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E f f i chooses, will be able to declare every | beacuse sadine ter int nea For the 40-Hour THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS | For a Workers-Farmers Government | To Organize the Unorganized For a Labor Party Week Entered a! second-cin) Foren E arch 3, 1879. ,< ; rae eee BuNAL CITY ~ 4) DITION PR Vol. V., No. 250 Published daily except Sunday by The National Daily Worker Publishing Association, Inc. 26-28 Union Sqa., New York, N.Y. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: In New York, by mail, $ NEW YORK, MO Outside New York, by mall, $6.00 per year. FOSTER HITS FAKE ISSUES | IN ROCHESTER Communist Candidate | Given Rousing | Welcome Broadcasts on Radio Big Election Parade’ Draws Thousands (Svecial to the Daily Worker) ROCHESTER, N. Y., Oct. 21.—| Killing every seat and reaching into the annex of Ukrainian Hall, more than 500 workers gave an enthusias tie welcome to William Z. Foste: Communist candidate for President, at an election campatgn meeting here Saturday night. Foster was welcomed at the rail- road station by a delegation of 100 workers. He hurried to the radio station, where he broadcast for half an hour on the war danger. Then the Communist nominee rushed to the hall which was already packed with workers eager to hear the mes- sage of militant class struggle he brought them. Foster exposed the fake issues of the capitalist parties and showed how unrelated they were to the ac- tual conditions of the workingclass. He also pointed out the traitorous rele being played by the socialist party and the A. F. of L. bureau- cracy. He stressed the fact that} the imperialist powers are prepar- ing a new world war and a war against the Soviet Union. One hundred dollars was raised for the Communist campaign fund | at this meeting and considerable, literature sold. There were also| several new inembers admitted into the Party. | After the meeting a parade of 20) cars was held for three hours thru the principal streets of the city. The cars bore various posters and slo-| gans and the parade attracted the, attention of thousands. MEXICAN LABOR PROPOSAL HAZY All Strikes May Be Called Illegal MEXICO CITY, Oct. 21.—There ere many loopholes seen in the labor legislation which will be first placed lefore a convention of employers and labor officials before introduced into the Mexican congress in De- cember by the provisional president- elect Portos Gil. While the projected law, as now explained by Gil, would favor work- ers’ insurance, the eight-hour day and six-day week and do away with some of the lesser evils of industry, it is calculated to produce “peace” in industry at the expense of the | workers, according to observers here. The loophole which will allow the government to intervene on the side of the industrialists is pointed out to be the provision that while peace- ful strikes will be judged to be legal, &S soon as any violence occurs the strike would be rendered illegal. In; view of the fact that more militant strikers will rot allow seabs to take | their piaces and the well-known fact | that employers always try to use seabs, the government, if it so strike illegal. In addition, it is also believed that any: convention of industrialists and union officials will certainly deplete Gil’s projected law in such a way as to render it practically useless to workers when on strike, or at times when branches of industry are at a standstill. Furthermore, Gil would justify lockouts when produc- tion in a certain industry has sur- passed the amount that can be sold. On October 27 Daily Bs Worker will issue a special edition of 300,000 copies of the Daily Worker. This is part of the election campaign program. It will be enlarged in size, with special articles and fea- tures by leading members of the Political Committee. It is absolutely necessary to give this edition the widest possible ‘circulation. i Send in your bundle order immediately, attaching a re- mittance for same at the rate of $6 per thousaid. Have your unit and organization send in .& greeting to the Daily Worker on the occasion of the 11th Anniversary of the Russian “Revolution. ae ee WORKERS PARTY SHOWS POWER IN MINNESOTA DRIVE Challengés Steel Trust in Its Strong Campaign Ariz. Exposes Renegades Tron Miners Getting Red Message MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Oct. 21.— The most spirited Communist cam- paign ever waged in this stronghold of the steel trust and big business is now under way with the Workers (Communist) Party attacking the democratic and republican parties and the rehegade farmer-labor lead- ers who deceived and betrayed the illit "Roi workers and farmers going over Vien | OPT) bag. andsbaggage tothe. big) parties of Wall Street. The Workers (Communist) Party is the only political party of the workers and poor farmers in the field in this election campaign, what is left of the socialist party appeal- Photo Workers (Communist) Party candi- date for governor of Arizona. With O'Brien is Frank Logan, active mil-| itant Negro worker of Phoeniz. Socialist Made shows |for their clerical, pacifist and, at Communist by Red Platform Contributions have begun to reach the National Election Campaign Reverend Norman Thomas. The task of placing Minnesota on the Communist ballot was a heavy one. The ten thousand Communist voters who cast their ballots in the primaries were not able to sign the ing to the liberals to cast their votes | bottom, imperialistic candidate, the) 75 KNIT GOODS WORKERS 5) CALIFORNIA eee PENS RY a OUT ON STRIKE Texas Red Candidate OLD FORGE, Pa., Oct. 21.—Over seventy-five young women, em- ployed by the Duchess Underwear |Factory of this city, have been on strike since October 17. The workers workers on the picket line with a gun. Trespass signs have been post- ed and strikers are not permitted on the property of the company. Conditions this URGE SPREAD we Five 4 fE 5 OF PATERSON, :: SILK STRIKE Committee of the Workers (Commu- nist) Party in response to the notice of the Election Drive Anti-Terror Emergency Fund, Among these was five dollars from the Workmen’s Sick and Death Benefit Funds of Communist petitions to place the|ince, in the latest achievement of a Workers Party ticket on the ballot. The comrades had to plough new Continued 0, Page Three can do nothing because soldiers go} BRITISH SCARED wt seesm was” | When the Red troops gained con- Belleville, Ill. One contribution of one dollar from Manila, Arkansas, letter, an excerpt from which reads: “T’'ve been thinking I was a socialist, but a friend gave me a tip. I sent for the Communist platform. After reading same, you can count on me. | Find enclosed one dollar. I could) use lots of literature, if I could only| pay for it—R. $.”* | ‘Other’ Contributions ‘have been re= ceived from workers coming to the| campaign headquarters at 43 East} 125th St. to bring a personal word | of encouragement with their money. The National Election Campaign Committee would like to receive with each contribution a short letter on| the local conditions of the Commu-)| was accompanied by an interesting | BY INDIA UNREST the invasion of the “Solid South”| and the Negro campaign, as well as| |the Gitlow case in Arizona, have| execution of those who oppose the been so dramatic that they have crowded out somewhat news of the campaign in the industrial states land in the important industries, having their hair cut and veils re-| More should be heard from the cam- | paigners there. Also the nuclei and! Party committees are urged to re- port on the progress of the emer- gency drive in particular and of the election campaign in general. Send in news of the struggle in your lo- cality. It is usually as important and as interesting as much that is | printed, and the only reason that it does not appear is that you don’t) jot it down and send it in. Getting} on the ballot in two and a half ‘here that “Soviet agents” are foster- | eed in factory are thetet fied | an improvement in condi- typical of many in this section, but . . , ’ tions, higher wages, and a 44-hour no effort has been made to organize COMMunist Jailed at fas Rie j ee week. At the present time, wages them fer struggle against the bosses’ Meet: Daily Worker Dyers May Join Big te range from $6 to $10 weekly, for a\by the labor fakers of the United ay oe Walk ~ Poli ‘ot daily output of fifty-five to’ sixty-|Textile Workers Union. The Na- Distributed alkout; Police F five pounds of silk. tional Textile Workers Union is now —— Make Arrests ign The walkout foilowed the dismis-| conducting an active campaign to Peg Pickers Also Join —o the sal of a forelady who was accused organize the entire textile industry. i 4 ee . . iba of being too kind to the workers., The conditions here are a part ng } Strikers’ Ranks Firm ue The manager of the factory has of the general exploitation of the Form New Unit of a fo- een very harsh to the employes, | workers in the textile industry, and “a “hief’s ” } ire even foreing women to continue at|the betrayal of the New Beatord Workers Party Chief's Pr Sie Held their tasks when ill. When com- |textile workers strike by the United) /¢ Hiawak Gesture plaints were made, he laughed at| Textile Workers Union, which ac-| (Special to the Daily Worker) the them. cepted reductions of 5 per cent and| SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Oct. 21. | PATERSON, Oct. 21.—Striking’ 4p, The company is mgking every ef-|the specd-up system is being fol-|-—The strike of 500 Mexican agri- f silk workers have reccived with con- jve fort to break the strike, and one lowed by general offensives against |cultural laborers in the fruit or- | siderable indignation news of the ge of the foremen Friday threatened ihe workers chards nt Webedneltie! is: continuliig bee ting of pelatine by nels of- ong SUT ARUN RIN ei es a Z ‘ % ficials of strikers’ rights. e ar * } : h pea plekars swelling the ranks Joseph Stedham, Workers (Com- test Saturday of a picket captain v The strike committee organized a | pypnoy, . an uncalled for order to move on, jhe Wrisds idewine taut aatied ie aanuel (oes eee has raised the question as to whether gy. ; | the recent promise of Chief of Po- UP HUNAN SOVIET MEETING TONIGHT Levin, district organizer of the SES lige ‘Tracy; that he wonld < boa ‘ Workers (Communist) Party, to as long as the strikers kept within. * speak, At the meeting, during which the law, was anything more than a HA io a new unit of the Workers Party mere gesture. CaptureChenchow,New Workers Will Demand was organized, a Communist was FIRING WORKERS The picket captain who was ar fd PEKING, Oct. 21—Ousting the) The mighty wave of protest that, Much Communist literature and «a adiation” Is Second ‘* that he was within his rights. troops sent against them with the aid)has arisen among workers thruout| wore distributed among the stelking Strikebreakine Move OEE Ue eeencee: i of local workers and peasants, the|the country at the jailing of William workers during the mass meeting. LSS ee | ea ne Rolie ae ntade on he ae army of the Workers’ and Peasants’ Shifrin, left wing worker, as a re- sa THe. kecond Bao in’ the ettile-| tae tear amines te tee eae ae Alliance has set up a soviet in Chen- Sult of the gangsterism and provo- breaking program by which the offi-|jsed “fairness” of the police. : v- chow, a principal city in Hunan Peewee Bet) Se ee YOUNG WORKERS cers of the American Express Com- Fred Hoelscher, secretary of the ‘in |triumphant drive thru the province.| greater heights at a mass meeting che visti: wikia. of the exnressler cet aie ee funny ir The latest reports received here alsy|to be held tonight at Irving Plaza, PLAN RED NIGHT workers was taken Saturday when i onoes the auspices of Chief of Po- J. say that troops sent against them! 15th St. and Irving Place, where George M. Harrison, president of| lice Tracy, and at which representa- |workers of New Yrok will demand the union called upon the govern- tives of the manufacturers were } elease. ; ment mediation board to act in the present. If such a conference took The meeting, which will begin im-|Downtown Manhattan jt" blace or was: oven placaae aan mediately after work, has been i 2 vi adoption by the| workers were not informed of the trol of the city they immediately called by the Shifrin Defense Com- Will Be Covered eon ALU coumaietinih faa fact. p |declared that all property helonged|mittee, 26-28 Union Square, which Downtown Units 1 and 2 of the stamp out all traces of the union! The ranks of the strikers are hold- 4 ‘to the workers and peasants, and b#s bees directing the campaign to young Workers (Communist) while the labor misleaders tied the |ing firm and with proper aggressive |burnt all land deeds and property pottaliee ee Sate from the | League have arranged a Red Rally hands of the workers by “negotia-|policies and leadership, there is be- ‘Cloak’ Suppression by. papers. Posters appeared thruout clutches the right wing tools of the \the city announcing the principles \of the new government. | According to the reports Scoring Reds LONDON, Oct. 21.—The unrest now prevailing in Afghanistan as a result of new economic and social measures introduced by King Ama- new provisions were distributed from_ sheaien (tt AE ag. union headquarters to the almost ania tr “ofr Hy "vetecne to We Samcon, starved inhabitants. Provisions were and the likelihood that it may spread | | ; * ¢ ;.| also made for the defense of the! to the Indian frontier causing #erin! city and the carrying on of the| ous complications for the British | oykers and pendants offexulve, government, Leg x have led to charges et As has happened all along the/ ing the revolt and capitalizing the | line of march peasants and workers opportunity for the spread of pro-|¢ame to the aid of the Red troops Secale: i e 3 when General Pei Chun-hsi sent The process of “westernization”|troops from Hankow on Chenchow. | nist election campaign. News about advocated by the king, with its con-|But most of the troops joined the commitant process of economic de-| Workers and peasants in a body, and velopment has already led to the)it has become impossible lo send |any troops against them because of | measure. The most significant side| fear that they join the Red forces.| of the matter, it is believed, is not) Se tr aaa the fact that the natives object to Jobs Scarce, But Yet Plentiful, Ex plains CommerceDept.Head moved, but the wave of unrest that) seems to be sweeping over the coun- With the unrest now prevailing | in India and sharpened by the ar-| Facts are often “singularly dis- rival of the Simon Commission, any|tressing.” Julius Klein of the native unrest is alarming to the| Foreign and Domestic Bureau of the British, who would maintain con-| Department of Commerce discovered trol of India at any cost. Due to| this in a radio talk recently on what the proximity of Soviet Turkestan,| becomes of workers thrown out of and the constant fear of uprisings,}employment by rationalization and the British are taking the oppor-|speed up, which he terms “the in- y deistice’” whose to take place in the downtown sec- tion of Manhattan on Wednesday, Oct. 24. Ten street corner meetings have Among |been arranged by the Young Work- bosses are trying to deliver him. A number of prominent speakers will address the meeting. unions of workers and peasants were them will be Ben Gold, Louis Hy- ers League members, to be held at ployees, which are used only immediately formed, and clothes and ™an, Joseph Boruchovich, L. Nelson, | various corners in the section. Fifty men on the extra list. Kate Gitlow, Sam Liptzin, Rose young workers will address the Baron and E. Werner. A. Lefkowitz | crowds will act as chairman, ‘ing the flatten of the Party of the class struggle to the downtown PRAYER ENDS workers, and showing why all work- ers must vote Communist. Open Air Meetings. The open air meetings will be held at the following corners: 7th St. and Second Ave.; 10th St. and Second Ave.; 7th St. and Ave. B; 5th St. land Ave. C; Irving Place and 14th 3 ‘Ss ; Clinton St. and Ignores Problems of St.; Rutgers Square; Clint Y ‘ington Sts.; Suffolk and Grant Sts.; Workers and Eldridge and Rivington Sts. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 21.—,_ All the meetings will begin at The Rev. Norman Thomas, candidate 8:30 p. m., and will be adjourned for president of the socialist party, Promptly at 10 p. m. for the grand/ began his campaign meeting here | Wind-up meeting, which will be held with a sermon, continued for an 0M the corners of 10th St. and Sec- | hour on the subject of water power ond Ave, Workers will form in line ignoring entirely the immediate de. the streets with torch lights to the mands of the workers. central meeting. The audience that turned out to Prominent Speakers. |} hear the prophet of the socialist! Prominent speakers who are fight- party was composed almost entirely ¢TS in the labor movement will ad-| of middle-class merchants and a few| ‘ress the meetings. Among these | petty business men of this city. A will be many Communist candidates, few workers were present, most of °&ttying the banner of the Workers at these meetings, explain-; following the recent betrayal of the | strike by unién ae 2 A tion” programs, a number of work-/| lieved t> be a good prospect of gain- ers were. fired Saturday for being|ing the full demands the union is “absent” October 10 and Oct. 11./ fighting for. Previous to this the company had Need for Spreading Strike. passed out red cards to its old em- Considerable discussion has been ly for taking place among the ranks of the In this Way workers, it is reported, over the \it has worked to-terrorize the men necessity of drawing in other ranks of workers. still -held on the jobs, - ‘particularly the dyefs, who have Company Arrogance. given signs of readiness. Workers Negotiations between L. R. Gwyn,|have not yet given up hope that vice-president of the company, their leadership will make the nec- Continued on Page Three essary move to call out these ranks. Recently an invitation was sent to the Silk Workers’ Union by the Nas ‘tional Textile Workers’ Union sug- gesting a joint campaign to draw in the dyers and other ranks of the Buckner O. K.’s Move Paterson workers. Inquiries made by Be The Daily Worker indicate that no “It’s alright, Mr. Connolly, you | reply has been made to this offer of may go now,” and the prison doors | cooperation. In the event of the con- of the Welfare Island penitentiary | tinued refusal of the union officials cpened Saturday and the waiting te call out the dye workers, it is automobile swallowed up the former believed that the National Textile presidert of Queens Borough. No | Union will consider it as its first one believes Mr. Connolly will be a duty to undertake this task. prisoner again. | For Connolly was one of the lead- ers of a graft ring which stole, twenty millions—from the workers.| New York City will be allowed to Just previous to that Max Steuer, |spend $26,000,000 more for govern- attorney for the millionaire sewer | mental needs next year than was grafter had gone to Justice Reigel- allotted in 1928, under the proposed mann who also had heard that Con-| budget approved by the Board. of, nolly had stolen millions from the Estimate yesterday. The 1929 bud- poor. get was set at $538,928,697.14. Connolly, Millionaire Sewer Grafter, Freed; CITY BUDGET UP $26,000,000 (By United Press) 6, tunity, it is generally pointed out, | police, who "allowed the anti-Semitic | ture operators and stage hands em- times as many states as in 1924 H4 shows that there are no slouches on | While shouting eh Aa eh the job. But we want to know how! er is it happened and is happening. you Fugitive Enemies of write and we’ll see that it is printed. | h One contribution that came pees Os 8. S. R. Gather to lier and that should be mentioned Mourn Tzar’s Mother is from John Tuchelski, who is now | e working as an electrician. in Lenin-, 4 few hundred emigres last night grad. He is a former member of | gathered together to mourn the the Workers (Communist) Party,|death of the dowager empress and sends 14 rubles for one and a/ Marie, mother of Czar Nicholas II, half days’ pay, with the hope that/ who died nine days ago in Denmark. the Party will succeed in getting on| The service took place at the Church the ballot in all the states of the of Christ the Saviour at Madison country, Ave. and 121st St. Marie is the person who on several occasions an- nounced she would return to Russia victoriously “in a very few weeks.” Workers Injured in Anti-Semitic Riot VIENNA, Oct. 21.—A number of workers were seriously injured at Budapest during an anti-Semitic demonstrations, according to dis- patches received here tonight. Two workers were arrested by the UNCONFIRMED REPORT. Roumania reactionary press sources claims that some peasants in the villages of the Ukraine have revolt- ed against Soviet authority. The report, however, has had no con- firmation and is considered to be rioters td escape. without foundation. MOVIE WORKERS STRIKE Ranks Firm After 2 Months’ Walkout The class war often flares up in|with no organization to aid them, out-of-the-way places despite the their ranks remain unbroken. strenuous efforts of the fakers of; The Calderone circuit operates a the socialist party and the American| chain of motion picture houses in Federation of Labor to preserve|Glencove, Hempstead Lynbrook and class peace. Out in the Long Is-' Valley Stream. The strike was land village 40 workers, motion pic-| called when the circuit refused to sign an agreement with the stage ployed by the Calderone cireuit,| hands and motion picture operators have been on strike for two months. | who are affiliated with the Amer- And tho these 40 workers have been ican Federation of Labor. The union practically alone in their struggle,: Continued o7. Page Three o suppress the native uprisings,| PARIS, Oct. 21.—A report from, that there are 100,000 more insur- East Broadway; Columbia and Riv- control, and ended with a prayer, 8d parade from each meeting thru | ventive genius of America.” them through curiosity. (Communist) Party in the present Klein admitted the number of fac- |tory workers has declined 900,000 | since 1920 and railroads reduced for- |ces by 240,000 in the same time. He They, together with the socialist jconceded that productivity per man |candidate, led the religious audience had increased 102 ii i Deane, thee te | rome, che fermion and the final|! tthe them to attend the meetings |\secutor of Mr. Connolly who during auto industry in 11 rs; in ‘ tail Yours. ‘pruductivite thes pela vgadeae a and to vote Communist. A list of |the course of the trial breathed fire 211 ver cent per man in rubber|,,.%0M8S definitely proved to the the speakers who will address the|and brimstone against the betrayers manufacture, 83 per cent in petro-|{¢W Workers present that the social- meetings will be published later. of the “public trust” also said it , list party is deeper in the mire of ' was O.K, So Mr. Steuer got the re- jleum refining and 61 in| ; , ig per cent in| bourgeois reformism and pacifism) lease of his client on bail. cement making; that a worker now than ever before, and that the ex- Thomas Speaks Word And Connolly js free again, on makes 32,000 razor blades in. the! .)); ‘ Pia M ploited workers of this country can j ] $5,000 bail. He stole from the poor. |same time he made 500 in 1918. expect nothing from it or its preach. L0F Capitalist Press $5,000 bail. He stole from sine elt | But Klein saw other things ander messiahs. TRY “a worker | contended that workers displaced go |to other industries. He said that the | auto industry and its associated pro- {ducts took in 1,280,000 workers | since 1920, while household ap- pliances such as electric refrigera- tors and oil heaters took in 100,000, elections. So the judge immediately granted Five thousand leaflets will be dis-| he certificate of “reasonable” doubt tributed by the members of the | requested by Steuer. Isn’t it “reason- Young Workers (Communist) |able” to believe a man innocent if League before factories, and in all|he got away with millions? places where workers congregate,, And Mr. Emory R. Buckner, pro- Before the meeting, several Preachers, friends of the Rev. Thom- as, had been invited to the meeting. “Further taxes on inheritance, vacated by Connolly large incomes and estates” are the Who stole a loaf of bread. Try and magic words by which Norman. Ket bail for him on a certificate of Woll, Again Normal, or ea Thomas, religious chieftain of the “reasonable” doubt. Issues New Attack socialist party, expects to transform sit (GORE pags OER . * ‘ . " A MILITARISM. on the Soviet the lot of the working class, ac- AIR } S Union cording to a statement issued by WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct Matthew Woll, leading jingo la- him last night and which is being The United States y has ry t ance solicitors and 185,000 more|bor misleader, after an unexplained | ‘Teated in a very friendly way by (hat it will build two giant airships |teachers than in 1920, silence of nearly two weeks since his the capitalist press. at a total cost of $7,825,000, This | Klein did not note that the bulk hysterical outburst against the So-| , Thomas also predicted the victory project is a continuation of the pre- lof this growth is in what may be viet Union yesterday reverted to his of Herbert Hoover at the polls and parations for the next war, as in the [termed the luxury trades and that| normal state by emitting a new de- 8”nounced that U. S. imperialism | hull of ‘each airship will be housed such indicates a growth of para- fecation against the first workers’ would soon cause a European blot a hangar with the accommodation sitism typical of an imperialism republic. against the U, S. | for five aerovlanes of the scout type. [headed toward a decline. But with) Cloaked in the robes of the Na-| ~~ TERR hae a 3 a jobless army of some 4,000,000 a tional Civic Federation, Woll gularly distressing” that many dis-|ing- against the “formidable in- placed factory workers have perma- fluences and continued pressure”, employee Me cogaition of te dovier ener 3D in Jails Are Aided by Labor Defense employed. the recognition of the Soviet Union. —_—_— “The National Civic Federation FEAR ZEPPELIN EXPLOSION. |has steadfastly cupported the con | Thirty workers, victims of the|national Latior Defense, and their LAKEHURST, N. J., Oct, 21 (UP). sistent policy of non-recognition American class war, are now in the |dependents $20 monthly. The I. Le —The Los Angeles, United States adopted by the administrations of jails of this country. All of them D. is appealing to all workers to! navy dirigible, may start Monday on| Woodrow Wilson, Warren G. Hard-|have been put behind the bars for support Fnabeslly the Prisoners’ a 48-hour training trip, officers at| ing, and Calvin Coolidge,” the state- their activities in behalf of their Pledge Fund which enables these| the naval station said today. Naval | ment says. class. These prisoners include Tom militant victims of capitalist “jus- officers refused to state “the pur-| As a sideline Woll is vice-presi- Mooney at San Quentin, Warren K. tice” to receive some of the neces- pose of the flight, One rumor which dent of the American Federation of | Billings at Folsom and the eight I. saries of life. | persisted here cited the possibility Labor and president of the Photo-| W. W. prisoners at the state prison| The class war prisoners also ap- of an explosion of the Graf Zeppelin, |engravers International. His main lin Walla Walla, Wash. |preciate letters from workers, par- housed in the same hangar with the|business is with the Civic Federa-| All of these prisoners receive $5/ ticularly on their birthdays. The | American dirigible. tion—and strikebreaking. a month regularly from the Inter-| Continued on Page Three | 21 ported When finally adopted by the city ei council it is expected to approxi- mate $550,000,000. = Communist Election Drive for Emergency Fund Against Terror. Tumediate tasks for all Party members: 1. Cut out the contribution: blank printed in the Daily Worker today. ‘ 2 Send immediately your con- tribution, of not less than one dol- lar, to the COMMUNIST ELEC= TION DRIVE NTI-TERROR EMERGENCY FUND. 3. Send the money without any delay DIRECT to the Na- tional Election Campaign Com- mittee, 43 East 125th St., New. York City. 4. It is the duty of every Party Unit to take up a collec~ tion for the Emergency Fund at once and to send the money DIRECT to the National Election | Campaign Committee. 5. Every unit must assign comrades to take up collections in the trade unions, fraternal or- | gonizations and factories. 6. It is the duty of every Party member to collect as much money as possible in the shops, trade unions and fraternal or- ganizations, ‘8 7. The Red Election Sundays and the house-to-house canyas- sing shouid be utilized to estab- lish the Communist Election Drive Anti-Terror Emergency Fund, NATIONAL ELECTION CAM- PAIGN COMMITTEE Workers (Communist) Party 43 E. 125th St.. New York, N.Y.