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% DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, J JARY 9, - HOstERY WORKERS | VOTE DOWN 2ND ‘| pay CUT DEMANDS Bosses and Officials Against Men Philadelphia, Pa. | Daily Worker:— The tembership meeting of the Full Fashioned Hosiery Workers’ Fed- eration, héld Friday night here, unanimously rejected and voted down | a further additional wage-cut of 25 per cent in the industry located prin- cipally in Northeast Philadelphia (Kensington) and vicinity. “Committee of Negotiations” n The consisted of uni officials and bosses. The wo! of Kensington have @ militant tradition and will no longer be focléd by the labor mis- leaders of the A. F. of L. Will Fight This. Organized resistance can be ex- pected now in many additional ho- siery mills, for this 25 per cent Wage- | cut which means a total of 60 percent! age-cut together with the 14 per cent Wage-clt against weavers in the upholstety trade, has put the work- ers of Kensingston into a struggling) mood against the bosses. In the ‘metal trades, many thou- | sands of wotkers are unéinployec| (also-in wis district). Those who are employed Have suffered waze-cuts. There has been no orghnized resist- ance as yet aiid workers of the steel. bronze and othér industries of Ken- sington should prepare for strike struggle, which is sure to come. Con- ditions are intolerable. Cc. Rabin. NEEnE DT Aer LAN R ST pacron OTD ERE ea ed WO & senda th | With Aid of Unholstér. ers International \ + (By a Worker Correspondent) POSTON, Mass—Since the loss of | thé recent strike end the smashing | f the Ise2l upholsterers’ union the | orton fummiture manufacturers have | been conducting a city-wide campaign to blecktist those who were active in the strike. During the strike the bosses hired gangsters, Secured injunctions and | spent thouserds upon thousands to/| break the strike and the union. Sueceks in this respect has not sat- | isfied these sine. They also want to remove evéry possibility of a fu-/ ture strike against the rotten condi- tions and low wages in the shops. And they are being aided by the) treachery of the Upholsterers’ Inter- national Union of N. A. who has helped the bosses on at least three) counts; 1, by refusing financial aid) to Local No. 87-and its several hun- | dred strikers; 2, by revoking its char- ter because of a few hundfed dollars | involved, thus hélping the bosses to! destroy the local; 3, by helping the | bosses to persecute the strikers by refusing to transfer the blacklisted workers to another local to help them to get employment in other cities. Finally. the International is making not the slightest effort to reorganize Bostoh. The full tréachery of these actions até now realized by the be-| trayed Workers, who sec no hope in the situation except through the Trade Union Unity League. 1. C, Fire Married Women in Portland R.R. But Is Fake ‘Relief’ Move (By a Worker Correspondent) PORTLAND, Ore.—Married women | have been discriminated against by thé Spokane and Portland and Seattle Railroad. The company an- nounees a “leave of absence” to all married women employees until the “employment. erisis” has passed. ‘This is just another form that the bosse5 have of supporting the lies of thé offite boy, Hoover, that they are | not laying off any employees. There | will be No aiinouncenient in the pa- pers of any workers being hired to, replace these women workers. They have been used by the bosses as long as they Were necessary and at lower wages than they gave men. Fconomic conditions make it nécessaty for woni- en to work and they must join the T.U.UL. and tient side by side with the men workers for better condi- tions. | Two suicides and one “accident”: is the casualty list of workers {or | the new year so far. Workers must fight for thé ~ight to live and hot tet the boss rule weakén them. The un- employment insurance bill is being circtiiated in Portland and every worker should help to get the Port- land quota. Workers will have to a for thé right t@ live. Join thé T.U.U.L. ahd fight for the class fights of wot! ORGANIZE TO END STARVATION; DEMAND RELIEF! 1931 1981 CALENDAR FREE! need ne toe ahs | paper. | He and the rest of the parasites have as high | nobility of those homes. Robbing Vets JERSEY FARMERS | O7 Issue Of |ARE-BEING DRIVEN Clothes, Etc.| 10 BANKRUPTCY Soldiers’ Hi b eipagon ofa. {Bankers Profiting By} Dayton, Ohio. Mr. Editor: | : My Dear Sit:—Kindly allow me a| This Crisis | lite space in most, baa VeluBnIs | New Brunswick, N. J. s ‘ | Daily Worker:— Boss parasites are robbing pension-| phe unusually low prices of farm ers of clothes and their monthly issue | products are affecting \ particularly Bf tobacco. Parnes the small and middle farmers. They ‘oss Economy. are unable to cut down their praduc- Now that this great and noble hero | tion costs and face annihilating com= £ ‘ of the war, General Frank Hines, who | petition with latge producers. A| conducted an $800,000,000 enterprise) sfonmouth County poultryman told on a salary of $25,000 a year, is BoiNE) me today that with ebgs selling at| to save $10,000,000 on the disabled} 49 cents and costs of taxes, insurance | soldiers’ home for the coming yeat.| ang interests and building costs being | as they ate another drop in| egg prices or raise in prices of feed will finish him. decided that the men who have had| the privileges of drawing clothes and tobacco from the quartermaster’s de- filddleman’s Protits. | pertment be deprived of this privi-| lege. The whole system is operated | under the capitalistic idea of soup} and hash for the disabled veterans and steak and automobiles for the According to him the large volume | f Western white eggs produced on big unit system with large capitaliza- | tion is taking away the metropolitan ;market from. the small farmer. Yet jhe can’t sell his farm and join the] Rob the Vets. | other unemployed. “Not even the| | will he urged to subscribe for them- The Worker® Unemployment Insurance Bill proposes: 1.—Unemployment insurance .at the rate of $25 a week for each tnemployed worker and §5 additional for each dependant. 2.—The creation of a National Unemployment Insurance Fund to be raised by: (a) using all war funds for unemployment insurance; (b) a levy on all capital and property in excess of $25,000; (c) a tax on allincomes of $5,00 a year. 3.—That the Unemployment Insurance Fund thus created shall be administered by a Workers’ Commission elected solely by employed and unemployed workers. All who sign the lists now being circulated by the Workers Na- tional Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance or its sub- sidiary organizations, demand that congress shall pass the bill, in its final form as (possibly) amended by the mass meetings which ratify it and elect the tnass delegation to present it to congress, or as (pos- sibly) aménded by the mass delegation itself. The final form of the bill will follow the general line of the three points printed above. Mass Circulation Will Be Stressed At Celebrations Marking 7th Anniversary three Par from house to house.” Building mass circulation for the | Daily Worker will be stressed at the Daily Worker Seventh Anniversary celebrations in District 2. A special drive for mail subscribers will be made at the New York Anni versary, to be held in St. Nicholas Arena, Saturday. Workers present} members went WOMEN DEFEND NEG SELLING DAILY IN Laurinzo Stokes member RO BWAY. of the Red WoRKER SEES TO Es AD VENTURES selves and fellow workers. In Newark, the Daily Worker An- niversary will be held Saturday at 93 Mercer St. The admission ticket of 75 cents entitles the holder to a }monthly subscription. Newark ex- Dany WorKee — Deu. 3L Rane i wc! Preparing New Plan; Colleetives Gain | The Walter Duranty articles to the York Times quote the Moscow government | New |Izvestia (authoritative publication) as follows “Tt now obvious that the | Five-year Plan will be completed in four years. The coming All Union Soviet Congress—the sixth—will meet \later this year, the decisive and con- clusive year of the Five-Year Plan, in many branches will be com- in three or three and a halt The subsequent Congress—the 1933, will meet when the next Fi we-Year plan is al- ready under way.” Durar laration is years. seventh—scheduled for comments that this dec- the Five-Year Plan is to be finished so far ahead of time land that further planned work will |follow is evidence of the confidence | of the Soviet Government in the new | year This coafidence he says is due not only to rt ming the dif- ficulties and shortcomings of the late at Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill | i oe i > RR ATO NAL 8h Ews« Analysts of Spanish Revolt | MOSCOW.—Referring to the events | }in Spain, the “Pravda” writes that | the recent insurrectionary movement | capitalist paper (OFINISHS-YEAR Pravda Gives|HAIT! WORKERS WIN 3 STRIKES Boss Papers Conceal Workers’ Victory NEW YORK—The local Spanish ‘La Prensa,” on Tues- took place under such circumstances | jday published a very prief Associated that it cannot be identified with the | Press Dispatch from Port-au-Prince, previous officers’ insurrections. First | Haiti, stating that the strikes in the of all, the insurrections have taken | Coffee, lumber ind banana industries place under the slogan of the over-| Which had been on for a week, had throw of the monarchy and the in- | esulted in a wage raise of fifty per troduction of a republican regime, | Cent for the workers. whereby the republican strivings of | broad sections of the urban and rural petty-bourgeoisie, supported by sec- tions of the industrial bourgeoisie (particularly in Catalonia) have en- tered on the stage of armed strug- gies; and, secondly, and still more im- portant, the military insurrections took place parallel with strike move~ ments on an unparalleled scale. Many signs have indicated that the Spanish proletariat is rapidly recov- ering from six years of fascist dic- tatorship, and that it is adopting more and more the slogans of the Spanish Communist Party, at the The great and noble engineer, Her- | jin this way. bert Hoover, and the rest of the para- sites have an idea to economize, but do not even think of cutting down their own salaries with all the money hey contro}. Now that’ this great | ropriation of $116,000,000 for the ef of unemployment is passed I ¢ to ask this question. There are *.000,000 unemployed men in the U. S. How many day’s work would it sive to cach man and what benefit, my way of thinking is the $116,- 909,000 appropriation is for a lot of President Ho friends of the re- publican par rel Editorial Note:—The $16,000,000 was appropriated for public con- struction, road work, etc., which, taking the promises of the boss politicians at their face value, will | country bank will take my place over. | The banker just laughed at me.” Our cost of production is two or three times that of the mammoth western | | Sunday at 6 p. m., with a conference farms. And the slow prices we are | getting are not passed on to the con- sumer. Even the optimistic report of W. F. | Knowles, government economist at the New Jersey agricultural station, contains the statement that New | Jersey farmers are getting low prices jand that these are still declining for pe products. Reduced Incomes. Incomes of farmers were greatly | FLINT SHOPS EACH DAY” |veduced in 1930. In August many |farm products sold at pre-war prices |and the combined New Jersey farm | prices for that month were 17 per |cent above prices from 1910 to 1914. ‘The purchasing power of the great pects to get hundreds of new readers In Elizabeth, the Daily Worker An- niversary celebration will be held to build the Daily Worker and a proletarian banquet at the Workers’ Center, 106 E. Jersey St. In Perth Amboy, the Communist Party, the Young Communist League, together with all workers’ organizations, are celebrating the Daily Worker Anni- versary, Saturday, at 667 Charles St., Perth Amboy. SELL IN FRONT OF “WILL John Werner, Flint, Mich., “We will sell the Daily Worker in front of the shop gates every day. Our present order is fifty a day, which we hope to increase to one writes: | Buildgs News b has been selling the Daily Worker to the crowds of workers in the subway on their to and from work, The capitali: news agents are much opposed to the | sale of the Daily Worker in the sub- way since they have seen how eager these workers are to get the paper the rotten mess of capitalist condi- tions, in this land of prosperity, and Laurinzo got into a scrap with one get off the train with his “Bolshevik | paper.” Some women comrades on j that which is telling them the truth about | President | of the guards who insisted that he | hoffer same time freeing itself from social- ist and anarcho-syndicalist influ- ences Further, events have shown that the Spanish proletariat is by no means prepared to play the role of an instrument in the hands of the re- publican industrialists, the officers and the petty-bourgeoisie, but that it is growing increasingly conscious of its historic role in the revolution. Summer and Fall,” and realization Communism penetrates the but to the fact that: Fall sowing campaign and newed drive for farm collect- aused much trouble and friction a year ago, have been carried out this year within a frac- tion the program and almost wholly without difficulties.” masses, “The the r ivization, which of The Associated Press had previous ly suppressed all news of these strike: and éven, this dispatch was not used in any of the big English language dailies receiving the Associated Press. This fact is vouched for by the long series of economic and political strikes, beginning with the bloody week in Seville in July, 1929, and cul- minating during the last few days in mass strikes throughout the coun- try. Further, the influence of the Com- munist Party of Spain ts steadily growing, although the democratic fas- cist regime of Berenguer granted no possibility of legal action to the C, P. There is no doubt that the develop- ment of the republican movement and the rapid growth of the revolu- tionary working-class movement in Spain is closely connected with the world economic crisis. The moribund industry of Spain (inflated by war orders, post-war currency manipula- tions, protection and state subsidies) and agriculture are badly hit. Unemployed, and elected a delega-~, When the dejegation reported to tion of seven to go in and see Boro|the crowd outside, it characterized Hestenberg. The delega-| Hestenberg’s promises as only an- tion was: Cogan, Lemlick, Green (a| other trick to fool the jobless. Negro woman worker), Welsh (a Ne-| The masses yelled, “We want bread, | gro worker), Paul, Daugherty, Kling-| and we are going to get it,” and| When they marched into the | started a parade down Myrtle Ave. to| hall the crowd was about 10,000|demand food from the Salvation | strong. It continued meeting and| Army breadline at Ashland and Third. | | Consumption was cut 10 per cent says | paitor Daily Worker: | not,start for quite some time. And | ui of farmers is destroyed. once started the greater amount of | ‘There is an increased interest in the, money will find its way into the pockets of the contractors, poli direct selling methods, and farmers’ pe pockets on) rs - » Bs. {co-operatives selling and purchasing, ticians and the usual run of capi- 2 ¢ c pl = = are getting more attention. talist henger-on and for use to | “7 noticed a decided dissatisfaction build up the political machine of with the old parties, Last night a the bosses. The number of unem- | small farmer's family ‘kept me until ployed workers ih the United States |S") tock in the morning asking ques-| now stands at 10.000,000 as shown tions about the Five-Year Plan and| conclusively in the Daily Worker of | n° serieuitural program of the Com- eo munist Party. Perhaps the sections located on the border of the metro- Less Mille for Phila. | politan farming district could tind |place for a lot of activity in their Babies As Milk Boss | rurai neighborhood Cut Down Preduction | =a \Shoes for Bie Faker Murphy But Not for U nemploved Workers Detroit, Mich. | i} | i Philadelphia, Pa ‘The babies of unemployed families in Philadelphia have to get along | with less milk. On account of the| | unemployment situation PhiJa. milk | President Abbot of the Interstate | Milk Producers Assn. To save the| Enclosed shows profits of the milk trust farmers ee POOUGWE OF thy Saker, Mayer | Pennsylvania inilk-sheds wer cut|Murphy and new Governor Elect) down 40 per cent a hundredweight Brucker of Michigan, each receiving on basic milk and warned to further | 12 Pairs of shoes from the Shoe deal- | decrease production. If they do not |&!S Association. | obey and reduce their milk produc- It is too bad they need them so tion, Pres. Abbot threatens that) much, while the thousands of jobless photo and com- another cut will take effect as the | here go shoeless, foodiess in this land | es companies can’t sell under present |of plenty produced by the workers. hundred in a short time. We started a house to house route which we hope | we will increase. Will write soon to the Daily about conditions in Flint. their way home were in the train. One of them sprang up to his de- fense and insisted that the guard let him stay on the train. Other work- jers sprang up to his defense and | Laurinzo continued selling the Daily Worker. E. M. writes from Gardner, Mass.: “The little boys have sold O. K. Sat- | 1,200 Hunger March in Br ooklyn: Many Demonstrate in Bronx, Manhattan (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) by the Council of the Unemployed. demonstration was attacked tn the! then, when these tried to speak, growing until it was perhaps 12,000 | strong by the time the delegation | came out Hestenberg Scared. All members of the delegation pre- sented the demands to Hestenberg, | who wa he promised all sorts of things. How- ever, he did nothing, and his prom- ises are worth nothing. The delega- | tion told him of the dozen children | fainting from hunger in Public Scheol 5: ignerance and promised investiga- | | tion. The same when the delegation cut off all but the front ranks, led| told him of Gates Ave. Court order- | 20, and to collect si {ing 42 evictions in an hour and five minutes Monday. seared to the point where | and Hestenberg pleaded | Police attacked it on the way, and cut off part. The rest staged an} hour's battle with cops at the bread- line. Reports are that some 50 were injured. Brownsville Workers Battle. The Salvation Army battlefield was | |the scene of action also of hundreds | of Brownsville workers and jobless who had met in the morning at 1844 Pitkin and marched all the way} down. | ‘The Brooklyn jobless are now called to mobilize all forces for the} march on New York City Hall Jan. matures for the Insurance Workers’ Bill. Unemployment. | tion. beginning, but the most savage bru- tality was vented on the others at their close. The Harlem demonstra- tion had only about 400 in it, but was growing rapidly. Police attacked it before it went a block and a half and the police attacked both Negro and white workers, but since the crowd was largely Negro, the white workers were more conspicuous and were most severely beaten. ‘There were three | arrests here. | Masses Gather Before Tammany Agency; March to Hall: Beaten Up As They Teave From two points the hunger march- | “If there was a war on you could find converged on the Welfare Depart-|some way, couldn't you, to keep us/ ment offices at, Leonard and Lafay- | alive until we got to the battlefield?” labor conditions. | Down with capitalism! Only Half Prosser Fund to — J obless; No Jobs from City Prosser Gang Proposes to Use $4,320,000 to Hire 24,000 for 12 Weeks; Doesn’t Say What Rest of $8,000,000 Is For NEW YORK.—Rybicki, head of the city employment agency, called on the mayor and related what every- body knows already, that 5,000 job- less jam into and around the agency daily, and that there are no jobs there. Rybicki added a detail. He told how when a clerk announced “just one hour's labor, at 55 cents an hour, for only two men,” such a mad rush for this little job took place that it was like a football scrimmage. The Prosser committee also called on Walker, and asked for $10,000,000 city funds to keep the emergency work going. Capitalist press reports state that their Aipaietes rea “Something must be done, or—” and the sentence was left unfinished. Evidently the Prosser gang knows of the rising determination of the job- less not to starve. That scires them into asking more money. It does not scare them into giving whet they have (much of it black- mailed out of employed -workers’ wages) to the jobless. The commit- tee told Walker it had $8,000,000 with which it intended to keep 24,000 men working at $15 a week until April. That would be $4,320,000. Where is the other $3,700,000? Used for over- head? Turned over to capitelists for materials? Just Coat? DANBURY FUR STRIKERS WIN SHOP, PICKETING STILL GOFS ON! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ers’ Industrial Union as “Bolshevik” and against June Croll, N. 'T. W. I. U. organizer as a “jail bird.” The work- rs championed the union, and Croll, who was arrested in the New Haven strike. The N. T. W. I. U. executive issued a statement to the press explaining the withdrawal of the hall from the strikers. ‘The strikers’ meeting last night re- pudiated the club and condemned tt for its sttike-breaking action. ‘They rejected the offer of the club to “lead the strike.” Hundreds demonstratded today be- fore the Danbyry Times and de- manded that this newspaper's cen- soring of the strike news should end. The editor, Wilson, explained that his paper had a policy against print- ing news of the strike because it “would spread the strike and bring more trouble.” Use Daily Worker, day night at the 8 p. m. mass meet- urged to attend. down town in New York. The Madison Square Council of the Unemployed led hundreds from the various breadlines to the demonstra~ tion in front of the municipal lodging house at First Ave. and 25th St. Po- | lice tried to interfere with the meet- ing, questioning, Robert Lealess, the chairman, as to whether there were , Communists 'n the crowd. Lealess told them that all workers and unem- ployed could take part in this demon- stration, without regard to political | The 150 cops stationed | opoiinns. there finally -vithdrew. This crowd marched singing and shouting for work or relief to the Lafayette St. demonstration. It is es- timated that some 5,000 were gather- ed in front of the Tammany agency | there. The doors of the agency were thrown open, and hundreds forced in, and locked in by the Tammany agents to reduce the size of the dem- onstration. The crowd from the municipal flop house sent its delegation, Lealess, Johnson, O'Boyle, Corbin, Sabel, in to see Taylor, in charge of the Wel- fare offices, at the same time the Down Town Council sent in its dele- gation, Ball, Foulke, Rosenberg, Lemke, Stevens and Neilson. Taylor met them, surrounded by strong arm men, and insisted he could do nothing. A worker said, . Thousands Demonstrate at Brooklyn --Bero Hall; Then March on Sallies ‘The strikers decided to circulate} The Hrockiy hunger march and 1,000 copies of the Daily Worker Fri-| demonstration was the largest. After invading the Amalgamated ing in Polish Hall, Ives St. All are}Temple at Broadway and Myrtle and calling all jobless there swarming out | And Taylor said, “Yes.” | March to Manhattan Lyceum oatighnaaupnttennLuMsoe eta sh et After the report of the committees, the combined crowd started march- |ing up to Manhattan Lyceum, on| | Fourth St. On the way a couple of | cops attacked them, and the resist- ance of the masses was roused. One | cop went to the hospital. Police re- | serves were called out, and by the time Manhattan Lyceum was filled with jobless and the meeting was} going on, the street was full of po-| lice, with ~wagons and all. Arrest Five Workers Police Charged in and arbitrarily | arrested five workers from the crowd. | One of these was Herman Turkowitz, | they let him out, “for questioning,” the next thing his friends knew of | him, an hour later, he was in Bellevue | Hospital. Cops Make Brutal Assault As the Manhattan Lyceum crowa started to leave, a signal was given with a flash light, and a brutal as- sault by club swinging police took place. Mrs. Constantino, the pregnant woman recently thrown out of the | municipal lodging house was knocked down by a cop’s club. Her husband, Jack Constantino, was beaten un- conscious by police. Hight others weré | beaten up, several lying unconscious on the sidewalk. . Hook Section of Brooklyn, where thou- sands of longshoremen and other job- less live miserably, combined and marched up Carroll streets, with the gangs of police following and police lining the corners, Strike headquarters have been}into the street, they paraded four opened at a hall at 258 Main St. and/abreast with banners flaunting their|One starting from Columbia and many are joining the union there.| demands for immediate relief to) Hamilton and the other at Colum- Shop meetings and mass meetings} Boro Hall. Police were strung out|bia and President, marched side by | are being held every morning and] jong the lines of march in groups) Side, each parade four abreast, to} afternoon, Mass picketing takes}of two and three, but did not dare|join the Boro Hall demonstration place at 6 a.m. every morning. Com-|to attack here. ‘These hunger march- | @bout 12:10. mittees of strikers are patrolling the] ors joined a great crowd already be- Elect Delegation. highways on the wateh against trucks|fore Boro Hall about noon. The crowd listened to speeches ‘The two parades, |THE JOBLESS! carrying bales of furs at night, ‘Two mass meetings in the Red from leaders of the Councils of the . . . “Tell the Courts,” Says Bronx Boro Presie ent: Woman Shows Quster Bronx demonstration was one not attacked by the police. whole series of open-air meetings were addressed by the speakers of | the Council of the Unemployed. who! Oniel, chairman; Jackson, an unem-| called on them to fight for relief and | ployed woman worker; Brown, a Ne- to gather signatures for the Work-| gro worker; Mrs. Singer, facing evic- ers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill.| tion; Greene. a young worker; Ram-| These crowds combined and about/sey, a food worker, and Gorden, of 1,000 of them started marching to th? | the Council of the Unemployed. Bronx Boro Hall, Third Ave. and E.| President. Bruckner’s answer to, 17and St. They found a great crowd | tneir demands was that they should | waiting them, and as their delegation |go to the courts. As the delegation | x | came out and reported this, a woman THE CITY HAS MONEY | stood forward and waved an eviction | FOR COPS; MAKE IT FEED | notice: “That's the answer of the courts,” she shouted. ‘The crowd cheered a call to pre-| vent the eviction of this worker. Fiften hundred marched to 4041} \Third Ave, headquarters of the Bronx Council of the Unemployed, and 110 new members joined the} council. | | flop-houst the only of ten started up the steps to inter- A|view Boro President Bruckner, et crowd shouted for “Bsead or Wages.” The delegation was made up | DEWEY 9914 Sunday: DR. J. LEVIN” SURGEON DENTIST 1501 AVENUE U, Ave. U Sta. BMT. x, |Milwaukee Jobless in Hunger March (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) of the police headed by Sergeant Dieden to break up the demonstra- tion. It was only the active support of the speakers. by cheers and ap- plause and refusal to move along, as the police commander, that thwartea the plans to smash the demonstra- Six patrol wagons were wait- ing for the arrests but the militancy of the workers prevented the cops from carrying out their plans. The Common Council refused on | act on the demands of the Unem- ployed and yet adopted a new budges (1931) allocating shousands of dollars for bird-houses in the Washington Park Zoo, thousands for the Memo- rial Da} fund, museum collector's fund, etc. The U.C. delegation showea the aldermen, especially the “social- ists’ how thousands of dollars could be gotten by cutting out some of the useless items of the new budget. But | the socialist alderman, Dietz, led the attack against the unemployed, main- taining enough was being done by soup-kitchens and char- ity at the Outdoor Relief. On the following day, Dec. 30, 300 workers attended a iaass meeting at Miller Hall to hear the report of the workers’ committee and greet the leaders of the unemployed, Burke ana Clark, released from jail that same day. 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MINDEL Surgeon Dentist 1 UNION SQUARE Koom 803 Phone: Algonquin 8183 Not connected with any other office Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet, 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian Food HEALTH FOOD Vegetarian Restaurant 1600 MADISON AVENUE University 586% y FOR Phone Phone Stuyverant 3816 John’s Restanrant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISRES A place with atmosphere whero all radicals meet 302 KE. 12th St. New York NQUET given by the NEW YORK WORKERS CENTER to greet the Central Committee of the Communist Party on the occasion of their moving into the new building, 35 East 12th Street Sunday: January 11, 1931 Admission Fifty Cents All Workers Organizations Are Uurged to Elect a Delegate to this Banquet 8-Day Bazaar TO HELP MAINTAIN THE NEW YORK WORKERS CENTER. COLLECT ARTICLES AND SEND THEM TO THE CENTER, 35 EAST 12TH STREET, N. Y. C. THE 8-Day Bazaar WHICH WILL TAKE PLACE FROM Jan. 11 to 1 a,