The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 2, 1930, Page 2

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Page ‘Iwo Mobi TWO MEETINGS PREPARE FURTHER BATTLE UPON VICIOUS INJUNCTIONS Workers Greet Two Fi at Banquet Tonight; Mass Mobilization at Central Opera House Tomorrow NEW YORK —Two preliminary mass gatherings to the next mass violation of the injunction will be held here. One is the great mass meeting to mobilize to Smash the Injunction, called by the Trade Union Unity Council and the Inter- national Labor Defense. All mifi- tant workers of New York and all jobless are urged to gather at Cen- tral Opera House, 67th St. and Third Ave., tomorrow night as a mobiliza- tion for mass picketing in defiance of the strike-breaking injunctions. The other preliminary gathering of these who are determined to win back the right to strike and to picket is the banquet to greet Harry Cor- nelius and Steve Stevenson, just re- leased from serving a year and a half in prison for violating an in- junction in the cafeteria strike. The banquet will be held at Manhattan Lyceum at 7:30 p. m. tonight. The two workers are enthusiastic about the present fight, and show in their unterrified speeches and their dete: mination that the bosses’ jail did not frighten them away from the c struggle. They urge all fellow-worl ers to carry on the battle. All work- ers, of every trade and industry, should be at Manhattan Lyceum to- night to greet these heroic fighters. Tickets are 50 cents and all funds go to the fight against injunctions. Foster Urges All to Come. lize at Central DAILY WORKER, EW YORK, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1930 e Tomorrow Night ; Fight A gainst In nst junctions! THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER —No Charity—Unemployment | By RYAN WALKER. nsurance — We DINNER © Good For DARIC WATE, Col ny 5 a! | ghters Just Out of Jail} {the Trade Union Unity Council, and | William Z. Foster, general secretary | of the Trade Union Unity League. The enlarged national committee of the T. U. U. L., in its final session | Saturday, adopted a resolution for continued fight against the injunc- tion, after which Foster made the following statement “The struggle against the injunc- tion weapon used by the bosses, by the reactionary officials of the A. F. of L. and of the socialist party, is} one of the major struggles before the American working class, involv-! | ing, as it does, the fundamental right | of workers to organize into militant fighting industrial unions and to | wrest from the employers by the | weapons of strike and picket liné better conditions. “The struggle to smash the in-| sunction at_Zelgreen Cafeteria. ic a| AFL LAUNDRY RACKET strike of the workers to smash the | 12-hour day put into effect by the A. F. of L. and the employers through | — ‘ & the use of injunctions, gangsters, po- | NEW YORK—Drivers' Local 810 lice and courts. The only method of | of the A. F. of L. has gone in the} smashing injunctions is to mobilize | laundry business. The officials of) large masses of workers on the picket | the local have signed an agreement | line to defy the orders of the court| With the Nonpareil Laundry, 546 E.| and to violate the injunction en| 170th St., and promised the boss that masse. they will get him more business. The “Whether the struggle confronts | Officials received the membership | the food, shoe, needle or miners’ | lists of other A. F. of L. unions, such | union, it becomes the struggle of the |#8 the Bakers, Barbers, etc. and | whole working class. | turned these over to the, boss. All | MEANS LOWEST WAGES GIVE THE UnemPLoveD A THANKSGIVING - ABowt OF Jour Witt One BEAY NS MAKE You WINDY AND THAT AID OV Tee: NEVES Dues Sop Lesy A CuP of ay AND Then ANICE Tyrcy TISSUE Pare SANDWICH Saul debe os ) BEFORE You EAT Bow YouR- HEAD IN PRAYER. AND ASK & SONG files WHOM ALL | YOU SAY You ARE feom Kansas CITY? WE Gaw'T FeeD HunqRy WORKERS From OTHER Cries (RYOU Dom't Like Tes Crry Co ACIC“TO WHERE YoUjmm. ’” Age FROM. Cops’ On Our PRestDeNT ATOR. THEN SIG A oF Fase To GON WORKERS STRIKE Elect Their Committee; | Mass Picket Today (Continued from Page One) of the committee in to present de-| mands for a return of the*wage cut) to Richards, the big boss. Richards | refused to see the committee, and} | dictatorship to be set up in Russia} Soviet. towns and villages. “YouR. Lousy HAND- MEAT, BREAD 7 WiITA Me ~ Now L WANT REAL food our HAS DISAGREED AND FeTATOES [ | (Special Cable to the Daily Worker) | pied or seized like bandits. MOSCOW, Dec. 1.—During the ex- “In ‘the best style’ of those who amination of the chief prisoners|inspired them, the counter-rgvolu- Ramsin, Larichev and Kalinikov, a/ tionary wreckers had drawn up an nightmare picture of the military| extensive program to ‘calm down’ In the after the victory of the intervention- | testimony at court they were com- ist troops Was shown. |pelled to admit that they had pre- The role of the French imperialists | ared the fiercest bloody repression | Answer to Boss War Plotters n| Was made especially clera in these | for the proletariat and punitive ex- [EAGLE PENCIL |Soviet Press Gives Workers’ |WORCORRS MEET | STARTS CONTEST, | | City Groups Worcorrs Primary Aim | NEW YORK—New York and | vicinity worker correspondents gath- | ered Sunday, Nov. 30, at 2 p.-m. at | their second monthly meeting. | Following the report of the secre- Arteff Theatre Troupe to Attend Needle Trade Ball NEW YORK.—New York workers will have an opportunity to acquaint themselves with the whole Artef Theatre group at the ball of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union. on Friday evening, Decem- ber 5th. The ball will be held in Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East 4th St. and will be one of the biggest held this season. The Artef troupe will come right | “The mass meeting called by the | Were sent mail urging them to Biv | the police drove the strikers, still Smash the Injunction’ Committee of | their laundry to the only “union ony sightiy organized for their task, | the Trede Union Unity Council on | Shep” in the Bronx. |from the vicinity. Among the speakers at Central Op- era House mass meeting tomorrow night will be Fred Biedenkapp, chair- tary of the Worker Correspondents | after their playing in the theatre in | League (Worcorrs) a full discussion | their new hat “Brillianten.” They | was held, in which all present par- | will not change their costumes. Many plans. On this Pravda writes: | peditions for millions of poor and “The bloody revenge of the Czarist | middle peasants.” man of the Smash the Injunctions Committee of the T. U. U. C.; J. Louis Wednesday, Dec. 3, in Central Gpera | Canvassers visit these workers tell- | House must rally thousands ef work- {ing them that this is a union shop. Engdahl, of the International Labor Defense, which defends the arrested pickets; Jack Johnstone, organizer of ers and be a powerful expression of the solidarity of the workers in the fight to smash the injunctions. MUSTE FAKERS OFFER PROGRAM OF EXTREME INACTION FOR THE JOBLESS: racy (Musteite Control) publishes @/ But they are to keep right on owing | magazine called “The Unemployed.” | industry.and collecting profits, though | It has in its first issue a serious of | wise masters like Hittler and Mus-| articles from various shining lights | solini or perhaps Blanchard, will tell | of the exalted professions: three | them how, so they don’t wreak things | preachers, a profesor or two, an editor | through too much . individualism. | for the Peabody Coal Co., and Hey-/ ‘That's fascism, not social fascism, but | wood Broun. | plain fascism. | Broun’s articles leads. It tells of | A Sermon’ 200 the “floater”, who wouldn't work that} Rey, Harry Emerson Fosdick prints | Point of te Wwheis"arteio is that if| Part, of, © Setmon appealing to bie] Gréadiies WO'or!, the-worker will begin | business men in his Riverside church, | to like them and no worker will work. | ; | “T think it would be a swell stunt to| , Sa'Ty W: Laldler says there must) come along and save them before they Nhe fisectes of ee orate calee ara take the dive (into the breadline).| are about 9,000,000 sires Smart for you and me, I mean. After) eens all, breadlines make breadliners”. That| Oscar Ameringer, editor is what Broun is worrying about. | American (formerly Illinois) of the| Miner, Norman Thomas is next with pure | 0'2n of the “Reorganized United | social fascism. He analyzes very cor-| Mine Workers,” the pet union of the/| rectly the couses of unemployment. | Peabody Coal Co., has an article. He ‘That's the radical phraseology. He W#*€S jovial over the fact that a crip- says ridthing “about direct struggle of | pled apple seller sells better than a the jobless for insurance nor of the | “hole apple seller. Oscar can aford asking them to please do something.| | s omens Education( to be | delivered by Comrade T. Littinsky. Bring shopmates along! The Regular Meeting, Yorkers Laboratory Theatre Theatre of the W.I.R. will be every workers against the things that in- | Some humor, he used to get $72,000) He just tells | # Year for printing the Illinois Miner, | crease unemployment, them the only way out is to vote for his gang. And that’s the fascist part: | °W"S @ Jarge part of a printing plant! Real Fascism But if the Rev. Thomas is a social fascist, he is followed immediately by | “Push Public Works” and is nothing | It |but an argument for the Hoover build- | @ proposal for straight fascism. is signed by Paul Blanschard. It is for no overthrow of capitalism, but just for a state planning board which would guarantee profits and a minim- | um subsistence for the workers by re- gulation of industry, This regulation is called “complete reconstruction of our social system” and its form and methods can be seen in a couple of quotations from the article: “Under such a board no man would be allowed to build a shoe factory when there were too many shoe fac- tories already. No man would be per- mhitted to gamble with the jobs of thousands of workers unless he de- monstrated his ability to keep his fac- “It may be objected that in such & world there would be less freedom for those who own and manipulate no one knows what he gets now, he and lots of real estate. An editorial in the back is entitled jing program, which is already a flop. The preacher who writes the very named Lathrop, makes to the ‘jobless | the one single suggestion of struggle in the whole thirty. ne pages, He | says, the jobless might organize to | force the government to grant un- employment insurance. The last pa- | ragraph of his article however, seems | to indicate that all he means is that they should join the socialist party or | Some “Labor Party” to be sprung on | them by Normie and Blanchard. Against this misleadership the job- less are begining to mobilize in the Councils of the Unemployed, to de- monstrate for immidiate relief, tc | militantly resist evictions, and to unite | with workers on the jobs to secure | shorter hours, more pay and fight speed-up, SPEED UP PAMPHLET REVEALS CAUSES NEW YORK—Ten million unem- ployed workers standing in bread- lines and sleeping in the open or in vermin-infested “charity” beds are asking just what effect the return of “prosperity” — confidently promised by the capjtalist press at any time within the next few years—will have on them. The question is clearly and graphically answered in the pamphlet “Speeding Up the Work- ers,” by James Barnett, just issued _ by International Pamphlets. Here it is made plain that, so far as the worker is concerned, “good” time are hard times, and “bad” times are ; ae times. Since the end OF latest imperialist war the workers employed in in- UNEMPLOYMENT pote 12 Smear) dividual as well as the collective share of the working class in indus- try becoming less and less. ‘The reason, Comrade Barnett makes it clear, is in the speed-up— the technique of driving workers to the limit of their endurance and forcing one man to do the work of many with no increase in pay or shortening of hours. Capitalist apologists attempt to disguise the Speed-up under the names of “effi- ciency” or “rationalization.” But “Speeding Up the Workers” reveals that there has been little technolo- gical’ advance during the past dec- ade. Increased production is being taken out of the nerves and muscles of workers who are then thrown on the scrap heap or left to stand at the factory gates as a threat to their al- most exhausted fellow workers in- side. ies Every worker, unemployed or still employed, should read “Speeding Up last article in the magazine, a fellow | As a matter of fact not even all the | drivers belong to the union, but the drivers are only one-fifth of the | | workers in the laundry. There are | | about 50 workers there, mostly Negro | women workers who get from $12 to |$14 a week. This the A. F. L. calls) a union™shop. This is the method of organizing the A. F. L. uses. ‘Trley promise the boss more busi- | ness for an agreement which leaves | out four-fifths of the workers and) which promises the boss “not to help or to influence the organization of | the inside workers.” All workers should be warned against the laundry racket of the A. F. L. and the bosses. The only or- gapization which organizes all the) warkers into one union regardless of) |craft or race is the Laundry Work-| | ers’ League, 16 W. 2ist St., affiliated | to the Trade Union Unity League. Labor and Fraternal A Lecture Will Be Given By Womens Council at 61 Jackson | Frida 5, 7p. m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday nings at 8 p.m. at 131 W. 28th St. | Printing Workers Industrial League | Meeting of concentration group ill take place Thursday, Dec. 4, at 30. p. m.. 16 W. 21st St. All bindery workers in the PWIL must come down Thursday. Dec. 4, 7.30 p. m. at 16 W. bindery worker conta Bring { Important Fraction Meeting Of the Food Workers Industrial Union Thursday, Dec. at Party headquarters, Iihnortant ‘matters. Attention, Jersey City ekly study elass in the funda- menals of Communism has been ai ranged every Friday night at py. m. at the Workers Center, Henderson St. Fees are $2 for one course (12 lessons). Unemployed workers free. Awe . Soliderity Dance Of Coney Island Branch of the League of Struggle of Negro Rights at 2901 Mermaid Ave., Coney Island, | Thursday, Dec. 4, 1930 at & pn. m. Janz All workers . band, admission free! invited. aes Ne | Grand Ball Under the auspices of the Friends of the “Il Lavatore’ for the benefit of the Italian organ of the C.P., Sat- vrday, Dec. 13, 8 p.m. at the Ttalian Workers’ Center, 2011 Third Ave. (bet. 110th and 11ith St.) Good music, fine program, contribution, 35 cents, ee | Ani-Fancisé Ball Entertainment and dance given by the Bronx Branch Anti-Fascist Alli- ance of North America, Satugday. Dac. 6.8 p. m, at 669 Prospect Ave. Good music. Admission 35 cents. Ca eee WOMEN’S DELEGATION OF THE R.LL.U. TO SPEAK AT MASS MEET Saturday, Dec. 4, at Irving Plaza. Speakers will include Wm. Z. Foster, Sophie Melvin, textile worker; Anna Kornblath, textile worker, and C. Mc- Lane, Negro needle trades worker. aoe Needle Trades Ball, December 5 Friday, at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 East Fourth St. Good program, Tick- ets 50 cents. Can be secured at the Union Headquarters, 131 W ei thé Morning Freiheit. y. 28th St. 60 1, Sth 6. 8. ue Protext eMeting for th: Eileen Holmes and Ma Will be held Dec. 5 at Cooperative Hall, 5 E. youth organizations and clubs arg urged to send delegates to draft a resolution of protest. Unem) Counciln Of Hungarian, Checkoslovak, Ger- man workers will meet Thursday, Dec. +e hs at 347 E, 72nd St. room 7. At this meeting we will form the Yorkville Unemployed Coun- ell. ee Building Maintenapce Workers Union General_membership meeting will be held Wednesday, Dec. 8 at the Labor Tmple, 243 E. 84th St. made to put it before the worging class. It should be sold at meetings and factory gates. ‘Speeding Up the Workers” sells for 10 cent, with dis- counts on bundles. Orders should be tushed to International Pamphlets, 799 Broadway, New York, who will also be glad to give information con- cerning other important pamphlets published by them, ./) ay Further Organization. The strikers then held Sadar mass meeting, larger than the first, in Labor Temple and continued their | organization, heard advice from the} organizer of the Trade Union Unity) Council, Jack Johnstone, and ar-/ ranged for mass picketing today) when the shop opens. The decision | is for all strikers to meet at 7:30 a block from the plant, and to picket it all around. After mass picketing | in the morning, thé strikers will meet again in Labor Temple, and make up | the shifts of 40 or so which will | maintain the picket lines between mass picketings. The strime commit- | tee will again call upon the man- agement today. Reject Wage Cut. ‘The ten per cent cut has been threatened for some time. Deter- mined refusal to accept it when it was announced some weeks ago in several departments resulted in its | postponement. The management tried to spread a féeling of despair and terror among the workers, and thought it could go ahead with the cut yesterday. The workers were unorganized, ex- cept for a factory committee, which issued a leaflet calling for strike yes- terday unless the wage cut were rescinded. The plan, carried out very. successfully, was for all to report to work, but not to work. If the wage | cut were not stopped by the company at ten a. m. all were to come out and march in a body to the meeting | place. ‘The company fired one worker as soon as the call to refuse to work began to be circulated around the) various départments, Later, at the! strike mass meeting, the strikers showed what they thought of this by electing that worker chairman of the meeting, and placing him on the strike committee. About ten, groups of workers marched out. A little later the doors of the plant were closed to try and split the workers and keep some of them in. It did not work. The doors finally had to be opened, when the crowd of workers standing idle inside were seen and urged by those out- side to come on. They did. Later, as the march to the Labor Temple began, still another group marched out. ‘The factory police tried to propa- gandize the workers against the strike, saying, “It will get you noth- ing.” One woman worker showed the cop her work hardened hands, and shouted, “I've been working here for years and starving, now I'll try striking.” Discuss Demands. The first meeting was addressed by the representatives of the fac- tory committee, and by Andrew Over- gaard, national secretary of the Metal Workers’ Ipdustrial League of the Trade Union Unity League, who suggested the large strike committee and offered all possible help, but em- phasized that this is the Eagle workers’ strike and their own soli- darity and organization would win it. Members of the elected strike com- mittee also spoke, and all the stribors started for the factory to see the committee present the demands. At the second meeting, held at 1:30/ p. m., the strikers discussed the sit- uation, many speaking from the floor on tactics to follow and de- mands to make. It was decided unanimously not to go back if the boss offers merely to make it a lesser wage cut than ten per cent. The greatest enthusiasm and | cheers greeted those who declared, “We won't stand for any wage cut at all!” It was decided that if the manage- ment tries a lay-off after the strike is won, the committee shall demand instead a reduction from the present nine hour day to the eight hour day and five day week, without reduc- tion in the week's wages. A collection was taken up to de- » white guards against the revolution-| While French, British and other | ary workers and peasants sales in| imperialist papers, to conceal their | ticipated. Druker, secretary, pointed out that comparison with the exploits of the | complicity exposed in the trial, are | French General Staff, the Legion-| filled with fantastic legends of mut- airs and the vassals in the colonies |inies in cities and villages of the and in the countries they have occu-| (Continued on Page Three) New Alloy Discovered nU.S.S.R. , MOSCOW, U. S. S. R.—A new su- ,of such parts and a consequent sav- per hard alloy has been developed by | ing of millions of roubles. @ group of engineers at Baku, Soviet | oil center. It is many times cheaper | new formula, have named the alloy and harder than foreign alloys. “Stalinite” to symbolize Stalin's firm- Those parts of’machinery, like gears, ness and strength. The enthusiasm exposed to great friction, and other of workers throughout the Soviet making possible a greater duration |on old inventions turned in. OPER CENT CUT |TW0 JOBLESS WORKERS AT PAL, RIVER | TAKE THEIR.OWN LIVES ‘wo more jobless workers, utterly without hope of getting jobs through Attack on Union | struggle against the bosses is ex- |actly what the latter want workers EebE PIVER, Mash; Deo. 1-—TNe)) +) 45, ava committed aulclde: management of the Chase Mills, em- | ploying ‘about 300 workers here an- | ; i a aes nounced on Nov. 25 a wage cut for Hell a ergs peeey WER OTE OF, vont hil iadactoed nh: Hoel was found. hanging trom a peas in Pe pvr oll first propose a] an abandoned garage in Warren, six weeks ago but ownig to the mili- | ee oro eaint tae puh 7 seit tancy of the workers the bosses ‘ook | ae: By SON RNC A CENE the advice of the United Textile | Workers officials and deferred action. Since that date victimization has been the order of the day and the bosses now consider the way clear for wage cutting. At the same time police of Fall River are carrying on a drive aaginst the National Textile Workers Uion, by every means they know of. They have constantly demonstrated their | force at the mass meetings and have DEMAND RELEASE HUSA AND HOLMES, NEW YORK.—All workers, young | and old, are urged to come to the mass meeting to be held this Friday, 8 p. m., at the Finnish Hall at 15 W. 126th St., to demand the release of Mabel Husa and Eileen Holmes, held in Monroe County jail on a trumped up charge, | | | Coupled With Policé | take government agencies, and not | realizing that running away from the | One, Oscar Knight, 3323 Harrison | the League is building and maintain- ing connections with hundreds of | worker correspondents and laying the | basis for the building of city Wor- corrs groups in all parts of the coun- | try. A monthly bulletin is issued by | the Worcorrs League and 300 of the jlast three issues have been mailed | spondence was approved. | Additions were made to the execu- | tive committee by the election of new members. All worker corresponderits humerous types of instruments will Union has been noted through the| wishing information or the Worcorrs | be covered with a layer of this alloy! many inventions and improvements | Bulletin should write to Worcorts, 50 | |B. 13th St. New York. | «) Lint ” DISARMING FOR WAR NEW YORK.—Five hundred work- ers filled Irving Plaza on. Sunday, Nov. 30, to hear Max Bedacht speak on the “Crisis of Capitalism.” The workers started to come as early as 6:30, so that by 8 o'clock the hall was quite crowded. The | workers kept coming until 9:30. They listened attentively to the lec- ture. That was quite evident by the number of varied questions asked. On Sunday, Dec. 7, C .A. Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker, will speak on “Disarming for War. workers to come and hear why the capitalist countries are talking “peace” and arming for war. KNIT GOODS JOBLE: NEW YORK.—All’ jobless knit geods workers are invited to the regular Tuesday morning meeting of the. Unemployed Council in. their trade. The meeting today is at 10 a, m., at 131 West 28th St. S MEET convicted one of the N.T.W. members on a frame-up charge of “receiving stolen goods.” They have also evicted | the U.T.W. from tis headquarters. Nevertheless the National Textile Workers Union will organize the | AMUSEME NTS workers of Chase and other mills. | The wage cut rouses opposition. fray expenses of the hall, the strike | committee was charged to take up| the task of obtaining finances, get- | ting relief, and telling the world that | Eagle Pencil is on strike against a! ten per cent wage cut and nobody | should try to take their jobs. reat cheers greeted the announce- | ment that the Councils of the Un- | employed had recognized the strike and pledged not only to keep all job- Jess workers from scabbing, but would | probably offer to help in picketing if required. "RAZ | wt | FOR SALE—Three rooms furniture, recently purchased—sacrifice. Call | ALG. 7956 for appointment. POPULAR PRICES—CO For a Good Meal and Proletarian Prieas Kat at tha UNIVERSAL CAFETERIA Cor. 11th St. and University Place (Special Room for Conterences) ELIZABETH, THE QUEEN GUILD W:,,°%;, Es 8:8" Mate, Th.&Sat. 2:40 ROAR CHINA MARTIN BECK 2H#4 40th St, West of Broadway Mts, Th, & Bat, 2:50 EAT THE BEST AT THE HONEY DEW CAFETERIA Incorporated Fourth Ave, Cor, 12th Street HOME-MADE MEALS You can select the best foods, as we have a great variety. We are sure you will like our cooking HONEY DEW CAFETERIA Ath Ave. Cor, 12th my New York City eve. MUSIC AND CONCERTS nna CARNEGIE HALL, Frii, Ev., Dee, 6, 8 230 ki 4 Levitz NBO Artiste Service NOW PLAYING! im Dynamic! Revolutionary! Gribbing! (THE BREAK-UP) “Here ix a picture in the tradition of ‘Po: dard of photography in Soviet filim ularly are tremendously eftective."— A TENSE TALE OF THE OCTOBER REVOLUTION PRODUCED BY MEJRABPOFILM IN U.S.8.R. TH ST. PLAYHOUSE 5? WEST STH ST, between Fifth and Sixth Aves.—Spring 5095 AMERICAN PREMIERE! LOM" temkin’ +. Nigt +. Usual high scenes partte- + Daily Worker. Sn NTINUOUS NOON TO MIDNIGHT IVIC REPERTORY 1 st. in Av ni 8:3 GOc, $1, $1.50. Mats. 1 ‘“ Ste 2:30 EVA LE GALLIENNE, Director Tonight . Tom. Night . Seatstwk: ee New Musical Romance, with GUY ROBERTSON, ETHELIND RY ARMIDA, LEONARD CEELEY, “Others MAJFSTIO THEA.,, 441 of Brondway Eves. 8:30, Mats, Wed. Chi, 2600 “ . SIRGPRIED -ALISON’S HOUSE. ‘T'nHalt,113W.43 0x0} THE GREEKS HAD A WORD FOR IT A COMEDY B SAM i. HARRIS Thea, 42d Bt. ot By Evening 8150, Mate, Wed, & Bat, 2:30 ee HATHAWAY TO SPEAK ON’ This subject should interest all the | | other organizations have promised to bring their members to this ball and help make it a success. No sympathetic Workers’ organi< zation will have an affair on Friday | Decembor 5th. Many. other organiza= |tions have postponed their own af- | fairs for a later date. This ball will be a demenstration |of solidarity with the needle trade The engineers who discovered this | out. A contest for the best city corre- | Workers in {proof of readiness of | these organizations to help in p= coming dress strike. Friends of the revolutionary unions will meet this time at the Needle Trades ball, next time on the picket. line. Let no worker miss this affair. Ask your friends whether they have al< ready their tickets for the Needle Trade Ball, if not tickets can be bought at the office of the union, 131 West 26th Street, or in the office of the Morning Freiheit, 50 East 13th Strect. The price of admission is Only 50 cents. “For All Kinds of Insurance” ((ARL BRODSKY Telephone: Murray Fill S551 7 Hast 42nd Street, New York | | | “SER O Y | 657 Allerton Avenue |} Estabrook 3215 Bronx, NY | . DEWEY 9916 — Office Hours: 9 A. M- M.-9 P.M. Sunday: 10 A, M1 PM. DR. J. LEVIN | 1 SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U Ave, U Sta., B.M.T. At Bast 15th St. BROOKLYN, N, ¥. DR. J. MINDEL SURCHLON DENTIST 1 UNION SQUARE Room 803—Phone: Algonquin 818% Not connected with any other office jensant ¢o tne at Oar Place. 87 SOUTHERN BLVD, Bronx (near 174(h St. Station) NB ERVALD 914%. RATIONAL” Vegetarian RESTAURANT 199 SECOND AVEi.UE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian PESTAURANT 1600 MADISON AVE. Phone: UNI versity 6868 “hone: Btuyve John’s Restaurant TY: ITALIAN DISHES @ with atmosphe: all radicale | 302 %,12th St. New York SS Advertise your Union Meetings here. For information torite to The DAI).Y WORKER Advertteing Dept. 50 Bast 18th St. New York City,

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