The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 14, 1929, Page 5

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a VALLY WORKER, MONDAY, W YORK, , JANUARY 14, 1929 WAYWOOD'S BOOK TELLS VIVID TALE ‘OF PIONEER WEST Urge Workers to Write of Great Leader Continued from Page One one of those who, before railroads crossed the Great Plains, carried a saddle-bag of precious letters, mounted on swift horses, riding like the wind across trackless prairies, dodging lurking Indians, stopping only to change horses at some lone- ly outpost, to deliver the mail to the next rider, finally to be carried| through to the California gold| fields. | His father and mother met and} married at Salt Lake City, where! the future labor leader was born in February, 1869, Salt Lake City was the new center of the religious sect} known as the Mormons, whose chief | was Brigham Young. At war with other sects of the east, whom they} termed “gentiles,” they sought to) monopolize their refuge in Utah. Haywood tells of their killing of | gentiles in what was known as “the | Mountain Meadow Massacre,” he} tells of their polygamy, and political scandals between them and the gen- tiles who pressed in among them. His father died soon after Bill was born, and the family moved to the small mining camp of Ophir after he had acquired a stepfather. Here he had his first school. Also, he tells of his first work, going into the mines when only nine years old. Ophir was a wild western mining camp, and Haywood recites the var- ious scenes of violence witnessed there. When the family went back to Salt Lake City, Haywood got an- other term of school, his last. Then he was bound out, as an indentured child slave, to a cruel farmer. There he pulled his first strike, and ran away back home. There followed many kinds of work as a boy in the booming and Weugh town that Salt Lake City was. As an usher in a theatre he saw Shakespearean drama, and awoke to an interest in culture, a culture he gained by reading and experience with his gift of a rich mind that absorbed the essentials of things. One day he saw a Negro lynched, and his boyish spirit felt the horror of racial prejudice. Undoubtedly, as he pictures it, this incident made him passionately opposed to racial hatred, and in his later life he was militantly for racial equality to the New Cab The pickings will be fertile for the new cabinet of Roosevelt of New York. The cabinet is shown with inet of Tammany Hall New York, Roosevelt in abi to Milk Treasury of New York State FOR COMMUNISTS. 05 YEARS IN JAIL Workers Party Activities PHILA, WORKE appointed by Tammany Governor ‘ove photo. F raternal Organizations BEGIN DRIVE TO Office Workers, The Office Workers’ Union has ar-| S$ ranged a dance for Washington's birthday eve, Feb, 21, at Webster Manor.” Sympathetic ' organizations | are asked not to arrange any affair | for that evening, ‘Stat see) | Women Theatre Party. | A g00d opportunity for Jewish | workers to see the regular week-end | 4 to 6 play in the Schwartz Art Theatre on 14th St. and Srd Ave, on Friday) evening, Feb. 8, at reduced prices if| tickets "are gotten in advance. The| full price will be charged on the day of the performance. Tickets in advance may be gotten at the central office of the United Council of Work- Ing Women, 80 FE, 11th St., Room 583, or phone Stuyvesant, 0576- ae ies nw Negro Champion Danee, The Negro Champion and the American Negro Labor Congress will | have a joint dance and entertain- | ment Jan. 22 at Renaissance Casino | 138th St. and 7th Ave. Other or- ganizations are asked to observe date. Bie ects Metro Workers Soccer Lengue. The Metropolitan Workers Soccer League will hold a ball on February | 23 at the Laurel Garden, 75 B. 116th | St. Organizations are asked not to arrange any conflicting dates. Renee IES Harlem Organizations! | The Harlem Youth Center that will| open within two weeks in its new | headquarters at 2 E. 110th St., will rent out rooms on weekly, monthly or daily basis for prices ‘that. will suit every working class organiza- tion, For more information apply to; FE, Elsman, 1271 Hoe Ave., Bronx. eee Liber to Lecture. { Dr. B, Liber will deliver a series of lectures at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. on Fridays, Jan. 18, 25 and Feb. “1, on “Radi- calism and Personal Life.” ‘The sub- jects of each lecture will be: Health and the Radicals; Disease and the Radicals and Radical Child-Upbring- ing.” Lectures will begin at 8:30 p.m * * & ‘Workers Laboratory Theatre. The Workers’ Laboratory Theatre meets every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 8:30 p. m., at 384 E. 15th St, basement. All interested in workers’ dramatics are welcome. oe orkers Center. | * Brooklyn W. | Concert and dance under the aus;| pices of the Brooklyn Workers Cen> | 1s welcome t ing Friday, Jan. 18, at 108 EB, 14th t., 8 p.m. Ce A & Young Defenders, The Young Defenders, as part of their educational program, will or- ganize an Esperanto class, ' All inter- nationalists are invited. is free. class wil Instruction Registration is now on. The 1 meet every Sunday from P. m. at 1400 Boston Road, Bronx. Jan. Cicer ie Harlem Progressive Youth. The sport section of the club will participate in a sport exhibit at the <enin Memorial meeting for Jan. 19, Comrades are urged to come foi final preparations, Tuesday Thursday at 8 p. m: ew Labor Temple Poetry. The American Poetry Circle, 8 to 10 newsppaer and magazine poet will give a recital, Thursday, Jan. 17, t 8:15 p. m., at the Labor Temple, 242 KE. 14th St. Publie invited. ee ed and ix S, Yorkville I. L. D. ville branch of the I. neld Tuesday, 8 p, m., at the Czecho- asvak Workers Home, 347 E. 72nd * * « Freiheit Symphony Orchestra. “Franz Schubert” will be the sub- Ject of the first musical talk of the group on Friday evening, Rose Gar- den, 1347 Boston Road, Bronx. The talk will be illustrated by a group from the orchestra with Nathan terman, director, as speaker. hearsal tomorrow evening at Southern Boulevard, St. station, Re- 1292 near Freeman 0 attend. URGE RUSH ON NICARAGUA WORK Proposes $150,000,000 | for Canal WASHINGTON, Jan. The first lesson will be given | The monthly meeting of the York-| L. D. will be| Any instrument player | UNIONIZE SOUTH ‘Textile Union Issues any conflicting dates. The Lenin | Memorial Meeting this year will be demonstration against Lenin Memorial Meet Reports of delegates to the section Ep} B A Lenin Memorial Meeting will be| convention will be discussed. | L |held In Madison Square Garden Sat- Seat TEE |urday evening, January 19. Ani Party| unit a Seetlom Tg ' “s } | and sympathetic organizations pleas |p.’ 760 doch tn \ OF T j i | You are requested not to arrange Pe, a powerful regular 60 will m, hold a Tuesday, 6 meeting, P. st '8 Workers Given Long Sentences (Red Aid Press Service) | ITALIAN FRONTIER, (By Mail).| —Three more trials of anti-fascist | |workers took place before the spe-|_ cial tribunal at Rome on December | 10. | In the first process two workers| of Schio, Vicenza province, were} tried for carrying on Communist propaganda and distributing leaf- lets. The court called both workers | “guilty” and sentenced Attilio Can-| ova to 8, and Gastone Grotto to 2 years prison. | In the second case two workers | were charged with distributing an fascist leaflets. The special tril unal sentenced Rodolfo Busi to 2| | years, 2 months and 7 days prison| and Giovanni Lombardi to 2 years j and 15 days. | Call to Workers CHARLOTTE, N. C., Jan. 13.— Firing the first gun in the organi- jzation drive that the National Tex- | til Workers Union has instituted in the southern textile centers,. the r the | Charlotte Locals of the union re-|4 workers jcently issued a call to unionization there and distributed it in leaflet |mill workers. Decisions of the convention of the N. T. W. U. and the more detailed plans adopted later by the National Executive Council at their recent eeting in New York, was no mere |mouthing of words the news of the |campaign’s beginnings show. | According to the reports already handed in, the union organizers |there are making remarkable head- | way in organizing committees in the |mills, who are immediately consti- |tuted into a bona fide local of the |new union. | The call in appealing to the work- ers declares: “To All Textile Workers of Charlotte “Fellow Workers: “Wake up, our working conditions jare rotten. Our wages are very low. Our working hours are much too long. The speeding and doublii:g up of work is sapping our strength. We live only to pile up big profits In the third process, the most im-| portant of the three, 3 workers of | Verona were tried for reorganizing | the Communist Party and carrying | on propaganda activities in their| home ‘towns and in. the surrounding | territory. The prosecution called all| “dangerous Communists” | and'saw in Fortunato Pegoraro the | outstanding supporter of the Com- 5 " ‘ alge, snce,| that they attend the conference. |form to thousan’s of the exploited | munist Party in Verona province. | 4 . . : |The sentence of the court was as| follows: | | Pegoraro, 81-2 years; Guiseppe | Bendini, 5 years; Giuseppe Frison, | |4 years; and Giovanni Facciotti, 3/ years prison. il PILSUDSKI TRIES TO AVOID PEACE Soviet Proposal | Continued from Page One jfing” and “insincerity.” In the same way, the semi-official “Epoca” | sees in the present proposals for outlawing war more “bluffs,” in Highly Embarrassed at ‘No More Criticism’ Is Women’s District Committee. A special meeting of the Women's District Committee is called for 11 a, m., Saturday, Jan. 19 * * * MEXICO MASSES HONOR MELLA Police Play Hoses on Demonstration Negro Work Conference. A Negro conference of the district has been called by the District Exec- | | utive Committee to be held on Jan. | 5 at the Workers Center, 26-28 | nion Square, to establish the farete | pparatus for Negro work and to discuss ways and means of increas- ing our activity among the Negro workers, This is the first conference of the district where Negro work will be the only order of business, The con- Continued from Page One ers, but who were active ference will have for its task (1) The ; anbae Beas al drawing in of Negro workers into | attacking workers demonstrating | the Party. (2) The building up of a | their protest before the Cuban em- Party apparatus for Negro work. (3) bassy, are accused of ¢! agents cf the Cuban gove who carried out their plans on Mex- Mobilization of the Negroes for the ask in fighting the war danger, for he organization of the unorganized, eir pI 1 Work with vorard to the women ang |can soil of assassinating Mella, youth workers. (4) Spreading of| While the press generally is filled OVANL units are urged to end dele. | With news accounts of the case, only Bates to this conference. Failure to one paper, “La Prensa,” has demand- of our Negro. work on the pertiar (ed that the government of Gil take the unit. Select delegates and see action against the murderers. Gil’s government, however, which has |done nothing to apprehend the as- of the sassins, instead only offers the Wilkins Cuban ambassador, whom everyone knows is implicated in the murder, lits protection from the Mexican | Wyte workers and has surrounded the Cuban assassins’ headquarters with great forces of police. The ambas- sador-assassin has even the effron- try to vilify Mella in the press, from behind the lines of police guards. ta t Branch 4, Section 4, An important” meeting branch will be held at 1330 Ave. today at 6 p. m, Ro. GS Unit 4¥F, 3p. educational meeting Bota today at 6 p. m,, 101 it. An Moving Funeral Ceremony. DAPMAKERS HIT 3 art i | : | BOSTON CZARISM | Before the great procession began of workers who followed Mella to {his grave, his body rested in state in the hall at the headquarters of the Mexican Communist Party. i The hall was draped with red and Edict of Fakers black, and for the last twenty-four BOSTON, Jan. 18—Members of hours the body of the victim of Boston Capmakers’ Local 7, at the | American imperialism was watched union membership meeting here dur- | OY°™. by sgustas Ot uonior), changed \ hourly, while a steady stream of ing the latter part of last week, workers and peasants filed by, hour) \ thi ; ‘ denounced the officialdom of the after hour. On the faces were a ives in | this way again trying to evade the : f | ie ee | disarmament proposals of the Soviet local for wrecking the union and sorrow and an anger that bodes no) pleasant surroundings. dumps. We live in Union. It is recalled that in his report) Sat, * | good to American imperialists and | abolishing every vestige of democ- thele agetite.- both’ Maneat: ahd eltering the | 1 jthe imperialist war and for the de-| Marks Place. | rs Minor Olein Sneak; fense of the Soviet Union. Ae 4 VLinor, ae Te All Units. meets Wednesday, 7:30 p 1,000 Attend Tickets and posters for the Lenin) M. at 60 St. Maris Place, for elec- | se Memorial Meeting Saturday, Jan. 19,) tlon e 4 | PHILADELPHIA, Jan, 13—In are now ready at the district office. | wecdck Soaxaere es Call for them’ at once. | ‘The will meet tonight at 8/|one of the most e a 1 jd ag |p. m., 313 Hinsdale St. Important as hp Heidi te over Fatemder the auspices of the| Problems will be di , and. the | Strations ever held i ‘ A dance unten the aueniose of the | Deport. of dalagater to -tho asction| 4.900) workers. Friday night cele’ Be cy jam. J 3. peat eceived : fifth annivers y be given on Jan, 20 at 8:30 p, m., at|/ convention will be received ieated ‘the’ fifth “anxive of the 090 peiya tle AYE. . | Daily Worker at the Tabor Institute, hth and Locust Sts. Following a selection of Rt 917 by J. erman, Robert Minor, editor of the Daily Worker, ad ing on the growth of the p Olgin, the Yiddish C a7 ed the music from 1905 to ssed the meet- editor of ne, greet- its significant role as a fighter in the y and pointed out struggles of the w: ing its five years’ cont only working class newspaper in the world. Pnegli h Commun tim of of the imperiali States. President } 1s a tyrant who d for governing hi interest of Yankee impe Mella’s body his ashes later tal capital of the wor rest beside the rey of many lands now. buried near the tomb of Lenin. alism. IL. be cremated and n to Moscow, the Demonstrate at Vera Cruz. VERA CRUZ, Jan. 183—Hundreds of workers and’ students demon- strated today over the tion of Julio Mella at Me: They surrounded the Cuban an d U. S. consulates, singing the Inter- nationale and denouncing the mur- der as a crime of Yankee imperial- ism. When they left, there remained a huge banner reading: Yankees out of Latin America!” COMRADES BAT t the “We can better our conditions, | before the Central Executive Com-| How? [mittee of the Soviet Union last | a i ; |month, Litvinoff had remarked that |cision brought in by the right wing/ 13.—Be- bane aeaae will put att any government thinks that the|Zaritsky appointees, who had re- racy in the organization. Despite the “anti-criticism” de- | SCIENTIFIC VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT Cuban. | Absurd Charges by Police. | The police under President Portes | Gil, are trying to cover up their 1604-6 Madison Ave. i 4 ili i |Soviet Union does not desire peace | placed the popular legally elected | aesi h ins, by hold-| Between 107th & 108th Sts, cause it was feared that to begin | good militant fight for us. | 4 ancit |assistance to the assassins, by ho n & s fullest degree. ave Myer teen eH roreniace immediately on the construction of| “What union will do this? Is it and sil not Slearan togetay mate |left wing administration, the mem- | ing Mella’s sweetheart and comrade, | cas cs He worked in a fruit store, and} >2"4- een re the canal thru Nicaragua would|the United Textile Workers Union, | the other powers, why do they no under arrest and bership stood up and assailed the|Tina Modotti, s charging that Mella was killed by |Some rival lover. as messenger boy, learning, as mes- senger boys do, many things adults | arouse too much antagonism in|No! Aboslutely not. We have tried| c#ll the bluff” by accepting the| A .|gang that had destroyed union con- licmanecoaurrs sine Latin America, a resolution intro-|this union before and found the | Proposals for disarmament and out- &8ng A dance and concert under the aus- pices of the Brooklyn Workers C would not like to see made khown to the public. As a bell-boy in hotels, | J: he met many famous persons of that day, but at 15 years of age, it was decided that he go to Nevada, and work in a mine, where his step- father was. In Nevada, in a remote spot sixty miles from Winnemuca, the nearest town, Haywood spent some time. Here, strange as it seems, he be- came acquainted with classic liter- ature. Miners are readers, There, too, he had warm friends, one was “Tim,” a dog, whose qualities Hay- wood remembered to his life’s end. Here, too, he knew the quaint ter will be given Saturday evening, an. 26, at 56 Manhattan Ave., Brook- lyn. Good jazz band. «8 * Working Class Women. Council 10, Bath Beach, will cele- brate its second anniversary with a concert and vetcherinka at 48 Bay 28th St., on Jan. 26, * Freiheit Chorus and Ball. The anpual ball of the Freiheit Singing Society will take place on Friday, Feb. 22, at the Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. Fourth St. Rs eed Bronx Freiheit Chorus. The Bronx Section, Freiheit Sing- ing Society will hold a concert and ball on Saturday evening, Feb. at the Rose Garden, 1347 Boston Road. The Singing Society will par- ticipate in the concert program con- until next week for consideration. duced in the senate yesterday rec- leaders agents of the bosses. These | /@Wing war. ommending that work on the im-|leaders led us into a strike before f the Pilsudski 45 th Perialist canal be begun, went over|we were properly prepared so that|©f the Pilsudski government to the |the bosses could find out who were |ditions and ruined a once powerful Comrade Modotti' The introduction of the resolution, |the best fighters amongst us. These however, makes it clear that the Yankee imperialists intend to rush their war preparations in Latin America, a plan which includes the improvement of the Panama Canal to permit larger and heavier war traffic and the construction of the| canal thru Nicaragua, The resolution, introduced by Sen-| ator Edge, authorized the appropria- | tion of $150,000,000 for a survey by army engineers of the Nicaragua leaders cleared out after. Some of the leaders were crooked. We Want. “A union that will fight the bosses. “A union that has honest and tried leaders. “A union that all the workers in a mill can belong to—an industrial union, “To belong to a union that is or- workers in this country. In the same way the recent reply | Litvinoff note is an evasion of the | Soviet proposal for outlawing war. |In stating that, while it would be | willing to enter into negotiations with the Soviet Union it would re- serve the right to make “amend-! ments,” the Pilsudski note leaves | | obvious loopholes open for with-| drawing from the negotiations and | “diplomatically” refusing to outlaw | war with the Soviet Union. | It will be recalled that ever ganizing all the 1,085,000 textile | *imce August, 1926, the Soviet gov- | ernment has proposed treaties of | |when interviewed ridiculed the idea | |local. jand said: This decision, made in a desperate “It is an infamy for the police to age Dairy nistacn omrades WIL Always Find It Pleasant to Dine at Our Piace, effort to retain control of the union,'try to make out that this was a|| 1787 SOUTHERN BLYD., Bronx calls for the suspension for three | sentimental case. It is clearly a case! months of all critics of the official-| of a political assassination by the dom and their policies. Another de-| Cuban government which has sim-| cision a la Mussolini, which many |ilarly murdered hundreds of other! members declared they intend to de- | Cuban workers for the same reason | fy, is that henceforth no more shop ,—their opposition to its subservi- chairmen are to be elected by the ency to U. S. imperialism. Mella | workers, but are to be appointed by was purely an idealistic boy who| the Zaritsky appointees. |fought for his principles and died | for them.” “Mella was potentially the great-| “It in childish to attempt to hold individual persons guilty for the inception of the war; it is a mix- Station) RVALE 9149 Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: University 5365 take to accuse kings and czars of | | est revolutionist in Latin America,” | “A union that will unite all textile "0"-@egression to Poland only to be |canal route and proposed an inves- | workers—South, North, East, West. | refused on some pretext or other. Rational | tigation of the possibility of enlarg- Chinese- cook, and learned the no- ducted by Jacob Schaefer. bility of the American Indian, He having created the present war. The war was made by capital (“For Any Kind of Insurance sok ee Women’s Educational Club. learned how the white men had nassacred Indians, men, women and children, just “for the hell of it.” He tells the story of Ox Sam, which should take the glamour off of “In- dian fighters,” in the minds of the boys who should read Haywood’s book, Today we give on page six an- other part of Haywood’s stirring cvama. Turn to it and read it. Con- tinue it from day to day. Send in your subscription, and renew your old one so that you will miss none of this series which will be historic in American labor literature. In addition, the Daily Worker ex- tends to workers, those who have known Haywood and been enlight- ened and inspired by him, to write letters to us, relating their own ex- periences with the old fighter, the story of the struggles in which he and they were interested, what Hay- | wood did or said that impressed, Tell of the’ Haywood you knew! HONDURAN MINES HOLES OF DEATH TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras, Jan. 11.—The newspaper “El Sol” pub- lishes a report upon the horrors suf- fered by the workers in the mines of San Juancito, where the death rate of miners from the terrible con- ditions under which they work has reached ghastly heights. There are five hundred workers in these mines, that is, there is place for 500 to work, but so deadly are the conditions that after six months of work, almost all miners become victims of tuberculosis, and so fast do they die that new vic- tims recruited from unemployed workers in other sections take their places. The convention of labor unions now in session are demanding remedial action to enforce protective legislation and there is a united front of labor generally to this end. A meeting of the Women's Educa- tional Club will be held today, at 6/ p.m. at 26 Union Square. Ali ‘mem- | bers must attend. | EN ea Harlem Organizations, Attention. The Harlem youth center has} opened at 2 E. 110th St, Rooms for parties, open forums and dances. For information get in touch with E.| Eisman, 1471 Hoe Ave. Bronx. * Brownsville Y. W. Camaraderie, Saturday Feb. 2, at 154 Watkins St. Brook- aya. arranged by the Brownsville oung Workers League. ee Sa Workers Esperanto Group. The Workers’ Esperanto Group will hold its usual class and meet- REICH JOBLESS AT 2.000000 Social-Democrats Are} in Betrayal BERLIN, Jan. 13.—The number ef unerployed workers in Germany, which has heen steadily increasing with the rationalization of industry, was approaching 2,000,000 towards the end of the year and will exceed that number by the end of January, eccording to an official statement last night. These figures only include those receiving dvles from the govern- ment and it is believed that a large number of unemployed have not been registered and are therefore. not included in these figures. Ccunting the dependants of the un employed the number directly affec- ted would reach about 6,000,000, The increase during the last year fs about 43 per cent over the end of i927. The betrayal tactics of the teformist trade union leaders to- gether with the policy of the social- democrats has played no small part in increasing the army of unem- ployed. L evening, ing the Panama Canal to meet fu- ture war needs. The resolution further contained a clause authoriz- ing the government to give notice to its puppets in Nicaragua of its intention to begin the canal. Some senators put up the feeble objection, for the sake of form, that such a resolution would “expressly commit the government to the construction of the Nicaragua Canal,” which has already been expressly done in the treaty with Nicaragua. The resolution, with a few minor amendments, will be brought before the senate again next week, SR ae Sandino Victory, MANAGUA, Nicaragua, Jan, 13. | —It was learned here today that a force of national guardsmen under marine supervision were repelled by Sandino forces in a fight north of San Juan de Telpaneca on Jan. 10. Four of the guards were wounded and they were forced to retreat. PARIS, Jan. 13 (UP).—Police Prepared today for a heavy guard for Governor Fuller of Massachu- setts, who arrives tonight. He will be escorted to his hotel to prevent recurrence of the Communist de- monstration which took place last year during Fuller's visit here. Com- munists, however, said they were planning no demonstration. STOCK PRICES RISING Stocks on the New York exchange advanced from one to more than eight points in the first half of the session yesterday, with dealings on ® moderate scale. Call money rose from 6 per cent to 7 per cent. The Yederal Reserve Board weekly statement sets forth a de- crease of $17,204,000 in brokerage loans. There wi tremendous rise of $238,000,000 last week. DOCKERS DEMAND INCREASE. GLASGOW, (By Mail).—Dock workers along the Clyde River have demanded speciwl wage rates for work done between 4 a, m. and 8 a, “The Party tn the highest of ti class organisation Pri tY—Lenin. Attend in} memorini meeting, January in 10, im the Madison Square Garden. m. They demasd four shillings an hour, | “Is there such a union? Yes. is called the National Textile Work- ers Union of America. The Na- |tional Textile Workers Union has ‘nothing to do with the United Textile | Workers n—with its boss-paid leadership. "The National Textile | Workers Union just carried on a six |months strike in New Bedford, Massachusetts and is carrying the jfight for a better standard of living te every city and town in this country. “This union stands ready to or- ganize us. Let’s bet a part of it. {But in order to become organized we |first must trust each other. The |manufacturers (the bosses) are or- ganized in the Manufacturers Asso- ciation to beat us. We will, we mu: show these bosses that we can stick together and fight together, under proper leadership, beat them and compel them to raise our wages and lessen the hours of work. We have workers, Be ready to join the Na-| tional Textile Workers Union. “The National Textile Workers Union fights for—Higher Wages; 40 Hour Five Day Week; Equal Pay For Equal Work For Women and Young Workers. “The National Textile Workers Union fights against—Wage Cuts; | Long Hours; Child Labor; Un- sanitary conditions. Stand Ready. “One Industry—One Union; One | Mill—One Local.” Subscribe to the “National Textile |Worker”—the wunion’s mouthpiece, 50 cents a year. Address—National Textile Workers Union, 104 Fifth Ave., Room 1707, New York City. i “Like the German capitaliats, headed by their crowned murderer ‘Wilhelm, no the énpitalixts of other countri re waging a wi only for t! m of the profits of the capi for world rule, Hundreds of billion of capital have been investe@ in profitable con- ind te capitaliam scandal. igh, inanne profits.” From ously speech by Lenin in Leningrad, Lenin memoriat meeting, January 19, In Madinon Square Garden, it] dressed to Lithuania, *| drawn, womens’ associations are to | A similar proposal has been ad- British Say Amanullah | ‘Drops Reforms; Their (Spy Is Still at Work NEW DELHI, India, Jan. 11.—A | \dispatch from British sources re- | ceived here today says that King | Amanullah of Afghanistan has is- | ;Sued a proclamation withdrawirg | |his series of reform laws. According to this dispatch the {girls sent to Turkey to be educated are to be recalled, the purdah, or | seclusion of women system, is to be | restored, conscription is to be with- | | 1 |be closed and soldiers are permitted | | to become followers of the holy men. | The question of reforms has |served the British as a cloak under | which to incite the revolt against | the Afghanistan government so that | they could dominate the country and | use it as a base against the Soviet | Union, Colonel Lawrence, the Brit- ish spy, on whose head Amanullah | has fixed a price, is still at large in | Afghanistan. NGLISH Elementary — Intermediate Advanced—Private or Group BENIXOFF SCHOOL 337 GRAND STREET, N. Y. Phone: Orchard 7812 fe LPR endl aa ee RSET TOY Educational Institute—| English, Arithmetic, Composition, History, Literature, Citizenship Instruction vanced=At Your Ho: or Schoo! 301 LIVINGSTON ST., B’KLYN TRIANGLE 0509. DANCING NEWEST STEPS polse, balance, lead, follow in vonfl- dence, quickly, finest teachers, gua anteed to teach you correctly wal fox trot, co! gentine tan, n separ: rooms, without. appointment; in vidual lessons, $1; open 10 A. M, to 11 P. M.; also Sundays; special course for beginners. VALENCIA DANCING STUDIOS, 108 W. 4th street. — SUSquehanna 0629, Capitalism had run into a blind al- ley, Thix blind alley was nothing more nor less than the impertalinm which dictated a war between thone competing for the owner- whip of the world.” From speech ARL BRODSK Telephone Murray Hill 5536 C tar January io, in Wadinon Squats 2 East 42nd Street, New York | en a | CO-OPERATIVE (DR. J. MINDEL SURGEON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone, Algonquin 8183 Dental Clinic 2700 Bronx Park Kast Ap't ©. 1. TEL ESTABROOK 0568. DR. I. STAMLER Surgeon-Dentist DIRECTOR OPEN: Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. from 10 to 8 P. M. Saturday and Sunday from 10 to 7 P, M, Not connected with any other office ee Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF SURGEON DENTIST Office Hours: Tues., Thurs. & Sat. 9:30-22 a. m., 2-8 p, m. Sunday, 10:00 a. m. to 1:00 p. m. PLEASE TELEPHONE FOR APPOINTMENT 249 EAST 115th STREET Cor. Second Ave. Vork Telephone: . New Lehigh 6022. DR. L. HENDIN SURGEON DENTIST 853 Broadway, Cor. 14th St. MODERATE PRICES Room 1207-8 Algonquin 6874 Comrade Frances Pilat MIDWIFE 351 E. 77th St., New York, N. Y. COOPERATC:S! PATRONIZE E. KARO Your Nenreat Stationery Store Cigars — Cigarettes — Candy 649 ALLERTON AVE., Cor. Barker, BRONX, N. Y, Tel. OLinville 9681-2 — 9791-2 Advertise your union meetings here. For nformation write to The DAILY WORKER Adve-tising Dept. 26-28 Union .3q., New York City Hotel and Restaurant Workers Branch of the Amalgamated Food Workers 133 W. Sint St. Phone Circle 7336 BUSINESS MEETING Id on the first Monday of the Dp. mM, month a mM, Union—Join ommon Enemy! mn from 8 a. m. to 6 Unity Co-operators Patronise SAM LESSER Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor 1818 7th Ave. New York STB a tne te Be, AMALGAMATED : FOOD WORKE: } No-Tip Barber Shops’ irou Wonks 26.28 UNION SQUARE Meets 1atSaturday Q. flight up) Hes Third Ave. 2700 BRONX PARK EAST rab eu N.Y, (corner Allerton Ave.) Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet 12th and Sts Strictly Vegetarian Food. gu All Comrades Meet at BRONSTEIN’S VEGETARIAN HEALTH RESTAURANT 658 Claremont P’kway Bronx Phone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY; ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmosphere where all radicals meet. 802 E. 12th ST.’ NEW YORE {MEET YOUR FRIENDS at essinger’s , Vegetarian and Dairy Ractanrant 1763 Southern Bi Bronx, N. ¥. || Right Off 174th St. Subway Station For a Real Oriental’ Cooked Meal VISIT THE INTERNATIONAL PROGRESSIVE CENTER 101 WEST 28TH. STREET (Corner 6th Ave.) RESTAURANT, CAFETERIA RECREATION ROOM Open from 10 a. m..to 12 p, m. Comrades, Patronize The Triangle Dairy Restaurant 1379 Intervale Avenue BRONX WE ALL MEET at the NEW WAY CAFFTER: 101 WEST 27th STREET NEW YORK

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