The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 4, 1930, Page 5

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A.F.L. PUSHES MUSTE__ FORCES IN SOUTH AS MILL BOSSES’ SHIELD Labor Fakers Sit Down at Meet With Bosses Instructions in Their Pockets Misleaders’ Southern Conference Held in Swell! Charlotte Hotel The American Federation of La-| ‘or southern conference, begins | velopment of the year just closed, | Sunday in the best hotel in Char-| “Perhaps the most important de- | so far as the cotton textile industry | These Are the & Child wo: er, young worke 5, women workers and a couple of a adult leaders in the struggle in the Southern textile field. Most of | workers, Ortiz Rubio, Wall |President of Mexico, drove him out | of the city. RUBIO DREN. _ FROM DETROIT BY WORKERS Mass Protest Forces Fascist to Leave DETROIT, Jan. 3.—The protest demonstration that met the murderer of the Mexican militant Street | mass orders enn’ Police Chief | orders Pickets Shot; Bombing Is His Excuse NEW ORLE! ANS La, “Shoot to kill” is the order issued | today by Police Superintendent Ray | as he sent out squad after squad of armed men to try and finaliy break | the strike of the street carmen. The | Jan. | excuse given by Ray for his drastic three 1 dyna- is that since yesterd: cars run by scabs have be: mited. The police are not making any pretense of discriminating be- tween pickets, however, and will break up all picket lines. Ray’s son was a scab during the \injunction notice SOCIALIST TRIES “TO JAIL WORKERS’ FOR PICKETING Report from USSR to} Food Workers Tonight Samuel’ Heiler, anember of the so-| cialist party, came into special s sions court in Borough Hall yester day to testify that h Workers’ Industrial Union Local 17,; A Page rive \Case of 10 Jailed in Election Rally Again Postponed hearing on the case of ten workers arrested September 12 for holding a meeting on the election ampaign and the Palestine situa- tion in Brownsville took place yes- terday. The police arrested Harold Williams, the principal speaker, and nine others, on the charge of “in- citing to riot.” A TT Physical Culture Restaurants "VY FOOD AT LOW PRICES lotte. Numerous well upholstered|is concerned, has been the labor| these are from Gastonia region, and have gone through the battle | Riled at the monster meeting. of | first part of the strike, and came out | of the Amalgamated Food Workers 18 Nore a ot eee Oey international officials of ational’ troubles of the Southern mills. It| there. They are active now in the Southern campaign of the National | American and Mexican workers that | second best one night when hejand to push the contempt case 21 Murray St. New York City and international A. F. L. unions | is possible to discuss these from a Textile Workers Union. |met him with booes and hisses, the | Clashed with a picket. Ever since against five of them. hose OD, | A will be there, with the instructions | number of angles, to add or to de- —_—_——— See ~ |belly, awling white terrorist, Rubio.|then Ray has been particularly |trial were Organizer lbaum, of their bosses in their pockets, and | tract the stress, ete. The fact re- |precipitately left here without offi Pete: a Arenbloch, Horowitz, n, and a campaign will be worked out, de- | mains that these strikes in South- signed to do the mill owners no/jern cotton mills last year started ‘harm and try to keep the texile | new manner of thinking. They mill hands from joining their own| awakened in many mill executives union, the National Textile Workers’ |a realization that the industry was Union. The southern campaign of | not a law unto itself, and that mills the A. F. L. was officially voted|would have to make internal through the A. F. L. convention at | changes themselves—and do it soon Toronto, and Green, in summoning |—or have it done for them.” this conference, refers to this fact,! The problem for the Southern tex but says not a word about the in- | tile mill owner is to make the work- | tolerable conditions of the South-|ers think that concessions are to} ern textile workers, |be made to them without letting What Bosses Mean. ‘them actually establish a real union. The Southern mill owners are co-,This is where the A. F, L. comes operating, cautiously with the A. F.|in, and ityis pushing forward its| L. program. The reason ‘is stated|Muste controlled United Textile in a recent article in a textile trade | Workers’ Union to serve as the paper published in New York: |shield for the mill barons. or edition affairs. one Worker. dar. Lenin Memorial to Fight Imperialist War. land of the world’s workers, have been greatly advanced. “At the same time Hoover is ‘in- stituting fascism against the work- The Lenin Memorial Meeting, now set for Jan. 22, Wednesday eve- ning at 7 p. m., at Madison Square Garden is to be a tremendous coun- was It has been that when gient. for the aff serted in the would increase the Daily Worker in~ and make it more nass circulation for | __ come considerably possible to build our official orga: In a recent issue of the adv WORKERS CALENDAR \LL LABOR ORGANI PARTY UNITS, ATTENTION! xenerally understood ry Dail L sed rkers orgun- to secure jd advertise r should be in- y Worker. This national ily Worker the © i We hold that income af- We therefore giv after the followi insertion of not ialendar will prevail: | meetings of or serted free of consist of mo: | words to the | wishing to giv affairs will rece such affair in the Workers provided they insert a paid advertixe- fairs should no longer be free of charge in the Wor! ve vertixed ers Calen- notice that here- rule regarding in the Workers 1, Notices of ine. pablicity to income iee of ndar n free ni ter-demonstration to the Navallers in the U. S. His co-agent of|ment of the affair in the Daily War Conference being held under | Wall Street, William Green, pre- | Worker, = Oar ed eat te the pretense of disarmament dis- cussions in order to mobilize for war against the Soviet Union. In a letter issued to all militant working class organizations in the New York metropolitan area by the Communist Party, all workers’ or- ganizations were urged to mobilize for participation in this demon- stration. The letter in part fol- lows: held Saturday, Jan. 18, at 7 p. m. “The antagonisms among the im-|at Madison Square Garden on the perialist powers and the prepara- occasion of the anniversary of the tions by them for war against the |death of the great world leader of tending to speak for the -vorkers of the country, has promised that we will not strike nor fight for better conditions. The socialist party, fol- lowing its established policy of be- trayal, gladly joins in this’ effort. “We workers must prepare to fight these alliances against us and defeat imperialist war preparations. A monster demonstration will be 7D. The Leninism n. q their income affairs Worker will be charged for space in the Workers Calendar at the r: 20 cents a line, each line to ¢ of six words, remittance to be when notice of affair is sent. (___ILEINoIs_ Chicago Nucleus 504 Dance. Concert and m., at Workers Lyceum, firsdh ‘Boulevard. dani Pd second functionaries ence will be held on Januar Sam Don will speak in the Daily ce, Sunday, confer- Com. on Li e Com. Paul Cline will, take up the organizational aspects of our | Lenin campaign. The last two weeks jon of the eae j|Communist Party and Trad Soviet Union, the Socialist Father- the workers, V. I. Lenin. Senate, House, Rush Railroad Consolidation in January all units will be covered on Leninism. oo Chiengo Needle Trades Bazaar. WASHINGTON, Jan. 2.—Senator |sentative Parker of New York, re- Fess, Republican Party, today in-| | publican, has a similar bill in the troduced before the senate. subcom- | pooner: he, Tetecetaial Commerce | ts a Commission itself recently published mittee of the Committee on Trans-|9 scheme for wide-spread consolida- portation a motion to start hearings |tion of railroads. Comment in|‘ on one phase of his bill to consoli- | Washington is that this trustifiea- date railroads. The matter up now tion is needed to make an efficent is the authority of the Interstate |war machine, and provide reliable annual Saturday, ba’ The Chicago Needle ers Industrial Unio | Workers’ Lyceur Trades Work- ML hold its Jan av '26 at. the Hirsh Blvd. y Chicas: Nucleus ses. Commerce Commissi Discussion on “Present bs ion over railroad transport facilities for the growing Ghdine Wer at ee mecting’ of security holding companies. Repre-| industrial trusts. Nucleus 5 y. January 6, at 1700 N. tenaw St. 7:30 p.m. ¥ Civil Liberties Tries to Befuddle Weiss Case : The Civil Liberties Union is try-|in a cpaitalist court, the Civil Lib- ing to make capital out” of the case erties Union is filing charges of Miriam and David Weiss, mem- |#ainst Sabatino in the Appellate | hers of the Young Communist | Division of the Supreme Court. The | ig | arrest of Miriam and David Weiss | League, who were’ threatened with | was a class issue. Judge Sabatino \s day, night, January 12 m. 2 v. Division a beating by the foaming Judge| acted in the same manner as other | brate the Sixth Annivers Western_ Aves., tion 5, Communist Party. né Meet on Unemployment, Chicago Cause and Re- cussed at a mass meeting Friday, January 10, 7:30 p, at Northwest Hall, North and der auspices Sec- | a | Chicago Daily Dance and Ranquet. Worker banquet and dance Sabatino. In: order to further the | judges do when they have Commu- | Worker. Admission 50 cents illusion that justice can be obtained | nists before them. thicsco: Nacd Worker Dance: | Dance at Schoenhoffen Hall, cor. 40 Mennonite Children Die in Germany HAMMERSTEIN, Germany, Jan. 8.—Suffering from’ the bad condi- tions inflicted on them by the Ger- man bourgeoisie after they left the Soviet Union with their parents, 40 children of the German Mennonite sect died here of disease. The Mennonites were put up in| German | barrack-like camps by the capitalists who promised them a virtual paradise if they left the FAIL TO PRISON SHOE STRIKERS Concert Sunday to Aid, | Mass Demonstration Locked-Out Workers The cases of fifty-seven shoe strikers who demonstrated before the shop of the Dan Palter Co., Fri- day came up in Jefferson Market Court yesterday on disorderly con- duct charges, and most of them were thrown out of court. Several were convicted and given suspended sentences. The workers stood on their right to picket this shop against which the Independent Shoe Workers’ Union is,leading the strike. At the same time, Judge Rafael, of the New Jersey Ave. Court, in Brooklyn, had to dismiss the cases against a number of shoe strikers whom the Elmore Shoe Co. was trying to frame up on charges of “insulting a girl” in their office. The shoe strikers are more than wer determined to carry on mass picketing and win their strike. Sun- day, Jan. 5, at Central Opéra House, 67th St. and Third Ave., the union is putting on a fine concert, all proceeds to go to the strike fund, and for relief of the strikers and their families. All workers should attend, to help this strike. REMEMBER. The Daily Worker must estab- lish mass circulation among work- ers in industries. Order a bundle *€ the Sixth Anniversary Edition. | FIGHT MEXICAN jror instigated in Mexico. |Ashland Ave. and Milwaukee on }11, 1980, at & p. ven by the Food Workers Indust League. Ladies admitted free. orchestra. Re- freshments free. inc mcast iood Soviet Union. The nature of the disease from which the 40 children died is not revealed by the capital- . Chicago Daily Worker Banquet ist doctors in charge. Fifty other |a¢ ssi oav children are seriously ill. Several “i aes hundred other children ar? suffering -PENNSYIN NT 4 from measles. The direct cause of the widespread disease among the On Saturd ay aM fis Children 4 xi. | the Young Communist League ‘of Mennonite children is the poor sani- | ie, Young: ae aaa of H. tary conditions under which they | Workers ectric and North Ave. Adm ers are urged to s All sympathiz- are forced to live. Send Pittsburgh Daily Worker Banquet. Pittsburgh Daily Worker Proleta- rian Banquet to celebrate the Sixth | sary of the Daily Worker on January 5, 8 p. m, at Labor 5 Miller ‘St. s ortant Dates for Philadelphia, | January 10,—Friday evening, Sixth | Anniversary Celebration of the Daily | Worker. Concert. Girard Manor Hall, 911 Girard Ave.’ Admission 50c. January. 17.—Liebknecht Memorial Mass Meeting and Concert, At the Negro Elks Hall, 16th and Fitzwater TERROR JAN. 4 NY Communists Stage a ‘Tanuary 24.—Lenin Memorial Dem- onstration at the Broadway Broad ‘and Christian Sts. Ramis Be. Phila, Monthly I. L. D. Conference. All functionaries and active mem- bers of all I. L. D, branches in Phila- delphia must be present to the reg- ular monthly conference on Monday, January 6, at 7:15 N. Sixth St, whi the national conference will be dis- cussed by the Hetamates bd Philadel ing ene School Forum. Su 130 p.m. at Scottish Rite. ‘Hall, Pitzwater St, tween 15th and J6th Sts. Jam: Ford, just returned from “Negroes in the Class Strike OHIO Cleveland Workers School Concert and Danee. All syz.pathetic organizations are requester on Saturday, January 11, 1930. The Workers School of Clevéland is ar- Fanging @ concert and dance aigghe Lithuanian Hall, §839 Superior Wve. ~ Warren “Krassin” Lecture Stereoptican slide lecture on the Krassin rescue at Hippodrome Hall, Sunday, January 5, 7 p.m. « | | CALIFORNIA Frixco Dally Oth Anniversary Aftatr, 6th Anniversary of the Daily Worker the San Francisco Section is) giving banquet and musical entertainment, at the Work- ers Center, January 1%, 145 Turk St., San Francisco. n The mass demonstration against the persecution instigated by the Hoover-Calles-Morrow-Rubio clique aimed at the workers and peasants has been called by the Communist Party for Saturday, Jan. 4 at 3.30 p.m. at 10th St. and 5th Ave. The recent arrests of dozens of the best revolutionary workers in Mexico has called forth tremendous protest from all over the world. Junco, leading proletarian fighter in Latin America, has been rear- rested after having been once re- leased and is now being threatened with deportation to Cuba where the butcher Machado is more than anxi- ous to execute him. Only an effective world-wide pro- test can save him, Latin-Ametican workers are espe- cially urged to participate in this demonstration and to voice their solidarity together with the Amer- ican workers against the brutal ter- Gj All workers are urged to raise the question in the various trade unions, fraternal organizations, etc. a to mobilize effective participation in Comrades and sympathisers are i asked to send in greetings to the the demonstration. Well known | Office ‘or “the ‘Dally “Worker, 14s speakers from the Latin American colonies and semi-colonies as well as leading revolutionaries in the United States will address the meet- ing. Turk St. Los Angeles Daily 6th Anniversary air, Sixth Anniversary Celebration of the Daily Worker will be held Sun- day night, Jan, 12, at the Coopera- not to arrange any affairs | | | | 706 Brooklyn Ave, Good | Z, good things to eat uiures are on the pro- A living newspaper wil lbe of the fetaures. ~ Memorial California | one California. 1 San Franc Turk’ and Polk Los Angele 8. Flower St., Meeting. he Hall, 612 | 8 ea Columbus Hall, ‘an, 21. en YCL Inter-racial Dance. | w Haven Unit No, 2 of the | mmunist League will hold inter-racial dance at the Masonic Hall, 76 Webster St. on Jan. 11, All workers invited to attend, Ali organizations are urged to keep this date open. DISTRICT OF its first COLOMB! Washington Inter-racial Dance. An_ inter-ri dance under the auspices of the t Party and Young Communist L of Wash- ington will be held January 6, 1930, at the Pythian Hall, 1200 U St. N.'W. Negro and white ‘workers Admission 40 cents. EW JERSEY ~~~ welcome. Section Membership Meeting. ta ew Jersey Section g will’ be held 1930, at 93 Mer- r addre: with the N. J. Section Organizer D. | wit the meeting. together Flaiani. ‘Trenton Part: A banquet will JUL Banquet, be held by Union Unity League of Trenton, Saturday, Jan. 4 at the Par! ) Second St., 0} fice, m. to begin at 8 p. The banquet arranged tor: funds for the Party Recruiting Drive and for the organization of the un- organized workers in Trenton. Ad- mission 25c. All unemployed will be |admitted free of charge. i | tion, seems to have overwhelmed the capi- | its fascist judge Vitale and the most ganization w | Mexican and Cuban the | cially announcing his slinking away | The Detroit Free Press carries | the blazing headline: “Ortiz Rubio quits Detroit. Reds blamed. Cuts | visit short. Goes to Chicago. Mex- ican chief had intended to stay sev- eral days.” All of the capitalist press here are featuring the spirited protest of the militant workers who chased the | Mexican Wall Street puppet out of — | the city. Whole pages of pictures and news | items are carried on the demonstrs the effectiveness of which talist agents and their police. One paper says that Rubio’s “de- cision to cut tour short is unan- ounced,” showing that the leader of | the terror campaign against the revolutionists did not want to undergo the bar- tage of another stration against him. The reception accorded him by the |Detroit workers, which tore the mask from the stark fascist oppres- jsor of the Mexjcan masses, was |quite different Trom that which of his bosses, Hoover, Lamont and ict | Morrow. Because of their failure to break up the protest meet, the Detroit police are faced with a scandal. Severe criticism is leveled at Detroit | capitalist authorities by the Hoover | administration. On the 14th of January, Mayor Bowles, a Ku Kluxer, will be instal- led. He has announced that as police commissioner he will appoint Col. Cole. Cole, at the present time, is | smashing demon- | Rubio had been getting at the hands | CONNECT AITALE, BAIL RACKETEERS More Filth on Fascist Judge, Foe of Workers lose close Further revelaticns o° the connections between Tammany Hall, © vicious elements of the underworld | Were yesterday shown, in the ad- | mission by Charles B. McLaughlin, Bronx District Attorney, that the | holdup of a dinner party of Vitale’s | was the result of a war between Bronx and Harlem bail-bond rack- eteers. Thus Vitale, vicious towards mili- |tant workers brought before him in | court, is connected with a group of racketeers and thugs which prey on | 7, the workers in the courts. The raid on Vitale’s blow-out on December 8, was made by racketeers in the ex- jpectation of finding a bail-bond racketeer from Harlem, whom they had it in for. This is the party wt.” led to the leaking out of facts showing Vitale’s connection with gangsterdom. For | Vitale, soon after the holdup, re- turned to Detective Johnson, of the Bronx, a gun which had been taken from Jonson during the holdup. Later on in the, note-book of a} seven hold-up men, | NEEDLE UNION SPEEDS DRIVE : iL. L.G. W. ‘Fake Strike; | Builds Bosses’ Trust The Needle Trades Industrial | Union campaign to force the dress shops to observe union conditions is well under way, as the shops take | |son. The Industrial union will con- | duet a campaign of strikes to en- force its demands. The union reports | that the workers, having been given a chance inva series of weekly open forums to thoroughly discuss the ituation have indicated overwhelm- ingly their desire to build their own industrial union and fight for im- provements in conditions, The union is now being reorganized ona strictly shop basis, following a conference of shop chairmen to work out the details. “Strike” Builds Trust. The first beginning: of the fake International Ladies Garment Work- ers Union “strikey’ a stoppage of work in which the big dress shop | bosses co-operate with the unio: were seen yesterday, when severa dress sho “settled’ what never was a strike, by joining the Affili- | | ated Dress Manufacturers, the | | bosses’ association. {of the Joint Board of Cloak and | Dress Makers, I. L. G. W., hurriedly | denied that the strikes were merely |to build up the bosses trust, but he added: “Of course, if a manufacturer wishes to join the association as a means of settling wit the union, we're glad to see him do it.” Nagler, Julius Hochman, super- visor of the dress department of the joint board; A. Luigi Antonini, man- ager of Local 89, and Joseph Spiel- man, manager of Local 22, all of them infamous for the use of gang- sters and police against real strikers belonging to the Needle Trades | Workers Industrial Union, were in} a conference with the Wholesale | Dress Manufacturers Association officials yesterday fixing up the de- tails of the lockout and fake strike. | ‘|Millinery Workers to: ~>) Aid Working Women’s! Anti- War Conference Millinery “workers have pledged | their aid to the Working Womens | Anti-War Conference, to be held | Saturday, January 4, at 2 p, m,, at | Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th | St. | Sylvia Blecher, secretary of the | Millinery Handworkers’ Union Lo- | jcal 48, in a letter addressed to the | District Women's Committee of the | Communist Party, told of the en-| thusiastie response of the millinery | workers to the conference. | 56 ARABS DIE IN PLAGUE TUNIS, Jan. 3.—Because of un-)| healthy living quarters in which the | Arab workers are forced to live.| a terrible bubonic plague is raging oe Fifty-six Arabs already have ied. chairman of the military affairs |thug arrested for dope peddling, Vi- |committee of the Detroit Chamber |tale’s name was found listed under American Restaurant 1003 SPRING GARDEN ST. PHILADELPHIA Goldstein. They were be ing in defiance tried for picket- butcher shop on Cortellou Roads Clean Wholesome Food about three months ago. jendly Service. Popular Prices. Heller’s main argument against the five was that they were Com- munists. About his own socialism, PHILADELPHIA he said he only ¢ such mat-| { CAPITAL BEVERAGE CO, will tke or your entertainments and sa} SODS WATER “and BEER 434 West York Street COLUMBIA 6255. ters “philosophica but care believed in Tammany Hall. all this, he is well of the t party st the United Hebrew Trades, company u ed right wing obtained the junction and pushed the case. The case was dropped for lack of eviden really | 3 Despite | known as one} ts in the or- in- | 4 sc ephone ich PHILADELPHIA Phe work we make*is good. Or- ganizations’ work—our specialty. pruce Printing Co. x | Hear Delegate To USSR. |] .» y SEVENTH ST. PHILA. PA. At the organization meeting of |] ei —market 6883 pepercig food workers to be held tonight Keystone—Main 7040, Printers at 16 West 21st St., Smith, who just returned from the Soviet Union, | ~ es where he spent three months as a PHILADELPHIA delegate from the Food Workers,|| "atrontze the pally, Worker will report on differences in the|| gay att yout supplies for sieates condition of food workers in the und other affairs at | SLUTZKY’S Delicatessen Store FOURTH AND PORTER STREETS 5 and in the work | ail are invited. | The food workers are engaged in republic. a big organization campaign. Prep- a arations for struggle are nearly | = ' comple Every member of the || | union is obligated to participate in|| CLENSIDE UPHOLSTERY the organization drive, A full re- Ai Repairs. Dane at jor’ of the present situation will be|| Reasonable. Beleds given. | ROBERTS BLOCK, No. 3 Glenside, Pa. Enlist Your Shop Mate in the ||! telephone Ogontz Drive for 5,000 New Members. ue | Philadelphia, Pa. up more work after the holiday sea- | ‘of Commerce. A hint that Rubio was slinking jout of town, after the blighting greeting that the workers gave him, |was revealed when six detectives | visited the offices of the Communist |Party at about the time the Mexican jfascist head left town. A police truck was stationed in the street, in front of the Party headquarters. The capitalist press as well as the city authorities are much dis- concerted at the unexpectedness and militancy of the demonstration. They severely criticize the police officials for being unprepared to smash the demonstration. A statement issued by the Com- ! |says: “The mass protest meet which |met the murderer of our fellow jworkers in Mexico drove the Mex- jican Wall Street president out of | the city. munist Party on the demonstration | the heading of “numbers frequently j called.” An attempt is being made by {Tammany to make Johnson the goat in the whole affair, because great fear exists among the Tammany leaders that the deeper going con- nections of strike-breaking Tam- many with the thugs may come out. The name of ex-Governor Smith, one of Wall Street’s presidential candidates in 1928, has already been jinvolved in the Vitale case. Vitale is notorious as a fascist leader in New York and as a vicious baiter of militant workers. i. L. D. Urges Members \to Aid Demonstration District of the In- | The New York fo: Mexico Workers! | Isadore Nagler, general manager | When it became openly apparent | ternational Labor Defense will par- that the facts of terrorist campaign | ticipate full foree in the mass pro- xi against the Mexican workers and | test demonstration against the Mex- peasants had been widespread among | ican terror tomorrow (Saturday) at the Detroit workers, Ortiz Rubio|3 p, m. at 110th St. and Fifth Ave. slunk away like a beaten dog. We | The district last night issued an} call upon our fellow workers in Mex- | appeal to all its members to take | now raging in Mexico, with the sup- |pression of all militant organiza- tions and the murder and torture of thousands of workers and peas- ants, is being carried out at the Soviet Fliers Press Search fer Eielson| NOME, Alaska, Jan, 2.—The | order and under the direction of the Soviet expedition looking for Ben/U. S, Wall Street government. While |Hielson and Earl Borland, aviators | at home the Hoover regime still lost in Siberia, is cooperating with | finds it expedient to keep up pre- the American fliers and ships in| tenses of “democracy,” in its Latin: Alaska who are also searching for} American colonies, both those the missing explorers. | owns directly and those i. controls os in some camouflaged form. Bloody Write About Your Conditions | suppression of the toiling masses for The Daily Worker. Become a |is the program of American imper- Worker Correspondent. ialism. — Sa Se aoe “Only by becoming a member of the Communist Party can you give your greatest services to the cause of the working class. Only as a Party mem- ber can you really fight effectively against the enemies of the working class”’—-EARL BROWDER Why Every Worker Should Join the Communist Party 32 pages of mental dynamite for every class- conscious worker, Presented in simple style and in the language of the workers of the shops, mills and factories, Five Cents Per Copy SETAE SSU EDS REM Na S37. EC ee a Join the Race for Revolutionary Competition! pol SPARES SE RNR he Rr eR Rush Your Orders With Cash to the WORKERS LIBRARY PUBLISHERS 39 EAST 125TH STREP? NEW YORK CITY ico to do the s..me with the Hoover-| part in this demonstration. The Calles-Rubio clique. Drive them out |appeal, which is signed by Sam| of Mexico! Fight the white terror in, district organiz at in Mexico!” [he unprecedented white terror Sixth Anniversary Celebration Baily S25 Worker Friday, January 10, 1930, at 8 p. m. GIRARD MANOR HALL 911 Girard Avenue \ | William Gropper, Cartoonist adya Chilkovsky, Interpretive Dancing Colered Singing Quartet ADMISSION 50 CENTS | SAN FRANCISCO Sixth Anniversary Celebration DAILY WORKER Monday Evening, January 13th, 1930 Banquet and sical Entertainment WORKERS CENTRE, 145 TURK STREET CHICAGO Sixth Anniversary Celebration DAILY WORKER BANQUET AND DANCE , January 12, 1930 Sunday Evening 2021 W. DIVISION ST. ADMISSION 50 CENTS LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA Celebrate the SIXTH ANNIVERSARY of the DAILY WORKER 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 Admission 50 Cents Unemployed Free! BUILD THE DAILY WORKER!

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