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aign Shriking nea called by the Relief Ssymour Burns district ray Tis¢ Rally to Defe Of Framed-up 15 TAMPA, Fla—The trial snee of the 15 T on the framed up charg out of a police reld on 2 workers are g more ever to i workers. with pl and to strer unfon, They Labor Defense by 250 S. Defense (CONTENTED ON PAGE THREE) 240U. 8. BANKS | FAIL IN 3 WEEKS) Bank fai U.S.A. for the first K show marked increases, Alres 240 have fa This figure is tak capitalist press, end does not include unreported failures imated deposit 1 nuary failures reac the as ng total of $120,000,000. This | thet thousands of workers’ lities. in savings are wiped out. The bi never lo in these bank failures. ‘They remove their deposits before the eomes. Big Response to United Front Strike Call {CONTINUE - Se | strike machinery will be presented at the United Front Committee, | which jeintly with the Indus Union, is eonducting the strike prep- arations of the united front organ- | izrtion drive. makers from all shops upon immediately to arrange nr ings ef their shops or shop com- | x ces to discuss these demands and | ect delegates on the basis of diseussions. Workers are also ied upon to take up the question e strike fund and to bring con- tions in the name of their shop @ dress conference, pecial call was issued today by industrial Union to all members ne International Workers Order, | vorkers’ clubs, and all dressmak~- onnected with the revolutionary vement who are working in the ; industry. Jn this call the In- a1 Union points out that today re many dressmakers belong- to these organizations, working in shpes, who are preparing these to ans’ the strike call but have failed to report them to the In- | dustrial Union. As a result of this| neglect, many difficulties developed in some of these shops. The Industriel Union therefore calls on all the class conscious work- ers not to await il the general strike call but to immediately report | © shops to the office so that the anization Dept. can with are uss comrades the definite problems she shops. A special complaint department been organized and all dressmak- evs from open shops,’ company union shops, are called upon to come to the ce every day to take up these | @ meeting of shop chairmen and Pp committees held Monday night, | shop representatives discussed | he demands and the plans for the coming conference. All shop tees pledged to establish contact ch the open shops company shops in their building and see thet those workers send representa- % to the conference ES | Lol up thousands of Daily Worker subs in the fight against wage cuts. | com- | the factories and sheps of New York, | Tammany reign of terror against un- Activity) — IN FISH STRIKE 2 sed the confer-| ; tings to the 228 dete-|C a 11 for Fight on| pee connie eRe Injunction Workers, w | | NEW YORK.—In the effort to break | Ky. and JAIL 8 WORKERS iThe Seabury “Investigation” NEW “BO T= rea} story of Temmany graft is not contained in the Seabury ine vestigation yeport gbout whieh the capitalist press is bellowing 60 much. . It is true Seabury shows that huge sums have been grafted. About 15 Tammany grafters, ineluding Sheriff Farley, Deputy Police In- spector Kelly, nad Harry ©. Perry, Chief Clerk of the City Court, grafted over $2,800,000 in a short period—inore than there is available at this moment to feed 1,000,000 starving unemployed in New York and their families! ‘ | Seabury only skimmed the surface of the cesspool of Tammany ' ding the imme. | tt militant strike of the Bronx fish} gratt, conditional release of |v oree’® by the injunction, the Tam- ‘The Seabury investigation repert is mage at a time when all of the scan rgIN HiRISE) co-operating with | Jeading capitalist city governments in the United Stetes are in a finan- : Grnia and copies | {70,28 bosses, has arrested elght fish | cila crisis. Seabury talked a lot about “graft and corruption established ae The Con | Workers on the picket line today and| and controlled by Tammany Hall end permeating the city.” But Sea- charged them with violating the in- | junction. Kushner and Smithline ase of all strike leaders, | were grrested while picketing at 941 Soe ee rerkeTs sin, | Bast 180th St, Isidor Cohen at a fish falls on dacne-up store on Jennings St. and the other Jemond wan tener | Workers on Bathgate Ave, The Food : se ae Workers Industrial Union calls upon d to Governor Laffoon of Ken- | the working class public in the Bronx | to support the fish strike by fratia- | nizing only those stores which have signed up with the union, the strike of the Kentucky |. The te-up of the bosses and the | s and pointed out that this | Tammany courts and judges with no- | e provides a means of drawing | torious racketeers is clearly shown in | the case of this injunction. The in~ the uncondi- Kent Alfred Wagenknecht, national see- retary of the Workers tnternational | F ee ined the importance of bury, rich exploiter that he is, very carefully guards the connections be- tween Tammany Hall and Wall Street, the fact that the financial policy of Tammany is controlled by Morgan & Co., by the National City Bank,/and by three or four other of the leading imperialist banks who dominate every city government in the country. When Morgan & Co, ordered the city relief bureaus to shut down, Tammany Hal] shut them down willingly. When Tammany Hall received a $200,000,000 Joan through the House of Morgan, it took along with it the program of hunger and starvation for the unemployed. This program is thoroughly in keeping with the corrupt: Tammany politicians who themselves had set the lead on March 6, 1930, in slugging and beating the unemployed and jailing their leaders. It is not only Tammany Hall, past masters in the art of graft, who follow the lead of the big Wall Street bankers, but Mayor Murphy of Detroit who was one of the first to shut down on city relief, to close the Selatan est zene ge ica | fluence of Dopey Benny, a gangster,| Municipal Lodging Houses in réturn for @ loan to keep up the grafting aut BE Ge Paige ve tata |who heads a racketeering outfit, wag| Machinery of the Detroit governmenit, to pay the interest on city bonds against the bosses \s ains ead ri 2 : thoiworkers' standagda/or living | used by Himmerman, organizer of | to the rich parasites. a fore : ; the Fish Dealers’ Association, which The Seabury investigation had @ purpose to accomplish. ‘That pur- ‘We can march through Kentucky pose was aided by the Socialist Party. When Seabury first started to obtained the injunction against the and Tennessee into the heart of the | 5 i. yen. South with our propagand. and or- | | » Wagenknecht sald. “This| The Food Workers’ Industrial 1 create unity between Ne. | Union is calling a conference of work~ white and smash discrim-|ets’ organizations to mobilize the | and segregation.” | Working class to lay plans for a Wor speaking for the | Smashing anti-injunction fight which | needle trades workers, stressed the | Will make the injunction a dead let- importance of knitting the struggles | ter. The Smash-the-Injunction Con of dress workers andthe miners to- | ferenee which has been endorsed t zether into a common offensive.|the Trade Union Unity Council w “The Kentucky and Tennessee min- | take place next Friday evening, Jan. are fighting the same battle as | 29th, at p. m. at the headquart- re the dress workers. Let us unite | ers of the Union, 5 East 19th Street. our ranks and give a smashing blow | Workers’ organizations are urged to to the hunger campaign of the bosses | send delegates to this conference and their agents, the officials of the| *¢ American Federation of Labor,” Wor- | TUUC ENDORSES si urely we can provide these min- rs and dress workers with a bite to| eat when they strike against hunger | and terror and for wage increases,” | Rose said William Z. Foster, national sec- | yvetary of the Trade Union Unity| The New York Trade’Union Unity League, in summing up a brilliant | Council today issued a statement en- analysis of the importance of relief |dorsing the defense conference to be a se strikes, | held by the International Labor De- The conference indorsed the pro- | fense on Sunday, Jan. 31, at the Irv- gram of th? resolutions committee | ing Plaza Hall. The statement says and tho delegates pledged their full | in part: cnergy in organizing a mass relief “The Time has come when every campaign to win these strikes and to| workers organization must rally to keep starvation from stealin a bril- the support of the I. L. D. in its ef- hant victory of the miners and the| torts to give adequate defense to adres. miekere workers who are being terrorized | and persecuted by. the capitalist | class. “The increased number of per- -Seeutions in the last few weeks is. an indication that terror is on the inerease and that the bosses are beeoming more determined in their efforts than before, to smash all militant workers organizations. There must be @ greater amount of support to the I. L. D. in its cam- paign for the release of Tom Moo~ ney from prison, that the pressure of the masses is increasing. “The terror,against the Kentucky miners must be fought and the tempo of the campaign for the re- lease of the 9 Scottsboro boys must be increased if their release is actu- ally to be secured. “The T. U. U. C. calls upén every Working Women’s Meet January 30 Prepare February 4 Demonstrations NEW YOK.—Working women from nemployed women and wives of workers will gather at a Working Women’s Conference on Jan. 30, at 2p. m. at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irv Place, New York. Since relief has been cut off in New York, unemployed women are suffering unbelievable misery. Even the little relief that is thrown to the} workers is demied to single women, who are left destitute, without food and without’a home. The women who are still working, | are having their wages cut stegdily,| until they barely have anything left, to live on. Part-time werk and eat shop conditions ate becoming * ° 1sual in the needle trades and other Against Olympics industries, The Working Women's Conference| The workers of New York have on Jan, 30th will discuss how work- | Joined the Counter Olympic Cam- ing women can fight more effectively |Paign, which will expose the class against unemployment, wage cuts|Tole of the bosses’ Olympics to be and the imperialist war plot. ‘The|held in California this summer. mobilization of working women for} They are planning a series of elim- Feb, 4th Unemployment Insurance | ination meets and tournaments which Day Js one of the main tasks of the| Will be run off preliminary to the conference. Preparations will also be | huge International Workers’ Athletic made for International Women’s|Meet. This {s the workers’ own Day—March 8th. of its affiliated unions to partici- pate in this conference being held on Sunday, January 31st.” N. Y. Workers Join Counter Movement Sef Re: jto the Olympics in Chicago this summer. ILD Defends Workers} me tirst event scheduled is a| in reneral S Hi | Free Tom Mooney Open Street Run, | G ner 1 Se Ssions to be held on Monday, Feb. 22. 2N>/| Cow rt Tied a Y | proposed course in New York City | "ested. The workers’ militancy and Neer |is from Rutgers Square to Union The case of Zaroff and Bosch! who| square. This is a 21-2 mile run were arrested on January 8th, 1931, 88 | through areal proletarian section of @ result of a police attack against an | the city. unemployed demonstration, at Man-| ‘The Counter Olympic Committee hattan Lyceum, came to trial in Gen- | of New York is calling a United Front eral Sessions Court, Part 7, today. | Conference of all working-class or- ‘These two workers who were partie- | ganizations on Feb, 29. All workers ipants in the demonstration wera! are invited to attend this conference. rarged with felonious assault. The workers of New York must ra]- to the support of these two workers ang must come to the court room as a demonstration of solidarity with the unemployed workers and against fights: For a Mass Workers’ Sport Meet. Against the discrimination against Negroes; For the freedom of Tom Mooney; ‘For free gymns, fields and playgrounds for worker athletes; To employed workers. boycott the bosses’ olympics in Los THE WESTERN WORKER | Comes Out January Ist Angeles. What’s On— TUESDAY, A, fighter to organize and lee tAISE FUNDS! BUILD 52 Issues $2 Western Worker Campaign Committee 35 FOURTH STREET, 26 Issues $1 DEFENSE MEET Workers’ organization and every one | mass meeting held at Ocean Park-| Property of meet, which they will run counter |™arched about 600 strong through The Counter Olympic Committee | Please report to 1357 Neptune Ave; scrape together some of the lesser grafters of Tammany Hall and hold them up as examples, the Socialists helped the little game along. Norman Thomas wrote a whole series of editorials praising Seabury, Seabury was “cleaning up the government,” and the Socialists are for “clean” capitalist government, efficiently slygging the unemployed, efficientiy starving the workers, wiping out local graft so that the rich taxpayers will throw their support to the Soeialists. In the present period the financial crisis in the various cities has | lessened the available source of graft, though in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and elsewhere it outstrips the unemployment relief given by @ hundred to one, and there is a struggle between the various capitalist politielans for control. The workers, starving by the millions, faced with mass evictions car- ried out by the corrupt city courts, beaten and slugged when they demand bread, watching the capitalist politicians raise their salaries when the workers get wage cuts, are beginning to see through the class structure of the whole corrupt layers of capitalist government. Then Seabury comes to the rescue! Norman Thomas and the So- cialist Party come to the support of Seabury. Here is hope! Capitalist city government ean be perfumed, the swamp of corruption can be made to smell sweeter, if it is covered with a new set of phrases. Seabury proposes non-partisan elections, a city manager plan, a re- organization of the city government. | It is not Tammany Hall alone that is corrupt. The whole capitalist structure is corrupt, rotten, and no amount of “re-organization” of city government will wipe out a jet of the ingrained grafting system. In Chieago good republican supporters of the grafting Harding and the swindling Hoover, under the Thompson regime, coined millions irf graft. The Cermak regime, affiliated to Tammany Hall, has “reformed” the police so it is more efficient in beating up the unemployed and shoot- ing down Negro workers. In Cleveland the “non-partisan” city govern- ment kills Negro unemployed workers for refusing to be evicted. In De~ troit, the “non-partisan” Mayor Murphy tells the unemployed to starve while he saves $83,000,000 for the rich exploiters. There wil] be more starvation for the workers whether it is under Tammany or Seabury and Thomas's sweet-smelling capitalist dictater- ship. Only the workers, through their class action, through their strug- gle for unemployment relief, through building up their own party, the Communist Party, through developing the revolutionary struggle against capitalism can put the final] seal on the cesspool of capitalist government. Brighton Beach Bread Strike Wins Hunger Disease Rampant in Ky. PINEVILLE, Ky., Jan. 21 (By Mail) The Bell County Health Department announces that it treated 5715 cases of pellagra (starvation disease) in the county-in 1931. This is in addition to First Victory Ka IF eases treated privately or by company Bakery Boss Signs. to | decters. Sell Cheaper Rar KETTLE ISLAND, Ky., Jan. 21 (By | NEW YORK, Jan. 25.—After a the Pioneer Coal Co., | way Hall, the Brighton Beach Bread | here, refuses to deliver to miners Strike Committee explained to the| bundles of The Daily Worker sent workers present that they would no/|to them through the mail. Majl.)—The U. 8. post office on the | Yellow zs Terror Cry NEW YORK, Jan. 26, — In an ef- fort to once more stir up anti-work- ti-Communist hys- the country, the throughout New York cor talist press have cooked up (or rather Found Planted jn 107th Regiment Armory” the “Evening Graphic” tells of a “contraption” that was “planted” in the armory in a “red plot”. A dozen policemen rushed to the arm- ory, ys the Graphic, seized the de- | vice and dropped it into a pail of water, Considerable excitement swept throughout the armory, says the wildy eyed boss press reporter. But as is generally the case, so in this case the whole nature of the “plot” stands exposed in the Graphie’s own columns. is We quote the Graphic against the Graphic: “The armory and other officers of the regiment . . . were inclined to make light of the occurrence. Some said that jhe supposed bomb was nothing more than 2 hand-gre- nade which the guardsmen had left in the building with instructions that it be destroyed.” Thus died the most recent anti- ney’s finest. Paterson Tag Day on January 31 for Ken- ~ tucky Miners Relief ‘Tag day and house-to-house col- lections will be held in Paterson, N. |, Sunday, January 3ist for the Ken- Tennessee miners. In the volunteer call Comrade Clay, New Jersey District Secretary of the W. J, R. says, “Our district has been somewhat late in mobilizing its forces for the relief of the Kentucky-Ten- nessee miners. 'This tag day must be the means of making up for lost time. Let us show the other districts that the workers of New Jersey are behind this strike to the last man, woman and child. All report at 9:30, 3 Gov- |ernor Street, Paterson, N. J., Sunday, 9:30." . |500 Volunteers Needed | for Newark Tag Day| on January 29 and 30) NEWARK, N. J. — The Workers International Relief has secured legal !permission to hold a city-wide tag day for the relief of the striking Ken- tucky and Tennessee miners here on January 29 and 30. This victory must be fully utilized by the workers of this |city. We are calling for a minimum of 500 volunteers to go into every cor- ner of the city for funds. The office of the W. I. R., 75 Springfield Ave., will be open every day for recejving | volunteers and issuing instructions and stations for the tag days. Bring groups of workers in for credentials. The success of the United Front Conference in New York for the strik- ing miners and dress makers must be an inspiration for us to develop real mass conference here for the miners on January 29 at 75 Springfield Ave., 8 p. m. longer picket the shops, since the bakery bosses had voluntarily re- duced their prices. However, the committee exnlained that in their {opinion the reductions of the prices without the bosses having signed aereements was a fake gesture to disrupt the unity of the workers, Events proved the Strike Commit- tee to be correct in their analysis. The bosses upon learning that their shops were no lonver to be picketed immediately jacked up prices to their old level. The workers upon being meade aware of the action of the bosses == Moscow the streets of Brighton Beach and in front of the bakery stores, shouting slogans and singing “On the Picket Line.” ‘Thus far 12 pickets have been ar- | enthusiasm has brought forth the first rift in the United Front of the bosses. ‘The Wagner Bakery at 319 Brighton Beach Ave. has signed to® reduce (and maintain reduction) of bread.to 5 cents a pound and rolls to 15 éents a dozen, This is @ real victory. Those wishing to do picketing, E THEATRE GUILD presents EUGENE O'NUILLS Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra’ Composed of 3 playe presented on tiday HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED ‘THE HAUNTED Commencing at 5:30 sherp. Dinner In- termigsion of one hour at 7 No Mats GUILD IEA. 58d St, W. of Bway nue. Don’t buy bread or rolls from those shops fighting the workers. RENEW YOUR OLD SUBSCRIP- TION TO THE DAILY WO! B Workers! Do the places where you spend The Theatre G REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy By ROBERT UL. SHERWOOD Martin Beek fit, 22 eve, 8:40 Mats. Thurg.Sat.2:40 - ee Ile In Fehicarse Tonight at dpm. ae 3d your money our struggles in the Weat fl iivays welcome” "It advertise in the UEENIE SMITH in iv! SUBSCRIBE NOW! The Unemployes’ Geunelt wilt. pee- Worker? Q sent a program tonight at the Fin- nish Hall, 15 W, 126th St. Admission is 28 cents, proceeds to go to the unemployed, * 13 Issues 50c eve Worker photographers in Germany have asked for a number of copies of the Hunger March pictures (Dec. 12) issue of the Daily Worker. | Workers who have such coples in- tact are requested to send them to the Workers’ Film Photo League, 16 W. alet Bt, New York City. ’ Alteration Painters, Bronx Section A regular o forum will be held at our headquarters at 10 o'clock. prominent labor leader wilh lecture /on Trade Unionten» ' San Francisco, Calif. Bust DANCING BSW Is OWN 44th St. THEATRE. Went of Bw ives, 8:30. M Wed. & Si a PHILIP MERIVALE CYNARA ‘wITtH s1EFRENSON FOsTER ASK THEM TO DO IM SEND US THEIR NAMES! Daily. qlorker AO BK, With St. N.Y. Soon you will see on Broadway the first Soviet Sound film “ROAD | TO LIFE” The World Attraction! Opens at CAMEO, 42nd Street and Brway., JAN. 28 Speaks! = Press Raises| and the yellow capi- | overed”) a brand new “bomb plot” in New York City. Under the streamer “Red Bomb) NEW YORK.—A public hearing was held on Jan. 22 at 1813 Pitkin Ave. by the Brownsville Unemployed ; Council to expose the misery and starvation which is forced on the un- employed. The following experiences | were told: | #1. Kaplan, living at 503 Williams | Ave. a needle tredes worker, makes |from 316 to $17 a week, pays $22 |rent, has 3 children, had to borrow to pay rent, but had to move. The house is organized and is striking for lower rent: The landlord Simon Halpern, has gotten 35 dispossesses issued, but the workers are deter- mined not to pay and to fight on until they win the strike. L. Kramer, a child going to Public School, whose fatl er has been unem- | ployed for 4 or 5 months, gets hardly anything from the school, only soup and bread. The schoo] promised him shoes but did not tive them to him. Many more kids in the school need relief but do not receive it. He was forced to stay out of school one day because of lack of food. He and his family were evicted from their home | last week. Wm. Brady, Negro worker, unem- ployed for 6 months, lives at 41 Wat- kins St., was thrown out of his house at 1595 East New York Ave. He stopped the Marshal from putting | him out without a dispossess, but the Marshal got # warrant for him. The Unemployed Council stepped the Communist provocation of Mulroo- | eviction and got the Brooklyn Bur- eau of Charities to pay his rent in | new rooms, he found. The council j also got the marshal to give $5 to ; pay for moving. Mrs. Fogel is out of work, has 4 | children, applied to the United Jew- sih Aid and Home Relief Bureau but got no relief. Has not even got a room to stay in. Two of her children were taken away by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Chil- dren. Eli Jaffe, unemployed for 3 months, worked for the landlord so that his rent is paid, his electric and gas is {shut off. Police station and Home | Relief Bureau said they would inves~ tigate but did not. ‘Then the Home Relief Buyeau told him they had nothing to do with the Electric and Gas Companies. This worker thinks | that if the workers go in a group they will get quicker and better re- lief. Goldberg, unemployed 6 months, MB PLOT” Destitution and Suffering DES AT BIRTH Exposed at Public Hearing living at 1508 St. Marks Ave., lives there 8 months, pays $30 yent, got dispossess for not paying 10 days rents, went to police station, wag sent back and forth from main to section office but hasn’t been inves- tigated yet. Is living on $? which he got from a friend. Mrs. Kornitsky, husband ynem- ployed, went to police station and got nothing. Landlord gave her until Monday to pay the rent. Two ef her children are in the Gerry Society; they will stay there for 5 years; she wants her ehildren and wants money for those ehildren who have beer taken to the Schermerhorn Society. Lieutenant Watkins, unemployed since a week before Christmas, liver rent for Dec. or Jan.; was giver at 288 Dumont Ave., has not paid until Monday to get out of the house He went to tle Home Relief Bureau 4 weeks ago, but was only given food and a coal ticket., ‘The Unemployed Council went to the Home Relie! Bureau and,forced them to pay thr rent so that he is not evicted. Rent Strike Loom: in Brownsville Tenants Demand Cut of $4 Per Room NEW YORK.—Under the leader- ship of the Unemployed Council of Brownsville, the rent strikes in the section are continually growing. On Sunday, Jan. 24, a meeting of the entire block of Fiinsdolle St., be- tween Geronia and Riverdale, was held. ‘The tenants decided to de- mand a reduction of $1.50 on each room. A block commitiee wes elected to present the demands to the Jend- lords. In the event that the land- lords do not agree to reduce the rent, the ienants voted to go out on a rent sirike. ‘The tenants are enthused by the victory of the Olinville Ave. rent strikers, who won as high as a $4 re- duction in rents. ‘They are deter- mined to force the landlord to come to terms and reduce the exorbitant rents now charged. See Who Advertises in Your Own Daily WORKERS! All working class organizations of Newark, N. J. rally to the 8th An- atversary of the DAILY WORKER Sat., Jan. 30, 7:30 pam. 53 BROOME ST., Newark, PROGRAM: Red Dancers Prolet Buehne \Newark Mandolin Orchestra Speaker: BILL DUNNE, Editor of the Daily Worker Admission 25 Cents LUNCH 35c; DINNER 50c (For Comrades) Affiliated With FOOD WOKKEKS INDUSTRIAL UNION Part of receipts goes to I. 1, D. and Workers’ School RED STAR 49 EAST 12TH ST. RUSSIAN MEALS For Poor Pocketbooks COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW BLMER RICE PAUL MUNI i Plymouth he » W. 45 St. Be. a2 2CAME 42nd St. All Seats 25¢ & D'way tol P.M. He Rebelled Against Society “CAIN® THE STORY OF A MODERN ROBINSON CRUSOE! BIGGEST SHOW IN NEW YORK BEKO JAMES DUNN & awwls SALLY VILEMD 1" tarty Rien | & he Dance Team” Every shop, mine and factory a fertile field for Daily Worker sub- scriptions, KAVKAZ 382 E. 4th Street, N.Y. ©: MELROS DAIRY VEGETARIAN BESTAURANT Comrades Will Always Find it Pleasant te Dine et Our Place. (781 SQUTHERN BLVD, Brops (pegr 174th St. Station) fELEPRONE INTERVALE 99149 SOLLINS’ RESTAURANT 216 KAS? 14TH STREET | 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents Workers’ Correspondence is the backbone of the revolutionary press. Build your press by writing for it about your day-to-day struggle. STATEN ISL, WINNIE! Intern] Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR AN Work Done Onder Persone! Cere ot PR. JOSEPHEON BRONX, N. ¥- “WE STRIKE” and “ON THE BOWERY” Two Revolutionary Acip By DR. MORRIS LEVITT Published by 1.W.0O, Pricelse At WORKERS BOOKSHOP 50 E. 13th St. N. ¥. ©. Good Eats UNIVERSITY DELICATESSEN 100 University Place, N. ¥. C. Telephone AL. 4-1307 Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bot. 19th aod Lith ftp. Strictly Vegetarian feed “GRAND NIGHT INTERNATIONAL UNEMPLOYED RELIEF TUESDAY, JAN. 26 at 8:30 P.M. at FINNISH HALL, 15 West 126th St. Program: MUSIC, POEMS, SONGS, DRAMATIC and COMEDY ACTS, TWO SHORT SPEECHES IN FINNISH ND NEGRO CHORUS CHORUS JOH! OTHER rE Dance with Good Musie ission 25¢ All Welcome PROCEEDS TO UNEMPLOYED. Auspices: Unemployed CounelJ. CONCERT FOR BENEFIT THE LIBERATOR League of Struggle for Negro Rights At the FINNISH WORKERS HALL 15 West 126th Street, New York Thursday, January 28th, 1932, 8 P. M. Excellent Program, Featuring MARIE EVELYN MARGETSON, Pianist main ees a exmmrriog Pe Admission at door—35 Cents {