The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 25, 1930, Page 2

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Page Two sats DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1ysv |Jewelry Workers Hold! Metal Workers to Meet] Friday; Struggle Is On ‘Meeting on Wage Cuts BOSTON PICKETS NEEDLE TRADE ‘OFFICE WORKERS | Thursday; Movie Sat. to Win Their Demands | workers are called to a mass meet- WED, FEB, 26! ON THE LINE THIS MORNING pe are invited to discuss the fight Daa 1, ducting a national struggle for un-} |Street, when it was given fifty-seven Jim McWilliams; Sharon DeVries; which includes gold, silver, plati- m, novelty workers and watch ing Friday, Feb. 28, at 2 p. m. at} 13 West 17th St. by the Metal | Demonstration At the *rinst wage cuts: There are pienty|20 Jailed But Line Is Forty-Hour Week’ Plan Fight On Unem- Battery, 8.30.a.m. of wage cuts. Intact; Shops Won Against ILG Fake | ployment ives” ‘Thacplayeeill’ be Sépbated at hae jthe Thursday matinee. Earl Faber and company; others. Feature Photoplay. MOBILIZE TO GREET PORTER “The Cradle Song” At! ticer O’Brien”, with Ernesi Tor- rence, Dorothy Sebastian and Clyde Civic Repertory Cook. On the stage—Glenn and Jen- kins Franklyn D’Amore, with Jack One hundred and forty perform-| Lane and Ethel Truesdale; Savoy ce of Grenoiera Maria Mi and Mann; Lillian St. Leon; Wilson- 's Spanish comedy, “The | Keppel and Betty, and the Four » will be marked by the | Jacks and Girlie. Sier ti that play at the Civie Repertory |” Ricardo Corete; Johnny Downs; Theatre. This production was the yavis and Badeliffy Fiowere of outstanding success of Eva Le Gal-| sevie and a Belle Pola, Photo- lienne’s first season in Fourteen play—“Hunting Tigers in India.’ | Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, ’ | employed councils and committees | of action of the employed and job-| less workers. It fights for work | ers, will hold a meeting at 125 West 45th St., Thursday night, to Workers’ Industrial League, a sec- tion of the Trade Union Unity | “s The union has a special showing | (Continued from Page One) at midnight, Saturday, of “the fun-| BOSTON, Mass., (Continued from Page One) | More than 150 employed and un-| The program of the week opens which all workers in the industry League. The Metal League is con- ‘For niest Sovkino Comedy,” entitled | Feb. 24.—The Porter when he arrives at Battery gangsters imported from New York or wages, for the seven hour day | shop! Bring information to the In- employed office workers organized |with Tchekov’s “The Sea Gull.” Park, after his long sentence for his “‘The Comrades and One Invention.” or recruited in the Boston under- and five day week, higher wages | dustrial Union; Fight against the | the first Unemployed Council of the |«yije, Bourrat,” by Claude Anet, Fs Sani ceed Waka working-class activities. There will be other entertainment, world by the company union today | and better conditions, equal pay for | sellout and sweat-shop conditions | Office Workers Union, at a meeting | it} ‘he cinas on muedday eveies oe eee ee Long imprisonment has not ‘ Get tickets at the union office. j shirked their job of attacking one equal work and against the speed- forced upon you by the company- | held in Labor Temple yesterday, | Th or Rani i “The Open A Markoff, sibel the apa daunted Comrade Porter's spirit. He | ----- of the most militant and largest up. | union! Of the 450,000 office workers in |p ae The W ng, a mie Fascist Federation will speak on is anxious to be out fighting in the picketing demonstrations ever held “Join the demonstration and show oor,” and ie Women Have Fascism at the Workers School Y t n OW | New York fully 110,000 are unem- your readiness to fight side by side | ployed. Part-time work is the lot with the other workers for a real | of many more thousands, Way,” will be presented; Friday) Forum, Sunday, March 2, evening, “The Sea Gull;” Saturday ‘Those | matinee, “Peter Pan”; and Saturday \here. The police were sent in in- | stead, and tried by mass arrests to ranks of the revolutionary move- ment. “I am anxiously awaiting the SPARTA STRIKERS day when I shall be out,” he wri “to fight shoulder to shoulder the fellow workers.” “I am very anxious to be out, as I understand, according to informa-| tion obtained from the capitalist! press,” says Porter, “that a textile | strike is bound to be called in the} northeastern states; that a strike in| tes, | with | break up the striking cloakmakers and dressmakers picket line. They up such a hattle that their line re- | made 40 arrests, but the pickets put | LAUNDRY LEAGUE workers’ union and union conditions under the leadership of the Needle) are forced to work at a greater Trades Workers Industrial Union— fortunate speed, at |Section of the Trade Union Unity duced salaries. enough to hold “positions” longer hours, and at re- DEFY FISHWICK Reject Bosses’, UMW Order to Go Back | | mained intact. The afternoon mass meeting here today, after the battle in the streets was the most erthusiastic since the strike started. The cloak and dress- DEFIES ARREST |Workers Get Leaflets; | Boss Rages and Fumes! : | PALACE. H, Robins, vico president of the| Ted Healy, Jimmy Savo, Arthur Union, and Leo Klinghoffer, Youth |@"4 Morton Havel; Healy Manner; Organizer of the T. U. U. L, both Rosita Moreno; Babe and Her Holly- spoke, wood Redheads Fred Keating, Grace Doro and others. League!” Ten thousands of workets in the needle trades are discontented and ready to fight. They have been badly swindled by the employers, week, Then ask him to become a Build The Daily Worker—Send j evening, “The Open Door” and “The; jn Your Share of the 15,000 New Women Have Their Way.” Subs. “For All Kind of Insuranee” ([ARL BRODSKY man speaking workers ofl : 5 gies : ——————— lephone: M Hil 8550 the Southern textile industry apa | BULLETIN pcg es pe eCbpinaiee me Lind them have been swin Tell the Advertiser—“I Saw | HIPPODROME. as ephone ey { Boutheand that wondeeful work bes | POTTSVILLE, Pay Feb. 24. — |i coy goa. ‘More and more | «4 committee went yesterday to| dled by the company union. | | Your Ad in The Daily Worker.” Photoplay, William Boyd, in “Of-|7 Hast 42nd Street, New York fj) South, and that won: erty’ Work aS’ When a piece of dynamite, which h i ah eb ’ distribute an organization call to 7 jesinger ; | ] been done, I also know. : jhe was carrying in his shirt ex-| 0.008 aay Nessa tional Lalieg {te Workers of the National Laun-| , Even the bosses, who co-operated da iat Mae aia 3 Cg) Sia a oF the fact that his let-|nloded, John Wincavage, of New| Gaucass” Wale he wari dries, Wilkins Av. & Boston Road, | thoroughly with the Perverts ae Py A M u wf was censored, Porter was able | yy; 4 ‘i a r The bosses of thi , which » | sf E M Ee Ni T ¢ 9 to express the fact that he is anxi- rec ai eas Blown oS? ae union) and capitulate to the demands | ;, aatatt : pase ited Mae workers don’t seem to like it. Schles- | ° WORKERS’ CENTER ous to get to work in the growing | te was working as a miner in the duatetal Union Eemae ee fo reputation of being rough. They | inger promised wage gains, and told/ BARBER SHOP class struggles. buck run colliery in Minersville near | tye modav’ cove lof the most | tBreatened the committee with their |the workers that the settlement 2nd BIG] Moved to 3) Union Square A statement of the Young Com-/here, and the explosive was to use| **T7 aay . , Sppriey ‘ © most |lives which refused to leave, They | Stanted them. Yesterday's issue of AME WERK! | A Theatre Guild Production PREIHEIT BLDG—Main Floor munist League on Porter's release |; the mine. important shops settled on union) catied a few huskies, but the latter,| Women’s Wear, the bosses paper, Wisconsin | } says: t | Danae ee conditions, which include the 40 badly ex; sited workers themselves, | tells of wage disputes which ‘mark 42d ST. & B'WAY Pees! “METEOR” - “John Porter will arrive at Bat-| SPARTA, Ill, Feb. 24. — ‘The | Bour week. i did not like the job. They let the | the return of the workers” after the First Time at Popular Prices! fy KN BERMAN 7 1] tery Park, at 8:30 a. m. on Wednes- | sparta mine strikers, still meeting |, TMOrTo™, at 6 there will be an-lioss do all the threatening, while | fake strike and na lany shops Thelr First TALKING Picture || i aes Cooperatore! Pateonize i day, February 26. The Young Com- |as a local of the et Mine Work. eee big ae nee yee oe they merely looked on. The neigh- | €xPerience considerable annoyance “ACROSS THE WORLD” | GUILD, "; hue eee 2: | S E R O Y ‘ er pees of pha penis lers of America, today flatly rejected ai lressmakers at Paine Memorial bors, who are practically all work- beni of aera a ae | | t fe working youth to demon-|the bosses’ offer to return to work. 4 ers, showed their sympathy for the | Scales were advanced —so: alg Mr. and Mrs. | CHEMIST ’ i 3 “ saa : ———__—_ ; it tual! i | « "7 Gea Patee dan ohitiaian in bad The U. M. W. A. (Fishwick) offi- committee and told the boss to keep Sablcatagts 1s rif ually bel anes MARTIN JOHNSON THE APPLE CART | 657 Allerton Avenue j an answer to the preparations for a ae ma Hida e reending WOMEN NEGRO Ae oe ay rm ee cn The officers of the Industrial | sal onigeade operate Estabrook 3215 —_ Bronz, N. ¥, A r Tis, ie miners to go aC] pending retreated, . #. q . 5 . war against the Soviet Union, an/ settlement” of their demand that 5 Despite the fact that two police-| Union are filled with delegations JOLSONS’ 59th 6¢, a tth av. ve. sa | MARTIN BECK “ere: Birget | + ; answer to the forces’ hack reac-!the working force be not cut from 7 men appeared on the scene, all the | from shops which come up to get the Mats, Thurs, and Sat. | Pee f tion, an answer to attacks as mani-| 404 to 80, The miners refused the workers came out of the shop,| id of the workers’ union for a fight “The f Li ho | W. I. R. CLOTHING STORE ] feasted by the appeals of Manning, | floor to Sub-district President Mc- everyone receiving leaflets. Many |@ainst bosses and company union. Count or Luxembourg |— aerated, Meugh ! of the Lutheran Church, end of the! Ajiister of the U. M. W. and booed gave their addresses, and expressed | The Schlesinger gangsters and go- By FRANZ LEHAR | NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES Telephone Ludlow 3008 Jewish sinagogues, the pope and|him out of the hall. - eager willingness to organize. jrillas are roaming the market, aided | With Roy, Cropper, Florenz Ames, Cleaning, Pressing, Repairing their imperialist backers.” |” ‘They rejected the call of the Fish-/SDeCial Need to Send 70 Hours A Week by the police, to try and slug the | <2 0e* Once __ | Loews "Bis 2” oon Cueed Work eae Me ee wick administration to hold a con. The laundry workers are very| Needle workers into submission to} R E B 0 U N D ews ‘4 joods Called for and Delivered. | 4 Delegates March 1 sasti izati the company union and its two-year All profits go towards strikers Report Santo Dom- | vention and form a union under his enthusiastic for organization. They | the company al y dihin Te sae atten es cow ‘and their ramilien, A | control. Two calls have been issued by |Work under the most miserable con-|Slave contract. Against this the| comedy by Donald Ogden Stewart | SHOW YOUR, soLipaniry ; ingo Masses Revolt) at « meeting called in the adjoin-|the Metropolitan Area Trade Union ditions. Their hours are anywhere | Workers mobilize today. |___ with HOPE WILLIAMS PITKIN PARADISE foie dakensinadenes ; ing lot today, 150 strikers, half of | Unity League, one to women work-|ftom 50 to 70 a week. Pay for over- | PLYMOUTH TP. 45th st. w. Pitkin Avenue Grand_ Concourse ee tt Soe lt hen erm tee ta |r tad ee Nr on | ti, ar gare |40-Hour Week At ae | OL Comrdes H } y of New) Miners Union speakers Herchey and | ers, pointir; it thei t un- |Tange from beotat eae cone on Re ; York, which practically controls the (Continued on Page Three) lbesrente a Pers anda eet 18 to 25 for men for the most ex- Shoe Workers Meet; Ethel Barrimore Theatre| ON BOTH SCREENS PARK RESTAURANT t eéonomic life of Santo Domingo. lehem to elect delegates to the con-|hausting labor. Sixteen dollars a — arth Street, West of Brondway | NORMA 698 Alerton Avenue ‘ * 28 « | lvention of the T.U.U.L. this Sat-| Week is considered a very high wage (Continued trom Page One) | Bves. 8:50. Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:30 Corner White Plains Ave. 2 WASHINGTON, Feb. 24.—Re-[Labor and Fraternal |ivay and Sunday, Merch 1 ani{Sor laundry workers. In many |the Brooklyn Supreme Court Part 3,| Death Takes a Holiday SHEARER A GOOD PLACE TO EAT i ports of a revolt in Santo Domingo, Organizations |2, in Irving Plaza, 15th St. and| Shops the foreladies receive this | Justice Mitchell May. A_ecomedy about site. IN Open All Night. Ladies Invited. : Dominican Republic, reached the Irving Pl. enormous sum, For this they slave| The workers of the shop were on} ___with PHILIP MERIVALE | Hi | ” t State Department today. The in-| exposition International Revolution-| The convention will establish the|M#"d themselves and keep on nag- ie oad Ere ii Me oan IVIC REPERTORY 14th, st | ‘THEIR OWN DESIRE ; formation received by the State De-| of workers’ Esperanto Group, 28|Metropolitan T.U.U.L, on a firm Sine the rest of the workers to speed ee : ae ye rs a Rives. 6:20, Mats, Thur, Sate 250 || BE ALIENS. VEGETARIAN partment states that de Vasquez and | Union Square, sth floor, till Feb. 26.| basis, coordinating all the economic |it UP- ; work when the case close ane Bc. $1. $1.50." || Staze Shows—Both Theatres trom ADSTAUMANG I his wife, supported in power by mar- ULD. Bésaer. letrugeles of the workers in the|. The laundry industry employs} It was clearly shown that the BVA Le GALLIENNE, Director |] CAPITOL THEATRE, BROADWAY ll Always Find it t ine bayonets, sought refuge today in| Feb. 26 to March 2, at New Star Metropolitan Area, and it will mob-| Negro women predominantly. Injbosses locked out the worker, be- | Tonight —“MLLE. BOURRAT” | h the United States legation. No de- | Came. , College, sxtieise, unde, 0436, flize the workers for the great un-|™any laundries the bosses discrim-|cause they refused to sign yellow | Tom. Night—“CRADLE SONG” t 7 tails were given. | 799 Broadway and all branches. "lemployment demonstration March |inate against Negroes, giving them | dog contracts, é Pan ida We, Rtation) tie 1 cc ght | Wamene Ouaairas at, 3 the worst jobs and the lowest pay. ida ace stones of fee ers Now Playing! . The Dominican Republic com- | ,, Lecture on International Womens| ‘The call from the Negro organ- was the last witness for the i. 6. 1 | a, ‘ Pan the abit Wald ot the ind in| Bilin Ale’ Station ren Brighton inet of the TULUL, to the Negro BYERS ON TRIAL TM, ord he coon vas eee TREMENDOUS DOUBLE-FEATURE PROGRAM! RATIONAL # whie! siti is situated. United workers declares in part: pias | States imperialism has had a dic-| Get iesfiets at 18 We iith Suemem-| “We Negro workers especially apo ws i ill, Mass “PRISONERS Vegetarian ~ ] tatorship in the Dominician Republic lees ieee 8p. m./are made to suffer from the de- bhai trer anor ‘tha New York 9 RESTAURANT n since 1906. | . oe f& veloping crisis and: the drive of the as | of SOCIETY . : A age election, supervised and | Pi Matovis Mranch WLR. st, | bosses. Be of thousands of ’ ia A ore bin a Me be igi arias won by the marines, was held on/ Brooklyn. Newly ofgainzed, all in-|us in New York and New Jersey ' 4 SAUGHT 10 1E BERLIN UNDERWORLD) | March 1924, and all the laws pre- | Vited. yo are forced to do the hardest and — prncient coeocies (Ey eae Ai paeeelloaiagntie Gea to ibe Bupeantearlin’trdabaent || Strictly Vegetarian Food ‘ viously WeSiee by the marine com- e Brownsville Workers’ School. ns ae ese for the lowest wages. G a stonia Defendant ae Ba /maating ‘ob Wane tS of the children of criminals. | ita cei y : manders were forced on the masses. | 20/00" 1n ‘fundamentals and eiemen: | we are always the last to be hired. * ¢ kers is called by the women’s —and on the same program— | : The National City Bank of New| tary English. Register at 105 That-| We are the first to be fired and Was in Big Meet vee tient, of the L S. W. U,, tol] AMAZING: ACTUAL! AUTHENTIC! HEALTH FOOD ‘ York practically rules the Domini-|ford Ave, | suffer most from the growing un- Neat Tueaday, Fats 98) 08 G46 at —as real as war itself! . can Republic, with the help of the| _mronx ‘Workers’ School. jemployment. We are more brutally] NEW BEDFORD, Mass., Feb. 24. te Wat Oe Bi ; Ff as Vegetarian U. 8. marines. c1gig® Bronx Park Bast, Esperanto | speeded up and are the first to|_K. 0. Byers, textile worker, and : FIGHTING for the FATHERLAND } a so, /Class being formed. Register at : dee TAURANT The Negro, Indian and Spanish | schoot Office or L, Cooper, director. |!ave our miserable wages cut. We | defendant in the first Gastonia trial, It the Advertiser—-"I Saw “Contains the punch of horror you will find in ( peasants were exploited by Wall —_—-— ere discriminated against not only | comes to trial here tomorrow morn- Tell the the Daily we eer” ‘ALL QUIET ON THE WES ERONT!? 1600 MADISON AVE. P Street, In 1929 Charles G. Dawes, C é hae by the bosses and their government | ing on charges made against him| Your Ad in ee a gic Gaeene wees Phone: UNI versity 5865 1 3 i interest of the Wall Street ommunist Activities bi aie, y tHe purealerets and] when he was arrested during ley Aeme Theatre US Brondway and 4th Ave. 3 inkers, worked out a system of 4 akers of the A. F. of L. several days’ demonstrations 0: TOGRAPHS AT THY STUDIO if ’ contrélling the entire finances of| 1, Ua.Meetines, Tontent. | “More and more Negro workers] 6,900 mill workers about the middle| | P™°"°Gn youn HOME Sees BT ree oti. Se tinats,., Releges fram |i] Phone: Stuyvesant the country by U. S. imperialist |st, Room 6; Unit F-1, Section 6, os are beginning to realize that their) of January. The workers were de- | all day John’s Restaurant F bankers. | 236 Lenox Aver: Unit Fete section, CTY salvation from slavery, unem-| fending the right of the National/! Bootin Photo Studio || SPECIALTY: rTALIAN DISHES } | 6:15 p, m, 27 E. Fourth St; Unit R-2\ | ployment, wage ents and speedup, | Textile Workers’ Union to hold mill e EAST SIDE THEATRES | A place with atmosphere F Mass Pickets At C&G@’ Section 1, § p. m., 27 E, Fourth St. | discrimination, lynching and terror| gate meetings, and of the Trade 454 THIRD AVENUE ERE where all. radicals ‘meet 8 #4 YC.L. District 2. is in the unity of the Negro and Union Unity League to organize the New York City r || 302 E.12th St. New York i Attacked By the Police nfl (rst Sune Greate, ine White workers in the militant mew | employed, CALEDONIA ores ND. AVE N | = : ‘ cian one ee | against the bosses and their agents Byers was arrested with Over @/ |. ut ates tor Orgesieations iy 3 Sebbeieel from eee ou WHE about your conditions f the A. F. of L dozen others, including most of the Le ree! P L AY el 6 | q All Comrades Meet at r ers is spreading. Worker: A Se Re i 4 iervd shop are coming ts ‘te “the Worker aL | sight aetnt thet hy ge moniat Party section organises and “188 SECOND AVENUE, CORNER EIGHTH STREET _ BRONSTEIN’S ‘ a Worker Corres; it. i ay im Urow polic: rf » CORN q cs sf 14 ronx heard an announcement from t therefore join th iza-| izer. d 0] GRAM! | have been called to participate in/ the waiters, members of the Hotel, | tion thie itiae Au Seériesen toyathc jail sentences ranging from five to RELIABLE Today and Tomorrow—February 25 and 26 || 558 Claremont Parkway, Brons 7 the demonstration of the Needle| Restaurant and Cafeteria Workers’ less of color, race religion ard na-| twenty days. Byers is charged with'| MUSIC COMPANY Picc ADILLY ARNOLD BENNETT'S play of London's || [ Trades workers on 35th St. near 8th) Union of the Amalgamated Food tionality, for the common struggle|the others with inciting to riot, Majestic, Victor and other Radios ment te Re ae 1 Ave, ; Workers, that all the tips receivéd|apainst the bosses.” breach of the peace, resisting an of- al FO E: r Support Daily Worker. were to go to the Daily Worker,| The call to the women workers|ficer, etc., and also with “insulting og R ST PEOPLE of SIBERIA ¢ A benquet of a section of the In-| which helps the union in its strug-|follows in part: the flag” because he said the Red PIANOS and VICTROLAS Photographed by the Soviet Expedition | SURGECN DENTIST I depéndént Workmen’s Circle in the| gles. The collection was $10.20. “Due to the crisis in industry to- | Flag was the workers’ flag. Expert Repairing Week Day Prices: 12 to 6 p. m. 25c: evenings 35¢ 1 UNION SQUARE q oaretrnam full line of : Room 803—Phone: Algonquin * eae Not connected with any day and severe unemploymert, the Spanish and Russian We Meet at the. other office its have launched a vicidus of- Re cords 1 : ensive against the conditions of For the Defense of All Class War Prisoners all worker "Women workers ot- 1808 Thied Ave, near 1014 COOPERATIVE CAFETERIA Dr. ABRAHAM MARKOFF ‘ pecially, who receive the lowest|} 1393 Fifth Ave. nedr 116th St. -28 UN SURGEON DENTIST waate and Be forced to work un. NEW YORK city hag, TON SQUARE cor. Mee BAST, 118th STREET j ‘ . er tremendous speedup in meta! Tel. Atwater 0402 ate Berean terre bd ; pants, war industries, textile mills, Fresh Vegetables Our Specialty DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAZ 4 laundries, department stores, etc, seems : al Scorn ¢ Please jeicenane tex appointment t ) @ e are hard hit by the brutal speedup — Ce en ee i eo wage-cutting campaign of the ; ; jbosses. Women workers in New D. AILY WORKER | \ y York and New Jetséy toil from A Advertise your Union Meetings 4 rine to 12 hotts a day with an eee nena anidaictineesiaiinedhicantincinanghehitaimeratenmeeeee® here. For information write to 4 average wage from $12 to $18 a) re 0 STU | ’ week. More and more married Si tu rd E e Tied Pepin hele as R , pees women are forced to slave in fac- ete ee EE a ay Oo ° |A\| 26-28 Union Sq., New York = - vier ‘ a., New York City ¢ ‘ it. Ye Ww tories and mills in order ta main , tain_the family. Fal ~hadeetaatthacldidinadl ednesday tthe ade G d inion Unity League, CKLAN are. ' Feb. 26, 27, 28 Thursday the only militant trade union center RO D PALACE : Hotel & Restaurant Workers \ a e 9 9 that leads the workers in every 155TH STREET and EIGHTH AVENUE Avaebess! PART we Eo ‘ F Mar 1 2 Friday struggle against speed-up, wage |f| To réach hallm—éth of 9th AVE. “L” to 165th Bt. Phone Chelsea 4274” } i brutal f th . Sa da cuts and tel attacks of tl 6 | ' the cises t 5 « tur bosses, calls upon all women work- New Star Casino y ers to unite together with the men . Hoare” meeting mem Rett : Nase laae nate ya cana mea RED DANCERS ||...:2cccee| | h nion! Join and “ t A ' ql A tise FIVE CENTS MORE WAGES. | ja. on Kaemyt . Dancing! Restaurant! Music! Exhibitions! Concerts! || sarmn omen wehecuson Other Entertainment Soucten from $B Bie painters have won a B-ceat increase [| Admission 50c in advance PRIZES for class struggle group costumes J In to 85 cents an hour in a contract ff] 75¢ at the door, VERNON ANDRADE ORCHESTRA ‘ Defense with the employers’ assdciation. German Workers’ Cub, t Tickets on Sale at New York District Office, Bay ae ante hak tae fall Tateraational Labor Défense Branches ho 7 Talk, to your fellow workers tt READ and . IT FIGHTS New membere "accep ‘ ) ) ei Rea ee THE DAILY WORKE eae ka JOIN AND SUPPORT THE INTERNATIONAL LABOR DEFENSE _|| seit tie? 0t,'he Dally Werker- ll copponn FOR YOU! ||] Boal laste, Mnaer regular subseriber. i b

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