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J DAILY WORKER, NEW YONK, THUNSDAT, SEPTEMSEN 20, 1954 Page Three N. Y. JOBLESS MOBILIZE FOR MARCH TO CITY HALL SATURDAY Will Ths emand. Adequate Aid During Winter East Side Workers te Urge Aldermen to Back Program NEW YORK.— Unemployed and relief workers’ -groups throughout the city are mobilizing all workers for the mass march, Saturday to City Hall to demand the immediate approapriation of adequate funds for winter relief. East Side workers, led by the Thirteenth Street Unemployment Council will assemble at Seventh St. and Avenue A tonight at 8 o'clock and march in a body to the home of Alderman Saul Fassler demand- ing that he support the Council re- lief program. March to Alderman’s Home On the lower East Side, employed and unemployed workers will as- semble at Rutgers Square at 7 o'clock tonight and march to the home of Alderman Stand, 290 East Broadway. The march will be led by the Workers Committee on Un- employment Locals 2 and 3 and the Rutgers Place local, both affiliated to the National Unemployment Councils. West Side workers will assemble at Sixth Ave. and Bleeker St. to- night at 6:30 o'clock and march to the home of Assemblyman Pele- grino, Harlem Meetings Planned In Harlem, under the leadership of the Unemployment Councils, workers will hold mass meetings at the Home Relief Bureaus at 181 West 135th St. and at Lenox Ave. and 124th St. Similar meetings at the Home Relief Bureaus are being arranged throughout the city. In Crotona Park, a mass meeting | will be held tonight at 8 o'clock at the headquarters of the Crotona Park East Unemployment Council, 1472 Boston Road, to mobilize the workers in the neighborhood for the city-wide demonstration and} mass march to City Hall Saturday. March to Begin at 10 A. M. The march to City Hall will form in Union Square Saturday at 10 a. m. and parading to City Hall will demand the immediate appropria- tion of funds for Winter relief. In addition to this central issue, the workers’ elected delegates will place an eleven-point program to Mayor LaGuardia for immediate enact- ment. The program calls for endorse- ment of the Workers Unemployment | Insurance Bill and the petitioning | | of Goy. Lehman by the city for calling a special session of the State Legislature to enact the Workers’ Bill on a state-wide scale. The or- ganizations affiliated to the United Action Conference on Work, Relief and Unemployment demand the Workers’ Bill to provide a measure of security to New York’s unem- ployed in ozder that they might not again be made the pawns of La- Guardia’s criminal game of with-| holding relief. Other demands include: union} wages and conditions on all relief) and P. W. A. jobs; a public works program to provide jobs for all the unemployed; the unqualified right of all workers to organize, strike, picket and assemble; an immediate increase in cash relief; free milk; and enforcement of the State Vet- erans Relief Plan, N. J. RELIEF MEN STRIKE MIDDLETOWN, N. J., Sept. 19. One hundred and fifty Monmouth county relief workers engaged in work on the school athletic field here, struck yesterday demanding cash wages instead of the present food orders | town district of Manhattan, union GiB TVR) picketing. \Gontradiction Between Mass Strike Movements and Officials Who Support . N.R.A. Cited as 54th A.F.L. Convention Nears 28 Stevedores | Charged With Death of Scab PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 19. —| Calvin Krause, first of the 28 long- shoremen to have a preliminary | hearing on the charge of murder) as an outcome of the death of James Connor, scab docker, has been bound over to the Grand Jury. Connor was killed when a group of members of the International Long- shoremen’s Association clashed here | with strike-breakers in, a scab} union outfit, the Columbia River Longshoremen’s Association, at the | hall of the latter, on Aug. 20. | The entire clash was an out-| growth of the great general ing 00 movement on the West Coast, the | Columbia outfit having been organ- | ized by company officials in an| atempt to split the ranks of the strikers. The twenty-seven remaining members of the I.L. A. who are also| being held on charges of murder, will have a group preliminary hearing this week. Several of the longshore- | men who are facing murder charges, have definite proof that they were | not even present at the hall dur-| ing the time the incident happened. Despite the fact that there is clear proof that several shots were fired from the inside of the hall | by scabs, and one shot was fired towards Connor by a gang boss, who even admits that the shot might have been the fatal one, still these twenty-eight longshoremen are be- ing held for murder and undoubted- ly will all be bound over to the Grand Jury. This mass murder frame-up is | being used by the waterfront em-j} ployers and government officials to try and smash all militancy of the longshoremen and other workers and to discourage any more strikes. This is a culmination of the at- tacks upon the longshoremen which | resulted in the arrest of over three | hundred and twenty-five longshore- men in Portland during the strike. Among the 28 longshore- men facing charges of murder are the most militant rank and file members of the I. L, A. Charges against longshoremen in Portland, range from vagrancy, disorderly conduct, assault and battery, riot to murder. Italian Bakers Win Demands in 5 Shops With 9 Still NEW YORK.—Militant picketing | by the Bakery Workers Italian Local 107, affiliated to the Food Workers Industrial Union, 106 E. 11th St., has resulted in the settle- ment of five bakeries in the down- | leaders announced yesterday. Thirty-five workers employed by nine bakeries are still on strike de- manding recognition of the union. | Formerly the workers| had belonged to the Knickerbocker Italian Bak- ers Union which the industrial union leaders claim was a rack- eteering organization. Bakeries that still struck are the De Lis, 1115 First Avenue; Cusi- mano, 232 E. 29th St.; Milano, 285 Elizabeth St.; Perna Maraccino, 193 First Ave.; Tantillo, 185 First Ave.; Rosa, 416 E. 11th St.; Bivona, 302 Mott St.; Neglia, 68 Stanton St., and Orgentieri, 22 Prince St. Downtown workers are being urged to report to union headquarters for TONIGHT — CONCERT AND DANCE for Benefit of Crown Heights Branch, Workers’ School ELKS HALL, 1068 Fulton St., Brooklyn, N.Y. Featuring EUGENE NIGOB, Pianist; WORKERS’ LABORATORY Win a Free Scholarship to School—$2.50 25 Chauncey St.—Strachey's “Coming Struggle for Power” on FREE COUPON to be given. DEL, Cartoonist THEATRE in “Thaelmann” Check on Bazaar and Rummage Sale at Subscription 40 Cents DAILY WORKER Baz Friday October 19, 20, 21 at the newly and completely rebuilt ST. NICHOLAS PALACE 69 West 66th Sirect @ Orgenizations and individuals are urged to collect articles @ of mercheidise for the @ names and ads for the bazaar journal. MORNING FREIHEIT YOUNG WORKER Saturday araar headauarters, 50 E. 13th St. 6th floor—Algonquin 4-9481 aar Sunday (Near Broadway) bazaar. Greetings, honor roll | bership requirements in order to} |maintain their voting strength in| DUDClation of sympathetic strikes | Out) |letter from President Roy Hunt | \patting the A. F. of L. misleaders. | WILLIAM SCOTT AND HIS RHYTHM BOYS | a (ledlacace of ( C. P. Seen |in their own ranks of a new corps after his far more vicious attack on in New Movement Of Workers By Bill Dunne Iv The active leaders of the union organization movements in practic- ally all industries and occupations —but especially in basic industries formerly unorganized or with very small and weak organization—in the last year and a half, have not been the upper stratum of the official A. F. of L. leadership, This has a direct and very im- portant bearing on the issues of the | structure of the A. F. of L. unions and their tactics in the eonflicts with employers which will come be- | fore the 54th convention. It is probable that union mem- bership in the United States today is close to the 5,000,000 mark if the | Railway Brotherhoods, T. U. U. L. | unions and the various independent unions are included under the gen- eral term, trade union movement. 100 Per Cent Rise This figure can be only approx- imate, It maybe somewhat above the actual membership or slightly below it. But it is sufficiently ac- curate to allow us to conclude that the last two years have been an in- crease of about 100 per cent in union membership. (In the beginning of 1933 the membership of the A. F. of L. unions and the Railway) Brotherhoods did not exceed 2,500,- 000. Figures as of Aug. 1, 1933, fur- nished by Secretary Morrison to the 53rd Convention, and based on} per capita tax payments, showed | A. F. of L. membership to be 2,192,- 000. It was actually much lower than this figure because of the cus- tom of the larger unions of paying per capita tax far in excess of mem- the A. F. of L, convention. The Building Trades unions, whose membership had reached over a million in 1929, and which in the early period of the crisis made up practically half of the affiliate membership, suffered great losses; unemployment in the building trades reached as high as 85 per cent with what amounted to the almost complete disappearance of the building and construction in- dustry with the continuation of the crisis. New Corps of Leaders | Hundreds of thcusands of newly | organized workers in the decisive industries are conscious of the fact that they have been able to or- ganize because of the development MinincinMen Assail Terms Of ‘Agreement’ NEW KENSINGTON, Pa., Sept. 19.—Back at their jobs after their | |second strike in six months under A. F, of L. guidance, with no better wages than when they struck, the union not recognized, working con- ditions in no way changed except | in the direction of speedup, dis-| crimination against union men al- ready a proven fact, and so-called “seniority rights” which were “won” | a hollow sham, hundreds of mem- | bers of the National Council of Aluminum Workers are expressing themselves as “through with the union.” The so-called agreement, merely a@ signed statement by the Mellon- controlled Aluminum Co.'s officials “recognizing” Section 7-A of the/ National Recovery Act, under which Boris Shishkin and Dave Williams forced them to return to work, has | become an ironical joke among the | workers. This “settlement” has been print- ed in beautiful pamphlet form by the company, together with a nice | Fifty union men, most of then | active during the strike, have not been given jobs. The company has a glib excuse, however, ready in every such case of discrimination. In most cases the men lack “abil- ity,” one of the qualifications of | the “settlement.” 3,000 P. M. A. Pickets, Close Freeburg Mine; Owners Broke Pact FREEBURG, Iil., Sept. 19.—Three thousand miners of the Progressive Minerseof America here picketed the | United Electric Coal Co. and forced it to shut its mine last week. The walkout was called because the company broke its contzact with the P.M. A. The company had been operating under a P. M. A. contract from October, 1932 to April, 1933, but broke the pact in order to make another one with the United Mine Workers, the American Federation of Labor union in the field. The attempt of the operators to run the mine with a few scabs and armed thugs proved futile in the face of militant mass picketing by the miners. The N. R. A. board has sided with the U. M. W. A. against the Pro- gressive Miners, an independent | } organization, but mass pressure by of leaders. Tens of thousands of | workers who remained in the unions or in close touch with the labor| movement during the crisis know very well that the initiative in the organizational drives and extensive strike movements was taken by local | union officials, Central Labor Coun- | cil delegates, rank and file organ- | ization committees and strike com-| mittees, etc. | These workers know that the tac- tics of mass struggle that have proved effective—unity of strikers} and unemployed on the picket lines, in relief work, on hunger marches, | in the fight against evictions, in| the struggles for equal rights for Negroes, mass picketing, mass marches in the organization drives and strike struggles, etc., have been developed and applied in particular industries and on a nationwide scale against the wishes and open} oppesition of the “recognized” offi- cials of the A. F. of L. and its affiliated unions. C. P. Influence Seen The influence of the Communist | Party is to be seen plainly in these mass movements. Especially is this true of the solidarity actions—in | the increase of sympathetic strikes, | administration himself—A. F. of L. officialdom has | the West Coast maritime strike and | the Bay Counties general strike. | The situation has changed. Far more than a half-million textile | workers and workers in some allied trades have struck against the code provisions of N. R. A. in their in- dustry in spite of Johnson’s Cali fornia barrage against Communis' “alien agitator: foreign - born workers and sympathetic strikes. Mass layoffs as in the steel in- dustry, rising prices, speed-up, lowered wages, the increasing fero- | | city of the attacks upon the unions and workers’ living standards are | hastening the process of disillusion- | ment which is given additional im- petus by the fact that huge in-j creases in profits have taken place in the last year, Hard to Point to Roosevelt Forced to denounce the main figure in the N. R. A. next to Roosevelt only the President to hold up to | striking workers as the last bul- wark between them and the em- ployers. But it is becoming ever | more difficult to maintain the illu- sion of Roosevelt's “friendship for | labor’—or even the illusion of his Johnson — | | iota eeshers Gone 100 Per Cent In Last Two Years more difficult to protect Roosevelt |from the mass disillusionment and anger arising from the growing| conviction that N. R. A. is nothing more or less than what the Com-| |munist Party said it was when it was adopted—a program for pull- jing capitalism out of the crisis at the expense of the toiling popula- tion, Sooner or later—and sooner rather than later—A. F. of L. officialdom will face the crisis of deciding whether to continue its fulsome praise of Roosevelt and unreserved support or encounter a mass revolt | against its policies and leade: nip. The inner struggles that will take place during the 54th convention | will center around this basic ques- tion, no matter how distorted the form may be in which the issue arises, and no matter in what dip- |lomatic terms the discussions aze conducted. The support of Roosevelt and N. R. A. is bound up inseparably with the class collaboartion theory of A.| in the inescapable fact that the | impartiality in labor struggles — in| F. of L. officialdom, with its * question of a general strike arises | the face of the cold bayonets, belch- | partisan” political policy, with its in one form or another in practic- | ing rifles and machine guns, mass | belief in middle class respectability | ally every important strike tod: The influence of the Communist | Party is seen in even a more im portant aspect of the recent class battles—in the fact that the mass struggles more and more involve | conflict with the government and its | various agencies, but that workers do not shrink from these struggles because of this. | So powerful are these two trends | that A. F. of L. officialdom—as was | the case in California, and is the | case in the textile strike—is com- pelled at times, in spite of its de- and the general strike, to “go along” with these mass movements in order to maintain its leadership and control until it can find ways and means of strangling them. So con- tinuous is the process of disillusion- ment of large numbers of workers with N, R. A. and its purposes, that A. F. of L. leaders are forced to make important modifications in| what was formerly open and un-| reserved support of N. R. A. and | the Roosevelt administration lead- | ers, Johnson “Resignation” Move The.demand by A..F. of L. lead- ers for General Johnson’s resigna- tion following his attack on the textile strike is a typical example | of this. No such demand was made | grets and deplores, | final .| military arrests and barbed stock- ades for strikers and sympathizers. | Furthermore, while one of main purposes of the demand for! Johnson's resignation by A. F. of L.| officials is to prevent his stinking} anti-labor speech from polluting | the sanctity of the President, Amer- ican workers are not so dumb and gullible as Gorman and other “re- cognized” labor leaders think: American workers are harder to fool by the division of labor tactics of the Roosevelt administration than they were a year or even a few) months ago. Johnson Chief Liason Officer Secretary of Labor Perkins re-| her assistant the Presi- McGrady “conciliates,” dent’s face is fixed in a continuous | smile while he says nothing—but General Johnson, aided by Frank ‘Walker when he was in Washington, |is the chief liason officer between the Roosevelt administration and | monopoly capital, Roosevelt can no more escape responsibility for Johnson’s strike-breaking utterances than he can crop restriction program in the face of an actual and growing shortage of food reserves and rising prices of necessities. The A. F. of L. officialdom will find it moze and First Acts of Revolutionary Wo the | escape responsibility for the} jas against militant action and class | solidari Industrial vs. Craft Unions The issue of industrial unionism ‘non- | linois t P. Wins Places On State Ballot CHICAGO, Sept. 18—With the acceptance by State election au- thorities of 26,931 signatures of ac- credited Illinois voters on 1,140 nominating petitions, the Commu- nist Party has brought to a success- ful conclusion its drive to place a |State ticket in the field. | The petitions were accepted yes- terday by Governor Horner, his Secretary of State and his State Auditor following a conference with Samuel Hammersmark, David Bel- thal and Morris Nackall at Spring- field. The acceptance of the petitions, which gives renewed strength to the leadership of the Communist | Party in making the Illinois elec- tions a struggle for the most vital immediate needs of the State's workers and poor farmers, will give the Party the following State slate: Samuel Hammersmark for State Treasurer, Romania Ferguson for Superintendent of Public Instruc- tion, Carl Lockner and LaVerne Pruitt for Congressmen-at-Large, jand Peter Greenleaf, George Lee and Samuel Lisset for Trustees of |the University of Illinois. versus craft unionism in this stage | of the crisis means raising the ques- tion of power in a very concrete form no matter what such sponsors | of industrial unionism coupled with | class collaboartion as John L. Lewis | may think, This issue also in- volves major questions of tactics for the labor movement. All these issues arising in the face of wide class battles in which masses of workers are fighting for elementary economic and political rights must and will produce a crisis of leadership in the A. F, of | which will be a reflection of the crisis in the ranks of the capitalist class. (The next and final article will deal with the analysis of the new developments in the labor move- | ment and the conclusions made by the Central Committee of the Communist Party, the Trade | Union Unity League leadership and the Daily Worker at the be- ginning of the present strike wave early last spring. The article will also deal with the program of the Rank and File A. F. of L. Com- | mittee for the 54th Convention.) White culties rkers’ Government Are Relief Workers Explained in C.P. Platform Win Demands The election program of the Communist Party pledges all its candidates and forces to fight for improving the living conditions of the working class. It declares, how- ever, that while struggles for the immediate interests of the workers can be won, that the only complete and permanent way out of the capi- telist crisis is the es‘ablishment of a Soviet government controlled by and for the entire working class. How a workers’ revolutionary government would act immediately to relieve the poverty of the masses | and to improve their living condi- | tions, is described as follows in the Manifesto issued by the Eighth Convention of the Communist Party held in Cleveland last April. The first acts of such a revolu- tionary workers’ government would be to open up the ware- houses and distribute among all the working people the enormous unused surplus stores of food and clothing. It would open up the tremen- dous accumulation of unused buildings—now withheld for pri- vate profit—for the benefit of tens of millions who now wander homeless in the streets or crouch in cellars or slumns. | Such a government would im- mediately provide an endless flow of commodities to replace the stores thus used up by opening all the factories, mills and mines, and giving every person a job at constantly increasing wages. | All former claims to ownership of the means of production, in- cluding stocks, bonds, etc., would be relegated to the museum, with special provisions to protect small savings. No public funds would be paid ont to anyone except for services rendered to the com- munity. Unemployment and social in- surance would immediately be | provided for all, to cover all loss | of work due to cause outside the contrel of the workers, whether by closing of factories, by sick- ness, old age, maternity, or other- wise, at full wages without spe- cial costs to the workers. Such a government would im- mediately begin to reorganize the present anarchic system of pro- duction along Socialist lines. It would eliminate the untold waste of capitalism; it would bring to | full use the tremendous achieve- _ ments of science, which have been | pushed aside by the capitalist rulers from consideration of pri- the coal diggers has forced the) mine bosses to keep the mine closed. | vate profit. Such a Socialist re- organization of industry would immediately double the existing productive forces of the coun- try. Such a revolutionary govern- ment would secure to the farm- ers the possession of their land and provide them with the neces- sary means for a comfortable liv- ing; it would make possible for the farming population to unite their forces in a cooperative So- cialist agriculture, and thus bring to the farming population ail the advantages of modern civilization, and would multiply manifold the productive capacities of American agriculture, It would proceed at once to the complete liberation of the Negro people from all oppres- sion, secure the right of self- determination of the Black Beit, and would secure unconditional economic, political and _ social equality. With the establishment of a Socialist system in America, there will be such a flood of wealth available for the country as can hardly be imagined. Productive labor, instead of being a burden, will become a desirable privilege for every citizen of the new society. | (Special to the Daily Worker) | CHICAGO, Ill., Sept. 19. — Mass action by organized white-collar workers forced the Federal Relief | Administration here to agree to ex- tend the work relief project of 100 {of these workers, This was an- | nounced Saturday, at the expiration | |of the time limit granted the F. E. |R. A. by the workers last Tuesday. Determined workers, solidly or- ganized, quit their jobs on Tues- | day, Sept. 11, and boarded a special | | street car to take them from 180 N. | | Wacker Drive to the F. E. R. A. office at 1319 S. Michigan. Eighty strong, they marched in regular ) Tanks into the building and de-| | manded an open hearing. Meantime, a committee clected by | the workers was demanding from | | Officials the continuation of their | jobs beyond Sept. 18, when ey |were scheduled to end Facing the relief workers, the de- | partment heads firs: tried to stall | for time, saying “We will do what |we can. We can’t promise any- | thing,” and so forth. The workers refused to listen to this sort of | talk, | the “red scare,” claiming the organ- |izers of the union were all Com- i cubeeaeee | Auto Payrolls Decline As Food Prices Jump, DETROIT, Sent. 19—Figures re- leased by the Federal Reserve Board reveal that while food prices are go- ing up, payrolls of automobile work- ers are going down. In the face of rising food prices (the highest in 30 months), the figures show that the average earn- ings per worker were reduced more than 10 per cent during July as ecmpared with June. At the same time, while production was only 12 |per cent under June, payrolls were 17 per cent lower. According to index figures, the payroll per car declined from 93 in June to 87 in July. Average earn- ings per worker stood at 72 as com- pared with 89 in June. In view of the increase in the cost of living which has taken place in the last |12 months, the real wage of the | worker has declined far more than the index would indicate. Sa se | Our Readers Must Spread the Hear-- |] | former General in Czarist Army | Author of ‘The Chinese Soviets’ Corliss Lamont | Member National Committee | Re Seu: Dr. Hansu Han Editor of “China Today” Frank Palmer Chairman of Federated Press| in the Far East SUN., SEPTEMBER — 8:30 P. M. — | Centra! Opera House | 205 East 67th Street ADMISSION - 25c of the Auspices: Friends Soviet Union Daily Worker Among the Members | |of All Mass and Fraternal Organ- izations As a Pelitical Task of First | | Importance! READ AND SUBSCRIBE “SOVIET RUSSIA TODAY” so the officials tried to raise | Federal Figures Show || Gen. Victor A. Yakhontoff | WAR CLOUDS: 3rd) Petitions for candidates for the State Legislature, for United States Senate and for the House of Repre- |sentatives will be filed next week. Walestens Will Debate In Detroit on Sunday DETROIT, Sept. 19.—William W. Weinstone, secretary of the Com- munist Party in the Michigan dis- jtrict, will debate with U. S. A. | Heggblom, member of the Wayne |County Committee of the Repub- |lican Party on Saturday on the | subject: Resolved that the Prole- |tarian Dictatorship Should Sup- |plant the Republican Form of Gov- | ernment in the United States. | The debate will be held at 8 p.| m. at the Detroit Armory, Larned and Brush Streets. Weinstone will speak in the affirmative. The de-| |vate is being held under the| Association of Detroit. iC. P. Sets State 'Meeting in N.Y. For Sept. 30 Ratification Conference to Be Held in Coliseum Following Day NEW YORK.—The State conven- tion at the Communist Party, at which its candidates in the fall elece tions are to be formally di mated, will be held on Saturday, September 29 in the New Star Casino, 107th Street near Second Avenue from 12 noon until 6 p. m., it was announced yesterday by Carl Brodsky, State campaign manager. The following day, Sunday, Sept, 30, there will be a mass ratification conference in the open air arena of the Bronx Coliseum, 177th Street and Boston Road starting at 1 p. m. Arrangements for both ats are being speed: by State campi quarters and by the workers organs izations which are planning to take part. More than 15,000 workers are exe pected to be present in the Coliseum arena on Sept. 30 when Israel | Amter, candidate for Governor, are rives there from Chicago by airs |plane to make formal acceptance | of the nomination, which will have been made the day before. Amter will spend the preceding two days in Chicago at the Secord United States Congress Against War and Fascism. Workers organizations which have not receved credential forms for the nominating convention should obtain them immediately from campaign headquarters, Brode sky said. Many delegates are ale ready returning their credentials along with campaign contributions these voted by the organizations they represent. | Delegations from workers’ ore ganizations are planning to turn the ratification conference in the Coli- seum into a mass demonstration of support for the Communist Party in the elections. Large groups will parade into the arena with their | banners, bands and placards. Speakers at both the nominating and ratification meetings will in- clude Charles Krumbein, district organizer of the Communist Party; Williana Burroughs, candidate for Lieutenant-Governor; Fred Briehl, | candidate for Attorney-General, Max Bedacht, candidate for State Senator; Rose Wortis, nominee for State Comptroller, and Isidore | auspices of the Workers’ Education | Begun, candidate for City Compe | troller, CAMP Wingdale, Is Open All Through September! MORE ROOM @ MORE $14 a week Cars Ieaye 10:30 A. M. dail; (Allerton Ave, subway on Whit UNITY New York PHIL BARD DIRECTS PROGRAMS FUN @ CRISP WEATHER ; $2.65 a day iy from 2700 Bronx Park East fe Plains line), ALgonquin 4-1148 Ideal Time $14 a week. Finest accor i heated rooms in our modern hotel. Hot and cold Best food obtainable COME FOR REST AND FUN! water in each room. Cars leave 10:30 a. m. daily Camp Nit Sedaiget np ON-THE- te NEW YORK FOR AN INDIAN SUMMER VACATION! Weather Is Crisp. The Hillside Is Colorful Estabrook 8-1400 for Sports mmodations. 60 steam- from 2700 Bronx Park East -__— Philadel of the Com FRIDAY, Broad an | @ SPEAKERS DAILY WORKER 15th ANNIVERSARY SEPTEMBER 28th, 1934 at TURNGEMEINDE HALL Pat Toohey, Earl Browder and Clarence Hathaway Bella Dorfman of the Artef — Freiheit Gesangs Ferein Admission with tickt 25 cents phia, Pa. AND munist Party iad Columbia @ PROGRAMME Without ticket 30 cents “SUPPORT THE © Soviet Movie Philadelphia, Pa. DAILY WORKER” @ Russien Bazaar Speakers Just Returned from the Soviet Union | FRIDAY, SEPT. 21, at 8 P. M. | 1208 TASKER STREET ®@ Dance || ADMISSION 25 CENTS @ Buffet AUSPICES: C. P., SECTION 1 vote sor Communist Candidates! Against the Imperialist War Makers, Against Fascism! i ‘ >