The Daily Worker Newspaper, October 6, 1933, Page 3

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(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) and be glad of it. Nothing so crude) ' and harrowing as revolutionary work- ” ing class politics should be allowed | | to disturb this Utopia of monopoly | | capital. This is clear enough, but this is not all, Ie remained for Miss Per- kins to describe in unmistakable terms the route the Roosevelt regime with the aid of the A. F. of L. lead- ers and the camp-follower professors, ‘has mapped out for labor to travel: “The fifty-third annual convention of your organization,” said the patroness of the American labor movement, waving her lorgnette in the best Boston Back Bay. manner, “thanks to the vision and courage of sees labor as an integral part of the modern state.” “The modern state,” for Miss Per- kins means, of course, the capitalist- imperialist state which the United * States is today. Not even the har- » dened reactionaries in the A. F. of L. Executive Council have dared openly to voice such a fascist con- ception of the role of labor organiza~ tions under the N. R. A, Possibly their theoretical arsenals are not © equipped for such far-reaching forays into the future. Bulwarking her theory of the subordination of labor organizations | to the exigencies of capital and government in “national recovery,” ' the Secretary of Labor reiterated in sharper form the conception of gov- ernment as an entity standing above > classes—the impartial arbiter of class conflicts. “The direction of this ad- ministration will be in the joint in- > terest of wage earners, industry and the general public and not to favor a | ‘SECRETARY PERKINS FLAPS WINGS OF N. R.A. VULTURE AF. of L. Officials Provide Scabs in Painters’ Strike 140 Shops Settled With Union Conditions NEW YORK.—As the Alteration Painter's strike increases in strength and more shops are being settled, A. F. of L. officials are making ener- getic efforts to break the strike and destroy the union. Not only are they. planting pickets at shops settled by the union but are sending scabs to man the jobs of workers on strike. A number of rank and file painters have refused to aid the officials in their strikebreaking activity. In Harlem where 30 Negro painters | are on strike against the Sun Leasing Corporation, scabs sent by the A, F. of L. were repulsed by the mili- tancy of the Negro and white pickets. The corporation is sencing dispossess notices to the strikers who occupy their apartments. A rent strike is being organized in support of the de- mands of. the strikers in Harlem. About 1,100 painters in 140 shops have returned to their jobs under union conditions according to reports of the Alteration Painters Union. ‘The Brooklyn Bosses’ Association, after negotiations with the Union found that the Union would not yield | an inch to the proposals of the bosses to lower the union scale of $9 a day. | The bosses cancelled negotiations when’ the Union rejected any lowered scale but 15 bosses in the Association DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 193% Where Los A ngeles Jobless Forced-Labor Crew Was Cremated construction Finance “relief? of Griffith Park. Foremen An entire road-camp crew of 65, working under the Re- Tuesday ina fire which swept over approximately 1,000 acres ) under threats that they would | fused. Photo shows bodies of tion of Griffith Park swept by ’ scheme, was wiped out late forced the men to fight the fire | ina blind ravine. Brave Sergt. Boob Snatches Dailies Arrest Two Who Spread “Daily” to Ford Strikers men are estimated to have been trapped and burned to death In Ravine Fire. ae Patt get no more work if they re- road workers lying in the sec- the brushwoed fire. About 65 | Cafeteria Workers ‘in 3 Hanover Stores. Page Three TERROR INCREASED, LEADERS JAILED AS GUARDSMEN RULE NEW MEXICO STRIKE AREA 250 Join Walk Out at Dawson; Denied Permits for Relief Collections and Meetings; Strikers in Urgent Need of Aid | GALLUP, N, M., Oct. 5-—The National Guard is terrorizing and arresting | men, women and children participating in the strike of miners here. Those arrested include Barto, relief organizer; Correa, Mexican leader and sub- | district secretary of the National Miners’ Union; Allender, youth organizer of the union; Walkernegro Mentmore, local union president and a number os ———#of others. “Get. Down, or No srk B Dawson, New Mexico permit ‘or a@ mass meeting was Work,” Los Angeles Fire Victims Tol denied. Permits to collect relief and to hold a dance were also |City Park Commission Hears Story From Novarro, a Mexican leader, Was arrested and held incommunicado five days without any charge placed against him. An effort was jmade to get him to go back to |work which he refused. It is re- |ported that he was put on bread | LOS ANGE! denied, Survivors oS 5.—Foremen ance work at! e 69 men are either issing as a result of their late Tuesday afternoon, a fire in a canyon which veloped into a _ blazing to “ down quick if you| in there and get cx want any more wo These and other sational charges vere made to the City Park Commis- sion here today which began the usual official “investigation” into the | avoidable tragedy. One of the survivors of the doomed | land Water as a punishment. Three Mexican workers framed on charges fo assault are denied jury trials. The International La- bor Defense is active in defending all arrested workers and support- ing the fight for the rights of the striking miners. One worker was clubbed with a revolver by the Mutual Mine Bros. boss. He is noW out on forty dol- lars bail. One worker is in bed in a serious condition as a result of being at- tacked. fs any one group or class at the expense ' of another.” The relief office is patrolled by Walk Out on Strike :: signed up individually conceding all reed la'gr crew, A. G. Green, testi- Since the economic conditions of workers can be improved only at the expense of the capitalists, it becomes > still clearer what Miss Perkins, in her capacity of spokesman for the © Roosevelt administration, meant when > she said that “wage earners are to be permitted to make constructive » contributions to solving the economic problems.” : Miss Perkins cannot truthfully be - accused'of inconsistency. The same note—that of subordination of the + interests of labor to “the general of society with the capitalist class in the saddle, the middle class cling- ing to its stirrupleather, running fe: labor and leaving it to gather the dung scattered along the road— struck throughout her speech. Speaking of her own department, the Secretary said it “was created in the interest of the welfare of all the wage earners in the country, whether organized or unorganized.” Her definition of workers’ “welfare” was made clear in the next sentence: “It (the Department of Labor) must be administered in fairness be- tween worker and employer, between employer and employer, and between each and the public as a whole if it is to accomplish its seb purpose.” The best comment on this state- ment was made at the convention press table by a correspondent of one of the big news services. He said: “The lady used the word ‘worker’ ize and the word ‘employer’ three Limes in that short outline of the policy of the Labor Department.” It is the intens'cn of this article ‘to shatter the fiction that Frances Perkins has any conception of the role of the working class and its or- ganizations that does not fit into the N. R. A. program for their incorpora~ tion into the state machinery of im~- t perialism, It is necessary to do this since she was appointed to give color to the fiction that the Roosevelt ad- ministration is “for labor.” Her convention speech brought her out into the open—mainly because in great waves of strikes in basic in- dustry huge sections of the American working class are fighting for their right to independent existence, against the state-managed domina- tion the oficial leaders and the gov- ernment would force upon them. Just two more pieces of testimony from the Perkins’ lips: “For the influence of the wage workers of America for good goes good,” that is, to the present form, union demands, Two pickets were arrested for dis- orderly conduct when Jake Wolner, business agent of A. F. of L. local 102, Brooklyn, put scabs to veck un- der police protection at a shop on strike. Police arrested the pickets when they were pointed out by Jake. All painters are urged to attend the trial of the pickets at the Coney Island Court, Wednesday, October 11, at 8th St. and Surf Ave. themselves and all groups—farmers- investors-bankers-educators, etc., will benefit from this kind of a contribu- tion. Their responsible relation to the modern state and its great in- dustrialism is taken for granted.” Miss Perkins is nothing if not re- spectable. Were she to be accused of consorting with gangsters and racketeers, of aiding and abetting union corruption and racketeering as a private individual, doubtless she would have her attorney file criminal libel charges against the vicious per- sons or publications guilty of such vile slanders. But as Secretary of Labor, in her official address to the A. F. of L. Convention, she delivered the follow- ing eulogy of one Edward Francis McGrady, state’s witness in New York courts against striking garment workers, paymaster of gangsters used to beat up workers, paymaster and procurer of perjury and perjurers used against workers, aider and abet- tor of police frame-ups against striking workers, their organizers and leaders, accomplice of Grover Whalen, Matthew Woll and William Green in splitting the ranks of workers in struggle against sweatshop condi- tions, gangsterism and corruption of the lowest kind: “And in this connection let me say to you that the Assistant Secretary of Labor, Edward F. McGrady, who is so well and favorably known -to you all, is doing a great service for the country as General Johnson's right hand man on labor affairs. He has been assigned to N. R. A, at Gen- eral Johnson’s special request by which the Department of Labor is honored. It is a distinction of which you all feel justly proud, I am sure. Speaking for myself I can assure you that the Department is fortunate in having such a capable official as Mr. McGrady.” It is not our fault if the lady chose to undress before the Fifty-Third Annual Convention of the A. F. of L. We merely report the facts. She to Stop the Sale: Attack Instigated by A. F. of L. Official; Spurn Harrison, N. J., Cop Bullies “Daily” Agent Despite Court Action | HARRISON, N. J.—The old battle} strikers, is on again. Chief of Police Peter| A. Brady of Harrison, N. J., is on the} rampage once more. His cops are) stopping the sale and distribution of | the Daily Worker, through the brave} and daring feats of Sargeant Sam} Boob. Stopping it, after the right) to sell and distribute the workers’ paper was established in the courts of Harrison. On September 13, Marion Laughlin, Daily Worker agent, was tried in Harrison courts for distributing the Daily Worker in front of the Cru- cible Steel Company, The charges against her were dropped through the response of the workers rallied by the International Labor Defense of Harrison to the trial. workers will commemorate the second Last Wednesday workers distrib-| ®Miversary of the brutal police mur- uting “Dailies” in front of the Worth-| der of two Negro workers. John Ray- ington Pump factory were stopped ford and Ed Jackson, with a militant by Police Sargeant Sam Boob. demonstration on October 6, for the insulted. and threatened the Daily demands for which they died: Ade- Worker Agent and two other workers | quate relief for all workers! No evic- handing out back copies of the Daily. tions! A home for every worker! Sam Boob demanded of one work-| Israel Amter, secretary of the Un- er, “Now aren't you ashamed of your- self distributing the Daily Worker ” This worker was on relief, getting $3 on which he has to support his) wife and four chilren. On Thursday, while Marion Laugh- lin was selling Daily Workers in ‘ ; front of the Crucible Steel plant, she | @ading 300 workers in putting back saw police in places she'd never seen the furniture of Mr. and Mrs. Foster them before. She gave a young Harp, who had been evicted from worker a copy of the Daily Worker their home in the heart of the Negro and was busy giving out others, when district at 2693 E. 47th Street, by along came Boob. Brave Sargeant Book came along the avenue in his| COU. Their murder was whitewashed oe ye | by the Republican city administration pales set aes aaron. ae which instead attempted to jail the right to give out or sell Daily Work- fatally wounded workers and several ers, and that she intended staying | Of their comrades, there until she gave them out. The daring Boob got out of his car; came over to Comrade Laugl and demanded a copy of the Daily As Marion relaxed her arm, he grabbed the papers, about 17 or 18, and rushed to his auto, Swiftly he drove up the avenue, stopped the young man who had accepted the Daily Worker, asked him if he had a copy. When he said “No,” Boob said that it would be just too bad for him if he did have one, Israel Amter to Speak at Memorial CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 5,—Cleveland be the main speaker. He will discuss “The Coming Winter—Unemployment and the N.R.A.” Rayford and Jackson were killed of Harrison will eat and drink and ad what the authorities want them to. workers of Harrison enjoy the new Daily Worker immensely, and that workers near the shops accept our paper eagerly. “We will continue to sell and give gut Daily Workers and break through this terror,” concludes the letter of Marion Laughlin, the way beyond the ranks of the workers got a big ovation, Sam Boob brags that the workers | Daily Worker agent in Harrison. | At the hearing last Monday Graham was released and Cooper was | Cleveland Workers’ to Honor Murdered, Negro Leaders Oct.6, employed Councils of the U. S., will! | Oct. 6, 1931, by police bullets while! bailiffs at the order of the municipal! | Marion Laughlin writes that the | Demand of Judge to Leave Town | | CHESTER, Pa., Oct. 5.—An official of the American Federation of Labor called police to arrest Graham and Jennie Cooper for speaking to striking Ford workers about the Daily Worker and pledging its support to the | charge of union members, workers in | clive dead | ered to Jeave the strike area. When | refused to leave’ Chester, the| ge held her for further investiga- | mn without bail. After three days in jail and with | numerous threats and intimidation, including finger printing, the judge held a special session at eleven thirty last night and released her. V. M. Mullin of the International | Labor Defense threatened to start} habeas corpus proceedings if Cooper was not released, NEWS BRIEFS Blind Beggar Charged With Cruelty to Dog. NEW YORK.—Ray Edens, a, blind beggar who frequents the theatre districts in New York, was arrainged before Magistrate | ; Louis Brodsky when brought to court by a summons from the Association to Prevent Cruelty | to Animals. The Association de- manded that the dog should have | hospital treatment, and not be dragged around the Great White “What about the blind beggar?” Edens received a suspended sen- ; tence, Way by the blind man. We ask, | \17 Strikers Arrested on Old Injunction NEW YORK.Protesting the dis-| three of the eight cafeterias of the} Hanover chain came out on strike| on Wednesday. The strike is led by| the Food Work Industrial Union. | The strikers’ dei ds include the re- instatement of all strikers, no dis- crimination against union members, a 25 per cent increase in wages, the right to organize, no split watch and no reduction in wages for meals. The cafeterias on strike are located at 126 W. 32nd St., 61 Whitehall St. and 369 Lexington Ave. At 61 White- hall St., where the entire day and night crew walked out, the Marine Workers’ Industrial Union rendered valuable assistance. Seventeen strikers have been arrested as a result of the re- vival of an old iujunztion obtained already | \fied at the hearing that the men “were pushed into going down into the Box Canyon,” where they were frapped. Others bitterly accused | straw bosses of ordering them down the slope. The identification of the Ss given up as a hopeless task by Coroner Frank Nance, who ordered the bodies cremated. Immediately after the tragic, cri- minal fire, Ralph Scott, Los Angeles fire chief, characterized the burning | to death of the unemployed workers | as “involuntary suicide.” Police today announced that Robert D. Barr, who yesterday was arrested for suspicion of arson did not cause the fatal blaze. He did however ad- mit, according to the police, that he started a fire in the park later in the evening. Told officials to lo- cate a fire in the r ational center and unable to find it, Barr started a fire of his own, police say. | by the bosses’ association and issued | against the Amalgamated Food Work- ers. A mass meeting in support of the cafeteria str is being called at | Bryant Hall, h Ave. at 41st St. tonight at 8 p.m. sharp. All cafe- teria and restaurant workers are urged to attend the meeting where the code ings will also be discussed, “Bury Depression” in Buffalo Plants Increase Lay Offs BUFFALO, N. Y.—Four weeks ago Man Embezzles $9,000. PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Jame: Gledhill pleaded guilty of em 39,000 from the Railway n to protect pri- j vate Gledhill was once civic leader of Penn Delaware County, ani fo ch Ecuador Voleano Erupts. GUAYAQUIL, Ecuador. San Vincente Volcano suddenly be- gan erupting boiling hot water af- ter fifty earth tremors in 24 hours shook the coastal region here. By HENRY PURO pera under and taking out of production 10,304,000 acres of cot- ton and 9,600,000 acres of wheat, the slaughtering of 5,000,000 pigs, and even the “intervention of Nature” in the form of a drought, which has re- dyyed the wheat crop by 500,000,000 bt fels, has not eliminated the farm : the agrarian crisis is deepening. George N. Peek, the chief administrator of the ~ cultural Adjustment Act, is compel | to admit the “loss of purchasing | power” of the masses and that “bread- _) lines become coincident with plenty,” Secretary of Wallace .admits that the “farmers situation has become worse” because the gap between what he gets from his products and what he has to pay for the goods he needs has become greater. 7 These two men are the chief ad- ministrators of Roosevelt's New Deal for the farmers. Their state its constitute in essence the admittance of the wae of moe poceera Lain course, actually they admit its failure, but are trying to bolster up the hopes of the | lar. ‘Who has profited by the artificial boosting of prices brought about by the destruction of cotton and food products and by instituting the vari- ous codes (milk codes, etc.)? Specu- lating food trusts and marketing wonopolies are the ones now making fabylous profits. Mr. Peek himself admits that of “fifteen companies re- porting the corporate profits in this country in 1932, nine dealt in food and tobacco, Our biggest to- bacco com} reported last year a total net profit of about $150,000,000. ‘That was almost as great as the en- to American hacco crop.” The result is that the price of bread, milk, wearing apparel and other necessities of life has gone soaring sky high, making life ever harder for even those workers and farmers who still have a few inflated dollars. On the other hand, bankers, and food trust and marketing specu- Jators have made ever greater profits under the New Deal. For the great army of unemployed workers and penniless farmers, from whom even meager relief has been cut out, the New Deal means “new starvation.” Southern cotton growers, who a few months ago compelled their share- 2 ‘Washington, demanding Roosevelt ® new inflation of the dol- A great number of farmers, who did not participate in the great wave of struggles of the past ten months, adopted a “wait and see” attitude, giving Roosevelt “a chance.” They now begin to realize, that their last hopes are gone. They are becoming militant; they begin to look for new i mittee of Action and the affiliated committees . and organizations, is bound to find even greater response from the toiling population of the countryside than did the First Farm- ers Conference a year ago. This Conference will take up the question of immediate relief for all impoverished farmers, the question of struggle against new mass evictions, which will inevitably take place when the bankers and insurance companies with the aid of Roosevelt's Farm Credit Administration begin new fore- closures, This Conference will also prepare real militant mass strikes against starvation prices and will mobilize farmers in joint struggles with the workers against the robbery of food and market speculators and profiteers, The Communist Party gives its wholehearted support to the Farmers Second National Conference and will do everything on its part to make it @ success, Our Party emphasizes the great necessity of all toiling farmers unit- ing their ranks for greater struggle for immediate relief. leadership to and lead them in a fight for their demands, of the new militant move- ments among the farmers, Milo Reno, self-nominated leader of the National Holiday Association, speakers about “the necessity of extending the NRA to agriculture,” threatening that if this is not done, “there is no possi- bility of postponing longer the strike scheduled for last spring, which was delayed only to give the administra- tion a chance to make good its prom- ises.’ ‘This arch-betrayer, who last spring arbitrarily called off the national farm strike even before it began, on the basis of Roosevelt's proposed Agri- cultural Adjustment Act, is now try- ing to retain his leadership of the farmers. He tries to make them be- lieve that the wage-cutting NRA would remedy the farmers’ situation, if it were extended to agriculture. Hasn't the NRA been extended to agriculture? It has. What about the Milk Codes, which have tremendously raised the prices for the consumers and greatly increased the profits of the milk trusts? But the program of Roosevelt 1s | not directed towards the relief of the unemployed workers and needy farm families. His efforts are directed to- wards destroying food and the other life necessities, in order that prices may be raised for the benefit of the bankers and their agents. The meagre $75,000,000 that Roosevelt now pro- poses to use to buy farm products for the distribution for the unemployed, is like a drop in the ocean. This being the situation of the farmers, the Second Farmers Na- tional Conference, which is to meet in Ch'eago on November 15-18. at the call of the Farmers National Com- It is necessary for the toiling farm- ers in their Chicago Conference, to voice the strongest protest against the murderous attacks on the farms and at the same time to lay down plans for mass defense against these fascist actions. The Conference must especially take up the defense of the Negro sharecroppers in the South and give every support for their liberation struggle. It is necessary also that the Con- ference will explain fully how capi- talist officials and fascist elements in Yakima Valley, Washington, provoked fight between striking agricultural Fariners Prepare National Conference to Fight Ruin Organize Against Inflationary Costs of Farm Necessities, and for Slashing of Monopoly Wall Street Profits workers and the toiling farmers in order to declare martial law and at- tack against both groups of toilers and arrest and brutally best their leaders and prevent the United Farm- ers League State Conference to meet, The Yakima Valley incident must be a valuable lesson of the necessity of real unity between the agricultural workers and the impoverished farm- ers, The considerable section of the farmers already being to lose -their confidence not oniy in the Roosevelt government, but in the capitalist par- ties. In this juncture the reformist politicians and social fascist come forward with their proposals for the necessity of the new party, offering it in the form of various names, e.g. Progressive Party, Peoples Party, So- cialist Party, Farmer-Labor Party. And there are many workers and farmers who believe that this may be the way out. Here we Communists want to issue a solemn warning. This is only the new way for the agents of the bourgeoisie to induce the toil- ers to continue to support the ex- ploiting capitalist system. The his- tory of these parties in European countries has clearly demonstrated this fact. Experience in this country also shows unmistakably that the promoters of these parties are noth- ing but the agents, of the big ex- ploiting class. It is therefore necessary, that the toiling farmers, while carrying on militant mass struggles for their im- mediate economic demands, give their of the Railway Express Co. They Demand Cancellation of Mortgage Debts, Which Roosevelt Program Has Clamped Tighter Than Ever thousand peo} ourial.” cf tl | On tl sy | ¢ from 1 to 4 ho | from 10 to 20 hours a e from $6 to $10 a week in pay. nts| for the cancella- debts, Party, which fig) tion of farme: inst the evictions, sheriff sales an or thi immediate relief, and really un promisingly and honestly fights these interests of the toiling farm- ers and which aims to do away with | the system of mortgages, evictions, | and starvation, The important task of our Party now is to help the militant farmers’ organizations to mobilize broad dele- gations and support for the Second Farmers National Conference. Every state of the union must be pene- trated. It is not sufMicient that only those farmers are to be represented who have already been organized into the left-wing and progressive farmers / organizations or for the militant Farmers Committees of Action. It is | necessary to penetrate new masses of unorganized farmers as well as the rank and file farmers in the old line ay to be presented to the N. R. A. hear- | political support to the Communist | | guardsmen ithe in order to intimidate strikers. Relief is very low and is urgently needed. Funds and relief should be sent to: National Miners Union, Box 218, Gallup, |New Mexico. | : New York RED PRESS BAZAAR —FOR— @ Daily Worker @ Morning Freiheit {| Comrade MAC HARRIS |] touring for the Daily Worker will be’ in the following cities |} on the dates listed below: \f up to October 14: Los Angeles, San || Diego, San Bernandino, Pasa- | dena, Hollywood, Long Beach. |] October 15 to 19: Oxnard, Ventura, |} Santa Barbara. |} October 20 to 27: Monterey, Santa || Cruz, Watsonville, Salinas and Carmel. OUT. OF TOWN AFFAIRS FOR THE loxker wniet Party USA Chicago OCT. 7th: Party Ent W.LR. he: | sion St | Concert an ce given by Unem- ployed Co No. 5 ‘kers Center, 3348 W. Div dmis. sion 15c. | Detroit | \{ OCT. 7th.: | Big Dance at Magnolia Hall, 28th Street and Magnolia Ave. Admis- sion 10c. Good Music, Beer, Revere, Mass, OCT. 8th: ka, Workers Center, enue, at 8 o'clock, : Philadel ANTI-WA HENRI BARBUSSE Famous French Novelist CLARENCE HATHAWAY Communist Party of U. S. and Editor of Daily Worker ! R MASS MEETING Friday, October 6th, 8 P. M. Rabbi Wm.H. FINESHRIBER Report of Delegates to the Anti-War Congress TURNGEMEINDE HALL, Broad and Columbia Avenue @ Young Worker, | Friday, Saturday, Sunday OCT. 6, 7, 8 ADMISSION Friday and Sunday. | Saturday .. | Lit. Fund .. Total for Sat... . 50c With Advance Ticket Obtainable At Every Organization, 10 Cents Less At The Door, Combination Ticket for All 60 CENTS 3 Days DANCING EVERY NIGHT | To the Tune of VERNON ANDRADE’S ORCHESTRA ; NATIONAL PRESS BAZAAR COMMITTEE i 30 Bast 13th Street (¢th floor} New Yotk City Telephone: ALgonquin 4-9481 | | | | | phia, Pa. TOM MANN Veteran Leader of British Labor Movement DAVID H. H. FELIX Socialist Party farm organizations, CHICAG Nor do the farmers demands need to wait for a conference. The Con-, ference preparations and the elections j of delegates must be done in the course of waging local struggles all over the country, on the united front basis. The conference preparations | must be utilized for the strengthen- ing of the farmers’ militant organi- zations and organizing the united front action committees, building up the circulation of farmers militant papers and recruiting the best ele- ments of the toiling farmers into the Communist Party 4825 N. Kedzie, 4 P.M.—Grand Concert, Dancers, John Reed Club 8 P. M—Dance, Supper, Dance, ADMISSION 25c, CELEBRATE 14th ANNIVERSARY OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY Sun., Oct. 8, 4 p.m., Albany Park Workers’ Center —VARIED PROGRAM—- Mass Revolutionary Chorus, Ukrainian 6 P. M—tLecture, History of the Communist Party—B. SHIELDS, Auspices:; Communist Party, Section 5 0, ILL, near Lawrence Sketch, Many Novel Features. 4%

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