant celories. The result of reiting the frozen northernmost) In the plumbing shop of Marks |1924. Since then the R. R. Company ceived their education while in serv-|the last wage agreement Fh een nae mu ad Sohleck, in th a eee eae ones pene ee ee e last wage agreement there for) Russia, 2 ie Bronx, the ling men away from the anions Pree plumbers are forced by the bosses ¢ “Step ons Ft?) ig —Allson Smith, World. CENTURY Thea., Central Pk. w. TU & 62 St. Eves. 8:30 Mats. Wed. and Sat. MARY DUGAN nenenisin 25 o arglo Arthur Hopkins Presents “MACHINAL’ A new play in two parts and ten scenes by Sophie Treadwell Then, W.45thSt.Eves.8.30 THE TRIA OF ice of the Armour Company. Then,| the rank and file coal miners is a | . ae " | smokers, free concerts, free picnics, "Thea, 44,W.ofB'way.Ev. according to police statements, | drastic wage cut and the shackles|_ Laplanders, Samoyeds, Tungus, | to speed up on the job, |free dental treatment, and now free| date for U. 8, senator, sfoke to an ney mane aprotic | SHUBERT irorMais Wea,bard.to Oehler urged to have the conditions| of a company union. Ostyaks and so on—some of them Eee Rigi nes i SCHWAB and MANDEL'S | Ok Ome , ; Mr. Marks, the senior partner, is | Uniform caps have heen given to the| enthusiastic mass meeting at the MUSICAL SMASH GUY ODETTE DE WOLF reversed and have the laborers kill} Thruout the past labor history of | tribes whose very existence has been | : DREIRSE, 16 |ROBERTSON MYRTIL HOOPER Walker Auditorium. Over four hundred dollars were raised from the collection for the campaign. The names and addresses of nearly 18,000 voters who declined continually heckling the workers, ! men, all paid for out of the nine and| His favorite expressions are: “Get |Seven cent fares that are being the work done,“ “throw it up,”|Wrung out of the car riders, the |“step on it,” “are you a cripple?” | steat majority of whom are work- |“I can do twice as much,” “if you | €TS- the capitalists. It is evident that| this country the coal miners can| discovered only recently—have sent the stool-pigeons of the Armour Co.| show a splendid record of militant |daring members to taste this Rus- will testify to statements that| struggle for working class organiza-| sian culture of which the white men Ochler never made and on the basis| tion. The unbreakable solidarity and | from warmer climes have told them. of his speech at the Sacco-Vanzetti| unconquerable fighting spirit which | Many of them had to travel for two in a musical romance of Chopin Goob NEWS Witt LILACS with GEO. OLSEN and HIS MUSIC meeting they will try to railroad| made possible the building of a once | months or longer by reindeer and jcan’t work faster get the h—— off) | this job.” All of these brilliant re- | During all this time neither the} officials of our local union or our him. More “Crimes.” E, B. Eastwood, who is secretary-| destroyed. Faithful to our great tra-| organizer of the Kansas City branch dition we the delegates assembled at of the International Labor Defense, is also indicted on the same charges. His crime consists in making an an- nouncement after the meeting o: some picnics dnd other I. L. D, af- fairs. So this is termed assisting Hugo Oehler in organizing, teach-| ing, preaching sedition, ainst the government. a member of the I. L, D., {| machine and resolve to build the new violence,,| Sam | great union still lives. We will build | dog or floating in diminutive punts again where the traitors have|to get to the Leningrad school. lessly to secure the best possible wages and working conditions ob- tainable through our organized| power. Only through struggle have we gained in the past, and we de- clare our unalterable opposition to | class collaboration. Our policy ‘will| be one of militant struggle to win} our rightful demands. | | For a Labor Party. In the attacks by the operators! this convention, representing the rank and file coal miners, finally and completely repydiate the Lewis union, the name of which shall be the National Miners’ Union. Repudiate Wage Cut. John L. Lewis and his corrupt clique can no longer speak in the name of the coal miners. We call upon the rank and file in all the marks are taken by the plumbers | international have done anything to as they are meant, and they continu- |help the membership. In fact they ally try to work faster. |conspired with the R. R. Co. and It is impossible for the plumbers | the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. | on this and other jobs to appeal to | of New York to put over the ak a the local union; the misleaders of /2"C¢ Plan on the men. Under the labor immediately call up the boss |imSurance plan the workmen have on the telephone and arbitrate the |"0 legal guarantee whatever, noth- matter so that later when this dele- | iN& but vague promises by the R.R. gate appears there are no differ- | ompery: “The R. Ri Co. reserves sens between the workers and the | the plan any time,” and for that What in necessary for the plumb: ‘ostnit te ee we te tke ing trade is to organize job com-| to state their political affiliations, as well as about 1,500 who regis- tered “socialist,” are being can-) vassed to sign the Communist pe-| tition blanks. Los Angeles will also have a/ number of nationally prominent speakers, such as Foster and Git- low, speak at mass meetings. There will be a large number of open air meetings arranged, not only in Los Angeles, but also in the surround- ing cities and towns. | more letters about the conditions of ——_ Acceptance Speeches Just Published FORTY-EIGHT page pamphlet con- taining the acceptance speeches of William Z. Foster and Benjamin Git- low, Workers Party candidates for Pres- ident and Vice-President of the United 5 paths to the colle e ; ; iE | cept to withdraw, which b; i h veland R. R. workers and the Py ae ace os, i ar P ee ee fields to refuse to recognize any|upon our standard of wages and|mittees to protect the plumbers and Von lose 79 per eee ae ee epee activities of our States of America. ie oe cater Detaniise, the wage cut agreements, signed by | working condition, in all past helpers of the American Assueistion that had been deducted, and perhaps| local and international union offi-| ie an of the I. L. D., and| them. Fight against the check-off | strikes, clubbings, jailings or de-|of Plumbers Helpers, “air” inte in. Time | ci i i other I, L. D. literature. This, too,! and thereby destroy their hope to|tective ambushing have been our D. W. ek les ig Richa eae CARMAN. ||| d ued also is the nominating speech iB seditious act against the gov-| keep you enslaved to the company| lot. Courts and police and all the|_-—-—— RE MRI Neha tubs re dod — |] elivered by Bob Minor, Editor of the Daily ernment. nion. Break. completely with the forces of the government have been| Worker, and the closing address by Jay Levestone, Executive Secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party, summarizing the achievements of the National Nomin- ating Convention. The Packing House workers who, Lewis machine and join the Nation-| against us regardless of whether | were arrested at the Sacco-Vanzetti| al Miners’ Union. the republican or democratic party | meeting in Armourdale are now be- We solemnly declare to use every were in control of administration. | ing urged to turn state evidence] ounce of our energy to fight to the| We therefore declare in favor of a| against Hugo Oehler and the others. last to remove every obstacle to) policy of independent political action | Tf they fail to do so they will be build an organization to comprise|by the workers through a Labor faced with the prospect of being the whole of the rank and file coal | Party. arrested on the charge of belonging ™u« ers. An industrial organization) In all industries of the country| to the Communist Party and will taking into its membership all men| today, the standard of living of the also lose their jobs. employed in and around the mines,| workers are being attacked, wages Meanwhile the persecution of the except the bosses. Within our ranks reduced and the speed-up system Communist Party and other militant We Welcome the colored miner as intensified. The employers are pur- workers is the most “going” sub- well as the white, the foreign born | suing their open shop drive. The | ject of discussion, not only among | Miner as well as the American. We | basic industries are unorganized. | the Packing House bosses, but also pledge ourselves to fight for com-| Yet the mood for struggle of these! NATIONAL PLATFORM of the WORKERS (COMMUNIST) PARTY THE PLATFORM of the CLASS STRUGGLE Each pamphlet carries a plate with the latest photographs of Foster and Gitlow splendidly done. PRICE 5 CENTS In lots of 100 or more 80 per cent off. among workers in other industries. The workers know that the Com- yaunists are persecuted because they are fighting for the interests of the workers against those of the bosses. Peccany do the Packing House iho feel and resent this attack. ey know that the attack against , Party was undertaken and di- ected by the packing house inter- plete equality for all, in every res- workers is growing. The National | pect, regardless of yace or nation-| Miners’ Union declares as its policy ality. to assist these workers in their Importance of Negro Workers. | struggles against the employers. To The Negro miners are an import-| assist them in organizing into new ant part of the workers in our in-| militant unions. Class solidarity dustry. They must be brought into| against the attacks and exploitation | our union, drawn into full partici-]of the capitalist employers is our) pation in every sphere of activity| slogan. To promote it is our object. | and leadership. Ours is the fight to] We declare that we will spare no 64 Pages of Smashing Facts—Price 1 NATIONAL ELECTION CAMPA!GN Make checks and money orders payable to Alexander 1 Workers (Communist) Party of America 43 East 125th Street, New York City : unite all coal miners under the ban- "$g%8 because the Party was the ac-| ner of one great organization for efforts to extend this class solidarity! to embrace all the workers of the world, to strengthen them in the! ds the nged of a union, —M. C. five factor in rousing the workers | the protection of our common in- | terests. struggle for complete emancipation | 4 Our object shall be to fight cease-| from capitalist exploitation. | 0 cents COMMITTEE ‘rachtenberg, Treas. National Election Campaign Committee 43 EAST 125TH STREET NEW YORK, N. Y. All orders must be accompanied by payment

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