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1928 F DAILY WORKER, NEW. YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 13, Depu ty, in Challenge to U. S. Commu vage Iwo nist Herman ery empire », and to this inj m able than in Mexi ng to disarm his army and de-| — é 1 ; | re rs | part may be charged the decline|liver the arms at a price of $10 ETR AY AL BY Hold Conference on VILE SPEED-UP AT Uree Umbrella Makers E11 )GG HONGES of our oil industry, because the com-| per rifle. In exchange for his trea- Shop Papers Tonight | ‘to Attend Organization yanies prefer to take their invest-|son, Moncada obtained the promise} ] ] n verte’ do, tha: TAR GE: the_ savacal tanks "Rian erenden eh thease at Workers’ Center| 5 \Meeting Here Tonight , say GY BPSLAMERPINGY Pombona, has called him. The| being kept. | The fires sadenence ik ted in 1) Bua Wore Cori i Bieta) ankee oi rests are y -| « old i y singh the New York district of the Work- | onditions under whic! - Yanke ] interests are now man T hold in my hand a clipping aa (Contrountat) Party on the ques-| brella and handle makers are com- SOIL IN ADDRESS to grab complete control he state of Zulin, the zone rich- deposits, and convert it into independent republic. avering from the Mexican paper ‘E] Univer- sal.’ It is a radiogram from Mana- gua, in which it is said that the mayor of the capital city has pre- AIDS OPEN SHOP tion of shop papers will take place | tonight at the Workers Center, 26-| 28 Union Square, 4th floor, at 8| The entire matter of shop ENSLAVES MEN |pelled to work are growing from | bad to worse. | Wages are getting lower ‘while “GHACO OIL GRAB RR "2.2 * . é ’clock. us sq Working hours are growing longer, yi E Daily Worker Prints i" Colombia, the reactionary sented a proposal to eret a statue, Force Sweat Shop OM | papers, ne problems volved in we, WorkerExposesNature tn'spite of the fact that we are Conference Opens Way . a government still vacillates between r. MeCoy, as a sign of grati- > a sf ee oy p 46 * ” & 7 cans Full Text the two imperialisms, and the pret-|tude for his valuable intervention, Knee Pants Workers suing shop papers, the lessons to] of “Vacations eae ee pureee asi, | for Oil Steal ese sure of foreign capital, allied to in-|in the elections. This gives a clear 4 ee the poke) are so low that we are forced to F Continued from Page One f of the ternal reaction is such that the con-| t July refused to approve gress ls idea of the degree of abjection to whigh the Nicaraguan traitors have Following their latest act of be- | vayal, which was the forcing of the already, an analysis of the possi-| bilities for new factory papers, as well as the entire question of the Continued from Page One to enjoy it. This he is able to do | take work home and work nights in- | stead of having a rest after a hard Continued from Page One sentatives of two governments ab- solutely controlled by the U. S. fi- ion was proclaimed the the proposal of the liberals to send | come. sweat shop system of piece-work on nature of shop papers, will be cis-| because he made large profits | day's work ‘ t supren supreme legislator | its condolences to the Mexican gov-| “Mr. Cumberland, sent especially |the ~ 7mbership of the “vest and|¢) aoghat he |through the unbearable speed-up | ve are driven all day in| 2anclers? Cuba, and Peru, two .o! end sup: ernment upon the death of General to study the situation in Nicaragua, |!@%°s siakers branches of the union, recess aes SER .. | system, paying us low wages and) th, spiel aa an rte take work the, governments which U. S. im- Ret at nan es ‘ so denice i Nrearae"ay the Beckerman and Hillman machine | A. Markoff, the head of the Di us t the shops and forced to take work) nerialism is actively engaged in dictate which year S in Obregon. Slayery in Antilles. has declared in the United States that a new loan of $15,000,000 must of the Amalgamated Clothing Work- | trict Factory Newspaper Commit- tee and D, Benjamin, head of the forcing us to work long hours. Be- cause we work piece-work and home, the season is shortened and we are faced with a long period of buying away from British leader- ship: Brazil and Chili, of Charles angement, put where the domination of|P@ imposed on Nicaragua, all fi-/ers Union, decisively continue *9 | sistrict agitprop department, will|Mices are made very low by the | unemployment. Only when the um-| iyans Hughes of the U. S., and of ectorate of| yankee imperialism is absolute is|"a"ces of the country to be con-|take further steps which dumorelite | norton the question, employers we are able to earn from | prella and handle makers will be) polivia and Paraguay.. ‘That is, it ; a and the Antilles, | tolled by a strategic distribution of es InGUaDTy BH AS Ra $22 to $25 per week. In order to! organized into a strong industrial) ;. 4 committee which American in- Bank Robber Marines. In Cuba the managers of the sugar Yankee functionaries in the admin-) 4? cetteay Ps 1 : P. ’s Ball make this miserable wage we must) union ean we force the bosses t0| terests control absolutely, and its “In H 1e National City Bank |centrals are the masters of the gal-|i8trative organs in order to guaran-| Calling on workers in the knee Spanish Paper’s Ba work long hours and speed our-|pay a decent wage and better our! cossions are in secret; the repre- The Ha d; and at the r Prince, atta and carried away vernment held deem its paper money. “The half ion dollars took a trip to the North and was deposited 500,000 which the serve to re- with raw-hide whips as the Negroes were beaten sixty years ago. “Tm the cities the labor organiza- tions are persecuted and revolution- ary workers frequently disappear; her they are deported to Mexico flung, bound, into Havana bay.| |During the Pan-American Confer- ence, an arm of a who had been imprisoned some days before tee the inter | officers, will discuss with the pres-| | ident-elect of the United States, Mr. Hoover, the establishment in Nica- ragua of a mliitary academy, which} will be a miniature West Point and will be directed by the North Amer- ican captain, Fred Patchin, and will have military instructors from the United States Army,’ ete, | pants makers’ section of the union dust The statement says: “The recent developments in the union, the decision of the Becker- man machine to introduce piece- work, the reduction of wages, the breaking up of shops, the support given. to shops which are trying to for Saturday evening, Dec. 22, at the Harlem Casino, 116th St. and| selves up. machine was demoralizing the in-| (Communist) Party is arranging|in this shop are forced to work piece-work, which is now the policy of the Amalgamated Clothing Work- | Lenox Ave., will be an international | ers: Union, affair, Latin-American and Spanish will be the tune of the night, for all those who are going to attend promise to come dressed up in cos- tumes of their respective countrie: As there are more than a score Get Cheap Labor. The introduction of modern ma- chinery and of section work enables our employer to hire unskilled work- | ers, who can learn the trade quickly, | conditions in general. Cloak Workers to Rally Here Tonight Continued from Page One 1un for office but—and here lies the | hypocrisy of the whole fake man- euver—all nominees for office wil! have to be qualified by the consti- dithe tn lows a e knife; they have the| BS ’ i in- § i Daily Worker and ea the 4 pe a4 me bates ‘Cheir orders| “In ‘El Universal’ of November to mobilize themselves for a strug-| will See Many Latin | Do we earn enough during the| Umbrella and handle makers! We ee eee Me ied Latin Amer- ject the plantation workers | 2%, another radio from Managua is|fle against their betrayers, the) American Costumes year to be able to stand this Christ- | are calling an organization meeting ican press were barred from them lto a regime of veritable slavery.| Published, which says: ‘President | 7 Je Union Educational League is- | [mas “vacation” and another one of for tonight at 6 o'clock at 7 E. 15th yesterday forenoon. There the land workers are beaten| Adolfo Diaz, General Moncada, the|Sued a statement which gives afew} Although the affair that the] a few weeks that we receive during | St. It is the duty of every worker)" 7; 11 surely recommend such. & president-elect, and North American, facts to prove that the Beckerman! Spanish fraction of the Workers! the summer months? We who work | to come and bring shopmates along. hal eabtalci te ; peace as will give American bank- ers and mining and oil capitalists the land they want, and the trans- portation they want, at Paraguay’s expense. | But Kellogg, in charge of all this intrigue, “never heard of oil in Gran | Chaco,” and “doesn’t know anything jabout American banking interests |in Bolivia, and hasn’t time to look in the vaults of the National City | for posting up anti-isiperialist mani-| Crawl Before Hoover. establish themselves out of town, ae 2 , In this manner the market is flooded | #'y/0. or io the matter up.” of New York. It deprived the |festoes, was found in the belly of| “Diaz and Moncada, the two trai-|like “Sun-Star,” “Ralph and Cal-| of Latin American countries, not) with more workers than can be em-| ‘ution of the International. Enough) American newspapers and news ment of economic| shark, It was recognized by a/tors, are disposed to present their| kins,” “Brillinat,” and many others, | Counting their subdivisions, it is ex-| ployed in the industry, which makes constitutional provisions exist, it is) services, which Kellogg seems to in- mopel it to sur- 1 place in the the me financiers ” of Haiti. of Haiti. econor “Occupation ring worn as a family heirloom. “To give an idea of the control of the United States over the C administration, it is enough to re-| call that during the visit of Mr.! respects to Mr. Hoover in the port of Corinto, to Mr. Hoover, the great- est representative of North Amer-| the refusal to fight for elementary union conditions union control in the trade—is a re- ican imperialism, which has sunken! sult of the policies of the general | in slavery all the peoples of Central|office of the Beckerman grafi ma-| America and the Antilles.... | the most | Pected that there will be a variety and of costumes; peons, farmers, work- ers, Chileans, Peruvians, Bolivians, Mexicans and also types of costumes from parts of Spain—like Aragon,| Andalousia, Basques, etc. | it possible for the boss to force the | workers to compete with each other for jobs and in this manner is able to pay the powest possible wages to the workers. known, to disbar any candidate not to the liking of the traitorous gang. -Another point allows general elec- tions in Febrvary, run by a com- | mittee trom the union. If this com- | mittee thinks it advisable, they will sinuate he does not read, contain | today long articles on the oil dis- | coveries in the disputed territory, Thus the New York Sun statess. “It (the Chaco) contains 100,000 square miles. Above ground it is a jungle “In 1915, Port ce was occu-| Coolidge to Havana, in the days of chine to help the bosses at the ex- _ : daa dl ee 1 i e, they w Above ground aaa Wee Fel ae conrenene, the wuala iosal alice Heroism of Sanding enki ab. Han Ree | _It is promised that these costumes| _, 7" So US ee eet Scab choose impartial supervisors. The | filled with virgin timber. Under- Br ned. the naval forces |e wien plésed ot the coramand| “ut! tot ‘all ie rotten ja Nica.| ‘ithe dif wonk dhthe Kaleepants (i be) entirely dleterent of thors) arte yen varanacr meee @ | left wing had demanded impartial} neath is oil.” But Kellogg never | ie deb teva eae {0 see dia : (as felieeymi eit We pends : bs 3 0 i ri ‘ jAs r ship and not the right wing's is . - hand, p ed to accept the treaty.|D. C., who was established as the Sandino, with less than 1,000 men, | former scab-contractor and the pres- costumes of Latin’ Americans. cheme these checks are very small Busine leadership. But te Schleae After @ sharp exchange. of isle : The financial interests controlled | highest authority of Havana. badly armed and equipped, has cnt manager. ane | laced, af papers Avvave savin sauetideae peopoeal: Wit WekvERTEaee Bi eres Peover eels. Warige q the taitw d imposed a loan of| Espionage in Central America, fought against the marines, number-| “The settlement /in the single Millinery Group Greet: | particular job we tear off the check !own committee to decide whether | conference, the correspondent of the $40,000,000, se visors to colle tee the pa treaty r marines ¢ Yankee super- and guaran- terest. The in force and the emained in occupation of ed “In Central America, the govern- ments are now mere police agents the Yankee state department. The administrations in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, are cen- ing over 10,000. The most brutal actions, actions typical of imperial- ism, have been applied against the Nicaraguan people which places all its hopes in the Army of Liberation. kneepants establishes and legalizes sweat-shop conditions. For instance the shop of Kramer Brothers, 134 Spring Street, the bosses were asked by the union ofi Released Girl Militant Edith Sherr, young millinery and put it where it is handiest for us at the moment. the day we begin gathering up our checks and who knows that but a Is to make | worker who was sentenced to serve | few checks are lost during the day | they need supervisors and if so they At the end of themselves will have authority to | | choose them, The whole proposal is a fake, the union statement will say, and is Daily Worker has been admitted with full rights to the press room, Bolivia May Return. | Bolivian Minister Eduardo Diez | De Medina, who yesterday withdrew Haiti. ters of espionage and information |" the aerial bombardment of Ocotal,/a reduction in the wages of his | five days for picketing by Judge| amongst the garments. At the end|made because the scab union is on! ‘ ire J The Nicaraguan Canal. |designed to check the spread of the| T¢!Paneca and Chinandega, the en-/ workers, when the bosses will recog- | Reynard last Saturday, was greeted | of the week we have to figure up our| its Inst legs, while the left wing Re Ae nee ee “In 1909, Nicaragua, in its turn, | liberation movement whose center is tire population Urea pecan arta nize the union, he shall give the re-| yesterday on her release from Wel-|cwn checks, This is a most tire- | union has hasade it a national con- seagaart sete megee sgerierdeia nh q $ seal Scag tS a a a PS ; sys men, women and children. duction back to the workers, so to | far, lk . |some job a ra .| vention and amalgamation with the | &n cL teat IS a was affected. Mr. Knox, secretary|in Nicaragua, in the headquarters fare Island by a‘large group of e job and only a trained book | eoenecs, Paraguay, received new snsteuttlons of state, demanded the signing of a of General Sandino. Strengthen Naval Base. U. S. Dum-Dum Bullets. The region of Nueva blind the workers, that they should | millinery workers. She was met at|keeper can accurately figure up| \think they got a raise in wages, and | 4 o’clock at the 86th St. Station by | checks of 11-6 and 1% and 2% today from La Paz which it is be- treaty by which Nicaragua would | Segovia, | . i F : ‘i ; lieved will result in his ret ced to the United States the Bay| “Guatemala has just finished ced-| where Sandino has his general head- | induce the membership of the an |the delegation, who came with cents cach, ete., which are the prices | pany-unionizing the shops and per- the conference. polit ; of Fonseca and permit the construc-| ing to the United States a port on| quarters, has been declared outside |? continue to pay their dues with| flowers to welcome the young| we receive for our part of the work |mit these conditions to exist. Take| ‘The minister declined to reveal tion of a canal by the Lake Nica- the Pacific Coast, and the govern- the l-g, which implies that all peace- satisfaction. But the boss reduced | woman militant. | on a section of the garment. This an interest in the affairs of our the nature of the instructions al- ragua ‘route, President Zelava re-| ment is using martial law to force | ful *habitants are to be considered | the wages with the intention of liv-| ‘The delegation was made up of| System is downright robbery. unie~ -: ssupport the left: wing in A fused the treaty and the United|the congress to ratify the conces-/as bandits. The dum-dum bullets, ing up to the understanding. OUr| members of Local 43 of the Mil-| We workers of the International |its ef” © ie vedsoee unite aeribel waite a cusuetnr Genie te States consul in Bluefields, by means |sion. Salvador has permitted the| which the European powers have manager and his helpers are over-| jinery Hand Workers’ Union, all of| Tailoring Co. must fight against | Bec +8 and Hillmans and con-| likely, i of Adolfo Diaz, an employe of a| secret fortification of the Island of long not dared to use, because of looking the entire matter and only | whom advised the released woman | these conditions that. enslave us and | ver. anization into a militant | mining company, incited-a rebellion | Mianguera, which belongs to Salva-| their ghastly cruelty, are the only help the bosses ta make new reduc-| worker to rest a few days before| barely give ourselves dnd our fam- | unio: sing for the interest of the| we gemand the immedzate recogni= | 5 that overthrew Zelaya. The ships of the United Fruit Company ook part dor, and next year the Salvador congress will be compelled to vote bullets used by the United States marines to assassinate Nicaraguans. tions.” in the fight, transporting rebel| for its sale to the United States, Here in Mexico is Jose de Paredes, forees. From then on the United|which needs the island to complete | who was private secretary of San- WORK States minister governed Nicaragua, | i Fonseca naval base. Yankee dino, who shows a brutal wound, supporting successively Adolfo Di and Emiliano Chamorro. In 1912, 2,500 marines landed and crushed the liberal revolution against Diaz, imposing his re-election as president. And | means of the habitual loans American capital empowered itself of the railways, the Bank of Nica- ragua and the whole national econ- omy. Bryan’s Canal Swindle. “In 1913, the traitor Chamorro signed, with Bryan, the treaty which ceded to the United States, for $3, 000,000, the strip of land necessary for the construction of the canal by the lake or any other route, gave the United States a 99. lease on the Gulf of Fonseca to es- tablish a val base. In 1918, the High Com n of aragua was set up, formed of one Nicaraguan and two North Americans, to super- vise and control all expenses of the public treasury. This commission had such power that, at its proposal, the salary payments of all govern- ment functionaries, including that of the president of the republic, would be suspended. The 1921 Invasion. “tn the year 1921, the marines again landed to crush a new rising, agents are spreading the story that $4,000,000 will be distributed among the Salvadorian congressmen to as- sure the approval of the sale. “This same government of Salva- dor was the one which accused Mex- ico of subsidizing the expedition of General Moncada. Suppress Sandino Paper. “As regards Honduras, in last July its government suppressed, at the order of Mr. Summerlin, the United States minister, the peri- edical “Ariel” of Froylan Turcios, representative of General Sandino. The Honduran government has per- mitted the passage of U. S. marines through its territory to facilitate the operations against Sandino. The military chiefs of Honduras engage in frontier espionage and turn over to the Yankee troops all Nicaraguan refugees who fall into their hands. Breaks Panama Strike. “The government of Panama, in 1926, called in the U. S. forces guarding the canal zone, in order to crush the renters’ strike. The Yankee troops assassinated the Panamanian people in the streets of their own capital. Diaz, Vicious Lackey. “But the depth of abjection and | which appears more as an axe- wound than one from a piercing ball. | Defeats Invaders. | “But Sandino continues afoot in lead of the Army of Liberation. Lacking arms, arms are captured from the invaders; lacking rations, |they are provided from the stores | of the marines; they lack medicine, and cure their wounds with clean water, Sandino fights and wins with his small army of Latin Americans that symbolizes the fraternal union of all our oppressed peoples. .. .2,000 marines have died in Nicaragua. A} half dozen flags have been captured from the invaders, and wives of Sandino officers are today carrying umbrellas made with the stars and stripes....One of these flags has been sent to Mexico and I have it here, for those who wish to see it. Scorns Sentimental Fraud. “The invaders have sent Sandino’s father to the General’s camp, to pro- pose peace in exchange for dollars and honor. Sandino has declared that he would never lay down arms while one marine remains on Nicaraguan soil; and he has threatened to shoot anyone who comes to him with dis- honorable proposals, even though it be his own father. MEET TONIGHT Many Organizations to Be Represented The reports from many groups of women workers for the delegates’ conference on organization of work- ing women to be held at the Labor Temple, 14 Street and Second Ave., tonight, has been extremely en- couraging, according to a report by Ray Ragozin, woman Communist leader. The women workers of New York City are waking up to the im- portance of organizing in the strug- gle against the attacks of their bosses. “This conference will be the first step towards organizing the. unor- ganized women,” Ragozin said yes- terday. “Many women who have been in the struggle of workers will address the conference. Reports will be submitted from various shops and industries showing the condi- tions in those industries, and step: will be taken to lay the foundation in organizing the women in those again taking up her militant part} in the struggle. ! ilies bread. We must fight against our union bureaucrats who are com- great mass of rank and file work- ers. tion of Soviet Union by the United States government! ST BALL SOVIET: COSTUME COLORLIGHT Sa t. Kve. DECEMBER 15 Madison Square GARDEN 104 NATIONALITIES ‘ a time peatort Rpentece: ei ignominy we find in the usurping *Sees Sandino Victory. shops.” ‘ ty they remained in } gua until| government of Nicaragua. Adolfo “Sandino continues the fight that “Unfortunately, however, the oa : : . . ° y 1925, when they left only to return| Diaz is an employe at the beck and must-end with victory. The fight of| cloak ‘and dressmakers will not be comprising the Soviet Union will parade in native attire a year later to drive Dr. § legally elected vice-president, his country and impose Adolfo D And Adolfo Diaz mer employ: the financial interests of the North call of Minister Tberhardt. When Carleton Beals, editor of the ‘Nation’ of New York wished to interview Adolfo Diaz in Managua, passing Sandino means that it is possible} to resist the advance of imperial- able to be with us on account of their own meeting. They are never- ism. This fight is a living example | theless, pledging their support in all for all our -peoples and shows us, dino, further steps that the federation i ‘AUSPICES: “Wak, a mining compar nd at present} through to the eamp of Sandino, that imperialism will be crushed the will take to organize working Re, an employe of the Washington gov- | this -esident, Adolfo Diaz, tele- | day on which in each Latin Amer-| women.” ok ernment, at the head of the Ni phoned to U. S, Minister Eberhardt, ican country the revolutionary work- ———— © , guan government, continues to to ask him if he, Diaz, would be| ers rise under the banner of a San-| REDUCE HUNAN SALT TAX or Y and fills with opprobrium the his tory of his country. * . * Consolidating U. S. Control. “This is, in brief, the history of the rapid economic growth of the United States, in its first phase: But its expansion does not stop with Central America and possession of the national economy of Colombia, Venezuela, E] Salva- dor, Bolivia, Peru, Chile and Ar- gentina. Only in Brazil does Eng- lish capital retain its old positon, Peru and Chile, whose traditional dispute of recent years was no more than the quarrel between two rival imperialisms, are today governed by | two efficient auxiliaries of North| American expansion, Ibanez and Le- guia. Steal Venezuela Oil. “In Venezuela, Juan Vicente Gomez has placed the whole wealth the Antilles. | Fighting at arm’s length with Eng-| lish capital, Yankee capital seizes | allowed to receive Beals. Fake Nicaraguan Election. “The elections in Nicaragua are ending, under the supervision of an electoral commission formed of a Yankee agent, Mr. McCoy, and two Nicaraguans. Mr. McCoy has, in n, three votes. In this , he could enjoy the pleasure of winning on all questions, and not only that, but he was able to hold a session all by himself, making up a | quorum and gaining all votes unani- mously with his three votes. Well, | then, this Mr. McCoy arranged that to avoid electoral frauds such as are habitual in his own country, a spe- cial indelible ink be used to mark the hands of each ctiizen who voted. | | And thus, under the pressure of the marines, the Nicaraguans were obliged to elect a president desired | by the United States and be branded |with the ignonimous mark of Mr. | McCoy, Adolfo Diaz, the president |of the republic, was the first ot | present himself to vote, to set the of natural resources at the disposi-| example:... tion of the Yankee capitalists. With- out labor legislation, without taxa- Moncada’s Sell-Out. “The president-elect is General tion of any importance, the oil in-| Moncada, who last May signed a| dustry is there much more profit-} shameful treaty with Stimson, pro-! is to unite with the anti-imperialist | pressed peoples of Latin-America.” | ‘ , have the duty of thinking of our future, Yankee capital already holds most of our petroleum, all our mines and practically owns our railways, Mexican government is merely theo- retical. The same capital is now seizing our electric power plants, ‘and very soon will have grabbed all our basic industries and all our na- tural resources, The investment of Yankee capital already has mounted | peoples of America. We must ask} to $1,500,000,000 and $200,000,000 of this is in lands, Mexico Isolated. “The Bay of Guantanamo gives the United States absolute control of the Gulf of Mexico. Panama and the Gulf of Fonseca give them the control of two oceans, at the end of the continent Mexico remains isolated from South America and there is no hope of aid for us in case of war with the United States. Only the blind cannot see tha danger which threatens us. Unite Against U. 8. “And in these conditions, our duty Me NANKING Mail).—Hunan (By “And we, comrades, we who are) peasants have forced the ministry | the most directly threatened; we! of finance to reduce the salt tax $3 | rer picul. fighters of Nicaragua, with all anti-| also, because the control of the imperialist fighters of the continent. | “Our first act, in the present moment, must consist in a protest | at the voyage of Mr. Hoover. We must denounce the real character of his voyage and declare that it con- | stitutes an insult to the oppressed our government and all the decent governments of the world that they refuse recognition to the traitor Moncada, made president of Ni¢ara- |gua by the bayonets of Yankee | marines, Dare Hoover to Land. “And we must declare, finally, | that Mr. Hoover mus® not come to | Mexico, that the Mexican people re-| ject his .isit as an affront; and that | if Mr. Hoover dares to set foot on | the beach at Vera Cruz, the shades of Azueta and Uribe will rise from their tombs to spit in the face of | DOWN TOWN Square, N. 0. C.,, 16 W. 21st St. Lidsky’s Book Store, Broadway. Rational Vegetarian 199 Second Avenue, B ADMISSION: $1.00 IN ADVANCE 1» Worker Office, 26-28 Union Restaurant, aily ' OR and FREIHEIT * Tickets Now on Sale at: “@¥ BRONX Rappoport & Cutler’s Book Store, 1310 Southern Boulevard. ® $1.25 AT THE D Restaurant of U. W. C. BROWNSVILLE 202 East Goldstein’s Book Avenue. Store, 365 Sutter BATH BEACH Malerman’s Book Store, 8603 20th Avenue. Demonstrate Your Solidarity! Be that man all the hatred of the op- HARLEM * * Health Food, 1600 Madison Avenue. Unity House, 1800 Seventh Avenue. ha, BORO PARK Max Snow Drug Store, Thirteenth Avenue and 43d Street. One of the 25,000 that Will Crowd Madison Square Garden Saturday Night, December 15. 1iin't Miss!