The Daily Worker Newspaper, January 31, 1931, Page 5

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DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURD. x; TA LL OUT FEB: 10 IN MASS DEMONSTRATION TO BACK UP INSURANCE BILL DELEGATION TO CON GRESS HT FOR JOBLESS INSURANCE BILL ON CONGRESS; INTERNATIONAL FIGHTING DAY IS FEB. 25! -parts of Illinois and Indiana. The latest reports received from the | southern part of the state of Indiana show @ mass meeting of 200 miners was héjd in Bicknell, They unani- mously voted to endorse the Workers Social Insurgnce Bill, signed indi- | vidually and elected eight delegates | te the’ Indiana State Conference. The ¢onference will be held in Indianapolis on Feb. 1. At the min- | mions and leagues of the T. U.) ¢.o-weeting in Bicknell, the Lewis | ge bterei an ihc |aeents mobilized 150 miners in an| New Orieang In’ Line, ttempt to break up the meeting. ’ centers Tallhig to call toln uP i When the miners came and heard strate Feb. 10 includes espe*}-yeakers present the Bill for Unem- New Orleans. Several meet='| \ioveq msurance, they enthustasti- have been held, each larger | caty’siipported it, signed individually | the one before, in which @/21q donated fer the expense of the nent part was taken by Na- “ delegation. | Pibin si on Me cael Roo ., In-Clay City, Ind., a small fanning | : | 1ecting, held Jan. 25, voted to town,.@ mass meeting was held on | istrate at the city hall Jan. 10, ) present demands to the mayor-(: 1. a week relief for each job- cker and $2 more for eath nt; no evictions, free gas; lectricity and fuel for the’ ‘lloyed and free carfare and for their school children; rent ions for part-time workers, g of public buildings for the , abolition of vagrancy laws. mmittee was elected to present: ‘mands to the mayor, and ‘a* ‘e to Washington is _ being: NTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) or speed-up in the factories. rose who still work. Build Councils! 2 preparations for both na- nd international demonstra> eb. 10 and Feb. 25, the or ition of the jobless into coun: nd the organization of those orking into the fighting indus- the, street with about 500 farmers | present, who enthusiastically en- | dorsed the Unemployment Insurance | Bill, and then elected delegates to the State Conference in Indianapolis. | The, few copies*of the Daily Worker | on hand, were grabbed like hot cakes, | \ ,anid_the workers were actualjy fight- ing over them. Mass meetings have also been arranged in Oakland City, Clinton, ‘Terra Haute, Anderson, Muncie, and other mining and farm- ing towns in the state of Indiana, | .. Action in Indianapolis. f |» In:AIndianapolis the masses of | Miners Desert Lewis. . =..workers are militantly fighting SAGO, Hi., Jan. 30.—The cam-'|#gainst evictions, and for immediate to endorfe the Workers ‘Social relief in the city, and for the support | nee Bill, to be- presented in’j of the;bill to such an extent that | SS on February 10 by the na-:| bi Jocal capitalists are raising a red delegation, has spread in all,se: | will demand that the state legisla- | carfare, light and fuel and water, for TO BE FORCED Part of the employers’ attempt to rally all reactionary elements against the jobless is to publish a miniature Daily Worker consisting of four ar- ticles selected from the Saturday, Jan. 10 edition of the real Daily) Worker. The appeal to business men is added: “These reproductions should ‘convince the most skeptical persons that Communists. are active in Indianapolis.” ‘The Indianapolis state conference on unemployment will be held Feb. 1 at Odd Fellows Hall, 2441-2 West Vermont St., starting at 3\p.m, The delegates now being eleeted from all parts of the state will lead a hunger march on the state capitol Feb, 2 to present demands that the state pay $15 a week to each jobless work- er and $3 more for each dependent, The demonstrators and conference ture pass a law for free rent, free the jobless, and abolishing taxes on unemployed workers’ property and | |property of those working part-' Bea The march will start at 10 a, m. Feb. 2. Organize In McKeesport. McKEESPORT, Pa., Jan. 30.—An unemployment council has been set up here, and those doing the best work on it are Negroes, When this counfil heard of a pro- posed eviction of a Negro family on Locust St., the council stated publicly that it would fight the eviction, and so far the sheriff hasn't dared to try it, The council meets every Satur- d ayat 2 p. m, at Workers Center, 1134 Locust = (LER SPEAKS = R WALL STREET: logy and Arrest. ay things’ in spite of obstacles and) e Stage Play “| wrecking schemes the capitalist na- +tions throw in*its path? Now then, not all this being done under Sov- jet rule in the USSR under leader- | ‘ship-of. the Communist Party? Why Go.you then call the Communists “dishonest. and bad”, as you did in anes ED FROM PAGE ONE) | TINUED. FROM PAGE ONE) “What is one life In the af- a state?” is Was suppOs' ify American people and show. “SOCIALIST PARTY SERVES BOSSES; => IS NOT A PLACE FOR WORKERS” |McDonald done toward destroying what they were before? What has) capitalism and the setting up of so- cialism? Nothing that I can see. Compare Russia with Great Britain, | what a glaring difference with every- | thing in favor of the Communist | Party and the USSR and next to nothing in favor of your.kind of so- to the timely suggestion of using the Daily Worker in building up hunger marches and demonstrations, Phila- | delphia. sent a story in for the hun- | ger march last Thursday, ordered received them right on time for the demonstration. That's rallying the workers and boosting your circula- tion at the same time! other districts to follow this example. SO. BEND IN LINE FOR RED NEWS CLUB J. B. an engrgetic Daily Worker seller of South Bend, Ind., gives us an inkling of the possibility of a Red Builders News Club. He writes: “I have never seen people buy the Daily Worker as much as they do now, I am organizing about 5 or more boys together to sell them with me. I am expecting to get as there are more and more people buying it.” are looking for an increase as soon as he rounds up his group. SPOKANE, WASH, TACKLES EX-SUBS Frank Sellman: “Comrade L. and f are going to see all those whose subs expire and see if we can persuade them to take the Worker for another month, As you know, searce and it is very hard for some of those people to spare more than 50 cents at a time.” SPECIAL OFFER WITH LABOR UNITY Daily Worker readers who buy Labor Unity, the weekly organ of thé Trade Union Unity League, for more news in factory and union, now have the use of a special offer. Ordinarily, a 3-montk subscription to the Daily Worker is $1.50. In the “combination offer, you reeeive | both the Daily and Labor Unity for the same price. The same ap- plies to the 2-month subscription for $1, for which you obtain Labor Unity, along with the Daily. Philadelphia was quick to respond 2,000 extra copies for. that day, and | We expect | about 200 customers from the start | J. B. now gets-100 copies daily. We | money is | 1M Going To HELP re (toy, THE UNITED STATES / NITit THE SeeO) Tar OME INV THose fC Bag fe a\ 2 &s Dah. nowr CmnounisT SEED OF THOUGHT L 7 Zura PACKAGE OF Danae €2 SEED AND SYAR: 1, PANTING BUNDLE RAISED IN MILWAUKEE Philadelphia Orders 2,000 EZ NTE RNATIONAL ExtraCopies for Hunger March; Other Districts Should -Follow | | Militarists in 10 P. C. Waze Cut je British China Prepare Workers Is Plan of Labor Gov't tor New Wars, The bubble of -“peace” so much boasted about by the Nanking Gov- ernment since last October is again | broken, | shows. recent news from China The growing war clouds over | various regions not only reflect the increasing ‘contradictions among the bourgeois - militarist | | semi-feudal | groups and the imperialists, but also |prove that only the peasants can bring about the unification of China. According to Tuesday's New Times, eight Shansi gene. jing Shang Chen and others |resent the interests of the revolutionary {struggle of the Chinese workers and} ay real York includ- ho rep- north- | western landlords and bourgeoisie and are the tools of British imperialism, | have determined together,” “to stand or falk resisting the order of the Neil O'Brien, section Daily Worker | Nanking Government to disband their Tepresentative in Milwaukee, Wis., writes: % “Please change the address of | the bundle order now going to C, M. Also increase this bundle from | 10 to 15 copies per day.” We suggest that Milwaukee send some lively Worker Correspondence armies, | their forces should be “reorganized,” Instead, they intensify their | preparations for the coming struggle | with Chiang Kai-shek and other| | Nanking militarists by declaring that | | that is, increased, and that disband- | ment would merely be creating “bri- | gands and Communists” who have} Parliament on Tuesday the or special articles on demonstrations been very active in distributing leaf- and hunger marches in the district, | order extra bundles of the issue inj lets in Taiyuanfu, | Thus, the order of “disbandment” which the stories appear, and in this} of the Nanking Government, which | SEND MORE PHOTOS, | REPORTS TO “DAILY” | Where are pictures of Red Build- ers News Club members? We not } only want to hear about them, but | we want to see what they look like. Snapshots of individual ones, or a group right on the street are wel- come. These will be used in our circulation column. We are without sufficient reports from both | districts and News Clubs. This is an ,important item in the 60,000 circu- still | all Street was following the course in demanding certain ’| 9 ons from the fascist chief. | 1, of course, in line with his tions, did not attack thé le murder of workers by: the ni regime. On this sort of. cialism. your ‘éditorialof December 4th, or as in your cartoon strip, Jane Arden, “Islam SHode”, dangerous Red, un- derworld criminal and gangster?” » ‘What did the Reds do in Russia that:was so “dishonest, bad and crim- and the USSR! ism and all of its tools! From a Communist that believes in | real socialism and will accept no imi- tations. y American imperialism is 190'/4N8!", are not they destroying cap- Albert Hardrath, R. 1, t in accord with Mussolini, - ‘|#talism and Danie vere eae Unity, Wis. ytini has> “been « “demanding: thatcwhat you socialists wan of es c= dare you to print letter im ‘here also, or don’t you believe in so- rom Wall Street in payment ciqtism anymore? Have you become ling by: the policies erage the third party of the bosses, 1 oans have been refused, anditnet isthe case then quit beating ai has been balking, threat-| about the bush, drop your false face yar and alliances against the}snq come out openly for fascism and States and other leading im- capitalism. A man or party saying full in your paper “The Milwaukee Leader”. If you are honest and not yellow you will print it. to the best of your ability. In case you throw this letter in the» waste i powers. Butler's speech! one thing and doing another is a eae fiat eee ote ed to warn Mussolini of the | p:ynocrite and deserves the workers’ i ' { his ways. “The “apology” contempt. Is the clubbing and killing of thou- | sands of Hindus under the socialist |Premier Ramsey McDonald the kind of socialism you would like to see} (putzinto practice in the USA.? You ict is that the “court martial’! seem to love him, you gave him pages| 1 be used by the State De-+of space in your paper just a short| t to bring greater pressute| time ago; or don’t you think it hurts|~ against Mussolini by permit-|the indus as much when they are ee to ee ontbepatai clubbed or killed by socialists? How s demanding a public court- : i ig a pl about the workers in England itself, "The Haatoat Gnicle Bam ‘aimen pe to enlist “publie support” ir)aré* they any better off now than| Mussolini, in accordance} ——=—_______._-_._.m._jgree was further revealed in the wishes of the leading bank- Liberian slavery situation today with e United States. the objection of the State Depart- ment to a proposal for a thorough a ehee eae =i epee investigation of conditions in Liberia. narine who blurts out things)” The proposal was made in the thinking, the fact is just the League of Nations and is evidently P Butler is a tight-moutlied |” an attempt on the part of rival Bri- ho says just what he is told | tish imperialists to embarrass their his superiors want him to fellow imperialist robbers of the he Universal Service staff} a eo ident, interviewing Butler's Ever since the exposure of the officers quoted them as say- widespread enslavement of Liberian 3utler's speech: “He knows |" natives by the Firestone interests of is doing and thinks thtée| hall” was wrecked. Fifty were in- |e United States, with the aid and ‘ore he speaks!” ~}Jured!’* Police arrested ninety. support of native government tools ‘A collision -oce of -U. S. imperialism, Secretary titude of the State Depart-; urred ‘at. -® fascist | esimson has been throwing out a 1 the Hoover government to- | Meeting in’ Chemnitz when a hall ki bid d ‘i uitler Js elipwn tether tance wee meecmed. and scores were injured | "WOKS screen of rabid denunelations pieagibeede ech 3 the: Tanbi saatday ‘afternoon, of his native tools in a frantic effort she Magi rob Mas) ‘arrest |. ‘Collision with fascists and Reichs- |'® cover the role played by the Navy Department issued Adi. nner in Hahnheim, Hessen took| United States imperialists, including itled “In the United States |: : 3 Herbert Hoover, prior to his election Peacetime” in which Butler | Pisce vesterday Devise ectee | jas president of the United States, in Injured — includin; highly and is given official ae Masipeten |bringing about. the enslavement: of mn as a good tool of Amer: the Liberian natives. Stimson’s ahs? “ ‘At Spandau near Berlin a. pitched | vialism. His action in China, ‘battie’! between Reichsbanner and | | hypocrisy is now thoroughly exposed by the State Department |: Stimson, and the “arrest” er are the usual diplomatic to the threat against Mus- HALT CALLED ON on Liberia Slavery Workers, Fascists, Collide, Many Are | Hurt in the Fighting) (Cable by Inprecorr) | '” BERLIN.—Oollisions occurred yes- terday at Dresden between fascists and'workers. Six were seriously in- Jured, others were slightly injured. Police cleared the hall. A similar collision took place at a fascist’ meeting in Cassel when a 927-28 agail the Chines. |by the necessity facing him of op- “| fascists resulted in many casualties, oe revolution . js, “Police: separat oA th a combatants, posing a thorough investigation of Liberia conditions by which the U. 8. imperialists would be exposed as the real instigators of slavery in the United States colony of Liberia. imson’s denunciations of slavery iberia is all the more hypocriti- cal because of the existence of hun- dreds of thousands of Negro work- ers in the worst form of peonage and share-cropper slavery in the United States itself. same time, the action of ‘jalist powers bringing pres: Mussolini is shown by the of the Second Interna~: d the yellow Trade Union. nal of Amsterdam, protest~'| LONDON. ne “result of the cot- ‘tom-dispute ballot was 90,770 against, 44,990" for negotiations, showing the Tighting spirit of the workers. Goy- .ernment intervention is expected’ im~- meédiately. On Saturday, Clynes sug- st fascist terror. This res+| gested/a test period, working 8 looms ag passed not at the time} on agreed terms. satest terror of fascism buty {jo at the moment when the')socialists, to aid their imperialist mperialist powers are de- masters, time their protests against certain concessions from}fascism to coincide with their cam~- These concessions he ré-! paign. of propaganda against Mus- out substantial loans. ‘The 'solini. Elect delegates to N. Y. Confer- ence for Prot of Foreign Born, Feb. 8, at the Irving Plaza, | aiwethiige ie ee HIS OUT AND MAIL IMMEDIANELY TO THE DAILY WORKER, 50 E. 13th ST., NEW YORK CITY ‘RED SHOCK TROOPS f a to For tres $30,000 DAILY ‘WORKER EMERGENCY FUND nelosed fimd 6... 22. 4i, * dae to build RED Shee TR .ENCY FUN! HGP VAn ROOM 5) Woe Vee penkes 0d ors for the sitcbistalyebuipietion of the $30,000 DAILY WORKER Long live the Communist Party Down with capital- Contradict me if you can and defend yourself U.S. HYPOCRISY Stimson Backs Down WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 30.— | more day-to-day news on working class activity, take advantage of this offer! of one. RENO NEWS CLUB WANTS MORE MEMBERS FP. B., Daily Worker representative, is sending in regular reports on the Reno Red Builders News Club. They now concentrating on getting more unemployed workers to sell the Daily and earn their expenses at the same time. ADVICE FROM AN EX-SERVICEMAN J.D. of Philadelphia, Pa., an un- employed World War Veteran, writes suggesting that the govern- « ment cash the tombstone Bonus | Bill, and ends: “I call on all ex- servicemen to sell the Daily Work- | er, That is how I make a living.” | FINDS DAILY HONEST, | FEARLESS; SENDS $3 “Enclosed please find $3 check for | which please renew my subscription for six months to the only honest. and fearless advocate of working class interests in the U. S. A.” H. A. B., Chicago, Il. DISTRICT PAGES OF VALUE IN DRIVE Each district can boost its circula- tion overnight by “having a page once | a week with special district news. Workers will become more interested in the paper when they find a page filled with local news. Formerly a charge of $15 was made for this page, but now it is offered to the districts free provided they order 2,000 extra. copies of the special issue. Send short, rather than long articles in advance, select your day, and watch Get two papers for the price} already held ‘one meeting and are) Labor Unity readers who, want lation drive and should not be over- | looked. Send them in. Tell us what's | going on, them. GIVES $1 TOWARD WORKERS SUB FUND “I wish to thank the comrade | who thought this idea in -helping | those who are unable to continue | payments on subs. I bhepe many | comrades will respond to this fund.” A. Read. postscript, saying “Sorry, much,” but it means that some work- er who can’t afford the Daily Work- er will receive it for two months. We have many such subscriptions which will have to be dropped on account urge all workers who can afford to send their dollars to do so in order | to keep the Daily Worker in the | homes of class conscious, fighting | | workers. le | “SAGINAW PAINTED RED"; ORDERS 200 We want to broadcast | |to the verge of breakdown in their| of the Daily's financial crisis, and we | ; | has been used by | as a method of getting foreign loans, Chiang Kai-shek |and as propaganda, has been flatly turned down by rival Since it is | well Nanking Government militarists. known that the is essentially the tool of American imperialism, the situation clearly reflects the sharp- ened antagonism between British and American imperialists. This confli¢t is further manifested |Shoe-hung, Li Chung-Yen, etc., interests of the Kwangsi and British imperialism, have come peace negotiation with Nanking. In fact, the new alliance of the Kwang- si militarists, the so-called “left” of) | the Kwangsi clique, who represent the | landlords | wing of the Kuomintang, led by Wang} Ching-wei, with its militarists like Chang Fai-kei, the “Iron-side” gen- /eral and others, have come to terms | with the militarists in Kweichow, | Szechuan and Yunnan Provinces, also Government. Several towns have} |e occupied by the Szechuan gen- | | erals. Comrade Read enclosed $1 with a | tools of British imperialism, to open | it isn’t |the first gun against the Nanking | | All this ‘shows the rivalry aoe the various feudal-bourgeois-militar- |ist groups and their imperialist mas- ters, this time, mainly the British and American imperialists. Another mili- | tarist war will again break out before jong. | .C. W. W. is starting something in | | Saginaw, | lively it’s | Last week he wrote us, asking for 100 Dailies" every day to Saginaw. “This is a town of 75,000 population and I look for good results here.” Mich., lows “I am painting Saginaw red so increase my order at Saginaw from 100 daily to 200.” With C. W. Ws pep, he should have little trouble in getting unem- ployed workers and organizing a Red Builders News Club. We predict he'll double that bundle increase yet! Fight against police supervision. Protect the foreign born. Elect your circulation grow! \ delegates to N. Y. Conference, Feb. 8, at Irving Plaza. STRIKE SPREADS IN PHILIPPINES Cable reports from the Philippines to capitalist papers in New York | state that the strike movement in the islands is rapidly spreading. | More than 200 workers of the Stand- ard Oi] Co, went out on strike, when 30 of their fellow-workers were fired because they belonged to a militant union. The union leaders declared | they would call a strike in all the oil | plants, involving over 2,200 men, if the workers’fired were not reinstated. The report to the New York Times states: “A suggestion has been made that Communist influence is behind the movement and that there is a possibility such a strike would be the signal der @ general disturbance.” The 3,000 longshoremen at Iloilo, Panay Island, were reported back at work, but the report does not state whether they won their demands. ‘They undoubtedly did, as they were militant in their strike activities. Negotiations are under way for the ending of the strike of 600 long- shoremen among the sugar centrals of Occidental Negros Province, Ne- gros Islands. . All unions of Manila, at a united ‘Mass meeting Wednesday night, adopted a resolution commending the strike of Negros and Iloilo, ‘end ate |day in jail if a friend had not paid NO NICKEL—ARRE ‘TED NEW YORK.—Rose Calabrese, lagee 16, unemployed. was accused by i the B. M. T. detectives of putting a | slug instead ofa nickel in the turn- | stile. Magistrate David Hirshfield fined*her $1 and would have got a her fine. She had only 45 cents. ‘The Council of the Unemployed demands free carfare for the jobless. ADMIT EMPLOYMENT OFF 4 PER CENT MORE. ALBANY, N. Y.—The N. Y. State Department of Labor admits that employment decreased another 4 per cent in December. CAMP AND HOTEL NITGEDAIGET PROLETARIAN VACATE or’ PLACE N-TAE ENTIRE YEAR Beautiful Rooms Heated Modernly Equiped Sport and Cultural Activity Proletarian Atmosphere $17 A WEEK CAMP NITGEDAIGET, BEACON, N.Y. PHONY 30 suring the strikers moral and finan- cial support, and declared that not and is stepping so | hard to catch up with him. | Four days later he writes as fol- | ADELE CAFETERIA Cor. of Second Ave. and 7th St. New York City A Hell of a Good Time! AT THE NINTH ANNUAL DANCE Given by the 6; AT THE PARK PALACE 110th St., and 5th Ave. Cole Musie by Smith's ADMISSION 25 per cent to the Inte Red Banquet Under the Auspices of the Harlem Anti-Fascist Section 2011 83RD AVENUE (Bet 110-111 St.) Sunday February Ist, 1931 AT 2 P. M. —Good Food—Good Music— ADMISSION 75 CENTS Concert and Dance THIS SATURDAY, JAN, 31st at 8 p,m. Italian Workers Center 2011 THIRD AVENUE, HARLEM, NY Proceeds for the Daily Worker— Proletarian Evening one worker would act as a scab against the cee chs The Followers of the Trail Club | |SATURDAY EVE., Feb. 7, 1931! | Having ende ions to a standstill, spondent of the referring to this id that, “The govern- pursuing confidential in- as to the probsble results of a simultaneous reduction of wages an prices throughout industry.” Labor government and the MacDonald now puttin the plan o are now under way to cut over on the railre be are agreed that this wage cut MacDonald is deali sk id be put into effect. The action tile ow of Philip Snowden in taking the Icom s ritiative nizing the indus- is blow is clearly sig- of the union leaders Snowden, , v Donald are for the Exchequer, but the Herald-Tribune leading lent admits “it would be tails of t ble to put it through without cut. A United Press dispatch from agreement with the trade Lendon, adi Janu 26th, The proposal of a “reduc- “The tion was made in finan ’ is the bait that the | cial eric here tod t the are handing out so that the |r: reasury (headed by union leaders can aid the |den) had confid government in swinging the memorandum to the n- | wage cut ciers and indus We are told by the Herald-Tribune their attitude toward writer that the unions “might con- wage cut throughout Imagine, asking the bosses for a 10 per During a discussion in the sider it expedient to accept a national reduction of wages applying to all les and limited to 10 per cent if accompanied by a guaranty that attitude of the t wage cut! British prices would be brought down to a nt.” Jof wage-cutting came up. Vi | Graham, president of the Board of | Trade, replying to Kingsley Wood, a conservative member, re- |garding proposed unemployment | plans, said: “Important proposals under discussion in various trades, but the House will appreciate that to disclose similar exte: Sir up the profits of the bosses at the expense of the British working class, The talk about “reduction in prices” is the lever to aid the union mis- leaders to put it over. Against this attack, the Communist Party of Bri- | tairr is rallying the workers, pointing |the nature of these proposals would | out the meariing of the unity of the | prejudice the position of the num- | bosses and the “Labor” party against erous interests concerned and might | the workers, are in another form in southern China. | The-southern militarists, like Huang} Proletarian Support for Communist Press’ SOVIET COSTUME BALL TONIGHT JANUARY 31ST WORKERS CENTER 35 East 12th Street ADMISSION, 25 CENTS Arranged by Unit 2, Section 1; Downtown Young Communist League Proceeds for the DAILY WORKER and the YOUNG WORKER JAZZ BAND Closing Feb. Ist LAST WEEK OF SALE Men’s Overcoats Suits-Full Dress $ I Fy Cutaways-Tuxedoes 100° Gen. Camel Pile Coats Formerly Sold Up to $37.50 Our Tuxedoes are lor Made and lined with satin, They are equal to high-priced garments garments are from our 19 other the best silk and in value, These stores, which we are closing. Brandeis Clothes, Inc. 871 BROADWAY, CORNER 18TH STREET Our Only Store FALL TOPCOATS, formerly ‘5 $22.50 to $29.50 Open Every Evening Until 8:30-Saturday Until 10:30 And AN Day Sunday “Without reve practice.” When you are in New vo k don’t miss the chance to study at: Workers School Term st 12th ST.—Phone Algonquin 1199 Spring Social Insuranc Workers Cori Noxro Work: ... History of the Com Colonial Probl Communism, Union Strategy, Voliti Es Marxism- NEW CLASS ROOMS, REDUCED S. JSTRUCTORS, SPECIAL SCHOL. Ak Spevial six Te Bolshevik Reve afternom, 3 ty 4:30, School Auditor wary dist, single admission 20 cents, combination card for 6 lectures oaly 50 cents x ile at the School office... . Olgin every Saturday Friday night $2.00 Special 12 Iectures on Post W. £220 to 0:50, Sing conducted by the Workers School SUNDAY FORUM EVERY SUNDAY NIGHT. 35 EAST 12th STREET, Second Floor. Tel. Algonquin 1199 This Sunday Webruary Ist at 8 p. m.. at the School Auditorium A. B, MAGIL, Daily Worker Correspondent at Moscow will speak on “THE GREAT MOSCOW TRIAL” Come and hear the first-hand account of the greatest trial this Sunday Questions—Discussion Jacobson, eve 12 leeture Don’t fail to come. ADMISSION ONLY 25e

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