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me aem _ PAGE TWO —~ UNITED FRONT ELECTION MEET City Conferences Ratify Patterson NEW YORK.—Backed by the spe- cial Women’s Election conference or- ganized recently and by a number of mass organizations which have al- ready elected delegates, the United Front City Mayoralty Election Con- ference to be held Monday Oct, 10, 8 p.m,, at the Lido Ballroom, 146 St., anq@ 7th Ave., is showing signs of developing into the largest mayoralty election conference ever held by the Communist Party in the city of New York to The candidacy of William L. Pat- terson for Mayor of New York City will be placed for ratification before this conference, Only about a week remains for col- | lecting sufficient signatu William L, to place Patterson on candidates, Th mnt Communist ction Campaign Committee, there- immediately for gathering sign- ction ome $ mor? volunteers for ga signatures, William L. Patte: iy be denied a place on the ballot. BOSSES WRITE UP. HILLOUIT DAILY Prone That He’s Very, Very Safe for Them ie capitalist presc t, Social- yor, and by day. Their to the rest of the cap- Hillquit is a good be needed if Cormmunisis” get much i At out in an identical rut In most of the evening pa- t Hillquiet spen j , reading a “papa baeked French detective story,” and suzroundca by his beautiful and ex- pensive collection of French modern. istic paintings. It was made clear that Hillquit is respectable, not one ot these “fantastic,” hungry, cold, ragged, unshaven inhabitants of Hoo-| verville, flop houses, ang bread lines. Hillquit promised in his interview the day before that he wouldn’t make any real change in things if he were elected. Yesterday he stole some of McKee’s thunder and promised to walk to the city hall if elected. Mc- Kee only asks his associates to ride the subway. Hillquit commented on McKee as fellows “Until the last three weeks he acted as a willing tool of the democratic machine.” An election fa- he ballot | fore, appeals to all workers to volun- | the | si More Farmers Join the Strike Against Ruin and Hunger Farmers meeting in Bowling Green, Ohio, and signing up for the strike. leaders have tried in vain to call off the strike which they once declared, but the farmers refuse to stop. Their pressure has finally forced the Farm Holiday ¢ rewd to anounce a “resumption” of the strike. Farmers’ Holiday Association FARMERS PICKET IN MINNESOTA United Farm League Forms United Front BEMIDJI, Minn, Sept, 19,—FParm- and Clearwater coun- ried picketi Highway No. 8 | r y unde’ ship of the United Farme: ue, There is a united front of the U, F, L. and file of the , and the unem- and no evictions; i of poor farm- exemption for small farm- m to conduct the strike, Sept, 19—The vention of the League met at Mesa- h 59 delegates, It the farmers for relief in » 15. Plans for a r ice to foreclos- ictions, Tt voted to send of farmers to help to strike in Memidji coun- aring Wiliam Schneider- mmunist candidate for gov- the confercnce voted to issue mers to support the ‘PROTEST HUNGER | DEATH OF CHILD Schenectady Workers Demand Relief | SCHNECTADY, N. ¥., Sept. 19.—-A Vir-| |Landlords in Move to) iSet Back Activity of| |the Downtown Council | | NEW YORK. — In an attempt to | set back the activities of the Dow town Unemployed Council, w ich has wide influence among the work- jers on the East le, the bosses and liandlords are trying to have the | Council evicted from its headquart jon East 7th St. even though it pa | its rent regularly. | | Through its many struggles the | . |Council has won relief for thousands jof starving workers and their fami- | }lies on the East Side and has stop- | ped hundreds of evictions. The | Council stops on the average of three evictions daily directly and many | more indireetly. | The members of the council have dged themselves to fight to the inch to prevent the eviction. ‘NEEDLE TRADES CONVENTION, SAT. \U rge Open Shops to Send Delegates | ——- | | NEW YORK. — The New York | jeonvention of the Industrial Union is to take place the coming Satur- | lax and Sunday. All Industrial | union shops, open shops and company union shops who have not as yet | ‘elected their delegnies must do so at once so as to be represented at the; | convention, | The trade departmenis are going | jahead with preparing plans for the | trade conferences where their specific | roblems of the trade will be discus- | 1 and recommendations to the con- | | vention will be made, The shops are urged to send in the names of the | |felogates at once so as to help in |the organization of the convention. | Delegates who have béen elected are to come into the union office for their | eredentials. A full report on the activities of the Industrial Union, the plans and protest meeting at the policy of the | Perspectives will be given by the sec- yor to MeKee, pretending that he is| Albany city government which re-|retariat of the union which will be not a tool any more. sulted in the death of starvation of | followed by a discussion. Nomina- ILGW and White Guards the nine-year-old child of a war vat-| tions for delegates to the National It was brought out in the inter-|eran will be held here at Crescent | Convention will be made by the re- view that Hillquit was attorney for | Park under the leadership of the-Un-| spective trade conferences and the the International Ladies Garment|employed Council tomorrow (Wed-| delegates elected at the district con- | ILGW. the Unemployed Council of Schen- ‘antastic” Communists to lose; Policy toward workers and their | | NORMA ORGANIZE i( a mock trial on July 31 the;enough relief to the unemployed a working class of the United | curring. { | s—which means for the strike! nesday) night, | vention, sing clique at the head of the| In a statement issued yesterday by} ‘The kindly reporters even explain | ectady, the Albany city government 70 K 'ARMERS IN hev is that Hiliquit was forced by| Was condemned for its starvation th ood job, in the interests of politics, children, and the Schenectady city | are government was called on to provide mmunis; Parity found him guiity| Workers in the city to prevent sim- eee * & e being a ‘Judas to the interests ¢¢|llar deaths from starvation from oc-| Lay Basis for Group in New Jersey States. This attack was caused by| The Unemployed Council is circu-)| his retainer as lawyer for the White| lating a petition which has already| Ruesian oil interests. He has since | been signed by hundreds of workers ‘clinquished the position.” | demanding that the city and eounty | NORMA, N, J.—Seventy farmers of Norma, meeting at the public school The workers’ candidate is the Com- nunich candidate, William L. Pat ¢rson. Paterson Textile Workers Meet, Wed. PATERSON, N, J., Sept, 19—The lational Textile Workers Union, call- ng on all textile and dye house workers to form a united front, re- less of present organization and litical belief, | supply free food and clothing to all | children of the unemployed. The | petition proposes that funds for this | purpose be obtained by réducing the | salaries of all officials, from the gov- ernor of the state down to the relief | edministrators, and by taxing the in- come of the bankers, corporation heads and rich business men. | \StrikeWon at Diamond ‘Mattress Shop in N. Y. here under the leadership of a Com- |mittee of Action, laid the foundation \of a state-wide organization of poor land middle farmers. This was done lin spite of the attacks of the fertil- iver dealers and rich farmers, who came posing as sympathizers and | tried to throw a monkey wrench into ; tha machinery. These attacks were repulsed by the poor farmers, who | drew a sharp class line, Resolutions were sent to the prest- cent of the United States and the | governor of the state demanding im- DOLL WORKERS SPURN AFL PACT \Organize Own Bodies, | Win Concessions (By a Doll Worker) In April, 1932, a few workers in the doll factories got togther anq distri- | buted leaflets announcing to the workers that they were ready to form a Doll Work Industrial Union, Working conditions in these shops are intolerable, Wages are low and hours are long. In four months 500 workers had joined the Doll Workers’ Industrial Union. With no funds in the treasury, and without the proper preparations or- ganizationaily, the few leaders of this union decided to call a general strike. Their demands included a 44-hour week, a 35 per cent wage increase and time and a half for overtime. Gave Away Leacership Instead of drawing the workers act- ively into the struggle when the strike was declared, the organizers handed over the entire leadership into the hands of the reformist leaders, offi- cials of the American Federation of Labor, the Socialist Party, the Amal- gamated, etc. For three weeks, 17, per cent of the workers from the trade have been out on strike. All this time the reformist leaders of the strike have been negotiating and conferring with the doll manufacturers, with the re- sult that an agreement has been drawn up and signed by a few union leaders and a newly formed Doll Manufacturers’ Associ: +i. Agreement A Betrayal This agreement was a betrayal of the workers. None of the demands for which the workers struck was in- cluded. When the agreement was read at a mass meeting of the work- |ers, the workers, and even the original organizers stormed against it, The reformist leaders to draw in |- the workers from the larger factories, | stated distinctly that there would be |mo negotiations and no settlements without the consent of the shop com- mittees. But these labor officials have broken their promises, The agree- ment they are trying to force down on us would make conditions in the doll shops worse than before the strike, When sections of these workers ré- alized this betrayal they turned their backs on these reformist leaders, or- ganized themselves into solid bodies, negotiated with the bosses directly, and suceeded in obtaining better re- | sults than the official agreement. Farm Holiday Clique Now Calls for Renewed Strike; Never Stopped SIOUX CITY, Ia., Sept, 19—The executive council of the Farmers Hol- iday Assocation met here yesterday, and after a review of the evidence that the farmers refuse to stop strik, ing went on record for “resumption” of the strike in all Middle Western and Southern states, The council, however, struck as hard a blow as it could, by repeating the instructions of Milo Reno and other of its national leaders, that “picketing must stop.” ° What’s On—' DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1952 DRESS STRIKE SPREADS IN N.Y. Meeting Wednesday NEW YORK.—“Down with Starv- ation Wages: Down With Sweatshop Conditions; Unite and Mobilize Your | Ranks in Struggle for Higher Prices and Decent Living Conditions”: are | the slogans of a call issued yesterday by the Dressmakers Unity Committee consisting of International member: and the Industrial Union, The Unity Committee which was formed last | week has already started the organi- | zation drive. A number of shop: came down on strike today in re-| sponse to the call of the Unity Com- mittee and two have already re- turned to work wifh some improve- ments. The Unity Committee is | planning to spread the drive to the open shops where workers are slav- | ing for starvation wages and to th union shops where the agreement i: not enforced. | A mobilization mass meeting hes been arranged by the Unity Com- mittee for Wednesday, right after work. This meeting will be a mass} protest against sweatshop conditions. Workers are calied upon to bring | contributions from their shops for the united organization drive fund. Workers from open shops are called upon to bring their complaints to the | headquarters in Memorial Hall, 344! W. 36th St. Nine Special Classes in Principles of Communism NEW YORK.—Nine special classes are offered in fundamental principels of Communism at the Workers School 35 E, 12th 8t., third floor, for the fall term, This course includes the an- alysis of the structure of the capital- ist system of producion, the develop- ment of capitalism to imperialism, the basie contradictions of capitalism (crisis, militarism, war), the reyolu- tionary role of the working class in the struggles against capitalism the struggles of the colonial anq semi- |colonial masses, and the role of the: Communist Party and its relation to the working class and the toiling masses, and the fundamental tactics for condueting the revolutoinary | struggle against the capitalist sys- | tem of society COMMUNISTS ON THE IOWA BALLOT This Makes 21 States With Red Candidates | DES MOINES, Ia., Sept. 19.—The | nomination papers with state candid. | ates and presidential electors have been sent in to the State Secretary for filing, by the State Communist Election Campaign Committee. Besides the presidential electors to put Foster and Ford on the ballot, | six congressmen have been nominated out.of a possible nine and all state offices but attorney general. Blackwith and Polk Counties have nominated by convention county can- jmnamed Sazanoff, “Clear All Wires” Satirizes Fake Capitalist Press Reports on USSR in “Uleat All Wires’ Square Theatre, Bella and Samuel Spewack have painted a picture of the degenerate island of foreign di- plomacy, capitalist press correspond- ents, and remnants of the aristoc- racy and hangers on which un- doubted}; in the capital of the ic. It probably must continue to exist as long as capitel- ism survives in the other countries. The play claims that within the island there are some fairly honest types, bourgeo's press craftsmen, who really try to tell the truth. But the aestheie Menzies (played by John Hoysradt) who tries to sabotage the joviet government a little in his ar~ les in the New Republic, the “King’s Messenger” of the British Embassy (played by Philip Tongue) who hangs out with the correspond- ents, and particularly the main character, Buckley Joyce Thomas, played by Thomas Mitchell, are fools ut just poison fools. Even the good ones, like Pettinky rite (hinted at as the Times correspondent) are rough with the chambermaids, try to ex- ploit their translators. etc. Attracted to this island of capital- sm like flies to sugar are such char- cters as Prince Tomofsky, who is ving with a dancer of the old re- gime and trying to peddle her for $5,000 to some American, but will take $500 for her in o pinch; a peas- ant, who turns out to be something of a kulak, and a Gorguloff type played by John What real workers Melvin Bleiffer. |show up are handled by the Sp2- wacks in a kind of patronizing man- ner—the playwrights are said to have been correspondents in Moscow at the Times themselves, But they do make a roaringly sa- tirieal play on Buckley Joyee Thom- as (who reminds one of Donald Day, the Chicago Tribune eorrespondent). Thomas spends his time faking sto- climax when he steges an attempted agsassination of the prince, using his jail-bird secretary to fire the shot. He nearly gets the Commissar of For- eign Affairs killed, by mistake in- stead, and the G.P.U. soon checks up and exposes his whole scheme. In the end he is completely deflated, shown up, ridiculed by his associates and everybody else. Then he gets a job at $15,000 a year to report Chinese news for Hearst. It requires a considerable strain on the imagination to think of the jPeople's Commissar of Forsign Af- fairs in the rooms of this flamboy- ant faker, but it makes a good nlay. There is one interesting jab at ;American capitalism. When Grau- stein, the G.P.U. agent, is digging into Thomas’ tricks, Thomas in the extreme of his bluffing campaign, slaps him on the shoulder and de- elares, “I'll put you in the news, as the most intelligent invéstigator 1 ever saw.” Graustein responds quietly: “When I was a worker in America I went to a Communist démonstration. The police clubbed the workers, including me, and the newspapers compliment- ed the police on their very intelli- gent handling of the situation.” In the end, Buckley Joyce Thomas gets hiS passports and an invitation to go somewhere else, just as the oaoee Moscow correspondent did. “The Eagle of By SAMUEL BRODY) (Workers Film and Photo League) The struggle of a tribe of oppressed Caucasian peasants against the mili- tary ironheel of Czarism and the amazing heroism of one of their number (Zaur, the “Eagle”) in this struggle, combine to make “The Eagle of the Caucasus” a film that moves with the feverish tempo of a silent American “Western.” With this fundamental difference: in this case our hero does not ride hard merely to rescue the sheriff's daugh- ter and bring some nebulous “bad man” to “justice.” Zaur wages his merciless battle against the land- owners who rob his people of their crops. Against hte Ozarist princes who tax his tribesmen to the bone. Against the sadistic ‘brutality of the Cossacks who put the torch to the peasants’ huts at the command of the landowners. Zaur is a Robin Hood who burns with the desire to free hig people from oppression, He is neither an adventurer nor @ grinning, impetuous acrobat a la Fairbanks, al- though he is as daring a rider and as keen: a) marksman, “The Eagle of the Caucasus” suf- fers from the shortcoming, however, that it present this conflict between an oppresseq national minority and the military bludgeon of the landed aristocracy too much as the fight of a fearless individual leader rather than as part of the general struggle for national and political emancipa- tion from Czarism, “The Eagle” re- mains too much just the story of didates to run on the Communist ticket. Papers are still to be filed’ with the county auditors. Zaur, the peasants’ hero as he rides back into his mountain hiding at the conclusion of the film. And the ques- AMUSEMENTS "THE FREIREIT SAYS: “Picturesque, gripping and dynamic. It reveals a true story of the brutal treat- ment of the peasantry by the Czarist regime.”” Amkino Presents — American Premiere “The EAGLE of the a! y CAUCASUS” ‘FILLED WITH THRILLS."—N.Y. Times Added | First Showing of All-Talking Festare | Cartoon “THE TRAFFIC COP” wonxees Acme Theatre ddth Street and Union Square y WAY. 42ST. Photoplay Magazine Raves Over ‘GOONA-GOONA’ C OUNSELOR-AT-LAW WITH BY PAUL MUNI ELMER RICE PLYMOUTH THEA., Wi 45th, LA, 4-6720 Eves, 8:30. Mats. Thurs. é& Sat., 2:30 —_—_—— the Caucasus”’ tion arises in the spectator’s mind: Is not this a futile and unequal stwuggle? Zaur alone against the Czar's Cossacks; against the whole armed force of the monarchy! In this respect “The Eagle of the Cau- casus” suffers badly by comparison with several Soviet films previously seen in this country and bearing on @ like theme. On the debit side it must also be said that most of the interior se- quences suffer from the kind of direc- tion (or absence of) cutting remin- iseent of the old Biograph films, Especially so the duel between Zaur and the Prince. This is all the moré flagrant as there are exterior se- quences that rise high in skillful cut- ting and photography. On the same program at the Acme Theatre there is shown the cleverest Soviet sound cartoon we have yet seen. It is calld “The Traffe Ex- pert.” If only Amkino would re- frain from dubbing such gems with unnecessary vocal synchronization. ries from Russia. He rises to a fine; WIN FREEDOM OF CHINESE SEAMEN ‘90 Were Prisoners on Dollar Line Ship | NEW YORK,—The threat of milit- ant action upon the part of Chinese seamen, who virtual prisoners for | wer |son, hes forced the Dollar Steamship ; Co, to negotiate with an elected com- mittee, and allow members of the crew ashore, which was formerly de- nied them, The company has been forced to promise either immidiate return to China, which was the main {demand, or employment on the Pre- sident Johnson on the world cruise. The quality of the food was also ime | proved, The crew gained this victory with {the suppert of the Marine Workers Industrial Union and by acting along | the lines suggested by the M, W. I. U. The unien recently established con- tact with them and immediately came to their aid, The Chinese seamen are not rely- ing upon the promises of the com- pany but continue to organize and have expressed their determination to | continue the struggle in case the ;aereement is not carried out. Chinese Edition of Paper The Chinese crew were very | thusiastic about the M. W, I. en- Workers Voice, which is published by4 ;the M W. I, U. A collection of $19! was made by the crew for the VOICE, The “President Johnson” recently returned from a world cruise and has been laid up. For 3 weeks the crew was not allowed ashore; although the ship was in port they were not given fresh vegetables or fruit or meat, and when they demanded that they be returned to China, which the con- tract calls for, the captain refused to give them any satisfaction. A strict guard was placed over them, Clarifying Position on the Negro Question NEW YORK.—The Section com- mittee of Section 15 of the Com/ munist Party here has passed a re- solution “That every member of the section must buy a copy of “The Com- munist Position On the Negro Ques- tion’ and that for each comrade who is unemployed, the units are to buy @ copy, The Section committee urges other sections to do the same. The price of the pamphlet is only ten cents and its reading and discussion will go @ long way towards clarifying the Party’s position. Equal rights for the Negroes and self-determination in the Black Belt. enema ATIENTION COMRADES! Health Center Cafeteria WORKERS CENTER 50 EAST 13th Patronize the Health Center Cafeteria and help the Revol : BEST FOOD Field’s Cafeteria 3824 THIRD AVE., BRONX, N. ¥. (Near Claremont Parkway) Comradély Atmesphere. Proletarian Prices WORKERS PATRONIZE COHEN’S DINING ROOM GRILL AND BAR 129 University Pi. Near 1 EAT AY THE ROYAL CAFETERIA 827 BROADWAY Between 12th & 13th Sts.) Roysl Dishes for the Proleta: OUR WORKERS MEMBERS OF F. Classified APARTMENT TO LET—Six rooms, newly renovated, Suifebfe dentist, docter or private family. Fine corner location. 1481 58th St, Brooklyn. Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 80 FIFTH AVENUE 15th FLOOR AU Work Done Under Persona) Care of DR. JOSEPHSON OHEN’S UT RATE OPTICIANS . Eyes Examined by Registered Op- tometrists—White Gold Frames $1.50—Shell Frames $1.00 117 ORCHARD ST., Near Delancey MANHATTAN OPTICAL CoO. EYES EXAMINED BY REGISTERED OPTOMETRISTS White Gold Frames_—__—$1.50 Shell Frames —__.__-. 1,08 122 HESTER STREET (near Chrystie St.)Tel: Orchard 4-0230 International Barber Shop 181 AVE. C, COR. E. 11TH ST. Open to Downtown Comrades and Friends Mairentting for Men, Women and Children a e hel over 3 week: abroad the steamer President John-« ‘ . and |the Chinese edition of the =e invites them to an open meeting, at Oakley's Hall, 211 Market St. Paterson, Wednesday | CAMP WOCOLONA Workers, Support the Press That Fights NEW YORK.—The Diamond Mat-|tmediate relief, no sheriff sales or tress shop, which was striking un-| foreclosures, a moratorium on farm- Registration 1s now going en for! the fall term of the Workers’ Peadoree night, Labor Union Meetings | ROSPITAL WORKERS The hospital section of the Workers Lecgue w: day, Sept. 21 at 8 p. m. at 108 %. 14th t., room 402, The meeting will discuss a Madical ~plgn ef action against the wage-cuts that axe being put into effect in all the city hospitais and institutions managed by the Federation of Jewish Charities. It is ex- pected that all city and Jewish Federation acspitals will be represented at this meet- ing. JAMAICA CARPENTERS 4 mass meeting of unorganized carpenters will be at héld at 8 p. m. Wodnesday night Finnish Hall, 109-26 Union Hall St., , under the auspices of the Inde- Fpenters League. The meeting the general situation in the x is to be done to fight the wage gts end the possibility of establishing an Independent Cerpenters League in Jomaica. HATHAWAY TO LECTURE Clorence Hathewey will spealt on the “po- Witiesl parties and their relation to the working clese” at a meeting held under the auspices of the Office Workers Union at the Laber Pemple, 242 E. i4th St, Thurs- day, Sept. 22 at 8 p.m. UNITY MEETINGS ‘The Unity Committee is arranging a se- ries of open air meetings Tue: noon hour in the dréss market to speak on the vplied organization drive. These meetings be addressed by members of the In- ternational and the Industrial Union, nawhs sanda KNIT GOODS DEPT. The Knitgeods Dept. of the Tdustrial Union is calling a mass meeting Thur right after work at Irving Plazp to past vietories and work out ples for sprea@ing the organization drive to the . other unorganized shops. QO mab he FUR WORKERS dg aged for a new trade board and of the Needle Trades Workers In- old a meeting Wee | der the leadership of the Furniture Workers Industrial Union, settled | yesterday with the strikers, This is the twentieth mattress shop which | settled with the union gince the drive | to organize the shops began. Following the winning of the Dia- mond strike workers of the Glob2 Upholstery shop at Park Avenue and Broadway came out on strike for an increase in wages, the 40-hour week and recognition of the union. The Furniture tyson Industrial Union issued a call today to all fur- niture workers and friends of the | strikers to collect relief in the form | of food and funds to aid in the strike | campaign. Donations must be gent of the union. The strike at the Ideal Chair Co., at Grand and Garrison St., Maspeth, | L. 1, is still continuing. TRIAL OF DAVIS DUE TODAY NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—The trial of Senator James J. Davis, republican politician of Pennsylvania, on charges of violating the lottery law, was due | to begin today in Federal Court. He had been indicted on two counts in connection with the shady fund raisc- ing activities of the Loyal Order of Moose, of which he is « leader. IMPORTANT PHOTOGRAPH: IN- VENTION IN SOVIET U? ! MOSCOW.—Zurikov, a cov dent of the Soviet Academy of S¢icn- ce, has contributed a new weapon to Soviet scientific inqutry. He has invented a new automatic fons will take at the of Le ve al- wnion, 432 We * ways sequired . dives, “ |to 108 E. 14th St, the headquarters ers’ debis, lowering of the farmers’ truck fees to $5 a yéar, and no gas tax for farmers, Farmers from nearby points asked | | for help to organize in their neigh- borhoods. A speaker told of the or- ‘ganization of youth sections in the | United Farmers’ League, and advo- cated the organization of youth sec- | tions in this newly formed New Jer- sey Farmers’ Protective Association, ‘Meeting Will Protest Jailirs of Brooklyn Leader « of Jobless NEW YORK. — Max Schnapp, cer of the Unemployed and Com- mounist eandidate for Assembly in Breoklyn, will be the main speaker at @ meeting tomorrow in protest /eeainst the vicious beating and jafl- jing of Ferrera, another militant worker who is being held on Bllis Island for deportation becaus of his ectivities in struggling for relief ‘yom the city, Ip Schnapp and Ferrera were jailed after taking pari in a demonsiration for relief at the Home Relief Bureau jat Ablemarle Road and Gvavesend 4ve. Sehnepp has just finished his ‘atl sentence, The mecting will take place at 1373 43rd St. at 8:30 and will be under the School, 35 E. 12th St., third floor. cei ebay Volunteers ar@ needed by the New Yerk State United Front Election Campsign mittce. Comrades willing to help spply at Room 406, 90 Best 13th St. e Volunteers wanted to distribute posters and leaflets for the Workers’ School fall term. Call at 35 Hest 12th Street, third floor. 8 @ TUESDAY seer Leadership is to be held in the Workers School, Register immediate- ly ab 60 Hast 18th St, Sth floor, Pleneer | office, All cuts and mats borrowed from the Daily Worker must be returned immediately. S Hil a A rehearsel of the Dramatic Group of the Proleteylt will be held at 114 West dist 8t., at 8 o'clock, New recruits ate wanted. o ee WEDNESDAY Comrade Max Schnapp, leeder of th employed Council of Boro Park, juct tei |, will speak ri a mess meeting at 1978 43rd &t., Brooklyn, at 8:30 under the auspices of the Unemi gil_and the South Brooklyn Sect! TLD. Admission free. . An open sir meeting unger the auspices of the Greenpoint Polish Bronch, ILD will be held at Driges Ave. end Russell St., Brooklyn, at 7:30 p. m, 6 ‘Morgan. ser: ‘The Nick Spanonthakis * canch, ILD will Nave @ meeting at 301 VW ot 20th St,, third floc, et 8 p.m, Bpeay vr: A. P, Cohen. Alfred Levy Brane’, IL will mest at 411 Pennsylvania Ay ., Broolilyn, at 8 p. m. CAN YOU TYPE? | | The Daily Worker will appricate! |an hour's time of comrades who \can t pewrite letters accumulated | in “ie financial campaign, Call at race on 8th floor, 50 East 13th St. Voluntecrs need have no previous aut of the International Labor Del @ experience—only typewriting abil- ity. Gratitude guaranteed, MONROE, N. Y. ERIE R.R. | Lodging: $1 per October 3rd to — COURSES OPEN TO Principles of Communtum Politienl Economy Marxicm-Leniniom Communist Organization Princi le tj jab of Tinsolem Revolution iuage Courses Registe day, $4 per week ALL INCOME TO THE DAILY WORKER Opening of 1932 FALL TERM | WORKERS SCHOOL December 23rd The greatest movement of the masses against the continuel worsening of conditions by the capitalist cless raises sharply the burning need \§| for training thousands of workers for more efiective and militant participation in the daily struggles. ALL WORKERS IN — Negro Problems Correrpondenes Courses vr Now! | Number of students in each cless will be limited REGISTRATION CLOSES SEPTEMBER 30TH THE WORKERS SCHOOL 35 East 12th Street, third floor, New York City Telephone Aigonquin 4-1199 “MORNING “ Colleet articles and ings for Your Battles! Get Ready for the 6th Annual “DAILY WORKER” FREIHEIT” YOUNG WORKER” Bazaar MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, N. Y. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday Oct. 6, 7, 8,9, 10 the Bazaar Journal and send im- mediately to the Bazaar Commiftec. Help make the Bazaar a success BAZAAR HEADQUARTERS 50 E. 13th St., New York (6th floor)