The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 12, 1928, Page 2

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————— OS Member of Young Workers T 1928 E DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, League Is Brutally Beaten Up by a Laundry Official W AS GIVING OUT Expressmen chew Greet Solidarity in ooike Son Bi “? i WORKERS SCHOOL ore re, Pemit(| ANGSTERS BE AT —. meseres stigia| i at Symposium Oct. 15 \Hear Weisbord Speak SHOP BULLETINS AMONG THE HELP Police Aid Company - Brutality se 6-70 OFFER THREE YOUTH COURSES \8 Special Classes on During This Term As part of its campaign to reduce | high rents and improve housing | |conditions in this community, the |Harlem Tenants League has ar- |vanged a candidates’ night, on which \all candidates of the various par- |ties in the Nineteenth and Twenty- |first Assembly Districts have been YOUNG HOUSTON NEGRO WORKER Youth Badly Beaten at Houston Cotton Firm The Hudson County Convention of |the Workers (Communist) Party | will be held this Sunday, at 2p. m. in Jersey City at Fraternity Hall, 256 Central Ave. This conference is the final-one of a series of confer- ences that have been held by the Workers (Communist) Party in New Jersey. ce : |requested to appear and to state the The convention will be addressed i Nathan Adler, a member of the Three special youth courses ar« |position of their Party on thie vital] HOUSTON, Texas, Oct. 11—Ex.|PY Albert Weisbord, the Party's ' Young Workers (Communist) F ; ae being offered by the Workers School question of housing. biting bates! et! the, heed), tae candida‘ or the U. S. Senate in ‘ League, was beaten up by a thug Photo shows a group of express strikers after during the present fall term: “His- ape aula ineatieohthe League oe |New Jersey. Delegates are expected official of the Northern New York ‘they had walked out on Wednesday, demanding |tory and Problems of the Youth) |" sat see rie enous aac |and body, and spitting blood, Lamar from at least 60 organizations. The t and Mott Haven Laundries at 5:30| union recognition. The corrupt union officials | Movement,” Herbert Zam, instrue- |i) Pe hen for this Papert, at g (Dalton, 28 year old Negro youth,| appearance of the Workers (Com- i Pp. Benak ate he and Doro- later sold out the strikers. j tor, Tuesday from 7 to 8:20 p. m5 piimccthi the Public Lsbeary: audle employed by the Channel Draying | munist) pel access in Jersey i thy Cohe! nember--of the fe Organization Problems of the Com- torium, 103 W. 135th St. Company, related a story of an Cepek tele re Actes to Young (Communist) | Re ey ae eee The candidates who have already |*@ck by white gangsters at the Ex-| ee ie yo ta wn Be ral ht aplan as the instructor, ae | 1 Been ned disteibated se ora ie CLASS STR UGGLE IS WORKERS PARTY oti 8:30 to 9:50 p. m.; “Funda-|promised to appear are Edward eo Cotton Compress, several bord, since he has led the Passaic eee tote Mowe we , mentals of the Class Struggle,” with | Welsh, Workers (Communist) Party mie 2 |Textile Strike and has been active Bees, which ie ai ~~ at SHARP IN A l IS | ‘RALIA ‘ |Will Herberg, instructor, Friday |¢andidate for Assembly; Richard B.| Dalton was driving a truck load|in the New Bedford, Mass., strike. and Concord Ave., Bronx |from 7 to 8:20 p. m. A 50 per cent | Moore, candidate for congress on |of cotton from the Exporters com-| tn Hudson County, the so-called Boss Attacks Worker. —— |reduction in fees has been made in|the Workers (Communist) Party, | pany to the ship channel, and, as he| model county for the workers, the ' ‘Adler had been distributing the By J. RYAN New South Wales, in conjunction |these courses so as to make it pos-|#nd John W. Remer, republican can- | attempted to leave the premises|workers are suffering from’ the t leaflets to the young workers, most-| gypNByY, ‘Australia (By Mail).—| With representatives of the rank and : SGN ,|sible for all young workers and didate for assembl) 4 with about 20 bales of cotton, six| speed-up system, low wages, unem- i 1 ly Negroes, fo t ten minutes 1," js indisputable that the class|file of the A. W. U., decided to ad-! Will Debate ‘Veterans’ | members of the Young Workers} All tenants are invited to come or seven trucks loaded with country | ployment and the labor spy systems. i “ when an official the company Aiea in Australia is becoming |V:se A. W. U. members not to take I g | (Communist) League to attend the | and hear the position of the various | cotton were in his direct path. The} Albert Weisbord will speak on the 7 rushed angrily out of the building) ;eener and that the whole of the |0Ut tickets for the year 1928-29, but on Issues soon lyouth courses, The fees for these |candidates in respect to the Emer-|country checker was _ checking,| program of the Workers (Commu- and roughly pushing him into the apparatus of the capitalist state is|to purchase instead special tickets i A |three-month courses will, therefore, |gency Rent Law and a law to im- whereupon Dalton blew his horn for | nist) Party at the same hall at 8 plant, brutally attacked him. Adler's! going to be used against the work-|Which will be issued by the Labor| The John J. ae ore oa ©/be $2 per subject instead of $4. prove conditions in houses. the right-of-way, stating that the|o’clock in the evening of the same face was swollen and badly bruised| ing class movement with greater in-| Council of N. S. W. The money NOE Horeign aa oH vit| The course in the “Fundamentals ee roadbed was soft on either side and day. after the vicious attack tensity in the future. Already, four|thus acquired by the Labor Council | 1 1 Which Was responslilc Tor Sv (of the Class Struggle” will begin if his heavy truck should get into Previous to-the att on Adler,| trade union leaders have been prose- | Will be placed in a trust fund pend- Tone Kee on San A eid «today at 7 p. m, in Room 6, at the the soft ground, it would have been the young Negro workers had cuted for their actions during the|ing the holding of a conference of drat i edieiaes eieneiea ne headquarters of the school, 26-28] ™ impossible for him to get out. As} A NS IN greeted the two Young Workers|recent industrial disputes. Brown|Tank and file members of the A.) ot % 0. the issue of the election | U7ion Square. oe continued .to Sound Mia“horn, one (Communist) League members very|and Carrigan were heavily fined a|W: U- . |campaign by the Workers (Commu-| The course in History and Prob- A E of the white employes of the Com- enthusiastically, reading the bul-|few weeks back, and the latest to| It is recognized that the consti-| List) party. lems of the Youth Movement and | Press cursed him and repeated the Ietin, which described the conditions| be prosecuted are Garden and John-|tution of the A. W. U. has been so) jy oa isation of profes-|OTSanizational Problems of the oath when Dalton asked him not to im, the laundry, and commenting! son. |rigged as to secure the life-long oc-| 1 he an hich’ Gx ea askin |Communist Youth Movement are in- | ae label him as a dog. Finally the cot- |cupancy of positions by the present | S07 Pa eS eeses and tended primarily for functionaries} Never Knew of Graft — yery favorably on the contents. But of the two the officials plant, seeing how well the young workers were being received, forced the em- We to re-enter the plant when © attack on Adler took place. Trumped Up Charges. Garden’s alleged crime was “in- citement to murder.” I quoted his statements in my last letter. The charge was so ridiculous that the jury found him “not guilty” after | officials, Therefore, the only way to deal with the situation is to cut off their source of income. There is no doubt that the rank and file of the A. W. U. is heartily a propaganda of lies and slander | against the only workingclass party in the country, on Oct. 4 committed | L¢ ho: |the indiscretion of challenging | ith the origin of the Youth Move- ie é ; | ment in Europe, the establishment SSietaie thes ta aueeae Gus lot the Socialist Youth Movement In- : of the Young Workers (Communist) League. The first course deals } in Borough Continued from Page One quested. Nothing could stop him. Buckner, also made a few remon- ton was removed and he was given the roadway to carry his load to the Ship Channel. After making the trip to the Ship Channel, Dalton returned to the Compress for another load, and Left Wing Off Ballot; Rap ‘Czar’ Zaritsky | Continued from Page One Police in the vicinity aided the considering the matter for only fif- |*i¢k of its present leaders. who was speaking on an opposite|*e™mational and its relation with the | justice Hopkins made a few 28-| while waiting for his load someone| York Capmakers Union have again Official by shoving the young Negro| teen minutes. corner, to a debate. Powers accepted | S°cial Democracy, the role of the |tures to (ora teccuton, fimecy i (struck him a blow on the head from sent a scathing letter to the General workers through the doors into the; Johnson was charged with at: SCHOOLS IN GRIP the “challenge: Williain, W.Weln-] = Couetn Leann mOn eS SHED E TOR eer ee } "|behind, while six or seven other| Executive Board which exposes the plant while Adler was attacked. In spite of the attack, Adler said tempting to intimidate men against | working on a certain ship. In other magistrate who, in his summing up stone, District Organizer of the|the founding and development of the Workers (Communist) Youth Party, last | Communist | with special emphasis on the Amer- confirming the debate is now)¢rs (Communist) League of Amer- International, | strances, also for the record. The |rest of the time Connolly talked. | white employes “ganged” him, beat- ing him with sticks, while two other Denied Medical Treatment. | corrupt dictatorship at the helm of the organization. The leter, signed yesterday that the distribution of | words, he was prosecuted for trying | night sent an official acceptance of | ‘ a ‘ gangsters stamped upon his stom-|by Henry Sazer, Louis Cohen and Ieaflets in the factory will continue to persuade men from scabbing. | the challenge to the Tammany-con-| ican section of the Young Coramu- Sats aa ach. # |Jacob Schogel, declares: Beitare place every week. Johnson was brought before a trelled hundred pereenters, arid ward |ISt IOTCrIeReGe Ene, COU Ne a aalted’s thee heh vane eo |“Dear Sirs and Brothers: , WORKERS PARADE of the case, denounced strikes and working class leaders and sentenced Johnson to six months’ imprison- ment. The sentence is even more | Washington, Oregon, | Idaho Spread Bunk awaited at the District Office. | ice, while the second course will | Weinstone Hits Jingoes. Should the debate be held, the deal with the many organizational | |problems faced by the Communist Youth Movement at the present | |much as discussed “things” with Thillips, certainiy not about the fa- mous “lock-joint” pipe which was the main source of the gang’s rev- Unconscious from the attack, Dal- ton knew nothing until three Negro youths placed him on a bale of cot- ton. The brutal assault occurred “On September 3, 1927, we, the | undersigned, appealed to you against ithe procedure of elections adopted by Locals i, 2, 3, 17, 27 and 40. In serious than what it appears at | Communist equi according |iime in the United States, taking up |enue. He denied that he had ever| shout 3 p. m., and he Tey there tnion'| Sey see eee Retin DESPITE POLI first glance, because under the| WASHINGTON, Oct. 11. (U.p)— |‘? the letter sent by Weinstone to the| such important matters as carrying |thrown out awards when willful |the cotton until 6 p. m, without FUMED po Rae eau rgertona ys Veterans of Foreign Wars, prove on of Communist work in the fac-|contractors had refused to “See| \in a lette ‘ept. 6, , that en Club Many at Times Sq. Demonstration Crimes Act Johnson, who was not born in Australia, can be deported. Arbitration. Now that the Anti-Trade Union Act has become law, many trade union officials who were loud in Distribution of power industry |pamphlets in the schools of Wash- Jington and Oregon with the ap- |proval of state school superintend- |ents was disclosed today in the Fed- jeral Trade Commission’s utility in- that the “veterans” are “working consciously against the interests of the broad masses of people in this country.” The letter reads in part: \“Your program is a program of fascism. You stand for imperialism) tories; the nature of Communist | anti-militarist work, the industrial | work of the League, the organiza- | tional problems of the League in| {non-league organizations, etc. In addition to these three youth Jack” Phillips. He denied all the incriminatory testimony so far piled up against him. During recess Connolly was smil- ing and confident. “It’s a great day,” he called to newspaper men |medical aid or attention. When at last he was taken to a hospital, the ambulance driver took his own time in ‘making the trip, stopping en route to the hospital at a cafe where |the driver and the attendant spent | |cur appeal will be taken up at the next meeting of tha General Ex- ‘ecutive Board. But our appeal has |not yet been considered. | “New elections are to take place Nominations this month. in the When a parade of members of the| their denunciation of the act be-|Vestigation. |about 30 minutes, thence to the various locals are already going on is wars and are assisting the war) A by way of greeting. “A real spring nek Workers (Communist) Party and| fore it became law are hastening to) Payments of $150 in 1927 to Mrs. mongers of this country to bring |COUrSeS three neal pie) ad day,” he oath “Guess I'll skip trial | Houston Clinie where another 30) with the samo procedure against the Young Workers (Communist) | proclaim their allegiance to the sys-|Josephine Corliss Preston, then shout another imperialist war. The|bee” Organized by the Workers) ii ooo nt tell Mr. Steuer | minute stay was made; after which| which we appealed. League used the occasion of the war maneuvers on Times Square Wednes- day night for an anti-militarist demonstration, the authorities were bewildeted. They did not know what was happening until the work- ers had marched for several blocks up Broadway and back to Times Square, with placards denouncing tem of compulsory arbitration. It seems that the penal clauses of this act have already had a remarkable effect on the mentality of some trade union officials. Perhaps the most dangerous part of the new act is that it provides protection for reactionary trade union officials, and inflicts severe the war preparations of the govern- ment and calling on the workers to support the Communist candidates. When the workers crossed Times Square and started up Broadway, penalties on any trade union leader guilty of militancy. Arbitration court judges have in- timated that they intend to attack | Superintendent of Public Instruction |in Washington, for aiding in editing utilities pamphlets were revealed in |testimony of Mrs. Clara K. Tripp,| wars and is the only means of lib-| |director of the Washington Indus- |tries Education Bureau. | In Oregon the pamphlets were in- |dorsed by State Superintendent |Charles Howard, Mrs. Tripp testi- fied. A fact-finding committee, spon- sored by the University of Idaho, to weeks in an intense campaign of| program of the Workers (Commu- nist) Party |which fights is the only program against imperialist erating the masses of this country from oppression and exploitation.” Meetings Each Week. Joseph B. Kamp, “Americaniza- School for Pioneer Leaders: “Prob- }lems of Workers’ Children,” with | |Miriam Silvis as the instructor, | Monday from 7 to 8:20 p. m.; “Amer- | ican History,” Joe Speer, instructor, | |Mondays from 7 to 8:20 p. m.;| |“Pioneer Movement and its Task,” |Frances Gordon, instructor, Mon- |days from 8:30 to 9:50 p. m. |T’ve been called away to go fish- ing.” He was still taking when the sun went down. Red Election Mass Meeting in Clinton has been engaged for the last few tion” director of the Dwyer Post, | ———_——— | 'Weisbord to Address make a survey of’ rural electrical slander against Communism and the Hoboken Workers at conditions in that state, received its U. S. S. R. The purpose of this is Hall Tonight at 8 | Within hailing distance of the |New York Jewish “Forward,” ‘sym- he was carried to the St. Joseph Infirmary. Here the doctor met him with the remark, “Guess you'll | be more careful about cursing white men hereafter.” Dalton told him | that he had cursed no one and the doctor retorted, “Well, I guess you'll see to it that the man gets a better understanding next time.”| Dalton received very poor treatment |at the hospital. His wounds were |not attended to, and he received vir- | tually no food. “Very Busy.” “It is true that you were very busy lately with various campaigns, |such as the campaign for piece- |work and to eliminate the progres- |sive elements of our union. You | were busy trying to force your fake Amalgamation proposal upon Local 43, in order to eliminate the mili- tant and devoted leaders of that lo- cal, ‘You had to reorganize’ Local 7 of Boston, and our worthy presi- 4-h k gained by , bol of class collaboration and citadel jdent is now busily engaged in se- the police tried to stop the parade, ee a eee Gone aaa major financial support from pri-| to attempt to counteract the splendid| Red Meet Tomorrow (f° labor-fakery, the downtown sec-| Negroes Flee Scene. curing an injunction against those tearing a placard from Paul/ihe 3 per cent margin above the | Yate power corporations, the Federal propaganda of the Communist cam- ss Com.| tion of the Workers (Communist)| A most disgusting aspect was who are courageously fighting Grouch, who headed the demonstra- pasic wage which was gained in| Commission learned. paigners, who every week hold a| Albert Weisbord, Workers ( om- | Party will stage a mass meeting for|lent to the affair by the fact that |@ainst your unconstitutional action tion. The workers pushed by the police and reformed, continuing the march for many blocks, despite the 1922. Coming Federal Elections. It now seems certain that the William R. Putnam, manager of meeting at the same corner where | Munist) Party candidate for U. S. the Idaho Power Co., testified his|six of them were attacked and| Senate from New Jersey, will speak corporation had paid $4,792 since beaten by thirty “heroic veterans.”|to the workers of Hoboken at an \the Red Election Campaign at Clin- | ton Hall, 151 Clinton St., tonight, at 8 p. m. between 200 and 250 Negro em- ployes of the Compress took to their lof breaking up and splitting their local. We nevertheless expected you to at least make a pretense of e d ns.””| , : ; , heels when the si ic | 3 aa * continued efforts to knock down! gedoral elections will take place on 1925 toward support of the Idaho|Since that occasion, the meetings | pen air mecting at Sixth na Wash-|~ ‘tha’ significance of tanight’s Gom- hood haste” began Hote naa ae impartiality and fairness to mem- signs and stop the demonstration.| November 17, Already a certain | Committee on Relation of Electricity held by the Workers (Communist) | ington Sts. at 8 p. m. tonight. munist rally lies,in the fact that it! tack on the member of their race. |P€TS Who have been active in the Large crowds watched the affair, \ to Agriculture. |Party have steadily grown in size! This meeting in Hoboken is one |is being held in that section of ‘the| * |union and the general labor move- and eager ad the thousands of amount of election propaganda is The committee was organized, a jand are looked forward to by As- | of the meetings in the tour of Weis- No arrests have been made as yet, ment for years and spare some time i : 1 ] lcity were the defunct socialist party ea ; anti-war leaflets distributed. After FOU OM: cee Or ee aera Sy jreport showed, by Dean E. J. Id-|toria workers as the only source.of | bord through the industrial towns of | is despérately holding its last trench ees not probable that any willl... give consideration to a constitu- a meeting in the center of Times ates f dings, of the College of Agriculture | workingclass information. | New Jersey. The workers of Eliza-| of “activity,” retreating step by step ‘ade in the future, despite the| tional appeal in which the elemen- jena ary governments Australia has ever | Be | 1 r g fact that the episode took place sev- : j Square, at which Crouch spoke on|} sown It has been beapouathle tor |o? the University of Idaho. —-—___- beth, Camden and West New York | under the militant labor onslaughts 1d tary rights of the members are in- the purposes of the war prepara-/t14 most vicious anti-working class|. A Teport of the committee's find- turned out in large numbers to hear | of the Workers (Communist) Party.|°T*! days ago. Dalton has been ad-| volved, tion until it was broken up by police, the parade formed again and con- tinued down Broadway. After the workers had turned down another and less crowded street, the police were able to charge with clubs. One worker was struck agross the back ot his neck, Crouch’s hgnd was badly injured by a blow ffom a club and he was also struck op the arm, and many others were hit by the policemen. The parade réformed, but it was then almost nfidnight and those participating re- t§rned home. During the parade, al, Red Flag, Revolutionary song Interna- the Hoover Shown as Tool of Power Trust; Smith hikewise Favors Grab legislaticn and administration, such as the Crimes Act, Anti-Trade Union Act, ban on working class literature, ban on Pan-Pacific Conference, and so on. The Labor Party, which has not been in office since the war, has an excellent chance of success if its leaders only fight the nationalists (capitalists) instead of attacking the militant section .of its own ranks. Coal Industry. The speed-up in the coal industry, coupled with competition from the mines of Great Britain, has caused a serious crisis in the coal industry. Thousands of miners are unem- ployed, and the bulk of them are working short time. The capitalist press insists that there must be a reduction in the price of coal and the coal-owners say that the work- ers must sacrifice wages and condi- tions to achieve the reduction. lings showed it decided private power companies could better supply farm- ers with power direct and that pub- liely owned purchasing companies | were not feasible. Wide publicity was given this re- port, Putnam admitted, through E. Hofer & Son News Service, which, | the commission “has learned, re- ceived $84,000 annually from private power interests. Part of National Drive. Formation of the Idaho Commit- tee was part of a national campaign |instituted by the National Electric | Light Association to increase power} personal life of any candidate but in| | consumption in rural communities, a | report disclosed. Members of the National Commit- tee included representatives of the American Farm Bureau Federation, the National Grange, the U. S. De- partments of Agriculture, Com- merce and Interior, the General Federation of Women’s Clubs and |Working Class Women Cheer Red Program_ Continued from Page One |play an important role in the elec- | tions. | Rebecca Grecht, Communist candi- | date and state campaign manager of the Workers (Communist) Party . who spoke on behalf of the Commu- nist program, was greeted with |great applause by the assembled |women. She pointed out that the |workers are not interested in the the concrete issues and program for which they stand, showing that can- didates of the Workers’ Party, by} their unflinching courage in fight- ing for the workers, merited the votes of all working women. Mrs. Alice McKay Kelly, repre- senting the republican party said Hoover was a nice man and had a the program and the platform of the workers Party discussed, and according to them the Workers |Party candidates can expect to poll |a large vote in New Jersey. The following is a schedule of the | Weisbord meetings: | . Oct. 14, Passaic, 2 p. m., Ukrain- ian Hall, 212 President St. | Oct. 14, Jersey City, 8 p. m,,| | Fraternity Hall, 256 Central Ave. | Oct. 15, Plainfield—Watch the | Daily Worker for time and place. | Oct. 16, Paterson, Carpenters’ | Hall, 54 Van’ Houten St. Oct. 17, New Brunswick—Watch |the Daily Worker for time and | place. . Oct. 18, Atlantic City—-Watch the Daily Worker for time and place. | Oct. 19, Perth Amboy, Columbia | Hall, 885 State Street. Oct. 20, Trenton Open Air, East State and Older St. Among the speakers will be Mos- saiye J. Olgin, Communist lecturer, jeditor of “The Hammer,” Yiddish | Communist monthly, and Communist ‘candidates Alexander Trachtenberg, Louis Hendin and Bert Miller. S. Milgrom, section campaign director, will also speak. A. Gussakoff, or- ganizer of Section 1 of the Workers (Communist) Party will preside. Women Workers Plan Red Rally on Nov. 1 Working women and working class housewives and mothers of New York and vicinity wi!] hear the election campaign issues of the 1928 elections expounded by Communist candidates and leading women work- ers at an election rally to be held at Irving Plaza Hall, Irving Place |and 15th St., Thursday, Nov, 1, at vised to present his case to the Har- ris County Grand Jury, the Houston branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and the Houston Commission on Interracial Cooperation. Needle Workers in Red Meet Tomorrow at 4 Under the auspices of the Needle Trades Campaign Committee a num- ber of big open-air meets will take place tonight at Harlem, Bronx, East-New York and Brownsville: Harlem Red Night—Speakers: Winogradsky, Wishnefsky, Silko- witz and Cooper (all speakers to report at 143 E. 108rd St.), Bronx, Longwood and Prospect Aves.—J. Weisberg, . chairman. Speakers: S. Leibowitz, S. Bleeker, J. Bleiman, I. Potash, A. Weiss. “We maintain that every member of the union has the constitutional right to be a candidate for any of- fice in the union and that no ma- jerity of votes of any local is re- cuired by a member in good stand- ing of the union in order to be a candidate for office. “We therefore ask you to take up our original appeal before the new elections také place. If, how- ever, the General Executive Board will not meet before the elections, we ask you to postpone the elections until the G, E. B. will have a chance te consider our appeal. The con- tention of Secretary Roberts that the G. E. B. has no power to interfere with the autonomy of the locals would sound like mere hypocrisy at this time when the president took the liberty to actually nullify the decisions of our last convention re- garding piece-work and for the for- WASHINGTON, Oct. 11.—The| The Miners Federation has a com-|the N.E. L.A. The six HS | 2S CANEPA 8 p.m. The rally will be held under} Bronx, 169th St. and Washington | mation of a Joint Board in the mil a : F ‘ oe Tcl, sir on | wonder lity. § | : * : i » M in the mil- not| mew disclosure was made here | paratively militant membership, but | on the committee outnumbered the wath ihe ents Philpphes|Camp Unity Group in the auspices of District 2 of the|Ave—H. Sazar, chairman. Speak- |linery trade.” todpy that Herbert for, the |e -dreedfully weak leaderahip. In| other anembeta: and in China during the boxer re-| Ratification Meet |“ ortcrs (Communist) Party. ers: Rose Wortis, 8. Zimmerman, || past eight years has been on the | stead of carrying on a national cam- | | Speakers will be Juliet Stuart|A. Zukuwsky, Cibulsky, Skolnik. ; sidé of the power trust, in a report just issued by the so-called non- fartisan National Popular Govern-| mept League. | The report decla’ present campaign s that while the being waged is paign for a shorter working day, the leaders are tinkering about with such reactionary “solutions” as col- lecti contracts—meaning that for a certain price per ton of coal the mine workers take over all the re- | Death ‘Toll in Prague ‘Crash Now 70; Police Hit Red Demonstrators bellion while travelling with her husband and really really, you know, ‘he didn’t represent Wall Street and he should be elected. Mrs. Kross, democratic represent- ative, was equally certain that Tam- Ratification of the program of the | Workers (Communist) Party is the | object of a meeting to be held under ‘the auspices of the Un-Ar-Coopera- tive at the Parkview Palace, 110th | Poyntz, Communist candidate for attorney general of New York State; Rebecca Grecht, candidate in the Fifth Bronx Assembly District and Communist state campaign Brownsville, Briston and Pitkin Aves.—Speakers: S. Lipzin, L. Co- hen, Gladys Shechter, M. E. Taft, A. Jonas. East New York, Sutter and Wil- liams Aves.—Astrinsky, chairman. Art Exhibition 3 = Al Smi s i- manager; Ray Ri in, running i i ( over “beer, theology, race conflicts |sponsibilities of production. Agree.| (By Wireless to Daily Worker) ae deweniae plaghcalliors ba | St. and Fifth Ave., on Friday night, | tno Twinty-thied Auserably 5 Speakers: S. Lipzin, L. Cohen, Co- of Paintings and Drawings andi state rights, the power trust is) ments have been made to this effect) PRAGUE, October 11.—The last | : | Oct. 19th. Among the speakers who] trict; Rose Wortis, militant needle|low, N. Wilks, Fradis, by the young artist ‘ busy_ with an eye on the main|in two mines. It is noticeable that | report of the toll of victims in the | will talk are James P, Cannon, Rich-} trades leader, and ‘that Tomorrow—-Red nights at down- |.gm¢ hance,” the companies which own these two eight story office building collapse 85 (Q(QWomen, Children |2*¢ B. Moore, Melach Epstein, Abra- | ‘ i town New York and Boro Park. : { ‘That the report has some cye on|mines have never paid a dividend. puts the figure at 70. Faulty OO? A i syy., ham Markoff and Rebecea Grecht, ‘ . Dewntown speakers: Olga Lwoff and 0 re S$ . {AI Bmith ie evidenced from the fact Unemployment, | material’ and the extreme speed with Work in Bengal Mills Air members of Unity Cooyerative) Workers in Brighton |5.Petrofsty (both iy Rossian), that it attempts to portray Al Smith| Notwithstanding the fact that which the building was erected is (are activel, articipating in this | Boro Park speakers: H. Koretz, Ev: ‘ . F 1 gs having fought the power trust, a| there arc still approximately 180,000 admitted to be the cause of the exl- | BENGAL, India—According to a | meeting, ‘which it is hoped: will give, -LOld Red Banquet Shafran, H. Lerner, Shiller. Philip will continue until : i statement known to be contrary 'to| workers unemployed in Australia, lapse. ‘ocal investigator there are in this! the thousands of workers who wer been yt ‘of | Goodmen, chairman, ¢ the facts by those on the “inside.” | thousands of immigrants are being | The Czecho-Slovakian Communist city nearly 1,400 factories of which at’ Unity, Gamp this, summer a|,. *,banduet under the auspices of Sunday, October 14 imported from the British Isles and |Party and the Revolutionary Trades 85 are jute mills. In jute mills, the the Workers Club of Brighton Beach DON'T FORGET TO REGISTER There are two days left in which to regisier. If you do not register you will be unable to vote for your candidates, the candidates of the Workers (Communist) Party. Registration places are open from ether European countries, particu- larly Italy. It is ofvious that these immigrants are being imported for the express purpose of breaking down wages and working conditions. Australian Workers Union. The fight against the bureaucratic & to 10:30 ». m. today and from p. m. tomorrow, (vation day. jofficials of the Australian Workers | Union was taken a step further last Mg when the Labor Council of N Unions today conducted huge pro- test demonstrations in the streets of Prague. Communist demonstrators includ- ing deputies of the Party were beaten by the police. Wholesale ar- rests of workers took place. Many workers on large construction jobs downed tools following the appeal jof the Communist Party. number of women employed is 53,- 000, children 86,500 and young fe- male children 1,500. Under the Factory Act no children can be employed in mines. The wom- en are so employed but though the | governor of Bengal is empowered to \prohibit such an employment of | women, it has never been exercised. |The governor is a Britisher. |chance to meet again and enjoy an ‘evening together. DICTATOR REMAINS | QUITO, Ecuador, Oct, 11 (UP).— President Ayora was unanimously re-elected by the new congress which assembled today. The new cabinet will be named this week.’ Probably all ministers will be retained. will be held Saturday evening at 9 o’clock at 227 Brighton Beach Ave. Ben Gold and Rebecca Grecht will address the workers present. After the banquet and the speeches, a concert will be given, followed by a dance that will last till the morning. The proceeds of the affair will be donated to the Communist election campaign fund. ' REGISTER TODAY. Four days of registration have passed. Two more remain. Reg- ister today in order to vote: for the candidates of the Workers (Communist) Party. Registration places are open from 5 to 10:30 p. m, today and from 7 a, m. to 10:30 p, m. tomorrow, the final day for registration. IN THE Cooperative Colony 2700 Bronx Park East. OPEN TONIGHT, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ALL DAY.

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