The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 3, 1930, Page 2

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Page Two UNITY LEAGUE india Congress MOONEY GREETS IN CONVENTION 224s: Form | anon pereNse | WN, Y. JAN, eat ae ‘Lett IN CONFERENCE LUMBER TOILERS’ DRIVE FOR UNION DEVELOPS Workers’ Theatre Develops Class Dramatic Group The Workers Theatre announces that this year its work is organized for the purpose of spreading work- ers’ culture as widely as possible. To carry out this aim, the group as; a whole will meet only once a week, | Physica! Culture ! Restaurants i QUALITY FOOD AT LOW PRICHS \ 39 North 9th St. 77 Bleecker 8 21 Murray 8: Needle Workers Strike] American Restaurant . 1003 SPRING GARDEN 8. Lahore, India, dispatches state that a split occurred in*the Indian Lumber Workers Industrial Union Conference ° find he was only doing what the | that U. S. imperialism fully agreed Crust . fr in the third’ canitell ele abekeea: of = jess a 2 y Sh nion ‘government wish to ward off the| im the third capitalist party, parad- | other struggles cf the workers of z aoe me trying to do, The fae the oe ee Pol taena that U and make good the billions | img under the alias of “socialist par- the Northwest. He is at present only people he was opposing were e navy should be built to powerful 7 ra ty,” ‘. ; " ao * the Marine Work- * 4 in Wall St., by driving down the| tY»” Rooseveltgives half-hearted sup- |an organizer for the Marine Wor Sixth Anniversary Celebration Workers Calendar contained 5 ; : . : si ol ann ssler should wi 5 ‘s 2 e i x Ps : SK SB RI ee ery OHIO | Bressler Company shoal wean oe indaatry Y TSPICInE | do it than by passing a law declar- |Gastonia defendants mto the widest adya Chilkovsky, Interpretive Dancing Sg es Bilatrn | OF the 20, ittairs jonty | Cleveland Workers School Concert | 5 c Peet SN eta rahe A Bema y ou ing that though electric power can mass movement possible. poe 3 es Bean! Aap Mea *t | Judge Dunne ‘under the usual pre-| Millions ace Starvation. | be bought and sold it is no longer | M. L. Malkin, needle trades work- Colored Singing Quartet HD th ocmeaign: The last two. w cand J ts dan. 21. : ; volved in the world crisis of capi- i in January all units will be covered | , 408 Angeles—Columbus Hall, 612 |controlling companie sold at | VO" pec Pi! ors in A. F. of L. unions will con-| 1. Fight against wage cuts, against b n Leninism. | high prices. The ca) t sports |talism, Due to trustification of in-| ta the building of a solid class! the speed-up, for shorter hours, and) CONCERT AN DANCE pat munist Party, Headquarters, 2021 W. Ie serene tc “Weidldtel woclattken i Division St. ‘Admiaaion 50 cents. _aphington Intercraciat Dance, {ida peiatie ee vam | ment, from disability resulting from| Center! : ay a Nea COME ALL—GOOD TIME ASSURED inter-racia v. i - i ie Chicago Nucleus 503. auspices of the Communist Earcy ana ae Lea ls Haynes Holmes, | 4 merican imperialism is leading the the speed-up and accidents, from & oe ad apn pa apne peanut ihenetibestihentiteantshetiheartctiheetimitetiemtnens nations ie pQigeussion on “Present Crisis and| Young Communist League of Wash- who passes as a liberal, and a conspiracy to attack the Soviet early physical exhaustion and retire-| Unity! Z te ‘ Com MN ontdiy Tamectm, OF gon, Wi Be held Monday, January |friend of the social-fascists in the |tr iio, heeause the Sovict Union is|™eMh there is no social insurance| 7. Fight the imperialist war dan- =e 1700 N. Washtenaw St., 7:30 p. m. | St. N. 'W. Negro and white ‘workers | ‘Socialist party” and the American), ):1.1 inspiration to th ‘ers | Whatsoever. This problem is of the ger! Po | welcome. Admission 40 cents. Federation of Labor, showed his|®,1V"& inspiration to the workers) vost vital importance to all work-| 8. Defend the Soviet Union, the “CHICAGO 4 Sunday, night, January 12 at 7:30 p. | Comrade Vokovich helped in| . A ; uu. at 2021 W. Division St. to cele | Preparing plans in some localities of | fice of the Reliable Employment/the new trade union center, based|| ber can you really fight effectively against the BANQUET AND DANCE i Dance at Schoenhoffen Hall, cor. % bs g hey ASRMKG Ave, and Milwaukee on Jan, | Sunday, January 5, 1930, at 08 Mere| Police were called to protect the/ang the most exploited sections of 3 47.1930, at § p.m. given by the Food | cet St. Newark, Ni J., at 1p. proprietors of the agency. The/the American working: class, the ¥ ‘- Prd perpetrated against the workers. | strug, le against the war danger, ° Chicago Dally pore Banauet Teeatow Pare cu Ranquct, John Haynes Holmes rushes to the the Teaiee ahd their fascist agate Should Join ‘ the Sunday. January 12, at 7:30 p. m.|q,4 banauet will be held by ‘the| aid of these lowest type of criminals|i, the labo t, th F. of 5 | nt 2021 West Division St. Commun’ Party and Trade Union in the labor movement, the A, F, o! as et 202 Unity League of ‘Trenton, N. J.) on who steal money from unemployed|y, misleaders, the socialists, the C M4 t P AN y aturday, Jan, 4 at the Party Oftioe, workers. Musteites and all fake progressives. ommunis arty LOS GELES, CALIFORNIA Draws Mich., Wis., Minnesota Workers = | 80 Delegates from 20 Lumber Camps Act on! Section Confers Jan.12 | Tasks, Munising MINNEAPOL —Following on aki. e, the or- ‘M eet Will Represent Greater N. Y. and N. J. The Trade Union Unity League of Greater New York and New Jer- sey has issued a call for a conyen- tion to be held on January 25, at | National Congress, when thirty del- egates walked out after failing to secure representation on the new | Working Committee, the composition of which was arbitrarily selected by Ghandi the pacifist. Under the leadership of Sprinivass | Aiyengfr, a rump meeting was held Class War Prisoners Say Intensify Fight | 2. PITTSBURGH, Ps., Jan. From the capitalist dungeons of thi: | country a handshake of solidarity was extended to the workers of this |. 4th St. (near 8rd Ave.). on Fridays at 8 p.m, The meeting place at present is Astoria Hall, 62 The work is of a mass character so that all can take part without aving any particular ability. It is! also a chance for those who do not peak good English to learn it thru| § will PHILADELPHIA Clean Wholesome Food Friendly Service. Popular Prices. ‘ PHILADELPHIA { ‘CAPITAL BEVERAGE CO, take care of your tue tM age 2:30 p. m., at Irving Plaza, 15th St. 8nd a “Democratic Party” formed. ry vorkers interna-|singing of workers songs and mass orth ts and suppl Behl ree and Irving Place. ‘The call points | 1! principles were “the same as the| tenuiy, “at ‘the Fourth, National recitations. SODA ‘WATER “and” BEER Trade Un workers ‘section of the out the speed-up and intensification | Congress” said the leaders, but it] Gongorence of the International La-| Groups from unions who take part 2434 West York Street ‘ 80 workers were present, and over |T. J. L. with Waino Kauppi of labor, wage cuts, unemployment | Was to function as a “left wing” of |). Defense. in the work will thus acquire the|{ ‘Telephone: COLUMBIA 6285. 20 lumber camps and towns repre-|Paynsville, Mich. as secretary. It and growing industrial crisis, and | the Congress, oy the Independent La-| Greetings from Tom Mooney, means for supplying entertainment | ~ gs a , sent the Mun section will] w i e into the calls for the building of a power-| Por Party of England inside the La.) rramed-up labor leader who has al-|at their own union affairs, and the 4 Seva he Merste Grovkars cnritere hei hanes fal trade union apparatus to resist | hor Party. Laas a fake left”) »oady spent thirteen years in San class conscious character of the)J | | ,PEILADELPHIA | |} ah Senoes Unions with: these attacks on the working class, that ones nglish workers hopes Quentin, were brought to the Con-| wo help in solidifying the |f The, wofk we make te Goeecialty. Bh ects and for revolutionary _ struggle | fixed on the Labor Party. Subash | vention by the California delegation, | union spirit, and bring new members resentative of the District office of against American imperialism, The call issued by the T. U. U. L | Mose declared as a leading member! whose members liad visited him in | into the union. | | of the new party, that it would carry | | Mooney greeted the confer We are fortunate in having James Spruce Printing Co. 152 N. SEVENTH ST. PHILA. PA, the T.U.U.L. will be present. Two | fey party, jail. | (ipsaiaeetes “ihe dumber worker inising), Upper Wis- follows: | out . e Congress program, but ence of the International Labor De- | Phillips, the well known singer Bell Market 6888) | pun are in the field in these two sections and Upper Minnesota. | To all new unions! might differ” on details. lense, calling for a greater mass directer of the singing. Pau ey: . Rogers is also helping with the di- fe eae & | To all T. U. U. L. groups and | ke ORT | organization of workers to fight for) = = ami ‘ U. S. A. Backs Shearer’s War Dope, Admiral cee conneinte A aba oad ch “N Y GOVERNOR'S a eae ena el BRITISH WOOL-WORKERS TO || patrons the netiy Worker | ‘ Re eT ee workers on The struggle in| Negro, white, women and young terror. Workers of two wool producing fac- | me SLUTZKY'S a . The publicity campaign William with earer was interfering the needle trades industry is sharp- workers—to all unemployed work- POLICY APES S. P, Leo Stark, who had spent eleven tories in Saddleworth decided to Delicatessen Store B. Shearer, propagandist of the|British propaganda and he was try- |ening. In Boston, Chicago and New |vrg ab : ; Rg seller ipa Sad (heseeiaees 4 Faoeeat Bethlehem Steel Corporation, for a| ing to prevent a repetition of what | York, the militant n ile uniona ora |T2,_Eellow. workers: |years in jail in California, convicted | strike against a ehteatened amr ae i : : petit rk, the militant needle unions ar2| me bosses, bank dc bea lander the criminal syndicalism law, |of ten per cent. | FOURTH 4ND PORTER STREETS bigger navy for the United States,| happened at the Washington Con-| prep to wage a sharp struggle | ae ean cra eure Uy Hall Pl Pea ay engi eecolahionary | = is in reality the policy of the United | ference when Secretary Hughes re- |against worsening conditions. ig, Mee ae ia A ammany a ANS | Hougnt pervonal. Tere aer ees - — — States government admitted Rear|fused to allow the State Depart- of President Hoover, have declared) J iia Gocigl-Fascists (ene ce the Balthanne delews. : 5 . A : ar ~ ‘ ag =. ber ’ Baltimore dele i } Admiral Bradley BL Flake, in, a) ment to give out anything sboat the | 9 Ee comer ae ane ames [ee "eeanseapent four and doen oun’ ||GLENSIDE UPHOLSTERY statement issued to e capitalis' onference and ord Riddell was | - f N ‘s ra eee 5 Seo ie ‘ + press. taking advantage of the situation NEW INJUNCTION workers. As a result of the Se eesetohie hdc reacug pba peat on ene ells yah Billings. In Russian Workers | pean Pieae E é Set Serrano ey y veloping economic crisis in this yea errs , S|his speech at the Sunday morning ; Fiske said: and giving out everything Great |of his collaboration with the sociai- session of the Conference he told of || ,, COoPerative Restaurant ROBERTS BLOCK, No. 1 “I believe in Shearer,” he said to The World. “I admire him very much | and Ithink he has been not only misunderstood, but very much ma- ligned. I have looked int ohis al-| leged activities at Geneva and I) the British. i Britain’s way.” The rapid war preparations, and the str le for naval armaments going on in *he preliminary con- ferences of the London arms meet, confirms the statement of F war strength. | abandon picketing “or otherwise in- especially the unorganized, semi- ‘ s | |terfering” with the Bressler Shoe |skilled, and unskilled workers. talist state of private employment | conference. | W ORKERS CALENDAR Company of Brooklyn was is: | As a result, we find a wave of |#gencies. Phe Communist Party in| Ella Reeve (Mother) Bloor, vet- Tu by § me Court Ju: wage cuts sweeping the country. | ts unemployment program calls for eran of the class struggle, brought —_———_ Dunne. T ‘unction followed |All kinds of new speed-up schemes, | the abolition of all private employ- greetings from the Centralia pris- ALL, LAOR ORGANIZATIONS AN closely afte al” of Judge |and new labor saving devices (ra- |ment AL. Se bey eae ab Renda agen: vi rhe ee ne cep et natin coatings AS Jallahan to give an injunction /tionalizati of free employment agencies by the |way to the Conference from Seat- . sf : sae chante bacteye et tec a the | overnment under the supervision of tle, Wash., where she is acting as Friday, January 10, 1930, at 8 p.m. It has been generally understood | jon of the Party ie workers organ- affair to secure rantoo affair should be in- Daily Worker. This | would increase the Daily Worker in- come considerably and make it more ible to build mass circulation for official organ. In a recent issue of the national edition of ; th ment for th serted in th Worker. We hold that income fairs should no longer be advertised | free of charge in the Workers Calen- | dar. We therefore give notice that here- | after the following rule regarding | insertion of notices in the Workers Calendar will prevail: 1, Notices of meetings of organizations will be in- serted free of charge but should » consist of more than five lines, words to the line. 2. Organizations wishing to give publicity to income affairs will receive a free notice of such affair in the Workers Calendar provided they inxert a paid ndvertise- | ment of the affair in the Daily} For the 6th Anniversary of the \hands of the ruling class. As one i 8. Organizati that de|paily Worker, the San rence Beis ; . ‘ babi | Herritee a veld adverttemene Of |B, Mercia” « neers | Capitalist Sports Graft |sttike of the southern textile work- | 165 (he, TOI Dave toes no are [Of the helpers in building the I. L. D. their. income affairs in the Daily | mus nt, at the Work- H ers, the present struggle of thou-| tion to the Negro workers, who are) - 10 it. formation in this country, ss 4 Worker will be charged for space in | ers ( 13, Vis Turk St, Ridden |sands of coal miners in Illinois, the 0st exploited and discriminated | 7 3 sure that the conference will DAILY WORKER the Workers Calendar at the rate of 20 cents a line, each line t ist | Sa ge ; of i words, remitiance vive made as ed fo Mena in renee te thal s rare ft behind the |New Jersey, etc. demonstrate the| teactionary A. F. of L, officials and) | ater struggle Mond. E ° when notice of affair is sent. | office of the Daily Worker, 145| Some o} je gra: ehind fe |* m ey» ” a sali | gre gle. a Vvenin | Turk st. a scenes of capitalist sports are being |growing discontent and readiness of | poles ae beh of Ehousenes | 8> January 13th, 1930 ‘ made public as a result of Francis (broad sections of workers to fight.|f young workers and women work- | ILLINOIS yj “Jan. 2733 | Chiengo Nucleus 504 Da Concert and dance, Sunday 5, 7 p. m., at Workers Lyceum, Hirsch Boulevard. The confer- ence will be held on January 5. Com. Sam Don will on Lenin and} Leninism. Cor Paul Cline will take! 1 up the organizational aspects of our second functionaries ” | Chienge Needle Trades Bazaar. The Chicago Needle Trades Work- | ers Industrial Union, will hold its Chicazo Dally Worker Affair. — | Daily Worker banquet and dance ‘Sunday night, January 12, at Com- Mags Meet on Unemployment, Chicago “Unemployment, Cause and Re- medy” to be discussed at a mass meeting Friday, January 10, 7:30 p. m, at Northwest Hall, North and Western Aves., under auspices Sec- tion 5, Communist Party. Amboy, at an educational meeting, | chargi: loyed workers oy Vincent Vokovicn win heering, | Was) Guar eine) UUeia ae % direct the factories and their gov- A ry DA cutenne patty Disce nnd Ranauet,| He EA Moreh, whe Feturned from |$5 to $25 on fake promises of jobs. “tect th ®°v-|| Party can you give your greatest services to the ILY WORKER Daily Worker banquet and dance brate the Sixth Anniversary of Daily Worker. Admission 50 cents. Chieago Food Workers Dance. Ladies Re- Workers Industrial League. -dmitted free. Good orchestra. freshments free. PENNSYTVANTA Aya Admfesion. fe 250. All sympathiz ers pre ursed to *ttend. Pittehereh Noll Worker Ronauet ty Worker Projet ‘ebrate the Sixth epaary of the Oaily Worker an | Tenyery § 8 p.m, at Labor 5 Miller St. » es for Philndelnht> Trvertant rte. JTomuary 10.-— Anniversary Cele Worker. Concert, C'rord Manor Hall 911 Girard Ave. Aamiasion 50c. TInnwary 17.—Tiehtnecht Memoria’ Ainex Meeting ond Concert. At thr ae Elks Hall, 16th nnd Fitzwater | e. s, a paid advertise- | (), 5 | Turk | Membership Meeting will” be | Phe bers delphia must be p ular month January sent to the th St., whe! Philadelphia Work. Sunday, Janu Scotti tween ‘ord, 1 Forum. P.__m., at All sy1ipathetic organizations are requested not to a! ge any affairs on Saturday, January 11, 1930. The Workers School of Clevéland is ar- ranging a concert and dance at the Lithuanian Hall, 6835 Superior Ave. Warren e, | IN SHOE STRIKE Is Move in Effort to | An injunction ordering the Inde- | pendent Shoe Workers Union to against the Union. While this injunction applies only to one of the shoe companies which, |under direction of the U. S. gov- {ernment, are trying to break the Independent Shoe Workers Union, y_|it is evidently a test case, which | would be extended immediately to | other companies if the strike at the |text of “acts of illegality” on the part of the trikers. ’ | nee he Ince ne ‘DIRT SPILLED ON Stereoptican slide lecture on the | Krassin rescue at Hippodrome Hall, Sunday, January 5, 7 p. m. j CALIFORNIA Frisco Daily 6th Anniversary Affair. San F Los Angeles Daily h Anniversary A Sixth Anniver the Daily Wor day night, Jan. 1 tive Cent ‘Y Celebration of will be held Sun- at the Coopera- 6 Brooklyn Ave. Good x, good things to eat and novel features are on the pro- gram. A living newspaper wi One of the fetaures Per WHT ibe Californin Lenin Memorial Meeting. San a it o— Hail, ranci fs and Polk Sts. 2 [— CONNECTICUT New Haven YCL Inter-racial Dance. organizations are urged to keep this | date open. _DISTRICT_OF_ COLOMBIA ___NEW JERSEY ~ Perth Amboy Leeture U.S.8.R. On Friday, January 3 at 8 ee in Workers Hall, 308 Him. St., Berth ve Year Plan ‘and Its Signifi-; ond ? N. J. Section Membership Meeti ‘An’ important New Jersey. Section held im. A representative from the District | will address the meeting together with the N, J. Section Organizer D. Flaiani. 20 Second St., to ‘begin at 8 banquet is arranged to raise LOW WAGE IN CHATN STORES. WASHINGTON (By Mail). — From a study of more than 6,000 working women in chain stores (5, \10 and 25 cents stores) the U. S. Women’s Bureau has to admit that 70 per cent receive less than $15 a | week, and over 40 per cent unde: $12. Send Greetings to the Workers in the Soviet Union Through the jal Dem "Aten: | . Admissior Special Printing of The Daily Q Worker in the Russian Language} BOSS SCANDAL |X. McQuade’s suit to compel the |National Exhibition Company, own- er of the “New York Giants,” to re- instate him as treasurer. Financial intrigues on each side are exposed to the other. Judge Landis, official be.cball dictator, is involved. | Professional sports are manipu- |lated by cliques and stock in the are being promoted to keep the |workers’ attention away from the class struggle. Bosses Who Defraud Unemployed Workers support to the enemies of the work- ers by bailing out of jail Dora Schneider, one of the owners of the Reliable Employment Agency which Over 150 jobless stormed the of- Agency with demands for the return of their money. The agency was not able to supply any jobs. agency bosses were finally arrested because of the obvious fraud charges Hundreds of revolutionary workers unconcerned, Why the great interest in the worst type of enemies of the workers ? ANXIOUS FOR MILL TOILERS’ DIMES. EAST MAION, N. C. (By Mail). —Anxiety for the dimes of the mill | workers caused the Baptist Church here to restore to membership mill workers expelled for striking. The churchmen also excused the action b ytrying to tel! their dupes that the “church is independent of all overhead control and is democratic in its organization,” country, as expressed in the Wall Street crash, the Hoover Fascist Council with the aid of Wm. Green, reactionary chief of the A. F. of L., is conspiring to put thru general we_ cuts, and further increase the speed-up. The capitalists and their living standards of all workers, jworkers in every industry. This taxes the physical endurance to the limit, and drives ever larger num- bers of American workers to the scrap heap. A worker at the age of 40 is considered too old to work, and is fit only for the poor house. The intense speed-up requires the muscle and.energy of young work- | The crushing speed-up and inten- sification of labor are throwing’ mil- | ilions permanently out of the indus- tries. The growing industrial crisis further increases the army of un- employed. Millions are on the threshhold of starvation. The spirit of revolt and militant offensive struggle against the |bosses is sweeping over ever larger |sections of fworkers, The heroic numerous strikes in New York and |The Trade Union Unity League, the jmilitant leader of every struggle against rationalization and for bet- ter conditions, aims to unify these struggles into a general offensive struggle against the bosses and the war danger. War Danger. American capitalism i: deeply in- dustry and the ruthless exploitation of the workers, the tremendous over-production and lack of mar- War first of all against the work- ers and peasants of the Soviet Union, who are making tremendous of the world. The Russian workers, as a result of the overthrow of capitalism, have in a’ few years raised tremendously their living standards, because ‘they own and The Trade Union Unity League, on the platform of militant class struggle, calls upon the American workers, especially the unorganized Negro workers, young workers and women workers, to rally to the Role of A. F. of L. and Musteites. in all its shameless nakedness, in their open alliance with the bosses, the department of labor, injunction judges, and underworld, in the cam- paign to crush the militant Indepen- dent Shoe Workers Union, and Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union, in order to company unionize these industries, to wipe out all union standards in the shops, and enslave the workers through yellow dog contracts. T. U. U. L. Led Many Struggles. The TUUL in New York and vici- nity has led many militant struggles of food grorkers, needle and shoe American Federation of Labor. asks for improvement of the strike- breaking state police. In order to give a liberal tinge to | his message, and to outwit his rivals | port to a fake eight-hour day la | He asks for regulation by the capi- the workers. | confused and false doctrine that “la- | bor of human beings is not a com- |modity or an article of commerce.” Roosevelt wants by law to wipe out the scientifie Marxian fact that hu- man labor power under capitalism is a commodity. He can no more commodity. There is sharp competition be- tween Tammany Hall and the “so- cialist party” with very little actual \differences between them. workers. The TUUL actively orga- nizes the unorganized metal work- | ers, marine transport, laundry, tex- tile, building trades, subway and con- struction workers, etc. In all strug- against, both by the bosses and the ers are almost totaly unorganized and are ruthlessly exploited. These sections of the working class play a tremendous role in every struggle against the bosses. | er New York and New Jersey, work- ers from new unions, shop commit- | tees of organized and unorganized workers, and class conscious work- Trade Union center. Campaign for Social Insurance. insurance. In America, the richest country in the world, whére the workers suffer most from unemploy- ers. 39 EAST 125TH STREET fascist agents in the ranks of the | He | | Roosevelt swallows the A. F. of 1. ! ‘At the TUUL convention of great-| front under the new revolutionary “Only by becoming a member of the Communist cause of the working class. Only as a Party mem- enemies of the working class” -EARL BROWDER Why Every Worker shops, mills and factories. Five Cents Per Copy nimi Join the Race for Revolutionary Competition! i A EES P Rush Your Orders With Cash to the WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS his struggles as a member of the Industrial Workers of the World in years gone by when he partici- patel in the free speech fights of that organization, his participation in the Cripple Creek strike, and| ers’ League and represents 600 sea- men of the Baltimore local at the} the District Organizer of the I. L. D. The Centralia prisoners sent through Mother Bloor, their mili- tant greetings to the Conference, | calling upon mass movement of the |workers to set them free, as well jas all other class-war prisoners, The j central point of their message was to intensify the fight to free the ler serving a two-and-one-half year |term in Comstock on the Mineola | | charge, sends his greetings to the] convention from behind prison walls. | | “The working class of the United States, after years of suffering,” |writes Malkin, “has at last. realized the necessity of an organization that | will always be ready to protect the | vanguard of our class from the |result in mspiring the delegates to Workers! Organized, Unorganized and Unemployed! | Negro, white, women workers! Elect Delegates to the convention! Organize a shop committee in your | | shop and on your job! Organize! | Join the T. U, U. L.! Fight for these) Demands! young workers, | higher wages! | 2. Fight against the social-fascist A. F. of L. bureaucracy! 4, Organize the unorganized into new unions! 5. Build the new Trade Union Workers’ International Fatherland! NEW YORK CITY reanized ni promote the but to |) & 2 = & c 2 aw 2 £ é : 3 Telephone Glenside, Pa. Ogontz 38165 Philadelphia, Pa. GIRARD MANOR HALL 911 Girard Avenue William Gropper, Cartoonist ADMISSION 50 CENT: ee SAN FRANCISCO Sixth Anniversary Celebration Banquet and Musical Entertainment WORKERS CENTRE, 145 TURK STREET Ltieetnetinentinetinetinntinette theta eat eee CHICAGO Sunday, January 5, 1930, at 7 P. M. STREET NUCLEUS 504, COMMUNIST PARTY, DISTRICT x Admission Fifty Cents Mi Friday, Jan. 24,| Zhe New Haven Unit No. 2 of th kets create no outlet for American iq ; i PaEE i Seta eS and” sunday 20 at the | LOWE Communist League” will hold Sone imperialism, but a strugele for the| 4 very important problem before| 3. Fight for social | insurance WORKERS LYCEUM, 2733 HIRSCH BLVD. Workers’ Lyceum. 2733 Hirsh Blvd. | yasonic Hall, 76 Webster st, & e pra Aes * the convention will be the organiza- against unemployment, disability an ; z 2 as 11, All workers invited to attend. ali John H. Holmes Helps Bann gustests which, Means: yar. tion of a broad campaign for social old age! given by Sixth Anniversary Celebration Sunday Evening, January 12, 1930 2021 W. DIVISION ST. { Poxt Pitennpeh ¥. C. ©. Dance. {funds for the Party Recruiting Deiv, A in jail i is ci i Hi i ! Ath * . Hee ges Sg ist, z | have languished in jail in this city) The fascist strike-breaking role } se "ynne” Caenmamiat Tene Toe |oveanized "workera in Vhrentone as for lack of bail, but John Haynes} of the A. F. of L. leaders and the 32 en, of a bensitg for every class- | Oe the ‘ » ehureh Pa wi a ce nt) lion 2he. r ji ali : ‘ . in si i Beer na taee Butt teak |nomitita tieetat chargers: wats Holmes sat in his comfortable church! socialists stands especially exposed ro ; rr eer Etec teeny worsen | SIXTH ANNIVERSARY of the DAILY WORKER Admission 50 Cents Daily Worker Birthday Party SUNDAY, JANUARY 12, 1930 Cooperative Center, 2706 Brooklyn Ave. Proletarian Supper at 8 P. M. LIVING NEWSPAPER—MASS SINGING DANCING AND SPECIAL FEATURES BUILD THE DAILY WORKER! ADMISSION 50 CENTS Unemployed Free!

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