The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 13, 1930, Page 2

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» age t Philadelphia Strike Against 20. P.C. Cut PHILADELPHIA, Pa workérs of Finkelste: factory is located at § have gone out on strike because they refused to accept a 20%, wage cut imposed by the bosses. In the where girls were } y as $6.00 per week, have left their jobs and a gether with the shoe wc ing militantly on the pic The of Model have also rejected the b posal of 10 wage cut the workers were told to r "ef the shop for an indefir period of time, which in r ns a lockout, the we lecided to) — transform immediately the lockout | into a militant strike. Vy Uaesddeaty vaste au her Work- on ii ier to put s of the bosses. peed up the o1 nd broaden the st joe shops a mass meeting no x workers will take be present WASHINGTON, D. C—A ssion by Secretary Lamont of C e that the gross busines f au jobile and construction industries fell off $3,000,000,000.00 since last year the extent of the crisis now shakir Red Flag Raised In MEXICO CITY.—On Friday, No- vember 7, police gasped when they saw a red flag flying from th tower of the huge nations with a large inscription the Government—Up with ©: ism!” “Education to End W POUGHKEEPSIE, N. with the pacifist policy of hiding the huge war preparations and tall ing about good will and such non- senses, Dr. Duggan, director of the shows | @ a Y.—In line | Institute of International Education | Three Billion Drop in Autos, Construction the capitalist industrial system nds of workers in tributary S aS glass, wood working, etc., d by the crisis in the auto industri and building trades industries. Mexico City Nov. 7 42, the be the sexto: ged with bei stasio Reyes, chez, ringer Reyes's father grandfather same cath- and were bellringers in the edral. r” Hokum at Vassar told the student at the Vassar Col- g t “education was the only oad to the attainment ef world peace.” 18,000 Railroad Deaths, Injuries in 6 Months CLEVELAND, O.—More than 18,000 railway worker were killed and injured during the first six months of this year, despite the great drop in employment. Lack of safety de- vices and intensive speed-up is held responsible, Lay Off 235,000 Railroad Men in One Year WASHINGTON, D. C.—During August 1930 there were 235,000 less employed on the railroads in August, 1929 on Closs I rail- roads. n Tens of ye engine thousands of loco- men are among those thrown out of |¢Ts were Killed in this way during work, $63,500,000 For Coast “Defense” nizing into the , November 14, at 1208 eet, at 8 p.m. Fred G.| p, National Organizer, will | WASHINGTON, D. C—An appro-| tions for war by the Wall Street gov- THE ADVENT How CAN You E TaYouR CHILD Ti URES OF BILL WOR Howr CAR YOU EXPLAIN APLATN: KER Ter YOUR CHILD WHY How Ne bosses of Philadelphia iY Yau CANNOT Peo; CHILD THAT Att You paren gpreniheige} “You cay PRovide CLomiles AND Shoes od HAVE To ay Rev \ erable earnings of the workers by | NO Foon for IT2 FOR.(7- AMO WERE MATH TS: PERHAPS Ny Bow in the thos ie AND The WereL Has 15 FLENTY ? ADOLLAE Sore s on the other BENTY. OWE GAVE %U 2 EXPLAIN To Your CAN You MORE DEATHS AS SPEEDUP GROWS 3 Workers Killed In One Day In N. Y. NEW YORK.—Speed-up and ra | tionalization, which has been severe. ly intensified in the present crisis, jis claiming moore and moore deaths |of workers on the joob. Benjamin Harris, 2, a Negro | worker working 625 feet below the street level n the construction oo an aqueduct in the Bronx was killed yesterday by sliding rock due to |faulty construction and speed-up, | In Utica, George Wilcox was killed | while working with a rooofing gang on the Ilion Methodist Church yes- terday. Herman Da Sherfield Farms Co, milk driver, living in the Bronx was crushed to death by an elevator when he rushed into a building to | deliver milk on the new speed-up | system. Just recently secretary of Com- and train service | Merce, Lamont, said: 23,000 work- | jobs in sight. 1929. 1930 will show a tremendous Salvation Army Big Shots Spend $30,000 for Trip to England (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW YORK.—A week ago Friday, on the liner “Majestic’ Commander Evangeline Booth of the Salvation | | Army with a staff of thirty sailed | as first class passengers for England. | The trip cannot be made for less than a thousand dollars apiece. 1,000 GATHER ~ IN JOBLESS MEET 'Devour Bread Thrown to Them By Baker NEW YORK.—Over a thousand jobless workers gathered to hear the/ speakers of the Down Town Unem-! ployed Council yesterday, outside the | city fake employment agency on Laf- ayette Street. Hundreds of workers} were standing outside the agency hoping for jobs, and there are no Milton Stone, one of the October 16 Unemployed Delegation which de- increase of deaths on the job, ;manded of Walker and the board of |estimates that the $200,000,000 slated j for the bankers be turned over to | feed the jobless, was the main speak- (SOVIET, GERMAN | | PHOTOS | EXHIBIT See Workers Camera Product, Saturday NEW YORK.—"The editorship’ of the magazine ‘The Soviet Photo'—a | Workers Camera League of the) Workers International Relief in New| York, and wishes you the best success in your work”, writes the ‘Soviet Photo’, a magazine supported by | 75,000 members of the Soviet Photo- | graphers Society in the U.S. S. R. At the same time the Photo Bec=} tion of the Society for Cultural Rela- | tions of the U. S. S. R. hails the} newly organized Workers Camera | League of the Workers International | Relief, New York, with”... The Photo Section of our Society is glad to be able to send under separate cover, 102 photo exhibits, the work of am-| ateur photographers”... | ‘These photos are among the most remarakble examples of Soviet ama-| teur photographic work; excellent ex- amples of Soviet life among the pea- sants, in the cities, and portraying the progress of the 5-year plan. Some | of the pictures are as large as 16 x 20/ | | ORGANIZE IN GEM PLANT; METAL MEETING FRIDAY EW YORK.—The Metal Workers Industrial League of the Trade Union Unity League has begun ac- tivity in the Gem Safety Razor Co., here with distribution of leaflets and | open air and shop committe meet- ings for the workers in the factory. The league announces that organ- Plant. Other factories are in a po- sition to organize shop committees. To make further plans for building a real industrial union in this field, @ membership meeting is to be held! tomorrow night, at 7:30, at 16 West 2ist St. Jack Johnstone, organizer of the Trade Union Unity Council | will be there to take part in the discussion. | The Jewelry Workers Industrial Union of the Metal Workers League is giving a concert and dance to raise funds for organization, Nev. 29th, at New Harlem Casino, with Edith Segal and the Red Dancers, and French Creole and Negro work songs by A. Burroughs as features. | NORESTRICTION | How Cant You EXPLAIN To YouR. CHILR WHY You witt @ ov AND FIGHT fore AX SYSTEP\ me MURDOCH GOES TO TRIAL FRE Crime Is Exposing the A.F.L. Fakers NEW YORK.—Nov. 11—The trial date in the case of Wm. Murdoch, |mass Soviet movement magazine—| ization work is to start at once in, National Secretary for the National j welcomes the organization of the | the Navy Yard and the Mergenthaler | Textile’s Workers’ Union has been set | for this Friday, Nov. 14th in the Criminal Term of the Corpoation Court, for alleged slanderous remarks and “lies” against the A. F. of L. printed and distributed in a leaflet issued by the union to the mill strikers in Danville. Murdoch will be defended in court by the Interna- tional Labor Defense. Murdoch is at present serving a 120 day sentence in the Danville jail for his activities in union work and participation in the local strike. The charges against Murdoch in libeling Officials of the United Textile Work- ers Union, the A. F. of L. organiza- tion are better understood according to the IL.D. after the leaflet has been read, which has just been re- ceived by the national office. The leaflet is an appeal to the workers in the mills, headed “Work- ers support the Danville strikers! THAT CAN ONLY OFFER ‘FOU UNENPLOYMEN. POURTY AND 4 PiypERS comp. 1M inches. priation of $63,500,000.00 for coast de- fense purposes is the latest appro- priation on the calendar in prepara- ernment. The coast defense program includes long range coast artillery guns. TELL OF ADVANCE UNITED FRONT OF OF SOVIET WOMEN Workingwomen to Have Anniversary NEW YORK. — Telling of the achievements of the workingwomen and housewives in the Soviet Union in * gery of endless housework, in enter- ing industry, etc. speakers at the Seventh Anniversary celebration of “ng themselves from the drud- ; MILLINERY WORKERS NEW YORK.—At a meeting of mil- y workers held in Irving Plaza 1 Saturday, a united front of mil- y operators, blockers, cutters and trimmers was formed for the purpose of {chting against the bosses and , the union bureaucrats attempts to worsen working conditions, and es- ment. The United Front Rank and File Committee of Millinery Operators, against the collective agree- | (3,000 CHL TOILERS tx 2 sos wre mate oe | CHEER USSR RULE, order to the police to slug the dele- gation. He called on them to organ- ize and fight for jobless insurance. | Many followed the speaker to 27) | East Fourth St., headquarters of the! Bedacht Greeted By) council, and joined it there. |. About noon a truck load of small Great_Applaud |lonves of rye bread, sent out as an CHICAGO, Nov. 12—An enthusi- | 2dvertisement for the baker, drew up astic mass of 3,000 workers willed | ®t Franklin and Lafayette Streets ‘Ashland Auditorium on Friday eve- | 2nd began to distribute loaves. Job- ining, Nov. 7, on the occasion of the | 1¢ss workers flocked around it, and celebration of the Thirteenth Anni- | besan to ravenously devour the loaves versary of the Bolshevik Revolution |®5 fast as they got them. Ten cops in Russia. The meeting opened with | Were there, and \he Tammany politi- the triumphant singing of the Inter- j clans smiled at the scene out of the national by the mass of workers, led | Court house and out of the fake by the International Workers Little | ®8ency. ;Symphony Orchestra and the com- | jes. ‘The epiit of this macs singing, | MANY NEEDLE TRADES MEETINGS THIS WEEK’ by the world working class in the ac- |complishment of the workers of the the United Council of Working Class | Blockers, Cutters and Trimmers elec- | Soviet Union through their victorious | | reflecting the triumph and pride felt NEW YORK.—A series of needle} Women will stress thé need of organ- izing the 8,000,000 workingwomen in industry. The celebration will be in the ‘orm of a concert, with the Frei- heit Mandolin Orchestra in new num- bers and recitations by Yosel Kotler. | ted at that meeting has issued a leaf- let exposing the schemes of Zaritsky and his henchmen in the Cloth Hat, Cap and Mill Workers Union, tc force upon the workers the collective greement. The leaflet calls on the orkers to organize in the shops for a joint struggle. Five-Year Plan, permeated the whole | So great has been the advance of | the working women of the Soviet! Union in freeing themselves from the age-old household servitude, and bars to professional and cultural life that bourgeois women are forced to ad- mit the great strides in women’s em- ancipation since the October Revolu- tion. In a series of articles in Mc- Calls, a bourgeois magazine for mid- | dileclass women, Helen Bennett, tells | of the workingclass women place in Twilding of a free workers society. This committee also calls an open forum for Monday, 2 p.m., at Bryant Hall to discuss the collective agree- ment and the means to fight it. All millinery workers are asked to at- tend and help the United F-rnt Com- mittee organize the struggle. Sacramento Workers Greet Land of Toilers Rule at Two Meetings) SACRAMENTO, Cal. — Hundreds of workers tonight stood in the street and cheered Mike Daniels and James O'Brien at a mass meeting called to commemorate the 13th year of the} Celebration Nov. 7 working class dictatorship in the | Soviet Union. Daniels was just re- SAN FRANCISCO, Cal—An en-' jeesed on bail after he had been ar- thusiastic audience of workers, over rested with six others and charged five hundred, shouted approval for) with extortion (1) for leading ten| sending greetings to the Soviet Union | thousand unemployed workers to the st the November 7th Celebration in’ city hall with demands on the gov- California Hall, San Francisco. The ornment after they had successfully Program consisted of a sports eX- secured restitution of dollars stolen! hibition by the Workers Sport Club, | from unemployed workers here by find a tableau by the Young Com- the jocal employment “sharks” Mur- munist League. The speakers were yoy ang Ready. | Frisco Workers in Soviet Anniversary Lou Sherman for the ¥. ©. L. and| Ii William Simons for the Communist) On his release several hundred Party, A large number of unem- | Workers met him at the city jail and | ployed workers attended the cele- escorted him to the headquarters of bration. ‘The resolution adopted for the Communist Party. forwarding, to the workers of the Following tonights street demon-| jet Union is a8 follows: | stration a large part of these present | ‘We, the workers assembled in Cali- at meeting. The main speaker of the evening, Max Bedacht, member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, was repeatedly applauded with tre- mendous enthusiasm. Labor and Fraternal Medical Workers to report Dele- sation to the Fifth R.LL.U. Congress At the meeting to be held Wednes- day, November 12, 8 p. m. at 16 W, 21 St. All medical workers are urged to hear the report from the Red In- ternational of Labor Unions. m in English Workers Club, 1472 Boston Road, Sunday, 8p .m. Subject “American Imper n and its role in Latin American C The Workers Camera League Of the W.LR. meets Thursday. Noy. 18th, at 7:30 p. m.. at our new head- quarters, Sth St., first floor. Fi rrangements will be made fof the Exhibition and Dance to take nlace Saturday, Nov. 15th. at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and isth St. at 6 p.m. Admission 15 cents. Leetnre On “Religion and the Class Struggle.” This Sunday, October 16, at 8 p. m., Workers Center, 105 That- ford Ave., Brooklyn. Council No. 5 U.C.W.C.W. Will give a lecture and banquet on jun@ty evening, Nov. 16, at & p.m. 2901 Mermaid Ave. Coney Island. Adiniesion $5 cents, “Workers? Journalism and Photography” lhe the subject at a lecture at or Defender Photo Gr 7 East th St, Friday evening, Nov. 14th, at 8 o'clock. All comrades and sym- pathizers are invited. Comrades who are unemployed and wish to help in the work of the 1.U.D. should call at the ILD District Office, 799 Broad- way, Room 410, é Neédle Trades Pideioge Solidarity Di marched to the workers center and| Auspices Negro Department N-TAW. | dollars from the men working for trades workers meetings is being held within the next few days, mostly in) preparation for the great struggles | coming in the dress strike, but also | for special organization tasks in some cases. | | The knit goods workers met today |6 p. m. at 131 West 28 St. Millinery workers meet today at at 8p. m. at 131 West 28 St. All needle trade workers are called | to hear Rose Kaplan, delegate to the | Red International of Labir Unions| | Fifth World Congress. The meeting | | will be at Webster Hall, 7 p. m.| | Nov. 19. ‘To form organization particularly among the Negro and the Spanish speaking needle workers in Harlem, and to prepare for the dress strike, a meeting is being held at Unity House, 1800 Seventh Ave., Saturday at 8p.m. All are invited. In Brownsville, Women's Councils Numbers 7, 16, 20 and 21 are giving a teaparty Friday night at 8 p. m. at 1844 Fitkin Ave., to support the strik- ers of the Everready Bag Co. New Britain Straw Boss Grafts on Men: Fires Those Refusing, (By a Worker Correspondent) NEW BRITAIN, Conn.—Tom Bazil, | straw-boss in Landers Frary & Clark | Co., has been grafting money from) the men who work under him for about five years; when the fellows refuse to give him any money they get fired. Bazil is always borrowing money and never returns it. It is estimated | ; that he has received hundreds of! fornia Hall, San Francisco, on No- Vember seventh, the thirteenth an- niversary of the glorious Bolshevik Revolution, greet you, the pioneers ih the building up of a Workers’ and Farmers’ Government. We greet you Who are fighting in the front line trefiches against world capitalism, filled the hall where an indoor cele- | bration was addressed by Jim Lacey | of Frisco. At the close of the meet- | ing a dozen of those present applied for membership in the Communist Party. The local drive for new read- ers for the Daily Worker was initi- ated at this meeting with the secur- LU, ill take place Saturday evening, | § p. m., November 15, at the Unity Cooperative House, 1800 Seventh Ave. him, one fellow is sueing him in court, but of course he won't get whith prepares for military attack On You; to try to crush the workers’ | » government you have set up, We | you, who havé shéwn under the | ve-Yeat Plan that under the Sov- | set form of government, workers, can | ing of subscriptions. The Daily Worker melts a million steel wills into one battering ram to smash the boss system. On to 60,000, Be a Daily Worker worker rae Meer Bazaar Committee Of the Workers International Re- |lief and the Uwited Council of Work« ing Class Womén Will meet tonight, 8 p. m., at 10 East 17 Street, to coms plete arrangements for the joint ba- zaar 6 be held January 2, 3, 4, at the Star Casino. * 1.L.D. Mass Mémbership Mi: Thursday, November 13, hattan, Lyceum, 66. EB: Engdahl will speak for J. Brodsky will speak on * self defense in court.” Nemeroff will report for the District Comin. Dts» jecting. at Mans Plan and build industry, can im- daily. ‘Béove their conditions. cussion by the membership will fole low. Meeting will start at 8 pm. __ A M . Refres! ts, Admission 85¢, i All Workers: Neato, Spanish, white |@nywhere in court. Even when \are invited. everybody in the shop knows about Tom Bazil's grafting. The big boss is in on the graft. | This week Bazil fired three fellows because they refused to come across with the dough. ‘These fellows were sent for to see Manager Smith's secretary to see if they had any proof of Bazil grafting. Just as if Mr. Smith don’t know about this grafting that has beeh going on for five years, He must be German Workers Send Photos The Vereinigung der Arbeiter Photograpen, Deutschlands, hails the American league and sends a set of photos—at least 50—about 12 x 16 inches in a beautiful folder dedicated to “The Workers Camera League of the Workers International Relief, | New York”. . . “We wish for your| exhibition a huge success . . .’ The exhibition of these pictures and many others will take place in! New York Saturday at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th Street. It will begin at 6 p. m. A program of dancing by the Red Dancers of the W. I. R.; also moving ictures and social dancing to the | trains of the W. I. R. brass band, | will add to the fun of the evening. | Admission is 35 cents, CHICAGO F.S.U. TO GREET 13TH ANNIV. Celebration on Friday, November 21 CHICAGO, November 11. — On Friday evening, November 21, at Or- chestra Hall, Michigan Boulevard | and Adams, the Friends of thé Sov- iet Union will celebrate the Thir- teenth Anniversary of the Russian Revolution. Beside a program of | organ and instrumental music, two | features Of the program will be the | delivery of an address by Albert Goldman, chairman of the Chicago F, S. U. and attorney for the Inter- national Labor Defense in the states of Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana, and the showing of the Sovkino pic- turization of the days of revolution, “Ten Days That Shook the World”. Admission to the celebration has been set at a low price, so that the workers of Chicago may attend with- out great expense. The main floor and box seats will cost only 50c; bal- | 25c. Tickets may be purchased from any member of the F. S. U., or at) the office of this paper. | MORE READING MILLS | ON VERGE OF STRIKE. READING, Pa, Nov. 11.<The| movement in the hosiery mills for general strike against the 30 per cent wage cuts grows daily in spite of every effort of the United Textile Workers chiefs to side track it. ‘The program of the National Tex- | tile Workers’ Union, for “Organiza- tion and Strike Against All Wage Cuts” fs sure to strike a real response from these desperate workers here. The Nolde and Horst mill workers are the latest to demand strike action. All are ready to go out The U.T.W. company union calls on the bosses to rescind wage cuts which amount to 50 per cent since January 1, 1930, as the only means to quiet the workers, itt at the sam. ume it is trying to get the workers to accept getting his out of it. / ~ | a ten per cent reduction, a | 4 cony and gallery seats will sell at | THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR [Tj HiPPODROME ON DRAFT ARMIES Arms Conference Talks About It Two Days Capitalist press dispatches from Geneva show the League of Nations “preliminary arms conference” tak- ing two days, Saturday and Monday, to discuss, academically, whether to recommend to a still more visionary arms conference to meet, maybe, some time in the future, to limit the terms of conscript soldiers. Finally it voted that each govern- ment is to fix the terms — which is exactly what each government was doing anyway. This is, by some trick of the conference, foisted on the world as a decision “combining the best principles of both plans, for general reduction and for national autonomy in army service,” The Soy- jet Union, U. 8. and Germany re- fused to vote. After this, by a vote of seven to| six, with 14 countries abstaining, the | Conference decided to recommend | that there be some general limit to the armed forces of each nation. All| the big imperialist countries ab- stained. The’ Soviet Union abstained | on the ground that the motion did not mean anything, and that thé U. 5. 8. R. stands for reduction, if the imperialists won't accept elim- inations, of armies and navies. | Spread the strike! Keep the scabs |out of the mills! and a general call |to the workers to rally against their (employers. The expose of the be- trayal of the workers by A. F. of L. officials is the basis for the libel suit. |The transcript of the charges reads that the leaflet referred to Gorman jan A. F. of L. official as a liar and exposed the owners of the mills in stealing wages from the workers, | The International Labor Defense |Points out that this is a direct at-! jtempt on part of the courts to pro- | tect company union officials and the | mill owners by putting away in -jail representatives of workers organiza- tions. A militant fight will be put up by | the I.L.D. in its defense of Murdoch | and various officials of the National | Textile Workers’ Union are leaving | |for Danville to act as witnesses for | the defense. Party Activities, Shop Paper Conference Sunday, Nov. 16, 2 p. m., fourth floor, Workers Center. All Party functionaries responsible for shop paper work expected to be present. BS we ial Seciton 4, Attention Specia! meeting Unit Daily Worker agents Thursday, 8.30 p. m. at 308 | Lenox Ave, Attendance urgent. 4 ie! 8 Sam Nessin to Spenk At Hast New York Workers Club, Wednesday, Nov. 12, 8 p.m. at 524 Vervont Ave. Subject—I.L.D. AMUSEMENTS 46th St. [Daily trom | GLOBE Seay fps Se, | THE CAT CREEPS with Helen Twelvetrees, | Raymond Hackett and il Hamilton CAMEO 24%, [NOW ALL TALK AND SOUND | THE GIRL OF THE, GOLDEN WEST | with Ann Harding, James | Rennlo & Harry Bannister OMEDY BY ZOE AKINS JARRIS Thea., 424 St. W. of B’ Wed. A SAM FL Evening 8:50. Mats, & EDGAR WALLACE’S PLAY ON THE SPOT with CRANE WILBUR and N MAY WONG ROGAR WALLACE'S FORREST TAEA. 49 W, of By, Eve, 8:60. Mts. W. & 8 2:80 THE QUEEN OF COMEDIES LYSISTRATA THE NIT YOU HAR Ean 44TH STREE Teton Eves. 8:40. — Mats. Wed. & Sat. 2:40 $00 Balcony Seats, $1, All Performan “UP POPS THE DEVIL” i Mats, Wednesday ai Saturday 2:30 IVIC REPERTORY 13 0 0 ) the, $4, 01,60, Mts, Th. & Bat, EVA Um OALLIENNE: Diceetor Theatre Guild Productions ELIZABETH, THE QUEEN GUILD Mite "thea, 240 ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK 72a. 45th St. West of Broadway road Evs, 8:50, Mts. Th, & Sat. 2:50 48rd St. and 6th Avenue BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK SHER: 8 RKO ane MAN acts | ‘TH PAY OFF ‘ith Marion Nixon NEIGHBORHOOD THEATRES RRO—ALWAYS A GOOD sitOW: RKO ACTS Bad arrive Van | Wm, Seaburt&Co, py Frank Coegmae Colet jer Mel me Tevin Today Mat. Tonight .. By RYAN WALKER. - Goo, St 2 Wg Gay Will Take Father’s Place If Latter Is De- ported for Militancy INGLEWOOD, Cal. — I guess you | have all heard about the deportation | cases out here in South Carolina, There are about four comrades and my father is one of the defendants facing deportation here in Los An< geles. The defendants here are still awaiting the trial which was to be held on September 26th but some other capitalists case came and but ted in and so the case was filed and postponed to an unknown date. All these four comrades are out on a writ of Habeas Corpus and are awaiting their trial but I hope that the IL.D. wins the cases, which makes it all the better for these com= rades and my father. Will Take Father's Place. One comrade is a German, the sec< ond Italian, the third Mexican and my father Spanish. In case they are deported which I hope not, there will be thousands of workers to take their places. But comrades, I will be the first one ‘to take my father’s place in the ranks of the Communist Party. I may still belong to the Young Communist League but some day I hope to take my father’s place in the movement of the Communist Party. Therefore I say to all work< ers and young workers join the work« ing class movement, for the Com~< munist program of class struggle is the only solutioin to the problems of the masses of workers thruout the world. L. Vv. MIDDLE CLASS GOING NEW YORK.—“We are fast becom+ ing a nation of capitalists and la- borers,” said A. J. Avedon, explain+ ing that his store had closed be- cause the middle class to whom it catered is being pressed to the wall. Help Build the SOVIET UNION! COME TO THE ANNUAL “ICOR” BAZAAR for the benefit of JEWISH COLONIZATION AT BIRO BIDJAN, U. 8. S. R. Wednesday, Nov. 26 (Thanksgiving Eve Opening Night) Thursday, Noy. 27 Friday, Nov. 28 Saturday, Nov. 29 — 165th Infantry Armory 68 Lexington Avenue, New York (Bet. 25th and 26th Streets) Articles from every corner of the world. From ‘a needle to a tractor will be sold at YOUR OWN PRICE! 2 orchestras, Dancing, Theatricals, 2 Restau- rants and Fine Buffet EVERY NIGHT Thanksgiving Eve Ball Wednesday Night \. 4: Biro Bidjan Ball Saturday Night Send Your Greetings to the Bazaar Journal monnss) Combination $1.26 for all four days: faturday 75 cents; Wednesday, Thursday end Frida; 50 cents, NO HAT-CHECKS. “ICOR,” 799 Brondway, New York Stuyvesunt 0867 ond . , For a do i, ea abt risen UNIVERSAL CAFETERIA Cor. 11th St. and University Place (Special Room for Conferences)

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