Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, | 1930 60,000 Campaign Gathering Momentum in Connecticut; Scattered Increases Come In Connecticut is showing signs of in- creased activity in the campaign for 60,000 circulation for the Daily Work. er according to the report from W. Kling, Daily Worker representa- tive from which we quote: “I received the 100 collection this morning. I gave them to com- coming to that? But it is a funny kind of competition when our op- ponents help us to beat them.” MUST BE WIDOW TO GET $3 JOB SOCTALISTS AID BRUENING PLANS 25 SPECULATORS IN FOOD JAILED GALVESTON RIPE FOR |CIRCULATION INCREASE BRIEFS FROM ALL LANDS ‘Bosses Slave, Drive Workers Al Me Bride write: Send thirty ‘ Rally to Fight for Job- Workers Lose in Big'rades trom New Haven, Stamford, | five copies to Galveston pronto. FOR DICTATORSHIP (Wireless By Imprecorr.) IN SOVIET UNION less Relief i re 2 eee ae da Bank Crash Bridgeport and South Norwalk who | Sentiment good. Look for a big in- LONDON, Bae ; 17,—Unemployed 5 td . 2 S is ve a proportionate Slant xalveston. am challenging a as - - - ers cAvy 1e A, - (By a Worker Correspondent) | Valley Glass Co. workers are sure| (By a Worker Correspondent) —_| share of these eee |Kansas City, Mobile and iste ‘0 Not Oppose Rushing tar ths «ceyndt uridine giiete MDAl to Swind e Co Brooklyn, N. Y. hard hit this fail as this company| Bronx, N. Y. + can geporte that the ditveuts) Orleans”) |? Through Boss Policy | peputation todged demands for| operatives During the past few months the | 28s the latest speed-up sysiem. No} I was just returning from a day’s| gaining momentum in this district | Xmas relief. | 2 bosses’ newspapers have carried story | Natler whether the worker 1s a man search for a Job and was passing the) ail the units are active in one or | DEMAND BUNDLE OF BERLIN.—Further discussions took) The deputation was recognized and| MOSCOW.—The G. P. U. has dis- after story about how the Post Office | or a young girl, he or she must keep up with the pace, or else go home Prospect Ave. branch of the Bank of United States when I noticed-a wo- more ways. Factory sales have been \75 FOR WASHINGT! place between Prime Minister Bruen- was invited to meet for the Public covered an organization of 24 per- was going to relieve unemployment | ve le tates \ begun Red Sundays have been or- ing and the leaders of the various | acsistance Committee tomorrow. The |S0"S Who have been buying up prod- ° by hiring extra Christmas help. In| ecause ine slave driving bosses care} man looking into the window of the} ganized rout are being estab- | We are in receipt of the following parties. It very probable that the qemonstration marched to Hyde| cts of which there was already a » order to make the offer appear mone: ee. more for th workers than ¢tray| bank and crying. I walked up to her} lished, subs are coming in from var- | wire from A. Rowgitzky, Washington, whole program of the government will Park where a mass meeting was|*2ortage in the markets , charitable it was announced that | 26 0” the street. and asked why she was crying, This} ious units. Affairs are being ar- |i). C.: be announced under article 48 (pro- | held. ‘The Workers’ Charter Move-| This set of speculators was headed only heads of families and exservice- | Most of the girls that work at this]is what she answered me: “I lost| ranged for the emergency cam- “Send seventy five copies Daily| viding for a dictatorship), before the ment led the unemployed. by the owner of a cafe, named men would be taken on. alan aN have extra dresses and| all I had in this crash. My cake paign.” Worker daily to S. Shinberg (address) | Reichstag meets, i iS ‘ Privalow, and by a dealer named .. ;./@prons at work due to the fact that|a painter, has been out of work for Would like to get payers early moin-| The social democratic “Vorwaerts” 0 “i r ;Runkov. These speculators em- roa apa bisa een ed the sped up is great they tear| fifteen months. We have four chil-/ JOE PENN CHALLENGES __| ing for sale on streets.” writes approvingly: | PARIS, Dec. 17.—Three thousand) \15veq verious methods. They began ernment. About a year ago I took | a Civil Service exam for the job in|} the Post Office. T supplied the gov- | ernment with a complete life history | of myself which was certified to by a notary public. My character had | to be certified to by friends and ex- | employers and my fingerprints were their clothes. And if they did not have spare dresses and no clothing on hand more than one girl would go home all tcrn to rags. Men and girls receive possible pay in this valley. the lowest SUTRO HOSIERY dren. The money that I lost was saved during the war. I had been using it to pay the landlord each month. Many times we starved so that we could keep the money for the landlord and not be thrown oud into the street. Can't Get, Job T asked her whether she was loo H. P. Alexander, of Jo writes in telling of tk Joe Penn has had selling Worker, esville, M experier the Daily ch tomers is and very poor lady an DETROIT ON PERCENTAGE s| |_ “I am looking up all the old sub- “One of Joe's cus- old INTENSIVE LAPSED SUBSCRIPTIONS DRIVE 0 Scriptions which have lapsed within jthe last two years, with a view to| haying them renew their subs,” writes Willis L. Wright, of Butte, Montana “At least, it will not be possible to reproach Herr Bruening for not hav- ing tried his best to carry out his program by parliamentary means.” | It appeals to Bruening to try again with parliament and writes further: “Should the proceedings before the Reichstag show that it is impossible tramwaymen in strike under revolutionary leadership | to timized workers, plus wa The municipality is try skeleton service with sce were collisions in Nure! ame out on} secure the reinstatement of vic- e increas to run the | * BERLIN, Dec. 17.—Yesterday there | berg between | | tificates. buy’ up large quantities of goods without pos: ing the necessary cere Besides this they bought upplies certificates and were thereby | successful in obtaining double quan- tities of goods. When taking over the goods, and during transit, they presented forged delivery nétes to kindergartens and children’s homes, taken. A year passed before I re-| ing for work and she answered thi of 85 years,” writes; Times are tough, but that is all the | to find a majority, then there would | Reichsbanner and workers. Many | for which the goods were allegedly ceived any news from the Post or- | iephare iefibiastacioty that. Lo haven't Alexander. “She |More reason we should keep on the | still be time to use article 48, were injured Reichsbanner | intended coming from a place which is down best paper she has | SUbS. ‘ r opposed to the use of article 48. All to death use of wood shavings and waste ma- rush. I averted and had to send| on the east side on Henry Street ever seen in her life.| 0d sub list, and will keep right on | it nts is that Bruening does hi Yesterday the Bonn Fascist: 1 Ker Hehitid, which ter: Hi. eats ree Rniber tecepinendaunn from, ’ ‘They manufacture silk underwear for A pretty strong| their trail until I get results. We} best to cover up his actions with & group of workers. ‘They of en eusar, for ckise was ie nsible member of the com- | ‘Weed Out t” Those Who fhe Fin loans) he bosses cof thie statement in this|@te doing all we can to get the Daily | parliamentary cloak. It writes fur- dentally shot a fellow fascist. A stu-| concealed in maccaroni boxes. But- . Can’t Speed place hire widows only. Being in church ridden town. | financed here. ther: dent was stabbed in the stomach ter was conveyed in baskets, covered Two weeks ago I was sent for along such bad circumstances, I said that I told him to tell} “Enclosed are the subscription ap- ‘At the moment, the social democ-| Tomorrow's Fascist meeting at| over with beer bottles. The specu- 3 with two hundred others. Most of| (py a Worker Correspondent) I was a widow although deep in my| yop pENN her about old folks) Plications for those who paid. We} racy is not in a position to say what | Magdeburg, with Hitler scheduled as} jators contrived to establish contect m+ those in line were not married men | is A ae heart I wished that it shouldn't be under Communist | 2@ve every member instructed to do|it would do if it were faced with an | chief speaker, prohibited by the] with the controllers of the co-opera- or ex-servicemen.. We all had to go. ,, 7 WUADELPHIA. “2. Sutro & Son true.” “After I had told the foreman | governments receiving full workers’| their utmost to secure subs, and I} accomplished fact. The finance laws | police. The Reichsbanner, and Com- | tive society shops, At the same time through the bureaucratic machine |! hostery manufacturing company. | ("1 5 joking for a job'and was| wages for the rest of their lives af-|®™ sending out letters to all sub- | contain much, particularly after the | munist counter-meets were also Bid] Gass > carved cae lnksGneaierian eae once more. This included the sign- jeaeen Pa SHEA Sen piety Neha a wideW ha tol te to walt in. ani ter they retire at the age of 50. scribers cut of town urging them to| alterations have been made, with hibited. Bees ihe euecuntas and the ee ing of three sheets of paper which |€T Made @ tolerable wage, Sutro and) * WGN: Oe Ok Ae ot ck to his| “Joe has challenged overgrown De-| help save the Daily. If I don't get/ which we are in complete agree- es et) poaratives contained oaths and promises: (No- body had any time toe read what he was signing because of the speed » with which the machine worked) the paying of .60 cents for a supposed Son knew how to keep the wages low. ‘The company is housed in a dirty building with poor lighting facilities. | Altho the building was built in the} office. I waited fully two hours and was almost frozen but kept my cour- ‘age up and hoped that I would get \the job. Then he returned and handed me a slip of paper containing troit to keep up with Jon Me a percentage basis. I am trying help him to plan to care Hillsdale, miles south of here If he is suc- on} to of | a city of over 5000 about 6 I will to each results from the fi letter, mail out a follow-up letter one.” 5 SENDS 6 SUBSCRIPTIONS ment This attitude of the social democ- racy gives Bruening a free hand with the old argument of “the lesser evil.” In conclusion the “Vorwaerts” writes Yesterday Kunkel, Communist member of the Prussian Diet, was ar- re! sted by the Polish Police for ad- sing an ironworkers’ meeting in Upper Silesia According to the statement of Ba- rinovy, one of the accused, he suc- ceeded in swindling the co-operative society shops of sugar, 3 cwt of bread, llewt of butter and 10 cwt of herings. 4 nineties, it must have been built! | “ c @ 1 " bond which no one saw; and a glori-| o eaniy for it is in a state of decay,| these questions: How long are you} cessful there then Coldwater, 18 miles | IN SPOKANE CAMPAIGN “For us the question is: shell we| Today the diet unanimously adopt-| another contrived to obtain 61 ous and consisting of a spoken oath) jot a collapse seems close at hand. |® Widow? What caused your hus-| West will be next. We do not a refrain from exercising our right to ed a Communist protest resolution! tons of best-quality flour, 50 ewt of to upho'd the constitution of ihe | pand’s death? to huddle int our shell like Detroit nk Sellman, Spokane, vote against the confirmation of the instructing the government to lodge} sugar and 83 cwt of butter. i The “plant” is located on E. Thomp- On what cemetary is ‘i rites: “A eat eee | : United States. We were handed a| 7° “plant” is located on & P" | he buried? Who was the undertaker | does. “ Ter Gs Pao everytime an &" | emergencies, or shall we overthrow|® protest demanding the immediate} Others played the part of ‘sellers card and shunted out of the door. | : that pedtermed the burial? T'an.| “OWr present order gives us an |{tele of Spokane is published send @ | ro ning Cabinet. and open up Telease through the foreign offee | of these goods. The whole greup Then I caught my breath end looked | : Many Layoffs. swered all these questions and a few, imerease of 100 per cent since the jaune an: = aes sare d uk the path to power for the National, With the Polish Government. ins admitted: What. ite ain SAND at he card, é was to aise DEC.| Lately, the ‘economip ctisis oom-|more that 1 don't remember and | bebinning if the: drive “and the) ee asiributed. oi sing this | Faseists.” Cire icee disrupt the co-operatives from within, in old clothes prepared for ver; y = colored Daily agent in Detroit said strsDUted. 4 i ‘iv: ss : i pelled Sutro’s to lay off many work- | signed my name. salam riacies peat " {to get subs for the Worker here in| Im other Words, the social demo-| The Daily Worke1 discloses the in the interests of private profiteer hard work. |ers. Now some of these workers had| “After having answered all these! that he. would write you that De- | °° fy crats intend to support the Bruen-! complete circulation situation in| in&- ‘The affair is in the hands of “ So fellow-workers, figure out how been working in the same place many | stupid questions I was told that they| ‘Telt accepts our challenge. Phe | lls 1s oe it would get a| ing government to the bitter end as tables each Wednesday. Watch for | te Moscow courts of justice. many days work I'll have before the Christmas rvsh is over. A week's! work is considered unemployment re- lief by the bosses’ government, It is about time we started relieving the bosses of come of the coin \we've meade for them, in the form of unem- ployment insurance. PIPT BATION IN, years. New pretexts had to be invented. | A glaring example is one young wo- man who was called into the office. She had been working there in the dim light many years. “How much do you weigh,” “Well, here.” She was good enough a few years ago at her weight, but now matters she was asked, One} hundred shree pounds, she replied. | we can't use you any more, | you have to weigh 106 to work inj} would investigate my case. If what they told me is true, I will get three | days’ work a week at $3.00 a day. “It seems that under this system a woman must bury her husband in or- der to get three days’ work a week.” CLOSED FOR A YEAR—HIRES BACK 125 RICHMOND, Va.—After the entire force of the Lavino Furnace Co., making ferromanganese, had been laid off for a whole year, the fer- would help Joe by sending us an additional 25 copies per day to build up his route. . When he does that it will give us an increase of 3500 per cent. How close is Detroit | next day Comrade Fabian said he | | bundle of 500 every day and distribute |free in the workingmen’s district to get subs for the Worker. So far I | only was able to send in 6 subs but hope to do better.in future.” Smith, Kresel, Other Tammany Fakers Mix ed Up in Bank Crash “the lesser evil.” them. Study them. AMALGAMATED REFUSES | TO UNIONIZE IF BOSS LOS, CHICAGO, Ill. Dec. 18.—Open re- fusal to unionize the workers in clothing firms where the boss is not making as much profits as the Hill- man bureaucracy thinks he should,| was voiced here by a high official of ers are underpaid, to get them to join the union. the Ama | shops | not soun it would be easy Igamated refuse to organize whose financial structure is “We are willing to wait until these | houses work out their problems,” he said, conditions or retire from business.” either they must improve their Meanwhile, the Amalgamated looks on calmly while the firms try to solve But | CZECH JOBLESS SHOW AN INCREASE SINCE SPRING PRAGUE.—According to official ‘igures there were 122,000 unem- ployed workers in Czechoslovakia at the end of October, as compared with 34,000 in the spring. These figures, however, include’ only those workers vho are in receipt of unemployed Wer Pp h 2 CEE LN | are different. Layoffs are necessary romanganese and chemical plants 4 Clothing Work thei bl ‘ i benefit, or a small fraction of those rr j land obviously you can’t gain weight reopened, taking back but 125° (coNTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) | positors’ money to real estate in- Le eee ise ay Catan one ae lems by cutting wages and} 1 at. unemployed. The “Prager working at Sutro’s. workers. up a smoke screen by a few graft | terests?” Bis Cianent Aimee VDP SSeue - Tageblatt” admits that there are at (By a Worker Correspondent.) exposures in the police department! But Forbes didn't tell who the 2 least 360,000 unemployed in the coun- PITTSBURGH. Pa.—The people of | < and in the city magistrates court,| “real estate interests” were. All he try. In reality the figures are far South Side Pittsburgh are terrorized | Wi iW) t 2 We k T iH f was the attorney for the Bank of the | cause “‘a political scandal of the first|} ¥¥ : $ G ‘ higher. The Textile Workers’ Union by the ecents of the bosses who are, WOMEN VOMIOSLIC WOrKers Leli 0 United States and knew of the con-| cause “@ political scandal of th first Telp Raise $30,000 to Keep the Daily Worker Going reports that there are 30 per cent going under the name of govern-| dition of the bank for a long time. magnitude.” The fact is that the less workers employed at present thap ment body, the keepers of law and order in this city. Two of whese| agents, Ed Mozer, a noiice lieutenant | “real estate interests’ were none and Growing! other than a number of the Bank of the United States Directors, such Not one move of this bank was taken without the leading Tammany graft- ers in New York City taking part in at the same time last year. Unbearable Miseries of Unemployed Heparture for the Soviet Union, took | her torn dress kept together by an . fool the people of other countrie’ | ‘kers Cen 5 a st AV! get a calendar, he gets = Oe collection of $10.25 for the Daily |immense safety pin and her whole |™@ny people. into thinking we got prosperity here ‘SUPPORT OUR Bil ie besa a 3 ane 700 olan ag Ma FE Gens mea res ene: ree: See fVorker. after a speech by Comrade | appearance showing, in addition to| One woman says: “They say|and then they come here figuring | = ' Non Partisan Children’ bidakstian, “A venion ie careers Se hilenstein, who pointed out that the | poverty, that there was “nothin’ there'll be nothing doing until there's | they'll get rich and what happens | rt Workers Center ..., 4041 Third Avenue rf f aily Worker is one of the sharpest |doin’,” so what did she care what|@ new war.” to them—make slaves out of them| SYRACUSE, N. Y.—Despite zero DAILY WORKER and “Goose” Guslan are the czars of | the clearin: house and slot machine rackets in this city All their actions are backed up by the ward council chairman, F. Dineler. Near the schools, children from 8) years of age are playing these games. The joints which have these slot machines sell liquor to the girls who get drunk themselves and act as agents for all the drunks in the) neighborhood. Cops Protect Joints. Night captain Smitty McFerrlain visits each of these joints in order to make sure that they get sufficient protection. Those operators of the gambling joints are allowed te do whatever they please, the others are| ritzy hirers—they were not so down- |Tight. ‘There are too many people | Hopkinson’s Mansion, Max Steuer.| surface of this rotten mess, One f i k Seven out of town.” hearted as the young kids who were |Snyway. What's the need of more.|New York Attorney charged tat thing is plain. Millions of dollars At One of The Following Stations: CALENDAR FOR Not lonig ago F. Dingier the ward |ttying the “household” line for the Believe me, it's a good business— | $12,000,000 of the banks SESE pet have disappeared. The depositors DOWN TOWN chairman aranged a banquet for the | first time after everything else failed. producing people. Production goes on | appeared between September 2: : Ls are not getting their money. The} Dail Fork : 2th § heneft of the unetriployed. He used |(The rich are still hiring servants |All the time. Too many. It's agreat | December 20. This attorny, however, | worker-depositors must organize or ally Worker . East 12th Street the police to force the people to buy at least $5.00 worth of tickets. He threatened that those who would not buy would be hounded out of this part of the city. i ‘ ness of looking for work. A couple| The agency woman comes in from B, C. Forbes, financial editor of | there is a limited sum in the bank ines stroegle, RAISE $10.25 FOR DAILY of young kids sitting near me, wait-|her office. All look awed and] the New York American, on Dec. 15| and they want it first! The Daily pea me Oe Hidke Gani Aeekk 1 deta at the bie ua. ing to be mother’s helpers (those in- | breathless, Maybe .. . “Lady wants | asked Broderick, state bank examiner Worker has called upon the small StriniehSorkets. Horie. 15 West 126th Siteet AT GOLDBERG FAREWELL said: “Every Monday I feel kinda|“don’t she know there’s been no ‘Jy $100,000,000 of de- ' full of the small deposits first!” Hariem Youth Center 1492 paper, size 8%, x 14, Neath; ‘ORK.—A group of workers, for lending nearly ui ‘enter . -1492 Madison Avenue ‘a . Neatly in my sec the eae ‘Trade |B004; I say to myself, well this is | green girls for five years—don’t she Spanish Workers Club, 6 West 116th Street tied ‘Wworker's homer” Fonion Unity Leegue group, who got | te Besinning of the week; Tll het know immigration is closed? She | at aia we get out of the last one? BRONX FREE together et Comrade’s Jones’ house to ieelebrate Comrade Gussie Goldberg's Lveapons in the hands of the Amer- ican working-class to put to naught he insidious efforts of our class ene- mies to preyare the ground for an at- ack on tht Soviet Union. Waiting for Back Pay Boston Jobs Forced to Live From Hand to Mouth; Often Have No Roofs Over Their Heads (By a Worker Correspondent) BOSTON.—Waiting in a house- hold help agency catering to ritzy Back Bay, in Boston, I couldn't help remembering some of the remarks and faces there. The room was full of about thirty women, all ages, all kinds. Hard-boiled dames who were “through plenty, lemme tell you,” they knew the line of gab to give the even if their servants are firing siaves.) Some middle-aged women, one knitting, another reading, some with their worldly possessions gar- ried with them. All looked hunted, many terrified, knowing the hopeless- terested in good homes rather than wages apply), were talking. One T sure get something today.” One Irish woman, haggard as hell, she lookea like, was attracting the attention of all the other women in the agency. They called her hard- boiled, and, believe me, she was, and cynical, too. And who wouldn't be, in her boots? You could see that her cynicism and hardness was the j natural outcome of going from agency to agency, sleeping, as I am sure she did, in 25-cent dumps when she could get the 25 cents. She was reading the paper aloud: “I see 21 people got bumped off in a train ac- cident. That’s a pretty good toll for one day. Yes, that’s good. It’s al- business bringing people into the world to starve. Yes, and what are you laughing at (to a Swedish wo- man beside her), the Swedes are pro- ducing too much, too, and look at us here all waiting to starve.” @ green girl—somebody just landed.” “Say,” says the Irish woman, must be a pretty ignorant woman not to know that. And, thank god, bless the lord, immigration is closed—too “Well, hope it breaks out soon,” says another. Our Trish friend: “What do you want a war for? Fight without know- ing what you're fighting for? And Cat this out and mail immediately to the Daily Worker, 50 E. 19th St, New York City. RED SHOCK TROOPS For $30,000 DAILY WORKER EMERGENCY Pibees a Enclosed find | We pledge to build RED SHOCK TROOPS for the successful completion ofthe ie baie Woukee } EMERGENCY FUND it. in a series of real estate frauds. nity & Insurance Oo. at the expense of the small positors. | kept his mouth shut about where the money disappeared to. money went to. this question: Besides the Tammany politicians, there were a whole raft of real es- tate sharks, among whom is A. E. Lefcourt. Lefcourt is now involved He was, together with Al Smith, a di- rector of the Consolidated Indem- The bank loaned hundreds of mil- lions of dollars to the real estate sharks who are on the board of di- } rectors, and who were coining money de- At a meeting of the bigger bank depositors, held Wednesday night at An exmina- tion of the business dealings of the Tammany Board of Directors of the | Bank will quickly show where the | “Who was—who were—responsible | must be “immediate repayment in Jas, Irwin S, Chanin, A. Milton, | ! Napier, Henry W. Pollock, Albert Rosenblatt and scores of others. Broderick is not working to ‘straighten out” the bank’s condi- tions, but his entire force is rupturing themselves hiding the traces of how the money disapeared into the hands |of Tammany erafters. The 400,000 | depositors, over 300,000 of whom are workers and unemployed workers, when they feel the pinch of hunger will know at last that some fat Tam- many grafter is having a good time on the deposits which they put into | the bank and not a cent of which has been returned to date. ‘This is just a bare scratch on the they will suffer at the expense of the | Board of Directors, their Tammany | supporters and the richer depositors. The rich depositors are organized for | their interest. They will let the | | small depositors go hang. They know | | depositors to organize. The demand ; A Negro girl in the room breaks out: ‘What gets me is the way they like they did owt of us, only they | call it a nicer name.” “I don’t see many of us getting a chance to be slaves either,” says an- other. Well—the more I see of the bosses’ system the harder I’m gonna , work for a workers’ government! West Side Youth Clubs Plan a Housewarming NEW YORK. — of the International Workers Order and the West Side Youth Club is giv- ing a housewarming ‘There will be an entertaining pro- - SYRACUSETOILERS — The Youth Branch weather, 150 workers crowded into the Workers Center in Syracuse, and _ enthusiastically endorsed the na- | | tional and local relief measures for | unemployment as proposed by the | Communist Party and the Trade Union Unity League. The large percentage of workers present were native born oe Faces that have never been to other | meetings arranged by the militant workers of Syracuse. Twenty-nine | signed up immediately for the Unem- ployed Council, and plans are being! perfected for a large demonstration | to be held before the City Hall, in’ VY olunteer for Saturday, 1 pm East Side Workers Club ... Down Town Workers Club Workers Center, . Ukrainian Workers Workers Center Needle Trades Union Mungarian Workers Home . Czecho Slovak Workers Club . Browx Workers Club . Non Partisan Children’s School Workers Center . ROWNSVILLE and EAST NEW YORK Workers Center . Workers Center .. Workers Center .. BENSONHURST, BATH BEACH & BRIGHTON 2901 Mermaid Avenue Workers Center Workers Center ... Workers Center . Workers Center Workers Center . Worker "--reovey Camnaign TAG DAYS THIS SATURDAY and SUNDAY Sunday, 10 am 196 East Broadwty ...93 Avenue B. 27 East 4th Street 17 East 3rd Street .-64 West 22nd Street . 131 West 28th Street 50 East Sist Street 347 East 72nd Street 1472 Boston Road 1490 Boston Road 61 Graham Avenue 46 Ten Eyck Street ...13 Myrtle Avenue 159 Flushing Avenue .105 Thatford Avenue 1565 St. Marks Avenue . 962 Sutier Avenue . Coney Fstand 1373 43rd Street 64 40th Street 136 15th Street -312 Columbia Street 48 Bay 8th Strect Get a 1931 Daily Worker calendar free with a six months’ subscription or re- newal, 1931 CALENDAR FREE! Paid in advance? Pay for six months more and get a 1931 Calendar Free! FIRST ANNUAL DAILY WORKER Seren striking Kalt-tong pistinns : fore Fie eal Luding: ‘An unpublished picture of Lanta addressing Moscow workers, Views of the bignest of: strikes and Saniapesrs sens U. 8. mashing cartoons of the ons sels, Lenin, ete, 12 pages—one for each month— printed In two colors on heavy with every str month's subsort) tion or renewal. Get your low worker to subseribs 50 EAST 13TH STREET, N, ¥, 0. “By Mall 50 cents @ month, ontside Mam hattan and Bronx. ttan and Bronx, my satay a ne iat CAMP AND HOTEL -NITGEDAIGET “ROLETARIAN VACATION PLACE OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Ff Brighton Beach Wi co jgNAME oo Cenc eeconsererseeeceeecacceceee tesenereecsovesesesseocessoecsssoess| [eram, dancing until 1:30 a.m. The) preparation for the Washington Con- 6 aan ‘ be aoe Negeepel Sreaes Proletarian Atmosphere : : affair will take place at the head-| ference demonstration when the mil- : NEWARK $17 A WEEK | ADDRESS % quarters, 3342 W. Roosevelt’ Road, | lion signatures are presented to Workers Center ...eseseeees seeeecccceceseees+ 93 Mercer Street CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEAOOM, ¥.X. Saturday, December 20, at 8p. m, ‘ Congress, UHONE 731