The Daily Worker Newspaper, February 4, 1932, Page 2

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Race Hatred on Trial This Sunday at Harlem Casino Needle Trades iiludirisl Union Fights Against | Tmperialist Poison NEW influence of impe Trades Industrial afternoon, Feb. 7, and abuse of a held at the New Harlem Casino, 1004 West 116th St., beginning at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon. In a cal! to the workers to attend the trial and rally to the fight| against race hatred, the union points out The Needle Trades Workers’ Indus- on trial Union has for its policy the nity of all workers for common] Struggle against the bosses. The pro- gram of the Needle Workers’ Indus- trial Union calls especially for a fight for the rights of the most un- derpaid, most exploited workers in the trade, the Negro workers Our | union regards race prejudice as one} of the most terrible curses of the labor movement. It is purposely or- ganized by the white bosses in order to divide white from Negro, to split the ranks of the workers, and. op- press and exploit both The International Ladies Garment | Workers’ Union of the Jim Crow American Federation ports the bosses’ Labor, vicious of race préjudice. against Negro workers like all Amer- | ican Federation of Labor bosses unions. Only recently Mr. Reisbe! vice president of the International | Ladies’ Garmeht Workers’ Union, and | manager of its Philadelphia local, | removed Negro pressers from jobs, and replaced them with Jewish| pressers. ‘This is the discrimination, | prejudice, Negro hating policy of the | egro organizer of the union. Within Its Ranks YORK Seitieerinad to stamp out the poisonous Rst race hatred in its ranks, is holding of a white worker accused of race prejudice the Needle at trial this Sunday The trial will be bosses, and their unions, Fellow workers: This white chauv- inism, this division of the workers in lines of race and nationality, is part of the bosses’ campaign to lower the standards of living of all workers. The bosses and their government are vigorously pushing the campaign of terror against Negro and foreign born workers. Nine Negro boys are still held in the prisons of Alabama on the framed up charge of “rape.” The bosses, through their tools, the police and militia, shot down unemployed workers in Chicago and Cleveland. Thousands of foreign born workers are deported for fighting against wage cuts and for unemployment re- lief and unemployment insurance. Especi: at this time, when the Negro and white workers under the leadership of the Needle Trades Workers’ Industrial Union are unit- ing and striking for wage increases | and better working conditions in the are needle industry for all workers, the bosses and their agents trying to fhe Communist Party, the leader split the ranks of the workers. of the working class, endorses this mass trial and calls upon all workers, Negro and white, to turn out in masses for this mass trial. Join the fight for Negro Rights! Against lynching! Against Jim Crowism! For the freedom of the 9 Scottsboro boys! [ASSES TO MARCH SQUARE TO (CONTINUED FROM PAGU UNES starvation and war plans of the Fed- eral government. The struggle for the Workers’ Unempl ent Insur- ance Bill and the fight against the new menacing imperialist war will feature the meeting The Wor Unemployment In- surance Bill, providing for job insur- ance for all workers equal to full wages to be paid out of the bosses’ profits and the federal wa be submitted to the y rs for en- dorsement. A delegation of 25, rep- resenting organizations of the unem- ployed, war veterans, working wom- funds will en, youth, and workers in trade unions and clubs will be elected to appear before the mayor v de- mands for increased priations tor relief of the une on debts to bankers ng $126.000,000 to be used for immediate rolief, all relief to be paid in cash and under the control of workers’ cor ttees. The doieg: de- mand that the city dorse the Work: Insurance Bill as councils have been the pressure of the tuner To March Down Broads A hu ade down will escort the delegation Squere at 3 p. m. to Ci A delegation from the Council appeared at City Hall yes- terday to reaffirm the intention of the New York workers to march and her at City Hall steps this after-| roon. A whole police detail awaited mm all morni idencing the un- easin the ess with which of the unemploy tions for strug; for their most immediate needs. Chief Inspector of Police, McAuliffe, re- ceived the delegation and ushered it into the outer room of Mayor Walk- Tammany views d er’s office. From then on, the Chief Inspector acted as messenger from some official inside who feared to face the delegation. Efforts to dis- suade the committee fr m orig- inal plans were of no avail and the What’s On— TRY URSDAY There w be a jass meeting of Alteration Painters at the Pros- pect Workers’ Club com ade Joseph Zact of the SU.U.C., will review the situation of All workers the aiteration painters in the trade are reque their me and bring ell orkers. A gran fin’ Photo- of Ni Xe t4 pm The Will m Ay joe HEN Broneh of the I of L. A. F. @ discussion at B The will by the ch 500 of the F Ww. Workers’ ( 8:30 p.m. Comrade Primoff will iead | the discussion oie Ye, Roy B. Hudson, receutly returned from the Soviet on “What I Sew in th at side Manor, 85 i Avo. Bronx, xt 8 p.m, under the aus p of the, West Bronx Branch of the F,5.U, A’ question and discussion period will follow “Bourgeois vs. Proletaria ture” will be discussed by Jos Freeman at Irving Plaza, 15th | and Irving PL, at 8 p.in. er the | auspices of the N. ¥. District of the Inundry Workers Industrial U WIL have a meeting tonight at Third Ave. and Cl ont Park at p.m, All laun workers inv'ted Workers’ © "5 League, WIN hold a memb: vship ineeting at 27 W. 126th Si, at 8 p.m, All mem- | bers are ttond | requested to Ronald Kdwardy neh, LL.D. retina to be | St FROM UNION CITY HALL TODAY \ym) | delegation finally received word that the paraders would be received at City Hall. Mayor Walker sent word | that he would be sick in bed today. The delegation will insist on seeing the Mayor or Acting Mayor McKee. This will be the first time in New York City that workers’ organizations parade down Broadway, the avenue heretofore reserved for the Dino Grandit’s, Lindbergh's, and other fav- ored sons of American imperialism. All out to Union Square at 1:30 p. m. today ready to march to City Hall. Join the fight for Unemploy- ment Insurance and immediate cash relief! Demonstrate against the war maneuvers and attacks against the Chinese revolutionary workers and peasants! Demand hands off the Seviet Union and all war funds to the unemployed! All out for Unem- ployment Insurance! Williamsburg Workers to March. The Unemployed Council of Wil- lisamsburg got a permit to parade. The march will start 11 a. m. from Graham Ave., and Varet St. to Bush- | wick Ave, with Bushwick to Mes- serole St., down Messerole St. to 8. 4th St. and through 8. 4th St. to Grand St. Extension. A number of open air meetings will be held at various points along the routes of march and when the parade will reach these points the workers will join the parade. @§he main demon- stration in Williamsburg will be held at Grand St. Extension and S. 4th Prominent speakers will address the mass meeting at 1 p.m. The workers will march to Union Square. The Unemployed Council expects the following organization to parti- cipate n the parade: 1, The Paper Bag Union. 2. Furnture Workers’ Industrial Union. 3. Alteration Painters’ Indus- trial Union. 4. Williamsburg Workers’ Club. 5. Several Russian organizations. 6. Three Women’s Councils. 7. Several Lithuanian organiza- tions. 8. Ukrainian organizations. 9. Two I W. ©. Branches and some Block and House Committees and many other organizations. All these organizations will march with their banners and placards. These workers will parade and dem- onstrate for Unemployment Insur- ance and immediate cash relief. Will protest against closing up the Home Relief offices, against the terror of the Temmany police and their land- lords’ beating up of the workers and resting them, because they fight ainst evictions, and for lower rents, free rent, gas and electric for the unemployed. ee YONKERS, N. Y.—On Feb. 4th, hundreds of workers, unemployed and employed, will demonstrate at Larkin Plaza at noon to demand im- mediate relief and the endorsement of the Workers Unemployment In- | surance Bill. A delegation of work- ers elected at the Unemployment Conference held Jan. 30th, will carry ALYN TE ANTS | WIN DEMANDS | of || |Force Recognition House Committee NEW YORK—tTwenty-three ten- jants of 292-Hinsley St., Brooklyn, |have won a strike for a reduction of two dollars per apartment and rec- ognition of the House Committee. In the beginning of the strike the landlord wanted to agree on the re- duction, but refused to recognize the House Committee. The tenants re- alized that this was an attempt to keep them unorganized and held out for recognition of the House Com- mittee. The demands were won in spite of the scabbing of two tenants, I. Criger and Morris Plaster, who sought to curry favor with the land- lord at the expense of betrayal of | their fellow tenants. Call Emergency Meet of Youth Anti-War Conference for Sun. NEW YORK.—An emergency ses- | sion of the Executive Council of the Anti-War Youth Conference will be held on Sunday, Feb. 7, at 2 p.m. at Irving Plaza, 15th St. and Irying Pl. ‘This meeting will take up the imme- diate tasks of the youth in the Chi- nese crisis. The invasion of the Japanese armed forces into China proper and the suppert given by the imperial- | ists to this attack, makes it essential | for the youth to act immediately ‘The Conference has pledged support | to all peoples struggling against im- perialist exploitation. The murder- | ous attacks on the masses of China must be answered with powerful pro- test of all workers. the demands of the unemployed to the City Council after the demon- stration. Twenty thousand workers are jobless in Yonkers. ae) oe NEW ROCHELLE, N. Y.—A siege of terror is being waged against the 5,000 unemployed workers in New Rochelle, one of the richest cities in New York State. All efforts to hold meetings, both outdoor and indoor, | are broken up and last Thursday a | worker who has been active organiz- | ing the workers in support of Un- employment Insurance equal to full | wages was arrested on a frame-up | charge of having concealed weapons | in his possession. Permission for a/| Feb. 4th demonstration has been re- fused. A protest meeting is being) called against the refusal of the authorities to allow workers the} right to the streets, . . . | i BEACON, N. ¥.—In spite of the) refusal of the local authorities to/| permit a demonstration on Feb. 4th, workers organized in the Duchess | Junction Unemployed Council of the | Westchester Unemptoyed Councils will demonstrate at Chestnut and Main St., 5 p. m. * 08 OSSINING, N. Y.—A mass meet- ing will be held Feb. 4th, in the head- | quarters of the Ossining Workers So- | cial Club, 20 Brookville Ave, at 8 p.m WHITE PLAINS, N. Y.—A huge protest meeting has been arranged by the White Plains Unemployed Coun- | cil of the Westchester Unemployed Councils at 128 Martine Ave. at 8) p. m. to organize and protest against local authorities’ refusal to give the workers the right to meet on the) streets.. The city authorities of White | Plains are doing all they can to stop | workers from protesting against the | hunger and misery that exists in White Plains, which is known as Millionaires’ Town,” where the only relief that is being given to over} 6,000 unemployed workers is watery | | coffee and stale rolls by the Salva- | tion Army. Pa rat Six Demonstrations In Long Island. JAMAICA, L. 1.—Preparations for | the six demonstrations in Long Island | are going full steam ahead, unheed- ing the violent threats of American Legion officials to break them up. A direct appeal is being made to ell ex-servicemen not to follow the faccist dictates of their treacherous | leaders, who openly collaborated in the robbing of their Tombstone benus, and to join their fellow-work- ers who are hungry and jobless at the Feb. 4 demonstrations. The largest is expected to be held in Jamaica, where workers will as- semble at 6 corners, hold short meet- ings and then march to the central demonstration at the Old Town Hail. After one hour of demonstration here the masses will proceed to the Leaiby subway and swing off to Ur ion Square, the central city dem- onstiation, The demonstrations will be held in Jamaica, Olmont, Inwood, Huntington, Hicksville and Hemp- stead. All these demonstrations will elect delegations to visit local town and relief agencies with demands. “The labor movement will gain the upper hand and show the way to peace and socialism.” LENIN. MOBILIZA FOR VICTORY IN OUR COMING STRUGGLES! M ASQUE BALL given by the Needle Trades Workers Industrial Union FRIDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 12 (Lincoln's Birthday Night) ‘'T \R CASINO—107th STREET AND PARK AVENUE GOLD WILL SPEAK—PROLET BUEHNE IN SOMETHING NEW BEN |Mecca Temple ~| night to ask the members of the In- DANCING UNTIL MORNING! Tickets In advance 50 cents—At the door 65 cents DAILY Wi ORKER, NEW YORK, THURSD Y, FEBRUARY 4, , 19 932 [Must Maintain Proletarian Discipline at | upon all workers to help maintain Union Square. 3. 4. irresponsible people in the crowd. 5. important demoastration. Demonstration Today NEW YORK.—The Unemployed Council of Greater New York calls the demonstration for Unemployment Insurance Thursday, The central meéting will start at 1:30 p. m. | All parades should be planned to arrive at the Square on time. Here are a few points to remember and follow: 1, Only authorized tommittees, bearing proper should be permitted to circulate through the crowd. Conversation, forming of small groups, and walking about on the edge of the crowd should be discouraged. No literature will be sold, collection boxes circulated, etc., except by authorized committees bearing proper identification. Pay no attention to rumors or unauthorized orders spread by Keep yourself in order and help maintain the unity of this UNEMPLOYED COUNCIL OF GREATER NEW YORK. 5 East 19th Street, Carl Winter, Secretary. Union Square | order and proletarian discipline in Feb. 4th, in promptly. identification, DRESSMAKERS IN HUGE MASS MEETING AT MECCA TEMPLE VOTE FOR GENERAL STRIKE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) scale included in the present agree- ment. 3. Am increase of 25 per cent in the wages of the workers who are working below the minimum wage scales, particularly the new elements who have recently come into the trade. 4. No discharge after one week trial period. 5. Negro and Latin-American workers to receive the same pay for the same work as white workers and have the privilege of working in every shop and every craft. 6. Equal pay for equal work for young workers and pay for the time spent in continuation school. Ship- ping clerks to be paid for overtime. 7. Unemployment insurance at the expense of the bosses, to be dis- tributed by the employed and un- employed workers, 8. No overtime so long as there is unemployment in the trade. 9. Equal division of work. 10. Contractor and jobber to be responsible for the wages of the workers. ll. Fight against injunctions, against gangsterism, and police ter- ror, for the right to strike and picket. “We. authorize the strike prepara- tion committee to decide on the day of the strike and issue the strike call, and pledge to tax ourselves with one- half day's pay for the purpose of raising a strike fund. “We call on all dressmakers, irre- spective of color, nationality, right | wingers, left wingers, organized and unorganized, employed and unem- ployed, to rally to the strike call of the United Front Committee and to help carry through a mass strike for union conditions in the dress indus- | try, to elect strike shop committees and be ready to answer the call for a mass united front strike, “We call on the members of the | International, whom the officials are preparing to sell out to the bosses through a fake strike lockout engi- neered by the leaders of the Inter- | national together with the bosses, the Lovestonites and Dudley Field Ma- Jone as a conspiracy to continue the conditions of slavery and oppression in the dress trade, to repudiate the treacherous activities of their offi- cialdom and to join with us in a unit- ed front strike for union conditions for all dressmakers and elect a dele- gation at this meeting to go to the meeting tomorrow ternational to join with us in organ- izing one united front strike. “We ask all dressmakers present | at this meeting and all other dress- makers to go to this meeting with us | | to demonstrate their support for a | united strike. We instruct the strike preparation committee to issue a spe- cial call to the members of the In- ternational and the open shop work- ers to rally to the United Front mass strike, and pledge to exert every ef- fort to see that the coming United Front strike is a real mass strike in- Is Modern Civilization a Failure? A sensational drama of a man’s scathing indictment of modern civilization! ACME THEATRE 14th Street and Union Square Popular prices—Midnite show Sat. KIDNEY AGONY? | Juick relief from Corture of barksches, {te Rear pains. Gents bs curbs une isi, in . oa St ARRAS cAlASALSS volving thousands of exploited and | oppressed dressmakers. | “Long live the unity of the cress- | makers! | “Forward to a united front mass | strike for union conditions under rank | and file leadership! | “Forward to the struggle! Forward | to victory!” | Strike Preparation Committee Meets Tonight. | The spirit of’ the Mecca Temple | meeting has shown the readiness of the dressmakers to fight for union conditions. The workers, in no uncer- |tain terms repudiated the fake strike |lockout engineered by the Interna- tional officials and Lovestonites to- gether with the bosses and the capi- talist politicians, and pledged to mo- | bilize all dressmakers to answer the | strike call of the United Front Com- | | mittee. | This morning the Lovestonites, |Pearl Halpern and a number of | others, toured the dress market in |machines, together with hired goril- | las, and made an attempt to terror- ize Pearl Kleinman, an active mem- | ber of the Needle Trades Workers In- | dustrial Union, on strike at the An- nette Dress Co., 1380 Broadway, and on Joe Kugler, striker of the Adelle | Frock Co., 240 W. 35th St, | The United Front Committee calls on the dressmakers to answer these | attacks on striking workers by driving the gorillas out of the market: The United Front Committee calls on all dressmakers to come to the office of | the NeedIe Trades Workers Industrial Uniongl31 W. 28th St.. to go out on the picket line in front of the strik- | ing shops. TRY 10 SMASH BREAD STRIKE Socialists Aid Bosses to Keep Prices High About 90 persons attended the | meeting called by the labor fakers to.) break “the bread strike at Brighton Beach. Many of those present were bakery | workers bosses to attend this meeting. The others comprised the Bosses them- selves and their henchmen, gangsters and “socialists”. The purpose of the bakery bosses, the gangsters and “socialists” is to smash the offensive of thé Bread Strike Committee, and to effect a forced séttlement on the price of bread. The strike committee calls upon all workers and consumers to stand on guard against any settlement arrang- ed by the fakers and “socialists”. Yesterday, 12 workers appeared in court and the judge who supports the bakery bosses, refused to try the cases without the district attorney, explain- ing that the arrested strikers are “ter- rible criminals.” This same judge ad- vised the attorney of the bakery boss. es to cause an injunction to be issued against the bread strikers, | The bosses’ lawyer replied that he would get an injunction against the thousands who are striking and pick- eting for the lower price of bread. Three pickets were arrested today | while on duty in front of the Ocean View Bakery, All three were latr re- leased, AFFAIR TONIGHT FOR MINE STRIKE) NEW YORK.—After the demon- stration for unemployment insurance, workers of New York will show their solidarity with the heroic miners of Kentucky, and at the same time en- | joy one of the best programs of work- | ers culture ever presented in this country, by going to the 0Workers’ | Theatre Night for Miners’ Relief, to- night at Manhattan Lyceum, 66 E. 4th St. N. Y. C. Plays dealing with the miners’ strike, with Scottsboro, with the In- ternational Labor Defense, withthe speed-up, with the Soviet Union, and other interesting subjects, will be pre- sented by five workers’ tehatre groups, Artef, Prolet-Buehne, Workers’ Lab- oratory Theatre of the Workers In- ternational Relief, Jewish workers’ clubs dram-section, and Ukrainian Dramatic Circle, The Red Dancers, too, will present some of their best numbers. Concert music and stirring revolutionary mu- sic will bé furnished by the W.LR. Brass Band. Admiss0i00on is 50 cents. All proceeds will go to relief for the striking miners of Kentucky. The af- fair has been arranged by the Work- ers Dramatic Council of New York. AMUSEMENTS sCAMEO 2ND BIG WEEK!=—=, Soviet Russia’s First Talkie "ROAD TO LIFE” DRAMA OF THE HOMELESS WAIFS (TITLES IN ENGLISH) 42nd Street and B’way | All Seats to1 P.M. 25¢ THE THEATRE GUILD presents EUGENE O'NEILL’S Trilogy Mourning Becomes Electra Composed of 3 plays presented on 1/day HOMECOMING, THE HUNTED THE HAUNTED | Commencing at 5:30 sharp. Dinner tn- termisslon of one hour at 7. No Mats. |) GUILD THEA,, 524 St. W. of Bway poate nacre i etal ePladbir ‘The Theatre Guild Presents REUNION IN VIENNA A Comedy -By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD. Martin Beck {O"2" St. & 8 Ave. Eve. 8:40 Mats. Thurg.Sat.2:40 COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW By With ELMER RICE PAUL MUNI} Plymouth frac thors, a sat. 3:20 | EVERYBODY'S WELCOME 1 comedy bit, with FRANCES LIA OSCAR SHAW, ANN PENNINGTON HARRIETT LAE SHUBERT Thea,, 44th St. W. of Brw’y Eve. 8:30, Mata. Wed, RENEW YOUR OLD SUBSCRIP- | TION TO THE DAILY WORKER at Choruses from New York, Fall River, etc., in Tickets 50c., 15¢., 700 SINGERS National Concert of all the Freiheit Singing Societies SATURDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 20 Mecca Temple, — 55th St. and 7th Ave. Philadelphia, Boston, Newark, Patterson, Providence, $1.00 and #1.25—On sale in the Freiheit Office. 35 Bast 12th Street, 6th floor the Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, revolutionary songs who, were forced by their |- | other current problems. | Bosses of Los Angeles Try to Declare the Communist Party Illegal at Trial of 45 Workers a retired carpenter, a real estate salesman and one oil pumper. In his opening statement the pro- secutor frankly stated that his pur- pose is to prove that the Communist Party follows illegal methods and means, as overthrowing of the gov- ernment by force ip violence, there- by making all the defendants guilty. He admitted that the Long Beach meeling itself did not disturb the peace. The prosecutor put Hynes, the infamous “Red Squad” agent on the stand. He took all day reading from many books and pamphlets, and cit- ing quotations. Hynes still holds the stand. Tomorrow Hynes and the pre- secution will use the strategy of try- ing to prove that the Party believes in forcible and violent overthrow of the government and then try to es- tablish that the workers are Com- munist Party members and on these = convict the: “This raises the question of the right of the legal existence of the party and makes it a case of the utmost im-> portance. Mass pressure and tele-~ grams to Judge Charles D. Wallace, Jergens Trust Building, Long Beach, California, should be sent by workers and workers organizations to help win the right of the Party to legal existence, Among the defendants are Sam Darcey, Ida Rothstein, Lillian Goodman, Edward Sandler. LOS ANGELES, Calif, Feb. 2. The trial of forty-five workers ar- rested in Long Beach recently started today. The jury consists of five re- tired farmers, three housewives, one businessman, an interior decorator, Bedacht to Lecture On “Growth of Reyo- lution in Germany” The workers of New York City, both young and old, ‘will have an opportunity on the next six Sundays to hear Comrade Bedacht speak on the most important issues confront- ing the working class today. The first of a series of six lec- tures, “The Growth of Revolution In Germany,” will be given this Sun- day, Feb. 7, at 7 p.m, at New Har- Jem Casino, 116th St. and Lenox Ave. This lecture serics has becn ar- ranged by the English and Youth City Committees of the International Workers’ Order. Of the subjects to be discussed on succeeding Sundays are “The Background of Manchuria,” “Capitalism and Planned Economy,” “Why and How Social Insurance,” “The Role of Religion and Patriot. ism In the Class Struggle,” “We Workers and Our Children” and See Who Advertises in Your Own Daily HEAR J. FREEMAN (Author of “Voices of October”) “Bourgeois vs. .Prole-| tarian Literature” TONIGHT AT 8 P. M. At IRVING PLAZA, 15TH ST. AND IRVING PL. Intern’) Workers Order DENTAL DEPARTMENT 1 UNION SQUARE 8TH FLOOR All Work Done Under Personal Care of DR. JOSEPASON Dr. M. B. FELSEN SURGEON DENTIST Extraction Specialist 851 East 162nd Street Corner Prospect Ave. Ome block from Prospect Avenue Auspices: N. Y. Dist., F. S. U. 199 Broadway, N. Y. C. This Ad and 20 cents Admits You Subway Station Kilpatrick 5-5028 Phone: Cooperators’ SEROY CHEMIST 657 Allerton Avenue 1584 BRONX, N.Y. MELROSE DAIRY VEGETARIAN BESTAURANT Comrades Wil! Always Find it Pleasant to Dine at Our Place. 178% SOUTHERN BLVD., Bronx (near 174th St. Station) YELEPHONE INTERVALE Workers Theatre Night | For Miners’ Relief (All Proceeds to Striking Miners of Kentucky) 5 Workers Theatres Jewish Workers Dramsection Ukrainian Workers Drama Circle Workers Laboratory Theatre of W.LR. Artef Prolet-Buehne Also—Red Dancers—WIR Brass Band Arranged by Workers Dramatic Council of N. Y. Adm. 50c Thurs., Feb. 4, 8:30 p.m. MANHATTAN LYCEUM 66 East Fourth St. Rational Vegetarian Restaurant 199 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 12th and 13th Sts, Strictly Vegetarian food SOLLINS’ RESTAURANT 216 EAST 14TH STREET 6-Course Lunch 55 Cents Regular Dinner 65 Cents AN AFFAIR WILL BE HELD ON Saturday, Feb. 6th at 353 Beekman Ave., Bronx for the benefit of The DAILY WORKER LUNCH 35c; DINNER 50¢ (For Comrades) Workers are members of Foon Good Meal Entertainment |] WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION Part of ipt: LL.D Auspices: Unit 2 and 26, Section 5|| "" “hag “Wworkene” Schoet RED STAR 49 BAST 127TH ST. RUSSIAN MEALS For Poor Pocketbooks KAVKAZ 332 E, 14th Street, N. ¥. ©, Dance and Entertaiment for the Daily, Worker given by Unit 4-B, Sect. 1, CPUSA SAT., FEB. 6, 8 P. M. DOWNTOWN F. 8. U. 216 East 14th Street Admission 25c. “WE STRIKE” and ‘ON THE BOWERY” Two Revolutionary Acts By DR. MORRIS LEVITT Published by 1.W.0. Priceléc At WORKERS BOOKSHOP 50 E. 13th St. N. Y. C. ROOM TO LET—Single or Couple, 2132 Mohegan Ave., Bronx, Apt. 1-A. THE WESTERN WORKER Comes Out January Ist A fighter to organize and lead ovr struggles in the W RAISE FUNDS! BUILD IT! SUBSCRIBE NOW! 52 Issues $2 26 Issues $1 13 Issues 50c Name City .... .. State... Western Worker Campaign Committee. 15 FOURTH STREET, San Francisco, Calif.

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