The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 22, 1928, Page 2

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4 win ec oo - fe Yt i { ( r x AUDIENCE CHEERS MILITANT STAND AF RED SPEAKERS Intensive Anti-Fascist Drive Begun Over crowded ha “House, 7 E 1 *ternoon in a g saeeting agains toltalian worker a anothe: Detroit at murder of wounding apThe workers 9&8 the wofer.a in the bloody : Jusion with the “ganization iga to sn eqorkers who opr eakers appez workers t the , in col- an jingo or- into Amer of those its bloody rule. BHis Will Fight Fascism. ‘SA resolution passed unanimously bysthe 1,000 workers present, con- ‘démned fascism and advocated a ‘iinfted front of all workers against tHe’ reactionary blackshirt rule. apoli and G. Serio of 1 (Communist) Party, } ‘addressed the workers who packed hall, and called upon them to “Fight the underhand ©ilethods of the fascists. "Qpplause greeted cach speaker as different points were raised. Men- tions of the word fascism were sig- nals for long boos. oe Begin Big Drive. Other speak reiterated stand of the two Com ers, calling upon the wholehearted solidarity against the Teactionary activities of the fascists. A motion made toward the end of the meeting called for another meeting to be held next Sunday. Ac- cording to N. Napoli, this meeting was only the beginning of an in- campaign against the fascist s in America. Other meet- ings will carry t campaign fur- ther, nd gangster Protracted for nce Prizes for Shabbiest Garments to Be Given at I. L. D. Fall Revel Workers whose clothes have long Since lost their innocent bloom and freshness will be THE DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1925 alian “Unknown Soldier” Stunt to Boost Imperialist Warfare To boost another world slaughter of the workers on behalf ¢ of playing on the workers sentiments by paying homage to the ‘ capitalist countries. Photo shows Capt. Eckener, who commande Graf Zeppelin on its transatlantic flight, at the tomb of the “unknor of the capitalist system, the trick ‘unknown soldier” is used in all d the German militarist dirigible wn soldier.” WORKERS PARTY gone Says OPEN AIRMEETS © D.A.R. Speaker ‘ WHEELING, W. Va., Oct. Many Candidates to Be “The socialist party is also Among Speakers 21. American party.” For this not altogether new dis- covery you have the authority of ntensive election! Mrs. P. A. Reymann, prominent y of making the blue blood of the Daughters of the present election campaign a means| American Revolution. of bringing the message of the class} And who more than the D. A. R. struggle to the workers of New York) members are to judge what is and vicinity, the Workers (Commu-| “American”—the good kind of nist) Party has arranged a series! Americanism, mind you, not the var- of open air meetings to be held dur-| jety of 1776 or that of 1812. ing the present week throughout the) ‘¢ ety and Ae aie : annual convention of the D. A. Among the speakers who will ad-| held at Bluefield, W. Va., Mrs. Rey- dress the workers at these oven air! mann launched a spirited attack meetings will be many candidates of|upon the Workers (Communist) the Workers (Communist) Party,| Party, its candidates, its program various offices in the! and its militancy. “The Commu- nists openly state that they fight A list of the meetings to be held in the class struggle,” she said. and the sneakers who will address|“That is un-American. It is the them follows: duty of a national defense commit- Today tee to combat un-American institu- Rutgers Souare—Taft, Spochnik,| tions, The republican, the democrat, Hendin, Wattenberg and Blum. the socialist party may be classed 1st Avenue and 49th Street—Mc-/as American, but not so the Com- Donald, Sniro, and Suskin. munist Party.” 28th Street and Lexington Avenue! ‘The good lady’s tirade was caused —Rees, Primoff and Silber. by the calling of a recent Commu- ep otand, St. Ext. and Havemever| nist meeting at Wheeling, at which Street—Zan. Midola, G. Welsh,|/Scott Nearing was scheduled to and Joseph Cohen. speak. Nearing and other Commu- Stanley and Paterson r 3 nist speakers were arrested. Miller and Gussakof. La Tuesday. and Williams—Liptzin, Continuing drive and its poli (Noon)— B. Sutter Negro Segregation Bimba, Jul. Cohen and L. Cohen. ; Prospect and 163rd St.—Grecht. Is Shown Up : in Leroy, Horwitz, Lillienstein und Suburb of Chicago Wishfsky. 144th St. and 7th Ave.—Williams,| CHICAGO, Oct. 21—Negro resi-| Alexander and Markoff. dents of Maywood, one of Chicago’s 5th Avenue and 125th St.—j|most popular and growing suburbs, | Stachel, Gil Green, and Frank. are not wanted in the community! Eagle Pencil (Noon)——Sherman, | and concerted efforts on the part of and R. Rubin. white property owners and real es- Wednesday. tate operators to curb the growth Wilkins and Intervale—Nessin, of Maywood’s Negro population,| Jackson, Schiller and E.-Shafram. came to light recently through an 136th and 7th Ave.—Ed. Welsh, article published in the Maywood Wright, and Grace Lamb. Herald, the weekly newspaper of Myrtle and Hudson—B. Miller, that town. At the meeting of the Hinswood, and Midola. real estate board and the white prop- 2nd Ave. and 10th St.—Gussakof,| erty owners, it was reported that Pasternack, Sam _ Saroff, and) petitions have been _ circulated Hendin. throughout the white residents, for 99th St. and Lexington (Noon)— the purpose of securing signatures Ballam which make it impossible for the Passaic, N. real estate men to sell property to Negroes. Over 90 per cent of the —Padgug. STATE KILLS HICKMAN SAN QUENTIN PRISON, Calif., said. It was further planned by the Oct. 21 (i carried Wil through one of the most atrocious 870eS- crimes in the history of California,| The Negro citizens of Maywood, collapsed completely when he mount- however, through their organization, ed the gallows today to be hanged | & for the murder of Marion Parker. | fight the segregation tactics of the Less than a second before the White residents. In a statement trap was sprung he almost fainted, |™ade public by the club, the Negro put before he could fall to his knees Tesidents say, “The movement car- the trap went out from under him | Ties all the earmarks of race hatred, and he dropped to his death at the | intolerance and prejudice. It aig Dee Me ER jects us to rebuff and insult; it de- Labor Sports Union Activities Stimulating Worker Athletics in their element Saturday night en the annual Proletarien Autumn Revel of the New York section of the Interna- tional Labor Defense is held at Web- ster Hall, 119 East 1ith St. At this affair the more frayed and tattered one’s clothes are the better, for , Prizes will be awarded to those wearing the oldest and shabbiest 1 clothes. ? “This is expected to produce spirit- ed competition amon York’s tattered proletarians, many of whom ; are planning to don garments of Weénerable age. A committee of well- known proletarian artists and writ- ers will judge the respective merits of the “costumes” and award the prizes accordingly * @?€ntertainments of various kinds WAH be provided during the course gf the evening and dancing will con- tinue until the ea hours of the morning. The proceeds of the tumn Revel wili go to defend wor ers now under attack by the’ capi- talist courts. Tickets are 50 cents in advance and 75 cents at the door and are on sale at the office of the TL. D., 799 Broadway, Room 422. You're in the fight when you write for The DAILY WORKER. By WALTER The Labor Sports’ Union, since its last convention held in New York on the 27th, 28th of August, has shown s real organiza ains in building itself and in stimulating the work- y ers nationally in organizing work- ers sport clubs. day the workers # inal parts of the country are tak- “ ing active steps in organizing sport ¢ ¢lubs. The workers r the fact that the bosses sport o ations e are their class er lea. (Y. M,C. Ay ¥. W. C. A., Industrial Athletic mn League, A. A. U.) and hot-beds for y anti-labor corruptive propaganda. ™ They are energetically going ahead with the organization of their own sport clubs under the banner of the Labor Sports’ Union. Twe Years Old. While the workers sport move- ment has been in existence in the European countries for many years, it is less than two years since the workers in this country have ganized a national. workers sport or- ganization, the Labor Sports’ Union. It is true, there were many workers sport organizations in the large in- dustrial centers, mostly Finnish, be- fore the organization of a Labor Sports’ Union, yet they were not or- ganized into a central organization and their growth was limited. To- day the L. S. U. numbers over 70 clubs with a total of 5,300 members within its ranks The American working youth is becoming tired of the Gene Tunneys, Bil Tildens and Babe Ruths of the or- \ a prives us of that friendly, helpful We will block any attempt to drive or coerce us from our homes and our property.” professional athletic fame. it is| LO Ask Death Penalty tired of idolizing the “big shots” in for Obregon Assassin sporting. It is being stripped of the MEXICO CITY, Oct. 21 (UP).— illusions that its mind has been filled with in school, (“everyone has an|he death penalty will be asked for Leon Toral, assassin of equal chance”) with the intense ex- jose De ploitation and unemployment now| president-elect Alvaro. Obregon, when he goes to trial next month, rampant. It is tired of the bosses’ sports, with the Jingoism and anti-| gocording to a formal notification working class propaganda that al-| which has been presented to judicial ways goes with it, and is determined authdetties): Tt: de:underatoodss the to have organized sports under its| trial may start November 5, but no own leadership, within the ranks of! cesieial date has been set. the Labor Sports’ Union. se Need Funds, Lesser penalties will be asked for The National Executive Board of the dozen alleged accomplices of the the U. taking note of the ®8sassin, only one of whom will be \change taking place in the minds of | ‘tied with Toral. ve the working youth is’ utilizing all} Juan Corres Nieto, federal district forces within its means to carry the| Hrosecutor, said Madre Concepcion, message of labor sports to the young the nun who is charged with being workers and to organize them with.|the “intellectual instigator” of the in the ranks of the L. S.-U. crime, will hear a demand for the To do this organizational work ™aximum sentence for her when the the L. S. U. must have funds. print leaflets, send out organizers, to) men is twenty years in prison. provide clubs with gyms and in- structors requires a good deal of that the cther eleven men and wo- money which must be raised. National Executive Board has)|be held for prosecution on lesser created a permanent organizational | charges. fund, to which it asks all workers and working class organizations, that are interested in building up a strong labor sports movement and George last night approved the ap- of organizing the youth into a work-|pointment of Viscount Peel as sec- ing class organization, are asked to retary of state for India, to succeed make contributions to the Labor Lord Birkenhead, who resigned last Sports’ Union Organizational Fund. | week. Send all contributions to the Labor! The Marquess Londonderry was Sports’ Union, 15 West 126th, St., named commissioner of works, to iNew York. ‘yeplace Viscount Peel. NEW SECRETARY TO INDIA whites have signed petitions, it is) RALLY ON OCT, 26 IN BROWNSVILLE an Many Red Candidates | Will Speak « Red rally to be held srownsville at the Hopkinson Man- |sion, 428 Hopkinson Ave., Brooklyn, on the evening of October 26, the in -|Communist platform of class strug- gle will be presented by Commu- nist candidates in the 1928 elections |and other prominent Ked speake | The rkers of Brownsville, a w Speaking before the twenty-third jorge section of whom are needle | Office of the Workers (Communist) "| trades workers, have responded | enthusiastically to the Communist |campaign thus far at the open air | meetings held in that section and in the signature drive to put the Wor ers (Communist) Party on the bal- lot, and a large and enthusiastic mass meeting is expected to be held. | Those who will speak on what the Workers (Communist) Party stands for, in the factories, mines and mills as well as in the 1928 elections, will he H. M. Wicks,’ of | the Daily Worker staff; Scott Near- ing, candidate for governor of New |Jersey; Bert Miller, candidate in the 14th Senatorial District of Manhat- tan and organization secretary of District 2 Workers (Communist) Party; Ben Gold, Communist candi- date in the 23d Cdngressional Dis- trict; D. Benjamin, candidate in the ‘th Senatorial District; Ray Rago- vin, running in the 23d Assembly District and Samuel Liptzin, Red candidate in the 22d Aessembly Dis: trict. Election Symposium in Williamsbrug to | Be Held October 26 A political symposium participated in by the Workers (Communist) Party, the republican and democratic parties, will be held on Oct. 26, 8 p.m., at Miller’s Grand Assembly, at the corner of Havemeyer and Grand Sts., in the Williamsburg sec- tion of Brooklyn. The Workers (Communist) Party will be represented by A. Bimba, organizer of Section 6 of the Work- ers (Communist) Party and Com- munist candidate in the 13th as- sembly district. | Anthony De Piano and P, Nathan- _—The bravado which! oard to form a syndicate to buy) son, republican and democratic can-/several times for their fearless ad- iam Edward Hickman UP all property now held by Ne-|didates in the 14th assembly dis-| vocacy cf Negro rights. ‘trict respectively, will speak for their parties. The socialist party has been invited to send a speaker the Community Welfare Club, will, but has not responded. The sym-| Ppetroit Wolverines posium is being held under the aus pices of the Brooklyn Citizens’ Com | mittee. | Hundreds of workers of Williams- | burg are expected to attend the sym- It sub-| posium. The issues of the 1928 elec-|tained their position among the/ ‘tions are recognized by them as be- leaders in the national professional gale which swept over England and importance to/ football league by walloping the Scotland yesterday resulted in nu- ing of the utmost |to hear the platforms of the various | parties presented by their candi- dates. ‘Worker Killed by | Electric Current; 2 Others Injured Workers Attend Protest Mass Meeting Against Fa “HARLEM NEGR 0 “WORKERS RALLY. M RED NIGHTS ‘Hundreds March Be- hind Red Flag The first of the two Red nights which the Workers (Communist) Party has planned for Negro Har- lem went over with a bang on Sat- | |urday night. Negro Harlem was) thrilled to the core as scores of | | Negro and white workers with auto- | |mobiles borrowed for the occasion, invaded the district with the revolu- | \tionary message of race equality | ,and workingclass solidarity. Eleven | successful street meetings were held | the district, covering Lenox, [Seventh and Fifth Avenues, and fin- lally converging in one huge cam- | ign rally at 135th St. and Seventh | e. {in pa Ave The final rally opened at 10 o’clock jand was soon swelled to huge pro- portions by the arrival of crowds of Negro workers who ‘had been at- tracted to the other meetings and who followed the banners of Com- |munism to the final rally at 135th | St. and Seventh Ave. Here, too, lcame all the speakers, including Jack Stachel, secretary of the organ- |ization department of the National |Party; Ed. Welsh, Negro Commu- |nist candidate in the 21st Assembly | Distriet; Otto E. Huiswoud, Negro }member of the National Political Committee of the Party; Harold Williams, District Negro Organizer jand member of the District Political | Committee; Alexander, of the Young | Workers League; A. Markoff of the District Executive Committee and many others. Negro Harlem was given concrete evidence of the nature of the Work- jers (Communist) Party, the party of jall workers, biack and white. Hun- dreds of Negro workers thrilled to the information vouchsafed by: Negro and white comrades of the leading part played in the councils of the Party by its colored members, and joined in the cheers led by the Teague members for William Z. Foster, presidential candidate of the Party; Richard B. Moore, Negro Communist candidate in the 2lst Congressional District; Ed, Welsh, Negro Communist candidate for the | Assembly in the 21st Assembly Dis- |trict and Lovett Fort-Whiteman, | Negro candidate for State Compt- | | roller of New York. |- The crowd listened with intense \interest to the reading of the Work- jers Party platform demands for the Negro, which include full equality, | jequal pay for equal work, admission | | into the labor unions, and the aboli- |tion of lynching, jim-crowism, seg- jr1egation and all discrimination egainst Negroes. And they cheered |for the Communist presidential and | vice-presidential candidates, Foster jand Gitlow, as Negro comrades told j how these candidates had invaded the south with their message of race | |equality and how their meetings had | |been brcken up in many cases by | |police and reactionary A. F. of L.| | cfficialdom, and themselves arrested IN. Y. Giants Lose to 28-0; Friedman Stars | | DETROIT, Oct. 21 (U.P).—Benny | Friedman’s Detroit Wolverines main- cooperation which should exist be- their daily lives, both in the shop| New York Giants this afternoon, 28| merous scattered wrecks and an o¢- tween the two races, but does not. and at home, and they are anxious;to 0. Benny’s forward passing and | casional fatality. Harrowing exper- Reet were the mainstays of the! | Detroiters, although he played only | \half of the game. | | Bruce Caldwell, former Yale star, | who played right half for the Giants, | did not show to advantage, being | |thrown for losses when the Wol-| jverine linesmen broke through. i | Red Match Box Bosses Wouldn’t Make RQ PARTY| & De? X | WORKERS (COMMUNIST) PAI oS 4 ne re gS Ky & , OTE COMMUNI AlL POWER READ th Baily Worker > to the Working Class ARE CAPITALISTS CLASS CONSCIOUS? WALL ST.MEETS LANDLORD BLOC Stimson Works Hard for Sugar Interests MANILA, Philippine Islands, Oct. | gans of the Party. 21.—Three separate bills introduced |were intended for free distribution into the lower house of the Philip-| during the election campaign. pine legislature, having as their ob-| The Diamond Match Company ject the alteration of the land laws| gave as its reason for turning down to allow the leasing of large areas|the order the slogans For the Work- in order to encourage larger sugat|ers, Against the Bosses, which as plantations, are now under discus-| may be readily seen does not sound sion and have led to the organiza-|so musical to the ears of corpora- tion of a conservative opposition on|tion magnates engaged in the ex- one hand and a radical bloc on the | ploitation of labor. The other match other. {company simply returned the copy The bills have been introduced by| without comment, tho it had origin- the American governor-general, | ally expressed pleasure at the pros- Stimson, and aim at the loosening/Pect of a large order. of the land laws in various degrees.| The accompanying picture of what The most insistent of these laws the match box would look like ex- demands that no limit be placed on| plains why the match companies re- the area subject to lease, while an-| jected the job. other of these laws, said to be sup- ——————_ ported by senate president Quezon,| * would amend the land laws so as to Bar Kansas City Negro increase the area a corporation may| Aviator From Airport lease from the government trom | Pecause of His Color 1,024 to 25,000 hectares (2,500 to 60,000 acres). Since the evident purpose of Stim-| KANSAS CITY, Kansas, Oct. 21. son’s proposed measures is to grant |—The officials of the Fairfax flying more freedom to American sugar /|field, the airport in this city, have interests, the conservative national-|barred Doctor A. Porter Davis, a ists, who represent native landown-|Negro physician, from the use of ers, oppose the bill. They have de-|the field because of his color. The manded the formation of blocs in| Treason given by the field authorities the senate and in the house, lead by |for this discrimination is that white Senator Jose Clarin and Senator Pilots and plane owners have ob- Pedro Rodriguez. jected to his being allowed on the Quenzon has already indicated his field. They further state that his willingness to cooperate with Sim-/ Presence on the promises greatly son in changing the land laws and retards the property’s development. he is reported to be pushing one of| Davis, who purchased a plane last the three bills in the house. Two) Spring, experienced the same condi- others who are: known to have tions in Missouri at other flying pledged Simson their support -are fields, and therefore came to Kan- Senator Osmena and speaker Manuel | 888 to find a place where he would Roxas, who are threatened with a| ot be discriminated against. Dr. split in their party. | Davis hopes to establish an aviation The minorities in both chambers aenpal toe Negro OUR is hey, are reported to have pledged sup | ooh ies to any Sviation': at purt to the insurgents of the nation- aniéeed sponsored either by the BON: alist party, and it is expected that ernment or by individual whites. Simson will meet with some diffi- culty in having his measures passed. AND HOW? The Galen Match Company and the Diamond Match Company, chief manufacturers of little match pack- ets, that are given away free with the purchase of a cigar or a package of cigarettes by your neighborhood tobacconist, refused to fill an order for the Workers (Communist) Party for several hundred thousand such packets bearing the pictures of the Communist candidates and the slo- NEW POSTAL AIR LINE BUENOS AIRES, Oct. 21 (UP). . —The post office department yes- Young Worker League jeraay signed on behalf of Presi. Organizes a New Unit cent Irigoyen the contract with the : . Compania Transarez Colon for the in the Harlem Section. serial postal service between Buends Aires and Sevilla, Spain. The ser- Meeting a long-felt need in Negro vice will begin within six months of Harlem, a unit of the Young Work-|the completion of an air terminal ers (Communist) League, has been | here, formed there. The unit invites all young workers, of all races to its next unit meeting, Wednesday night, at 200 West 135th St., at 8:15 p. m. Next Friday night, Oct. 26, will be Red Night in Harlem. All mem- bers of our new unit are to be there. | Furious Gale Sweeps Over England, Scotland LONDON, Oct. 21—The furious of the iences are being told today. The small Glascow steamer, St. Bren- @ don, was wrecked on a reef. The sailors were rescued after hours in an open boat. The Irish trawler, William Castle, was wrecked on the} Wigtonshire coast. One of the crew! was drowned. e CELEBRATE the To trial opens. The maximum for wo- | Nieto will recommend to the court | The men implicated in the assassination | LONDON, Gct, 21 (U.P). — King | | His body writhing and twisting | as 30,000 volts of electricity passed thru it, Frank Anderson, an elec-| trician employed by the open shop Bell Telephone Company, was killed | Saturday afternoon when his hand accidentally touched a live wire.) |Two other workers were injured, | one seriously. | Anderson had been compelled to| work overtime in the laboratory of | the company at 462 West St. With) him were two other electricians, | Stanley La Roche and Arthur Conk. | As it was late, all three were hur-| rying to get thru as quickly as pos- | sible. Anderson’s hand touched the sup- |ply wire with the full current on and he was thrown away from the transformer to the cement floor. His body struck a ladder on which La Roche was standing and the latter |was thrown down, hitting his head | \against the hard cement floor. He was taken to St. Vincent’s Hospital and is reported in a serious condi- tion. The third electrician, Conk, | was also burned severely about the hands before he was able to turn the current off. of Daily for Dist Navy Day. Needle worker! Has your shop con- tributed to the election fund of Workers (Communist) Party? Coll funds! Get n collection list at the! warters of the Needle Trades alm Committee, 28% Lmion Room 202 im ‘ Order Now A Bundle Special 11th Anniversary Russian Revolution, Election Campaign and War Danger Edition—October 27th, —300,000 COPIES— PRICES OF BUNDLES, $6 A THOUSAND of the HEAR— BEN GITLOW, Workers. ribution FREIHEIT SINGING POLYPHONIC Tickets—ARENA, $1.00; BALCON scist Ter The packets | SWING IN 11th Anniversary ;: CANDIDATE FOR VICE-PRESIDENT MADISON SQ. GARDEN RED ELECTION RALLY SUNDAY, NOV. 4th 2 o'clock PROCESSION OF RED FLOATS! (COMMUNIST) PARTY, 26-28 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK, MANY FLOATS TO COLOR RED RALLY ON NOVEMBER 4 \Pageant Will Portray | Lives of Workers A new and revolutionary standard of vageantry will be achieved at the Madison Square Garden on Sunday, Nov. 4. The 11th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution and huge Red Rally will contain the most dynamic presentation of the class struggle ever given in this country. Accord- ing to Adolf Wolf, under whose direction and management the pageant is being prepared, it will be “taking the pageant of the class struggle out of the static stage and eiving it a powerful, dynamic aspect. Workers will see and thrill to the revolutionary movement in full swing of action.” Picturesque Floats. All around the Garden picturesque floats will parade in militant pro- cession. Twenty different aspects of the class struggle will thus be presented. These are “Unemploy- ment,” “In Memoriam to Our Martyred Dead,” “American Negro Labor Congress,” “Labor faker and political float.” “Soviet Union float,” “Needle Trades Union,” “Textile Union,” ‘“Miners’ Union,” “Youth and Pioneers,” “Anti-Im- perialism,” “Workers International Relief,” “International Labor De- \fense,” “Communist Foreign Lan- \euage Press,” “Daily Worker,” |“Workers’ School,” Workers’ Inter- Inational: Sports,” “Proletcos,” “Workers’ Camps,” “United Work- ers’ Cooperative” and “Working Women.” re Great Procession. Thruout the procession action will take place on each float, descriptive of its nature. The whole procegsfon lof class struggle will be the most elaborate to be attempted. Ilun- dreds of workers, white and black, men, women and children, will take |part in the presentation. Up and down the entire length of the arena, north and south sides, the hig parade will march to the cheering of 20,000 workers and the singing of the International accompanied by the Freiheit Singing Society and the Polyphonic brass band. Lovestone to Speak on Colonial Question in Harlem Thursday Eve. Jay Lovestone, national secretary of the Workers (Communist) Party, will address Unit A, Harlem section, this Thursday, at 8 o'clock. He will uss the Colonial question. The meeting will be held at the Work- ers Party Harlem Campaign Head- quarters, 200 W. 135th St., room 207, icorner of Seventh Ave. All Negro workers and those white workers engaged in the Negro work of the Party are requested to be present. Units are instructed to release such comrades for this meeting. | Who wins when you read your | bosses’ paper? TO LINE! BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION | WM. Z. FOSTER, RED PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE SOCIETY! BRASS BAND! Y, 50¢ — ON SALE AT WORKERS —— _ Receaanmete

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