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“Phila. Dockers Meet! Endorses Own Code _ Set Up Action Group to Lead Fight PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Four hun- dred longshoremen, members of the International Longshoremen’s Asso- ciation, took steps here to set up & Central Action committee to lead the lJongshoremen in the fight against the proposed code of the bosses and union officials. The men cheered the rank and file delegate who reported on Ryan’s secret negotiations with the bosses and N. R. A. Loud “ayes” were their answer to the call to prepare for strike, to win their demands. ‘The men endorsed the strike of the San Francisco longshoremen. A code proposed by the National Ac- tion Committee of the I. L. A. Rank and File, was voted upon point by point. It calls for the return of 1932 gangs, reduction in size of drafts, to be determined by the men; $1 an hour and 6 hour day, federal unem- ployment insurance, rank and file control of all negotiations and the right to strike to enforce the de- mands. A vigorous protest was sent to Ryan for his holding of secret meet~- ings with the bosses. A mass meet- ine will be held to set up a central body, this Saturday at 312 South Second Street at 10 a. m. Polish Jongshoremen are called to a meeting Sunday at 3039 Solomon Street, Richmond at 2.30 p. m. TRADE UNION DIRECTORY... CLEANERS, DYERS AND PRESSERS UNION 283 Second Avenue, New York City Algonquin’ 4-4267 FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 4 West 18th Street, New York City Chelsea 3-0505 FURNITURE WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 818 Broadway, New York City Gramercy, 5-8956 METAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 95 East 19th Street, New York City Gramercy 7-7842 NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 181 West 28th Street, New York City Lackawanna 4-4010 EMIL NYGARD First Communist Mayor Will Speak at the Concert Given by the Coney Island Workers Club 2tth Street and Mermaid Avenue Brooklyn Saturday, Oct. 21st, at 8 P. M. MOISSAYE J. OLGIN Will Lecture On Take Up in Every A. F. of L. Local the Socia National Com mittee Speaks for 1,200 Local Unions NEW YORK.—The demands of the | A. F. of L..committee for Unemploy- | ment Insurance and Relief, repre-| senting 1,200 local unions of the A. F. of L, which were rejected at the| A, F. of L. convention without a} hearing or discussion, should be raised in all A. F. of L. local unions, said Louis Weinstock, secretary of| the commitiee. The committee, head-| ed by Weinstock was ejected from| the A. F. of L, convention hall. “The) program calls for the organization by the A. F. of L. of a general struggle | on a nation-wide scale for the Work- ers Unemployment and Social Insur- ance Bill, and for its incorporation in all codes, and the initiation of united front conferences for the adoption of the bill,” Weinstock stated. The pro- gram should be discussed and acted on in all local unions, he said. The rank and file of the A. F. of L,. demands revision of all codes up- wards monthly to meet rising living costs; special provisions in all codes to decrease the inhuman speed-up system now practiced on workers; the enforcement by all effective methods of the unrestricted rights to organize, strike and picket, for free speech, and assemblage for workers, and against compulsory arbitration and injunctions. “The A. F. of L. Trade Union Com- mittee for Unemployment Insurance and Relief calls on the A. F. of L. as its national policy to carry out mass violations by the A. F. of L. and its affiliated unions, of injunc- tions which are against these ele- mentary rights of the workers,” said Weinstock. The statement of the Unemploy-| ment committee calls for the imme- diate withdrawal of all A. F. of L. officials from all N.R.A. boards and) committees, “since the actions of the | A. F. of L, officials as labor repre- sentatives are detrimental to labor DATLY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBRR 21, 1933 ‘Build Wide Front of Workers for U MOBILIZE | Insurance Bill The Party in last Red Cross baskets. cinct workers have been instructed to drop scores of s in their ter- ritory, using their own judgment as to which cases these should be. Wholesale evictions are taking place. Relief is being drastically cut. Home relief is coming to an end. Work relief at low rates of pay and for a totally inadequate number of hours is taking its place. In the face if this situation why has the unemployed work of the Party so seriously slumped in the New York district—and in other dis- tricts? The reasons are many. 1, The propaganda of the “New Deal” and of N.R.A. has affected a section of the Party membership. In the beginning, even some leading lo- cal comrades believed that the prq- visions of the recovery act were su that we would not be able to oppose it. The analysis of the Party seemed to clear them up—but not for long. In the Bronx, a comrade is waiting for the “new Party line.” This com- rade believes that the Open Letter | does not meet the situation. But the Open Letter is just the answer to the N.R.A—and no “new line” is needed. What applied when the Open Letter was written applies now, ith even greater vigor. Opportunistic Analysis and serve the interests of the em-| ployers, as proven in their actions} in signing such codes as coal, auto, | ete.” The program also calls for “the | | repudiation of all anti-strike agrec- | | ments, such as the supplement to the| coal: code, and struggle against all | attempts to make this a policy for| United States labor.” Weinstock stated that “The A. F. Insurance and Relief demands a} fight against all forms of company) unionism, both open and concealed, | and the formation of united com- mittees of action representing all| groups of workers, against company | unionism and against company spy “What's Happening In_ || and private police systems. We de-| Russia?” This Afternoon at 3 o’clock WORKERS SCHOOL | 35 East 12th Street, 3rd floor Questions. Admission 200. Tuesday, Oct. 24, 8:30 P.M. | workers, and the condemnation and} | clal section assuring | mand the elimination from all union | | constitutions and by-laws of all sec- | tions discriminating against Negro removal of all open and covered re-| strictions upon the right of the} Negro workers to hold official posi- | tions in the union. We demand the incorporation into all codes of a spe-| equality for Negro workers in the right to jobs of L. Committee for Unemployment | ¢ Certain workers temporarily have had their wages increased, some new workers have received jobs. Some comrades have come to the conclu- sion that capitalism therefore is on the upgrade once more—that unem- ployment is a back issye. A new early crash and a rapidly mounting cost of living will follow, sharpening ituation as never before. The is of the comrades is oppor- is keeping the Party the situation and the tunistie and from i meeting a big job ahead in clarifying the membership, for without this the work on no field will go forward. 2. The Open Letter has been ap- plied in a one-sided manner. The Open Letter correctly declares, as did the 14th Plenum Resolution of the; Central Committee two years ago, that the main channel of the Party work is shop and trade union work. The Open Letter, however, also lays | down as a basic task the organiza- tion of the unemployed and a vigor- ous fight for relief and unemploy- ment insurance. into shop work, leading many strike and Work Among Jobless Must Overcome Burocracy; Organize the Movement Around Demands of Workers Relief pre- @— ‘The Party in New York has swung} New York By I. AMTER L ‘The analysis of the New York situation applies to mamy districts, and therefore the following articles should be dismissed by each District Com- mittee. The relief authorities of New York City have removed more than 50,000 families from the relief rolls. On September 22, 35,000 families received their mass of the unemployed. . c) The consequence is that the Party does not know the immediate issues in the neighborhoods—issues on which the workers can be mobil- ized and will straggle. Grip of Isolation For instance, there is no question | that the Workers Relief Ordinance represents the immediate needs of the workers of New York. But if we cannot get the workers to struggle for it, then as an issue it strikes no roots. This is due to the failure of the Unemployed Council, through its isolation, to find out the imme- diate issue that can arouse the neighborhood. For example, in Pitts- burgh, in one section it was milk for the children; in another, shoes for the children—and Pittsburgh also has a Workers Relief Ordinance. A demand has meaning only in so far as it can mobilize workers for strug- gle. That must be our starting point and guide in getting the workers in- to action. Through struggle on the ESCAPED MILITIA HERBERT BENJAMIN, National Organizer for the Unemployed Councils, who was arrested in Gal- lup, N. M., while addressing the picket line, escaped from the mili- tary stockade where he was incar- cerated by the militia. To date the military have found no trace of Benjamin, who success- fully cheated the stockade of its FRATERNAL MOVEMENTS I. W. O. Branches in Fight for Social Insurance By MAX BEDACHT The International Workers Order is at present organizing a united front of fraternal organizations for social insurance. This campaign is a very important one. Every member of the Order must participate in it. The campaign means that the Interna- tional Workers Order is occupying that sector of the class struggle front which logically is its duty to defend. The fraternal movement and char- ity have been in the past the excuse of the bourgeoisie for their refusal of social insurance. Through the mouths of their political spokesmen, the Republican Hoover and the Dem- ocrat Roosevelt alike, they have again and again emphasized that the relief of the mass misery caused by mass unemployment is not a social duty to be fulfilled by the government, but is} the duty of private charity and in- dividual efforts. In accord with this theory, the bourgeois fraternal organ- izations have ever been opposed to social insurance. For them the fra- ternal movement became an aim in itself. When the issue of social in- surance was raised, they asked, “What will become of our organizations when social insurance becomes a practice?” Their demagogic porpaganda tried tg close the eyes of the masses to the fact that these individual efforts and ery are totally inadequate. They re- ject the obvious conclusion that any misery caused by social conditions re- quires social efforts for relief. Because the bourgeois fraternal movement was not based upon the principles of mutual help among workers, but was based upon other so-called principles, such as a certain religious denomination, or a certain patriotic conception, or a certain brand. of mysticism, they were always able to develop some abstract organ- n 5 even the collective fraternal efforts} of all the sufferers from social mis-| Page Three employment Insurance A Baby Dies of Starvation 250 Buffalo Rubber SPR t ety Tak Wisee scr S ninn ines tome | ORMOND. CAD SUE of Ruth and Lee Whyde of 215 Detroit St., died at the Kelley Hospital . aS Saturday, October 7. Hospital attaches said the child died of starvation. |Fight NRA Starvation Betty Joan was one of eight children of the Whyde family, ranging | between the ages of 5 and 20 years, all live at home. This worker ved on| Wage, Speed-Up the basket system for some time, and reported to No. 10 Council of the} creel National Unemployed Council, of which he is a member, that he has never; BUFFALO, N. ¥., Oct, 20—While been getting enough food in the basket. | a committee of workers was present- His basket. was raised 2 numbers with additional milk for the baby, as | ing demands to the superintendent of a result of the activity of No. 10 Council. The milk was cut off a short|the U. 8. Rubber Reclaiming Oo., time later. The baby became ill, and was taken to Kelley Hospital where | workers of four shifts were outside i. aera the mill gates and one shift was in- the child died a short time later. The father gave two blood transfusions, | side waiting to hear the company’s but this did not help. | ‘The body was taken to the Willison funeral home, then was taken to see igen tates cocina tie tompacy the trustee’s undertakers Roystons and Askiens and was brought to the| answer, the last shift was outside home at 215 Detroit St., where preparations were made by the National|the mill and the 250 workers in the Unemployed Council and members of the Communist Party for the services. | Plant had tied it up completely. Two wreaths of roses and liclies were sent, one from the No. 10 Council and} The strike was the result of several one from the Party members. | weeks of intensive organizational pre- . | parations ably carried through by a whic | group of workers from various de- A wreath, which bore the | Dartments and shifts. Under the le was placed on the casket NRA, the speed-up which had been in co-operation with the | steadily intensified in the past few hh on the casket, that this | years, was not lessened and although | hours of work were shortened, wages eeks of almost every comrade | Went down, the majority of the work- ers receiving no more than $10. Some were earning no more than $340 = workers’ flag was draped over the casket workers’ emblem, the hammer and the s with these words: “We, the Communist Party National Unemployed Council place this wrea may not happen again.” ‘There were tears streaming down the ch and friend, as the conductor led the choir in singing Solidarity and the | Workers’ Flag. A “Times” reporter took pictures and wrote an article, but | peey did not print it because of the false statements from the doctors and the | = nurse, who are trying to place the blame on this worker as neglect and | Bip pcni petro kag improper care. This worker raised a family of 10, and surely this child) workers included recognition af the did not die from improper care or neglect by the mother. | plant and department committees of An acid was used in the milk for this child and several statements have | the Rubber Workers’ Industrial Union, | been made that the acid did not agree with the child, and caused the child| 8 flat increase of 16 cents an hour to become ill, by following the orders of the doctor, and the cutting off of | for all workers, wages to be paid the milk by the trustees, ‘The baskets do not contain sufficient food for a| i cash, no fines for tardiness or fail- week's supply and the trustees have admitted the fact, but nothing has been | peat aa pgeckotibe ol bea done about it so far. - half for Sundays and holidays as as other demands, . . . (OUNCIL members have been arrested on several occasions demanding | food, clothing and shelter; several fights have occurred in the trustee's | office over the same demands. | Many things have been done to outdo the workers, while the McNut | and the Petters politicians fight over the next election and nothing ts being done to feed the people; while the Kingbuns Slaughter House destroys | | thousands of pounds of meat a day. A MONEY MAKER FOR YOUR ORGANIZATION SOVIET FILMS ON 16 MAL FEATURES AND SHORTS May Be Shown in Your Clb or Hall Write te ‘Munorleans Crew (Heavy Lay-Off in Strike for Back [Youngstown Steel] owuzceor™, Pay and Increase Mills; Output Down | ~~ [uc =. eat ee ate Marine Workers Union '[Loeal Finance Writers|— Leads Baltimore | Very Pessimistic | | Walkout Over Future | HARLEM PROGRESSIVE YOUTH CLUB izational loyalty of the membership. This loyalty was not based upon the fraternal service of the organization, | but it was built around the so-called principle—the religion, the patriot- ism, the mysticism, etc. Because of this organizational loyalty the bour- geois leadership often succeeded in winning the membership+for their stand against social insurance on the ground that social insurance would obviate the necessity of their organ- ization. At present, however, this source of strength of the bourgeois leadership of the workers in the fraternal move- ment is disappearing. The workers now learn the inadequacy of mutual help as a remedy for social evils. They learn that more is required than mutual help. They begin to realize that struggles are necessary against these social evils. The first thing they realize is the | need of struggle for social help where presents Two Great Events for the Benefit of the Daily Worker This Saturday Night Concert and Dance GOOD PROGRAM NEGRO JAZZ BAND This Sunday Night Dr. Paul Luttinger will Lecture on “SEX AND YOUTH” 8:30 P.M. Harlem Progressive Youth Club 1538 Madison Ave., New York City | BALTIMORE, Md., Oct. 20.—The| \crew of the S. 8. Munroleans, Mun-| YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Oct. 20. — \son Line steamer, struck yesterday | On top of layoffs in Bessemer, gal- |for back wages and increase in pay | V@nizing and other departments, Re- lrates. The strike was pulled by the| Public layed off 125 open hearth Marine Workers Industrial Union | laborers this morning and told them | | which with the Waterfront Unem-/ it would call them when they were | ployed Councils have taken action to | needed again. | | prevent shipment of scabs. A. call| Only 4 open hearth furnaces are has been issued to the jobless sea- | operating. Steel production in this ‘men to stand solid with the crew. _| district has taken another 5 per cent Officials of the International] drop. The financial writers in the | Longshoremen refused to support local papers are pessimistic. They |the strike, but the longshoremen | can’t see any outlook for much im- walked off the dock refusing to| provement in the situation. Railroad handle cargo on the struck ship. | buying has not come through and * ° . | automobile production is going down | NEW YORK.—The Waterfront) steadily. Unemployed Council and the M. W.| The Steel and Metal Workers Tn- LU. issued a joint teaflet here on | dustrial Union is calling upon all the | the 8. 8. Munroleans strike, waning | layed-off workers to come up to the | against attempts to get scabs. Sea-| union headquarters at 266 East Fed-/ men are watching the shipping of-|eral, join the unemployed branch of| fices tc prevent any scab recruiting.|the union, and take part in a fight) Delegates will try to strike the|for more relief from the city and) Munson ships now in or due in this| state, and federal unemployment in- OUT OF TOWN AFFAIRS and for the same wages and hours | of labor.” Lad mutual help cannot solve the problem | any more. They learn that aside from | ‘t in the next few da) | surance. s against the at- to stop the activities of the CHARLES RECHT ._, Will Speak on These demands, which Weinstock} ,..,° cn oo «| the Sick insurance that they can or- “Soviet Russia Today” |} deciared the only means of building) the ey Pat) The te ee immediate issues, the workers feel| 8anize among themselves, they need | . . FOR THB at ante lagise tee ces cle ties pr St. |] and strengthening the American la-| jing and leading the struggles of the| confidence in the organization and | unemployment insurance which they | in Soviet Russia e bor movement, include: special pro-| unemployed, on the other hand, has| can then be led in struggle for enact- | cannot organize. They learn that) ® Dail = tection in all codes for young work-| fajien into a slump, in spite of the} ment of the Relief Ordinance. aside from those mutual aids that | there are Torgsin stores in over Contd ‘Party USA Boston Daily Worker Mass Meeting EARL BROWDER General Secretary of the Communist Party, U. will speak SATURDAY, OCT. 2ist Dudley St. Opera House 113 Dudley Street, Roxbury, at8 P.M. ADMISSION 25 CENTS Auspices: Boston District Daily Worker Financial Campaign Committee America’s First Communist Mayor FMII. NYGARD Crosby, Minn. speaks at the great Election Rally Scandinavian Hall 5111 Fifth Ave. B’lyn, N.Y. (Over Milton’s Store) Sunday, October 22 Robert Minor Communist Candidate for Mayor in New York City, will present the LICENSE NOTICES NOTICE is hereby given that License Num- ber NYB14127 has been issued to the undersigned to sell beer and wine at retail, under Section 76 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law at 70 Clinton ers, elimination of all child labor; against forced labor of all kinds in- | cluding reforestation, etc., and union | wages on all relief and public work; | drastic lowering of union dues and re-instatement of all those expelled | from the A. F. of L. because unem-| ployed or because they differed on} policy with the leaders; reduction of all officials’ salaries; genuine trade union democracy and full rights of minorities; and a fight to wipe out racketeering and gangsterism in the| unions. Weinstock, summarizing these de-| mands, said, “Such a policy alone can enable the unions to lead the millions of American workers in vic- torius struggle against the drive on ‘their wages and working conditions and the attempts to legalize in this country, under the N.R.A., a coolie standard of living, and to hamstring the unions and make them ineffec- tive by incorporating them into the machinery of the employers and the government.” ‘The Committee calls for the unity of all the workers, no matter what union they are in, or whether un- organized, in the struggle for these demands. On the question of the N.R.A., Weinstock stated, “The Na- tional Recovery Act is the central part of the plan of the Roosevelt administration and the banking and employing interests it represents, to solve the crisis at the expense of the industrial workers and in all sec- tions of the toiling population. The basic purpose of the N.R.A. is to legalize and place the full power of the government back of the work sharing, starvation sharing plan, evolved by Walter Teagle of the Standard Oil Co, and William Green; to lower the standard of liv- ing of the working class under guise of shortening hours and increasing wages. The N.R.A. substitutes this illusory scheme for the one method that would surely alleviate to some extent the present destitute condi- tion of millions of jobless workers and their dependents — compulsory federal insurance for all workers at the cost of the employers and the government.” Weinstock showed that the N.R.A. since it began operations, has tried to choke off strike struggles, institut- ed terror against the workers, raised the cost of living and increased speed-up. The union burocrats, he Bt, New York City, to be consumed ‘upon the said premises. David Schwarts- man, New York, N. ¥. said, have since increased their ter- rorization against rank and file mil- recognition that mass unemployment is a permanent phenomenon at this stage of capitalism. Shop work and the building of the industrial unions together with building the left oppositions in the reformists unions must go hand in hand with the build'ng of the Un- employed Councils and leading joint struggles, The unemployed have been on the picket lines, aiding the shop workers in their struggles. With the sagging of the unemployed work, strike - breaking automatically in- are endangered. 3. There is open disbelief that Un- employment and Social Insurance can be won. There is the idea that unemployment insurance is only an agitational slogan, or, as one com- rade states, “something to worry the capitalist with at times.” If in 29 states during the past winter un- employment insurance bills were in- troduced; if Roosevelt admits that millions will never return to work; if the predictions of Johnson, Green and Roosevelt that 6,000,000 would return by Labor Day have not ma- terialized; and if the figures of pro- duction and consumption show that the line is downward, then it is clear that there is not only the need of unemployment insurance, but the necessity of mobilizing all forces to struggle for the Workers Unemploy- ment Insurance Bill. This is lacking in the New York District. ‘These are the main political issues hampering the development of our unemployed work and not only in New York. Now as to our methods of work, 4, Bureaucracy is widespread in the unemployed movement in New York. There is direct appointment and removals of Unemployed Council functionaries by the Party Commit- tees. These functionaries are re- sponsible not fo the masses but to the Party Committees. As a result we witness the following: a) The leading functionaries warm the seats in the headquarters “wait- ing for cases,” and giving directions and orders, instead of being in the neighborhoods, helping the less de- veloped comrades in the work, and themselves canvassing, organizing, leading the workers in the neighbor- hood struggles. b) This brings about an {solation of the leaders from the struggle, and, because of the inexperience of the other comrades, isolation of the Un- itants inside the A. F. of L. creases, so that the strike struggles employed Councils from the great | fizst d) As a result of our isolation, the work consists chiefly of agitation. | SUPPly, they need old age pensions, | If in an eviction case, however, a worker's furniture is on the street and the comrades can think of noth- ing better to do than to hold an election campaign meeting in front of the house, they only drive away the workers. Agitation is nec- essary in our work, better agitation than at the present time—but it must be accompanied by persistent struggle. As against this, we have the exam- ple of a single comrade who recently was assigned to the West Side. This comrade found a longshoreman who faced eviction. The comrade went down to the waterfront, held a meet- ing of longshoremen, and discovered that a number of them also had re- ceived eviction notices. From this meeting he went back to the house of the first longshoreman, held a meeting “f about 200, elected a dele- gation to go to the landlord, a Wall Street bank, raised hell there, re- ; turned to the West Side and together with the. longshoremen made prep- arations to prevent this eviction. Up to the present, our meetings were greeted with bricks and vege- tables. The workers did not see us in action. Now. action was being planned, and the throwers of the bricks, boys belonging to a Catholic boys club, have been neutralized, and contacts with a few of them have been established. What has changed the situation? The work of a single comrade with a lot of initiative who not only agitated but went into ac- tion. This has won the support of the workers and will lead to organ- ization and further struggle. (TO BE CONTINUED) Suspended Sentences for the Diamond Cement Strikers BALTIMORE, Md. (By Mail).— Four seamen, who participated in the strike of the S. 8, Diamond Cement, were given suspended sentences of 60 days in criminal court here. ‘The court was forced by the able defense of the seamen and the mass protest to withdraw the jail term originally given. The chief witness of the prosecution was the former third officer, Samuel Elgin of the ship, who turned against his fellow- officers and seamen to scab. He has been rewarded hy being made ist offices an effective workers’ fraternalism can they need maternity insurance, they need a social insurance which secures their existence no matter what may portunity to make a living by selling their labor power. Important Issues That is why social insurance at present is such an important issue for the working class. That is why also social insurance at this moment interfere with their ability or op-| | orders enable your relatives in Soviet Russia to purchase all sorts of domestic or imported ervicles at low prices. 1,000 localities. Torgsin orders may be sent to anyone, in ony | For orders on Torgsin apply to your | quantity. local bank, companies listed below % or their authorized agents To Cities That ave ni | ama\ 4 GSIN stores, Torgsin | Amaigemsted Bets 2: your order by parcel post. Am-Derutra Transport Corp. American Express Co, Gdynia-America Line Hias Icor, Biro-Bidjan, Corp. Manufacturers Trust Co. Public Nat’ Bank & Trust Co. PRICES REDUCED about 50 Per Cent Oct. 2ist: Browder will speak at Daily Mass Meeting. Dudley St. Opera House, 113 Dudley St, Rox- bury. Youngstown, Ohio OCT. 21st: ‘Affair given by Unit 655 of OP. at Icor Center, 307 No. Walnut St. Cleveland, Ohio Uaternapecel, Workers: R.C.A. Commun‘cations, Inc, Union Tours, Inc. Hudson Co, National Bank, Ba} , N. J. The Pennsylvania Co, Phila Union Savings Bank, Pitts. Amalgamated Trust & Sav- ings Bank, Chicago becomes a rallying point of the pro- letarian elements in the fraternal movement against the bourgeois mis- leaders. And that is why a campaign for social insurance among the fra- ternal organizations, as now organ- ized Pe: ue International Workers Order, such importance for the whole working class. Because of the importance of this campaign the branches of the Inter- national Workers Order must not per- mit any meeting of their organization to go by without # serious discussion of the campaign, without a check-up on. the activities in the campaign, without a correction of mistakes made in the campaign and without decid- ing upon further steps to invigorate the campaign. Because of the importance of this campaign, every militant worker must become an active supporter of this campaign of the International Work- ers Order. Every militant worker in a bourgeois fraternal organization must make himself the organizer of left wing around the issue of social insurance. Every militant worker in @ bourgeois fraternal or; must make a fight for the admittance of the delegations of the International Workers Order for the raising of the issue of social insurance. Every lan- guage section of the International Bringing Chicago: 304 N. Michigan Blvd. All Arrangements for FROM THE SOVIET UNION to the United States and other countries can be made through “INTOURIST,” Inc., representatives in the U. S. A. of the Soviet State Travel Bureau FOR INFORMATION APPLY INTOURIST, inc. 545 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. OCT. 2ist: House Party at 12209 Holborn Ave. at 8 p.m. A good program has been arranged. Toledo, Ohio OCT. 21st: Progressive Whist Party given by Unit 7 and 9 at home of Tony Bell, 376 Pinewood Ave. pm. Bvery- body invited. Detroit REPRESENTATIVE m U.S.A | Se Fin dye moe nenttlew Yori RY. together with the Mea’s Polish Chamber of Labor are holding dance at 12415 Lonat, at 7.30 p.m. Adm. 15c. Door prizes, good music, good time. | Rockford, Ill. || OCT. 21st: Social held at 2613 8. 6th St., 8 pms | Good program. Relatives Mata; Mass. | oct, 2ande House Party, Musical home of Ed Wise, 4 Havelock St. Ausp.: American Workers Chorus. | at 7.30 p.m. Chelsea, Mass. OCT, 22nd: Dinner at Workers Center, 88 Hew- thorne St. at 2 pm. Adm. 35¢, Boston: 110 Boylston St. Chicago, M1. Workers Order must propagandize the workers of their respective language most intensely with the issue of so- cial insurance, The manifesto on so- cial insurance issued by the Conven- tion of the International Workers Or- der, which is available in various lan- guages, must be systematically dis- tributed at every meeting place of fraternal organizations of their re- spective languages. ‘This campaign must lead to the establishment of a broad united front which then will carry on the cam- paign for social insurance with the added forces which the participants of the united front will bring to the 129 EAST 34th STREET WORKINGMEN OF ALL COUNTRIES! You Need Natural, Undoped and Unprocessed Health Foods to Give You Health and Strength in Your Struggle for Power, Come to Our Store or Send for Our Health Guide Free.— HEALTH FOODS DISTRIBUTORS New York City. — Phone LExington 2-6926 OCT, 22nd: |] Los Angeles Section | Comrade MacHarris, touring tor the Daily Worker, with the great Soviet Film “Ten Days That Shock World” and “Bread” will be showr in the following cities on the dates Usted below for the benefit of the polly Workers Oct, 22 to 26 inclusive— Monterey, Santa Cruz | and Watsonville | Oct. 27—Carmel & (Near Lexington Avenue) scape reaaanes er quan ien Ce aLaoaen vill