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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1934 Page Three N.Y. Workers Will Demand Winter Relief at City Hall Friday Daily Worker Fund Drive Falls Behind Pace Set in 1933 WILL PRESS ACTION | WHEN ALDERMEN VOTE ON Communist Party and Unemployment Councils Call All Workers to the Demonstration Against LaGuardia’s Tax Schemes NEW YORK.—Every Council local, all organized and F ‘Mpcanize employed and unemployed workers, trade unions, mass and fraternal organizations are urged to mobilize their entire membership for a mass demonstration at City Hall, Friday, Sept. 14, at 12 noon, meets to vote on the LaGuardia relief tax schemes. The central demand of the dem- onstration will be the appropriation of adequate relief funds to finance Winter relief. In a statement issued by the New York Communist Party on Friday, and in a statement by the Unemployment Council on Sat- urday, the LaGuardia relief tax schemes were exposed as maneuvers to slash relief and place the burden for all relief financing on the shoulders of the working popula- tion through subway taxes and a tax upon every pay envelope. These tax schemes of LaGuardia hold out the promise of future cuts in relief. Council Demands To meet the rising relief demands, the Unemployment Councils demand that all relief financing be met by taxation on the big business and public utilities, on large incomes and inheritances, taxes on stock trans- fers and tax exempt church prop- erty, and a moratorium on the debt service payments to the bankers. In no way are the small business men and the working population to be taxed, the Councils demand. “Higher fares, wage and salary taxes, and drastic reduction in re- lief to a point below the present hunger level threatens the employed and unemployed masses,” the Com- munist Party statement points out. Local Actions A series of local mass meetings and demonstrations are being ar- ranged by the Council locals to mobilize the workers for this dem- onstration and for a mass march to City Hall on Sept, 22, Locals of the Downtown Unemployment Council will demonstrate today at Spring and Elizabeth Streets. On Thursday, at 12 noon the Chelsea locals of the Council will demonstrate at the Relief Bureau at 418 West 53rd Street, demanding an end to police terror at the relief station, the immediate removal of Chief Supervisor Burt, and increased relief The New York County Coun- cil appeals to all locals which are not demonstrating on this day to support this local. Thursday morning at 10 o’clock the Workers’ Committee on Unem- ployment Locals 2 and 3 will mass at Rutgers Square and march in a body to the relief station at Sheriff and Broome Streets. Homeless Men March on Relief Headquarters NEW YORK.—More than 300 homeless men, mobilized by the Council of Unattached Men, 517 E. 14th Street, marched on the Wel- fare offices Monday, forced Deputy Comissioner Stanley Howe to meet with their delegation, and wrung from him promises of better food and improved conditions in the city flop houses. Howe at first refused to meet with the elected delegates. Glancing out the window and seeing the men establish a mass picket line, he then consented to meet with their committee. While police attempted to provoke the men to disorder, they held their ranks and continued picketing. To the men’s demand for better food, issuance of clothing and more sanitary conditions in the Muni- cipal Lodging House, Howe an- swered that the city was broke The Council of Unattached Men, effiliated with the National Unem- ployment Councils, is calling upon all homeless unemployed workers to come to their headquarters at their regular Tuesday meetings at 2 p.m. The homeless men will assemble at Gold Dust Lodge, Corlears and Water Streets, Friday, at 10 a.m., and march in a body to City Hall TAXATION when the Board of Aldermen | Pennsylvania Jobless Groups March Today Unemployed _ Delegates Will Present Demands Visited Front Wins Jobs for Four Negroes Harlem Cafeteria Boss Grants All Demands; New Fight Planned NEW YORK.—Four Negro work- ers were hired yesterday by the Empire Cafeteria, Lenox Avenue and 125th Street, as the management capitulated before the militant, united struggle of white and Negro workers for the hiring of Negrots as countermen and busmen. One of the four was engaged as a counterman, the others, including | a girl, as busworkers. The management agreed to all the demands of the organizations in- volved in the struggle, including employment of Negroes in other capacities than porters, no firing of | the four workers without consulta- tion with the organizations, and | withdrawal of all charges against workers atersted while picketing for | these demands. ‘The fight, initiated by the Young Liberators, youth section of the League of Struggle for Negro to State Legislature PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Sept. 11— The Philadelphia Unemployment Councils yesterday received con- firmation of their demand to pre- sent the program of relief demands to both the upper and lower houses of the State Legislature on Wednes- day, Sept. 12, when a mass delega- tion from all over the State will converge on Harrisburg. In a telegram to the Councils, Governor Pinchot was also forced to agree to meet with the workers’ committee. * * 8 PITTSURGH, Pa., Sept. 11—The Unemployment Councils and other organizations of the employed and unemployed in Pennsylvania will send a mass delegation to Harris- burg today instead of on Tuesday as was erronously stated in yester- day’s Daily Worker to demand im- mediate appropriations for winter relief. The march will start from all over the State and converge on Harrisburg. The Councils demand the imme- diate appropriation of $50,000,000 from the State to provide winter relief for the State’s unemployed for the three month period ending January 1. Weekly cash relief at the rate of $2 for each member of a family and $2.50 weekly cash re- lief is demanded for each single worker. Against the forced labor schemes of state relief administrator Eric Biddle, the jobless demand mini- mum cash wages of 60 cents an hour for a 30-hour week, union rates and condition to apply on all work relief jobs. State unemployment insurance modeled on the Workers Unem- ployment Insurance Bill to be ef- fective pending the enactment of the Workers’ Bill on a national Scale is also demanded in the Coun- cil program. Duluth Students Strike To Keep Schools Open DULUTH, Minn., Sept. 11—A strike of hundreds of Duluth stu- dents, against the closing of five schools, was called by the Schools Protective League here after ihe School Board, at its last meeting, refused to re-open the schools. Twenty-eight teachers will lose their jobs if the schools remain closed. The children are to be transported by bus to other school buildings and crowded into such space as can be made for them. Mass meetings have been held every night in every one of the School districts. Committees and a Rights, was energetically supported by the Communist Party, the Food Workers’ Industrial Union, the In- ternational Labor Defense and rank and file members of the Souffeites and other reformist - controlled groups, Initiated by the L. S. N. R. and upported by the other organiza- tions already involved in the fight for jobs for Negroes, a conference will be held soon to advance the | fight on the basis of this victory. | (See editorial on cafeteria fight on page 6.) Duluth Jobless Seamen Vote for Affiliation with Unemployment Councils DULUTH, Minn., Sept. 11—The unemployed seamen in Duluth have unanimously voted to affiliate with the Unemployment Councils. This comes as a result of the necessity for better consolidation of organi- zation than that provided through the Seamen’s Committee. The Seamen’s Committee in Du- luth has, with the support of the unemployed seamen themselves, won many victories. Recently they de- manded and won shower baths. They are now receiving forty-five cents per day for food in addition to clothing, tobacco, toilet materials. Before the organization of the Sea- men’s Committee the unemployed seamen were sent to Bethel and fed on slops. After three days they were told to get out of town or go to a transient camp. Now they have clean hotel rooms to sleep in. N. J. Jobless To Present Demands to Legislature NEWARK, N. J., Sept. 11—The state-wide unemployed worker's organization, the United Unemploy- ment and Relief Workers’ Associa- tion of New Jersey, has issued a call to all unemployed, freternal and labor organizations to send mass delegations to Trenton Wednesday morning. Thése delegations will present the demands of the unemployed work- ers to the New Jersey Legislature, now in special session to consider unemployed relief. offices were nominated. The 19, who will base their cam- paign on the slogan “Communism Against Fascism” are: Harry Cor- rell for Governor; Earl Stewart, now in jail facing two charges of criminal syndicalism, for Secretary of State; Louis Olson, for Congress- |man from the Third Disirict; N. A. Mackrill and Louis Jessen, for Mult | nomah County Commissioners; Di: | De Jonge, also in jail facing two charges of criminal syndicalism, for State Senator, Thirteenth District; Virgil Akin, William Linden, George | Butterfield, Richard Lovelace, Ray Billings, Clair Fessler, Arthur Hayes |a Negro, Kenneth Fitsgerald, Har- | old Foster, Beatrice DeBoord, How-/ ard McPeak, Mary Goold and “Ed- ward Denny, also in county jail fac- ing criminal syndicalism chrages, were nominated as candidates for State representatives from Mult- romah county. Tells of Michigan Tour DETROIT, Sept. 11—“The work- | ers of Michigan are responding vig- | crously to the Communist program.” | declared John Anderson, Communist candidate for Governor, on his re- turn from a speaking tour through- out the state. Anderson, leader of the Progres- s in the Mechanics Educational Society of America, independent union of tool and diemakers, has a notable record as a fighter for the worker's interests. “The workers rapidly are learning the lesson,” he said, “that Roose- velt’s promises are not a very stable diet. They are rapidly realizing that the so-called NRA garantee of the right to organize and bargain collec- tively has been shown up in its true colors by the numerous instences where regional labor boards have taken the part of the employers. They know that efforts by workers to organize and secure better condi- tions have met with discrimination and the use of the state police when Complete State Slate Named— John Anderson, | Communist Candidate for Governor of Michigan, Describes Terror on Tour PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 11.—Despite police intimidation and a barrage of anti-working class propaganda, a state nominating convention was held here on Sept. 8 at which 19 Communist candidates for Congressional state and local | With the American Federation of local police were unable to supress them.” Iowa Names Candidates DES MOINES, Ia., Sept. 11—Ira R, Meade, State Secretary of Unemployment Councils, who is now under indictment on a criminal syn- _|dicalism charge was nominated for Governor. Robert Conroy, militant young Negro workez, for Lieutenant Governor at the State Nominating ; Convention, The rest of the slate yconsists of Joseph Van Nostrand, section organizer of the Communist Party for Secretary of State; Flor- fence Butler, for Secretary of the | Treasury; Henry Lansing, for Sec- retary of Agriculture; N. B. Whiting, ' for Attorney-General; K. Kirkpat- rick, for Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Ed Krueger, for Railroad Commissioner, Charles Logsden, Henry Moser, John Denison and M. N. Makins will run for the State Senate. Nomi- ; nees for State representatives in important areas of the State were also designated. ST. PAUL. Minn., Sept. 11.—An audience of 300 workers and farmer: heard 8. K. Davis, Communist can- didate for Governor, explain the meaning of Communism and present | the program of his Party for the immediate improvement of condi- tions for the toiling masses of the nation. breaking actions of Farmer-Labor Governor Floyd B. Olson and urged the election of Communist public officials. N. ¥. Plans Banquet NEW YORK—Representatives of mass organizations and individual workers of the North Bronx will take part in a ratification banquet for local Communist candidates on Saturday in the auditorium of the ‘Workers Co-Operative Colony at 2700 Bronx Park East. Candidates who will be present are Sam Nessin, Nathan Shaffer, and Pat Toohey. The pamphlet, which is being Publishers, is a masterly analysis tile workers, the maneuvers of the Every Communist, every milita: fight of the textiie workers, should and their N. R. A. strike-breaking City, not later than this Saturday. Rush your order at once! published by the Workers’ Library of the present struggle of the tex- leaders of the United Textile Work- ers, and presents the Communist strategy in the strike. int worker, everyone supporting the read this pamphlet which is a pene- trating and lucid guide for workers in all struggles against the bosses apparatus. A limited edition of this pamphlet is being published. All orders must be in the Daily Worker office, 50 East 13th Street, New York The pamphlet sells for two cents a copy; $1.50 per 160. the; Davis exposed the strike-, Unions Cal Strike Moke Groups Will Discuss Nationwide Walkout CHICAGO, Sept. Western conference of workers of various furniture unions, affiliated ; Labor and independent organiza- tions, will be held in Chicago, Oct. 13 and 14, Joe Kiss, secretary of the National Furniture Workers’ Indus- | trial Union, announced today. The | conference will discuss prep for a national strike in the i try. The conference has been given impetus by the formation of a united front in the Eastern States between 7 locals of the American Federation of Labor and the N. F. W. I. U. A recent tour by the sec- retary of the union in this terri- tory has aided greatly in prepara- ‘tion for the parley. The conference will invoke the following cities: Chicago, Ill.; Rock- ford, Ill.; Naperville, Ill.; Kanka- kee.; Minneapolis, Minn.; Minn.; Bloomington, In mond, Ind.; Evansville, In napolis, Ind.; Kenosha, Wisc.; Mil- waukee, Wisc.; Cincinnati, Ohio; Cleveland, Ohio; Louisville, Ky., and Grand Rapids, Mich. The conference will take place at ‘the People’s Auditorium at 2457 W. Chicago Ave., Chicago, Ill, on Sat- urday and Sunday, Oct. 13 and 14. For further information, Mid- West furniture workers immediately communicate with the National of- fice of the National Furniture Workers’ Industrial Union, 199 Broadway, Room 638, New York City, N. Y. Rich- India- 75 Michigan Canners Strike for 7 Cents An Hour Wage Raise FENNVILLE, Mich.—Seventy-five canners, employed at the Fennville Fruit Exchange, went on strike Fri- day, demanding a seven-cent-an- hour raise, All but two of the work- ers walked out. In an effort to prevent the strike, an increase of 2% cents an hour had been gzanted them Monday, but the workers stuck to their original demand and struck. The strike is reported to be endangering 75 per cent of the Allegan County plum portcead which is stored at the Ex- | change for canning. ‘Communists in Textile Strike’ | Retief List of Homeless Is New Pamphlet by Hathaway A 32-page pamphlet by C. A. Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, entitled “Communists in the Textile Strike—An Answer to Gorman, Green & Co.” will be off the press this Saturday. Continues To Increase WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 11.— The number of homeless persons being cared for by the Transient Relief Bureau has increased stead- ily this year, according to officials of the Federal Emergency Relief Administration. On Aug. 15, according to the F. E. R. A, there were 226,750 persons receiving such relief, as compared with 192,288 on June 15. Sixty-five per cent, relief officials report, are between 16 and 34 years of age. Our Readers Must Spread the Daily Worker Among the Members of All Mass and Fraternal Organ- izations As a Political Task of First Importance! Miners Face Fight for Class- -Struggle Program Will Push U Unity Stand! central council of the Schools Pro- tective League are being set up. Hundreds of petitions demanding re-opening of the schools are being circulated, Herman Griffith, who is one of the outstanding leaders of the Schools Protective League, was the “labor indorsed” candidate for school board last spring. This was a Socialist and Farmer-Labor Party ticket. Since that time he has re- signed from the Farmer-Labor Party, announcing his intention of joining the Communist Party. MASS CONFERENCE for the DAILY WORKER @ MORNING FREIHEIT YOUNG WORKER BAZAAR Thursday, 7:30 P.M., September 13th at the WORKERS CENTER 50 East 13th Street — Second Floor Ail mass organizations are urged to take this matter up at their next meeting and elect two delegates. If there will be no meeting of the branch, the executive com- mittee should appoint two delegates. All mass organizations, labor unions and Party units must be represented to this conference and help make this affair a success, Against Pearcy at the P.M.A. Convention By R. Shaw The second constitutional con- vention of the Progressive Miners of America, called for Sept. 17, brings back the picture of the mass revolt of the Illinois miners in 1932 against the Lewis-Walker United Mine Workers of America machine, the militant fight of the rank and file, the mass marches from town to town closing the pits against the ordered enforcement of the wage cut from the $6.10 to $5 scale, In this battle the miners lost eleven of their fellow workers, yet they unflinchingly threw aside the Lewis-Walker gang, formed the Progressive Miners’ Union, hoping that they thereby would have a rank and file organization, free from misleaders’ and bosses’ agents. But no sooner was it formed, than this hope of the miners was blasted upon the rocks of class collabora- tion. In place of a militant union, the officialdom of the Progressive Miners of America has been com- peting for the past two years with the Lewis U. M. W. A. machine as to who can prove to be the best servants of the coal operators. That is the sum total of the official deeds since the first P. M. A. con- vention, and while the rank and file delegates are preparing for the Second Convention to fight for a class struggle program and to oust these betrayers, Pearcy and his machine are setting the convention stage with “extra delegates” for further reactionary measures against the miners and to further entrench themselves in the saddle. Demagogic Alliance Wins At the time of the first conven- tion, in September, 1932, the Com- munist Party in Southern Illinois, then numerically small and not or- ganized in most important mines, was unable to expose sufficiently the enemies of the miners in their ranks, and thus the alliance of the Musteites, Socialist Party leaders and satraps of the former Walker- Lewis machine succeeded, by use of radical phrases, demagogy and skill- ful riding on the wave of the fight that was waged by the rank and file, to place themselves at the head of this militant movement only to behead it and deliver the miners into the hands of the operators. Two years is not a long period, but in these two years the officialdom of the P. M. A. outpointed in many respects Lewis's record of betrayal. Here are some of the deeds of these “progressive” leaders: 1, They put over the $5 wage cut (when Lewis failed) and even refused an offer of $5.70 scale in order to compete with Lewis for the hand of Peabody. Individual agree- ments, collaboration, arbitra‘ion with “stand pat” “stay at home” policy immediately after the first convention. 13,000 Miners Blacklisted 2. Turning back the ® militant march of Oct. 12, resulting in the blacklisting of 13,000 miners, through no picketing, no spreading of ae strike policy. 3. P. M. A. officials endorsed and, as Lewis did, hailed the N. R. A. They also joined the sheriffs in a most vicious attack upon the Communists and miners who ex-| posed the scabbing N. R. A. and the coal code. Pearcy approved the deputizing of miners to break the hunger march; he told the Women's Auxiliary in convention “not to picket but stay at home and cook.” The officialdom endorsed the “hu- manitarian” Horner. Pearcy, ap- palled by the grumbling of Gilles- pie miners against the speed-up, told them “you must load moré | coal, or how will we get another contract.” He told the miners (at the Nilwood mass meeting) that the “P. M. A, must be a conservative union.” Officials Spent 340,000 4. The officialdom spent $40,000 | on lawyers’ fees and hundreds more on trips to Washington, supposedly trolled courts. The same policy was followed in the majority of pits. Today all conditions won by great sacrifices are lost. There are 20,000 totally unemployed members and about 13,500 part-time employed members in the P. M. of A. Those employed are subjected to a hundred differ- ent speed-up schemes, discrimina- tion. In tonnage mines many | miners earn less than they .would get on relief, and in Saline County the P. M. A. officials approved a $4.50 scale with the excuse that “it was first signed by Lewis.” Many of the honest rank and file dele- gates who two years ago were mis- Jed by these fakers will challenge them at this convention. What will be the policy of the officialdom at this convention? The Officialdom’s Policy In the first place, Pearcy-Keck have a pretty strong machine built up around them, with such elements as Picek, Smith, Novak, etc., who will act as “breakers” for all attacks upon them. To mislead the honest rank and file delegates, they will resort again to radical phrasemon- gering and demagogy. Pearcy will attempt to cover up the betrayals by two methods. On the one hand he will try his old gag of appear- ing radical by telling the delegates “We did all we could, the best that could be done under this rotten sys- tem.” On the other hand he and his gang will raise a red-baiting campaign against the Communists, to fight Peabody in Peabody-con- ‘ Program To Oust Tory | Officialdom Looms as Parley Nears | such as has been pushed in the offi- |cial organ. There is a scheme whereby Pearcy is to become the International president and thus enlarge the bureaucratic machine. They will also attempt to shift in the mines or exposure of their bettayals to the February Scale Convention. The militant rank and file dele- gates should not allow Pearcy and his machine to shift the exposure of their betrayals from concrete is- sues to some abstract political label- ling. This is one thing they will always try. The delega‘es should not allow the machine to develop an argument on Communism versus Pearcy, but force the machine to answer concrete questions of their sellouts and betrayals and don't let them swerve from those burning is- sues of conditions and needs before | the miners. Class-Struggle Program ‘The class-struggle program of the unity movement, calling for united strike action of the P. M. A. and U. M. W. A. miners for the $6 scale, six-hour day, five-day week, to- gether with demands for ousting of officialdom of both unions, trade union democracy and other changes, is the only program for the rank and file. The duty of the fighting rank and file deloga‘es will be to bring this program ur on the floor, discuss it j with the honest delegates and in putting up a militant stand for ac- tion, expose the officialdom respon- sible for the present starvation con- ditions and slave coal code agree- ment in Illinois, 11—A Mid-| St. Paul, | every discussion of scale, conditions | Nominating Parley Held\Furnitur fe THAN $3 $3,500 In Oregon m Despite Police | RAISED IN 23 DAYS | OF $60,000 DRIVE |A.F.L. and In Independent} | Only Eleven Districts Enter ] Into Socialist Compe- | tition To Collect Urgent Funds—Average The Daily Worker drive of $625 a Day Is Needed for $60,000 is falling behind! Proof of this is glaring in a comparison of the figures in the present drive with those of the campaign conducted by the Daily Worker in the Then, C. P. Pledges Full Support ToMill Strike Urges Rank and File in New England To | Take Control BOSTON, Mas. Communist Party of New England has pledged its support to the textile strikers in their fight for better wages and conditions in a statement distributed in the strike area. The statement urges the textile strikers to take into their own hands the authority to make all decisions concerning the strike through the election of rank and file strike com- mittees. Sept. 11.—The Calls for One Union Further, the statement declares: “The Communist Party in every mill town as well as throughout the United States is doing everything in its power to spread the strike and to organize the unity of all workers, organized and unorganized, to build one textile union in the in- dustry controlled and led by the honest rank and file textile workers. The Communist Party protests most vigorously against the use of in- timidation methods, such as the “red scare” that has been played up in the press, the use of machine guns, police, poison gas, militia and all other forces of terror and sav- agery used on the West Coast and other strikes, and are being em- ployed by the bosses in the textile strike. No terror, no matter how repressive and murderous it may be, will stop the onward sweep of the workers once they are united in the strugglé to better their condi- tions. The Communist Party calls upon the National Guardsmen to realize they are the brothers and sons of the working class, that their interests lie with those of the textile workers. The Com- munist Party calls upon the Na- tienal Guardsmen to refuse to act as strikebreakers, The Commu- nist Party calls upon the National Guardsmen to join with the strik- ers to help them win this glorious battle for their most elementary rights, N. J. Munitions Plant Discharges 500 Men; Textile Strike Is Blamed BOUND BROOK, N. J., Sept. 11.— Five hundred workers have been fired without notice by the Calco Chemical Works. For months the local Chamber of Commerce and the capitalist press advertised far and wide that prosperity was here, that Calco was hiring thousands. Daily, hundreds of unemployed workers be- sieged the Calco plant, but only two or three workers were hired. Calco's excuse is the textile strike. Primatily Calco manufactures muni- tions. Textile dyes and chemicals | are only a small part of the product of New Jersey’s big war plant. early part of 1933. the “Deily’s” campaign was for ning Jan. 15 ,000—begin- the end of been recorded 1 at a & month $6,651 on the books. But no such amount will hare been received at the end of a month in the present drive, however, unless almost twice as much money as has been contributed to date comes into the office during the next eight days. This is being written on Sept. 10, and. only $3,549.67 has been entered, The drive began on Aug. 18. Districts Not Moving Tq is evident, therefore, that the distticts are not even as productive as they were last year. We are ask- ing for almost twice as much moni and at the end of a month, nat ally, on the basis of last year’s drive the sum received should be practic ally double the sum of money re- ceived then. But what do we find? We find that on the basis of present returns, we will not even equal the $7,656.72 received in the $35,000 drive. We should have, in compa: son, about $12,000. What do the districts intend to do about this? The 8-page, three- edition paper is coming out in léss than a month! Surely, they cannot allow the next week to pass without at least equal- ling the sum received in a month last year. They should reach, in- deed, almost $10,000! An average of $625 a day, they must impress upon themselves, is needed to make the drive successful. We have not yet come near that average. Only 11 Districts Compete The Daily Worker also wishes ta ;| point out, in regard to the activity of the districts, that only eleven cf them are entered in Socialist com- petitions—one, New York, being en- gaged against the rest of the country, This situation is certainly greatly amiss and must be remédied immediately. Districts not yet en- tered should enter into Socialist competitions at once. The Daily Worker feels secure that its readers—the working class —will stand behind it. We expect to get the $60,000! But we urge the districts to remember that monty is needed immediately—and that only a substantial sum at hand will enable us to get out the 8-page, three-edition Daily Worker. DETROIT, MICH. I. M. SMULLIN Attorney and Councilor now located at 1004 Hammond Building Telephone: Cadillac 2612 Back from Tour of Soviet Union CHICAGO, ILL. OPEN BOOK REVIEW “The Toilers Against War” by Clara Zetkin Reviewed by Eugene Bechtold of Chicago Workers School Sunday, September 16, 3 P. M. At North Side Workers Center 548 Wisconsin Street 1900 North, cor. Larabee. Adm. 10 Cents Precedéd by Anti-War Sketch by “Blue Blouses” CHICAGO, ILL. Entertainment and Dance BENEFIT DAILY WORKER Saturday, Sept. 15th, 8 P. M. At 548 Wisconsin St., 1900 North Auspices, Section 4 Communist Party Tickets in advance 15c. At door 20c. PROGRAM: Freiheit Gesang Ferein, Ist ELECTION CAMPAIGN CONCERT and DANCE Saturday, September 15 at the MANHATTAN LYCEUM, 66 East 4th Street Freiheit Mandolin Orchestra, W. L. T. CARL BRODSKY, Candidate 8th Assembly District, only speaker. GOOD JAZZ ORCHESTRA, Dancing till 2 A. M. Auspices: Down-Town Communist Election Campaign Committee Admission 35 Cents —Philadelphia — . Leading Members of the Daily Worker Staff JACOB BURCK, HARRY Cartoonist, and GANNES Associate Editor of the Daily Worker Will Meet the Philadelphia Daily Worker Shock Brigaders ata Robert Minor Banquet Celebrating thé Fiftieth Birthday of Robert Mi Struggles, Member of the Central | Saturday, Sept. 15th | at 8 P.M. ADMISSION FREE TO THOSE DOO! r, Veteran of Working Class Committee of the Communist Party Broad St. Mansion Broad and Girard Ave. WHO WILL PRESENT AT THE R A SOLD COUPON BOOK FOR THE DAILY WORKER