Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Page Two 'W YORK, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1934 * 100,000 Sales Quota Set for First 8-Page N.Y. Daily Worker Chicago Workers Speed Plans for Congress Against War | ' COMMUNIST PARTY Intensified Terror MORE DELEGATES Negro fistends Smatt F Erin ae in South 7 White Women And Share Croppers’ Union PLANS TO DOUBLE SALES BY JAN. 1 Importance of Raising $60,000 Fund at Rapid Pace Stressed by District Secretariat of C. P. in Announcing Program NEW YORK.—One hundred thousand sales in this city was the quota set yesterday by the District Secretariat of the Communist Party for the first issue of the eight- page New York Daily Worker. The paper will be dated Monday, Oct. 8, and its first More Troops Called night before. This resolution is a major step| in the plan of the District to double, | at least, the New York circulation of the Daily Worker, before Jan, 1 At present the city circulation is 15,574 copies day. Stress Added News Value In making its d ion, the Secre- tariat stressed the added news v the enlarged paper would have members of trade unions, the unem- ployed and members of fraternal and cultural organizations. Not only will the added pages afford a more adequate treatment of the ac- tivities of these working class groups, but with two New York edi- tions, one on the streets early in the evening and the other shortly before midnight, the paper will be able to provide its readers with up to the minute news. The success of the eight-page paper, the Secretariat pointed out, is based upon its widest circulation In North | Carolina By HARRY RAYMOND | (Continued from Page 1) rights to hold the meeting, the “News” article continues: “Per- |haps he rural police squad will }turn the crowd back at the side- | walk, and in that case, of course, | however much speaking there will be elsewhere, it will not be on the | Court House steps.” Permit for Meeting Denied The permit to hold the meeting was denied by Henry B. Fowler, chairman of the County Commis- sion. Paul Crouch, Communist Party organizer, in denouncing this flagrant refusal of the right of free speech and assemblage to the Com- | among the masses—particularly|™munist Party, issued an appeal to among members of A. F. of workers through the country to unions, among the revolutionary|Wire protests to Commissioner and independent unions, among the| Fowler in Charlotte and demand unemployed and the Negro people.|that the right to meet be granted These must be reached with the|to the workers of Charlotte. New York Daily Worker. | “The Communist Party criticizes the action of the commissioners in $60,000 Fund Needed refusing the Court House as being The drive for $60,000, the Secre-|an action definitely placing them tariat further pointed out, is inex- | on the side of the mill owners tricably wound up with the cam- | against the striking textile workers paign for circulation. The $60,000| and sympathizers,” Crouch told the is eatin, for the increased eee sea yesterday, ant itions. With the improved paver it will be considerably. easter | tar iorccpapedintee oO carry out the resolution of the i eighth convention for a minimum |e meeting and will introduce a of 75,000 readers by Jan, 1. resolution against the use of Na- | tional Guardsmen, and the rein- All Sections of the Party, mass or- | forcements ordered out yesterday, ganizations and trade unions are|and will demand that the funds urged by the Secretariat to imme-| which are being spent on the Na- diately make plans for large orders | tional Guard be used for relief of and distribution. The New York| the striking textile workers.” Daily Worker should receive wide| Crouch charged that Howard and continual publicity throughout | Payne, assistant secretary of the the city, and canvassers and speak- | North’ Carolina Strike Committee, ers should make the paper and its was the first to denounce the flying $60,000 drive a special point on squadrons and to “raise the red every occasion. The influence of herring.” the Daily Worker is growing stead-| “In doing so,” Crouch declared, “The Communist Party will hold | jily and rapidly and, as our two- |" month intensified circulation cam- Paign showed, it is an easy selier, when pushed. MEET YOUR COMRADES AT THE 2 th STREET CAFETERIA 8 East 14th Street, N.Y.C. Near 5th Avenue A CONGENIAL PLACE TO EAT Empire Cafeteria Fresh Foods Proletarian Prices 125th Street at Lenox Ave. COMRADES PATRONIZE CANTON KITCHEN Chinese-American Restaurant Special Lunch 25¢ — Dinner 35¢ 207 East 14th Street WORKERS COOPERATIVE COLONY 2700-2800 BRONX PARK EAST | has reduced the rent, several good apartments available. Cultural Activities for Adults, Youth and Children. Direction: ‘exington Ave., White Plains | Stop at Allerton Ave, station | ‘Trains. Office open daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m Sunday 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Telephone: Estabrook 8-1400—8-1401 friday and Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 125 FOLDING CHAIRS “ 60c John Kalmus Co. ita xe WEST SIDE WORKERS PATRONIZE BROWNS HAND LAUNDRY 239 West 72nd Street Between Broadway é& West End Ave, WE CALL AND DELIVER WE_DO POUND WORK TRafalgar 7-0496 ‘ own reactionary policies. The red herring is used only by some who wish to have something to hide be- hind. An effort to split the ranks of the strikers on the basis of Party membership is an effort to weaken the strike.” Troops Attack Pickets During the week-end I made a tour of the strike front from Con- |cord, N. C., to Greenville, S. C. | arrived in Concord shortly after the | troops attacked a mass picket line |in front of the Gibson Mill on Fri- |day and arrested four strikers and held them on charges of inciting to | riot. Strikers in the union hall on | Classified | ATTRACTIVE Front Room, private, suit- able 1-2. Home privileges. 9 E. 118th St Harlem 7-4292. (5B). ATTRACTIVE Furnished Room, 196 E, 175th ft. Apt. 4C. Mrs. Gusoff. Comrades Patronize JADE MOUNTAIN American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE (Bet. 12th and 13th St.) Dr. S. A. Chernoff GENITO-URINARY Men and Women 223 Second Ave., N. Y.C. OFFICE HOURS: 11 | SUNDAY: 12 - | Tompkins Square || Dr. Maximilian Cohen Dental Surgeon |] 41 Union Sq. W., N. Y. C After 6 P.M. Use Night Entrance a2 EAST 17th STREET Suite 703—GR. 7-0135 Dr. Harry Musikant Dentist 7195 EASTERN PARKWAY Corner Kingston Ave, DEcatur 2-0695 Brooklyn, N. Y. Dr. Simon Trieff Dentist 2300 - 86th Street MArfower 9. Brooklyn. y. a ie is only trying to cover up his | In Atlanta Case (Special to the Daily Worker) ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. 16—When | gro lawyer of At- her with Ben Davis defended Angelo Herndon, appeared yesterday as defense counsel for Leah Young and Annie Mae Leath- ers, arrested textile pickets, South- ern history was made. For the first time a Negro was defending native-born white Southern women in the cour's. Proscutor Hudson yesterday of- fered to reduce their bail from $5,000 each if the two women would promise to stop their activity among the strikers. Both refused. Mrs. Leah Young, the mother of five children, issued the following statement from the Fulton County jail in refusing Hudson’s strike- | breaking offer: | “We Southern white women are | waking up. We have been enslaved | by the bosses long enough and have Stood all the pressure we can bear. If I have to lose my life, children and all, I am going to remain in the struggle for the liberation of the white and Negro workers.” Alarmed by the spreading of the textile strike, Governor Talmadge yesterday ordered two companies of the National Guard to Car‘<ersville, | although martial law has not been |proclaimed. The Griffin Mill at Griffin, Ga., closed down on Thurs- day. A flying squadron of textile strikers from Trion and striking {stove workers from Rome, Ga., |closed down the mill at Aragon, bringing to 35 the number of mills closed by flying squadrons. The calling out of the National | tween the Governor and a group of mill operators and T. M. Forbes, secretary of the Cotton Manufac- | turers’ Association of the State. South Union St. said that the at- tack started when workers marched from the hall to the Gibson mill, which was surrounded by guards- ;men who had refused to allow a | picket line to beformed. | “The fight lasted 30 minutes,” a | striker explained. | Threw Bombs Back “Soldiers led by Sergeant Flem- mings put on their gas masks and rushed at us with their bayonets | stickin’ out. Another one of the yellow dogs got down behind a ma- |chine gun and turned it toward us, | Just then the yellow ‘dogs began | | throwing gas bombs, but we got right smart ball players in our union and we caught the bombs and threw them back. “The first gas candle that one of | our men threw back landed in fron$ of the machine gunner. He left the gun and ran like a blue streak, three others dropped their guns and followed him, Then one of our boys sat down behind the machine gun |and hollered at us to go at ‘em. And we sure did. We pushed the soldiers back and Sergeant Flem- mings backed into one of the bayc- nets and was taken to the hos- | pital.” Tells How Wemen Fought Another striker told how the women fought. “We've got women in this town with more guts than | the men,” he asserted proudly. “You |ought to see them grabbin’ those | bombs and throwin’ them back.” | The Daily Worker was every- where in the strike hall. In every corner I saw strikers with the pa- per. A young textile worker, member of the Young Communist | League, distributes 200 Daily Workers every day on the picket lines and in the hall. All Gaffney Mills Shut Down at the southern end of the | strike-front, in Gaffney, 8. C., | Where the once swanky Chamber of Commerce sign of “Welcome to Gaffney” has given up the ghost and collapsed at the southern en- Guard followed a conference be- | | By John Barnett The small farmers of the South who opened their meagre farm sup- plies to the striking textile workers |in the famous Gastonia strike knew that this was a common fight. These farmers’ own sons, brothers {and daughters were striking against unbearable stretchout and starva- tion wages, against having their very flesh and blood woven into cloth. The poor fighting farmers of the United States stand for solidarity |with the workers. So declared the Farmers’ National Conference, the Share Croppers’ Union, the New England Farmers Protective Asso- ciation, the Pennsylvania United Farmers Protective Association, the United Farmers League, and the many actions of sympathy and sup- port by hundreds of farmers on | hundreds on occasions. | Will Aid Mill Strikers In this magnificant struggle of |the textile workers, the exploited farmers all over the south will re- |Spond again in splendid support, in |siving relief and other forms of help. So will the farmers in New| England, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, | | Virginia and elsewhere. The call of | strikers for tke support from the Share Croppers’ Union has had a |big response among fhem. They jalso are striking, throwing their strength into the battle for better conditions, These textile strikers are leading a heroic struggle for the right to live. Against whom? Against the | New Deal slave codes, the same New} | Support the Textile Strike Deal that has ruined thousands of |organizations which fight for the cotton farmers, especially Negroes, | deprived them of their farms, which through the Bankhead bill will tax their cotton away from them, which pays rental and allotment checks to} |the landlords. The same New Deal | that has tried every way to clamp |disastrous milk production and |marketing codes upon the milk armers, that ties up the truck | Srowers with ruinous marketing | regulations. Farmers Fight Same Line-up These textile workers fight against | the same landlord-banker-mill own- | ers, who ruin the farmers by paying | next to nothing for cotton, sweat |blood from the textile workers to make the clothes, which are then |sold back to the farmers and work- ers at high monopoly prices. The} |Same terror gangs are used against | |the workers and farmers. The Ku | Klux Klan in being revived to bust up the union and bring terror to the countryside. The textile strik- ers are leading, are in the front lines fighting the financial interests that wring profits from the suf- fering on the farm and in the fac- tory. They need behind them united action of workers and farm- ers, Negro and white. Certainly all farmers and farm toiling farmers, who have the cause of the oppressed toilers at heart, will give every possible support in} food, in money, and on the picket lines to our fighting brothers. This can be done at once, from Alabama to Maine, directly to the local strike committees. Every ounce is a blow toward winning the strike, trance to the town, every mill is shut down. Pickets working in six- | hour shifts patrol every entrance to the plants both day and night. | “Not even a louse can get through these lines,” an overalled picket ex- plained, The only break in the whole strike-front came yesterday at Union, 8. C., where U.T.W. leaders urged the workers to call off the strike and return to work on Mon- day. This section, which is com- manded by John Peel, third vice- president of the U.T.W., is the weakest in the South, due to Peel's efforts to halt all militant picket- ing and flying squadron activities, Peel Balks at Unity Yesterday Peel announced that he had refused an offer of the local Communist Party for united front | action to strengthen the strike. Peel’s statement to the press said: “In keeping with the policy de- fined by the National Strike Com- |mittee, this office has today de- |clined an offer of assistance from @ representative of the Communist Party.” A huge mass-meeting was held in Gastonia this afternoon and was attended by workers from the Bel- Mont area, which is struck 100 per cent. Plans were worked out there for an intensification of mass pick- eting to meet increased efforts of the mill owners to open the mills on Monday. 400 Workers Cheer Speech by Hathaway At Campaign Banquet NEW YORK —More than 400 workers assembled at a banquet in the Royal Palace, 16-18 Manhattan Avenue, Brooklyn, on Friday even- ing, gave a rousing welcome to Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker and Congressional candidate, who was guest of honor. | Hathaway, in making the prin- \cipal address of the evening, em- phasized the unprecedented oppor- tunities open to the Communist Party and to the entire working class for sending genuine working class representatives into Congress jand into the lesser law-making | bodies in the coming election. In personal capability, Hathaway |Said, the candidates of the Commu- | jnist Party rank far above the aver- |age capitalist politician. Communist public officials, he said, armed with the Communist program and backed by the mass organizations of the working class under the leadership of the Communist Party can be- come important agents in the class struggle. A total of $102 for the Communist campaign fund was realized in a collection at the banquet. ‘Daily’ Shock Troopers |Of Philadelphia Raise $800 At Minor Banquet PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Sept. 16.— Having collected over $800 for the Daily Worker financial drive, more than 200 shock troopers those most active in building and spreading the Daily Worker among the textile strikers in Philadelphia, gathered at a Robert Minor banquet Satur- day night at Broad Street Mansions. James Casey, Jacob Burck and Harry Gannes, members of the Daily Worker editorial staff, were among the speakers. Stirred by the editorial in the Daily Worker calling on the Phila- Gelphia district to take the lead in circulating and building the Daily Worker among the textile workers, the workers at the banquet pledged to raise their full quota of $4,000 in the shortest possible time; to double and triple the circulation of the Daily in mill towns and to gain a@ minimum of fifty new Party members from among the textile strikers, A. W. Mills, district organizer, re- ported that a beginning had al- ready been made but that greater efforts would be put into these tasks. Workers from radio, hosiery and textile mills told how the workers eagerly received and read the Daily Worker. In some places where Daily Worker agents pre- viously were driven away, they are now protected against the thugs by In bic aay FROM TRADE UNIONS AND SHOPS URGED 250,000 Leaflets Announcing Opening of Anti- War Parley on Sept. 28 Are Circulated Among Workers Throughout City By Bill Gebert CHICAGO, Ill, Sept. 16.—The working class here, its organizations, trade unions, unemployed, Negro, youth, women and professionals, are mobilizing their forces for the Second U. S. Congress Against War and Fascism. Until now, 18 locals of the A. F. of L. have officially elected dele- @gates. The important ex-services (Continued from Page 1) tics of the U. T. W. leaders. No agreement or negotiation should be considered which is not handled by | the workers’ elected united front mill committees and ratified by all the strikers themselves, U. T. W. Continues Splitting The U. T. W. leaders continue to pursue @ policy of splitting. They have conferred with Governor Green of Rhode Island (MacMahon and Sylvia) and in towns such as Lawrence, New Bedford and Lowell. have conferred with the city and police officials. In these confer- ences they have acted as informers against militant workers (as in Lowell) pointing out “Reds” to the police. They have throughout the entire New England field entered voluntarity into agreements with ThalmannFilm #« organizations elected dele- the police and the authorities to limit pickets to a few and have agreed to abandon mass picketing. In New Bedford they are giving relief only to those U. T. W. mem- bers who have been in the union a year. They agreed in Rhode Island in advance to the calling out of the National Guard and to deputizing of an army of Legionaires and armed deputies. MacMahon, Sylvia, Riv- iere and all the other U. T. W. top leaders have been the loudest in whipping up the “Red” scare against militant pickets. Like Hearst and Governor Green, they called the militant strikers “hoodlums and vandals.” . Plan Individual Settlements Now these U. T. W. leaders have gone a step further. They now are planning to break up the strikers | by individual settlements not based To Show Hitler Terror Scenes NEW YORK.—‘The great masses of Red Front fighters and anti- fascists of Germany appear before| your eyes under the leadership of Ernst Thaelmann, imprisoned Com- munist whose liberty the whole world of workers is now fighting for, in an historical motion picture which will’ be presented at the| Twenty-eighth Street Theatre this week.” This statement was issued yester- day by the Thaelmann Liberation Committee, which is now ¢o-ordin- | ating the work of all anti-fascist organizations in spreading this ‘flim. | This film was taken out of Ger- many with great danger and will be shown together with films of | the Hitler terror, the burning of the| books, the Reichstag fire trial, Dimi- | troff speaking in court, Dimitroff in Moscow, and scénes of the mass struggle to liberate Thaelmann throughout the major countries of the world. ‘The sponsors of the film frankly admit that the picture does not have any dramatic story acted out by professional actors imitating the various individuals, like Thaelmann, Clara Zetkin, Sen Katayama, Dimi- troff, Torgler, Van Der Lubbe, Bar- busse, Rolland and others, but that instead this historical document is made up of actual news-reel films of all these individuals in action, as well as genuine films of the strug- gles of the German proletariat cov- ering the period from 1924 to 1933. The sponsors point out that no artificial dramatization is necessary. ‘The story of Thaelmann and Dimi- troff, of the Hitler terror and the struggle against it, is one of the most dramatic stories in all history, on united action of the sections of the strike and not based on the na- tional demands. The so-called attack of the U.T.W. leaders on General Johnson | is merely a smoke-screen to hide | the attempted splitting of the strike which is nearing. The attack on Johnson is an attempt to hide the fact that Gorman and MacMahon and the entire U.T.W. national leadership are again preparing to accept arbitration, that is, to send the workers back before their de- mands are won and agreeing in advance to accept as final deci- sions of Roosevelt's mill-owners’ ar- bitration boards, Protests Urged In view of the greatly increased terror, and the attempt Monday to open the mills under troop protec- tion, the entire working class of the country should intensify its protest against the sharp terror. Hundreds of armed guards, called “vigilantes” openly in the papers, are patrolling highway and mill towns as well as mills. In Salem, Fall River, Sayles- ville and Woonsocket as well as else- where, the mill owners are making a concerted drive to open the mills Monday, under the protection of the guns of these troops and guards. Especially important in view of this terror, are supporting actions from workers and organizations in other industries. Sympathetic Strikes must answer increased ter- ror this week, The “Red scare” rages unabated especially in Rhode Island. It was announced in Providence that many Federal agents and Federal immi- gration authorities are aiding Gov- ernor Green in his “red” hunt. The “Red scare” aided by Sylvia and McMahon of the U.T.W. is being intensified in order to stifle mass Picketing and get the mills open and break the strike. Governor Green is being flooded with pro- tests against the terror of his troops by the workers throughout the country. Funeral of Slain Pickets Woonsocket thousands marched and but greater protest must be made| Murdered Courtemanche, and this film document of that story will undoubtedly arouse great masses to join in the fight against Fascism. The film will be shown at popu- lar prices next Wednesday, Thurs- day, Friday, Saturday and Sunday in continuous performance from 9:30 a.m. to 11 p.m., at the Twenty- | eighth Street Theatre on Broadway. shot down by National Guard troops called out by Governor Theo- dore Green of Rhode Island. In practically the entire town looked on while 19-year-old Jude Courte- manche was borne to his grave, So great was the indignation against the killing that National Guard officers were forced to re-| move from duty the policeman who Woon- Socket remains under martial law. with hundreds of soldiers at the rayon mill and many more patrol- ing streets. (Special to the Daily Worker) BOSTON, Mass., Sept. 16—Thou- sands of workers massed at the fu- the strikers. nerals of the two textile strikers Renounces Proposal to Repeal Sales Tax On the Masses By Harry Gannes Some of the great secrets about which President Roosevelt spoke to Upton Sinclair, Democratic candi- date for governor of California, in their recent Hyde Park conference, are now coming to light. It all con- cerned Sinclair’s plans to “End Poy- erty in California.” That Sinclair would have ditched his whole fake, demagogic program if elected to office was a foregone conclusion. But Sinclair is a very impatient man. He does not event wait until he is elected in order to throw most of his promises into the waste basket. Roosevelt undoubtedly recounted to Sinclair some of his sad experi- | ences with demagogi¢ promises, and | Pointed out to him how he could still try to win the election by, on the one hand, gaining greater sup- port from some of the most reac- tionary and outstanding capitalists, and on the other hand, continuing | to fool the mas: but with less de- finite promises, with more skill and subtl Sincl; rs first step towards this Voies for Democratic and Republican Parties Are Votes Sinclair Changes Plans After Visit to Roosevelt é end was a conference with George Creel, war-time lying propagandist, red-baiting bloodhound. This con- ference brought Sinclair closer to those democratic leaders who previ- ously did not support him, fearing the effects of his demagogic propa- ganda, A State Convention of the Demo- cratic Party will be held on Sept. 30, in Sacramento. This will be the funeral of the great Sinclair EPIC plan (though Sinclair will retain the foul demagogic propaganda he used to win the nomination). At that convention a platform will be writ- ten to have as its aim winning the support of the strike-breaking ship owners, Hearst, and every capitalist agent in California. Sinclair has already announced that he will replace his special brand of Socialist-influenced dema- gogy by the out-and-out trade- marked Roosevelt New Deal poison. In order to get the support of Hearst and his red-baiting news- paper apparatus, Sinclair has com- pletely ditched his proposal to re- peal the sales tax. In other words, the tax on the necessities of life of the masses will remain, with Sinclair as governor, in order to ease the tax burdens of the million- aire exploiters. This is Heart’s | program. Sinclair's EPIC proposal to pay all persons past 60 years of age $50 a month social insurance, hav- ing served its purpose, is now go- ing to be put into the grave so there will be no misunderstanding about it. The much-touted plan to give every unemployed person in Cali- fornia a job by means of the state- owned factories and special loans for the purpose has been repudi- ated by Sinclair after his Roosevelt- Creel conferences. The plan for communal farms is dropped, In order to win the support of these exploiters who have not until now relished EPIC, Sinclair goes still further and modifies his prog- ram on taxation. He promised that if elected governor he would except ail small business and homes as- sessed at $3,000 from all taxation. He no longer even promises this, but cuts the sum down to $1,000. Most significant of all is that he has gone completely the Roosevelt way on the most important question facing the employed and unem- ployed in California—unemployment insurance. Sinclair now states, in- stead of advocating unemployment insurance, he will wait for Roose- velt to announce a scheme, and will | adopt whatever Roosevelt offers. The hundreds of thousands of voters who believed Sinclair's EPIC e Retains His Demagogic Campaign Publicity to Fool Voters promises, and gave him the nomi- nation, have a great deal to think about. Sinclair shed these prom- ises just as easily as he shed his Socialist shirt. Whatever promises he makes will meet the same fate. Sinclair's main object is to help the Roosevelt regime save capitalism, and to stave off the revolutionary maturity and development of the exploited masses of California. The fate of Sinclair's promises, so closely connected with Roosevelt's, should be utilized by every Com- munist and sympathizer in the elec- tion, showing how every agent of the capitalists, no matter under what banner he parades, tricks, fools, betrays and dupes the work- ers, Only the Communist Party has a program for the immediate needs of the workers and for the ultimate solution of their problems—a revo- lutionary program for Soviet power, for the dictatorship of the prole- tariat, for a workers’ state that will be unflinchingly carried out by the mass might of the prol<tariat them- selves when they seize state power. COHEN’S 117 ORCHARD STREET Nr. Delancey Street, New York City EYES EXAMINE! By JOSEPH LAX, 0.D. Optometrist Wholesale Opticians Tel. ORchard 4-4520 Factory on Premises CAthedral 8-6160 Dr. D. BROWN Dentist 317 LENOX AVENUE gates. Delegates have been élected by the National Guard, the Ger- man Reichs Banner Schwartz, a number of churches and many language organizations. Two locals of the Socialist Party have re- ported that they will send dele- gates. But so far an insufficient number of trade unions and workers in the shops have elected delegates. No elections have taken place in the important shops here, nor has everything been done toward elect- ing delegates from the trade unions, especially from the A. F. of L. and Railroad Brotherhoods. In order to speed this activity, the Chicago Congress Arrange- ments Committee urges all sup- porters of the struggle against war and fascism to concentrate espe- cially in the remaining days before the Congress on electing delegates from trade unions, shops, ex- servicemen’s organizations, armed forces, Negro organizations, youth and women clubs. For this purpose a meéting of the Chicago delegates of organizations which have al- ready chosen representatives will be held on Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Medical and Dental Arts Build- ing Auditorium, 185 N. Wabash Ave., fifth floor. This meeting will be held in conjunction with a full meeting of the Chicago Arrange- ments Committee. The agenda pro- posed for the Congress will be dis- cussed, as well aS thé issues and problems confronting the American working class in the struggle against war and fascism. The Chicago Congress Arrange- ments Committee, in connection with the Constitutional Day which is to be celebrated in Chicago on Sept. 17, has decided to issue a special leaflet on this occasion, pointing out that it is under the cloak of preserving the constitution that all attacks upon the working class have been carried, especially as is so clearly demonstrated in the present bloody attack upon the tex- tile strikers. This patriotic rally will be utilized by the committee to rally the workers for the Congress | by issuing leaflets to be distributed among those who will be assembled on Constitutional Day at the World’s Fair. More than 250,000 leaflets have been issued to the workers of Chi- cago announcing the opening of the Congress in the Chicago Coli- seum on Sept. 28 at 7:30 pm. Special leaflets are addressed to trade unions, Negro people, to stockyards, Illinois Steel, Western Electric and Harvester workers. Special leaflets to young workers, in addition to the general leaflet addressed to the toiling population of the city of Chicago. DR. J. SAMOSTIE 220 East 12th Street Skin, Urinary and Blood Conditions Lady Physicians in Attendance for Women Hours 9 to 2—4 to 8—-Sunday 9 to 1 DR. JULIUS LITTINSKY 0 A.M., 1-2, 6-3 P.M : DICKENS 2-3012 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkin and Sutter Aves., Brooklyn Office Hours: PH Brownsville and East New York Comrades Welcome J. BRESALIER EYES EXAMINED—GLASSES Between 125th & 126th 8t., N.Y.C. Good Work at Clinic Prices FITTED 525 Sutter Ave. at Hinsdale St. Brooklyn, N. ¥. PAUL LUTTINGER, M. D. sy pee DANIEL LUTTINGER, M. D. Are Now Located at 5 WASHINGTON SQUARE NORTH, NEW YORK CITY Hours: 1 - 2 and 6 - 8 P.M. Tel. GRamercy 7-2090-2091 ‘Fresh Food—Proletarian Prices—s0 19-10 THIRTEENTH AVENUE, RADIO SERVICE BY MEN WHO KNOW HOW @_ SPECIAL DIs- COUNTS TO COMRADE READERS OF THE “DAILY” SQUARE RADIO CO. WINDSOR 8-0280 WE GO ANYWHERE ‘All Comrades Meet at the’ NEW HEALTH CENTER CAFETERIA E. 13th St.—WORKERS' CENTER BROOKLYN, NEW YORK for Murder of Workers in Strikes