The Daily Worker Newspaper, December 8, 1931, Page 2

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Fi Page ‘Two me ay, pie 3, en BROOKLYN Sth Anniversary of Your Paper MARCH DEM. The Eighth Avntveras the Worker, be marked by ary of Daily a monster cele- bration on Sunday, January 8, st 2 p. m., at the Bronx Colis- | eum, will mark eight years of struggle to keep going a paper that is written by workers and for workers. All workers have | a personal interest in attending the eighth anniversary celebra-| tion at the Coliseum. T have a personal interest not only in what their paper has | so far accomplished in its fight | to get the truth to the workers, but in what the paper will do| in the future, now that the] revolutionary struggle is wid-| ening because of the spread of | Daily Worker eaniee ment and imperialist which will] war, and because of the in | Breac IN| Pickets De- 1. Silk creasing danger of war against} mand Cons Withdraw: the Soviet Union. | The workers more than ever | heed @ paper to expose the| wage cut and starva-| | tion campaign ang the secret} | war plots. The workers more support the| through greater efforts in the present campaign than ever must 000 subscriptions. The j workers more than ever must| show their support of their vaper by coming out. in mass to the Bronx Coliseum on Jan- uary 3 to hear the results of the subscription drive and to greet the eighth anniversary of their paper. M’Donald Prepares Bloodbath! for Indian Workers, Peasants "' NEW YORK—The National gov- “rmment of Great Britain, headed by e “social! MacDonald, has tually declared war on the Indian * A trial of blood from Bom- pay to Ben; with hordes of British troops suppressing the Indian m: S which Ramsay MacDonald, when | premier in the Labor government, said would be necessary to repell the | Indian revolution, is now being p pared by the British master class with the support of the so-called “opposition” in arliament, the Brit- tsh labor party. Latest cal reports from London | and Calcutta state that Indian work- ers and peasants can now be sen- tenced to death by secret tribunals | without public trial, or without trial | at all. Provisions have been made tor setting up special courts, headed by Fritish imperialists, which have the power of life and death over any prisoner brought befoer them. ‘The highest crime is fighting against British imperialism The purpose of the cret trial: announced by the British V: Earl Willingdon, is to make impos- ible mas sdemonstrations such as atetnded the trials of Indian revolu- tionists in Meerut, Delhi and Lahore. Besides, these courts are given au- thority to levy heavy taxe sand pen- aities on entire peasant villages if ey infringe the orders of th British masters. Drastic rules set up for the “control of t order to make demonstr as | suspicious” manner will be arrested. Through these means, the British imperialists will redouble their terror against the Indian workers and pea- sants. 3 ‘The new reign of terror, forecast- ing a bloody drive against the In- | dian masses which will put any of |the past expeditions into the shade, | omes on the heels of the breakdown jof the Indian Round Table Confer- ence in London. Gandhi, who has been pleading for a united front of the Indian bourgeoisie and the Brit- ish imperialists against the rising anti-imperialist revolution in India, | has failed of his gask because the British masters would not give | Gandhi sufficient concessions to be| able to fool the Indian masses. Gandhi is now returning to India. He now fears the mass, popular re- volt and is coming back to India in order to try to stem the tide of strug- gle against British imperialism. Gandhi again talks of returning to his cell, of increasing the ‘“non- violent” opposition to British rule— all this in the face of the open ter- ror and provocation of the British masters, in face of the rising strug- gles of the Indian workers and pea- sants. British imperialism is determined to force its yoke deeper into the necks of the Indian masses. But the new terror laws will not stop the re | anti-imperialist fight of the Indian workers and peasants, A new stage of struggle is opening up against masses difficult. Anybody ving a British imperialist rule in India. 3,000 Tobacco Farmers Smash Sale in Anger bs 7ENSBORO, Ky.—Shouting their the manner in which the sboro Loose Leaf Tobacco Co. ng their tobacco at starva- prices, three thousand embittered vice president and general man- the Owensboro Tobacco Co. they saw the tobacco crops snapped up by the dummy buyers of the tobaco trusts at prices almost half of what they had received last year, the farmers interrupted the auctioneers with shouts of “You can't take our tobacco that way!” threatened to wreck the warehouses unless the sales were stopped imme- dia ly. Taking advantage of the poverty and desperate straights of the re farmers, the buyers had squeez he price down $4.61 per 100 whereas r of various to last year it had been $8.47 per hun- | @re@ The resentment of the farmers wes brought to a fighting pitch as | the {prices were forced down con- inuously in spite of the fact that | the manufacturers of cigars and cigarettes had reported 1930 and the first half of 1931 as two of thé mos Prosperous periods in the history. Misled by government propaganda for acreage reduction, the farmers adopted a unanimous resolution not to raise any tobacco rext year. A mass meeting at the local courthouse also adopted a resolution to appoint a committee to ask James C. Stone. chairman of the Fodcral @arm Board, for financial acking in the tobacco pool whi rey izira What's | On rae |e TUESDAY Meedie Trades Works Will give a comrades 1 Union in tne Unie i W. 26th-Si. wt § pur 1 invited 191 workers Forur ven ui 1¢8 & Manchur Danger. Dis Nightworkers Oper lecture will be A 14th 2 Situation and ‘he Wer ussion. Admission Ie WEDNESDAY Brownsville Ur: Will hold a le on “The New F the Workers’ ni Skiaroft » Culture” corner Pitkin Brooklyn, at aud Christopher 8 pm mpeet Porte Mrancin, &. A. Stu 1, WHO Technicum, Russian Revolu St. Brooklyn, 4 Bide, Maintenance Workers Will hold an iv nt me Kroutser Hall, B®, ¥6ih St, tioor. Workers am urged to at mers broke up the opening tobacco on by hurling apples | ioneers and at W. C. Crab- They | at Low Prices The inbased sales were postponed until Monday with indications that the farmers would keep their crops joff the market entirely since the | prices offered are insufficient even | to pay for the cost of cultivation and haulage. | Kentucky leaf t Obacco sold for $16.72 | | a hundred pounds in 1929, the highest | |year and was forced down to half | | that figure in 1930. In 1928 and 19> the farmers got $13.50 and $11.27 re- spective a hundred pounds on their crop. The ruinous drop in tobacco | Prices as manipulated |bacco Trust shows that in one year from 1928 to 1929 the price of leaf | tobacco was forced down from a na- | tional average of $20 in 1928 to $10 | hundred pounds in 1929. ‘The price | this year has been cut to’ and 4 | cents a pound in Kentucky and Vir- | ginia tobacco growing disjricis. That this price spells actual starva- tion and ruin for the mass of small | tobacco growers can be seen in the fact that the average cost of growing leaf tobaco in Virginia this year was estimated at 13 cents a pound. The production cost in Kentucky is a | slight variant at this cost. | At the same time the huge tobacco companies, dictating ihe price of raw tobacco to the farmefs, are making record profits, the following four big profits showing the following sur- pluses after dividends depreciation and costs were paid: American To- | bacco Co., $91,800,000; P. Lorillard Co., $16,000,000; Liggett & Myers Tobacco | Co.. $20,000,009 and R. J. Reynolds, $55,000,000. The American Tobacco |Co. alone made record earnings of $43,845,370 in 1930, an increase of 43 of 1929. Group Theatre Play Opens Thursday At Mansfield ” will be the title of the nd production of the Group Theatre, a playdealing with the labor jand unemployment crisis by Claire }and Paul Sifton, which opens at the Mansfield Theatre Thursday, Dec. 10. Franchot Tone, Phoebe Brand, Mor- | ris Jernoveky, J. Edward Bromberg, | Mary Morris and other members of the Group Theatre will be in the play. The play which was formerly celled “Son of God” will be presented under the auspices of the Theatre Guild. “Over the Hill” with James Dunn, Sally Bilers, and Mae Marsh js the en attraction at.the Hippodrome. udeville acts include “The Street ger’ in person, George Beatty, Milton Douglas, Erma Ward & Girls, Donatella Brothers & Carmen, Four Comets, the Jovers, and Clemens by the To- } | per cent over the earnings and profits | | to ‘discuss a | commendatic City Give NEW YORK.—H ers and un ploy t ered before Brooklyn Borough He!) darity with the demands of tt tional Hunger Marchers then manding entrance into the Capitol building in Washington. | They also placed demands with the | Brooklyn Borough administration for | unemployment relief rivht here, and de- had a list of cases of unemployed workers’ families who are actually starving. Speakers were strikers from the Merhige Silk mills, and the Co: Island Bread strike. The crowd joined the speakers unanimously in demanding that Borough President | | Hesterberg withdraw the police from | these picket lines and that the city feed the unemplcyed. The crowd pledged to t these tw strikes in sy Speakers from the © nemp oyed and s of ‘the | | for the Intern: ticnal Labor Mefense | and by E. We!sh of the League of Struggle for Negro Rights. An indoor meeting was held at 450| Hick wt. headquarters of the Jnem-| ployca Council branch, and many | joined the council. ANOTHER DRESS SHOP STRIKES Thrée Needle Trades} Meetings Announced Sods | NEW YORK —In spite of unem-| ployment, the condition in the dress | shops are’ driving more and more | workers to open revolt. Those in Smiley Dress Co. shop at 122 West 26th St. came down yesterday to the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union and got help in striking and shutting down the place. Conditions were absolutely unbearable. The Industrial Union urges work- ers in other shops to do the same. The struck London Dress Shop, 24 Seventh Ave. has advertised for new work: and the union calls all to help picket. Strikes are going on also at Berman & Smith, 213 West 35th St., and at a number of other places. Knitgoods Mecting at 10 a.m. All unemplo knit d's workers are called to a meeting this morning at 10 am. at 131 W. 28th St. posses in this trade have decided to cut wages one per cent excuse of raising an unemployment fund. Milliners Meet At 2 p.m. The United Front Committee of the millinery workers calls a me ing of all unemployed milliz t 2pm. today at Bryant Hall, 41 St. and sixth Ave. Cloakmakers Meet Tomorrow The Left Wing Gr and Local 9 of the International Ladies Garment Workers have called |a mass meeting for Wednesday, ® cember 9, at 6 p.m. struggle conditions in the trade and make r tion campaign for officers of the locals. All cloak finishers and oper- ators are invited New Fang Imperial t Magazine Is Issued; NEW YORK.—The first the Anti-Imperialist Review has ar- rived in this country, the organ of the League Agnins Im-rialism, printed in English, It contains an article by Maxim Gor7 on “The Iin- nerialist Sharks and Their Compan- ions,” and a greeting by Henri Bar- busse, President of the League Against Imperialism. The results of the session of the International Executive Committee of the Leagug, held June 1-3, 1931, are summarized in an article, showing not only the transition of the National bourgeoisie from revolution to counter-revolution, but also the organizational method taken to strengthen the Executive Committee. This magazine (September-October issue, 62 pages, price 15 cents) should be read by every worker, by every fighter for national independence of the colonial and semi-colonial peoples, by every true anti-imperialist. Cet your copy from the Anti-Imperialist League, 799 Broadway, R. 535. Subseriptions—for one year (8 is- sues) one dollar, through the United States Section of the League Again: Imperialism, the Anti - Imperi League of the United States at Broadway, R. 535. Subscribe today, MacDona!d. Policies Raise Price of Milk LONDON.-The first fruits of the starvation policy of the new National Government headed by the “socialist” Ramsey MacDonald is to be seen in the increase in the costs of living, especially food pri The price of milk here was raised two cents a quart November 30. The price rise is attributed to the in- creased cest of production of milk inasmuch as fodder must be pur- Belling. The} under the | s in Local 1| Cooper Union | to reestablish | | ons for the present elec- Has Snecial Features | FOR) | throughout, | | workers |the unton, ere UMWA Sub-district Conference Backs The Hunger March CHICAGO, Dec. 7. the entire state of Illinois various locals of the A. FP. of L., including —Throughout n to the United Mine Workers of America, have not only endorsed the National Hunger March, but have elected hunger marchers and contributed financially to the struggle for un- employment insurance. News has arrived that at a subdistrict conference of the U. M. W. A. held in Collinsville the delegates un- y belonging animously passed a resolution sup- | porting the hunger marchers. This is an open repudiation of the nerous policy of the labor fakers who, in Vancouver turned downa proposal for unemployment insurance. Chicago’s mass demonstration today in support of the demands then being made in Washington by the National Hunger Marchers will be at 3 p. m. at Union Park. VETS ‘MEET HELD « ON UNION SQUARE ee Vote Support To The Hunger Marchers Braving snow flurries, hundreds of jobless workers and ex-servicemen assembled on Union Square yester- day at 2'p.m. at a meeting called by the Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League in support of the demands the Na- tional Hunger Marchers made on Congress, When the weather worsened the crowd marched down to the head- quarters of the Workers’ Ex-Service- men’s League, at 79 E. Tenth St., where the hall was jammed to the doors and an indoor meeting held. The meeting was enthusiastic with Saunders, Burns and W, Meltzer as the main speak- ers. A resolution adopted at the meet- ing on Union Square was sent to President Hoover demanding the fol- lowing: Unemployment insurance for all workers, immediate cash payment of the bonus, demand private med- ical treatment for disabled veterans at government expense, fight against ‘another imperialist war. The hunger march on Boro Hall in Brooklyn also adopted the same resolution. The Workers’ Ex-Servicemen’s League will present a threevact play dramatizing the defeat of the pay- ment of the bonus at the American Legion Convention at their dance to beheld Friday, Dec. 11, at 8 pm., at theManhattan Lyceum, 66 E, Fourth St. The proceeds will go towards founding a national magazine for worker ex-soldiers. FURRIERS MASS SCORE KAUFMAN Mass Meeting Assails The Injunction YORK.—-Thousands of fur gathered at 29th St. and Seventh Aye. at noon hour yesterday protest inst the injunction taken out by the company Union nt, Kaufman, against the Indus- nion. Ben Gold, secretary of speaking of the injune- quoted Kaufman's statements which show him to be an open agent provocateur. The workers enthusiastically sup- ported the Industrial Union. Dogskin Workers to Meet. Today, at 2 o'clock, a membership meeting of the dogskin workers will NEW tr tion, issue of | be held at the office of the Industrial Union, 131 W.28th St. At this meet- ing the executive committee will re- port on all activities since the last strike, the rolicy of the union toward the expiration of the agreement, and all other problems relating to the building of the union among the dogskin workers. Due to the “unemployment situa~ tion, the meeting has been arranged for 2 o'clock. All dogskin workers are called upon to come. New Labor Unity Is Larneched; Ranquet Celebrates New Step NEW YORK. — Several hundred workers including delegates from about 25 organizations were present. at the Labor Unity Banquet and En- tertainment last Saturday night at Manhatten Lyceum. Besides the mu- sical numbers, Soviet movies, and a enjoyed the many interesting short speeches made in support of the new monthly Labor Unity magazine, the first number of which will be out about December 26th. Bill Dunne, associate editor of the new monthly magazine and an out- standing leader in .the American Labor Movement, as toastmaster, led the list of speakers which included besides the main speaker, Wm. Z. Foster, Rebert Minor, Louls Enedahl, I. Amter, Joseph Zack, M. Sherer, Mike Gold, a young pioneer and Tom Scott, Youth organizer of the Trade Union Unity League. Tt 4, janned to repeat the Banqucy next year and to make it an annual! affair for Labor Unity. FIVE THOUSAND DAILY WORKER 12-MONTH SUBSCRIPTIONS chased with the depreciated pound. BY JANUARY &tht hot dinner on the program, everyone | REVOLT SPREADS IN THE CONGO, CENTRAL AFRICA 40 Natives Killed Clash With Imper- ialist Troops in A capitalist press dispatch from Brussels, Belgium, admits the spread of the revolutionary movement in the Belgian Congo, Central Africa. ‘Three Belgian soldiers are reported to have been killed and several wounded in a fight with African rev- olutionaries in the lake districts of the Congo. The Belgians claim to have killed 40 of the natives. African workers and peasants in many sections of the Belgian Congo have been in revolt for the past eight months or more. In spite of the Bel- gian censorship the news of their heroic struggles against the imper- falist robbers has leaked out from time to time. ‘The revolt of the Congo natives is part of the revolutionary movement which is sweeping the colonies and semi-colonial countries and has reached its highest expression in China, where under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party the Chinese workers an dpeasants are carrying on a relentless struggle against imperialism. The Japanese action in Manchuria, supported by the United States, French and Brit- ish imperialisms, is aimed at crushing the Chinese revolution and attacking the Soviet Union, the world citadel of the revolutionary movement of the colonial masses and the home work- ers in the imperialist countries. * MacDonald in the British parlia- ment has called for war against the colonial masses. Hoover in his Arm- istice Day speech admitted that the tremendous armaments of the imper- ialist nations are aimed at the colo- nial masses and at the Soviet Union. Negro and white workers! Defend the revolutionary movements in Af- rica, in China, in India and other colonial and semi-colonial countries! Defend the Chinese Revolution! De- fend the Soviet Union! Down fith imperialism and its murderous at- tacks on the colonial and home mass- es! LAUNDRY BOSSES STRIKEBREAKING Bosses Assn Head Aids Active Shop Boss The bosses of the Sterling and Pretty laundries, Steinhorn and Hent- man, president and vice president of the bosses’ association are leading other bosses in doing scab duty. Last Thursday the Association called a special meeting to consider ways and means of breaking the strike in the Active Laundry. One of the measures taken is that all Losses sceuld take turns in doing sca!» duty. The drivers of the Bronx Home are torved to scab in the Active by means of intimidation. Ancther step decided on is that other laundiies do not take bundles that were formerly washed in the Active Laundry but cornpetition among the bosses is so keen and the bosses cre so greedy that th*y cutdo one another in taking away cus- tomers from each other. The bosses of the Sterling and Pretty laundries, Steinhorn and Hent- man as officials of the Association hire the gangsters and manaze the frame-ups. They are constantly on duty at the Active Laundry on the side of the bosses.’ Mr. Sieinhorn, when the gangsters failed to break up the meeting of Laundry Workers’ Union last Wednesday pulled a gun in order to protcct the gangsters. The Laundry Werkers’ Unicn, 260 E. 138th St., calls on all workers to help the union by coming to picket line and help in canvassing the cus- tomers to inform them of the strike. The Cameo Theatre is featuring on its screen, “The Battle of Gal- lipoli,” a story of Gallipoli slaughter in the World War. Thousands of workers lost their lives in this cam- paign, The story is taken from the noyel, “Tell England” by Ernest Ray- mond. Gerald Rawlinson, Fay Comp- ton and C. M. Hallard are the leading players. 300 Girls Forced To Give One-Third Pay To Bosses Charity Three hundred girl workers of the National Screen Service Co., Forty- Sixth St. were informed on Thurs- day, December 3, that they would have to sign slips authorizing the company to deduct one third of each week's pay for one month for the city unemployment fund. Some girls refused and when they protested, were told “either you sign or you are discharged.” TRY SMASH FWIU BUTCHERS BR. Racketeer Outfit Gets Out An Injunction In an attempt to smash the or- ganization of the butchers of ‘the Food Workers’ Industrial Union, the butchers’ branch of the United He- brew Trades has returned to the old method of injunctions. For three years, the following Brooklyn stores, Cohen and Levine of 4002 13th Ave. and 2259 86th St.; Mensch, 3904 13th Ave., and Dicker, 3913 13th Ave., were under the control of the Food Work- ers’ Industrial Union, Recently the racketeer outfit in the trade sold some of its union signs to the bosses of these stores and took out an in- junction banning picketing. Know- ing that this alohs would not stop the F. W. I. U., they have hired gangsters to terrorize the men in the shops and the pickets. Theunion calls upon all workers in the neighborhood to support. the | strike and help drive out the thugs and strikebreakers. SOVIET FAMILY LIFE IN LECTURE M. Scherer Lecture Is} One Of Series For the first time in New York, the illustrated lecture, “24 Hours With the Soviet Family Fillipov,” will be given by Marcel Scherer, national secretary of the Friends of the Soviet Union, this Thursday evening, Dec. 10, at Irving Plaza Hall, 15th St. and Irving Place, at 8 p.m. These pictures blast the bourgeois lies that Communism destroys the family; The Fillipov family is an average Soviet family in Moscow—a | family living under obtaining condi- tions and shows the Socialist con- | struction of the U.S.S.R. by means | of the steady improvement of the material and cultural standards of living for the workers and is laying the real foundations for a sound} family life. This is the second in a series of lectures by different authorities on “The New Culture in the Soviet Union,” given every Thursday night, at Irving Plaza Hall, under the aus- Counties In Effort to PINEVILLE, Ky., Dee, “4-Habeus corpus proceedings will be held in the cases of National Miners Union members, J. E, Payne and Alex Barnett of Straight Creek, and Tom Coyne, of Middlesboro, Ky, Payne and Coyne are both charged with criminal syndicalism. Payne has to furnish bond of $8,000; an oppear- ance bond of $6,000 and a peace bond of $2,000. Coyne was arrested in the Middlesboro Court room, charged with criminal syndicalism, where he and five other National Miners Un- fon members went to be tried No- vember 16, before Circuit Court Judge “Baby” Jones, on the charge of “malicious shooting with intent ‘to kill,” a frame-up from the Premier Coal Co. strike last May, when a scab was shot, and slightly wounded. His bond is $6,000; appearance bond of $5,000, and peace bond of $1,000. in the recent Glendon Mine strike, at Straight Creek, is charged with band- ing and confederating on two counts, and has to produce an -appearance bond of $6,000. All three are in jail; Payne and Barnett in Pineville, and Coyne in Middlesboro, Payne's peace bond of $2,000 was slapped on him by Judge Jones, without any legal hearing, but with a lecture, telling him if he would drop the National Miners Un- ion, he could get out of jail. The International Labor Defense attor- ney, W. J. Stone of Pineville, will demand that the peace bonds be re- moved, and the appearance bonds be grealy reduced, on grounds of being excessive and illegal. Except for th# men now being tried for the deaths of the deputies Lee Jones and Daniels, the three men, Payne, Coyné and Barnett are the only miners in jail. Every single one of the criminal syndicalism cases, the banding and confederating cases, possessing prohibited literature cases, and malicious shooting with intent to kill cases have been continued un- til the next term of court. Many were dropped. This is a real victory for the International Labor Defense and National Miners Union. Every case was such a raw frame-up that it would have taken an unusually well-picked coal convict any of the miners. The op- erators, with their allies, Judge D. C. Jones, whose wife has large coal min- ing interests, and Commonwealth’s Attorney Brock, evidently didn’t dare | tisk the trials. ‘The Glendon Coal Co, Straight Creek, whose general manager, J, J. Hume, was one of the witnesses be- fore the Grand Jury, in the indict- ment against the Dreiser Committee, has just pulled one of the regular strike-breaking rabbits out of the Coal company’s silk hat, by sending 30 house notices to active members pices of the F. S. U, of the National Miners Union. At- AMUSEMENTS TRE TRE EUGENE ONE presents S Trilosy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 plays presented on 1\day THE HOMECOMING, HUNTED THY HA ED Commencing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner {n= termission of one hour at 7. No Mats. GUILD THRA,, 52d St, W. of Bway The Theatre Gutld Presents REUNION IN gQVIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT BH. SHERWOOD. Martin Beck TFS, 4" Bve. §:40 Mats.Thurs.&Sat.2:40 Beg’s Thurs. Eve., Dec. 10th The GROUP THEA. Presents 1931— By CLAIRE & PAUL SIFTON Under Auspices of Thea, Guild MANSFIELD 20°, $003 Byes 8:30 Mats. Thurs.& Sat.2:30 One way to help the Soviet Union fs te spread among the workers “Soviet ‘Forced Labor,” “EVERYBODY'S WELCOME comedy Dit, with The new muste: PRANCES W ARRINET LAKE RT Then, 44th St. W. of Bw'y S:t0, Mats, Wed, & Sat, 2:20 COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW with By ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI Plymouth Hue rmurss a sme 2320 ,;CAMEONOW O 42 nd STREET & BWAY “Battle of Gallipoli”) Thrilling story of ill-fated offensive in the World War 6th Ave. BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK by Max Bedacht, 10 cents per copy. Vv Rw “OVER sweet | the HILL” STREET With JAMES DUNN TENTH ANNUAL COLOR LIGHT MERRIEST EVENT OF THE SEASON \ Biggest Gathering of New York’s Working Youth OSTUME BALL Saturday, Dee. 12th 1931 New Yi East 17' ork Coliseum ‘7th Street, Bronx Jazz Band of 30 Musicians—ARTEEF Players in extraordinary program Edith Segal with the Red Dancers will lead the crowd in especially prepared Dances | Tickets in Advance, 65c—At the Door, 85¢ MORNING FREIHEIT © be Alex Barnett, active NMU member | company jury to; & 48rd St. FORCE DISMISSAL OF SOME KY. CRIMINAL SYNDICALISM CASES Carloads of Gunmen Roam Harlan and Bell Stop District Conyen- tion Set t for Pineville, Dec. 13 torney Stone is handling these cases for the ILD, » ‘The fact that 3 men who went back to work, immediately had their evic- tion notices dismissed, is sure proof that these house notices are nothing but a strike-breaking trick. No one who could help it, would live in the shacks the men are being told to leave. As one of the miners said: “Sure, we have water and lights in our house. Water, when it rains, pours in. And when the sun is out, you get plenty of light through the cracks.” BREAD PICKETS CARRY BANNERS Ten Arrested Win Case In Court NEW YORK.—The Coney Island bread strike brought out mass pick- ets, with signs, yesterday morning. Picketing will go on until a reduc- tion in the price of bread is ob- tained. The United Councils of Working Women and the Coney Island Rank and File Committee call for all to assist in this fight by com- ing on the picket line at 2 p.m. all along Mermaid Ave. Yesterday ten women pickets who were arrested last Thursday came up before Magistrate Hughes, seven charged with disorderly conduct and three with assault. ‘The Bakers’ Association brought two lawyers and a battery of wit- nesses against the pickets, but after these witnesses had contradicted and made focls of themselves the judge had to throw the c: and release all the were going out, ke @ bake their own biscuti not have any troub pickets ror the bosses favor of thi © out of court As: they am to at home and mush ia by 300 women ax maid A Phone: Dry Doeis 4-4522 Harry Stolnrr, Inc. | eomrenss © 13-15 CHRYSTIE STREET Cor, Hester St. ™ york OPTICIAN for International V ‘kery’ Order 4-9649 Dr. L. KESSLER alg. Strletly by appointment SURGUON DENTIST 853 BROADWAY Suite 1007-1008 New York Cor, 14th St. SOLLIN’S RESTAURANT | 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE STR FLOOR Aly Work Done Under Vernonia! Cave cof DR. JOSEPASON 657 Allerton Avenue O1-2-7584 BRONX, N. ¥ Vhone Stuyvesant 3816 John’s Restaurant SPECIALTY: ITALIAN DISHES a Legge ‘with atmosphere where radicals meet 302 E. 1%th St. New York MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN RESTAURAND Comrades ill Always Find st ‘leasant to Dine et Our Place. er SOUTHERN eae, Bronz (near 174th St. Station: TELEPHONE INTERVALE ” eere0 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet 12th and 13th Bts. Strictly Vegetarian Food Advertise Your Union Meetings ‘Were. For information Write to Advertising Department The DAILY WORKER 50 East 13th St New York City LARGE ROOM—Privileges and tele- me, con! or gentleman, reason- le, Goldberg, 061 Hoe aptine Ln Apartment 11-G,

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