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AUSTRIAN St ALISTS AGREE TO DAILY WORKER, N EW YOR g LAW LEGALIZING ARMED FASCIST ~ BANDS AID TO STATE “ORDER” Fascists Attack Vienna University and Injure| Students in Lecture Hall Despite Fascists, Communist Party and Work-| ers’ Defense Hail U.S. S. R. (Wireless By Inprecorr) VIENNA, Nov. 8—The “Home |tervention when “competent autho! Defense” federal leaders, Steidle, | tes” (the government) is unable | Pfrimer and Pabst, social democrats, have attended parliament to consult with the bourgeois parties on the work of the Constitution Commit- tee, Fascist leaders direct and in- ence this committee. he sub-commission discussing draft o fthe constitution has ar- ved at an agreement on essential questions. The social democrats agree on the paragraph authorizing |“independent” (fascist) military i {to “maintain order.” | Fascist attacks in the Vienna | University continue, Nationalist | students broke the doors of the so- jcial democratic professors’ lecture hall and many students were injured lin the ensuing fight. | The Austrian Communist Party |and the Workers’ Defense Corps are |holding mass meetings in celebra- tion of the twelfth anniversary of the November Revolution, (0000 HAIL USSR FLIERS IN NY, CITY Triumphs of Socialist ~ Construction Hailed (Continued from Page One) nal for the first wave of turbulent applause. pearance of the fliers approached, spontaneous outbursts of lusty sing- ing, whistling and cheering became more and more frequent. Delegations of workers from as far west as Cleveland and Detroit, as far south as Philadelphia and Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and as far north as Boston had come to the field in busses, bringing banners for pre- sentation to the Soviet airmen. Rep- ee of over 200 working ‘class organizations were on the “{f'ld, the Friends of the Soviet \Anion, in charge of the event, an- unced later. The reception program was inau- gurated by a 100?piece band, after /which Ludwig Landy, national sec- _ retary of the Friends of the Soviet | Union, and Robert Dunn, chairman _ of th ereception, delivered short ad- | dresses. A parade of workers’ chil- | dren befor ethe speakers stand ended when mothers rushed to red-d~ ped plat- form, holding their tiny tots aloft to b eembraced by the fliers, amid the riotous approval of the crowd. An exhibition of mass athletic drills, tumbling and acrobatics by member sof the Labor Sports Union Pat Toohey, secretary of the Na- tional Miners’ Union, greeted the fliers “in the name of the American working class, organized and led by As the hour for the ap- | several enthusiastic | tiliated with the Friends of the | Soviet Union, Roger Baldwin hail- | ed the aviators as “not only pioneers of high courage, but representatives | of a whole nation of pioneers. The |future belongs to the workers,” | Baldwin declared; “even we of the | middle class know it!” He saluted | the Moseow-New York flight as a | symbol of the enormous strides the first workers republic is making in | Socialist construction, By this time the 40,000 workers | had swarmed onto the field and were | milling about the speakers stand, | breaking into enthusiastic shouts at every mention of the fliers and of j the Soviet Union, Otto Huiswood of the American Negro Labor Con- gress declared that the U. S. S. R. | has a special significance for the Negro workers of America, who |vealize that only under a workers j and farmers government can full | racial equality be attained. | Mass singing, led by the Russian | basso, Ivan Steschenko, orchestral members and two selections by the | Freiheit Singing Society, and ad- dresses by Jacques Buitenkant and | M, Goodman of the F, S. U, follewed. | Edith Rudquist then made a presen- | tation of medallions to the fliers in | the name of the F. S. U. and Alex. Trachtenburg presesied a bronze | tablet for the Osoaviakhim Building in Moscow, and announced that 15 | tractors had been ordered by the | reception committee for the workers and peasants of the U.S. S.R, He | vequested that American workers .~ | assigned a collective farm in tho | U. S. 8. R. to be supplied with model | farm machinery. | Shestakov deseribed the hardships |of the flight, which he said the | ‘wonderful receptions organized for | | us have helped us to forget, The | presents and banners which have | been given us will be turned over to the Revolutionary Museum in |Moseow for the specially-formed the fighting new industrial unions.” | ge, : 4 partment to be devoted to the i fe ne Toohey nant hehe iy ie eat Rolotov said that future flights over 5 5 cpebrating the glorious achieve; and of the Soviets would he made ments of twelve years of working | ;, sea-pianes, and Fufaev added a clags rule in the Soviet Union, which | few words of heartfelt that 4, | inks to the has astounded the world and has) American workers, explaining that been an inspiration to the interna-/ ir his voice was unsteady, it was tional working class.” 4 K, Radzi and N, Kniazeviel: then | frozen, the crowd roaring with glee. greeted the airmen on behalf of the |The reception closed with the singing Russian and Ukranian workers af-' of the International. FRED BEAL CALLS ON WORKERS TO RUSH DAILY WORKER SOUTH Tells of Role of Fighting Paper In Struggle on Slavery and Terror {Continued from Page One) villages and see that the mill workers in these villages are supplied with the Daily always. “And workers have got to smash the terror against the south- ern mill workers and the National Textile Workers Union organ- izers who organize these men and women. | “We've got to fight the railroading of myself and my six fellow- workers, and we can’t do that without the Daily being rushed South. | “I want to say * word about what the Daily meant to us in, prison. “We were cut off from the workers when the Daily was kept from us. We'd pounce on every copy of the Daily we could get. It’s the only paper that gave us news of how the fight against mill slavery and the bosses’ terror was progressing. : “And every southern worker has got to have that paper. “I urge all elass-conscious workers to rush funds to the “Drive to Rush the Daily South,’ and t osee to it that his organiz adopts a southern mill village.” Daily Worker, * 6 6 26 Union Square, New York City. Fred Beal and his six fellow-workers are facing long prison terms because of the brave fight they put up for the southern mill workers, and in fact, for all of us workers. The least I can do is to answer his appeal to rush the Daily South, and I'm doing so by send- ing this contribution. FOR ORGANIZATIONS pc We, seccecccverevcsesassanacepegecptersrssccteeseeeeearersees (Name of Organization) ‘ity and State seeageeeneenoene wish to adopt a southern mill town or village, and see to it that the workers there are supplied with..........copies of the Daily Worker ery day for. «weeks. We inclose $...:...... Kindly send us the name of the mill village or city assigned to us, for we wish to communicate with the workers there. the route first negotiated by the | because he was excited and almost | Austrian Socialists Will Aid Monarchist Maneuver of Fascists VIENNA, No’ —Dr. Richard Schmitz, fascist leader of the armed Heimwehr bands and of the mon-| archist pro-Hapsburg Christian So- cialist party, has proposed a change lin the already faseist draft of the constitution. | This constitution is now being |talked over in parliament to afford |a veneer of “demoeratic debate” to its adoption. The changes would allo wthe return of the Hapsburg | royal family to Austria and remove |the law for confiscation of Hapsburg property as passed after the revo- lution. The socialists, who try to hold prestige with the workers by pre- tending to fight the fascists, but | who not only retreated but actually jaided in establishing the fascist | chosen president, Schober, who pro- | posed thi cosnstitution, while mak- |ing a noise in parliament when | Schmitz made his proposals, will un- | doubtedly yield when the Heimwehr | threatens—since the socialists have |already announced they would not | resort to force even in defense. | Serb White Terror Murders Communist | ZAGREB (By Mail).—On the |27th of September the revolutionary Brazan Brazanowitch was arrested by the Belgrade police and led to jthe “Marinkovitcheva Bara” in or- |der to show the police “the secret hiding place of the Communist ar- \chive.” According to the police re- |port he was then “shot whilst at- |tempting to escape.” In reality, of jcourse, he was murdered by the | police fo rhis refusal to give in- |formation. In order to detract pub- \lic attention from the murder of Brazanovitch, the Belgrade police treats the general public to phantas- |tic stories of a secret organization ,of Communists for the purpose of ‘robbing post offices and carrying on other crimes, Workers Want | TUUL| (Continued from Page Que) tortion by the bosses and, in the ‘case of Illinois, also against the |Fishwick and Lewis misleaders. Attention To Steel. | It is necessary at once for the \T. U. U, L, to pay especial attention |to the steel workers, In the auto industry, particularly, there is a | wave of unemployment, every auto ‘center reporting masses of jobless ‘and continued firing of workers. | | The auto workers union is calling a |great convention to meet in the |near future in Detroit, with a broad basis of representation to form a | powerful industrial union. A pro- visional organizing committee to take charge of convention arrange- | ments is on the job already. A. F, L. Fakers Scared. ings last week in Detroit, Pontiac, Cleveland, Youngstown, Rochester, the meetings besides be- | ing very successful, showed that the A. F. L, officialdom was deeply con- | |eerned and alarmed. In most of | these meetings strong groups of the local officials attended, and, though not able to heckle the speaker, sat |glum throughout the meeting and | |watched the workers enthusiastically applaud for the T, U. U. L. organ- lization campaign. In all of the above centers, and others covered on the trip, district T. U. U. L. appartus was created, local leagues are organized or are being organized in outlying but nearby centers, and as soon as the tour of the National Organizer, Jack | |Johnstone, begins November 24, these local general leagues will be | jdrawn into district conventions of the T, U. U. L., at which the na- | tional organizer will be present, | Active organization of industrial | [committees in the main centers are ‘under way. The substantial numbers of Negro | workers at the Foster meetings was | | particularly noticeable. ana lent) Buffalo Fakers There. | BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov, 10.—The entire executive board of the Buf- | falo central trades and labor coun- eil marched in and sat through Wil- |liam Z. Foster’s speech here along with 500 workers of the steels, tex- | tile, chemical, auto and other in- dustries. The workers were enthu- siastic over the thrashing Foster gay ethe A. F. L. because of its sell-out policies, its militarism, its support of American imperialism, and its failure to do anything for the workers. He explained the program of the T. U. U. L. for active organization of the unorganized into the new revolutionary unions of the T. U. U. L., affiliated with the Red In- ternational of Labor Unions, for a world-wide struggle againt ascpi- talism. He showed, too, that the T. U. U, L. continues its struggle against the labor bureaucracy in the A. F. L. to smash their paralyzing hold over the workers in their unions. Many workers present enrolled in the T. U. U. L. group: THEY STRUCK AGAINST SO- CIALIST ORDERS. (Wireless By Imprecorr) WARSAW, Nov, 8.—Three Polish coal districts held solid on the one- | day strike Wednesday in protest | against the low wage raise com- | pare dto what i" > miners demanded. | The socialist trade union leaders | tried but were unable to prevent the | strike. | | Build Up the United Front of | the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! Foster reports that in his meet- | Buffalo, | SOCIALISTS IN BERLIN COUNCIL "PROTECT GRAFT \Start Fight to Cover | Up Crooked Mayor | | BERLIN, Nov. 8.— ists do | net believe in fist fights or any |other kind of fight against capital- jism ,but they were ready enough | city council in desperate effort to |sav etheir grafting mayor, Gustav | Boess, from a vote of censure pro- | posed by the Communits Party frac- | tion, The proof was incontestable that |Boess had received from the city jelothing contractors, the Sklarek | Brotherss, an expensive fur coat for | aridiculously small price, The bank- |ruptey of the Sklareks, which in jturn caused the feilure of the munic- \ipal bank with the life savings of thousands of workers swept away, brought about an_ investigation | pushed by the Communists and the scandalous graft evidence piled up |against Boess and other soialist jleaders was exposed by the Com- |munist paper, the “Rote Fahne.” |Boess, however, was spending $12,- {000 of Berlin’s money on a junket- \ing tour of America, and was loath to come back to fac ethe music, | When he did, he was met at Bremen and Berlin by large crowds ing he had told Sklareks that he | would give the difference between \the real price and the few marks h epaid to c’.arity. But unfortu- nately there is no record of any |charity having ree-ived a cent from him, - Boess’ charity “began at home.” Thus when the city council met, the vote to censure him was ad- mitted sound by all but the social- ists, although the capitalist parties would like to shield him. So the socialists started a fist fight to |stall voting and the meeting ad- | journed without cision. The Com- munists will insist on a vote decision at a new meeting to ensure Boess | being ous" 1 before the cit yelection. ‘Rivera : Dictatorship | Faces New Struggles | As Valuta Takes Drop PARIS, Nov. 10.—In spite of all | the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera | falling in value on exchange. This hag been going on since February 1, of this year, and of sourse affects the workers in increasing the cost of living while their wages remain at an already low level, ing discontc..t and strike movements in spite of the collaboration of the socialists in th eexisting “joint coun- cils” formed by the government and legalized. It sheds additional lignt on the recent declaration of the fas- cist dictator that he will not relin- |quish his d:-Latorsh!p because, so he says, “the nation is not yet safe.” power,—Marx. 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, Strugvle 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- jaian 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. Te 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 xembership 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. to start a fist fight in the Berlin | lof irate workers, and tried to “ex- | | plain” the fur coat business by stat- | lean do, the Spanish peseta keeps | This opens a prospect of increas- | (By « Worker Gorrespondent) SAN DIEGO, Calii. (By Mail) | Brush fires have been ravaging the | back country here last week and | have caused the workers who are forced to fight these fires much sut- fering and misery. Thes fires ; break out in different parts of California every year at this time and the workers are rounded up and corralled in the jail and th the are forced into big trucks lot of cattle, standing up and fall- ing agvinst each other, and that’s the way they must ride 50 miles or more until they reach the fire | zone. Then they are a fa i: forced to climb mountains and over boulders and through brush, and when night comes on they. drop exhausted on the ground to selep (if they ean). Many of these workers are not. sup- plied with blankets. Many of them e been uncmployed for months | ILLINOIS MINERS E been without food but iff any of to protest t cally fit they depu- have for days, 1 some nda hed the workers re not phy up by the fire wardens’ s and dragg An incident of that kind oecurred last Another pro. tested to the sheriff as they loading him inte a truc'! had a car down the street and that he had some rabbitts and chicker ot he to look after. The she aid, “Get the hell in there,” that was that. The workers get the 6 cents an hour and their this skulldruggery, bu were week wor um of board t only or while th work, Nothing is paid for the sleepless ni they go through, or in case they get sick, ov for the clothes that are ruine - haye to wait a week for their C. G. Then, after they mone; ha’ \ Southern Farmers | Learn Must Unite With Mill Workers (By a Farmer Correspondent) Cc, (By Mail We jfarmers are learning that the same capitalist system that our product down below the cost of production is squeezing the textile mill workers of their labor and now it’s plain that all workers must unite and fight the enemy lands and mills. We must save these Gastonia workers that we' convited by a capitalist court w a Southern jury that believed the Bible from cover to cover, includ- ing witches. The pi hers tell the Southern mill workers about the good things RALLY AT MEETS 4 Separate Ca davénces| | Vote Militant Drive | (Continued from Page One) | repudiated Fishwick and Lewis, and voted overwhelmingly for the line lof the convention, and for a, fight | against the worsened underground | leonditions and lower pay brought | \about by the Fishwick and Lewis ad- ministrations. In each sace, a vote was taken, mass forces for a fight! for the six hour day, against fines and swindling by the companies, against discrimination against young miners and Negro mniers, and for extensive organization campaigns. All measures were thoroughly dis- cussed and detailed. Full reports jare being prepared for the labor they will get “in heaven” and then | press. these preachers will tel) them that | : it is harder for a rich man to get Miners Eager. | through heaven than it is for a PITTSBURGH, Pa, Nov. 10—| ‘mel to go through a needle’s eye " Drs o If you watch close you may The outcome of the present strus-| the mill bosses and the preachers gle in Illinois will determine to a large extent the future of the Na- \tional Miners’ Union,” declared Pat Toohey, national secretary-treasurer of the N. M. U., upon his arrival in | Heave Pittsburgh today after two weeks | in the Illinois field, to prepare for the meeting of the National Execu- tive Board here November 17, Too- hey has spoken to thousands of min- | jers throughout the state who have repudiated both the Lewis and Fish- | hea on the stock market, and wick machines in the corrupt United | was caught in the collapse. Riordan | Mine Workers, who have destroyed | and his Tammany co Ile agues re- their loca lunion charters and have | fused to believe the analysis of the affiliated with the militant National | Communists that American “pros- Miners’ Union. | perity was skating on thin ice. “The Illinois miners are in a| Riordan was 47 yea rs old, and fighting mood, and are prepared to | had been a climbing exploiter and join the national struggle against Folitician all his career. He was rty down reward in to be satisfied w:th pov here and look for their ‘ 1 Riordan Scares Tiger (Continued from Page One) demise is that he had been gambling e. | pay. hy s Two Weeks Work One for Messing BreadWagon Drivers in (By a Worker Correspondent) Just a few lines to post you on | conditions in the Brooklyn branch ‘of Messing’s Bakeries, for the driv- | ers, who are known at the office as the “route salesmen.” Some of these so-called “route salesmen” get on the job Thur y between 11 and 12 p. m. and wor aight through that will soon own all the} til! Friday between 6 and 8 p, m.} That is beca he is a salesman for $38 a week, minimum w Tf his commission runs a few dol lars over this amount, it is usually taken away from him because he | brought too much stale, which isn’t [his fault at all. This makes him handle Messing bread for nothing. The other five days total about 60 hours, so all in all, a | salesman” works two weeks in one and on top of that is cheated of his The firm has a system of men which is get- They feel it is peeding; up the ting unbearable. | get proper conditions and wages. —BREAD WAGON DRIVER. CACHIN SP. OR FRENCH WORKERS. By Im ov. 8. (Wir PARIS, government's dieu the .—The declaration | Chamber of Deputies is a pretense of demagogic reforms tantamount in to an attack on the workers, The Communits deputy, Marcel Cachin, spoke in bebalf of the Communist party, characterizing the Tardieu cabinet as a government of ration- | alization and increased persecution of the worker: He appealed to “route | Page Inree Kidnap Cait, Workers Who \J,8, METALS C0. Fight Forest Brush Fires “ELECTS” THE SHOP COMMITTEE They Will Represent the Company CARTE! N. J. (By Mail).— Last Wednesday the ballet was cast to elect the ee , (ihe company one), in the United Ste Metals Refining Co. of Ca company succeeded in se men te “represent” the € who were disenf company’s rule: he total vote it of 2,506 men employed, or 49 per quired of the t to vote. cent of the men, One wa: to be 90 days in the emp! company to have the And to be s drastic as in old Ei a candidate were feudal day The minimum of time you had to be employed the jl three years and the candidate to be American citizens and over by had ‘1 years of age. only thing overlocked was the color of hair sixe of ears. However, the men de- sired by the company became the members of the bosses’ committee. It true that the office and higher gang, foremen and good job holders went to the polls. the workers refused to vote, s “Tt does not mean anything any- way.” | The bosses’ one hope is to keep the restive workers “cool.” But the raise is always in the work- mind here and they say they demand that the commit will | press that question as their lgrievance. What the committee | does will show whom they repre- | sent. | We don’t expect anything, but | the fact that we have been fooled | will come out of the bosses’ selec- tion—Maxim Tramp. 5 Killed, 7 May Die, winking at cach other. They want | time to wake up, to organize all! In Blast of Gas Main the grat mass of workérs down here | bread drivers, to see to it that they | ot Kept In Repairs ELYRIA, Ohio, Nov. 10.—E sion caused through a leak in gas |main killed five workers and prob- |ably fatally injured seven others at the Times Spring Company h yesterday. Three of those expected |to die are women. Admitting that the high-pressure boiler probably sprang a leak dur |the night, a company foreman who | happened to be hurt blamed a work- ler for lighting. a cigarette as the cause of the explosion, even though garette lighting was a common practice, | the check-off, for the ‘ :-hour, five- day week, against the speed-up and for the other demands put forth by |the National Mir s’ Union,” Toohey lreported. He spoke at meetings in | Springfield, Taylorville, Staunton, Coella, Herri nand Belleville. It was in Belleville that the recent Il- linois conyention of the N. M. U, was held with 133 delegates repre- senting over 16,000 coal miners. Executive Board to Meet. Plans for the mobiliation of the |miners and for the formulation of policies to enforce the demands of |the N. M. U., and also extend the | struggle nationally, will be made jat the special meeting of the Ex- |ecutive Board, calls for which have | already been sent out. All members Colorado ,Kansas, Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky and lother states. The Exectuive Board will undoubtedly issue a call for the |second national convention of the N. M. U. to be held within 90 days after the call, either in Pittsburgh or Columbus, 0. Watt Up On Charges. High on the agenda of the Ex- ecutiv> Board will be the hearing of charges preferred by the Belle- | Watt, president of the union, whose |resignation it demanded. Among |th echarges against We't are bu- | reaucratism, a fight against the | militant policies of the N. M. U., spreading the doctrine that it is not necessary to fight the operators at this time, and that the miners’ solo | fight is against Lewis and Fishwick, d-baiting campaign against the ization ,and a policy of con- [ciliation toward the avowed foes of \the N. M. U., ineluding Fishwick, | president of the Illinois United Mine Workers of America apparatus, and | Alex Howat, who has now become |a part of the U, M. W. A. machine, | Watt, it is charged, is also carry- jing on negotiations for “capturing” the N. M. U. with John Brophy and Powers He>good, synica’y disre- garding the constitution, laws and class principles o. the N. M. U., and jattempting to lead the union to sur- jrender and defeat. Hapgood is a {former progressive now openly cam- paigning for Fishwick in Colorado. STRIKE SOLD OUT BY SOCIALISTS. (Wireless By Imprecorr) BRUSSELS, Nov. 8.--The threat- ening strike of the Antwerp tram- way workers has been choked for the second time by the anceptxiecs | by the trace union bureaucrats of | all the employers’ conditions. The employers broke the promise to in: crease wages, are expected to be present from | ville convention against John w.} reputed te be worth million: before the Wall Street crash, He was found dead Friday night, shot thvough the head, and with a | vevolver lying near. No public an- zouncement was permitted until Saturday noon. His death reminds in some detail of the end of Jes Smith, reputedly a suicide, whe died suddenly from a bullet during the j oil graft scandals, and about whose j death and recent activities much | mystery prevailed. Second Big Seandal. This is the cond recent banking scandal to Tammany Hall. The | governor’s expert at the investiga- tion into the affairs of the City Trust Co., recently, re marked that the full story of the rotten deals put through by the bank would never be told because it would expose too many democratic party office hold- Judge Mancuso of New York | ers was removed from the bench in the | | City Trust scandal, and the state banking superintendent, Warder, has just been convicted of accepting and sentenced to prison. kob and the Tammany backers are pouring ca sh into the Riordan- Smith bank to stop any such cx- posures there. | | Build Up the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! GET YOUR COSTUME FOR THE ry bi?) Ce tcrers Fe « 4480 maw Op $2750 0 1 non COME WITH YOUR COMRADE TO 1 GAYES' MA TICKETS AT NEW MASSES (112 B. 19th St Phone Ale, 4445) at the Workers Bookshop, 26—28 Union Square, New York. French workers on the occasion of \the twelfth anniversary of the Rus- sian Revolution to join in defense of the Soviet Union. | ’ CALL TODAY { > For Your Tickets the United Front of the Working Class From the Bot- tom Up—at the Enterprises! Build U SELL TICKETS ALL THIS WEEK IN YOUR SHOP EVERYWHERE You Must Be Present Your Fellow-Workers Also WrVTVTs > ROCKLAND PALACE West 155th Street, Corner Eighth Avenue Saturday, Nov. 16 Baily 325 Worker Entertainment and Dance wv VUVVvVvvVvVvVvvVvVvVvyv THIRD PERIOD YOU MUST COME TO HELP THE DAILY WORKER BUILD A MASS CIRCULATION IN ALL BASIC INDUSTRIES SO THAT IT CAN ASSIST IN GIVING LEADERHIP IN THIS PERIOD OF INTENSIFIED CLASS STRUGGLES. REGISTERING YOUR ATTENDANCE WILL MEAN THAT YOU ARE COOPERATING IN MAKING THE DAILY WORKER A POWERFUL INSTRUMENT TO HELP FIGHT THE WAR DANGER, THE RIGHT DANGER, RATIONAL- IZATION; TO DEFEND THE SOVIET UNION AND BUILD THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF U.S. mAh hh 4 4 4 4 4 to ty ty ty ty ty ty ty fy ty ty 4, ty tr he