The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 23, 1928, Page 1

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ssl For the 40-Hour THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS | For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized For a Labor Party Week ailu Entered as second-class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. Y.. ander the act of March 3, 1879, FINAL CITY EDITION Vol. V., No. 251 Published dail Publishing Association, Inc., 26-28 Union Sq., New York, N. ¥. except Sunday by The National Dally Worker SUBSCRIPTION RATES: In Outside New York, CALL FOR BIG" WIDENING OF SILK STRIKE Pledges Loyal Service to Big Business Plans to Pull Down Unorganized Shops Are Cheered W. Weinstone Speaks Line Thrown Around Salzburg Shop | PATERSON, N. J., Oct. 22.—Mili tancy was the keynote of the mas: meeting of silk strikers who crowded | the Turn Hall at Grove and Chris- tian Streets yesterday morning to elaborate plans for extending the} two weeks old strike of textile work- ers to include new ranks. Suggestions to pull down the un-| organized shops were greeted with cheers while plans for broadening the strike were made. They include meetings of the weavers at the same hall at 8 p. m. on Wednesday | and a meeting of all the young) workers in the strike at Turn Hall on Thursday. To Force Bosses. The strikers also expressed their determination to force the bosses of any settled shop to live up to their agreements. The meeting was addressed by Fred Hoelsher, organizer of the As- sociated Silk Workers’ Union, Wil- liam W. Weinstone, organizer of District 2, Workers (Communist) Party and Gertrude Miller, a mem- ber of the strike committee. | “We do not like injunctions,”| Hoelsher stated definitely, “but if we have to chose between the right) of the workers to picket and in- junctions, we will fight injunctions.” Calling on the workers to extend the strike, Weinstone warned them} against the attempts of the bosses to break the backbone of their struggle. He further urged mass picketing and warned them to stand firm in shops after settlements. “The Associated “silk Workers’ Union must widen and strengthen itself during the strike,” Weinstone declared, “for the textile barons are doing everything in their power to prevent the formation of a national Textile Workers’ Union. You must help build such a union.” Signs of the spread of the strike to include other ranks of workers were apparent today in the grow- ing sentiment for organization among the unorganized dyers. Strikers declared that they would picket shops despite the police and the incident is tqld of a picket who was ordered from in front of a mill but stood her ground and was backed up by her fellow pickets. The police withdrew discomfited. A lime has been thrown around | the Salzburg shop following their refusal to take back a militant striker. At the same time the shop com- mittee decided that a union organ- izer must be present at the shop whenever a settlement is made. Deny Centralia Victims Pardon; Free Thugs OLYMPIA, Wash, (By Mail).— After refusing to intercede in the case of the Centralia class-war pri- soners, Governor Hartley of Wash- ington has issued 97 paroles and dis- charges and 111 reformatory paroles and discharges under date of Oct.1. This order releases al! xinds of crooks, thugs and dope fiends to the number of 208, yet the Centralia victims, who merely sought to de- fend their hall against the legion- aires are kept in=jail. On October 27 Baily Sas Worker will issue a special edition of 800,000 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 édition the widest possible circulation. Send in your bundle order immediately, attaching a re- mittance for same at the rate of $6 per thousand. Have your unit and organization send in a greeting to the Daily Worker on the occasion of the 11th Anniversary of the Russian Revolution. Workers are reminded that Thursday is the last day when orders and greetings for this special edition can be accepted. | Nicola Napoli, editor of “Il La- | voratore,” Italian Communis | weekly, who is Workers (Commu NEW YORK, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1928 . | r-Candidate | | Hi S ha Hi : | £100VeE7V e€C. eve | i} Bs e - | | AIM _ Pledges Aid to B AIMED TO DRIVE eages Ald to bosses in } ; ij | Before an audience which included jciples of our American political and 5 |many of the leading financiers of| economic system, upon which we | Wall Street as well as some of the have advanced beyond all the rest i pyre [Protninent personalities of the re-|of the world, in order to adopt | ; ‘ ? publican party including vice-presi-|methods based on principles de- | Police Czar Condemns [fr Charles Dawes, Herbert/structive of its very foundations?” Upholstered Cabs in | Hoover last night brought to a{he asked early in his speech, “Our |climax one of the most sordid and people,” he said, “have a right to New Scheme unprincipled campaigns in Ameri-|know whether we can continue to ea = can political history in a speech at |solve our great problems without Cab Makers Dictate | Madison Square Garden in which|abandonment of our American sys- |he assumed the chief role of phil-| tem.” i ; jospher of Wall Street imperialism. | Then in more open admission of New cre Fight) Previous to the opening of the the political dictatorship imposed by A : on Issue | meeting *thousands of leaflets ex-|the ruling class than has yet been peu Party candidate from the 18th | |posing the record and activities of |stated, he warned against those who [aeperel pial yes also | New taxicab regulations which, it| the candidate of big business under by granting any economic conces- |taking a leading part in the anti-|:. sarced, have been issued at the|the caption “Who Is Hoover?” were sions to the workers generally | fascist movement and in other there: direction of the cab manufacturing | distributed by members of the Young | would immediately threaten the poli- jing class activities. Vote for him!) onanies and as part of the present | Workers League. The leaflet like-|tical domination of that ruling class. : [drive to eliminate 20,000 cab drivers | Wise announced a huge election rally |“Economic freedom cannot be sacri- ‘fromthe industry have been an-|to be held by the Workers (Com-/ficed if political freedom is to be nounced by Fourth Deputy Police|munist) Party at the Garden on/preserved,” he declared. His Wall BRITISH TORIES FEAR COMMUNIST Dismiss Worker Naval Arsenal in| LONDON, Oct. 22.—Communist | | Workers employed in the Woolwich text that it is “insanitary.” | dition the new order lays down cer- Arsenal and naval dock yards are faced with the alternative of re-| nouncing membership in the Com-| munist Party or loosing their jobs. Commissioner, “Czar,” Nelson Rut-| Nov. 4. William Z. Foster and Ben tenberg, to take effect Nov. 1. | Gitlow, Chief among the new orders by the Communist standard- bearers, will be the principal speak- ers. |generally increasing the size of the/ |eab interior. the police dictator who recently j ¢ > openly admitted favoring the iarge|, Brushing rapidly past the various interests in the industry, is one | 'umped-up issues which the repub: aimed at the class of cabs which| ican and democratic party speakers have been converted from pleasure | have been using as campaign fod- cars. The order condemns the up-| “et the favorite candidate of big holstery with which the majority of business expounded for nearly an these cabs are furnished on the pre-| hour, although in disguised lan- In ad-|8tage, on the main | faces the world today, capitalist im- perialism or Communism. Which Way? “Shall we depart from the prin- tain provisions for widening and issue which | Street listeners undoubtedly had no difficulty in understanding that it was their economic freedom which Hoover was promising to preserve. Quotes Samuel Gompers. Calling upon the shade of S:g.uel Gompers to support him in his declaration of principles for his capitalist masters, Hoover quoted the late labor misleader in his | pledges. of loyalty to capitalism. Hoover again repeated his pre- |vious emphasis on the republican [myth of prosperity and vaguely |promised some sort of agricultural | consideration. If put through the new regula- According to the Daily Sketch this tions will have the effect desired by | WORKERS PARTY ISSUES CALL FOR RED POLL GUARDS. Watchers Needed to! Guard Communist Votes Instructions Are Listed Important “Duty Must Not Be Overlooked ‘The slogan under which the Work- | ers (Communist) Party will mobil- |ize its membership for duty at the | polls on clection day will be “Guard | Every Communist Vote on Novem-! ber 6.” | In a letter addressed to all dis-| trict organizers and election cam- | paign committees the Nationa! Elec- tion Campaign Committee of the |Party announces that there are now | i thirty-four states on the Cominu- nist ballot with a fight still being |carried on to force the state offi- | \cials in Nebraska and Oklahoma to jput back the Party ticket on the ballot in these states. Poll Watchers Needed | In order that all the Communist | | votes cast on election day shall be |ecunted for the Party ticket, there | must be a sufficient force of watch- ers at the polls on November 6. | “Every political party whose name and candidates will appear on the j union, who is the decision was made by the govern-| | by the Communist Party, and was|Warly the Yellow Taxicab Niet oa | NEAPOLIS IN HARD FIGHT of anti-militarist work carried on| i |tion of eliminating about twenty also said to be due to the open revo- thousand: cab drivers from: the i | IN MIN |Appeals for Solidarity and Assistance lutionary aims of the party. (Special to the Daily Worker) PITTSBURGH, Pa., Oct. 22.—The National Miners’ Union, in an.ur- gent call to every militant worker \dustry. P A go ie already made when | At the same time, at the orders of ercy Glading, a member of the | tammany “Czar” Ruttenberg in| ae | Amalgamated Engineers Union, re- fusing to abandon Communism. was fired by the government. Percy Glading, backed by the Communist | Party, is proceeding to protest his| dismissal. | Political Issue. |charge of the Hack Bureau, the} j pals against taxicabs toga OISEUES robieme of the city has been viciously increased. | (Special to the Daily Worker) Scores of cabs have been “stripped” | MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 22.—Ben-| in the Bronx, in Manhattan and in| Brooklyn over the weekend as part | jamin Gitlow was enthusiastically | welcomed by five hundred workers | lof the same move of forcing out The situation arising from the| drivers, it is charged. ballot has a right to have duly ap- yointed and qualified watchers sta- | tioned in the polling places to see \to it that no irregularities are com- mitted by the members of the elec- tion board or any other persons in |the polling places which may inter- |fere with the right of citizens to vote for our party who wish to vote for it or to injure the ballots cast for the Workers Party, so that they may be declared null and void. Regulations differ in different states. Different Methods Used. Ben Gold, leader of the new fur Workers (Com- munist) Party candidate from the 23rd Congressional District, New York. Gold is one of the outstand- ing strike leaders in the country and thousands of negdle workers, as well as workers in other trades, will cast their vote for him as a rep- resentative of the Communist plat- form. FURRIERS BACK WORKERS PARTY Call Ratification’ Meet Thursday The New York Joint Board of the Furriers’ Union, Locals 1, 5, 10, 15, at its last meeting endorsed the ticket of the Workers (Communist) Party and called upon all members of the Furriers’ Union to vote the Hammer and Sickle on Nov. 6. The Joint Board calls all furriers to a special ratification meeting for the Communist ticket Thursday, right after work at Stuyvesant Casino, Second Ave., and 9th St. Speakers will be Gold, Leibowitz, | dismissal of the worker and the pro- jected dismissal of others promises to lead to a nation-wide struggle. | Workers are watching developments Coincident. with the insuance of | the new regulations has appeared) the announcement by large cab-)| manufacturers of a new cab to be at a meeting here yesterday. The anxiety about the welfare of the Communist vice presidential candi-| sistance in the struggle of the union | machines while in other states it is date showed itself in the unprece- dented outburst of applause which \aatlonalisy, requests immediate as- | against the joint attacks of the op- |erators, the Lewis bureaucracy, and Potash and other leaders of the Joint Board and candidates on the ticket of the Workers (Communist) Party. “In some states voting is done by | done by ballot. In the case of voting by ballot the parties are entitled to 5 As Yote unist! sess ees, Price 3 Cents PACT SHOWS PARIS-LONDON WAR LEAGUE Single Front Against United States Is Revealed Cede Fr en ch Arms Pact Means Anti-USSR Military Bloc LONDON, Oct. 22.—Full co- operation in naval matters as opposed to the United States position, and the freedom of France to maintain the largest army in Europe were two out- standing points revealed in the publication of the Franco-Bri- tish naval pact today. The disclosure includes only the correspondence and _ conversati between the two governments which bear directly on the naval agree- ment and the position to be taken by the two powers at a disarmament conference shoulc it ever actually occur. Communications and agree- ment elative to cooperation on the Mediterranean and on the Pacific, and the policy to be adopted to- wards the United States on the question of war debts and German reparations were not published, al- though it is stated on authoritative sources that such agreements exist. It was said on good authority that the conservative press will shout there was no political understand- ing or agreement between the two pow when the text is made public PARIS, Oct. 22 (U.P).—An offi- cial “white paper” disclosing cor- respondence exchanged between England and France in reaching an agreement on naval arms limitation was made public by the government tonight. It revealed that London and Paris agreed to favor limitation of first- line warships, larger cruisers, air- closely, for at this movement when | 4+ on the market Nov.1 which will all. parties are appealing. for. yotes, postu detail confornt with the new and political issues are uppermost, | ourations. In this fact, drivers the position of the trade union offi-|-c¢ an absolute confirmation of the cials, officials of the Trade Union charge that the new orders were marked. bis entry to the, meeti Place. . hag . a Z Ree “In spite of police and government, intensified within the oppression, the Communist Party) weeks. has entered the ‘solid’ south and it Rovernment which has past several j have. not py watchers,.during the | day while -woting is taking place | but also counters who will remain | after the close of the voting places Board, the furriers about the activities of the treacher- and watch the counting of the bal-| ous socialist party and the yellow Council and of the Labor Party on this question is of utmost im- | portance. In the meantime the British Com- munist Party is reported to be pre- dictated by the cab manufacturers. Drivers have been able to avoid paying from $2,000 to $3,000 for cabs built by these companies by converting the regular passenger In a long statement to the militant will remain there until we have! labor movement the union sets forth realized our demand of full freedom! the present situation and requests and equality for the Negroes,” said/ immediate aid to help stem the at- Gitlow. He displayed a full page tack levelled against the union. Hoover advertisement from a capi- lots for every party and challenge socialist “Forward” and of the bru- ‘the members of the board in case tal attacks and prison terms the |they disquatify ballots. It is neces-| Workers have been accorded by the |sary, therefore, to be prepared for | Tammany police and the republican |beth watchers and counters are ne- and democratic judges during their/ \ im ~hgxaft.carriers and. sabmarines, Tia leaflet issued by the Joint)’ , are reminded! Alliance Against U. S. It was noted that there was no formal naval accord, but the basis of agreement between the two pow- ers was contained in the body of correspondence between London and Paris. “An accord exists between Lon- don and Paris,” the white paper paring for a stiff campaign to bring jthe issue before the workers. PLAN ANTLWAR cars into taxicabs. In this way a saving of between $1,000 and $2,000 was effected. | Officers of the new Taxi Chauf-| \feurs Union of Greater New York announced yesterday that the union | |would fight the issue to the end. | |tary Kroll yesterday declared. a We! |are now making plans to calla huge | |mass meeting at which the drivers | : ‘Demonstration to Be | of the city will be enabled to express “The employers, the government} and the Lewis bureaucracy are joint- | ly attacking our union on all fronts. talist newspaper with the heading: “A chicken for every pot.” Gitlow cessary. “It is understood, of course, that strikes. “A vote for either republican. | exposed the fake prosperity slogan. | These forces are denying the miner | both watchers and counters must | democratic, or the socialist party is ‘Yes, we have prosperity, but not the right to organize into the union |be citizens and they can be appoint- | #M act of treason against your own for the working class,” clared. “Andrew Mellon’s daughter! new persecutions have been report- gets a million dollar wedding while|.q. New evictions are under way. good square meal would be much policy of guerilla warfare against! more tangible than the mythical re-| our people, shooting and murdering | publican chicken in every pot. |them with the apparent sanction of | In his speech, Gitlow spoke of the | the capitalist politicians, judges and | preparations for a new: imperialist | yenal district attorneys. Wholesale | “We will defeat this move just as| | 1 we have defeated oe Lee he the | the workers get unemployment. A|The Lewis bandits are following a signed by the chairman of the state |uniforming of the drivers,” Secre-j| Held on Union Sq. -The huge anti-war demonstration and protest meeting called for Union Square next Saturday at 2 p. m. by} the Workers (Communist) Party will mobilize thousands of class-con- | scious workers of New York and} New Jersey. The struggle against the im- perialist war danger actively waged | by the Workers (Communist) Party | and embodied in its platform of) class struggle in the 1928 elections! has been forcibly brought to the at- tention of workers of this country lately, with the nationwide staging of war maneuvers and intensifying themselves on this issue.” POLISH WORKERS HIT REFORMISTS Socialists Continue Be- trayal Policy (Wireless to the Daily Worker.) WARSAW, Oct. 22-—-The Lodz textile strike is now stronger than ever and the general strike conti- | of war propaganda generall.y. Workers are becoming alive to the} danger and must organize to fight) it. The official setting aside of Oct. aim of popularizing the navy and) nues as workers from other centers continue to join the walkout. The reformist tactics of the socialist trade union officials became more 27 as “Navy Day,” with the definite | avident to the workers, as a com- | lete general walkout is prevented war, pointing out that the war dan- |ger is one of the greatest issues in the election. He also dealt with | social insurance and with the prob- |lems of the exploited farmers, who | get only promises from the capitalist | parties. | A Red banquet was given in the evening in honor of Gitlow, at which more than two hundred workers were present, NANKING REGIME SEEKS U. 8, AIDE Wall St. Loans Are Now Sought WASHINGTON, Oct. 22. (U.P),— victimizations, discharges and perse- |cution of supporters of the National Miners’ Union is already evident. There is unanimity and cohesion be- | tween these forces of reaction in| their latest assault on the militant| National Miners’ Union. To repel |those attacks, we are compelled to jonce again call upon our supporters | jin the labor movemeht who have aid- | jed us sogpplendidly in the past, to} come to our aid again. | Servants of Bosses. “State officials, corrupted judges | and district attorneys, in a host of | jcounties, have denounced the Na- tional Miners’ Union and’ have util- ized their positions to openly and flagraptly serve their masters, the | Continued on Page Five WEISBORD TALKS janxious to get through the wor! and they may wam to court only | mittees of the party. Special watch- ers certificates must be given them or county committee. Each party is entitied to two watchers in eac' polling place, who have the right to appear at the polling place when it opens and examine the ballot boxes or machiries and remain there throughout the day in looking out fcr the interests of the party. “The Party has also the right to from the polling places in case some cur candidates, “The election buard is usually Gitlow de-|of their choice. A whole series of |ed only: by the state or county com- interests,” the leaflet reads. voter may ask the Party representa- | ‘ tive to show him how to vote for | Sewer engineer, last week convicted the vote of the major parties and | not bother with tue minor parties. | There |is but one party that deserves the vote of the fur workers—the Work- ers (Communist) Party, whose press and leaders and active members h have stood by the Furriers’ Union + in its trial and are now helping the fur workers to build their new mili- tant rank and file union. ‘Seely, Second Sewer |Grafter, Gets 1 Year; have Party representatives withi But Not in Jail e badges about one hundred feet away | Frederick Seely, former Queens |with Maurice E. Connolly, was yes- terday sentenced to one year in jail x, and fined $500 by Justice Tompkins in Supreme Court, Long Island City. | But Seely is again as free as the | Tammany air. Like Connolly, Seely was found Our watchers have a right to insist | 1 F that the votes of all our candidates |Suilty of conspiracy in sewer graft be counted and ccrtified to the city |deals which are believed to have board of elections. | netted the ring some twenty millions said, “on the following basic limita- tion, which the disarmament con- ference is charged with treating, to include four classes of warships: “First—Ships of the line; that is, ships of more than 10,000 tons or armed with cannons of more than eight-inch calibre. “Second.—Airplane more than 10,000 tons. “Third.—Surface ships of 10,000 tons or less armed with cannons of carriers of calibre superior to six to eight inches. “Fourth—High seas submarines of more than 600 tons. “The Washington treaty limited classes one and two, so the (dis- armament) conference would only examine a method of extending dis- armament in classes 3 and 4 to powers who are co-signers of the | Washington accord, “The conference will fix the maxi- Continued on Page Three | Communist Election Drive for Emergency | Fund Against Terror | | ee ee |p propagandizing for building a larger } e |and more powerful fleet, another |°" partially “successful in see step leading up to the next im- | Places due to the sabotage of ‘the perialist war, calls for concerted ac- | ™¢formist trade union officials. tion of protest on the part of »all| The textile workers at Bielostok | militant workers, according to Dis- and the metal workers of Warsaw, | trict 2 of the Workers (Communist) | despite the attempt of officials to | Party. An invitation to Henry Ford and| P |four other prominent Americans to IN ATLANTIC CITY Serve as China’s economic advisers | may be the forerunner. of a move by the Nationalist government to obtain foreign loans, it was said in government circles today. Owen D. Young, who assisted in framing the Dawes _ reparations! for War ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Oct. 22./ Says Old Parties Work | Further Instructions. It is imperative that the watchers |have been properly counted and cer- \tified on an official. report«to. the |board of elections. It is at this time | that tricks are perpetrated. board may take the votes of our |Farty and add them to some other perty, since they have to account headquarers and the Naional Office for the total number of ballots cast. | “It is important that the district | “prosecuted” jof dollars. Like Connolly, Seely was ‘let off on two counts of the indict- ment. Like Connolly he was sen- jor counters do not leave the polling | tenced to one year and fined $500. |places until the votes of all parties | Like Connolly he was yesterday released on_a, certificate .o fable “doubt and is mow free on @ | $5,000 bond, for like Connolly Seely The | stole millions and you don't have to |stay in jail if you can prove you | stole millions. | As in the ease of Connolly's re- Emory R. Buckner who the grafters very | vigorously but not so well, granted | lease, reason, | restrain them, have joined the strike. Wilbur Urges Bigger Navy. “Wilbur, imperialist secretary of | the navy, in calling on all to. observe | Navy Day Oct. 27, speaks of the Continued on Page Two | Socialist Sabotage. Systematic sabotage of the strike has been carried on by the reformist trade union officials especially on Continued on Page Two OLD REBEL: A veteran of the First Interna-| tional and friend of Karl Marx is} supporting the Workers (Commu-) nist) Party election c§mpaigr. in| Virginia. E. J. Housser, of Newport News, Va., has lost none of his revolu- tionary vigor despite his 80 years and gray hair. Together with many younger workers he went to Nor- folk to welcome William Z. Foster, ‘ommunist candidate for president, Friend of Marx Backs Communist Drive FIGHTS ON | who spoke at the first Communist | meeting ever held in the state of Virginia. 3 Joins Movement At 16. Housser was born in a French provincial town near the Swiss border. When he was ten years old he was compelled to go to work and thus began at thi. early age to feel at first-hand the oppression of the capitalist class. “He learned the Continued 9; Page Three plan for Germany; Prof. Jeremiah Jenks, acknowledged authority on Chinese affairs; Prof. E. R. A. Seligman of Columbia University, and R. N. Harper, Washington |banker, were asked to join with | | Ford in an advisory capacity. Sun Fo, Nationalist Minister of Railways, has indicated his plan would be to approach American bankers for a loan, according to Shanghai reports. Lovestone to Speak in Harlem Thursday Jay Lovestone, Executive Secre- tary of the Workers (Communist) Party, will speak on “Colonial and National Minorities” with special reference to American Negro work- ers, at 200 W. 135th St., room 207, this Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. -—Albert Weisbord, candidate for U. |S. senate of the Workers (Commu- nist) Party, in New Jersey, who was lone of the leaders of the textile! workers’ strike in Passaic, and now) secretary of the National Textile! Workers’ Union, last night at Folks | Institute unfolded the aims of the |Communists in this campaign. He) devoted most of his speech to a de- | nunciation of the repubtican, demo-| cratic apd socialist parties and their, \candidates and platforms. After de-| \elaring that the government is noth-) jine but the executive committee of | the finance-capitalists and that | Hoover would make an ideal chair- man of this committee as he has been a perfect servant of the im- |perialists a» secretary of commerce, _Weisbord turned to the record of | | Smith. “Why are big capitalists like Ras-! kob and Owen D. Young financing) Continued on Page Rive i receive immediately after the votes |his consent to the order permitting have been announced the number of | the release of Seely. votes cast for each candidate sep- | arately. The National Campaign Conttnued on Page Three We demand the prohibition by law of night work, over-time and job i work for working women. NICARAGUA “ELEC™ON” Former Consul Tejerino Tells of Farce An absolute dictatorship is being;election commissions, headed by | maintained in Nicaragua, according | American officials as well as the | to Toribio Tijerino, former Consul expense of the American “super- | of Nicaragua to New York, who has | visor” of this staff, shall be paid just returned from Central America. by the workers and peasants of | A copy ofthe election regulations Nicaragua. According to the Pro-| imposed by the United States, has visions of Article 3, the Electorial been brought to this country by Commission is composed of three | Tijerino. members, one from the “Liberal!” The regulations are by decree of party, one ‘from the Conservatives the president of the United States, and a president appointed by the | and provide that all expenses of the| Continued on Pewe Three j Inumediate tasks for ali 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 DRIV -TERROR EMERGENCY F E 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 collee- 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- ganizations 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, < 7. The Red Election Sundays | and the house-to-house canvas-- sing should be utilized to estab- |. i lish the Communist Election | Drive Anti-Terror Emergency | Fond. ok NATIONAL ELECTION CA PAIGN COMMITTER Workers (Communist) Party | 43. E. 125th St. New Yor!

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