The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 24, 1931, Page 5

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( : IL ht. nd 8 ob- _DATLY WORKER, | NEW YORK, SATURDAY, a ANUARY 24. 19 eer ne Re IN _ Page Fiy ae Join the Council of the Unemployed; :If there Isn’ t One, Organize One Report of Chicago Red News Club Shows Lively Activity; Must Push Membership Drive The Chicago Red Builders’ News Club is showing great strides in speed ing its-Daily Worker sales increases, This club, recently organized, holds regular meetings, keeps records of all its sales and is seriously engaged in w¥osting Chicago’s circulation. It: should add to its membership, how- ever, and broaden its activity. From Secretary T. Lambraw we get a detailed report of the club's ac- tivities, Following is the table for eight of the. most active members, Bis- bikis winning the prize, a Datly Worker calendar: S. Bisbikis, 730 copies in 16 days; J. Darn, 559, 15 days; W. McDer- mott, 543, 13 days; T. Lambraw, 283, 9 days; G: Allen, 281, 13 days; D. Esquival, 280, 12 days; Vinsky, 250, 11 days; G. Dafnis, 99, 5 days. Two members whose totals for 3-4 days average 50, but who show en- terprise and pep, are J. Adams and N. Rodriquez. Lambraw continues: “Comrades Allen and McDermott are natives. Both are doing very good jobs. McDermott was ar- rested “yesterday for selling the Daily Worker. He told the police plenty of good answers and raised hell till they released him. He’s an old man of 70, sells 50 every day and is not-afraid to fight back fust | as we expect. It makes our club proud of such a comrade,” The Chicago Red Builders have good reason to be proud! A good re~ port like this from every Red Build- ers’ News Club would hasten the 60,- 000 circulation goal. .What have the other’ News Clubs to say? GAINS 2 SUBS WITH CALENDAR T. Ray, Daily Worker agent of San Pedro, Calif., writes: “Our newsboy, C. E. Hummel, on the arrival of the D. W. Calendar took it with him on the streets while selling the Dailies, which resulted in getting two.subs the first day.” FUND FOR WORKERS’ SUBS WHO CANNOT PAY Many workers write in, saying they cant afford to keep their subscrip- tions going. They want the Daily Worker, and some go without food just to extend their subscriptions for @ month or two, but most are forced to give’ the paper up. The Daily Worker cannot afford to continue eaemticts subscriptions on acount of its onl; rd a financial crisis. Fot' this reason we ask readers to contribute- whatever they can to- ward some poot worker's subscrip- tion, so that his name will not be drepped from the subscription list. Send in your dollars to keep the Daily in the homes of unemployed militant workers. They want the paper: They need the )aper. All donations to the fund will be re- corded, OLD, JOBLESS, SENDS 50 CENTS “T’am’an old man and out of work —or rather no use to capitalism— | and-no old-ége pension. So now find rnelosed- 60 cents. Please send me ten copies-of the Daily Worker until I can build me up a trade here.”—G. W T., Hillyard, Wash, by ANNIVERSARY A HUM-DINGER” “The anniversary number of the “Daily” is’ just in,” writes L. Fy | Vancouver,Canada. “Take time to really read this 7th anniversary number (for it's surely a hum- dinger) and then may the laggard ones f0 ont with a new swing in WRITE THEE. CIRCULATION Figures ie se Dancy Worked ‘cook | too. Tam to the last with the work- ers of all over the world.” “DOING ALL I CAN”; SENDS $2 following from F. E. Walker: “I sure do admire the wonderful progress the workers are making, ac- cording to the Daily Worker. I am with you, doing all I can in a secret way to get the people to see our aims, I am mailing you in this let- ter $2, the best I can do this time. For this is the South.” “WISH I COULD SEND ENOUGH” Lester House of Coshocton, writes: “I am awful glad you kept me on your list. for me to get along without the Daily Worker. But when we are broke it is impossible to dig up a dollar. But here is one just the same. Just date that back from the day my time ran out, Will send a dollar from time to time as I can. Unemployment is terrible in this town—the home of Bill Green, too. “Wish ¥ could send enough to wipe out your deficit.” ALBANY JOBLESS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Welfare Society, the City Welfare De- partment, the American Leion (Cole- {man is an ex-service man) and in every case they got the run around, were passed from one to another | without any relief, and the landlord went right ahead with his plans to evict. The Albany Evening News carries a big story in its Jan. 22 edition ot a meeting of the council that night |at its headquarters, 69 South Ferry St., in which Secretary Pell’s report to the jobless is described as follows: “Pell then related how the Action |Committee and a Committee otf Twelve had handled the Coleman eviction case. While the Action |Committee sped to the Coleman home to reet City Marshal Otto F. | Baumras, the Committee of Twelve From the South we received the | Ohio, | It is almost impossible _ HALT EVICTION their sttide for socialist competi- tion.” . | hunted up the landlord to see if he | was a human bein5. TTING OUT A | “*We didn’t have so many mem- GOOD PAPER” “As an old-time Communist of 40_ years ago-and radical writer, allow | me-to compliment you on getting out a good parr. It's fine. Owing te the ‘circumstances, cannot do any bet- ter at pre! 12. month: Brooke, Va. ubscription.”—A. S. L., rARTY MEMBER ANSWERS FISH “Enelosed you will find $12 for four months of the Daily Worker,” writes B,L. Ithaca, N.Y. “At pres- ent moment, when the Party is being attacked by Fish and the whole capitalist machinery, the best” answer of the Party is to increase the circulation of its organ among the workers. If we had more money. we'd send it.” IAILY “SURE \ CLEAN SHEET” » “Enclosed.is one dollar as part pay- ient for Daily Worker sent me. Will ssure you, that every copy gets in ae hands of some prospectivee work-, when I have read same. Out ot’ ork for Some time. -Long live the aily Worker, sure a clean sheet.”— arry P. Hunzeker, Toledo, Ohio. 1X-SOLDIERS erty DAILY” 2rom J..K., Kansas, we received the ‘wing note: “Allthé ex-soldiers need is to ed the Datly Worker. World War ats ows ere dewn on the wov a * wat et them te ve and” ae would be just as mili- Pama re ves So fine non pone 4, OT we cre marches to get food. Soon, t, but send me a bill for | | bers as we miht when we went to | Coleman's, said Pell. ‘A lot of our men were trying to get their money re shoveling snow for the city and state, rhe Action Committee, from Pell’s description, spent several hurrying between the Coleman home and headquarters waiting for the marsha} to show up. Meanwhile, Pell | bumped into Barney Levitan, the landlord of the Coleman dwelling. Pell described hi mas ‘a typical land- | lord, with fur-lined coat.’ “He wanted to know what I would do if I were he,’ shouted Pell. ‘Com- paring himself to me—can you imag- ine that? Then he wanted the Cole- man’s to move into a furnished room. That’s what all the landlords want. Break up homes, move into rooms.’ “Pell said Levitan told him ‘it’s in the hands of the law.’ “Yes, shouted Pell, ‘the landlord bended knee for our rights. We de- mand them and when we go to him he tells us he can do nothing be- cause it’s in the hands of the law. “*¥et we tell our children to re- spect the laws. We tell them to be- lieve in the Constitution. What do you think about that, my friends? Telling our children to respect the laws—such laws.’ “At the Coleman home the marshal finally arrived and Pell said he staged a street meeting. After five or six visits to the scene earlier the Action Committee missed the arrival of the marshal. When the committee got there about halt the Coleman belong- | Pell | |ings were on the sidewalk. | jumped on one of the Coleman chairs. “Hundreds of workers came. Shop weetores nodded approval from win- fows neovhy, I talked. I pointed jout ot was a disgrace and a shame hours | and the law. We don't plead on | (This is the 18th of a series of articles on A. F. of L. and political corrup- tion in New Jersey.) ete) 6 By ALLEN JOHNSON A few months ago there occurred the following series of incidents in the great, city of Newark, N. J., one of the cities controlled almost en- tirely by J. P. Morgan’s Public Ser- vice Co. Two half-starved Negro girls 12 years old were arrested for prostitu- tion. Fifteen thousand of the 70,000 job- | less workers in the city demonstrated | near the City Hall for immediate un- employment relief. The demonstra- tion was attacked by police. A Federal survey reported that there were 6,000 children, many of them under 12 years of age, working in industry in the city. A member of an A. F. of L. union was found shot near the headquar- ters of his local. It was discovered later that he had attacked the po- licies of the local’s business agent at a meeting less than an hour before he was found shot. Al Capone arrived in Newark, where | he owns four stills, to make peace | between gunmen and A. F. of L. of- | ficials who were warring over gam- bling concessions. Capone arranged }a dinner for the two groups at which | police heads, city officials and an ex- | cnogressmen were present. The city’s answer to the events described above took the following | form. A city ordinance was passed | which decreed that no child under 12 could start work before 5:30 a.m. nor after 9:00 p.m. A copy of the bill can be obtained at the Newark City Hall, which is near the headquarters of the Catholic Bishop of the city. “No Objection to Child Labor” Mayor Congleton could see no ob- | jection to child labor. “Work never | harmed children,” he said, “It keeps them off the streets.” The demands of the unemployed were answered by the issuing of com- | bined revolvers, blackjacks and tear- | gas guns to the members of the po-| lice force. The overseer of the poor | was also ordered to draw up ques- | tionaires that were to be filled by) | the aged and the sick who asked for | relief. The questionaire had 167 ques- | | tions which had to be answered to} the satisfaction of the overseer he- |Phila. Worcorrs to Meet Sunday, Jan. 25 | Will Hear L.U. Editor) PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—The first meeting to. organize the worker corre- spondents of this city will be held Sunday, Jan. 25, at the Marine Work- ers’ Industrial Union Hall, 213 Lom- bard St., at 3:30 p. m. | N. Honig, editor of Labor Unity and former editor of worker corre- | spondence of the Daily Worker, will | be present and speak on the role of | worker correspondence. All those who dt one time or an- | other have written letters to the Daily | | Worker or Labor Unity are urged to be present at this meeting to build the Worcorrs movement, to put this family on the street. | Then the police came—the law again. | We were ordered to move on and be- cause one comrade sassed back a cop | he was arrested. But the Action | Committee got action and the mar- shal’s men put the Coleman furni- ture back in the Coleman flat. | “So lon as we stick together, no- bedy will be put on the street,’ Pell | told the roup. ‘This item of eviction | is just one point. This proves that | we can force our demands, “When the poor women of the city hear about this case they will be a | | little less terror-stricken lest they be | put out. The men will have a little |more respect. And they will know, | now, where to spit when they talk to | a landlord.” John G. Soderberg, speaking for | | the International Labor Defense, took | the floor and assured the workers | that though he personally was con- | tinuing his speaking tour Sunday, the | organization he had helped to build | up would be back of the jobless at | every stage of the game. Soderberg was described by the Albany Evening News as “powerful” and “dynamic.” | ‘The Council of the Unemployed | here. proposes to conduct a. mass | | meeting on unemployment t.2p. m., | Sunday, at the Regent Theatre, South | | Pearl St., and to demonstrate for re- lief at the conference of governors here, Demands. They will continue to fight all evic- tions, The jobless here demand: 1—Unemployment relief of $15 each week must be paid to all single workers. beginning with the first week of unemployment. | 2.—$25 each week to all unemployed workers who are married, with $5 weekly additional for each child or dependent. 3.—No evictions of unemployed workers for non-payment of rent, |, 4—Free light, gas and coal during | entire period of unemployment. 5.—All vacant and unused houses ‘and armories to be opened to the homeless unemployed, as sleeping and | resting quarters, 6.—Do away with “shark” employ~ | ment agencies and establish free city | employment agencies A. F. of L. Worker Killed for Not Paying Dues; A. F. of. L. Leader Collects Vice Graft for Police fere he would give up a loaf of bread. The gunmen who declared a truce at the dinner arranged by Capone soon ended their armistice and one of them was shot. The director of police divided this gunmen’s gambling | business with the most prominent A. F.. of L. official in the city. a 8 Many of the 70,000 unemployed in Newark live in the third ward of the city, in houses with few windows, and supplied with neither gas nor elec- tricity. The rent is high even when the workers have jobs. Since so mony do not, thousands of workers’ | families are constantly moving from one delapidated house to another, trying to keep a day ahead of the eviction notices but not always suc- cessfully. Since the workingclass districts in this great, modern city were a detri- ment to the interests of the real es- tate dealers who tried to get the rich to live in the city instead of mov- ing to the suburbs, the Prudential In- surance Co. a corporation whose yearly profits reach into the millions, | announced an immense housing pro- ject “in the interest of humanity.” “Humanitarian” Profits. The Prudential offered to build homes for 7,000 workers at a rental) lower than that charged by the land- | lords of the city. The press, charity organizations and city officials com- bined to shower praise on the Pru- dential for its unselfish interest in the workers of the city. The Pru- dential bought $1,700,000 worth of | rickety houses when it suddenly an- nounced that it owed a duty to its stockholders as well as to the “public” and would be forced to make 6 per| | cent on its investments in the hous- ing project, In order that the company could make this “6 per cent,” it said, the city would have to buy some of the property that the company had al-| ready bought. The company suggested | that the city build a park with the) property it thus obtained. After a conference beween ciyt officials and | the company’s executives, the city | agreed to buy a tiny portion of the! Prudentia]’s houses for $1,200,000, al-| though the Prudential had bought all its houses for $1,700,000. Nane of the new houses in this building project have yet been built, ‘MR. SUMARACKI “LOVES WORKERS” Big Real Estate Faker, Cheats Workers DETROIT, Mich—f!n the special senatorial elections in Detroit, which | will take place Monday, Jan. 26, a gentleman by the name of Sumaracki is running on the republican party | ticket. But let us see who is this | gentleman, and by what ways did he get rich and become a “respectful” citizen, This man’s occupation is a real estate business, In 1922 he bought on credit a farm which he had sub- divided into lots, and he hired scores of agents and began selling these lots, to the workers, telling them about the good opportunities and how it would be possible for them to get rich by selling these lots in a | few years and from then for double amount that they had paid for it. Or if build houses and become in- dependent, or even by renting them | to others and get the income from | collecting rents. Those lots had been sold for as high as $1,800. About | 3,000 lots have been sold to these | | workers. Today these lots can be bought for $600 and less. These cheatel workers paid to the treasury _of- this gentleman over two million dollars. In other words he made al- ready about one million dollars, and still they have ot pay to him about | one million more. Mr. Sumaracki paid for the farm | and spent for the scores of agents | not more than one million dollar: |In other words he made already | | about one million dollars, wresting this huge hum oyt of the workers, | by cheating them and yet many of | them are unable to pay the payment, | are losing thier lots back to Mr. Sumaracki, who makes foreclosures against those who are unable to pay. This is the profession of this “re- spectful” citizen who dares now to come out and make appeals to the workers to elect him to the State Senate. The duty of the Communist Party and the workers is to disregard such a gentleman, and instead of sending them to the State legislature to put them in some nice place so that they can be isolated aeanet from the work- Some of the workers in the city, led by members of the Communist Party, recently assembled before the| | home fo a fellow worker who was| | being evicted. The more outspoken | of the workers were arrested and jailed for three months. When the} judge delivered the sentence he said, “I believe in free speech, but not in workingclass districts.” The news- papers did not publish the judge's opinions on free speech, but several hundred workers in the court room heard them and remembered them. | The city is governed by a coalition} { of three republicans and two demo- jerats. In times past, bickerings of | | the two parties over graft were some: | times overheard by workers. Hoping} to prevent this, the democrats and/ republicans agreed to divide the city’ ’s| jobs and graft evenly. The party} that was given only two places on the city’s board of five commission- | ers was entitled to name the com-| missioner of public safety, who had control over the police and fire de- partments. Both of these depart- ments are a source fo much graft and his friends. Police Chief Collects from All. The present commissioner is a man | named Egan. He has appointed sev- eral men to do nothing but make ses, gambling establishments and | Many workers in Newark believe that | the ‘two little Negro girls were ar- rested for prostitution because they were too poor to pay graft. | Commissioner Egan’s chief graft collector is a man named Bill Lyons, a high official in the American Fed- eration of Labor. Lyons is president of the Essex County Building Trades. | Lyons keeps on good terms with the | commissioner because it is often ne- cessary for him to have militant | workers shot or beaten and the police help him do this whenever it is ne- cessary. Not so long ago Lyons shot a work- er named O'Hagan in front of the union headquarters because O'Hagan had said that Lyons was a labor faker and a grafter. A young cop who chased an auto that was speeding) away from the scene of the shooting jers and be prevented from robbing the workers. The Communist Party puts up as its candidate Comrade Philip Ray- mond, who is a worker himself and who is running on a platform which demands not only unemployment in- surance, no evictions, no foreclosures | on the workers’ property, free rides | on street cars for unemployed work- jets, free food for school children, free gas and light for unemployed, but also the platform tells the work- ers to organize and fight to abolish the law and regulations which allows such as Mr. Sumeracki to rob the workers. | Gottlieb’s Hardware 119 THIRD AVENUR Near 14th St, All kinds of ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Cutlery Our Specialty Daily Worker to the commissioner of public safety} | test, A. F. of L. strong-arm men beat | union workers from protesting. the rounds of all the disorderly hou-| speakeasies and collect graft for him.! 2.—The creation of a National Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill The Workers Unemployment Insurance Bill proposes: 1—Unemployment insurance at the rate of $25 = week for each memployed worker and $5 additional for each dependant, | Unemployment Insurance Fund to be raised by: (a) using all war funds for unemployment tmsurance; finally caught up to it and took the| driver to police headquarters. | The deputy chief of police ap-| ed him was punished. Three AF. of L. Lyons is one of the three big A.| F. of L. officials in Newark, The} other two are Joe Fay, business agent of local 820, union of steam and op- erating engineers, and Tom Sherlock, | business agent of the iron workers’ |local. All three of them are allies | of Ted Brandle, of Jersey City, whom | the newspapers call “the banker and labor leader” and who is on the pay-| roll of the corporations who employ | | ‘ions, “Leaders” diary organizations, demand that bill. nature drive. the collection of signatures. Committee for Unemployment L York City, for signature blanks. (b) a levy on all capital and property in excess of $25,000; (c) @ tax on all incomes of $5,000 a year. 3.—That. the Unemployment Insurance Fund thas created shall peared surprised when he recognized | be administered by a Workers’ Commission elected solely by employed Lyons. Nothing ever happened to|}| and unemployed workers. | Lyons but the policeman who arrest- | All who sign the lists now being circulated by the Workers Na- tional Campaign Committee for Unemployment Insurance or ita sub- congress shall pass the bill, in Ite final form as (possibly) amended by the mass meetings which ratify it and elect the mass delegation to present it to congress, or as (pos~ sibly) amended by the mass delegation Itself. bill will follow the general line of the three points printed above. . The final form of the All workers are called upon to help collect signatures for this Get the co-operation of all workers you know in the sfg- All organizations should activize their members in Write to the National Campaign msurance, 2 West 15th St. New the workers in his unions. Lyons, Fay and Sherlock use the same tactics on the workers of New- ark that Brandle uses on the workers of Jersey City. They all help the bosses cut wages, introduce speed up| stems and reduce forces. When the} DETROIT, Mich—The local street bosses refuse to pay them graft, they | ‘ «, | railways, or the D. S. R., as they call We cave ‘workers, out on strike. this institution, is one of the largest When the workers in the unions pro-| sources for the politicians to rob the | workers. To pay out to the politici- them and shoot them. The police al- | ans, as they say “for their good work ways protect the gunmen used by| Gone during the elections”. ‘This Lyons, y and Sherlock to keep the | system is owned by the city and has operated in such a way that it has The dues that are collected from| brought a deficit of $213,586.22. the members of the union, whether] Sometimes there is a “fight” be- they w not, are stolen by Lyons, | tween the politicians and because of Sherlock and Brandle. No excuses|this the workers are able to gather little facts of the “inside”. The other day Mr. Waldon, a member of the} | Street Railway Commission came out |with a “criticism” and states openly to Elizabeth, a town adjoining New-| that it is necessary “to reduce the ark, on a construction job. This system’s operating cost eliminat- worker hadn't been sent out to a job jing those on the payroll, who have in months and he overjoyed at) been named strictly because of the hig good luck. On t ond day on | part they have played in past. polit- | the job, the busine ent from his |ical campaigns.” local came around to collect his dues. | The capitalist press comes out and The worker said he had no money; |says “for years municipally owned he hadn't had a job for months and | street railways system has been the his wife was sick for lack of food. | political dumping grounds, and this The business agent said he didn’t give | practice reached its peak during the are accepted by A. F. of L. officials when workers can't pay dues. Not so long ago a worker was sent | ,| 8 damn if all his grandmothers were | Bowles administration, when payroll what he wanted was dues, not | | expansion approximated $1,000 per excuses. The worker said he couldn't | day.” “The list of those to be drop-|8t give him any and that’s all there was! ped was eagerly awaited at the city to it. The business agent said, “Oh,|hall Monday afternoon, as political is it,”? picked up a piece of two-inch | observers were anxious to learn pipe and bashed in the head of the | whether it included recent appointees worker, who died instantly. of Mayor Frank Murphy, or whether quin 4-7712 Office Hours: |) 9A. M.S P. and Sun. by Appointment Dr. J. JOSEPHSON. | SURGEON DENTIST f SECOND AVENUE Near 14th Street, New York City U.S. CAMP AND HOTEL TORDAIGET UROLEPARIAN VACATION PLAC OPEN THE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $17 A WEEK CAMP NSITGEDAIGET. BEACON, HONE 731 NY DETROIT STREET RAILWAYS ARE POLITICAL DUMPING GROUND |the reductions would apply only to {those added by previous administra- tions. Admitting that the “munici- |pally owned street railways has been the political dumping grounds” yet they say that in the future it will be kept only for others then Mr. Bowles politicians, Frank Murphy the present mayor who is eagerly supported by the state |government, and Governor Brucker, |and also by the Detroit Federation of Labor, is the “boss” and will have the jlast word in this matter. The re- | publican administration in the state of Michigan is robbing the workers whenever they have a chance and Sumaracki the republican candidate |for state senator in second district, where a special election will take place Monday, Jan. 26, is not going to be any better. The democrats who jare fighting against the republicans are fighting only for the spoils of workers which at present the repub- licans are getting. Only the Communuist Party is put- ting on a real fight for the defense of the workers, and is exposing such rafters. If the workers want to stop this robbery of the republican and demo- cratic lackeys of thé bosses they will vote for Philip Raymond on the Workers Party Ticket. Last Winter Sailing to S.R. Winter in the Soviet Union has added charms— Clubs, Theatres, Factories in full swing. SPECIAL WINTER-PRICE: $260 INCLUDING FIVE DAYS IN MOSCOW & LENINGRAD IN CARE OF THE WORLD TOURISTS Seltingy Feb, 17th, Via the Europa Ask for particulars: | WORLD TOURISTS, Inc. 175 FIFTH AVE., (Algonquin 6656) NEW YORK, N, Y. Readers! HELP BUILD MASS CIRCULATION FOR YOUR PAPER! VOLUNTEER |This Sunday, 10 A. M. To visit workers’ homes to get them to read our paper, to get signatures for the Unemployment Insurance Bill—To acquaint the workers with our movement and to mobilize them for struggle! VOLUNTEER AT ONE OF THE FOLLOWING STATIONS: DOWTOWN—27 East 4th St.—64 West 22nd Street HARLEM—308 Lenox Avenue—BRONX 509 Prospect Avenue BROOKLYN: Williamsburgh, 61 Graham Avenue—136 Fifteenth Street Brownsville, 105 Thatford Avenue—962 Sutter Avenue. BRONX—1472 Boston Road—2700 Bronx Park East—Auditorium Enclosed find EMERGENCY FUND NAME ADDRESS )CUT THIS OUT AND MAIL IMMEDIATELY TO THE DAILY WORKER, 50 E. 1TH ST. NE RED SHOCK TROOP $30,000 DAILY WOR” "2 EMERGENCY FUND We pledge to build RED SHOCK “TROOPS for ‘the successful completion of t the $30, 000 DAILY ¥ Ww Ww YORK ‘CITY For nice Ce Re Lhe Ree A cents. ORKER TF Workers School Spring Term | LAST WEEK OF REGISTRATION}| Courses for Workers: Fundamentals of Communism, Organization Marxism-Leninism Trade Union Strategy English, Russian, Esperanto, etc. New Courses This Term: Workers Correspondence Social Insurance Negro Work Revolutionary Literature,’ History of the C, I. New Class Rooms, Longer Sessions, Reduced Fees, Special Scholarship to Party and League Units, Trade Unions and Mass Organizations, Longer Sessions, New Class: Rooms, etc. When you are in New York don't miss the chance to attend the Workers Schcol.—Register Now!—This is the last week of registration! SUND AY FORUM conducted by the Workers School EVERY SUNDAY NIGHT. 35 EAST 12th STREET, Second Floor. Tel. Algonquin 1199 This Sunday, Jan. 25, 8 p.m. Workers School Auditorium, 35 E. 12th St., IRVING POTASH, Secretary of the N.T.W.LU. will speak on “SIGNIFICANCE OF THE COMING DRESS STRIKE” Questions—Discussion Don’t fail to come. ADMISSION ONLY 25¢ FOR BETTER VALUES IN MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S Suits and Overceats 20 to PARK CLOTHING CO. 93 Avenue A, Cor. Sixth St. 2

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