The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 29, 1930, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Page Two DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1930 NEGR O WORKERS! VOTE COMMUNIST! VOTE AGAINST THE BOSSES LYNCHING TERROR AND MASS UNEMPLOYMENT! VOTE FOR FIGHT ON LYNCHING AND FOR SOCIAL INSURANCE TO EVERY JOBLESS WORKER! — Vladeck Social- Fascist, | Calls for Appeals for Votes of Jews in Tammany Mouthpiece ll for Vladek for ‘every Jew who considers a serious matter, must vote dek.” 's how an advertisement run- ning in the Jewish Tammany organ today reads. As on a previous oc- casion, Vladek in appealing for stes ‘through advertising in that nmany paper again hiding his identity. There is no mention of the wor or “socialist par’ in their advertisement. | There’s hatdly any candidate or any of the other capitalist parties showing such rottenness as Vladek, Broun, Thomas and others are dis- playing in the present election cam- paign. Broun began by advertising MASS VIOLATION OF INJUNCTIONS Picket Zelgreen Again 21 Arrested NEW YORK. — Hundreds of workers packed the sidewalk in front of the Zelgreen Cafeteria, 217 West 34th St., yesterday in open mass Violation of the injunction against picketing. “socialist,” Race Prejudice the organ of Wall St. and Park| the Herald Tribune, that he} On his posters | Ave., jis not a Communist. }as well as on the posters for Nor man Thomas, the name of their} |party is ommitted. Now Vladek} Jagain is advertising for votes in the | |Tammany paper and appealing in| the name of his Jewishness to/ “every Jew.” Jacob Panken, another “socialist” | now arguing with the Tammany} candidate, Sirovich, as to whether Mrs. Panken buys kosher meat or not, has made a speech at Stuyves- ant High School Sunday afternoon, identifying himself with the Zionist and other Jewish nationalists in their present outery against the MacDonald government which has stopped immigrants to Plesatine and has concluded a political .deal with the representatives of the Arabian bourgeoisie in the interests of British imperialism. jother three were not obtained yes- | terday—Ed.) | At this hearing, the bosses did not even appear, The task of rail- roading to jail workers who dared to demand the right to pidket against the 12:hour day fell on the faker, Irving Epstein, business agent of Local 802, of the “Deli- catessen, Restaurant Countermen and Cafeteria Employees’ Union” of |the A. F. L. Epstein told how he ot the injunction for the boss, and asked the judge to punish workers violating it. | 1. L. D, In Fight. A statement isstied yesterday by | Rallying the workers in Rio de Ja- the District Office of the Interna- They were attacked by polic OF vee ck in the viet wagon | tional Labor Defense reads as fol- foot, horseback, in the riot wagon | F and on motorcycles. Twenty-one | lows: : pa need, ger being badly. “The International Labor Defense beaten up by a whole squad of cops! is behind these workers in their before he was thrown into the riot | Struggle against the courts in their |Sociated Press dispatches. |test took pldce at the time of a mil- | wagon, He was a worker, poleon, recently beaten up by po-| lice on a picket line. One woman | picket was cuffed and struck, and| arrested. Struggle Goes On. ) The fight will go on! This is but | the first round of a determined struggle of the militant workers of | New York to smash the injunction! evil by mass violation. There is! no other way. The A. F. L. and} the bosses cooperate to get injunc- tions against the strikers in every strike, and those who try to picket are jailed under Paragraph 600 of the Penal Code, providing sentences for violation of an injunction. Mass violation of the injunctions, or loss of the right to strike— slavery—peonage and a fascist rule through court orders by the bosses and the A. F. L. misleaders, with continually worsening conditions— that is the question before the workers of New York! There will be mass picket dem- onstrations—mass violation of the injunctionevery day at noon at Zelgreen’s cafeteria! All out to help the Food Workers picket! All) out today! Foster Speaks. The Communist Party election | rally Thursday, Oct. 30, in Cooper | Union, at which William Z. Foster, | candidate for governor on the Com- | munist ticket, will be a speaker, will | be also mainly an anti-injunction mobilization. Foster will leave his | upstate tour, and rush back to New York in order to take part in this/ most important struggle. A Com-| munist vote is a protest against in-| junctions. - Serve Injunction. The demonstration yesterday was led by “Slim” Welsh, carrying strike | placards.. Eight or ten police were | alteady on the ground, and their leader rushed up and served a lengthy copy of the subpoena on the picket. Welsh walked up and down reading it, still wearing the placards, and then tore it into rib- bons. The police pounced on him, the four or five hundred demon- strators who had been clustering around jeered the cops, and began to march back and forth, singing “Solidarity.” ‘The police attacks several times cleared a space in front of the cafe- teria, but the pickets always swarmed back, in spite of every- thing the cops could do—and cops képt getting thicker and thicker. | The patrol wagon arrived some time | after the green “emergency wagon”) and carried the arrested workers away during a chorus of “Boo’s” given the police by the crowd. Jeer Police Sluggers. The sidewalk across the street was jammed for half a long block with spectators, many of whom jeered the “police when they saw cops sneering women workers, or engaged in some other brutality against the pickets. Mounted po- lice finally rode their horses off the sidewalk among the spectators across the’ street to drive them away. Workers followed those arrested to Jefferson Market court where they were given a hearing yester- day afternoon, and 15 dismissed, the judge saying that he “did not want to advertise the Reds.” Storms of laughter and a demonstration for the defendants answered him from the workers in the audience. Six were held, charged with vio- lating “Paragraph 600.” Among them were “Slim” Welsh, Ialapof | cripple the unions Na-| Tight to picket and protect their jdemand on the part of the workers | class interests against the employ- ers of labor. The courts in issuing these injunctions are attempting to in their daily battle for the right to live and their fight for shorter hours and higher wages. The I. L. D. will give their support to the workers in this mili- tant fight and battle with these unions against any sort of suppres- sion hindering them in their organ- ization.” DEFY POLICE TO WELCOME AMTER |Phila. Workers Smash Cossack Cordon PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Oct. 28.— The reception of Israel Amter, one of the leaders of the New York Un- employed Delegation, at the Broad Street Station by 400 workers who broke through the police cordon, car- tied him on their shoulders, sing- ing, cheering, was the most enthu- siastic for years. The entire group, | whose number increased continuous- ly, marched down through the work- ing class streets to the Broadway Arena, holding the banners aloft, distributing leaflets, with the police not daring to interfere. Another parade, consisting of automobiles and trucks went through other parts of the city, with a band playing revo- lutionary songs. The rally, attended by over 1,200 workers, was equally enthusiastic. Beside Comrade Amter, there were several other speakers, including Bill Lawrence, District T.U.U.L. Cecretary facing 20 years after he was found guilty on sedition, Richard B. Moore, Sadie Van Veen, H. Rothwell, of the Y.C.L., with E. Gardos, District Organizer acting as chairman. Sev- eral applications were secured for the Party and also for watchers. The rally adopted two resolutions: one on the immediate -epeal of the Flynn sedition law and the freeing of Lawrence, and another demand- ing the establishment of an emer- gency relief fund of fifty million dol- lars by the city. Red revolutionists, see that your unit, section, district, organization is in action. Get behind the Daily Worker campaign for 60,000 readers. Workers Calendar BALTIMORE, MARYLAND. A, Daily Worker Ball, will be held on ‘thanksgiving Bve, Nov. 26, under the auspices of the Cotnmunist Party with the aid of the workers’ organ- ization. The hall will be announce: later. Do not arrange other affairs for that Bate, Pe Philadelphia, Pa, Philadelphia will celebrate the 1Sth anniversary of the Russian Revolution on November 7. 8 at the Broadway Arena. are invited. | p. Mm. * « Akron Slide pictutes of “Boss Terrors” with lecture by Jack Rose, Sunday, Noy. 2, at 7 Home, 662 Corice St. cents. * ’ Washington and Orexon Fred Walker, one of the Portland defandants chirged with criminal syndicalism will tour Unger the Sqpnices OF ee “LD. our take Me 2 followings Bet, v4 28, Abiorta, j 0, Cloverdale. Oct. “31, Longview; Nov. 1, Hockinson 2, 3, Hood River; Nov. * Nov. and Rose Rosen. (Ngmes of the burg; Nov. 7, 8 Portland: Nov. 9 10, Aberdeen, Grays Harbor; Nov. 11, 12, ttorium, 2457 W. Chis t | SEMI TERN MAUR NN Ne Ail workers |Ore@hinations are asked not, to ar- on wonath, Nov, :30 p. m., at the Ukrainian | auspices Minefsville I. Admission 16 | program thig district | dle ‘argnee Workers’ ‘The | is ho! “and | wil 4, 5, 5, Roses | will b THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKE Tat AQE MAKING AN UNEMPLOYMENT CENSUL FoR‘YoU = JOBS AND Wa G UL? iD Le Wy ROT —_ CS een” BRAZIL REDS LEAD PROTEST Call on _ Workres to, Fight Boss Cliques neiro, Braail, against the starvation, the Communist Party Monday led a mass protest agaifist the new military clique which rules there, as well as | against the bourgeois leaders of the | Vargas movement, according to As- The pro- itary uprising of a section of the mil- itary police. The Party took ad- vantage of the situation to lead a for bread. Police and troops were called into | action against the mass of workers who fought under the leadership of | the’ Communist Party of Brazil. Latest reports state that the “revolt has been quelled.” Over 100 casual- ties are reported, but details are not | given. By a policy of showing the) workers that. the new bourgeois clique is no better than the old, and by fighting for the real demands of | the workers, the Communists are en~ deavoring to arouse the workers to take leadership in the uprising. The cable from Rio de Janeiro says:: “Communistic elements took Advantage to protest against the food situation.” Barricades were thrown up ‘around the Ministry of War, the central police station and the foreign | office against the revolutionary work- ers, showing the widespread nature of the uprising. The reports that | the revolt has been “quelled” can be | taken with a grain of sal, A -Washington dispatch to the Journal of Commerce on Monday states that Stimson has announced | another quick change and is taking | steps to recognize the Getulio Vargas outfit when it takes power in Rio de Janeiro. In fact, Stimson now ex- plains, Wall Street never was “op- posed” to the uprising, but it put the embargo into effect because it was “the requirements of international law.” ‘ ” ‘The British are quick in their at- tempts to take advantage of the situation and are frantically trying to make an alliance with the new government before Stimson can rem~ edy the effects of the “new turn” of American imperialism in Brazil. Up to the present time, the various conflicting bourgeois groups leading the three divisions of the “revolu- tion” have not settled the division of the swag. Various counter-revolts | have taken place in Rio de Janeiro, and no agreement whatever has been reached between Vargas, represent- ing the Southern army, the Northern insurgents, and the gang of bour- geoisie who still hold Sao Paulo, the | most important state. . ‘The fight of the workers, under the leadership of the ommunist Party of Brazil shows the deep-going radical- ization of the masses, and the fact that the workers and poor peasants are beginning to put forward their independent demands against their own bourgeoisie as well as against all imperialist forces. Tacoma; Nov. 18, 14, Seattle; Noy, 15, Hiveretts Nov. 16. Mt. Vernon; Nov. 17 7, 18, Bellingham. ee PENNSYLVANIA Wilkes-Barre Concert and Mass Meeting, celébra- " Russian + 7. Ni 1 TD My t Workinen's Cirele. Hall, 69 So. saneoek St. * Seranton Concert and Moss Meetinst, cel tion 13th anniversary of the Russian Revolution,Saturday, Nov. 8th, 8 . m. at International Workers Order all, 508 Lackawanna Ave. Lae eee Serant Social and Literary evening ar- ranked by, International Labor De- fense on Thanksgiving eve, Wednes+ day, Nov, 25th, 7:30 p.m. national Workers Order Hall, at Inter- 508 All working class Lackawanna Ave. range any affairs for this night. 6 we Miners le International Cone 10th, at 7 p. my .D, Very. kod of singers, dancers and soloists. * * Wotkers of Chicago! In atder th help build the $50,000 “Organize and Strike" Fund, the Nee- ndustrial Union three performances of the h wuccers, “Ching xpress’ wnday, November 16, The showings take place at 3:30, 5, and 8 p.m. In addition the latest Soviet comedy shown, The performances in will take place at the People's Audi- ‘ld Ave, } R WE ARE MAKING WORKERS DIVIDE Thee > WITH mb, LESS. FORTUNA TE s HER a. ovR ON CG ois Aas WE ene CALLING WoORKE! TTAKG CARE OF THe? Wé FIRE —Is That So?— TE Business Does® ty fer REVIVE SOON <p len Pons OF LABOR BAYQUET UG HANG T fo By RYAN WALKER. Te BY, W THe Savarion (We Expecr BUSINESS TO HONEST C TIZENS| A Do Nt BE Int FULL. URGE LEATHER WORKERS FIGHT TUUL Voices Demands of Rank and File NEW YORK.—The Fancy Leather Goods Workers group of the Trade Union Unity League was issued to the members of the International Pocket Book Workers’ Union which starts its convention Oct. 31, a call to action against the treacherous policies of the socialist and AF.L. group in control of the union and of the convention. The statement of the T.U.U.L. de- scribes the speed up, constantly growing more severe among pocket~ book makers and cutters, more ma- chinery displacing workers, without any provision to take cate of those forced out, terror, blacklisting and espionage. Real Demands. The T.U.U.L. group outlines the demands which class conscious work- ers must fight for, which an honest leadership would mobilize them to fight for: seven-hour, five-day week without overtime; week work, no sec- | tion work; abolition of the helper system (which is a wage cutting scheme); minimum wages for mechanics and helpers; unemploy- ment ‘insurance to be paid by the bosses and the state, and adminis- tered by the workers. The T.U.U.L. calls for a union based on shop committees, shop dele- gate. system of representation, rank and file organization committees. The group points out that none of thesé things can be expected from the administration of the union, which, during the year it has been in office shows itself as rotten as the old clique, pursuing a policy of compromise and class collaboration at the expense of the workers. They refuse to keep their promise to rein- state the suspended members of the union. Organized struggle by the members must be conducted, for a militant policy, to organize shop committees, to unite with the unorganized and stop the onslaught on the standard of living. The-T.U.U.L. is the leader, FIGHT ON SERIO, VIKUKEL EXILE NEW YORK.—The deportation of Serio, Vikukel and the wholesale arrests of foreign born at the Com- munist ratification convention in Oregon will be protested at a mass meeting at the Central Opera House, Sunday afternoon, 2 p.m. on Nov. 2, under the auspices of the Dis- trict Council for the Protection of Foreign-Born. Arrests and deportations on a large scale is going on throughout the United States without any or- ganized attempt on part of work- ers: to stop it. A mass movement is now fast gahering force to halts deportations and protect the rights of foreign-born workers to organize into unions and militant organiza- tions without persecutions on part of the department of immigration. » At the Central Opera House meet- ing, the speakers will be, J. Louis Engdahl, lieutenant governor on the Communist Party ticket, N. J. Olgin, editor of the Freiheit, R. Saltzman, National Secretary of the Council for Protection of Foreign-Born and Samuel L. Darcy, Assistant Secre- tary of the International Labor De- fense. §S. Horwatt Secretary Dis« trict Council will act as chairman, Vote Communist! - | Square NEW YORK.—The biggest red election demonstration of the pres- j ent campaign, surpassing even the |great demonstration at Madison | Garden, will take | Monday, Nov. 3rd, at 5 p. ms, on Union Square.. Here the Commu- nist candidates will appear before | the workers of New York with a | final message before the polls open. The Communist Party and the |Trade Union Unity League who | started and led the fight for un- |employment insurance and imme- | diate unemployed relief more than a year ago, will not give up the fight after election day. The Com- munist Party will wind up its elec- tion campaign with a huge demon- I stration on Union Square, demand- ing immediate unemployed relief for the stafving hundreds of thou- | Sands and will serve notice that as the suffering of the masses of un- employed is growing deeper and as the army of the unemployed is place | | work as a means of “relief” will be! All Red Candidates to Be at Mass Rally in Union Sq growing larger, the fight for im- mediate relief will grow in the same proportions. Likewise, the fight against wage cuts and speed-up as well as the fight against part-time continued. The demands of the employed and unemployed workers will be voiced through signs, placards and banners displayed on Union Square. The feature of the demonstration will be before the “presence” of the “so- cialist’ Ramsay MacDonald who a year ago has made all kinds of promises to relieve unemployment }and who has succeeded ih having | the army of unemployed doubled | since he took office, and Jimmie Walker, who was forced by the Communist demonstration of Oc- tober 16th to have his Board of Estimates assign a million dollars for the unemployed, that is, for Tammany graft and “ice cream.” Obens at the A new picture is current at the Globe Theatre. Rex Beach’s best- seller of yesterday, “The Silver Horde,” turned into an Radio Pic- ture, with Evelyn Brent, Louis Wol- heim, Jean Arthur and Joel McCrea. Prominent in the cast. When this novel of Beach’s was the mode some years ago, we read it with relish and retained a recol- lection of the dramatic surge of the theme. Unfortunately in bringing the book to the screen—and here is a talkie plot if ever there was one— much of the real mélodrama has been lost by the stock-in-trade meth- ods of the director, which makes | the actual scenes of the salmon fish- ing—the silver horde, and the sal- mon canning factory seem ultra teal by comparison. In fact, one gathers the impression that the plot has been fitted in to an educational Picture of this industry. We have the girl of the Alaskan town, Cherry Malotte, played by Evelyn Brent, with the scarlet past and the heart of gold, eventually tracking down her man in the per- son of Boyd Emerson, played by Joel McCrea, after the misunder- standings and machinations of Mil- dred Wayland, the daughter of the Seattle man of power who tries to keep the boy from marrying his daughter- in more than one way. The suave villian, Fred Marsh, is enacted by Gavin Gordon. Char- acter parts are provided by Louis Wolheim, who ovéracts even more | than usual, Raymond Hatton, | Blanche Sweet,.who formerly star- red in her own right, and several |others. Besides the actual scenes of the salmon fishing and canning this talkie has a false staginess about it which does not ring true with the others. “The Silver Horde,” however, will provide an average evening’s entertainment for the audible movie fan. To many who do not remember the Beach novel or know the wide open spaces of the great Northwest it will possibly give more. AMOS-‘N ANDY TQ OPEN RKO has set Friday night, for the dedication of its new Metropol- itan playhouse, the Mayfair Theatre Broadway at 47th Street,—with Amos ‘n’ Andy in the first Radio picture, “Check and Double Check” as the initial attraction, according to an announcement made yesterday by Joseph Plukett. This comprises one of the most auspicious events of the new season, since by this inaugral presentation, Rex Beach’s “Silver Horde” Globe Theatre } Radio-Keith-Orpheum swings into | Broadway with a modern, well equipped theatre comparable with those of other major producers of sound pictures as.a “show window” for the first run here of Radio pic- tures. .The selection of Amos ’n’ Andy’s first sound picture as the opening offering makes the event particulatly noteworthy as it pre- sents for the first time on the screen the comedy personalities, “Amos”n’ Andy.” The Mayfair will have a capacity of 2,300 sats. The policy will be continuous performances after the premiere, starting Saturday, No- vember ist, at popular prices. ae Young Offers Men $500 to Scrap Selves WASHINGTON, Oct. 28.—Owen D. Young, head of General Electric, is | about to offer $500 per man to some 600 of the veteran workers in the West Lynn, Mass., plant of that com- pany, as the price of their scrapping themselves. General Electric has decided to drop the 600 oldest men in this plant, in order to reduce the average age of thé workers, who are insured un- der the anti-union “welfare” scheme of the power trust. Since each man has been promised a retirement pen- sion, a8 well as the keeping up of his life insurance during his employ- ment, the company is compelled to make some sort of cash offer to the veteran worker, to induce him to sur+ render these rights and declare him- self an old man. The price deter- mined upon by the company is said to be just $500. After using up his $500 the scrapped veteran will have no further claim on General Elec- | trico—and very little chance of find jing another job at any wage. SBUKGH v1 Remember DR. RASNICK When You Need a DENTIST 6023 Penn Ave., Room 202 ftiee Hl. 7699 MO. 8480 GLENSIDE UPHOLSTERY REPAIRS DONE Aa REASONABLE PRICKS Roberts Block, No. 1 GLENSIDE, PA. Telephone: Ogonts 8165 Presented by 15 Cents and $1.00 First Time in Detroit! “LAST NIGHT OF DON JUAN” By EDMOND ROSTAND LITTLE THEATRE 50 East Columbia, Near Woodward ~ roe, Now Playing! the Players of RESERVATIONS CL. 9571 TO RUN RACE FOR RED DRIVE SU NEW YORK ANTI- | LYNCH MEETING Many Organizations Answering ANLC Call Tomorrow night delegates from many working-class organizations, |shop committees, etc., will gather in St. Luke’s Hall, 125 West 130th St., |to protect the lynching terror of the bosses which has already claimed 38 © working-class victims for the year, jand to cut a program of struggle against lynching. The conference is called by the American Negro Labor Congress, and is one of many -anti-lynching con- ferences that militant organizatfon 2 / Young Communists to, Start in Bronx NEW YORK.—The Young Com-| munist League, New York District, is arranging a “Vote Commurist” race for the coming Sunday all through Greater New York. The race will start at 1:30 p. m. at Bryant Ave., Bronx &nd will wind up in the evening at 27 E. 4th St., downtown. Another group will start from 105 Thatford Ave., Brooklyn, 2:30 and will arrive at 27 E. 4th St., downtown, at the same time when the Bronx race will be wound up. At a number of stations in Bronx, Harlem, Yorkville, Brownsville, Brooklyn and Williams- burgh, each of the racing teams will be relieved by other teams waiting for their turn in the race. The team starting out from 2901 | Bryant Ave., Bronx, at 1:30 p.m, 1400 Boston Road, third relay—569 Prospect Ave., 4th relay—149th St. Ave., 6th relay—43 E. 103rd St., 7th relay—360 BE. 81st St., 8th relay— 1179 Broadway, finnish—27 E. 4th St. The route of the Brooklyn “Vote Communist” racers will be as fol- lows: Start at 2:00 p. m. from 105 Thatford Ave, ist relay—Fulton and Gingston, 2nd relay—46 Ten Eyck St. 8rd relay—Grand and Park, 4th relay—73 Myrtle St. 5th relay—Manhattan Bridge and Bow- ery, Finnish 27 East 4th St. The Young Communist League | appeals to all Party members and sympathizers having automobiles | and trucks to follow the racers all | the way down to 4th St. with “Vote | Communist” signs conspicuously displayed. Call up the Campaign | Headquarters (Algonquin 5707) and | register for participation with your | automobile or truck in the Communist” traces. tions and fraternal organizations are called upon to arrange meeting receptions for the “Vote Commu- nist” teams at every relay station. BOSTON Daily Worker Readers Meet at The New Garden Restaurant 32 Causeway Street Delicious meals. Comradely atmosphere Special arrangements can be made tor groups and parties. | will be relieved at 4041 3rd Ave. | The second relay for the “Vote | Communist” racers in Bronx will be | and Exterior, 5th relay—308. Lenox | 2nd Ave. and 50th St., 9th relay—! “vote | All Party sec-| 1 Million Copies of Special Election Issue is holding throughout the country in its work of mobilizing the entire working-class, white and Negro, for |struggle against Negro oppression. It is also a step in preparing the na- tional convention of the Congress, which is scheduled for November 15 and 16 at St. Louis, Mo., and will constitute a country-wide rallying of working-class forces against the mur-derous system of the capitalists, which its lynching terror, unemploy- ment and mass misery, ete. Workers are urged to see that their organizations elect delegates to the conference tomorrow night, if they have not already done so, or to rep- resent their organizations so that they can report back on the plans adopted by the conference for the fight against lynching. Negro work- ers! White workers! Join the struggle against lynching! Smash the vicious lynching terror and its capitalist instigators! Don’t miss full circula- tion tables each Wednes- | day in the Daily Worker. PHILADELPHIA | LittleTheatre | 2222 Market St. NOW PLAYING! Sensational Sovkino Production “CHINA EXPRESS” A Story of the Chinese Revolution Physical Culture Restaurants Quality Food at Low Prices 19 North 9th St. Philadelphia 77 Bleecker St., New York City 21 Murray St. New York City eH PHA ‘Yhe work make is good. eanigations work-our specialty Spruce Printing Co. 168 N. SEVENTH ST., PHILA, PA. Rell—Market 6383 Keystone—Main 7040 DI Union Priatere TRE Daily. orker Will be published between and November 1st. Pick out which ‘gota your diatriet, Kection, tinit ae elty, and immediately: ‘ny*plase Ma for the greatest DAILY WORKER distribution, WORKER. ORDER BLANK DAILY AD Want 1Hth At, N.Y, ©. . SPECIAL BLEC7’9N CAMPAIGN EDITIONS Encloved pieuse find $....... seeesd payment for ..coplés Pacific Coast Edition (West of Missipp! River) Dated October 27 copies Midwest Edition (West of Pittsburgh) Dated October 30 copies Bastern Edition (Bast of Pittsburgh) Dated November 2 Rushe and ordert. 68 @ thousand, 80 een| ocopy"smalt ‘bundles ORDER TODAY Paste ites th a seatal Sin “seale

Other pages from this issue: