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— __Page Two _DATLY | WORKER, , NEW YORK, W EDNESD/ AY. BIG COMMUNIST MEETS WIND UP : ELECTION DRIVE. Mobilize Workers for] Friday, Saturday (Continued from Page One) The huge 2 i of the Russian Rev munist Election Rally in Mac Square Garden Sunday at 2 p. m. A large number of Commun’ candidates, as well as other loake of the Communist Pa dress the open air rallie On Friday night at 8 o’clock the} following three rallies will be held: Brownsville, Stone and Pitkin.| o Speakers: W. W. Weinstone, Lenaj Chernenko, Alfred enknecht, Otto Huiswood, speaker and a speak Harlem, 137th n Ave. Speake otto Ball, Richard B. Moore, Far tin, H. M.} Wick: Juliet Stuart Poyntz, A. Markoff, Albert Moreau, Manya/ 4 Reiss. Harlem, 116th St. and Second} Ave. Speakers: Tom Di Fazio, A. Candella. The Saturday night meetings are Williamsburg, rand St. Exten. sion. Speakers: Fred Biedenkapp, Joseph Magliacano, Hyman Levine,| S$. Nesin, Otto Hall, Gordon, Lena} Chernenko. | Bronx, Prospect and — Speakers: W. W. Weinstone, J. S. Poyntz, M. J. Olgin, Rebecca Grecht, | M. Gold, Rose Wortis, G. Primoff, | Otto Hall, R. B, Moore. Downtown, 10th St. and second | Ave. Speakers: Alexander Trach- | tenberg, Samuel Darcy, H. Sazar, J. | Louis Engdahl, Vern Smith, Ro Rubin, John Di Santo, Le Bassen. Harlem, 110th St. and Fifth Ave. | Speakers: H. M. Wicks, Jack Sta- chel, Robert Minor, A. Markoff, A. Moreau, T. Di Fazio, 0. Huiswood, | Gertrude Welsh, M. Reiss. PLAN BIG 12TH ANNIV, MEET Analyze Stock Cr ash | at Garden (Continued from Page One) Carniagnele.” (The Carmagnole j was one of the stirring revolution- ary songs of the Paris Commune). Other numbers will be “Brand un Feier” and the “Soviet Fleet March.” Mimeographed copies of the wors of all the songs will be distributed so that everybody can join in. The Madison Square Garden rally will be a tremendous demonstration for the defense of the Soviet Union and for the election program of the only party that fights for its de- fense—the Communist Party. It will conclusion of the first year of the Five-Year Plan which is rapidly building socialism in the Workers’ | Republie and immeasurably| strengthening it against imperialist | attack. | Three of the Gastonia defendants, who mthe mill owners of the South | are trying to remove from the ranks of militant labor and long prison terms will be present and will call on the workers of New York to fight | against the capitalist terror which is raging all over the country. Tickets are 5 Oand 75 cents. Work- ers are urged to buy them in ad- vance at the New York District of- fice of the Communist Party, 26-28 Union Square; Freiheit, 30 Union Square; Needle Workers’ Industrial Union, 181 W. 28th St., and Work- ers’ Bookshop, 30 Union Square. Office Workers Union Gains New Members at Organizational Meet “Your wages are not going to be hgher unless you can put such force together that will make your bosses give you more,” Robert W. Dunn, director of the Labor Research As- sociation, said at a mass meeting of the Office Workers’ Union at Labor Temple, 14th St. and Second Ave., last night. The program of the Trade Union Unity League and its determination to aid office workers was explained by League Assistant Secretary John Schmies. “We unionized hundreds of mil- linery workers because we firmly believed that every worker can be organized,” said Sylvia Bleecker, or- ganizer of Millinery Hand Workers Union, Local 43, in an inspiring ac- count of that union’s struggles. A sum of $33.80 was collected for the International Labor Defense, which is defending the Gastonia strikers. New members joined the union in response to the organization drive initiated at the meeting. 500 UPHOLSTERERS STRIKE. LOS ANGELES, (By Mail.)— Five hundred upholsterers of the Soronew Furniture Company have struck against a wage cut and non- union conditions. iawn with the “Labor Imperial tin Donald Government, ‘Tory prepara~ t the USSR— also celcbrate the successful | Fundamentals. Morning Clas Unit R2, Section 1. Wee ecting Wednesday, 7:30 1 ‘th St Unit 12F, Section 2. t neet Wednes- Union Square, Unit 16F, Section Wee Unit B, Section 4. Wednesday. an Work 4 Section 6. Unit 4F, aa bpdclan ue t, 8:30 sharp at Worke Section 3. ing Thursday, 9 Broadway. * 6:30 p.m, at 1 Night Workers Unit, See. this afternoon, 3:00 o'clock, 6 Union Sq . Room 602. ‘Labor and Fraternal Organizations Plumbers Helpers’ Gastonia Meet. der the auspices of the American 1 on of Plumbers Helpers, a ting. to protest age “Members must attend; rades workers invited. Plafubers Helpers’ Office. The office of the American Associ pers is now lo All communi- ‘arded to this address. i ee Workers Laboratory Theatre. Membership meeting Thursday, 8:00 at 80 E, 11th St, Room 337. Monday, Friday and Sun- All workers who p.m, must file application nip not later than Nov. 1 (WLT or Workers School). Drama Fraction. Thursday evening at the Workers School. A be present. prop representative will ADD FRATERNAL organizations ce-Vanzetti Branch, I. L. D. nt meeting Monday, 8:00 p m., at 1472 Boston Road. Haslem Youth ‘Dates. The ‘Harlem Progressive Youth club Will give its 13th dance of the ae paehteniy wane nnn n DON’T BE A SLACKER. Today our Party faces greater responsibilities and tasks than ever before, The Central Commit- tee Plenum gives our chief tasks as follows: 1. Struggle against capitalist rationalization and the capitalist offensive and organize the unor- ganized, 2. Struggle against imperialist war, against American imperialism and for the defense of the Soviet Union. 3. Struggle against social re- forism and the Right Danger. 4. Building of the Party. Our immediate campaigns carrying out these tasks are: Organize shop committees — strengthen revolutionary unions— build the Trade Union Unity League. Conduct broad mass _ protest demonstrations demanding free- dom of Gastonia Prisoners. Make the 12th Anniversary Rus- sian evolution Campaign and meet- ings the most effecive and largest in history of Pary. Organize Anti-War Committees in the shops. Bring forward the Communist Party as the fighter and repre- sentative of the workers in the November elections. Build the Party—Win the work- ers from the shops—the Negro worker—the young workers. The Day’s Pay Campaign start- ed throughout the Party brought the results, but there are still some comrades who have failed to fulfill their Communist Party. To conduct successfully our, Party tasks and campaigns, the Party must be relieved of finan- cial difficulties. What Must Be Done at Once? 1. Every Member Who Has Not Responded — SEND IN YOUR DAY’S PAY NOW. 2. Every unit check over their membership list and immediately take steps to collect the Day’s Pay from those who have neg- lected it. WE MUST FINISH THIS TASK 100 PER CENT. Rush in your DAY’S PAY to the National Office, 43 East 125th tS., New York City. it construc- ‘oviet Union to ization Loan for subscription by the American work- (2 d/executive council, ej the Soviets on Aug. 23, OF LATIN LABOR HALTS CONGRESS: ‘Green “Postpones” His | Pan American Meet (Continued from Page One) Geen would lose their following. The for humor proved a good antidote | Weavers” chances of a Pan-American Federa- |for insomnia to this reviewer, and/noon and evening of Election Day,/|very tion congress suitable to the A. F. L. chiefs seemed to be confined to Mo- rones of Porto Rico, and perhaps a} delegation from the Crom, which is “The Booster” at the Nora Bayes | is one of those chgfations from \the Viennese,” the reson for whose adaptation is a mystery. Pilea and a 23d rate imitation he Potash and Perlmutter theme, ie yi affair about the Jewish father who tries to get his son a} start as a surgeon by using the same i pushing methods which made the old | man a prosperous bachelor. The hackneyed stuff that passes | a pretty punk cast did not make things better. A flock of love affairs, and “comi- eal” bickering in “The Booster” Booster’ at Nora Bayes Can’ Be Boosted posted Very Much OCTOBER 30, Tse, ) | op Wl. CONFERENCE is that the Viennese characters and | | settings have been, Americanized, | | | ands o we ave to stand for a “funny” T0 F R E E JAILED Trish maid, and a “funny” set of } “Abie’s Irish Rose”-like wheezes. iShow ‘Weavers’ Nov. 5/ Broad Rapresentation| ‘For Gastonia Defense) Plans Fight on Terror performances of “The | CHICAGO, ml, Oct. 29.—The In- will be given in the after-| ternational Labor Defense held a} successful Gastonia confer- | Tuesday, November 5, at Manhattan lence here Sunday. There were over Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. for the Gas-|125 delegates present representing tonia Defense and Relief Drive. The|78 fraternal organizations, 17 trade New York local of the Workers | unions, some I. L. D. branches and Special now reactionary enough even for |seem t ohave been swiped from third | International Relief will sponsor the | shop committees. Green. So the ongress had to be {called off. ‘The control over the congress last _ year by Green was so complete, that ithe A, F. L., which dominates the Pan-American Federation had the reckless effrontery to call the next |meeting for Havana, the capital of |the vicious Machado terror, the seat |from which death warrants for the jexecution of militant workers pour in an unceasing stream, and from which the assassins of Mella took their departure last year. Tihis guarantee that only the most servile of labor lieutenants of imperialism could attend added to and confimed the attacks made upon the P. A. F. L. b ythe R. I. L, U. 1} and the Latin American Confedera- i|tion, and seem to have badly dam- +|aged one of the best weapons of American imperialism. Green, as head of the A. F. L. when issuing the order to call off the Havana con- | gress, did not admit any ‘of the real jfacts, but tried to say that the *|necessity of using all A, F, L. offi- cial sin the southern organization jeampaign voted for at the Toronto jeconvention is the reason. Since jnone of the big bureaucrats ever {do any organizing, since the cam- paign itself directed merely against the National Textile Work- ers Union and will never under any circumstances actually organize the southern workers, the hypocrisy of |the reason given is obvious. is HERE AFTERNOON Workers to Greet 4 at ‘Valley Stream (Continued from Page One) Hotel by a caravan of autos, cov- ered with banners and iaden with flowers. At one o'clock tomorrow after- noon, the fliers will be given an of- ficial welcome at City Hall, when they will present the workers of New York with a message from Osoaviakhim, the Soviet aviation so- ciety which has backed the Moscow to New York flight. First pilot Shestakov, second pilot Philip Bolotoy, navigator Boris Sterlingov, and mechanic Dmitry Fufaev left Moscow in the all-metal, n | twin-motored monoplane Land of and have crossed Siberia, United States to establish the first direct air route from the U. S. S. R. to this country. the feat of successfully negotiating the first west-to-east flight across the Pacific. Aside from the tour of the army round-the-world fliers in | 1924, the North Pacific has never been traversed by aircraft. most tumultuous mass demonstration ever staged in Detroit was accorded Semyon Shestakov and his three comrades at a reception arranged by the Friends of the Soviet Union in Danceland Auditorium, the city’s largest convention hall, last night. Workers by tens of thousands stormed the auditorium to welcome the daring fliers who have brought greetings and epressions of solidar- ity from the workers and peasants of the U. S. S. R. to the workers and farmers of the United States. As each of the Soviet representatives rose to address the audience in Rus- sian, a fresh outburst of wild cheer- ing and applause rocked the hall. The feature of the evening was the formal presentation of ten trucks and tractors, suscribed by Detroit workers, to the fliers for their fellow-owrkers in the Soviet Republic. The program included the following numbers: Lithuanian “Ai- da” Chorus; Russian String Orches- tra; Polish Folk Dances; Ukrainian Chorus; Russian Folk Dances; Negro Spirttuals; Ukrainian String Orchestra; Workers Maennerchor of Detroit. The Land of the Soviets will leave the Dearborn airport for New York tomorrow morning, completnig its historic 12,500 mile flight from Moscow early in the afternoon. TUUL Program Ready The program of the Trade Union Unity League is now ready for sale, at the loca] office, Room 205, 26 Union Square. All secretaries should immediately place their orders. The programs sell for 15 cents each. W.TR. WORKERS CHORUS ENGLISH LANGUAGE Now Being Organized Register at Workers International Relief. New Address: 949 BROADWAY, Room 612, Telephone Algonquin $048 USSR FLIERS DUE Alaska and the} They performed} | political control. ema aks 8 | DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 29.—The rate American burlesque by the “adaptors” of the play. showings. Communist Party candi- | dates of New Yoak will speak. | The spirit of the meeting was leellent. A determined stand was WEINSTONE HITS'A, ROLE OF SCHOOLS ‘They Dope e Children for} Coming War, He Says} (Continued from Page One) | ies for the training of working-class | children as part of the war prepara- | tions and that the imperialists are | seizing upon the schools with an iron grip. Religious training in the schools is becoming an established rule and the imp. rialist propaganda for militarism, coupled with military training, is increasing by leaps and bounds. “The school authorities, under the dictatorship of the ruling imperial- ist groups, are -ndeavoring to stamp | out the activities of working class | school groups, particularly the Pioneers, and the reign of terror which is conducted against the working class has been conducted equally agairst the children who have been demoted, theratened with } expulsion and intimidated principals of the schools. Several such cases against the Pioneers, the children’s ommunist organization, have already been condemned in mass meetings; but of this Norman Thomas, who is the candidate of the third capitalist party, is of course silent. “The Socialist Party is endeavor- ing to organize the school system in accordance with improving its ser- vice as an instrument for doping the working class children with the pro- | paganda of the capitalist class. The Communist Party recognizes that the school system is an instrument for keeping the working class in ig- norance in regard to vital needs. “The Communist Party raises the demands for the abolition of relig- ious and military training in the |schools, for the right of teachers to organize into labor unions, for the right of teachers to organize into woking class organizations, for no discrimination against teachers with working class views, for the increase of teachers’ kages, particularly the lowest paid groups, as the most v ital demands of the moment in the | school situation. “The pretended plan of Norman | Thomas to raise the school system ‘above politics’ and outside of the class struggle is only a disguise for protection of the capitalist class’ po- litical control of the schools—one of its most powerful investments of Any talk such as Thomas’ talk of putting the schools outside of the class struggle is only a mantle with which to cover in. creasing reaction and concealing capitalist class upon all capitalist institutions for more effective ser- vice against the working class.” | ee ea BUTCHERS’ UNION) Local 174, A.M.C. @ B.W. Office and Labor Temple, Room 12 Regular meetings every Fair; and third Sunday, 1 M. Employment Bureau sata evers day at 6 P. M. Window Cleaners’ Protective Union—Local 8 Affiliated with the A. F. of L i} 15 B. Brd St, New York | Meets each Ist and 3rd Thursday ot | each month at 7 P. M. at Manhatt Lyceum. Window Cleaners, Join Your Uni. e month at "ied: Avenue. waned! Local 164 Vel. Jerome Tova Union Label Bread! Unity Co-operaters Patronize SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 - 7th Ave. New York Between 110th and 111th Sts. Next to Unity Co-operative Ho! Patromze No-Tip Barber Shops 26-28 UNION SQUARE (i flight up) 2700 BRONX PK EAST (corner Allerton Ave.) Phone: LEHIGH 6382 International Barber Shop W. SALA, Prop. 2016 Second Avenue, New York (bet. 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Bobs Our Specialty ‘Private Beauty Parlor |The “New England Labor Congress, | tions, the employers invited to the by the institute to meet each year and “con- |ETHEL BARRYMORE THEATRE| | feday Mat—“THE SEA GULL” | CARL BRODSKY |taken against the terror which the The conference decided a the workers in all of the or- cOR NEW SELLO T gars represented to form a |big united front movement to carry }fight against the terror in the Chi- | New England Fakers cago sedition cases. | 20 was elected Systemptize Treason |) * (ret ee ere lilization of this broad united front > |committee with hundreds of work- ers’ organizations. Puen Resolutions were passed dealing bosses and government have started |sainat the workers here. | o mob- on the Gastonia campaign and the | which will make plans for the mob- | WORCESTER, Mass., Oct. 29.— called by the Workers’ Bureau of the American Federation of Labor, concluded late yesterday one of the most brazen class col- laborationist maneuvers known so far. Although ,with only two excep- with Gastonia, pledging support to the Illinois miners, and pledging to introduce resolutions in every work- ing class organization proitesting against the verdict of the Gastonia courts. Seven of the leading members of the Communist Party or of militant | lcbor organizations are still in jail in Chicago. The bosses and courts jare doing everything to hold them |there. And they are still looking for | | about twenty-five others on sedition | charges. Detectives were present at the conference, in an effort to arrest the | leading comrades. But six of them | welked away empty handed. | | | t congress, and with no exception, the state governors invited ignored the meetings, the A. F. L. delegates, |. with William Batty, betrayer of the New Bedford textile strike, as prin- cipal leader, voted to establish per- | manent machinery for arranging co- operation between their unions and the employers. Batty Shows Way. They also organized a summer fer with representatives of the in- Unie. /-ADH anBTIEae Ian 08 AO ORE That orld revolution! Attend eration in the shops and mills.” Madison Square Meet ov. 3. Socialist construction in USSR is | Icuarantee and support of the pro- NOW PLAYING! WELCOME TO THE SOVIET FLIERS! see the great Red air-conquerors leaving Moscow on their history-making flight . . . vivid views. —and on the same program— “SCANDAL?” | A Tragicomedy of Modern Youth in Russia at work—in play—in LOVE illustrating the new SOVIET MORALITY FILM GUILD CINEM 52 W. Sth St, (Bet. 5th and 6th Aves.) A Continuous Daily—Noon to Midnight |) Direction: Symon Gould SPRING 5095—5090 Special Forenoon Prices: Weekdays 12-2—S5e; Sat. & Sun. 12-2—50e The Theatre Guild Presents KARL ANNA GUILD W. 52. vs. 3:50 Mats. ‘Th.&Sat. 2:40 NOW Wisconsin | Lies Dynamic—Powerful ost Mysterious Figure of Modern Times RASPUTIN FRITZI ‘VICTOR MILLE. SCHEFF in HERBERT’S MODISTE” Evenings and Saturday Mat. $1 to $3 Wednesday nee $1 to $2 SHUBERT Thea, 4ith st. W. of | B'way. Eys. 8:30, Mats. | Wednesday and Saturday 2:30 | QUEENIR SMITH fit’ the ‘seustont Comedy Sensation THE STREET SINGER ANDREW TOMBES 2d ST. & B'WAY 47th St. W. of Bway, Chick, 9944 Eygs. 8:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:30 PRINCE OF SINNERS JOHN Cometly I | DRINKWATER’S BIRD N HAND: ——A. H. WOODS PRESENTS— FUL’ W. 46th St. Bvgs. 8:50) MOROSCO THEATRE ULTON Wien Wee. & Sat. 2:30) | 45th St. West of Broadway Gan M. COHAN” | The Talk of the Town! | ‘Cran REPERTORY ii 6 | Bygs. 8:50. Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2:50 |ELSIE FERGUSON] ina Melodrama of 3 Acts SCARLET PAGES STEEPLE JACKS KILLED. NEW BEDFORD, Mass., Oct. 29. —Two steeple jacks plunged 150 feet to death here today when the staging attached to the chimney on which they were working, collapsed. 6th Ave. Eves, 8:30. Mats. we Sat, 2:30 b0c, $1, $1.50 EVA Le GALLIENNE, Director onight—"MLLE, BOURRAT? ight—"THE SEA GULL” |FURNISHED ROOMS tor Any Kma of Insurance” Now is your opportunity to get a room in the magnificent 7 Kast 42nd Street, New York | Workers Hotel | | Unity Cooperative House 1800 SEVENTH AVENUB OPPOSITE CENTRAL PARK Cor. 110th Street Tel. Monument 0111 Due to the fact that a number of tenante were compelled to leave the city, we have a num- ber of rooms to rent. No Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST 249 BAST 115th orpEer Seeond Ave. New York DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY Cor. ri . Call at our DR. J . MINDEL stfiee for further information. puree N DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE 4 other office way. Tel. FORNISHED ROOM for Party member ‘St. 5 a ie able rent, Apply Hox 8§ Ds W: BOARDERS WANTED roemet all improve- Dr. M. Wolfson Surgeon Dentist 141 SECOND AVENUR, Cor. 9th St . 1057 Fatle Phot Orchard 2333. Apt. 4B. Call owt of the legram! Vote YES — THE THREE POST-WAR PERIODS 1918 ; 1923 Deep revolutionary struggles of workers, deep crises of capi- ‘ talism in many countries. De- feat of attempt of interven- tion by imperalist powers in Soviet Russia. Consolidation of Soviet power. 2 1923 1927 Partial stabilization of capi- talism. Recovery of Soviet economy. Growth and influ- ence of the Comintern over broad masses. 3 1928 1929 Decay of capitalist stabiliza- tion, Success socialist recon- struction, five year plan, in Soviet Union. Sharpening class battles in imperialist coun- tries and colonial revolutions. AND YOU ARE IN THE THIRD AND THE DAILY WORKER IS IN THE THIRD NOVEMBER 16TH Mass Mobilization Of All Militants To the Radicalized Msases With Our OFFICIAL ORGAN Cooperators! SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 Bronx, N. Y Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 7/th S2., New York, N. Y. Tel. Rhinelander 8916 D. s. VEGETARIAN airy RESTAURANT omrades Will Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) PHONE :— INTERVALE 9149. RATIONAL Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts. Strictly Vegetariin Food All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S Vegetarian Health Restaurant 558 Cleremont Parkway, Bronx HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian RESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE, Phone: UNIversity 5865 Phone: Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES | A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet 302 B. 12th St. New York | - Advertise your Union Meetings | here. For information write to The DAILY WORKER Advertising Dept. 26-28 Union Sq., New York City Hotel and Restaurant Workers Are Preparing WAR Against the SOVIET UNION ? HY Were the Gastonia Defendants Sentenced to a Living death in jail | | WHAT Is the reason for The capitalist Terror in Chicago, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, New York ? The Gastonia Defendants Themselves And the Communist Candidates Will tell you the Answers at the , 12TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION of the RUSSIAN REVOLUTION } and * COMMUNIST ELECTION RALLY at MADISON SQ. GARDEN 49th Street and Eighth Avenue Sunday, November 3 at 2 P.M.