The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 4, 1928, Page 2

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| STATIONS LISTED THRUOUT THE PITY FOR NEW VOTERS Will Be Given October 8 to 12 ( & workers who 2will vy for the first time this coming election must first pass a literacy test. This test will be given on Oc tober 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12 from 6:8 ) m. and on Saturday, Octet er 12, from 12 o'clock noon un- m., ‘at the hroughout the city following Manhattan Houston Street, near Varik. iver and James Streets. and Ludlow Sts. bet. 8th and 9th Aves. pd 9th Aves. 47th bet. 8th and 9th Aves. 9th and 10th St. east of Ave. B. High Sch. of Commerce, 65th St. west of Broadway. £ 14th St. bet. Ist and 2nd Aves. Sth St. be. ist and 2nd Aves. G-Amsterdam Ave and 92rd St. W. 18th St. bet. 7 and 8th Aves. © 108th St., west of Amsterdam Ave. e27th St. bet. 2nd and 3rd Aves. 42nd St. bet. 2nd and 3rd Aves. =E. 20th St. bet. 1st and 2nd Aves. © 129th St. and Amsterdam Ave. S127th St. and St. Nicholas Ave. *afbth St. bet. 2nd and 3rd Aves. ge88rd St. bat, 2nd and 3rd Aves. *103rd St., east of 5th Ave. 288th St. east of Ist Ave. = 99th St. bet. 2nd and 3rd Aves. # 109th St. bet. 2nd and 3rd Aves. PiLenox Ave. bet. 134th and 135th St. Madison Ave. and 119th St. $l25th St. west of 2nd Ave. # 148th St. and 7th Ave. = 145th St. west of Amsterdam Ave. * 211th St. near Broadway. =-176th St. bet. St. Nicholas and Au- dubon Aves. tewtes Bronx Brown Place and 185th St. = 157th St. and 3rd Ave. College Ave. bet. 145th and 146th St. = Tremont and Anthony Aves. and « Mt. Hope Place. Workers Must Pass Literacy Test to Vote= Czarist Cathedral Now a THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, THU RSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1928 Museum STATE SPEEDS TO The “Cathedral of St. Basil,” pride of the czars and their lackeys, has been turned into a museum by the Soviet Government. magnificent building is situated in the southern end of Red Square, near the Kremlin, and is one of the visited by the group leaving for the L October 17 New Yo under the ausp City. many FINISH CONNOLLY TRIAL TESTIMONY Important Evidence Is Sidetracked Continued One intimidated, and at ly two murders from Page of witnesses least one and poss committed. Shield Tammany Grafters. Thus far, in spite of the volumin- | us evidence undoubtedly in the | possession of the prosecutor as to the grafting activities of the Tam- many-Phillips-Connolly gang noth- ing more definite than a reported bribe of $1,000 arranged for Seely, | Connolly's engineer, has been per- | Friday -- Saturday -- Sunday mitted to come out. On top of this | Buckner, undoubtedly carrying out | I R E I JH E, Il I the terms of a deal with Tammany | | Hall, has announced that the state | is about ready to rest its case. During yesterday’s proceedings | Paul W. Paulsen, the East Orange contractor who revealed the details Sa , of the $1,000 bribe intended for Paulsen testified to having been in- PERT structed by Albert Decker, an asso | Veraneree rit ciate of Phillips, the late Queens “sewer pipe king,” to bid more than | F a million dollars on a Jamaica sewer | A Million Articles at % Price ‘Graft Is Business. The figure, it was indicated, was | several hundreds of thousands of | dollars above the real figure. The | difference presumably was shared | by the graft gang. Paulsen testi- | fied that he sent in this excessively | high bid “because it was necessary in order to do business in Queens.” Buckner failed in this case as in The interest to be Mauretania” 69 Fifth Ave., sights of R. on the , Inc., W ORKERS PAR TY OPEN Even those who at first believed | AIR MEETINGS HERE MEET APPROVES C. |, DECISIONS The have been arranged by the Workers (Communist) various city for the next two days: others to probe further into the tion of the graft distribution that some revelations would be made at the trial are now remarking that it is too childish to expect the Tam- many controlled court to convict the .___| Tammany machine. meetings following en-air Plan Many Red Nights in N. Y. City Party, to take place points throughout the Today « Washington Ave. and Claremont 138th St. and Continued from Page One Anns Ave., : 2% Bronx.—Baum, Martin, Weich, Goli- | George Padmore, Alexander, Pad- 168th St. bet. Findlay and Teller Pledge Support to Fight cer, Litian Stein, sug, S. Leroy, M. Taft, Philip| | Aves. 40th St. and 8th Ave.—Solon De /Frankfeld, Charles Winters, Liebo- | * Longwood Ave. and Kelly St. War Danger Leon, Joe Cohen, Peer, Cibul; witz, Boruchowitz, M. Epstein, Ju-| = 166th St. and Boston Rd—Morris pe Pe Steinway and Jamaica Ave Codkind, Albert Moreau, A. | High School. Continued from Page One | toria, L. L—G. Powers, McDonald, |Gussakof, Victor Cibulsky, Lloyd, | 2 Fox, Simpson and 167th St. termined. struggle against the im- P. Muller, A. Heder. Louis Baum, Gil Green, Arthur Tremont and Vyse Aves.,—West perialist war and against the poi- Tomorrow. Stein, Eddie Epstein, Cyo. Gerson, | & Farms. sonous pacifism of the social dem-| National Biscuit Co., noon. | Miriam Silvis, Vosk. % White Plains Ave. and 225th St. ocracy. In view of the rapidly | Frankfeld, Rose Rubin. After these twenty-minute meet- * 189th St. and Lorillard Place. «rowing imperialist war danger the) 5th Ave. and 110th St—Blake,|ings are over, the Williamsburg » Evander Childs H. S—187 St and Congress justly emphasized the | Moreau, Fishman. |groups will meet at Grand St. Ex- > Creston Ave. necessity of tightening the Bolshe- 7th St. and Ave. A—Zeikowsky, tension and Havemeyer St.; the| . pets, vist discipline of all Communist Par- Ackerman, Silber, Vera Smith, | the Bronx group will meet at Long- | illary and Bridge St ties and increasing the struggle | Summer. wood and Prospect Aves., and the | a 4 bet. E. on and 10th Sts. egainst right opportunist errors. Market Plaza, Newark.—Lloyd,| Brownsville group at Bristol and E Ramsen St. near Avenue F, Can-|_ “The colonial question, in other Pearlman, Stanley. Pitkin Ave. eases St. 4 , "| words, the struggle for the libera- ee Factory, noon.—B, Lifshitz,| All workers in the city are urged | ‘Ave. T. E. 12th St. and Homecrest tio" of the colonial and semi-colo- | Chalu to attend these Red Nights. oy Beles nial countries from imperialist op- | —— SSeocnneen ere aan Ave. ' ; sa # » pression and the solidarity of the San Hopkinson Aves. and Am-| international working class with the Henry St. cor. Harrison St. Fourth Ave. bet. 40th and 4I1st St. = Kent Ave. near Myrtle Ave. = Eastern District H. S—Marcy Ave. x and Keap St. © Quincy St. near Stuyvesant Ave. Y Ellery St. bet. Delmonico Pl. and Throop Ave. 15th St. near 4th Ave. ve. bet. 42nd and 43rd Sts. Ridge H. S—4th Ave. and 14th Ocean Pkwy., Fort Hamilton and E, 6th St. Skillman, Conselyea and Humboldt Streets. South 3rd St. bet. Driggs Ave. and Roebling St. Meserole Ave. Guernsey St. W. 17th St. bet. Mermaid and Nep- ’ bet. Lorimer and ~ tune Aves. © 15th Ave. bet. 71st and 72nd Sts. © Girls H. S.—Nostrand Ave, bet. Hal- ~_Sey and Macon Sts, East New York and Albany Aves. @East New York Ave. & E. 96th Sts. PAlex. H. S. of Commerce, Albany = Ave. & Bergen St. # Arion Place near Bushwick Ave. “Irving & Willoby Aves. & Stuydam St. Bushwick H. S. Irving Ave. & Wood- %, bine St. Rogers Ave. and Parkside Ave. @Berriman St, Belmont & Atkins © Aves. Sutter Ave. Vermont & Wyona Sts. “= Sackman St., between Belmont & » Sutter Aves, # Eastern Parkway & Herkimer St. SDean St., near Saratoga Ave. = Queens. SBryant H. S., Wilbur & Academ}! Sts., L. I. City, z Steinway Ave., near Jamaica Ave., L. I. City. "Van Alst Ave. near Astoria Ave., L. I. City. © Old Flushing Ave., Maspeth. Washington Ave., Middle Village. Prospect St., Windfield, L. I. Newton H. S., Chicago Ave., Elm- hurst, L. a Flushing H. S., Whitestone Ave. Old Jamaica z S., Hillside & Union’ tay oR re reeks fiscke Aves., Jamaica. State St. & Roanoke Ave. Far Rockaway. 100th St. near Jamaica Ave., Rich-| mond Hill. Sutter Ave. & 108th St, wood, LY Pe Fe ete. rine Im Ave. & Fresh Pond Rd., Ridge-| oppressed peasant masses of the colonial countries, played a great role in the deliberations of the World Congress. Great headway was made in the solution of the questions of Latin-America and the problems of the Negro masses of the United States, “The adoption of the program of the Communist International by the World Congress marks an event of world historic significance. The pro- gram gives a Marxist-Leninist an- alysis of our whole period. It is a magnificent fighting weapon in the hands of the world proletariat. “The World Congress manifested the determined will of the working class of the world.to defend the U. S. 8, R.—the only fatherland of the proletariat. The World Congress approved the decisions of the E. ©. C, I. and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, condemning and uprooting the international Trotsky- {st opposition. “Tho membership meeting of the N. Y. District expresses ita deep- going conviction thut the work of the World Congress will link up the Comintern with the broadest prole- tariat more than ever before. “Long live the Communist Inter- national! “Hail the work of the S gross! “Hail the world program of the Communist proletariat! “Tong live the proletarian revolu- tion!” Before the yote was taken at the meeting, Comrade Gomez, in the ‘name of himself, Grecht, Wagen- knecht, Frankfeld and Aronberg read a statement declaring: “In view of the fact that discus- sion on the American Question is held in abeyance until the opening of the convention period, we vote for the resolution before the meet- ing with reservations on issues per- |taining to the American Party. (Signed) Manuel Gomez Alfred Wagenknecht Philip Aronberg Philip Frankfeld Rebecca Grecht” th Con- | | Yarmouth th & Shipley Sts., Wood- haven. | Richmond, | Broad & Brook Sts,, Stapleton. Herberton Ave., Port Richmond. Curtis H. S., Hamilton Ave. New) | Brighton, Knight Ave., New Dorp. \Summitt Ave., Tottenville, ¥ A Few More Gold Bonds Left FROM THE SECOND $250,000.00 6% Dividends will be paid from October Ist, if you buy a gold bond of $100, $300, $500 and $1000 N O W! Guaranteed by a second mortgage on the second block of houses in the Workers Cooperative Colony. Consumers Finance Corporation 2700 BRONX PARK EAST 69 FIFTH AVENUE Telephone: Olinville 8947 Telephone: Algonquin 6900. E VERYTHING for the Daily Worker- Freiheit Bazaar must be in the of- fice of the Bazaar TODAY ) Those willing to help are requested to come to the office, 830 Union Square, to register. Madison Square Garden —49TH STREET AND 8TH AVENUE— ; COMBINATION TICKETS:—Good for 4 Days; $1. 25: 1 now on sale at Daily Worker sci 26-28 Union’ Square, New York City. Settle for All Tickets Today I ahhdnnsedieteadisaichdiheehebhbtiteteenshairtectentanainndttsipnacemensiachjuntaiinantadenddne eae el bg ie 0

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