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T | | | For the 40-Hour | ‘THE DAILY WORKER FIGHTS For a Workers-Farmers Government To Organize the Unorganized For a Labor Party Week ) #ontered as second-class matter at the Post Office wt New York. N. ¥. auder the act of March 3, 1 Vol. V., No. 256 Published daily except Sunday by The National Daily Worker Publishing Association, Inc. 26-28 Union Sq. New York, N. ¥. NEW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1928 SUBSCRIP" Outside New York, b: ON RATE FINAL CITY E DITION 7 me Cents Price 3 RED TICKET ON BALLOT IN RHODEISLAND Communists Forced to Secure Separate Petitions Is Thirty-Fourth State Predict New Bans on Red Campaign Special Cable to The Daily Worker PROVIDENCE, R. 1. Oct. 28.— The thirty-fourth state in which there will be a Communist ticket on the ballot in this year’s elecction was conquered when Rhode Island was put in the Red column. The total number of states in which the oppressed workers and farmers will he able to vote for Communist can- didates is now nearly two and a half times as great as in the last presidential elections of 1924. Overcome Obstacles. Despite tremendous difficulties in the open-shop state of Rhode Island, where the industrial barons meet with little opposition due to the un- organized condition of the workers, the Party comrades were able to collect 500 certified signatures to Nominee ys. Jingoes Roy Stephens, Communist candi- date for congress from the Second | Congressional District of Nebraska, |who together with the other Com- munist candidates has been ruled off the ballot in that state. The State Supreme Court, acting upon orders |from the American Legion, rendered |the decision. Workers and farmers of Nebraska should express their | protest at this jingo attack on the | Party of the workingclass by writing in the names of Stephens and the |other Communist nominees on the ballot when they vote. JINGOES ARREST ANTI-SOVIET WAR BLOG REVEALED (ON 2 FRONTIERS | Britain Forms Persian- Afghan-Turkish | Alliance \Fear Czech Workers Rumanian-Polish Pact Revealed | | | BERLIN, Oct. 28.—An aggressive |military bloc against the Soviet \Union, formed by the British and | french governments along the west- jern and southern frontiers of the | Union of Socialist Soviet Republics, | has been revealed here in many of its details. One account reports in full detail the activities of French and British militarist statesmen in the forma- tion of the Polish-Rumanian military pact of aggression, with the inclu- sion of Czechoslovakia as a muni- tion supplying center, and the pos- sible adherence of the other buffer states of eastern Europe. The bloc along the southern fron- tier of the Soviet Union is com- posed of the military alliance of Persia, with Egypt as a possible ally. British and French Arm. Both accounts appeared in the Afghanistan and Turkey, | i Ans UST Poet FOSTER HAILED | BY OHIO STEEL, "NEGRO WORKERS Presents Communist Program at Meet in Youngstown | Points Out War Danger | Aristide Briand, the bulldog of | French imperialism and aggression| against the Soviet Union. British and French imperialism are now (Special to the Daily Worker) | engaged in building a series of ag- YOUNGSTOWN, O., Oct. 28—More | gressive war compacts against the |than 500 workers, most of them steel | |Soviet Union, which include all the | workers and Negroes, cheered Wil-| | so-called buffer states of ecastern|liam Z. Foster, Communist candidate | Ewrope and which now also incor-| for president, when he spoke here at | porates Afghanistan, Persia, Turkey |Bagle Hall at a Workers (Commu- and Egypt. nist) Party election campaign .meet- | | Foster emphasized the widespread | unemployment in the country and | presented the Communist unemploy- |the danger of a new imperialist war | eWUual iin the near future and declared | that only the abolition of the capi- aes jtalist system can abolish wars and | | speed-up. The Red nominee also Betrayal Jattacked the labor fakers who are jurging the workers to vote for the Following immediately upon the| capitalist parties, |exposure that “socialist” leaders in} Many Negro workers greeted Fos- Red Nominee Exposes | Labor Fakers | 4 | | SOCIALISTSIN. ment program. He also pointed out ‘Communist Party Bares sh evils as unemployment and the Will Speak at Rally | William Z. Foster, Workers (Com- munist) Party candidate for presi-| dent, will be a speaker at the huge Red election rally at Madson Square Garden Sunday. FOSTER, GITLOW PARADE NOV. 4 To Meet Red Nominees | at Grand Central As a prelude to the Red Campaign Rally, Sunday afternoon Nov. 4, sev- eral thousand New York workers will greet William Z. Foster and Benjamin Gitlow, Workers (Commu- YOUNG WORKERS put the Party ticket on the ballot. | The Party organization is still quite | weak in that state, and it meant) hard and constant work on the part of the state election campaign com- Crouch, 3 Others Held in Officers’ Attack the right wing needle trades unions |ter personally after the meeting nist) Party candidates, at Grand here received $100,000, half of and expressed their enthusiasm for Go ')raj “Grate nt nah ant “Germatia,” official orgen of the| Which was provided by Colonel Her-|the Communist, program. |them in a parade from the station German Centrist Party, and the Ost-|be"t H. Lehman, banker and Tam-| 1, Sisselman, special agent for the |to the Communist headquarters at jmuny candidate for Lieutenant-|Dajly Worker, also spoke, urging|/26 Union square, according to an- German press this morning and even such reactionary papers as_ the mittee to put the ticket across. Separate petitions had to be used for each office and elector, a pro- cedure intended to make the job of getting a working class ticket on the ballot more difficult. Funds Needed. Putting Rhode Island on the bal- lot was delayed vecause of lack of funds. For a time there was a real danger that this state would not go on, and it is still possible that some of the 34 states already on the bal- lot may be contested at the last min- ute by the reactionaries. The only way to. insure a successful fight against such a procedure is an im- mediate and generous response to the $10,060 Eleetion Drive-Anti- Terror Emergency Fund, which the National Election Eampaign Com- mittee has announced. Send all money collected directly to the head- quarters of the committee at 43 Fast 125th St., New York City, and deal your blow at the open-shoppers and terrorist: 3,000 WORKERS SCORE NAVY DAY Union: So. “Meet Hits Anti-USSR Bloc Another mass demonstration was sdded to the record of working class activity in New York when from three to four thousand workers gathered at the north end of Union Square on Saturday afternoon to protest the war preparations of the Wall Street government on the oc- easion of a nationally proclaimed Navy Day. The demonstration was held under the auspices of District 2, Workers (Communist) Party. From a platform covered with “Vote Communist” posters, speak- ers representing the Workers Party | ee | Military authorities yesterday evening arrested Paul Crouch, mem- ber of the National Executive Com- mittee of the Young Workers (Com- munist) League, and Roy Edwards, Ahsia Shoyett and Joe Lessin, League members, for distributing copies of the Young Worker and a serviceman’s leaflet to soldiers in Battery Park. The arrests were made by plain clothes men, who re- fused to explain their authority or the legal basis for their action. “Don’t Give to Servicemen.” Crouch and the other League members were taken to the ‘military \headquarters at the ferry, where they were threatened with the “power of the army.” They were told: “You can distribute your papers elsewhere, but don’t give them to the servicemen.” Military police said there had been consider- able excitement and trouble in the armed Yorces “as a result of these papers. And lots of young men vead these papers and will not join the army.” |the distribution at Fort Slocum last | February, and said that the soldier guard on the boat to the military reservation had been imprisoned for two weeks for letting League mem- |bers on the island. The officers were especially fu- rious at a short story in the Young Worker, “The Case of Private | Continued on Page Two NEED MORE FUNDS AGAINST TERROR $1,000 Must Be Raised by Tomorrow The National Election Campaign Committee, 43 East 125th St., must The officers mentioned | apres 8 Detar Betey 18 vernon, anther revelation ad sources, speak of both pacts as be-| been made of the close ‘relations of | ing directly aimed at the Soviet | the socialists and the capitalist polit-| Union, a step taken by the British | ical machines. A statement issued| and the French in their combined | Yesterday by District 2 of the| policy af celllary. aggression. | Workers’ (Communist) Party dis-| Due to unrest both in Afghanis-|losures an “agreement” by the so-| tan and in India among the peasant Cialist party to support the can-| and working class population, it is didacy of Feorio La Guardia, demo-| a known fact that the British have|S°gue and candidate for Congress been maneuvering with the Afghan-| 0" the republican ticket. | Comrade working class daily in the English language. John Marshall acted as chairman of the meeting. ea Foster to Speak in Scranton. SCRANTON, Pa., Oct. 28.—Wil-) liam Z. dent on Foster, candidate for presi- the Workers (Communist’ | Party ticket, will speak at the Labor close to New Y |Temple at Scranton on Wednesday, their entry into the city. Following | Oct. 31. This is expected to be the the parade on Saturday afternoon | biegest working class political meet-| they will be the principal speakers ing ever held in the anthracite. GITLOW TOURS _NEW ENGLAND To Close Campaign in Whirlwind Finish BOSTON, Mas Oct. 28.—Ben Gitlow, Workers (Communist) Party candidate vice-president, will speak ih four of the most important industrial centers of New England in his final tour. Gitlow’s tour in this territory comes at a time when the campaign is at its height. The heroic textile workers of New Bedford are planning a reception for Gitlow such as no labor leader ever received. This is in recognition of the loyal and active for |the workers to subscribe to the only nouncement made yesterday by the Arrangements Committee of the Madison Square Garden mass meet- ing. As a wind-up of the powerful campaign waged by both’ of the working class candidates throughout the country during the last two months, they 1 meet in a city rk preparatory to at the 1th anniversary celebration lof the Russian Revolution at the Garden on Sunday afternoon. The committee in charge of the campaign rally yesterday addr formal notice Police Comm to sioner Joseph A, Warren that such Continued on Page Two THUGS ATTACK PRINTERS’ MEET Wicks Is Slugged at Union Session The regular meeting of the Pro- gressive Party of ogr Union No. 6 of New k w lently broken up by gangsters a policemen at St nt High School auditorium yesterday afternoon, when the real progressive forces tried to force W. D. Medcalf, presi- |of the $100,000 fund raised by the socialist bureaucrats to maintain a |company union in the needle trades and to fight against the establish- iment of a real militant rank and) file union proves what the Workers co-operation which the textile strik- dent of that organization, to recog- : s nize an appeal from his arbitrary ers of that city received from the shdvdishonest rulings. Workers Party in their recent strug-| ‘The meeting culminated in a vi- gle against the mill barons and/cious assault by thugs upon H. M. which the Party continues to give! Wicks, prominent member of the istan, Persian and Egyptian native| The fund of $100,000, which was governments to create an effectual | Subscribed to by Lehman for Tam- alliance directed against the Soviet) many Hall, the yellow Jewish For- Union and against revolutionary up-| ward and the fake radical leaders of risings in the countries themselves. | the Amalgamated Clothing Workers’ That finally such an alliance has| Union, as was disclosed in the Daily | been completed is no surprise to stu-| Worker expose of Saturday, was de-| dents of the situation. Persia has/|livered to Benjamin Schlesinger,| | always seryed Britain as an eastern | right wing leader of the discredited Continued on Papa Three | International Ladies Garment Work- ers’ Union, for the purpose of fight- ing the left wing. q The statement of the New York | District Executive Committee of the : | Workers’ (Communist) Party fol- | | lows: | | cialists is not the first of its kind in | \the election campaign. We find an- | Si | other deal between socialists and the Sympathy for Left) republicans that has just been con- * vs summated in the endorsement of the Wing Policies Grows | candidacy of Louis P. Goldberg in : nomad |the 23rd assembly district, Browns- (Special to the Daily Worker} | ville, running on the socialist ticket, | PATERSON, N. J., Oct. 28.—| for which, in exchange, the socialists | Sentiment among the striking silk| will give their secret or open sup-; workers here for a more militant) port to the candidacy of Feorio La- conduet of the strike crystallized to-| Guardia in the 20th congressional | day when 17 members of the strike | district of New York. oe of 50 presented in written) ‘Tammany Hall and Boss Allies. |form a sharp criticism of the com- : : | promise tactics of their union Jead-|_, [he exposure by the Daily Worker \ers. The letter proposed that steps be taken immediately for a fighting | policy against the bosses in order to win the strike of the silk workers. After a lengthy discussion at the strike committee meeting today, the) (Communist) Party has been sta- officialdom succeeded in defeating ting all the time, that the socialists, bye vote of 28 to 22 vwthe New York Forwards, have been (Bs aes Boe waa lin an alliance with Tammany Hall) ‘onfirm Criticism, P | Although the leaders after the! Renee 04 Hage, Tee | most strenuous efforts succeeded in| | wholeheartedly. Show Opportunities. Whenever the message of Com- munism is brought to the workers in the many campaign rallies held Typographical Union, cne time edi- tor of the official organ of the Pro- gressive Party, and now of the edi- torial staff of the Daily Worker, |when Wicks demanded that Medcalf relinquish the chair after John Simons, chairman of the composing and other workers’ organizations Te- have $1,000 by tomorrow if the re- vealed the war purposes of the capi- quests of those campaigning in the talist powers and their designs| field for leaflets, posters and other against the workers’ and peasants’ election material and literature are government of the Soviet Union, at to be met. the same time exposing the role of | . 2 700 Children Cheer Communist Demands in New England cities the response room of the New York Times, had received by the Party shows the tre-| annealed from a ruling to refuse a Continued on Page Three vote on an important matter. mustering enough votes to defeat the | statement, they showed by the “ar-) guments” they presented to the rank | and file advocates of the statement | | When the appeal was made, Med- FULLER HID EVIDENCE.” TO AID EXECUTION OF SACCO AND VANZETTI The following news story received by the Daily Worker through the Federated Press is published though the manner of presentation is in error in some respects. for the information contained, al- It is not correct to say Vanzetti is “proved innocent” by the confession described here, for the simple were long ago proven innocent. rea son that both Sacco and Vanzetti The evidence newly presented here can only be, first, interesting material to add to the already abundant proof that neither Sacco nor Vanzetti was a highwayman or murderer, and second, an interesting admissi Outlook) of an instance of crimi country. to complete the damning proof of ion of a bourgeois publication (The inality of the ruling class of this It is not correct to say that anything “remains” to be done the frame-up and murder of Sacco and Vanzetti, for this proof was long ago completed and the working class of the world as the supreme j of Sacco and Vanzetti. It is incor Sacco and Vanzetti in any degree ruling class. The ruling capitalist never committed a more deliberate FULLER KNEW BOTH INNOCENT Suppressed Evidence of Witnesses BOSTON, Oct. 28.—The part that Governor Alvan T. Fuller of Massa- chusetts played in the frame-up and railroading to the electric chair of Sacco and Vanzetti is being revealed jhere as a result of new confessions made by the hold-up men who en- gineered the famous Bridgewater robbery for which Vanzetti was con- victed and which paved the way for the legal murder of the two labor martyrs. Fuller Knew. Frank Silva, a profess jonal hold- up man has confessed his part in the first robbery. In addition “Big ief” Jim Mede, operator of a criminal hang-out, has made out an | affidavit that he went in person to | ter was “investigatin >” the case end | reported the innocence of Sacco and Vanzetti to the millionaire open shop governor. The confession states that the gov- ernor called a state police officer and Mede was forced to flee from his office. In the new data secured by the Outlook, a semi-liberal publication, there is given further evidence that Fuller was furnished with an Amer, ican Express Company receipt show- ing that on Saturday, Dec. 20, 1919, the day of the robbery, a forty- pound barrel of live eels had been shipped by the firm of Corso and Cannizzo to Vanzetti at Plymouth, This evidence Fuller likewise sup- pressed. Judge Thayer Also Knew. Practically the same information, . it is revealed, was known by Judge Webster Thayer, who like: tinued with the frame-up against the two innocent workers despite the evidence of their innocence and the clamor of millions of workers thru- out the world. The Outlook comments editorially on the evidence which reveals the part played by Fuller as follov “As for Governor Fuller, we have seen that he had knowledge of two vital developments after the ‘were sentenced to death and before they were executed. One was big chief Mede’s confessed knowledge that others than Sacco and Van- zetti had perpetrated the Bridge- water crime; the other was docu- mentary evidence that Vanzetti did have eels to sell the day before Christmas. Why did he make no mention of either of them?” se con- | Governor Fuller at the time the lat-, men |. the three capitalist parties, republi- can, democratic and socialist, as part and parcel of the imperialist war machine. It was difficult to estimate the exact number of workers at the meeting, due to the large number of workers coming and going, some _ estimates running as high as five thousand. The workers responded with great interest to the speeches, and when “boos” for the socialist party, and cheers for the Soviet Union and for the Workers (Com- Continued on Page Four Bishop Brown, Minor in Harlem Tomorrow A mass meeting to wind up the Red Election Campaign in Harlem will be held tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock at St. Lukes Hall, 127 W. 130th St., under the auspices of the Workers (Communist) Party, Dis- trict 2. . Among the speakers will be Wil- liam’ Montgomery Brown, deposed bishop of Arkansas; Robert Minor, candidate for U. S. senator from New York State and editor of the Daily Worker; Richard B. Moore, candidate for congress in the 21st District, and Ed Welsh, candidate ‘or, assembly in the 21st District. Otto Huiswood will act as chair- Every day complaints are received |protesting against the delay in send- ing such literature and supplies, but the committee is unable to comply _with many of these requests, because \so much of this materia! is tied up \at the factory or at the printer’s. |Rush contributions today by tele- ‘graph wherever possible—if you \cannot telegraph send whatever you can contribute or collect by special delivery. The contributions received to date by the National Election Campaign Continued on Page Two The Workers (Communist) Party fights for the immediat ot the immigration laws ai oution of all restrict tion, OPO: aT EE 7 (Special to the Daily W'»rker) YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Oct. 28,— Hundreds of workers voiced their protest at the post office ban on the special California edition of the Daily Worker at a big campaign rally held here last night in Eagle PROTEST BAN ON ‘DAILY’ 15 New Subs at Youngstown, O., Meet that all their charges were true. It “Workers’ Children have no bread, was also felt that if decision had Working parents must vote Red.” been left to the general membership, | it would have resulted in an adop-| tion. i | The officials, however, were un- able to sidestep the demands of the Young Pioneers of America to ac- militant strike committee members quaint them with the issues in the that a general membership meeting | election campaign. be called. After acquiescing to the motion for a membership meeting, the leadership announced that a call for the ribbon workers will be in- cluded. These workers are not on strike and the leaders hope to find Continued on Page Three This ran as a combined refrain and slogan thru the meeting of 700) workers’ children at Webster Hall) yesterday afternoon, called by the The meeting was full of enthu-| siasm from the very beginning when triumphant cohorts of children, | representing the Pioneers, some non- partisan schools and other worker: ‘children organizations marched into} the hall, bearing signs and singing songs. When Jack Rubinstein arose to describe the struggle of the workers | in New Bedford, he was greeted) with.a storm of cheers that would) not be put down. Other speakers were Herbert Zam, of the Young) Workers (Communist) League, Jesse | Taft, of the Pioneers, who outlined, the demands of the working class children, and Bert Miller, who repre- sented the Workers (Communist) Party. Charles Wilson, a Pioneer, was chairman. After a series of tableaux, staged by the children, songs and cheers, the meeting unanimously decided that all working parents must vote Communist. depend- 1, Porto colonies Complete and immediate ence the Philippines, H: the other Amerte: olonies! details of the holding up of the “Daily” and exposed the hollowness of the capitalist bunk about “free- dom of the press.” Sisselman declared that the Daily: Worker is. the only newspaper that fights against imperialist. war and calf. recognized one of his hench- NEEDLE WORKERS BACK RED TICKET 'Call Ratification Meet for Tuesday Night The Joint Board of the Cloak and ressmakers’ Union representing tens of thousands of needle workers at its last meeting indorsed ‘the tic- ket of the Workers (Communist) Party. The Joint Bourd is calling a big ratification meeting of cloak and dressmakers for tomorrow at Copper Union, where it will expose the ac- tivities of the capitalist and “so- cialist” politicians against the needle workers and will point out why every worker must vote the Com- munist ticket. Hit Labor Fakers A call issued by the Joint Board to the cloak and dressmakers points out that the reactionaries of the American Federation of Labor who are yelling themselves hoarse with the ery of “no politics in the union” have indorsed either the republican men instead of leaving the chiir. At that point Wicks walked up to the platform and demanded that Medcalf leave the chair and permit the appeal to be made. One of the reactionaries, Fred McCann, a lack- ey of Leon H. Rouse, president of “Big Six,” arose and challenged the membership of Wicks. Wicks retorted that only coward- ly rats, afraid to debate issues would raise such a question and that his membership was Cann’s or anyone eé |membership demanding With the that the the reactionaries were in a tight | Continued on Page Two good as Mc-| Workers Needed for “Daily” Distribution All members of the Workers (Communist) Party, Section 2, are asked to report for distribution of the Daily Worker Special Election Edition today at 12 o'clock, noon, at 101 W. 27th St., or at 16 W. 21st St. | FOOTBALL INJURY FATAL NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 28 | (UP).—His neck broken in Friday’s }football game between Arnold Col- |Pa., died late today in Drake Hos- ‘ pital. TELLS OF “KRASSIN” Soviet Radio Expert Misled by Fascists MOSCOW, Oct. sky, who was aboard the “Krassin” | jica (40 per cent), less from Soviet as radio-telegraphist, relates many interesting details on the conditions of his work on the ship. It appears that conditions of the 28.—Dobrovol- with the outside world. More often | Union. | telegrams were received from Amer- |radio amateurs (30 per cent) and |the rest came from Germany, Eng- land and other countries. All attempts to establish connec- Hall under the auspices of the/for the organization of the unor- Workers (Communist) Party. ‘| ganized, and urged the workers to Louis Sisselman, special Daily|stand behind the paper. Fifteen [Worker agent, told the workers the|new subscriptiqps were obtained. Fight the ©. M. T. ©. 0. 'T. Cos. Fight the boy the right wing clique in the needle regular work of the radio station, or the Tammany candidate. So did‘ voyage |vere unfavorable for the| _ Mt ul tions with the group Viglieri, under- taken in accordance with the instruc- Continued on Page Three 3 cn unions indorsing the ticket of the It frequently happened that “Kras- Continued on Page 0 |sin” had no communication at all judge has condemned the murderers rect to attribute the crime against to a “hysterical” condition of the class and its governmental organs cool-headed crime than when they murdered Sacco and Vanzetti. eee (By Federated Presa) Bartolomeo Vanzetti has been proved innocent of the attempted BridgeWater holdup. Frank Silva, plotter of the crime, has confessed his guilt and has named his three accomplices. His confession has been via- the sin por st all cen- vith | by for and Bri- the the vase by * of ter, om. sub- rate and ain- aes. me the ing wn the hed 223 checked in every possibl se y pe le manner Vi ad and proved true. The revelations made in The Outlook, national weekly magazine, in its issue of Get. 31. Governor Alvan T. Fuller, who sent Nicola Sacco and Vanzetti -to their death in the electric chair August 22, 1928, has been asked by The Outlook to inspect the affi- davits and proof. 5 | Sacco and Vanzetti, when arrested in Brockton May 5, 1920, were ac- cused not only of committing the South Braintree murder holdup, for which th re electrocuted, but also the Bridgewater attempted holdup. co established a élear alibi, but Vanzetti was tried and convicted. Thus he entered his joint trial with Sacco on the South Brain- tree murder charge as a convicted man, with 15 yea ing over him. The same judge, Web- ster Tha: who tried Vanzetti in the first case, presided over the second. Both Proved Innocent. Jack Callahan, newspaper man who 15 years ago deserted the under- world, is responsible for obtaining the confession of Frank Silva, a one tinte professional holdup man and the affidavit of Jimmy Mede, in 1917 of a cigar, bootblack and taxi-stand in Hanover St., Boston, a rendezvous for criminals. Mede’s affidavit backs up Silva’s confession Both are free men. ‘a’s confession has allahan and other inve ators, resulting in the magazine’s complete assurance that Vanzetti was innocent. Thus the most dramatic labor case in American history since the Chi- cago Haymarket anarchists were hanged in 1887, enters a final stage. It remains now for the real erim- inals in the South Braintree murder to confess, in order to vindicate the contention of workers and humani- tarians of all lands that two inno- cent men were burned to death in Continued on Page Three detail. Weinstone Will Debate Fascist Head at the Moose Temple Tonight William W. Weinstone, district organizer of the Workers (Commu- nist) Party, will debate against the “Americanization” director of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Jot j B. Kamp, at Moose Temple, B: way and Eleventh Ave., tonight, He will expose the fascists as 5 ofthe big business interests, chairman get out and permit the | lege and Milford Preparatory School, hy them to break up militant : meeting to be conducted properly,|Therwin Kelly, 19, of Wilkes-Barre, | ers’ meets. The subject will be the 1928 tion campaign and the problems al fecting American workers. Ka in pursuit of his “patriotic” jas “Americanization director” | the Veterans of Foreign Wars, J. Dwyer Post, has launched an tensive drive in Astoria against{ jactivities of the Workers (Ci |nist) Party and against the Kamp represents the fascist ganizati for the breaking up of a |election campaign meeting and |assault on several of the speal The franchise for all for and migratory workers and for between the ages of 18 and coucemiint of the franchive Negroes|