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W YORK. SATURDAY, S SECTION HEADQUARTERS, 5 A.M. ON ELECTION DAY . Page Two _ WATCHERS DAILY WORKER, N TO VARIOU ed Compel NRA to Ask| tote Red Brent *e"/U. S$. Workers Hail |‘ UTTERS OF NEW YORK by dell‘4 Slaughter House’| i Industrial Union to tre Communist Party) Red Anniversary : Witness Says of Raid | ORK AAD 1 On Needle Union NEW YORK—More workers tak-| ing the stand Thursday identified _ Confab on Fur Co Militant Battle Put Up sai his» By Delegates Force T} |the seven gangsters on trial before World’s Records and Fun E Recognition clea: 1 ‘ | Judge Collins at the General Sessions eee { : ss a : y s j Court. Although they murdered two | aie are {E question thet George Saling was accustomed to being how they | prepa }and wounded several others in the | | boss-inspired raid on the Needle | ed was “How dees it feel to be the world’s best man in NEW YORK “ Needle Tr 1 = = | Trades headquarters last April, the | your specialty ?” . | gangsters are only cha: h “first ein easy idate Tells peeyirietete a vf | His s. the 120 yd. hurdles and he was not only Natio: ecov é lowing the militant y the union delegation a last ¥ ngs on the code Struggles rht Against Eviction, e writ the | capitalist p n bloody ction y the Ameri 1eir_plec w worl “The place looked like ” Moe Fineblatt, cler office testified yesterday. He described the room after the gang- sters had completed their fiendish job. Blood covered the floor, and | | Olym ad cleaned up field peting and his position was imp He had a run a disputed 14.277 on the day I spoke to him and on but world’s record holder as well. with Perey Beerd and Jack Keller com- He regnable, The best of the best. for President of the Board of Alder- Ben Gold, Communist candidate ) © 4 Beery 4 can worke | for Relief. seribed | to fight x a gedefan | Wounded workers stretched out were eu Wk Kick core. ike euiei ; for Relief, Described} to fight Ww ecve inde | groaning and screaming with pain.jat least half a dozen rer SE STE Ae Veneer ane neds By JOSEPH LAPIDUS In America, the Soviet | Spectators in the courtroom shud-|had beaten me to the inte i- Sparks A.C, and the Italian Football | Communist Party Candidate for | Union and throughout the world, dered as Fineblatt_ gave the details.| ter the interview had dege: ted| club at Jefferson Oval, in East New Aldermen st, Kings Co. | this day of enthusiasm and _ hope Rabinowitz, Harris Titleman and I.j into a conversation he said York this Sunday, November 5, at 1 ticipate i their | will be equally a day of enthusiastic Root were among those witnesses who} the answer all ready and was sur- |p. m, The game is @ regularly sched- Conkiin, 7 who were | determination to fight without rest an exposed were able to point out the gangsters| prised I hadn't popped the question. | wed contest between two of the lead- Samuel Ma evicted | until the final victory of the World « : who participated in the bloody on-| It surprised him, too, to be asked | ing first division teams of the Metro- was designated as rep | able to | October. he gra fter— slaught. fee ee etioniam He had never | politan Workers Soccer League. locals 2 and 3 of the |by the local polit Prior to the witnesses’ testimony,|" “what sort of results do they get?”| — suNDAY SCHEDUIZ OF M.W.8.L. AFL, Central When these workers, under the lead- the Unemployed Council, leaders of the these evictions od, police were called out em and beat them up. 1s, supported by the ions—two at 387 S. 5th 270 S. 1st St., one at 219 re I was arrested. In mber of evictions we have mobil- the workers to put the furniture ik. Almost 1,200 workers are unem- ved in this district. Only 4,000 are he Home Relief Bureau list. The are refused any relief, espe- the young and single workers. 2ve managed to keep the others is only by our demonstra- r leadership ¢f the Un-| | A partial list of the celebrations in American cities, today, tomorrow ersary day, follows: | combined 16th Anniv bration and final election rally the Bronx Coliseum, East 177th St. and at Arcadia Hall, Halsey St. and Broadway, Brooklyn. at the Coliseum will ude Browder, General Secretary of tl Communist Party of the U. Robert Minor, Communist cand date for Mayor; Williana J. Bur- roughs, Communist candidate for | Comptroller; Ben Gold, running for | President of the Board of Alder- men; James Ford, Aldermanic can- didate in Harlem and I. Herman, of the Young Communist League. Hall, |and Tuesday, Nov. 7, which is the} Brooklyn. | | 9:15—Williana Burroughs, Court St. ve, and 13: 30—I. Amter, Cypress ‘Communist Party Election CITY-WIDE TORCH LIGHT PARADE OPEN-AIR RALLIES, 00—I. Amter, for Manhattan Borough President, Rutgers Square. 30—Williana Burroughs, for Comptroller, Tomkins Ave, and+Hart St, 6:00—Ben Goid, for Aldermanic President, Union Square. | 8:30—Rebert Minor, 52nd St. and Ni 8:30—I. Amter, 86th St. and Lexington Ave. inth Ave. and Carrol, Brooklyn. 9:30—Ben Gold, 110th St. and Fifth Ave. 9 Sth St. lawyers for the gangsters attempted to confine the evidence to the at- tack on Sol Applebaum on whose charge the gangsters were indicted. Applebaum was permanently disfig- ured after the gangster bullets had ripped out part of his cheekbone. The judge was compelled to overrule the attorney’s objection and permitted the introduction of photographs showing the wrecked office of the Union and the wounded workers, vic- tims of the gangster attack. Many Features at Big ‘Daily’ Banquet NEW YORK.—An outstanding pro- gram of entertainment, dramatics was what interested him. “Results?” “Yes, What do they do in the| 1202” j | When he was told Soviet athletes | didn’t go out of their way for records, | he said, “So what do they run for?” “Fun,” Saling grinned. “Might be a good idea, I ought to try it sometime.” I knew damn. well the sort of re- sults they were getting. I knew that 22 flat for the 200 meter and 50.2 for the 400 were good college results here, but nothing to impress George Saling. He was definitely uninter- ested in further discussion of the Spartakiade. . se = T’S the attitude you'll find | Rome vs. Tico, 3 p.m ‘AL Division Falcons ys. Ecuadore, 1 p.m., Jasper. Red Spark vs. Italia, 3 p.m. Thomas Jet ferson. Fichte vs Prospect, 1 p.m., Macombs Dam Park. Spartacus vs. Olympic, 1 p.m., Crotona. Az Div: Prepeh vs. Hinsdale, 3 p.m., Betsy Head Park. Red Spark vs. Monabl, 11 a.m., Betsy Head Park, BL Division Maple vs. Dauntless, 1 p.m., Central Park, 6ith Bt. Olympic vs. Herzl, 1 p.m., Betsy Head Park. N. ¥. Hungarian’ vs. Hero, 1 p.m., Dyck- man Oval Bz Division Prospect vs. LW.O., J1 a.m., Crotone Park. Spartacus vs. Bronx Hungarian, 3 p.m, Macombs Dam Park. Juventsu vs. Fichte, 1 nm., Hudson Park. CL Diviston South Amer. vs. Hinsdale, 1 p.m., Contra) before the Bureau, in spite of| The meeting in Arcadia 9:30—Robert Minor, Steinway Hall, 113 W. 57th St., Young America In- ' 3, . : lice terror. | Brooklyn, will hear Robert Minor, | ata ‘ , re ae and addresses by prominent revolu-| 4 among American athletes. “What's| Pare OME BY. i am, central Park, ‘ocia arty rs wi 7 ths, Ben Gold and] Fe sae tionary leaders will feature the Daily| the good of competing if you don’t| edn st Socialist party leaders whom | Williana Burroughs, n ~ 4 9 . n, i 10:30—Robert Minor, 187th St. and Camberling Ave. 2” V d into a united front /I. Amter, Communist candidate for | 4 Pe , oes. othe Worker Banquet in Irving Plaza, 15th} plan to eventually shoot for records?” | French Ro Som Spartacus, 11 a.m. have refused in| President of the Borough of Man-|iay Aves dom BAC SRE. Bt, and Irving Pl, Sunday, Nov. 12 ih, Heroine way Patarss Living ocr | eg | weuiiees Gane c Schachner, the | hattan. Both meetings are to be-|" GAMDEN, ‘N. J.—Satarday eve- [AMMON: ee at 8 p.m, 'e | Polish §. O. vs. Youth Culture, 1 p.m, ocialist candidate, has never gone| gin at 7:30 and include programs age 4, A. Wy. Mille Bi criet | ioe gata cae Trinity fal Clarence C, Hathaway, editor-in-| | Tremendously attractive and ad- Signs emtties 3 p.m, Central Park, th us to the Home Relief Bureau. | of entertainment: New Dance Gh ECE. Bell be the | Aimee ghd, WOWera BEC *| chief, of the Daily Worker, will de-| mirable if you don't happen to start| “Gan ge ha : The cost of living is going up every | Group, the W.I.R. and Red Pront| 'A’fine 3 has| ROCKFORD, Ill. ; Nov. | liver the main address, and Carl} thinking about it. Red Spark vs. Pichte, 11 a.m. Thomas Jef- il thik ie indir the Ay RS 5 KS Bea ine program has|_ ROCKFORD, Ill.—Tuesday, Nov. eal . his . R. A.| hands and the Federation of Work- : Peay °*; | Brodsky, Communist election cam-| Do you know that 14.2 in the 120] Jerson. When the workers went out on strike , 7. Seventeen organizations will . Nonpareil ys. Red Spark, 1 p.m., ‘Thomas i gin weet a ers’ Choruses. Ace ee bees . r) et )) in| Daign manager, will be the master of | high hurdles means years of ene ~ under the leadership of the revolu- Tuesday, | participate. The program will in 7 8) y SY} Jefferson. ry industrial unions—in the|_ CHICAGO, Ill—Tuesday, Nov, in the Prospect Auditorium, |¢lude entertainment by local cul-| ceremonies. taken out of your life in merciless) Brownsville vs. Downtown Hungarian, & Meyer Brothers, Breslau | 7, at the Coliseum. The speake 2 Prospect / 8 p.m. Na-| tural and sports organizations. Numbers on the program will in-| practice? At that, chances ie Dire «Pets: Maer eee ' won some important | will include Earl Browder, tional speakers will address the| PITTSBURGH, Pa—Friday, Nov. | clude the Little Guild Quartet, a play | in & hundred thousand you'll never Helping ihe Dail Worker { making t ite of the police terror. | secretary of the Communist Par meeting ‘Admission .15c, unem-| 3, at 7:30 at the Carnegie Music| by V. Jerome, performed by the The- get there. And if you do, how long iv ) } ani pledged yr of the United States, as the main| pijveq free Hall, Federal St. and E. Ohio St.| atre of Action, the Lithuanian Aida|do you last and what happens on Through Ed Newhouse , eae elekiag speaker, and representatives fro’ “TOLEDO, Ohio —Tuesday, Nov.| Speakers will include John Meldon, Girls Sextette in dramatized songs of | the downgrade? Ask the former mile ig . lawyer for the shoe bosses in the |the Young Communist League and| 7 ‘7.59 pm. ab the Roi Davis Blue | National Secretary of the Steel and| the Proletarian Revolution, Workers | yocord holder Joey Ray, he'll tell you.| Contributions received to the credit = : ke. Se Trade Union Unity League. Pro-| poo ‘igan and Jefferson § Metal Workers Industrial Union!|Dance League, John Reed Club ar-| Ask Eddie Tolan. of Edward Newhouse in his effort to ie Ryan and other Tammany men The Democratic, Republican and | gram of entertainment. y HIBBID Minn—Tuesday, Nov. Ben Carreathers, Communist can-| tists, Negro songs of work and strug-| ‘There’s the argument that harm-/| catch up in the Soclalist competition ar see th Pe setie eens sae caer pag espa ea ore ae Se eeeat 7 at the Wasa Hall. There will be| aes a sgt WE ae Sa ce liis gle, ful though it may be for the athlete,| with Michael Gold, Dr. Luttinger, owes aa Be | eee eee cise ees ae .m. at Broadway), dance to close the program. A/|recently for his militant leadership it’s the jmmense majority of the| Helen Luke, Jacob Burck and Dell to } bunch of left wingers. This was chal-|ing and shelter. The Communist| Arena, Broad and Christian St-| dance will be held after the meet-|in the steel strike. spectators that is to be considered.|raise $1,000 in the $40,000 Daily f Jenged by the delegate from the |Party is with the workers every day | Clarence Hathaway, editor of the}; x 4 4 dont bout that. Th st eat Oe " 4 ©... uilding trades, who declares that |in the struggles for better conditions,| Daily Worker, will be the main ing. WILKES-BARRE, Pa.—Tuesday,| GARY, Ind—Tuesday, Nov. 7,|1 don’t know about tt. The most | Worker Drive: Ne rs Aaah |for immediate cash relief to the un- “ : sonia PROVIDENCE,. R. .I——Sunday,|Nov. 7 at-8 pm. at the Workers| at 8 p.m. at Turner Hall. Bill Ge- thrilling race I ever witnessed was|Joseph Freeman . $34 there is no such animal as a La} tee eit e speaker. Program of entertain- ¥ ae psa le—* Vy Be = is eer fs bet le of N.Y.U. d ©.0.| Erw F- Guardia left winger. He stated that | employed and for no discrimination | ment, Nov. 5, 8 p.m. at the Swedish Work-| Center, 325 E. Market St. A speak- | bert, District Organizer of the| between & couple of N.¥.U. and C.-C. ‘inna . 5.00 © the real left wingers had a candidate | #&ainst Negro workers. DETROIT, Mich.—Sunday, Nov.|ingmen’s Hall, 59 Chestnut St. | er from Philadelphia will address| Communist Party of Chicago will| N.Y. freshmen who did 4:28 for the | A. K. 2.03 B ora “id Vote for the Party that fights F dn Avena Gardens, John | Max. Bedacht, National Organizer | the meeting. be the main speaker. mile, 143 and 15 flat took the same /O. N. .... seestcees BB of their own, referring, it was evident, | 1 O.ider to shoulder with th | 5 at 2 p.m. in Arena Gardens. John ae nk, jonal Org: r to the man in the stands. Hist. Of Russian Revolution Eto Robert Minor, Communist Cane oO ae Oo a work- | Schmies, District ee of the of phe eee nga W gees Or- Psat siseces Club Be Gate for Mayor. on Z : | Communist Party and Lonny Wil-| der will address the meeting. 9 ihe’ eltastion at the: | Previews (etal as . rE aa me li i oa 7 AKRON, Ohio.—Tuesday, Nov: 7, t ROMPARE the situa -4 vious total .. t IAM BELL | UNEMPLOYED COUNCIL MOVES aes Moire delogete: (2 Mie War miB0 dite, vate Perking. School | andioras yne osses unt) competitors in the Olympies and | ¢ WILLIA) ELL” ana | __ HEADQUARTERS |1ast month will be the main speak-| Auditorium. A program of 13 num-| ° | be ceca eae? ere a hyd ‘otal to date ........ ‘ Fe orricrat Optometrist (4 || The city headquarters of the Unem-| ers Banquet to begin at 8 p.m.{ bers has been prepared. I. oO. Ford, N@ ro Cotton tri e ea ers automatically disq les you for 7 ‘ ° | W. 0 [| ployed Councils has moved from 10 innish Hall, 69 g. .| Communist candidate for Mayor of the Olympics, You can’t expect | py mbei: Calls On : 4 at Finnish Hall, 5969 14th St., near E i hand derek in | Telephone Algonquin 4-' s + +, MILWAUKEE, Wi -Wednes- ett es c | ebiresamnaatl A eben 29 Ra Newark.. ov. 8, 8 pm. at the| MILW¢ aE, Wis. ednes: LAFAYETTE, Ala., Nov. 4.—Lynch} Negro spy, who was sent into the i he’ i t ical Y.M-Y.WILA. Auditorium, High|day, Nov. 8, at 7:30 p.m. at West| parties under the leadership of dep-| union by Wood. Powell went to work Lragrimamny ee giiinie d HEA Polls on Tuesday fi 106 EAST 14TH STREET MOISSAYE J. OLGIN and W. Kinney. C. A. Hathaway,|Side Turn Hall, 1034 N. Fourth | uty sheriffs were scouring Chambers | picking cotton in Wood's fields, to) never get it back, for one, and 1 Kad Furth Ave, % ¥. 0. wan raitess’ 6 editor of the Daily Worker, Rebecca |St- Earl Browder will be the main | County today, looking for nine Negro|break strike called when Woods) whoa aecomodate him with living | The Communist Election Cam- Phone: Tompkins Square 6-8237 tpn tees eS Grecht, District Organizer of the|speaker. An elaborate program is| members of the cotton-pickers union, | chased two Negro wor’ rs off his) nq traveling expenses? You have | paign has roused many thousands I What’s Happening In |) Communist Party, New Jersey Dis-|in preparation for the event. which is leading a strike against in-| farm, owing them eighteen months’| 1) 4¢ more than a crack performer | of workers to vote for the Com- i s MOT THAVEN 9-8749 Russia?” trict, Frank Carlson, District 0: pe hale ao Ponn— Tuesday, | tolerable wages and working core pay. to get the big clubs’ backing. munist Party and to support our 4 ganizer of the Young Communist | Nov. 7th at 8.p.m. at. Troup Junior) tions, Seven others already have 1, Party. .Cover 60,000 workers that q DR. JULIUS JAFFE This Afternoon at 3 o'clock || League. Program of entertain-|High School. Prominent speakers} been arrested, and warrants have BNE Omit in ha aiee ory The fad apts, am aries Tas Goliscoaiste dave mated te ¥ : : WORKERS SCHOOL mene from New York will be present and| been prepared against the nine in} George Sims, Jim Spense, and John| *Je ocr {ne will to win, but with | Struggles in the last two months, — ti Surgeon Dentist | se PATERSON.—Nov. 6, Carpen-|@ musical program will.be present-| preparation for a reign of murder | ayior, out the in, the thodsitld wha hats tecoentes 1 % 4/401 EAST 140th STREET|||| °5 East 12th Street, srd foor |! ters Hall, 56 Houton St. & p.m.| ed and lynching. ; Interests beyond 120 yd. hich Burd | the Communist Parly as their |) a | Questions. Admission 2c. James W. Ford, Communist ean-| STAMFORD, Conn.—Wednesday,| ‘The authorities are supporting an| Word coming in from the field,| tes Loh ae lth caesar ee Party, have endorsed the Com- % oe egrltuidaciefontess | Yidate for vice-president in the|Nov. 8, at 8 p.m. at Pythian Hall. | announcement made by Frank Wood, | indicates preparation for a slaughter) backed financially by a big-hearted | onist platform as their platform | — $982 presidential elections and Moe| BRIDGEPORT, Conn.-—Sunday, | plantation-owner, that he 1s willing |comparable to that in Reeltown,) alumnus and morally by some at- | of struggle for the necds of the ame Phew: Office Phone: | Brown, Communist candidate for|Nov. 5, at St. George Hall, 8 pm.|and ready to kill every member of Talapoosa County, last December,| bitrary territorial ion. in mhaeees, 5 U. . Givin s-ti00 ustabrock 2515 To Russia? Mr of Paterson, will speak. This |James ‘Ford is expected to appear | the unfon, or any other Negro who|When at least four Negro croppers| backing ts a social unit ike She | Jo) communist vote in this meeting will also be a final election | at the celeb happens to get in his way. were murdered, and many arrested, | factory or the collective farm that | | Myny Commn Vn Os pla DR. S. L. SHIELDS rally. SPRINGE onn.—Tuesday,| Every Negro cabin is being raided,| ‘The International Labor Defense| spares no effort and little expense | 2oa° 2" aemand for higher wages, Surgeon Dentist | ELIZABETH.—Nov. 7, Russian | Nov ight St. the families of the cotton-pickers ter-| has called on all organizations of| to put over its representative. And | Oo0 uo oot? ang unemployment 43 Peoples Home, 408 Court St. W CGonn._-Sunday, | rorized, and all literature and any-| oilers, in all parts of the country,| it's not an isolated effort concen- | (oot nce. Make every Communist 2574 WALLAVE AVE. TRENTON, Nov. 5, Arcade Hall,|Nov. 5 at 3 pny at the Russian| thing else the deputies think they| and especially to farmers’ organiza-| trated in certain spots like the ' vote count! cl. corner Allerton Avenue Bronx, N. Y.| Army and Navy Store 15th and E. State St. Hall, Cherry St. can use, including all arms and am-| tions, to send protests against this| Spartakiade, in order to make @ cd es ROR '97 THIRD AVENUE... PLANFIELD—Nov. 5, 224 W.| Arrangements are being made for | munition, confiscated. reign of terror, demanding with-| showing. ‘The Soviet state and most ts tok ao. eee iar tie DR. R. H. ISAACS | Front St. celebrations in Hartford South| The excuse for this reign of terror| drawal of the posses and release of] every other self-governmental bass viet ‘cs, bey Sha pelle chi | (Between 12th and 13th Streets) LINDEN, N. J.—Tuesday, Nov.| Norwalk, Ansonia, New. Britain,|is the beating by an unidentified | the arrested pickers, to Sheriff Bob| agency in the country are consei~ Omari 2 Abad pol ously developing a sport movement | Tuesday, Nov. 7. Report to the Formerly of Baltimore, Md. has moved his office to New York at 304 E. 178th Street, Bronx, N. ¥. (Cor, Anthony Ave.) FOrdham 17-3448 : 12 to 2; 6 to 8 P.M, jay 10 to 12 Noon | Gives Honest Values in Genuine Horsehide Sheeplined Coats; | | Windbreakers, Breeches; | High Shoes; Boots, Etc. NOTICE! » RUSSIAN AR MOVED TO 9 West 42nd Street Farge Selection of Gifts, Toys and “NOTICE! T SHOP Inc. PEASANT HANDICRAFTS BRANCH AT 107 E. 14th Street Novelties from the Soviet Union. 10% Discount to Readers of the Daily Worker One Price Clothing Store CORRECT STYLES—FINE FABRICS Orchard 4-9648 168 STANTON STREET&™. unr St ‘You Need Natural, Undoped and Unprocesyed 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 (Near Lexington Avenue) 7, at Columbia Hall, Wood and Lin- Plainfield, Westerly and New Lon- group of farmers, of Paul Powell, a Slay, Lafayette, Ala. (Continued from Page 1) geois revolution in Europe, The effects of the Russian Reyolu- tion upon the native American work- ing class were tremendously deep in spite of the imperialist. position of America, with high wages and an shevik Revolution, We have not for- favor of affiliations with the Com- munist International, but to . be “realized” only with “conditions” and. “after negotiations.” Nor do we for- get that the combination of arbitrary mass expulsions of whole state or- ganizations and language federa- tions, by the national executive com- mittee, together with the United States government “red raids” of At- torney-General Mitchell Palmer— was the combination of events which brought about, first, the retaining of control of the Socialist Party by. the Hilquit crowd and, second, a rela- tively small and entirely under- ground Communist Party. We must not be confused by the fact that the immigrant workers were the main body of the new Com- munist Party at its beginning—we must not conclude from this that the American Communist Party was not a “native” phenomenon, but was merely an artificial reflex to a “for- eign” event. The immense useful- ness of the more international- “Soviet Way Is U. < Workers’ Way” ‘Says Minor ® minded immigrant workers who, es- pecially in this country, became at first the most conscious builders of the revolutionary moyement, cannot be divorced from the fact that the | very heart of American big industry |—the basic heavy industries of steel, | mining and machine, as well as the the building of the Communist Party, able to exploit very cruelly the fact that the revolutionary Party was so largely composed of immigrant work- ers. Demagogues in the service of the American bourgeoisie have been able to play upon this fact. to separate still farther the skilled from the un- skilled, the native from the foreign- born, the white from the Negro, etc. And above all, we must say that to overcome the isolation of the Party, the tremendous need of the present time is to reach the native Amer- ican working class in the most im- portant industries. Of course no one will build the fairy tale that because of the large predominance of im- migrant workers in the Party, the Party therefore is firmly entrenched in the basic industries! * * 8 R 16 years the increasingly mag- nificent success of the “Russian” revolution has been having a dynamic effect upon the American masses and the labor movement. And, under the magnificent light of Russian experience we are able to discover under our very noses a thou- sand proofs in American history of exactly the lessons that are taught by Lenin-Marxist theory and the ex- perience of the Russian Revolution. For, what other country (unless it be France) offers richer examples of under the leadership of Lincoln in ship over the conquered feudal South, the enfranchisement of the slaves— and finally, the betrayal of the freed slaves and their reduction to a land- less peon class through the reap- proachment of the Northern capital- ist and the ruined landlords of the South, Bourgeois revolutions are not pro- letarian revolutions, but their lessons claim deep study by the revolution- ary proletariat, And can anyone say that the proletarian revolution in America has not a rich and deep American genesis? The inevitability of civil war and the dictatorship of the proletariat in the struggle to establish the new socialist society—is this really so hard to explain to a Kentucky miner, or an Alabama steel worker whose eyes already know the look of the muzzles of machine-guns! Is it really so hard to prove to native Americans the great part that will be played by the struggle for the right of rem determination—in that great belt in which today lynchings abound, where the Scottsboro case proceeds to awaken the masses, where a whole Negro agrarian mass is _ being violently uprooted and excluded from which in breadth and general bene- fits has long ago outstripped simi- lar efforts in other countries. This year the Sovict trade unions alone have allotted 23,000,000 rubles for physical culture purposes. Less than two weeks ago the Daily Worker printed an interview with Doris Gerald, former metropolitan singles and mixed doubles tennis champion in New York. Miss Gerald married and had a baby. production, and where the revolu- tionary trade unions and the revolu- tionary party are finding their first understand these things! ican revolutionary party—but that at the same time, and it could not be otherwise, the revolution which is now fast being generated in Amer- ica, and its revolutionary party, are native American products and could not be otherwise. ‘The German proletarian revolution is fast approaching. ‘The profound effects of this coming world-shaking event will complete the shattering of a bourzeois world, RBut—our Amer- ican Hitlers in Washington have no| guarantee that their Blue Eagle and their Wall Street near-fascist dic- tatorship will outlast the Hacken- kreuz and bourgeois dictatorship of Germany. For history has queer turns and it is not excluded from possibility that America, which moves ‘so fast, may soon be in the vanguard of proletarian revolution, The boy is big enough to be en- trusted to neighbors, still, his mother has only been able to take the court Union. competing, at rest, marching in parades. Over 100,000 worker sportsmen from all over the world will parti- cipate in the next Spartakiade to be held next year. From America the Labor Sports Union is sending the best forces it can muster. We have no Georga Salings or even Doris Geralds. But we do have about nine various section election headquar- Party! (Signed) CHARLES KRUMBEIN, District 6 C.P.U.S.A, Dist. 2 — extremely weak revolutionary culture. | textile and packing-house industries, the process of history in bourgeois | routes among the Negro masses, and justrial for a few days. There ‘We must not forget that by far the| etc, — was-composed of millions of| revolutions! Our country was born|now among the white proletariat! twice in eight months. Domestic| 4 a : for the code ceptionally. majority of the members of the Socl- | immigrant workers, ‘To a certain ex-|in bourgeois colonial revolution, It} But it took the teachings of Lenin | duties. hearings in Washington this com- 5 c alist Party and of the I. W. W, be-|tent, therefore, the extremely large|Proceeded through a second, and/and of Stalin—and the example of| This 1s the sort of thing that hes! ing Thursday than the union has High Quality Suits and Overcoats came active partisans of the Bol-|share of the immigrant workers in| completing bourgeois — revolution,| the Russian revolution to make us| been sane, BRA? Ae in ig edld available transportation facilities nursery 15 0! 0! at Exceptionally Low Prices gotten that in order for Hilguit,! was also a “natural” part of ‘the| 1861-65, through great illuminating ha hk features of the factories where W0-) town, if you can Local head. Serger, Oneal, and their associates, | development of the native American | strides ‘of history that included the| s 11 so we must say that the great |™en work. I wish we mad the space | cnarters in this city at 140 Broad St ganization, they were compelled tO) O¢ course the bourgeoisi reer beter phen Adecalde SY aes Oe ae VOLUNTEERS HOLD AFFAIR FOR ‘geoisie has been be Bolshevik party profoundly stirred i maneuver with formal resolutions in ment, the bourgeois military dictator. and: Mimilated to ‘ + r= | of women athletes in the U. S. 5. R., AILY” ‘®D. ‘The Daily Worker Volunteers, who have already raised over $300 for the Daily Worker, will hold their second night at the Meeting of Building Trades Workers months in which to attract an un- limited number of organized and in- TUUL will hold a meeting of Build- dividual athletes into our Union.|ing Trades Workers today, 2 p. m., in Let’s get to work on that and there'll be no worries about suitable material. ‘The American proletarian revolu- tion would very splendidly evoke in many some “native” revolutions|| Tharsday: Concert perfectly % NEW INTERNATIONAL HALL, BOSTON SIXTH ANNUAL BAZAAR NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS’ INDUSTRIAL UNION Thursday, Friday, Saturday, November 9, 10, 11 Friday: Ball Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Place. , 42 Wenonah Street, Roxbury Saturday: Bargain Day