The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 18, 1930, Page 5

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/ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1930 Page Five FAKER ROBS FUND DONATED) TO PROSECUTE LYNCHERS OF WILKINS, NEGRO WORKER Randolph Has Been Exposed by Communists as Misleader and Soft-Peddling on Lynching Had Solomon Harper Arrested and Jailed for Showing Him Up Before the Workers By CYRIL BRIGGS. Charging the faker and misleader, A. Philip Randolph, with dissipating in “joy rides” the fund of over $1,000 raised through donations from Pullman Porters and other workers for the prosecution of the lynchers of J. H. Wilkins, pullman porter, who was found hanging from a@ tree in Georgia last fers of th. Brotherhood of) ADMIT NESSIN WAS VICIOUSLY BEATEN Sleeping Car Porters, New York Division, have invaded But Boss Press Omits Graft Expose the private office of Randolph during the past week demand- ing an accounting. Randolph who is president of the Brotherhood and in that capacity: betraying the strike struggles of the Pullman Porters and turning over the organization to the treacherous bureaucrats of the A. F. of L., is charged with using practically the entire fund, spending at lesat $200 of it for the recent joyride to the packed St. Louis convention of the Brotherhood’s self-elected delegates where no other business was trans- acted except the ousting of a former fellow rascal, Roy Lancaster, whose usefulness to the Randolph clique had ended with his exposure as a faker before the workers. Randolph and Lancaster are the officials who called in police to beat up and arrest Solomon Harper for rising in a meeting of the Pullman Porters and exposing the tactics of the leadership in soft-peddling the protest against the brutal lynching of Wilkins. Harper at that time, just a few days: after the lynching, thoroughly exposed Randolph, Lan- caster and the other misleaders as trying to protest instead of prose- cute the lynchers. For this, the fakers had him arrested and beaten up by Tammany police, and even went to the extent of appearing in court to prosecute him and send him to jail in savage vengeance for his exposure of their crime against the Negro masses. Spokesmen for the angry workers are severely criticizing Randolph for his habitual laxity and temporizing, pointing out that he is nothing but a messenger boy tool for the A. F. of L. bureaucrats into whose hostile {him to the first floor. hands he betrayed the organization, helping President Green of the A. F. of L., to strangle the. strike struggle which at that time had an excellent chance of success—as even Randolph admitted. The Pullman Porters should understand that it is not enough to expose Randolph. These exploited and betrayed workers must organ- ize to kick out the traitors and re- organize their ranks along militant lines of struggle. The only trade union center which is carrying on a militant fight for all workers, and is fighting against Negro oppres- sion, lynching discrimination on the job, etc., is the Trade Union Unity League, with which is affiliated all the truly militant unions. in this country. Pullman Porters! Kick out the traitors! Affiliate with the Trade Union Unity League! Join the real struggle against wage-cuts, lynching, unemployment, imperial- ist wars! And demonstrate your hostility. against bosses lynching terror by voting Communist on November 4! Workers See Advance Of 5-Year Plan MOSCOW.—The delegations of Scandinavian, Islandic, Polish. and German workers to the congress of the Red International of Labor Unions have published a joint dec- laration containing, inter alia, the following: “It is necessary to see at first hand the process of industrialization in the Soviet Union in order to grasp the full significance of the Five-Year Plan. The Soviet Union is the scene of tremendous construc- tive work. The Soviet farms and the collective agricultural under- takings are also developing splen- didly and the standard of living of the workers is improving. The re- ports of the capitalists and their social fascist lackeys concerning the situation in the Soviet Union are insolent lies. The development of the. Soviet Union under the dictator- ship of the proletariat and the atti- tude of the social fascists towards it exposes the real nature of these agents .of capitalism and proves that they do not want socialism. As | result of our experiences in the viet Union we shall return to our fintries with renewed strength enthusiasm in order to carry t the decisions of the Fifth World bngress of the R.LL.U., to win the rity of the proletariat, to or- - ize economic and __ political struggles and to lead the working masses in the fight for the over- throw of capitalism “ (Continued from Page 1) like thrashing you, you whelps, put them out.” “Police closed in and the four were hustled from the chamber, the budget hearing suddenly disgorging a howling, maniacal mob. In the corridor Maude White, Negro Com- munist, shouted “They are killing me.” A big fist silenced her. But the rush was on. “Down the back stairs leading to the mayor’s office one man was clubbed into silence as a dozen policemen rushed and skidded with The man’s hand, covered with blood, streaked red finger and palm prints on the wall as he clutched on the way down. “Blackjacks, fists and feet made a belligerent melee of a descent down both main stairways, merging with a crowd that had started to rush up the stairs. Out of the con- fusion, three huddles were formed, each a battle royal. Nessin broke for the front door, but was quickly beaten into submission, one night- stick breaking a glass pane as he was rushed back to the foot of t stairway, unconscious.” The lying Times, after a deliber- ately falsified story, later on admits the teriffic beating that Nessin and the other workers got at the orders of Walker. They name Major Deegan as starting the slugging on “the Mayor’s order.” They go on to say: “Meanwhile, Major Deegan car- tied out the Mayor's order regard- ing Nessin. Lester Allen, Robert Leless, Milton Stone and Maude White, the Negro woman, were ejec- ted with Nessin. In the corridor they were surrounded by detectives, who fairly threw them down the stairs and without giving them an opportunity to rise to their feet showered a fusillade of blows upon them. The fire of the attack was concentrated on Nessin. Again and again he tried to lift himself from the floor, only to be knocked down repeatedly and subjected to an un- interrupted hail of punches to his head, face and body. With blood pouring from his nose, his eyes blackened, his clothes torn into shreds, he finally succeeded for a moment in freeing himself from the attackers and make a dash through a door leading down City Hall steps.. Cries of “Hold him, stop him” called policemen outside into action, while a furious swing from one policeman’s club aiming at Nessin sent the glass crashing, resounding throughout the building.” : All the boss sheets tone down the reason Walker ordered the murder- ous assault. For the first time in his life he was exposed to the workers in public for what he is, a grafting Tammany politician. The News tells of Nessin and others being trampled and beaten down- stairs: “Prostrate at the foot of the stairway, the Communist was kicked and trampled upon, and finally thrown into the basement with sev- eral other agitators.” The Herald Tribune starts off its story exultingly: “Policemen’s nightsticks cracked the heads of two Communist agitators who invaded the Board of Estimate’s pudget hearing in the city hall yesterday afternoon.” Hidden further down they quote Nessin as saying: “I’m here representing the work- ing class, and you sit there repre- senting the grafting politicians.” Following this, reports the Tribune, “There was the sound of a blow and a falling body at the rear of the room, then general turmoil . . . “In the swirl down the stairs young Nessin cried out beneath the blows of his captors. They 1it him again and again. Down he went, sprawling his length on the floor. A man in civilian clothes punched him down when he rose, and another one jumped on him.” ‘ Lealess and Stone, two —other members of the committee, were treated the ‘same way, greater brunt of the attack wa against Nessin. He had torn the mask off the grafting politicians before their eyes and the eyes of the working-class. but the}- PULLMAN PORTERS CHARGE PHILLIP RANDOLPH RIFLED FUND ‘WitenDo THey SEave I) ICE CREAM* /WALKER TAKES $500,000 BRIBE Proof of the Jobless’ Charges (Continued from Page 1) were offering half of all net profits over 8 per cent, a difference which would ultimately amount to milli- ons. Hearing on Franchise Refused These rival offers were never heard. The item was never called. No call had been made for a hear- ing even though these lawyers and statisticians and officials of rival companies had been waiting all day and for months before for exactly that purpose. Even the capitalist newspaper reporters wrote that there had been no hearing, that the franchise had been jammed through. Let a capitalist newspaper describe the scene, the same newspaper that declared yesterday that Sam Nes-| sin “insulted” the mayor by calling him a grafter. Few in the audience realized just what had happened. Oppo- sition was there in considerable numbers, but got no chance to be heard. With startling suddenness the Board of Estimate voted the Equitable Company franchise. The yote was taken before the opposi- tion knew what was happening. Few citizens who had again come to speak on the matter were aware that it had taken place. In less than a minute a vote had been taken and the franchise awarded. The president of one company reatized that the Board of Esti- mate was taking action. ‘We ob- ject to this procedure,’ he started to say. The mayor called him to order. He attempted to continue and the mayor again called Him to order. ‘We refuse any longer, said the mayor, banging his gav- el, ‘to permit you to use the Board of Estimate to get public- ity for yourself.’ The corporation officer again tried to speak, but the mayor directed police to si- lence him.” Nessin Almost Killed at Mayor’s Order How like Thursday’s meeting of the Board of Estimate! The same railroading through of a franchise to all Tammany for unlimited graft. The same charge of “publicity seek- ing” on the part of the mayor, than whom there is no greater publicity hound alive. And almost, if not quite the same, order to throw the “disturber” out. Not quite the same, because the president of the rival bus company was simply evict- ed by the seat of his trousers, while Sam Nessin and his co-members on the Jobless Committee were slugged with blackjacks in front of the mayor and his entire board of Tam- many thieves and then thrown bod- ily down two flights of~ marble stairh, after which the entire com- mittee was blackjacked again by forty detectives, according to the New York Times, and the corridors of the City Hall ran red with gory blood. The corruption of capitalist gov- ernment was never beore thrown so flagrantly in the teeth of the work- ing class, never so unashamed or arrogant. There was not the slight- est attempt on the part of Walker to disguise what he and his crooked Board of Estimate were doing. Even the Brooklyn Borough President later admit’ed that he had been forced to vote for the crooked franchise. When some realty owners who thought that Walker had bitten off a bigger slice of graft than they thought he was entitled to and sued to set aside th: action on the ground that the public had been de- nied a hearing, Walker ordered the minutes -falsified and then forced the Tammany clerks to setsify that a regular meeting had been held and No one ap, eared. Family of Grafters Mayor Walker's hypocritical show of. anger when he heard him- self called a grafter is laughable, considering that graft seems to be both ahabit and a business with his entire family. Mayor Walker's father, William H., was formerly superintendent of public buildings and offices, While superintend- ent, he organized a dummy con- tracting concern headed by two of his sons. Superintendent Walker, in his official capacity, awarded contracts to this concern, which was owned by himself and his two sons. In the course of five years, Walker spent $6,500,000 of the city’s money. Almost two-thirds of it was graft which went into the already bulging pockets of the three Walkers. This concern gave as its business address the same street and house number in which the two Walker } sons lived, and city checks drawn even in fractional amounts with | bank deposits by his sons. Another | cian, was recently appointed to a} | city job in direct contravention of civil service regulations. Perhaps if Nessin and the jobless delegation were given an opportu- nity to make statements of fact, Walker would.scarcely have had the} gumption to “feel insulted” and the} | delegation would not have been sub- jected to a beating unparalleled in| the long and bloody history of the American labor struggle. But then | | again, it is altogether possible that | Walker would have ordered them| | shot then and there. Certainly the hundreds of detectives in the Board of Estimate would have been happy to fulfill the order. Among Walker’s friends and ac- complices are almost all the “Fifty- nine” who, according to ex-ambas- sador Fletcher, rule America. Also among his friends and accomplices are some of the greatest gangsters to see Tammany graft disguised. When it was charged recently in the capitalist press that New York’s | food supply was controlled by gun-| men who jacked up the prices of) almost every staple food that is found on the city’s tables, Commis- sioner Yynne, who has an itch for publicity and the mayoralty, declar- ed that he would put,150 inspectors from the Board of Health on roads leading to thecity to prevent food | racketeers from stopping food trucks and imposing a toll of sev- eral hundred dollars on each. Mayor Walker immediately ordered Wynne to do nothing of the kind, adding that it was the duty of health in- spectors to inspect, and inspect only. Will Walker deny that these food racketeers are paying tribute to Tammany for the privilege of im- posing a tax on food merchants? Walker is not only a grafter. He is one of the cheapest grafters in Tammany Hall, and those who know that Tammany officials have driven crippled ex-service men from their only means of livelihood at East Side pushcarts, and given these pushcart stands to Tammany hench- men, realize what this statement means. There are racing sweep- stakes of all kinds running illegally in New York. Almost all of them are fraudulent and everyone with- out exception pays for and gets po- lice protection. A recent sweep- stakes, with a prize of thousands of dollars, was won by a man who gave his address as that of Walker's house in Greenwich Village. The building is a one-family house. Finds Truth in Daily “Find a check for $3. I am one of 8,000,000 workers looking for a job, but I have to leave the Daily Worker to find the truth about the workers’ conditions in the country.” Geo. J. Rako, Cleve- land, Ohio. READERS! BUILD HOUSE TO HOUSE ROUTES, Sy6nan Jleye6unua DR. A. BROWN Dentist 301 East 14th St. Cor. Second Ave. Tel. Alxonguin 7249 NESSIN HELD ON “RIOT” CHARGE Carry On Fight (Continued from Page 1) Defense secured his release yester- day. Nessin, his head and eyes so lacerated by police clubs and heavy shoes that he can hardly see, suf- fers internal pains. It is admitted by physicians that | this may indicate fatal internal in- juries. If he dies, his murder lies squarely on the head of Mayor estimates, who ordered him beaten up because they were so enraged by Nessin’s frank declaration that less must be spent for graft and |some fo the billion dollar Tammany | budget given to the jobless to save their lives. Nessin is secretary of | the Councils of the Unemployed. Unprecedented Autocracy. The clubbing down, torture and dividual who cares to appear to dis- cuss the budget at a government open hearing has hitherto been un- heard of in America, and is com- happened in Czarist Russia or in jthe Middle Ages. This act of brutal tyranny was \reserved for representatives of the unemployed, and was performed by one of the most corrupt political ad- | ministrations that ever existed, by public officials engaged in handing out their henchmen from the city |by Walker senior were identical |treasury enormous sums, and de-| termined to swill along on their self | No, 302. increased salaries, give an additional | Kaiser. | brother of Mayor Walkef, a physi-}$7,000,000 ot their thugs in police | | uniforms, turn over $200,000,000 to | Panken, March 13, 1924, for failure | their banker allies, and starve 800,-| to pay $40 rent. Case No. 739. The 000 unemployed to death if need be | landlord was Rabinowitz. to protect their own graft. Plot to Suppress. Tammany feels so much the ef- fect of Nssin’s charges, in spite of a newspaper conspiracy to hide them, land is so enraged at the demands | of the starving jobless for relief, jthat all sorts of veiled threats to suppress all workers’ meetings are being made. capitalist papers carry displayed | |such statements as: or “Prominent city officials who do | not wish to be named,” is the end in New York of official | tolerance of Communists,” etc. Evening World carries a headline: “Officials Prepare to End City Wide Red Outbreaks,” which would seem to indicate preparations to suppress Communist election campaign meet- Yesterday’s afternoon say, “this The in America, including Bill Dwyer|ings. The Communist Party will and Paul Vaccarelli. Walker knew |continue the meetings according to and approved of the rum running on | schedule, city-owned garbage scows by Dwyer, Vaccarelli and Michael Laura, deputy street cleaning.com- missioner, under the supervision of Airy. Large Charles Hand, Commissioner of o Sanitation, and Walker's former see-||| Meeting Rooms and Hall retary. 1 Mayor Walker's affection for||| , TO HIRE gangsters and gunmen is even de-||| Suitable for tings, Lectures cried by Al Smith and some of the and Dancee in the “new Tammany,” who would prefer aa i Czechoslovak Workers House, Inc. 347 E. 72nd St. New York Telephone: Rhinelander 609% SSS Phone: LEHIGH 6383 ‘nfernational Barber Shop SALA. Prop. 2016 Second Avenue. New York (bet 103rd & 104th Sts.) Ladies Robe Our Specialty Private Beauty Parlor 29 EAST 14TH STREET NEW YORK Tel. Algonquin 3356-8843 We Carry a Full Line of STATIONERY AT SPECIAL PRICES for Organizations Ey Workers Bookshop NOW LOCATED aT 50 EAST 13TH STREET Announces the LAST SALE OF THE YEAR TODAY 25 per cent reduction on all books and pamphiets including those published by the International Publishers, Sta- dents of the Workers School are par- ticularly urged to come and fill their needs far honks for the school term, Subscriptions taken for Inprecorr, Communist, Communist International and all other magazines BUY ALL YOUR BOOKS AT YOUR BOOKSHOP Workers Bookshop 50 EAST 13TH STREET Red Rally, Oct. 21st to| Walker and the Tammany board of | “ arrest, of a delegation or of any in-| |parable only to what might have| “It is believed,” | | The Auser Realty Co. | |“Socialist” Judge Panken Evicted (Continued from Page 1) Which was perfectly true, but did }no good and merecovered up the guilt of the whole fake “socialist” | party. Zlat was due to get another lesson on this. “court of honor,” all of Forward| people, and Zlat thought that here, | | at least, he was going to get satis- | |faction that the anti-working class | action of Panken would be condemn- | ed by the “socialists” generally. But | Max Pine as chairman wouldn’t even let Zlat get the floor. And when | Zlat appealed the whole rotten case |to Abe Cahan, the big shot of the | | “socialist” party, Cahan threatened to throw him downstairs! Thus Panken, unexposed and even protected by the “socialist” party, went on evicting poor workers from | their East Side tenements at the petition of grasping landlords. No Republican or Democratic judge} could be worse. In proof of the wholesale character of this atro- | cious attack on the workers, we give ; just a few of the cases, selected at random: A Few Among Thousands M. Stein, 506 E. 5th St., evicted Sept. 15, 1924, by Judge Panken, | for failure to pay $10 rent. Cas The landlord was J. C. J. Greenberg, evicted by Judge! 1924, for failure to pay $24 rent. | J. Dudley, 370 Cherry St., evicted | by Panken’s order, March 27, 1924, for failure to pay $26 rent. Case No. | 1105. Landlord, The Apple Realty | Company. | D. Levy, evicted by Judge Pan- ken’s order from 14 Suffolk St., April 30, 1924, for failure to pay $30! rent. Case No. 1109. Landlord, J. Manicki, 191 Elizabeth Street, evicted by Judge Panken March 10, } 1924, or failure to pay only $12 rent. Case No. 1143. Landlord, Beers. Panken ordered the eviction of a worker named Guditor, from 186 Bleeker St., on May 7, 1924, for fail- ure to pay a lousy $20 rent. Case | No. 1159. Landlord, Bergoin. J. Salentino, evicted by Panken | from 16 First Ave., March 14, 1924, | for owing $18 rent to the Abra | Realty Co. Case No. 1116. J. Baardsen, thrown into the street by Panken’s order from 140 | W. 8rd St., for $25 rent, the same} day as Salentino, to help the same Abra Realty Co. Case No. 1118. | J. Dec, 640 E. 9th St., evicted by | Panken March 25, 1924, for $28 rent. Case No. 1138. Landlord, Bliss Realty Co. J. Valino, 184 Ludlow St., evicted | by Panken March 17, 1924, for $33 “SER 0 ‘a 657 Allerton Avenue Bronx, N Y¥ Estabrook 3215 A Eyes! Scientific Examination of eye glasses—Carefully adjusted by expert optometrists—Reason- able prices. OPTOMETRIS| -OPTICIANS 1690 LEX. VE been ote $1 st me Goldowsky arranged a so-called | | with himself as prime minister and minister of justice. | slaughter | Silesia after the war. | social democratic, Communist and | non-Party workers in a real fight- C. Skhilbaer, 46 First St., evicted | and needs of the workers, against by Judge Panken’s order, “Oct. 28, | fascism and against Austro-Marx- Case No. 5742. Landlord, M. Gilstro. | cism. | Construction Co. Austrian Gov’ t VIENNA, (IPS).—Vaugoin has |now formed a minority government | we: minister, Seipel as foreign| minister, the fascist Heimwehr lead- er Prince Starhemberg as minister of the interior, and the fascist | Heimwehr Dr. Hueber, Starhemberg’s | personality offers sufficient infor- mation concerning the character and | the policy of the new government. | Starhemberg is one of the richest | Jandowners in Austria and a pas- sionate monarchist. He took part in +s» Hitler beer-cellar putsch in | Munich in 1923 and is still a mem- | ber of the Hitler Party. As a mem- | ber of the Oberland Bund Starhem- | berg togk @ prominent part in the of workers in Upper man, as| The Austrian Communist Party is faced with’ a difficult task. It is the only real anti-fascist force | which exists in Austria. The social democratic leaders will rat at the first opportunity as they have al- ways done. It is the task of the| Austrian Communists to rally the| ing block against fascism. Austrian Communist Party must} lead a fight for a Soviet Austria in close relation to the daily struggles The| ism which is the pacemaker of fas- rent. Case 1171. Costuma. From the Poorest Tenements. J. Gariva, 13 Eldridge St., evicted by Panken April 14, 1924, for only $17 rent. Case No. 1180. Land- lord, L. Colton. J. Ottie, evicted by Panken from 180 Ludlow St., March 18, 1924, for $24 rent. Case No. 1195. Land- lord, M. Cox. J. Spearman, evicted by Pankex from 19 Hester St., March 26, 1924, for failure to pay a mere $18 rent. Case 1220. Landlord East End Landlord, R. J. Thomasso, evicted by Judge | Panken from 410 E. 11th St., March 10, 1924, for failure to pay $18 rent! to landlord C. A. Farnola. Case No. 1233. So we might go on for pages and pages, detailing the crimes against the working class of the poorest East Side tenements by this “so- cialist” judge, Jacob Panken. This is how they “help the unemployed”! | The Communists demand free rent to all jobless until adequate unem- ployment insurance is providéd by Congress. Vote Communist! Vote Communist! 25% REDUCTION TO CITY Have Your Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted by WORKERS MUTUAL - OPTICAL CO. under persona) supervision of AND UNION WORKERS DR. M. HARRISON Optometrist 215, SECOND AVENUE Corner 13th Street NEW YORK CITY Opposite New York Eye Bar Infirmary Telephone Stuyvesant 8836 50 ¥OR BETTER VALUES IN MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S Suits and Overcoats Ro to PARK CLOTHING CO. 93 Avenue A, Cor. Sixth St. BANQUET AND FILM SHOWING This Sunday, October 19 HUNGARIAN WORKERS HOME ‘ 350 EAST EIGTHYIFIRST STREET Farewell to the W. I. R. Delegation to the U. S. S. R. Showing of Russian Film at 3 O’clock in the Afternoon “ARSENAL” Banquet at 8 O’clock in the Evening Film ticket 40¢ In advance, at the door 50c, Banquet tickets $1.00 in advance, $1.25 at the door, Banquet tickets can be used for movie showing. |}to the dismissals, EINTERNATIORAL NEWS 'Fascists Make! Many Workers Vague to Seize) Rail Union Fakers in Germany Agree to Cut of Wages for Workers BERLIN (I.P.S.).—In order to avoid dismissals the directorial board of the German State Rail- | ways and the leaders of the Rail- waymen’s Unions have agreed that working hours shall be reduced from 9 to 8 hours a day on the railways and from 8% to 8 hours a day in the repair shops with correspond- ingly less pay. Should issals nevertheless become necessary, the directorial board will count on the trade unions to agree without trouble, The social democratic “Vorwaerts” tries to represent this arrangement as a great victory for proletarian solidarity unc leadership of the trade wi ers. It however al: nounced that in the spring di sals will have to take place. is The junion leaders who have agreed to eases, will also agree The revolution- ary trade union opposition is work- ing to organize the resistance of the railwaymen to these compacts he- tween the trade union leaders and the employers. ing wage ince \SHOCK BRIGADES FETE SUCCESS OF 2ND YEAR MOSCOW.—On the eve of the | shock brigade congress in the Soviet Union the Moscow workers gath- ered in the factories to discuss the balance of the second year of the Five-Year Plan. Reports were given from the various factories concerning the work achieved and the work to be performed in the third year of the plan. Moscow is decorated and illunii- nated and there is a general holiday spirit abroad. The second year of the plan proved the correctness of the general policy of the Commu- nist Party. In the first 10 months of the second year socialist large- scale industry increased its produc- tion by 27 per cent. In the remain- ing period the backward factories and works must catch up and the aim of 82 per cent increase must be reached and passed. The slogan of the factory workers is: The Five- Year Plan in Four Years! DEWEY 991¢ 5 Ofttee, Hours: M.-9 P. M. means: "10 A. Mu-1 PLM DR. J. LEVIN SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave. U Sta., B.M.T, At East 15th St. BROOKLYN, N. Y. DR. J. MINDEL SURGECN DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Reom 803—Phone: Algonquin 8188 Not connected with any - other office “For All Kinds of Insurance” ([ARL BRODSKY ‘Telephone: Murray Hill 655¢ 7 East 42nd Street, New York DEMONSTRATE MADISON $0. GARDEN Tues. October 21 7P.M. GREET ROSTER MINOR AMTER Buy Your Tickets Today! TICKETS CAN BE OBTAINED AT THE FOLLOWING STATIONS: .. MANHATTAN Communist Party District Oftice,- 6 East 12th Street, Workers Bookshop, 50 East 13th St. , 27 East 4th St. | 2 1179 Broadway Sollin'’s Restaurant, 218 EB. 14th St, Biderman Bookshop, 182 2nd Ave, Needle Trades Workers Ind. Unian, 131 W. 28th st Moslin’s Leathergoods Store, 335 Ey Tenth Street. HARLEM : ¢. P. Section 4, 30%enox Ave, Int'l Work, Qrder Schools, 143 By; 103rd_ Street. oi Health Food Restaurant, 1600 Madi- son Avenue, BRONX C. P. Sec. 6, 689 Prospect Ave. Bronx Coop, Restaurant, 2700 Brome: Park East. BROOKLYN 6, 68 Whipple St. 7 128 45th St. ,105 Thatford Ave, Bookstore, 413 Sutter Tickets 35c in advance. 50 cents at the door’ Contribute to the Communist Cam- ign! Bring Your Contributions Garden; Vote Communist Nov, 4 c. c. P. Goldstel

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