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od —— = Released Harlan Prisoners to Speak at Demonstrations Wed. Jesse Wakefield and Bill Duncan to Outline United Front Fight for Release of Class War Prisoners YORK. — Jessie London; vania and Sutter Ave., Brownsville. International Labor De-/8 p.m.; Grand St. Extension and Tense organizer in Harlan County,| Havemeyer St., Williamsburg, 8 p.m., Kentucky, who was recently released | Madison Square, 8 p.m,, to be pre- after spending six weeks in jail, and | ceded by about 15th St. corner meet- Bill Duncan, one of the Harlan min-/ ings in the neighborhood, at 7 p.m.; ers who faces a charge of criminal/and 138th St. and Cypress Avenue, EW Wakefield, ayndicalism, will be among the| where a mass meeting will be held Speakers at the six demonstrations | at 7 p.m., followed by a parade that | that will be held throughout New | will end with a demonstration at 7:45 | York City tomorrow (Wednesday) to| at Longwood and Westchester Aves. demand the release of Tom Mooney| Seven demonstrations will also be and Warren K, Billings, the Harlan | held in New Jersey: Elizabeth, Wed- prisoners, the Scottsboro boys, the|nesday; Jersey City, Friday; Newark, five Paterson textile workers, the Im- | Hoboken, Perth Amboy and New perial Valley, Centralia and all other | Brunswick, Saturday. class war prisoners. | Paterson workers will gather to- ‘The demonstrations, which are be-| morrow (Wednesday) night at 8 ing arranged by the New York Dis- | o'clock at an indeor Mooney-Harlan trict of the International Labor De-| meeting at Turn Hall. Pat Toohey, fense, will be held at the following | International Labor Defense organ- | points: Rutgers Square, 7 p.m.; 110/izer in California, will be the chief St. and Fifth Ave, 7 p.m.; Pennsyl- | speaker. Chamlee Says NAACP Tactics Menace S cottsboro Defense| Chief of Counsel Points Out That Parents and | Boys Have Chosen Mass Defense | __ DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, TU SDAY. SEPTEMBER 2 | THE ADVENTURES OF BILL WORKER IVE CoLtaPsed! Stay | PERFECTLY STILL. Don't Move Donk TRY To + GET UP oR You'Le UPser jG eee: ony BUT ab ZS Ve TUsT GurareDs You ARE Quiétey, UTIL T Can Gex uP AG AL? Move, Stet Where Fraction Meeting of Party-YCL Needle C. P. CANDIDATE IN FIGHT FOR Trade .Workers FOOD FOR IDS hice stan eee ich particular trade must positively at- tend. These metings will be of the Poli of 1.1, D \Calls on Paterson, Nu. greatest importance and no comrade | gs Pa otic ach | Workers to Rally | ™%% fail to be present. This ap- | CHATTANOOGA, Sept. —In | parents to decide the defense policy | 5 plies both to Party and ¥. ©. L. connection with the test maneu-/| and have done everything in their | members and admittance will be got- For Food Demands ver of the N. A. A. C. P. misleaders | power to disrupt the militant mass | who have announged that Clarence | defense initiated by the I. L, D. and} Darrow is to work for them on the| endorsed by both the parents and Scottsboro case, the Southern Dis-| their boys. General Chamlee's let- ten only on presentation of Party or League membership cords. Amalgamated Clothing Workers—| Thursday, Sept, 24, 8 p. m. sharp. PATERSON, N. J., Sept. 21—At an election campaign banquet of the Communist Party here, held last | retary of the United Front General trict of the International Labor De- fense has released fo rpublication a letter by General George W. Cham- jee. General Chamless is chief of counsel for the I. L. D. in its de- fense of the nine boys now facing legal lynching at the hands of the murderous landowners and capital- ists of Alabama. As I. L. D. attorney, Chamless has eontracts signed by the parents and the next of kin of the boys, all of | Whom are minors, giving him sole Cloakmakers—Thursday, Sept. 24, | | ter follows: | “If reports are correct that Mr. Clarence Darrow is te enter into the Scottsbore case, I weleome the | night, Walter Kolowski, Communist candidate for mayor of Paterson, made the following statement, scor- | |ing the Board of Education officials | for leaving their offices early Satur- 8 p. m. sharp (not Sept. 23). Dress Makers—Thursday, Sept. 24, | 8 p. m. sharp. fact. The entrance of Mr. Dar- | Millinery—Saturday, Sept. 26, 2 p.| row and the increasing support | day in order not to hear the demands | m. sharp. this case is receiving on the part |Of the strikers’ and unemployed) Fur Workers—Saturday, Sept. 26, of many preminent people shows | workers’ children for free milk and/9 p. m, sharp. food in school: that the fight in behalf of the | “The Board of Education officials Seottsbore boys put up by the In- | ternational Labor Defense and the | Stayed away from their offices or |- publicity connected therewith has | left early this morning, fearing that aroused the attention and support | the children of strikers and unem~- Miscellaneous Group—Saturday, 2 p. m. sharp, All the above meetings will be held on the 2nd floor of the Werkers Center, 35 East 12th Street. authority to act for the boys. The N. A. A. C. P. misleaders have per- | sistently denied the rights of the (conTINUED ON PAGE THREE) of wide sections of the working Wall St. Expects Steel Wage Cut to Net $7 000,000 Yr. Gain NEW YORK.—Matthew Woll, vice-|wage-cuts in England, wage-cuts president of the American Federa-| multiply in th eUnited States, The tion of Labor and acting president| current issue of the Wall Street of the strike-breaking National Civic | Journal observes with ‘satisfaction Federation, again attacked the job- | that the 10 per cent wage-cut in the less workers of America for demand- | steel industry will “be equivalent to ing unemployment insurance. Woll| about 85 cents a share on the 8,701,- spoke through the radio station | 371 shares of common stock” of the WOR. He characterized unemployed | U. S. Steel Corporation. By this insurance as “the dole” and expressed | wage-cut the owners of U. S, Steel his heartfelt sympathy with the ap-| make $7,500,000 a year. The Wall proval of the “draconian measures” | Street Journal then goes on to say: of cutting down insurance payments | “Anyone familiar with eonditions in in England and cutting wages in/the steel industry is drawn to the government services. | | conclusion that a reduction of 10 per Woll spoke feelingly against levy- | cent to 15 per cent in wages in in- ing more taxes on the rich merely | dicated,” to save the lives of the unemployed. The same paper quotes a speech “It would bankrupt any govern-| by Richard Whitney, president of the ment,” he said New York Stock Exchange, calling ‘While Woll thunders in favor of | for reduetion of wages “equally.” ‘Rubicon’—A British Seaman Crosses The Great Divide, Discovers USSR District Secretariat, | Ployed workers, represented on the | Communist Party. | delegation of Saturday morning, | would vigorously demand free milk | and at least one hot meal in school. “The Board of Education cannot evade the issue in this manner. It) will again be brought to them: The} demand of the starvfhg children of JERSEY HOLDS Paterson in order to be able to go TAG DAYS physieal hardship due to absolute is lack of food will come sharply before 'To wale. Fong them again. The Young Textile Pioneers and the National Textile | -——_— Workers’ Union and the Unemployed! NEWARK, N. J., Sept. 21.—There | | Council, will mobilize greater forces Will be Tag Days and house to house | |and appear before the Board of Edu- | COllections in New Jersey on Satur- cation to make these demands. Five day and Sunday, Sept. 26 and 27, to thousand workers in aPterson signed |Support the Communist Party Elec- | their names to a petition demanding ‘ion Campaign Fund in N. J, This | free food for children of strikers and| Year the Communist Party has | unemployed in the schools, pee 50 rican oe ere in , A |.N. J, running for Couneilmen, Mayor, “The Communist Party condemns the various candidates je the respec- Assembly, Freeholder in various parts | tive parties for not taking into con-|0f the state and for oS | sideration the needs of these stary-| . = pial tf |ing workers’ children, ‘The Commu- |? the election campaign, funds will) ve needed and al readers of! e | nist Party points out that these can- . | didates do not do this because they | Poly Worker, members of Peale jare candidates for the bosses and Gonos 7. es ©. Branchesndia genet eee sectapne | Branches, etc. are urged to partici- | ge ee tess rae isan in the Tag Day and aieati Hectic in thei ive | comes forward fighting for these de- | ye ee ae er ope ; mands of the Young Textile Pioneers! The Tag Days and house-to-house | and calls upon the workers of Pater- | collections will be held in the follow- son not only to yote for the worker | ing cities, and volunteers are to re- candidates of the Communist Party, | port 19 a. m. Saturday and Sunday for “Don't chum up with these people, Bill,” says the fatherly fat old im- perialist lumber buyer to Bill Parker, British seaman, who has a tem- porary job as the buyer's assistant. "They are going through the lumber mill region of the northern part of the Soviet Union, and Bill fails to take his advice. The reasons why he breaks with imperialism, “crosses the TUESDAY Lp, Will hold 7th St. and Ave. A, at workers are invited Steve Katoyis Br. an open air meeting on 8 pm, All WEDNESDAY Workers Ex-Servicemen’s Le: will hold an open-air meetin Sth Ave. and 26th St, Members urged to have a real turnout and pu it over big! | e t ee, WESL Open Forum. : The Workers Ex-Servicemen’s eague has opened a series of open Fenins the firet of which was held at 2:00 p. m., at which E. Levin spoke on the “Bonus.” The next open forum will be held at 79 H. 10th St, ae ae Mooney-Harlan Def. Demonstration Will be held in Brownsville, Sep- tember 23, at 8 p.m. at the following points: At Saratoga and Pitkin Aves. at Herxel St. and Pitkin; Hinsdale and Sutter Aves.; Rockaway and Du- Pitkin mont Aves.; Bristol St. and Ave.; Stone and Pitkin Aves. The central rally of the night will be Penn, and Sutter Aves ‘All members of the Bronx Inter- national Workers Club are called upon to participate in the Bronx De- monstration for freedom of cl wag prisoners at 138th St. and Cy- prefs Ave, at 6:30 p.m. Friends of the Soviet Union, Went Bronx Br. Will hear Pauline fier experiences in the Soviet Union at Paradise Manor, 11 West Mt. Eden Ave., Bronx, N.Y. All workers invited Ce OG | IL D, Alfred Levy Br. All comrades are asked to attend the Brownsville demonstration at Penn, and Sutter Aves. Aaa Ie hha Medical Workers Industrial League Will have a very important meet- ing September 28 at 108 E. 14th 8t,, in Room 202. All members must at- tend without fail. Bring money for Picnic tickets and ~ membership boo! Other medical workers are urged to attend, ® Rogers tell of | 2 but to stand ready for the next call Rubicon,” is the main part of the|t> demand free food in school for story of the new Belogoskino film, | workers’ children and to sign by the “Rubicon,” now playing at the) thousands the petitions demanding Cameo. The cast is mostly sailors | this” of the Soviet Merchant Marine and workers of a lumber mill in northern | Russia. With these is G. sanoilov, | TUUL Arranges Good acting the part of Bill Parker, and A. . . Wussinor, vay oonviicing ux teelerosram ror One Big Robert Sidney, the lumber agent of a British firm buying from the Soviet Union end trying to lead a little| Many workers still talk about the sabotage gang so that besides get-|ONE BIG TUUL PICNIC, that took ting most of the lumber, his firm | place August 2nd, where thousands |¢an also collect the forfeit for slow|of workers were present. From all | delivery. indications it seems that the coming The play contrasts the working; ONE BIG BALL, to be held on Oct. conditions of the two countries. | 3rd, at Rockland Palace, 155th Street First the rotten food, cramped dirty, and 8th Avenue, will also be a huge , forecastle, and lack of amusement on | success. The Food Workers Indus- the British ship. There is a drunken | trial Union, the Needle Trades Work- brawl when you go ashore, Bill| ers Industrial Union, the I.W.O, and | picks up a horseshoe, wipes up the | other organizations already tovk as- joint with it, and saves the horseshoe Ball .October .Third, | at the headquarters listed below: | Newark, 121 Springfield Ave. and | 90 Ferry St.; Jersey City, 302 Hen- | derson St.; Elizabeth, 106 E. Jersey |St.; Linden, Workers Center, St. | George Ave. and Fern St.; Perth Amboy, 308 Elm 8t.; Paterson, 205 Paterson St.; New Brunswick, 11 | Plum St.; Trenton, 7 Union 8t.; Pas- | saic, 39 Monroe St. | | signed quotas of a thousand tickets each, The Workers Cultural Federation is now busy in preparing a |program. Edith Siegel, the well | known proletarian dancer who has | just arrived from the Soviet Union, will appear in @ special program. The famous John C. Smith Negro orches- tra will provide us witn the best | file members of the A. F, of L, to dance musie until early in the morn- ing. for good luck. He scabs on e strike of coal loaders in a tropical port. Then he gets blacklisted for hitting the skipper when they are both |drunk ashore. By accident he gets STOP THIEF! . |a chance to ship on a Soviet steam- jer. Here he finds everything differ- + | ent, good food in clean surroundings, | shower baths, private | books and papers. Ashore in Lenin- covers a multitude of crooks, and |grad he goes to the International) Means to expose and fight this crime against the poor | Seamen's Club, and looking over the | of New York City! papers in the library and reading Daily Worker down, with a Burck | aimed at is to raise the price at least cartoon on the back of it, The picture is full of that sort of photography in which the Soviet movies especially excell, that is, scenes of large bodies of water in al | their various moods and conditions. | The tradition of Potemkin is strong here. One thing we would like to |have somebody over there explain, and that is, why do the ship's clock | and life preserver of a British tramp |have “U. 8. Navy” stamped all over |them? Those familiar with the In- ternational Seamen's Club rooms in New York and other American ports, should see what a fine thing the Russian sailors have, along the same line. vs “loose” form. A nice juicy graft! Ta figure it out—one day:alone $125,000 and the consumers on the other! oll That is not to say that loose milk eve: (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) stateroom, | #¥aY with it, “Public health”, however, like “charity”, The conspiracy operates under the guise of banning ;room there, drags a copy of the| “loose” milk. But that is not the issue at all! The thing on 2,500,000 quarts a day of milk now consumed in the @ year! A gigantic sum, and one which can give plenty | to the Milk Trust, which robs the farmers on one hand A sum which can well the Tammany machine into action for health” and subsidize capitalist newspapers to begin a campaign against such a “menace” as “bacilli coli”! With the wage cutting and unemployment (1,000,000 jobless in New York City), the workers who face hard- ship, have turned from buying the outrageously costly bottled milk, which is controlled by a cast-iron monop- oly, and gone to buying “loose” milk, which is from five to eight cents cheaper per quart. Therefore, loose milk suddenly becomes a “menace”, times is pure, But neither is bottled milk. New York milk is notoriously the Daily Worker five cents a quart ke your pencil and more, or $45,625,000 “public Worker! rywhere and at all|foose, be reduced! of workers’ babies whether it is bottled or loose. Also, iteis outrageously costly. But if the Milk Trust led by Bordens can put loose milk competitors out of business, it stands to gain millions and recuperate its falling sales and profits! All the hullabaloo about “racketeers” in loose milk only covers up the bigger racket of the Milk Trust. Of jcourse there are racketeers in loose milk, All capitalist business is a racket, But when the World-Telegram pub- lishes cartoons and editorials about racketeers “robbing poor children” because said racketeers deal in loose milk, it is so much demagogie bunk, deliberately concealing the other and bigger robber of the poor—the Milk Trust led by Bordens—who advertise! ‘ The Daily Worker means to expose this crime against the workers further! It means to stop this con- spiracy to rob the workers and murder their babies by raising the price of milk! It invites farmers who are robbed by the Trust to use its columns to tell what they are paid for milk; Trust cuts their wages, and show up the profiteering of ALL milk companies; workers whose babales are going without milk because of poverty—all write to the Daily Stop these thieves! mands that the price of ALL milk, »oth bottled and PATERSON WORKERS WILL FIGHT DISCRIMINATION BY A. F. OF L. PATERSON, N. J., Sept. 21—Theup, increased production, increased Paterson silk workers, those still on strike, workers in settled shops, or- ganized and unorganized, filled Turn Hall on Friday night at the mass meeting called by the National Tex- tile Workers Union to analyze the next steps in the struggle. Fred Biedenkapp, leader of the strike, was chairman, J, Rubin, Sec- Strike Committee, outlined the pre- sent situation, especially the role of the UTW, led by Muste and Gitlow in continuing thetr policy of fake settlements, of rushing the workers back inte the mills on the basis of betraying their demands, Definite evidence was offered by J. Rubin of numerous shops settled by the A. F. of L. below the wage seale, Some shops settled by the A. FP. of L. are already working ten hours a day, while the N.T.W.U. sueceeded in set- tiling six more shops on the basis of the revised demands, the eight-hour day, wage increases for all crafts and the right to organize. Rank and file strikers next related their experiences of A.F. of L. settle- ments and produced before the mass meeting U.T.W. books torn up by rank and file workers who have come over into the N.T.W.U, Tony Potica, active Syrian strike leader, mention- ed a settlement made by the A. F. of L, in the Elegant Silk Mill where the workers were told by Muste-and Gitlow that they settled on the union scale of six cents per yard, but found after a week's work that the boss paid them only three cents. When they protested to the A. F. of L. leaders, they were teld by Mr. Mat-/| thews to go back to work. The work- ers in this shep are now in the ranks of the N.T.W,U. Workers Fight Diserimination Hundreds of workers present show- | ed their resentment at the policy of | Muste and Gitlow in eonjunction with the bosses of discrimination against members of the N.T.W,U, in all shops settled by the A. F. of L. The resentment expressed by the workers is for a fight to the finish against this victimization of the most Joyal strikers and the best fighters in the interests of the Paterson silk workers, Cases of shops where Mr. Muste personally bull-dozed the rank and drive the militant elements in the shop out were cited at this meeting. The N.T.W.U. declared that it will use every means at its disposal to smash this A. F. of L.-Muste-Gitlow policy of diserimination, because what is involved is the very future of the Paterson silk workesr, their ability to maintain the gains made during the strike and their fight for the further improvement of their working conditions and living stand- ards. ‘This policy of victimization of the most militant workers in the mills is integrally linked up with the program of the U. T. W. and Mr. Muste, This program is the same as in the hosiery industry, the program of “stabilization of the industry.” It is already evident what “stabiliza~ tion of the industry” means to Muste and the silk bosses--wage cuts, speed VE COLLAPSED Stay QUIETLY -WHERE You An ARE ~ BECAUSE WE ARE ALL GOING % Rem cOLLN BES adulterated, watery, thin; This Is so, dairy workers should write how the ‘The Datly Worker de- Only by this means can thousands be saved from starvation and death! fae ES Ee oe —Capitalism Is Very Collapsible— ME TO COLLARIE AMER \CAN Stlo! See OF Course AMERICA 15 Too ERT AND GRAND For mercar,, & Bay ereitiay: a = By RYAN WALKER Profits for the bosses, less bread for the workers. It is already evident from the shops settled by the A. F. of L. that these masked agents of the bosses, Muste, Gitlow & Co. are preparing to cary out further wage cuts and to institute the six looms in Paterson, Against this the N. T. W. U, will fight to the finish. The hundreds of silk workers assembled at the mass meeting at Turn Hall indicated this in their enthusiastic response to the speakers, especially to Comrade Jack Stachel, Assistant Secretary of the Trade Union Unity League, who substituted for William Z. Foster. Comrade Stachel stated that the workers see more and more clearly this ‘wage cutting, strike breaking role of the U.T.W. and the masked agents of the bosses, Muste and Git- jJow and their recognition of the fact that their only guarantee for suc- cessful struggle against this hunger program is te build the N.T.W.U. in every mill, to turn it into a powerful mass union, Stachel Analyzes Strike All the workers present at the meeting showed the deepest interest | in the remarks of Comrade Stachel who outlined the position of the strike, the gains made by the N.T.| W.U. and the new tactics applied by | the bosses in this strike in order to break the ranks of the workers, in order te demoralize the strike. He dealt especially with the role of the “progressive” Muste and the “reyo- lutionary” Benjamin Gitlow as the bosses’ agents in the Paterson -situ- ation, He thoroughly expesed the} role. of these misleaders and showed them to be the reserve forces of the | bosses brought into play when they | saw that the U.T.W. wes too thor- oughly exposed as a strike br organization to be effectively used | against the workers, | Dozens of questions followed the | speech of Comrade Stachel. The | workers present showed their deter- | mination to deal mercilessly with the attempts st discrimination against the militant workers; to build the N. T. W. U. and continue the second round of the fight for the right of the silk workers to live, for decent conditions and against the hunger program of the bosses and their agents, AFL Unions Hold Scab Meet In contrast to this splendid display of the growing strength of the N.T. 'W.U. among the Paterson silk work- ers expressed at the huge mass meeting at Turn Hall, the renegades from Communism and open strike- Needle Activists to Meet Wednesday at The Union Offices NEW YORK.—Spurring the organ- ization drive in the needle trades, the office of the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union has called a. meet- ing of the following categories of ac- tivists: All active members, all members of trade committees, non-paid organ~ izers, all members of the propaganda, organization and other standing com- mittees, and all shop chairmen. The meeting will be held Wednes~ j day, September 23 at 131 West 28th Street right after work. Meet of Sheet Metal Workers To Organize Against Worsening Conditions NEW YORK.—To organize a strug- gle against the continuous wage cuts of both union and unorganized sheet metal workers and tinsmitns an open meeting has been called by the Sheet Metal section of the Metal Workers Industrial League, Wednesday, Sept. 23, at 5 East 19th St., 2nd floor. The A. F, of L. union among the sheet metal workers is taking no ac- tions against the ever worsening con- ditions in the trade, but are taking big initiations and salaries. breaking allies of Tom McMahon, Bill Green and Matt Woll called a mass meeting on the same night. Their crowd recruited from ameng the most notorious scab elements in Paterson, like Friedman, Laks & Co. listened to some of the most hypo- critical, counter-revolutionary laud- ations of the A. F. of L. and attacks on the N.T.W. which is in no way different from what the police and bosses have to say about the only militant revolutionary union of the textile workers, Mr. Gitlow declared that the N.T. W. called the strike prematurely, that the time was not ripe for a strike, but they did not state why he and the A. F. of L. called another “strike” several days after the N.T. W., if they did not believe that the time was opportune for a strike, The answer to this question is now clear to every worker of Paterson. Gitlow was the main force in calling this so-called strike of the A. F. of L., af- ter the N.T.W. called thousands of workers out of the mills, in order to break the strike, to carry out the bosses’ orders to divide the ranks of the workers and demroalize them. AMUSEMENTS A Worker Finds “RUB His was the harsh and tragic life of the sea..., his home on the rolling deep,...UNTIL,.,,. And Then He Cross: :CAMEO 42nd BROAD. Himself! AMKINO PRESENTS ICON” The new order of Soviet Russia brought him a fresh meaning in life, new ideas, and new am- bitions.... ed the “RUBICON” SEE THIS SOVIET FILM AT THE ST. and iY | NOW A Theatre Guild Production. “HE” By ALFRED SAVOIR Adapted by Chester Erskin GUILD yin. Bee MAE WEST IN ‘The Constant Sinner’ Thea, 45th W. Pwy. yes. ROYALE S40. Mts, Wed. & Bat. 2:80 200 to 30e 5 p. m. to closing—Bsnt. 20c tL 1 p. me THE FIRST TIME ON THE EAST SIDE} AMKINO PRESENTS THE 5 YEAR PLAN 'S ANSWER TO A CAPITAL! LAST THREE DAYS CLINTON THEATRE and ie til 1 p. m—10¢ and 20¢ 1 to 5 p. m— 20e and 30c 1 p, m. to jet Russia Polley— P WORLD! Clinton Delancey and itm. and 1. ew closing: HISTORY OF CPSU, WORKERS SCHOOL Bittleman to Lead Class on CPSU Comrade A. Bittelman, who is well known to the workers for his activity in the Communist movement, will give a course in the History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Un- jon in the Fall Term of the Workers School. The course will consist of a series of lectures on the struggie be- tween Bolshevism and Mensheyism, the Bolshevik Party in 1905, in the period of reaction and during the World War, the conquest of power, Wer Communism, the N.E.P,, the Struggle ageinst petty beurgsois de- viations, the Party in the period of successful socialist consiruction, etc. The class will be held on Wednesday evenings. The unperatleled richness of the revolutionary experiences of the Communist Party in the U.S.8.R. makes thts course a very important one for all class-conscious workers in the US.A. Workers are urged to register for this and many other important courses, as Trade Union Strategy, | Fundamentals of Communism, Po- litical Eeonemy, Marxism-Leninism, ete. Early registration is necessary in order to get into the elasses de- sired. The number of students in each class will be limited. Com- munist Party and Young Communist League units, trade unions and other mass and fraternal organizations should immediately assign members to take courses for vevious phases off political training en a scholarship basis, 71,500,000 RUBLES FOR TRAIL WORKERS IN NON-FERROUS METALS INDUSTRY The management of the non-fer- vous metals industry has appropri- cted 7,500,000 rubles for the training | during 1931 of 34,000 skilled workers. | They will be employed in existing | plants of the industry as well as in | those scheduled to be opened this | year. | SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT 216 EAST 1418 STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT | 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AU Work Done Under ot nal Care JOSEPHRON CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue Estabrook 3215 BRKONS, » 4 MELROSE D. AIRY VEGETARIAN BESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find it Pleasant to Dine at Our Place, 1787 SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 114th St, Station) TELEPHONE INTERVALE 9—9149 Phone Stuyvenant 8816 SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES A place with atmos; ncre ‘ell radicals mest 302 EB, 12th St. New York Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bot, 12th and 18th Bts, flere. For Information Write to Advertising Vepartment The DAILY WORKER 50 Best 13th St. New York City John’s Restaurant ‘