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‘Councils Lead | . Demonstration | Men, Women, Children | Clubbed When They | Ask for Hearing | By JOE DOUGHER SCRANTON, Pa., Aug. 23. — Fif- teen hundred unemployed miners} and their wives and children, under the leadership of the Lackawanna} County Unemployment Councils, | marched on the relief headquarters here Tuesday. The workers, who came to present their relief de- mands after the refusal of the re- lief heads to address a meeting at the courthouse, were attacked by More than 100 police. Before the march on the relief Offices, more than 1,000 workers and t their wives and children, some of i whom had walked six to eight miles from the surrounding towns, par- aded through the streets of Scran- ton. Arriving at the courthouse, an open public hearing was held on relief in Lackawana County. At the public hearing, mothers of large families, homeless single workers and unemployed miners on relief testified against the starva- tion relief and the eviction and hunger policy of the relief admin- istration. Officials Stay Away Although registered letters had been sent to the directors of the county relief board, to Mayor Davis of Stranton, and to state relief di- rector Eric Biddle to appear before the workers at*the public hearing, they did not put in their appear- ance. A motion was unanimously passed that since the relief officials had re- fused to attend the public hearing, the workers would march on the relief headquarters and present their demands as follows: 1—That county relief board chairman Byers meet with the com- mittees of the Unemployment Councils. 2—The re-instatement of two single workers who three weeks be- fore had been thrown out of the Salvation Army shelter for organ- izational activities, 3—The removal of Byers from the relief board. 4—Immediate payment of rent for a family of nine from Dickson City 5—Election of the relief board by the workers of Lackawana County. ranks and marched on the county relief offices. Although he at first t prev Byers declared that he would give them fifteen minutes to decide on a commit‘ee of five, but before the ) who were to be evicted. The workers massed in orderly refused to meet with the workers’ committee, Byers agreed to meet with a committee of two, then five. The workers demanded that he mee‘ with the full committee of fif- a right they had won through ious demonstrations. Police Attack With Clubs committee was able to put it to the workers for a vote, one hundred police, armed with riot clubs, at- tacked the meeting, clubbing men, women and children. The workers of Lackawanna County, under the leadership of the Unemployment Councils, are pre- paring for a mass demonstration and march on Labor Day. The city officials have already denied a per- mit for this day, and the local papers, in commenting on it, state that the demonstration this week “is likely to be the last demonstra- tion to be made by the Councils with the permission of the city au- thorities.” In refusing the permit, director of public safety J. T. Han- lon, after a meeting with Mayor Davis, said: “Labor Day has been set aside for organized labor and is recognized as labor’s day alone.” The Unemployment Councils and the Communist Party are prepared to fight this denial of the workers’ rights to the streets, and the work- ers are determined to march on Labor Day despite refusal of a per- mit. This is the beginning of the mass campaign here in organizing mass marches and delegations of unemployed miners and their fam- ilies in preparation for the state hunger march in October. CHICAGO, ILL. F.S.U. PICNIC Sunday, Aug. 26th - All Day Milwaukee Woods— End of Milwaukee Ave. Car Line Musical Program - Food - Refreshments Fun Proceeds to help finance sending of worker delegate to Soviet Union Out of To Affairs For the Red Press ® Wasuineton, D. C. LABOR PRESS DAY OUTING, Sunday, August 26th, at Camp Nitgedaiget. ‘nterteinment — Sports — Games. Hear Seymour Waldman, W: Corres- vondent of the Daily Worker. Transportation at 2902 Georgia Ave., N.W. Direction to Camp: Penna. Ave. S.E., turn left on Route 4, Six miles after Upper Marlboro turn left at Mt. Calvary Church, © Granp Rapips, Micu. INTERNATIONAL WORKERS PRESS PICNIC, Sunday, August 26th, at the Workers Camp, Greens Lake. Dancing, swim- |) min, Games, Refreshments, Beer. A. B. Magil, Detroit correspond- ent of the Daily Worker will speak. Trucks and cars leave from Delaware and Divisicn s. (Campau Park) Ukrainian Hall, 59 Seward Ave, N.W.; LSD. Hall, 1057 Hamilton Ave., N.W. at 9, 10 and 11:30 A.M. JILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1934 1,500 Scranton J OBLess Attacked As Page Three They Demand Relief Unemployment U.M.W.A. ME Detroit Relief Revolt As District Miners From Several | Towns Demonstrate at Shamokin SHAMOKIN, Pa.—Six hundred} members of the United Mine Work- ers of America invaded the city of Shamokin, Pa., Tuesday afternoon, and stopped before the U. M. W. of A., District 9 headquarters, in protest against blacklisting of their} candidates in the U. M. W. A. elections. The miners gathered from all points, Mt. Carmel, Kulpmont, Ash- land, Shenandoah, Shaft, Pottsville and other towns. The pilgrimage was a protest against the Executive Board of District 9 of the U. M.| W. of A. ruling the names of F. I.| Blase, Leo Sitko and George Wargo off the official ballot. The election is to be held September 25, | Blase and Sitko, who lost their jobs during the equalization strike | of 1932, have not worked since. Ac- | cording to an interpretation of John L. Lewis, president of the U. M.|} W. A, these men are not eligible to rum for office because they are not working at the trade, The ruling came as a shock to the great number of supporters, who want to know why coal companies may discharge militant union men from union activities and why J. L. Lewis may sanction the action of | the coal companies and retaliate by ruling that these militant union | men are not eligible to hold office, Several speakers took part in the | meeting, which was held two blocks from the mine workers’ head- quarters. A feeling of resentment and hate was expressed by each | speaker who each in his turn de- | nounced the “Hitler of the miners,” and the midget-minded district president, J. Brennan. It was reported that 53 of 84 local unions endorsed Blase to op- | pose Brennan. A resolution was unanimously | adopted to send letters of protest to the District Executive Board and to John L, Lewis. Also all members present were urged to attend meet- ings of their respective local unions and have local units send letters in protest to the arbitrary ruling. Harlem Section Backs Expulsion of Padmore From Communist Party NEW YORK.—The Harlem sec- tion of the Communist Party has repudiated George W. Padmore and his reformis and counter-revolu- tionary policies and endorsed his expulsion by the Communist Inter- national at a section meeting held last week. James W. Ford, member of the Central Committee of the Commu- nist Party and secretary of the Harlem organization, gave the prin- cipal address, analyzing the position of Padmore and outlining the Negro liberation movement in Africa and the West Indies. Reading from articles, documents and confidential letters and using the program of the Communist In- ternational on the Negro question, Ford completely exposed the petty bourgeois nationalist position of Padmore who has stated that the bourgeoisie or native ruling cliques in the Negro colonies are enlight- ened forces for the freedom of the masses. In one article, Padmore has stated that the Emperor of Abys- sinia is an enlightened monarch in opposition to feudal landlords and clerical religious forces, Ford pointed out that in every colony emperors and native ruling cliques are bound up with landlords and clergy, in support of the im- perialist domination of the colonies. Exposing Padmore’s attack as the act of a renegade and police agent and enemy of Negro liberation, Ford contrasted the revolutionary policy of the Third International, the in- ternational of the oppressed workers and farmers of all races and na- tionalities of the world. Negro Rights Group Plans Fight Against Jim - Crow Landlord NEW YORK. — The Frederick Douglas Branch of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights has launched a fight against the jim- crow policy of the landlord of the apartment house at 67 East 10and St., who has declared he will not allow Negro and Spanish tenants in his house. ‘The branch, with headquarters at 142 Madison Ave., has won 41 new members within the past week. Hundreds of relief and rent checks have been won for Negro and white workers of the neighborhood through joint struggles of this branch and the local Unemploy- ment Council. The branch holds open-air meetings each Monday night at Ninety-ninth Street and Third Avenue. CLEVELAND, OHIO SECOND ANNUAL DISTRICT PICNIC of the I. W. 0. SUNDAY, AUG. 26th Stop 25, Kinsman Rd. Program: Soviet Film “Krassin’’-Base- ball - Games - Dancing - Entertainment Free Transportation from E, 154th St. and Kinsam Road. Admission 20c. Blacklists Nominees 33 Convert Loans For Herndon Bail to Defense Funds NEW YORK. — Thirty-three more individuals and organiza- tions have turned in their Hern- don Bail Certifciates, to convert the cash represented by them into contributions to the $15,000 Scottsboro-Herndon Emergency Defense Fund, it was announced by the International Labor De- fense today. The total amount so converted has now reached the figure of $717.14. Honor cer- tificates, signed by Angelo Hern- don, are being issued to those who convert their loans into contributions, Nearly $3,000 which was over- subscribed for Herndon bail is tied up in this fund, the ILD. said, and can only be freed for the defense struggle through con- version into contributions, A con- siderable amount of bail fund loans has been returne Meanwhile, the defense fund, which must be raised by August 31, is still $11,378 behind, with only nine days left in which to raise the $15,000, and daily ex- penses in connection with the appeals in the Scottsboro and Herndan cases, mounting faster than the contributions come in. Following is the list of those who have converted their bail loan into @ defense contribution, since the list published Tuesday. Amount Name HL BODE, a wscivarnown Carolina A. Slotter Paula Petschek Certificate No. 37 M. Kustera George White Ruth Starr . Max Tanenzopt William Marcel Pastor Stok .W.O. Br. 514 John Reed Br. Walter Rejek Br. LL.D. Certificate No. 51 .. Edith Berkman Br. LL.D. Lillian Jacobs Ed Peters Sophie Rubi Hanna Cole Dunham Konstantin Holowka . On Beldner sesso Dr. Benjamin Trachtman Morris Gittleman . Szezepanski L. Frank N. Morse FP. S. Garrison Dore Segal . S. Toorck, W. C. No. 24 Bessie Chernin .... Previously acknowledged ....... 703.14 Harlem Workers Meet Tonight to Protest Jailing of Ramirez NEW YORK,—A mass protest meeting, organized by the Harlem Section of the Communist Party, and supported by all of the Span- ish revolutionary organizations of New York, will be held tonight at 8 o'clock at the Park Palace, 2 West 110th St. (Fifth Ave and Central Park), demanding the release of Armando Ramirez, Secretary Gen- eral of the Mella Club and Com- munist Party candidate for As- semblyman in the 17th Assembly District of Manhattan, New York. Armando Ramirez was arrested in Havana while representing the Spanish revolutionary organizations of New York at the Cuban National Convention Against War, Fascism and Intervention. Ernesto Soto, Secretary of the New York District Spanish Buro of the Communist Party, who will act as chairman on this meeting, made the following statement: “The mass protest meeting to be held in the Park Palace will not only deal with the case of Comrade Armahdo Ramirez, but with the Cuban situation, as an expression of solidarity with the Cuban rev- olutionary movement, against the bloody Mendieta-Batista govern- ment and American imperialism, against oppression and exploitation of the toiling masses.” AID TO ROCHESTER STRIKE ROCHESTER, N. Y. (F.P.)— About $1,000 a week is being con- tributed by Rochester labor to the Sibley, Lindsay and Curr truck drivers, who are in the third month of their strike. The city’s other de- livery unions have voted to assess each member 50c a week for the duration of the strike, Workers Plan | State Mareh Conference Outlines Hunger March of Unemployed DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 23. — The building of a Wayne County Relief Council and a State march to the capitol at Lansing were decided on at a conference of about one hun- dred delegates of relief workers from various projects on Aug. 17 at Danish Brotherhood Hall. The con- ference was called by the Relief Workers Protective Association, John Pace, secretary of the R. W. P. A., in his report, pointed out the partial victory won in the increases granted to some workers in the new August budgets. He declared that wherever organization was strong- est, there the workers got a larger increase. The conference decided to build relief committees in all trade union locals and in mass and fraternal organizations. The building of a youth section of the R. W. P. A. and the contacting of women’s or- ganizations for the purpose of tak- ing up special women’s problems were also voted. The Wayne County Relief Coun- cil that will be established will be composed of delegates from all trade unions and other organiza- tions that have members working on relief jobs or receiving direct re- lief in order to get the broadest support in the fight for increased relief and for higher pay for relief workers, 700 Single Jobless Men Plan Fight Against Erie Forced Labor Schemes ERIE, Pa., Aug. 23.—Seven hun- dred “transients,” living at the F. E. R. A. transient shelter here, held a@ mass meeting in Perry Square, Monday, in protes: against a plan- ned forced labor scheme, The transients were getting board and room and a few clothes. In cooperation with Nate Harrington, a Y. M. C. A. director, the Tran- sient Bureau proposed a forced labor scheme to give the boys “men- tal rest.” The plan was to have them work eighteen to t four hours a week on projects previously done by C. W. A. and relief work- ers at wages of fifty cents an hour and up. In answer to this forced labor scheme a group of militant single unemployed workers called the mass meeting, where the following de- mands were adopted: jobs at a min- imum of twelve hours work a week to be paid at the rate of fifty cents an hour, union rates for skilled workers; the workers to have the right to choose eating and lodging places. A mass delegation of sixty-one will present these demands to the Transient Bureau. The Unemploy- ment Councils pledged full support to the single workers. A member of the Socialist Labor Party, which had previously held five meetings of these same tran- sients, was booed when he at‘empt- ed to dissuade the workers from action, Bronx County Councils Call Special Meeting NEW YORK.—All workers active in unemployment work in the Bronx are urged to attend a special en- larged meeting of the Bronx County Unemployment Council tomorrow at 2 p.m., at 1447 Charlotte St. Each local of the Council and each Com- mittee should haye five delegates present and as many active mem- hers as possible. The plans of action in the Bronx in preparation for the city-wide demonstration on Sept. 22, and the organizational problems of the locals will be dealt with. Four Lunch Rooms Strike in Newark NEWARK, N. J., Aug. 23.—The workers at the four lunchrooms of the Grant Company in Newark, numbering 140 workers, walked out on strike Tuesday night. The de- mands of the strikers are recogni- tion their union, the Hotel, Restau- rant and Cafeteria Union, which is affiliated with the Food Workers Industrial Union; ten per cont in- crease in wages, abolition of the split shift, and elimination of the $3 per week deduction from their ;unanimously adopted. Ohio Workers Meet to Plan Relief Fight Reenmnatativeds a6 a8 | Organizations Set Demands in Akron AKRON, Ohio, Aug. 23.—Fifty- six delegates representing 28 work- ing class organizations of Summit County met here Friday, Aug. 17, and outlined a unified campaign to obtain relief and unemployment in- surance, The main report was made by Ben Atkins, representing the Un- employment Councils of Akron, who Spoke on the situation of the un- employed and relief workers in Summit county and outlined a pro- gram for a united struggle for ade- quate relief for the jobless, the re- lief workers and part-time workers. Resolutions of demands and a plan of action were unanimously adopted. The demands cover: cash relief of $5 a week for single work-| ers plus $2 for each number of the family, a minimum weekly wage of $15 a week for all relief workers and four full weeks work a month, no evictions, and the endorsement of the Workers Unemployment. In- surance Bill by the City Council and the County Commissioners, Other resolutions demanded the freedom of the Scottsboro boys, of Angelo Herndon, Tom Mooney and Ernst Thaelmann, A_ resolution against lynchings, terror and the menace of fascism in America, and calling for a united struggle was Proposals were made and a com- mittee elected to work out plans for @ mass march and demonstration to the City Council. The demands adopted at the conference have been embodied in the plans, and all workers’ groups will be urged to endorse it and co- operate in carrying out the planned action, The demands follow: (1) Free hospital, medical and dental care for all unemployed’ and their families; (2) tree clothing and shoes to the jobless and their de-| pendents; (3) free transportation for the unemployed; (4) restoration of all confiscated license plates and the right of the unemployed to operate and own motor vehicles; (5) playgrounds, gymnasiums, swim- ming pools, nurseries, etc. to be erected in working class neighbor- hoods; (6) street paving, sewer ex- tension, etc in workers’ neighbor- hoods; (7) a full time school session and payments of teachers’ salaries in cash, Moulders’ Union Chiefs Try to Split Chicago Foundry Workers’ Union (Daily Worker Midwest Bureau) CHICAGO, Aug. 23.—Leaders of the International Moulders Union put through measures today de- signed to split the ranks of the metal workers even more than has already been done. Rejecting a proposal to affiliate the Foundry Workers Union with the Moulders, the Moulders convention voted to try to steal the membership from the foundry union. According to the proposal of the committee accepted by the conven- tion Sunday, individual foundry workers are to be recruited direct to the Moulders. Delegates re- ported proudly that one-sixth of the foundry union membership had al- ready joined the moulders’ union. The foundry workers, however, are not to receive full union bene- fits. They will not get unemploy- ment aid from the moulders’ union. Hears of New Pay Cut, Drug Clerk Drops Dead NEW YORK. — A middle-aged drug clerk dropped dead in the of- fices of the Silver Rod Stores at 3611 Fourteenth Ave., Brooklyn, shortly after a representative of the man- agement announced a wage-cut yesterday. The clerk, Sol’ Gothofsky, at- tended a meeting called for the purpose of announcing the cut in company with other store man- agers. He was discharged seven months ago and rehired at a lower wage. Store managers, countermen and cigar clerks in the Silver Rod Stores now receive from $28 to $32 a week. The extent of the new cut was not announced because Gothof- sky’s collapse: broke up the meeting. JEWISH PAPER IN BIRO-BIJAN MOSCOW, Aug. 23—A Jewish language newspaper has begun pub- lication in the Jewish Autonomous pay which shall be given in cash. region of Biro-Bijan. The perfect disguise. 'LL CHANGE ME KAT by dey | LETTERIN' Cay er oF cee, N'l Comes BACK Like A Bic suot/ pee Pickers o rf at abam a 4 Prepare Strike for More Pay Led by Sharecroppers Union Textile Workers’ Plea for Aid Demanding $1 per hundred pounds of cotton instead of the fifty cents rate paid last fall, the Sharecrop- pers’ Union of Alabama is preparing to lead a strike of cotton pickers in the state’s Black Belt. The strike will involve share croppers and farm laborers. Special efforts are being made by the union to bring white farm work- ers into the strike side by side with the Negroes, in an effort to achieve a real united struggle, As part of its strike preparations, the union is distributing 20,000 printed manifestos throughout the cotton fields, clearly and simply ex- plaining the meaning of the New| Deal and the Bankhead Bill. These | manifestos call for unity in the battle against the starvation condi- | tions which prevail smony ih>) farming masses. j In making known its plans for a | wide strike this fall, the Sharecrop- pers’ Union also announced that it had received a letter from the Har- riman (Tenn.) local of the United Textile Workers of America, asking for the sharecroppers’ support against the strikebreaking NRA. This support will not only be glad- ly extended to the textile workers, sharecropper leaders declared, but its union will also try to spread the strike of the textile workers into the mills situated in the Black Belt. The union called for widespread support for the impending cotton | pickers’ strike. Bisbee Miners Win Over Company Union BISBEE, Ariz. (F. P.)—Decisively indorsing the Bisbee Miners Union to represent them ‘in collective bar- gaining in an election supervised by the Regional Labor Board, Bisbee copper miners won a signal victory over the hated, anti-union Phelps- Dodge Corp. Almost 100 per cent of the men voted. The union is affiliated with the International Union of Mine, Mill & Smelter Workers, A. F. of L. The alternative was a company union which had been forced upon the men when the N. I. R. A. was enacted. The victory is all the greater since the company had threatened to close down and used economic pressure on the men to defeat a union triumph. Railway Line Strike Looms in Cleveland CLEVELAND, Aug. 23.—Members of the Amalgamated Association of Electric Railway Employes have voted two to one in favor of a strike on the Lake Shore Interurban Railways if the company refuses to meet their demands, the union an- nounced today. The demands of the workers in-} clude a return to the 1929 wage! scale, Houston, Connecticut Battle in Stretch! o~ ae’ a Aeaelet saat nes ioeae uit Changes in Circulation by Districts Since Aug. 13 Learned in the closing laps of the 20,000 new reader drive, Houston and Connecticut are running far out in front, leaving twenty-four Districts gagging in their dust. The past seven-day burst added 30.6 per cent to the Hous- ton quota and 43.6 per cent to that of Connecticut. Deter- mined to pass each other before September 1, these two Districts are giving their respective rivals a clear view of their heels in the District Socialist competition. Third and fourth place positions are being held by Denver and Boston, with every possibility of the latter surging into the lead during the final week of the inten- sified drive. Socialist competition, tightened as New York sped past Chicago with an 881 net reader gain for the week. Holding its own, Buffalo narrowed the distance between itself and Minneapolis, while St. Louis passed Milwaukee. i ! | eral Lynn AFLShoe ‘Local Strikes Despite Chiefs | Joint Council Threatens to Revoke Charter of Edge Makers LYNN, Mass., Aug. 23—The strike more than 250 edge makers in city continues over the head of Ly Joint Council and the Resident General Executive Board of the United Shoe and Leather Workers Union. Mass picketing of all Lynn shoe shops has been ordered by the Executive Board of Locals. Unanimous votes of the entire membership of the Edge Makers Local to continue the strike, was the answer given to the Lynn Joint Council and the Resident General Executive Board when they ordered the strikers back to work on the threat of ing their charter. Utter di was expressed by the rank and file shoe workers when they became aware of the speech made by General Organizer Mack- esy in which he stated that the “shoe manufacturers cannot assume the burden of a general increase at this time” and that he feared “other locals might take similar action to that of the edge makers that would prove the destruction of the organs ization,” Indicating that he was ready to go to the extent of making a scab agency of the _ union, demagogically stated further that “I would resign my position rather st | Farm Workers Accept’ 8,000 Mexican Pecan Workers SAN ANTONIO, Texas, (F.P.)— A | More than 8,000 Mexican workers BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Aug. .28— | won a higher wage scale after sev- Although wages for shellers were increased from 2c and 3c to 5c and 6c a pound, and from 25 cents and 30 cents to 50 cents a pound for crack- ers, this wage will allow no more than 75 cents a day for eight hours Under the old scale, worker often made no more than weeks of strike, of work. 15 cents a day. This new scale will be in effect | In Oc- tober, the “off season” will be at an end, and the regular shelling sea- Unless the workers! only through September. son will open. Win Strike t than send anyone to work in the place of the strikers—but we can- not stop the manufacturers from advantage of Article 2 in the ement which gives them the to replace workers we can- right not supply within 48 hours.” Many workers have already quit their jobs and joined the picket lines where the manufacturers have taken advantage of this clause in the agreement. Wood Heelers Local 19 has a motion on the records to demand a similar increase to that of the edge makers. The Stitchers Local also voted not to work with any scabs taking the place of the edge ma 5 a remain organized and demand a better wage scale, they will have to return to the scale maintained be- fore the strike. Support the New York Daily Worker DAILY Picnic Sunday AUGUST 26™ Admission 25. CLARENCE HATHAWAY Main Speaker Dancing Games Sports WORKER ® NORTH BEACH PARK ASTORIA, L. I. Direction: LR.T. or B.M.T. subways, Second Ave. “L"' to Ditmars Ave. Bus to park remember October 18, 19, 20, 21 ‘MORNING FREIHEIT’ ‘YOUNG WORKER’ ‘DAILY WORKER’ | BAZAAR at the newly and completely rebuilt ST. NICHOLAS PALACE 69 WEST 66th ST., near Broadway (The Entire Building) Bazaar Headquarters: 50 East 13th St., ALgonquin 4-9481 ‘Today's Increase or —_ Increase Today's ‘Mon, ané Decrease Since start Percent Sat. Cire, Fri. Cire, over Aug. 13 of drive of Quota 1 Boston 2359 1507 97 575 95.8 2 New York 18609 16288 881 213 3 Philadelphia 3673 2263 154 39.7 4 Buffalo 941 679 = 53.1 5 Pittsburgh 1127 599 —16 41.6 6 Cleveland 3455 1820 —19 33.3 T Detroit 3072 1833 31 24.8 8 Chicago 5728 4068 — 44 27.2 9 Minnesota 1645 7195 — 15 58.6 10 Omaha 353 248 — 5 _ 11 N, Dakota 548 221 —w —_ 12 Scattie 1290 661 — 2 _ 33 California 1242 702 2 — 14 Newark 1583 1216 —3 48.0 15 Connecticut 981 44 98 148.0 16 N. Oerolina 208, 173 12 70 17 Birmingham 248 178 5 — 18 Milwaukee 848, 495 — 45 43.5 19 Denrer 886 506 —3 105.5 20 Houston 252 196 23 150.6 21 St. Louis 353 39 22 09.3 22 W. Virginia 174 129 3 cht 23 Kentucky 92 2 7 24 Louisiana 13 88 28 12.0 25 Florida 208 193 6 Bei 26 89. Dakota 146 a1 —2 19.6 Canadian & Foreign 687 378 —1 ee TOTAL 50734 36388 780 i CHICAGO, ILL. = Red Election Rally The of © Communist Auspices: Saturday, September Ist, 8 P.M. Peoples Auditorium, 2457 W. Caicago 1 day for turn! itte> for trip to Spcingfield to file petitions Hear FRANK PRICKETT ing in all signatures. lection Aldermen fom Taylor Springs and one of the Hillsboro defend-nts Dancing — Excellent Program — Admission 15¢ State Election Campaign Committee | Mackesy {