The Daily Worker Newspaper, November 11, 1933, Page 2

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Page Two N.R. A. EXPELS INDUSTRIAL UNION DELEGATE FROM FUR DAILY WORKER, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1933 CUTTERS OF NEW Y OweLt, ANYWRY, | SOLVED THE UNEMPLOYMENT PROBLEM For A YEAR, AND THE FINANCIAL CRISIS For 4 Years,” Marine Workers Win Strike for Higher Pay on S. S. Drifus ORK. ss ‘Strike Against High Bread Cost in Face of Picket Injunction DYE CODE C Action Put Over Lawyer, Fur Bosse s |Unemployed Helv and ONFERENCE ; Union Mobilizes Against Attacks, Calls Fur Workers’ Meet Monday NEW YORK.—With the maneuvers of the enemies of the Needle Trade: Workers Industrial Union clearly taking the form of an organized ana No Scabs Are Found NEW YORK.—Led by the Marine Workers Industrial Union, the crew of the S. 9. Mount Drifus won a 50 per cent increase in waves and other improvements of their conditions, after striking for four days. The crew joined this ship (one of 25, owned by one company, and oper- |200 Workers Mass In Front of Two Bakeries NEW YORK.—More than 200 work- | ers massed on picket lines yesterday in front of two bakeries on Allerton Ave., Bronx, in a strike against the high cost of bread. Picketing started yesterday at 6 am. At 3 p.m. the Specialty Bakery Association obtained | Further Developments HERE was an immediate and heartening and in many w surprising response to the preliminary announcement. of | the Wrestling Tournament arranged for Wednesday, Nov. 22, | by this column in collaboration with the Labor Sports Union. concentrated attack to destroy it, new developments occurred yesterday, | ated by. Simpson Spencer and Young) | ae injunction. at ie request ‘Gt Sol Letters, telephone calls and even a telegram came offering which indicate that the offensive is being pushed on all fronts. at Boe n, eons . Conditions Rosen, to take up the challenge to wrestle for the benefit of the Daily NRA. Administrator Conklin ordered Irving Potash, secretary of the On board were a ae mevilasc ry A passerby, Kurtz, was arrested) Worker, originally extended to Michael Gold. In that com- New York Needle T: sii: wameaits ¥ when he tried to defend a woman | pade’s via a dustrial Union out of all future con ferences on the fur dyers’ and dressers code on the demand of S. Markewitch, attorney representing the paper fur AF L-Terror Tactics Revealed at Fur. starvation w (4 pounds per month for sailors id 4.10 for firemen, equivalent to $18-$20 i: American money). The crew was discor .ented | and militant. But there was no or-| picket in front of Sol Ros b 691 Allerton Ave. When the picket scab, Kurtz sprang to her defense. umn on page |you will find a note by Max- sev nov t, Who writes that “if you want en* | | had accused a customer of being a/ well Bodenheim, the poet and | the latter attacked her and| ctonce in opening a firmly sealed envelope. He has never camped out, eaten @ raw vegetable or fruit though he union of the A. F. of L. Potash had ganization on board to voice their ,.,|to promote that boxing match for| Wlil consume astounding series of een officially invited by the N. R. A grievances. Last Saturday a member | The workers demand that the price | the benefit of the Daily Worker, let’s| eclairs at a sitting and lush, aro- to attend the code confernces of of the M.W..U. went on board and, of bread be reduced to 5c a pound | cet togethe:. I'm over forty, with | matic portions of Hverwurst. Also which this was the third and it has been tacitly conceded by the adminis- trator that the Industrial Union rep- Yesented the majority of the fur workers in the trade. Conklin’s ruling came after Marke- witch read a letter sent by Potash to the rank and file members of loval 2 and local 3 urging them to elect competent representatives to support him in his fight against a clause pro- posed by the bosses which is aimed to=rob them of work they are sup- posed to get. Potash told the mem- bers. that Mark Injunction Trial “Officers of A.F.L. Fur Union Ignorant of Its Affairs NEW YORK. — Crudeness of the e-up tactics of the fur bosses their ack upon the Needle des Workers Industrial Union was in testimony given the injunction trial brought spoke to the members of the crew. He spent five hours in the seaman’s quarters. At the end of his visit, a ship committee was elected. Backed 100 per cent by the rank and file,/ | they declared a strike on Monday and presented a petition to the captain | of the vessel and the owners, The ships’ officers attempted to break the strike by threatening to deport the sailors, and tried to get scabs but were thwarted in this at- | tempt by the Unemployed Councils of | the waterfront. The strike was set- | tled Thursday, after captain K. Fil- The last laugh. US. Finally Issues Demonstration and roils to 15¢ a dozen. Present prices are 9c a pound for bread, 24c a dozen for rolls. The East Bronx Unemployed Council is mobilizing all unemployed workers possible to help the strikers | on the picket lines. An Action Committee of ten has been elected to plan further steps in the organization of the strike to reduce the price of bread to a reason- able level. Overgaard Will Speak Sunday in Worcester put I'm willing to n such a cause any not much be knocked out |day in the year.” Jack Hardy, the former all-Amer- ican from Maine University pro- poses to work off some of his 200 pounds by taking me on. Rose, who was 175 Ib. A, A. U. champ, six or seven years ago and |fought on the coast as a pro with |some degree of success until he ran into somebody’s rabbit punch, harks again to the lure cf the ring in the prespect of three easy rounds with j}an ink-stained wretch. More modest | he’s bewilderingly glib, even scin- tillating in explanations of his un- usual tastes and dislikes; it is partly his briitiance in this regard which clinched him the job. Com- rades, I give you Joseph Freeman, writer of sonnets, books of econo- mics, literary critic, man, scholar, teacher of youth, editor of the New Masses and announcer of bout at the Harlem Labor Temple, 15 West 126th St., Wednesday, Nov. 22. . . ‘ b Reena a for the bouts is going on at several clubs around town, t od eo weet . off to second, referee, or announce | notably the Greek Spartacus, Bronx egainst the union by the bosses and arets added his name to the petition tt . T . t Rage tae | y Lgernecreed : | , |have been pouring in from all quar-| Spartacus, Vesa and Fichte. Any- epee : ; the A. F.,0f L. officials | aiongside with those of the members Indictmen Against oday Agains pel i peed res to ‘the olluiins A . : ” atong: me ers 4. | | “ . ters. If these comrades dispose of | he ‘S os previous hear ‘Joint Council. of the committee, and Alexander Bell, | | CORRECTION—Andrew Overgaard, one who cares see the elimina Teaidily seized upon by Conklin, and the fur bosses to demand Potash’s gexplusion from the pro Con- islin ruled that all futur rings Nathan Freiman, called to the stand after repeated demands from | the lawyers representing the fur rkers that the plaintiff produce | organizer of the Marine Workers In- | dustrial Union. All the demands were | granted. 16 members of the crew of | 24 joined the M.W.L.U. Nazi Plotter Here White-Guardists | secretary of the Trade Union Unity | | Council of New York City, will speak | on Sunday, Nov. 12 in Worcester, | Mass., and not in Buffalo, as was in- t least guaranteed against s deficit. |The two most convenient places to get them are at the Workers Book- S few as three tickets each, we're! tions can come to the hall a couple of hours before time. Entry blanks are being sent out now and if the number of applicants prove unwieldy iene “ Eeced| fe * “J: * ‘ shop, 50 E. 13th St., and the Labor | preliminary eliminations hi poate code re Of Labor mE OPTS hon claeed. to te | For three days they tried to get| SDAaNKnoebel, Fascist) FSU Mobilizes Against |correctiy stated in Yesterday's Dally | Sports Union, 813 Broadway. be arranged, There are weight would not be admitted. PP page ai cies sce | | : $4.8 Worker. Overgaard will speak at e | Ja, 1 i t of t zation. He| scabs, and could not because of th 2 | -Re en | . * * classes ranging from 126 Ibs. to un. Eetash vigorously protested the}, ted that is haa been ‘prisident |help the Unemployed Councils gave | Plotter i Exnosed by | ane oe = chagrin ote ein ns | TET’S see now. Some of these | Huatted. @etion and declared that he had aj ¢ ree weeks, and professed ab- | the strikers. The pickets were or- Daily Worker Meeting | day, Noy. 12 at 118 Green St., in Wor- eas We won't make the usual mistake right to inform the fur workers sthe intention of the c: r -betray them. The plan to shim: from the confer ‘was for the purpose of hend to put over a s si#Phe other ou to ude stated, of | - lute ignorance of the affairs of the | ganized, and the police were called mn before that time. | when the ships’ committee refused rs who had been the victims | to let the delegates be put ashore. A. F. of L. and bosses’ gang- | a ts took the stand all afternoon, | t the Suoreme Court, Part IV, Room ‘Quash Senate Quiz 208, Center St. where the trial is * of tk having a free | 5 ‘vation code. tanding developme: NEW YORK.—Heinz Spanknoebel,) NEW YORK.—In order to coun- Fascist agent, whose activities in this| ter-act a white-guard anti-recogni- country were smoked out by the sen- | tion meeting, the Friends of the Sov- | sational letter exposed by the Daily | jet Union have issued an appeal to Worker has been indicted by the Fed- | workers to demonstrate at 2 p.m. to- eral government on @ charge of fail-| gay before the Russian Club, 51 E. ‘cester, Mass. A delegation of steel | workers, members of the Steel and | Metal Workers Industrial Union from Buffalo is expected to attend the Worcester meeting. DELAY GANGSTER TRIAL | Le matters are still pending, but I can report on some of the nego- | tations for the big night. For one, | Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker and former three- letter athlete, wiil rive a brisk but comprehensive and authoritative talk explaining the position of the of amateur tournaments which give you an evening of uninterrupted and, after a while, rather dull wrestling. We're only putting on topnotchers and, besides Hathaway and Freeman, there will be a few rounds of boxing. I'm trying to get the girl high jump- srring y was the being held. The courtroom was | ure to register with the State De-| NEW YORK.—Trial of the gang-| - ral _ | ors of the Vesa A. C. for a feature scien je endiss Aah te camatiey “We ie rucker | pacten aat DERE Se NON aie Olea) | sters charged with attacking the | Communist Porty on sports in vari- | competition, but they're sore at me for gg ee who had been through the strugees| OL UlDA DECAUSE Spanknoebel’s whereabouts are not| ganrous, Whlte-guard Russian or-| headquarters of the Needle Trades | us connections. |having in my renort of a track meet “These hearings have been delayed|f the past months. Extra benches | known. The government had all the | S¢724ons have announced that | workers Industrial Union last April,/ Joe Humphreys’ role for the eve- | this summer, commented on their amesmuch as the % would be com the Industrial R. A. feared that d to recognize Union With the “handing down of the federal indict-| ng g@ment against the union and the at- tempt to obtain an injunction in the Supreme Court to outlaw the union. ‘the: Pvovernment and the bosses have ‘taken courage to push the code for athe fur industry which will aid the} ‘esses. * On Monday at 3 p. m. at Irving| -Plaza, a membership meeting of fur| workers is being called by the In-! dustrial Union at whith time a del-| getion of 200 rank and file members| will be elected to go to Washington| 4 -be present at the fur code hear-| ings. A report will be given on the 4njunction trial and the fur code con- | Aerence. a*"Poday at noon the executive coun- eil of the Union and the Trade ®oards are meeting in special emer- gency session to take up the steps in the fight against the attacis of the} fur bosses and the A. F. of L. espe-| were mo d into the aisles, and many failed to secure entrance to the} courtroom. An attendant told the Worker reporter that he had seen such @ crowd to witness a trial in his seventeen years in the Exposes Banks’Role | WASHINGTON, Nov. 10.—Because | it was exvosing the close relations | between Rooseve't's ambassador to Suvreme Court. |Cuba, Sumner P. Welles, and the| A Greek fur worker, Pappas, told | American bankers who ruled Cuba | threats which were made to him | under Machado and who now have | to induee him to join the A. F. of L.| powerful connections with the San | union, and of an attack by gangsters |Grau Martin government, the Senate | when he was beattn and slashed | Investigating Committee decided to- th a knife. The cut just missed | day to end its examination. his jugular vein, and required four-| This decision came after the Sen- teen stitches. Questioning by coun-|atorg perused State Devartment rec- sel for the fur workers brought out | ords and documents of the Chase Na- the fact that the gangsters at that | tional Bank. time were defended in court by viously ic Markowich, law partner of Null, the | gonad it see, gored Lenee| at 1 geen Gem paag AUF. | hushed up millions of do'tars in graft. healt Cattenipied seaenl times to|T8e, documents also showed that} bglneba cht r | Welles stopped at the Chase National | drag the “red scare” into the proceed- | Fi ¢ m | Bank in New York for. instructions ings. He referred again and again before he went to Cuba. to the fact that the N. T. W. I. U.| is affiliated with the Trade Union| Unity League. At one point in the trial the judge | told the fur workers’ lawyer that he | Talk USSR Relations. duri: u i veek information on which it bases its in-| pugs che coming Week they will dictment when the Daily Worker) is made public the famous intetontted'| Hae tt its Sovlem cover aa Nazi letter, but official action was | to raise funds for the white guard Loe ee rnty Of dave say ng Shan |bands in Manchuria, which are aid- getaway. same: ‘ | ing Japan’s aggressive actions against A eabta fo mparunnchn | ot USES A Fascist successor to Spanknoebel, ey “ Schmidt, is now in New York with 7 addition to the white-guard + ies,| Meeting today at the Russian Club, the full knowledge of the muenonttiat| 51 E, 121st St, the white guards will hold similar meetings in Boston on November 18. The F.S.U. is urging workers in | these cities to stage pro-Soviet Union demonstrations in front of these | white-guard meetings. Hitler Calls Upon GermanWorkers to Be Ready for War itler Prepares to (Continued from Page 1) vote on the recent Hitler Sichaaa| Execute Dimitr off from the League of Nations. | . on Day of Election ’ Run Hugenbderg fred Hugenberg, who made public a} It is of great significance that .Al- | hold meetings throughout the United | |was postponed until today, when one of the lawyers for the defend- jants reported that he was ill, The |case was expected to go to the jury yesterday, Repeated requests of the gangsters’ lawyers for postponements had been denied. | City Events T.U.U.C, CLASSES TODAY | Class for Young Workers, Sidney | Bloomfield, at 10:30 am. Strike | Tacties and Stratesy, Overgaard, | at 10:30 a.m. Class For Function- | aries and Leading Comrades on | Current Trends in the Labor Move- | ment, by Clarence Hathaway, 3:30 | | to 5:30 p.m. = * * Fish Workers To Meet There will be a mass meeting of the Fish workers of Greater New York on Sunday, November 12, at 1 ning will be fiited by one who comes | to us with a clean slate; in his own | words, a tabula rasa. The only man over thirty of my acquaintance who has never witnessed a ra wrestling or billiard match, he quaiifies for the position by the most complete and ‘many-sided ignorance of sports ever toted by | a celebrated contemporary. His | bachelor’s degree it is reported on | highly unreliable authority, was held up at Columbia for failure to run the mile in the stipulated time, 49 minutes. He sleeps with a com- bination lock on his windows, set the intra-building record at the New York Workers Center by wait- ing 22 minutes 8 seconds for the elevator to take him un one flight, beauty as well as their skill. The tournament is being held so that all the departments of the Daily Worker may continue and the girls may con- sent after all, Helving the Daily Worker Through Ed Newhouse Contributions received to the credit of Edward Newhouse in his effort to catch up in the Socialist competition with Michael Gold, De. Luttinger, Helen Luke ‘and Jacob Burck to raise a in the $40,000 Daily worker ive: | | and has been known to require as- |] DR. JULWS LITTINSKY || 107 BRISTOL STREET Bet. Pitkiu and Satter Aves., Brooklyn GARMENT DISTRICT | Phones: Chickering 4947—Longacre 10068 COMRADELY ATMOSPHERE one r ‘ ; | (Continued from Page 1) | didn’t like his “attitude” and told : Fascist anti-Soviet memorandum : pm., at 165 East Broadway, New| PRONE: DICKENS 2-3012 FAN RAY CAFETERIA @lally the federal indictment and the| him he was not out on the steps of I W h t anni mili interve j I : , k planning for military intervention | cons police were immediately | York. LD ort .M., 1-2, M. “ injunction. the courthouse “making a speech to n ashin g 0 q seainst the Soviet Uniotl, and wlio|aied’ tie crate ae ee ae See ae er ST Senet: a Reet 8 At # meeting on Thursday at Man-| cthers of his own kind.” Motion for hhactan Lyceum, the fur dressers and} & mistrial made by the defense was dyers unanimously decided to rejort|@enied. The judge frequently ny code which will not provide 6 eS ve ieee pitied with or commit | suggestions for im) 4 ee ie or eee | The defense auucnneed eee rank and file cf locals 2 and 3 of the | CoUvt teopens Monday morning it will iA, F. of 1. to join i ey the Geena tet call witnesses to establish connection gelnstate the worl | between the ganzster attacks, includ- representatives | ing the raid o: ‘% at N. R. A. conferences. | ters T when a. worker wa Rats | ters last April when a worker was ( , ° n 4 AIRY, to LARGE | | was supposed to have bsen demoted ene | for his bringing it up at the recent Tecognition is generally still believed | London Economic Conference, is high 0 be a foregone conclusion. |up on the Hitter ticket, the only one Through all the conferences Lit-| permitted in the election. vinoff een ae pe calm eat Talks of “Socialism.” surance. ile a drove of reporters or vainly sought an. explanation ne | Tn the face’ of cruel and drastic postponement of a conference from reductions in unemployment relief last night until today, the Soviet en- | payments, the utter failure of Ger- voy strolled from headquarters at the | ™8" industry to show any revival, Soviet Information Bureau, and, ac-| 874 the steadilly growing misery of companied by Boris E. Skvirsky and| the German workers and small fazm- Ivan Davilkorsky, Secretary of the|°r° ~ fi comsnved his earlier Foreign Office, went sight-seeing | ocialism” with which he (Continued from Page 1) talk of “ di ns of the ruincd petty- |called. The secretary said that the ; Consul refused to see them and or- | dered them to leave. The delegation refused charging the consul with | cowardice, Police Threaten Clubbing “If I have to call the wagon, there'll | |be a couple of bloody heads here,” | | thundered the cop as the delegation | | refused to move. The Nazi secretary | | declined to press charges of disorderly | | conduct, Three policemen and two plain- |clothesmen forceluily ejected tne de- legation from the room, but not before ATTENTION Y.C.L’ERS! All Young Communists are to Participate im the Anti-War De- | monstration, to be held on Armis- | tice Day (today) at 12 noon at Columbus Circle, 59 Street and | Broadway. | DISTRICT BURO YOUNG COMMUNIST LEAGUE * * * Amter To Speak At WILLIAM BELL orricta, Optometrist Ewe 106 EAST 14TH STREET Near Fourth Ave., ¥. ©. Phone: Tompkins Square 6-8237 mmm! Celebration Israel Amter, national secretary of | the Unemployed Councils, and sev- | MOT THAVEN 9-8749 DR. JULIUS JAFFE | i | | 156 W. 29th St. New York Garment Section Workers Patronize Navarr Cafeteria 333 7th AVENUE Corner s8th &t. TRADE UNION DIRECTORY « CLEANERS, DYERS AND, PRESSERS.. UNION 22% Second Avenue, New York City | Pauline Rogers, the chairman, had bou into thinking that he/ voiced her protest against the trial| would actually attack the German] frame-up and against the refusal of | capitalists. | Nazi officials accept protest tele-| eral others will speak tonight when | the Finnish Workers Club sponsors a | 16th anniversary celebration of the | Surgeon Dentist 401 EAST 140th STREET |along Washington’s “Main Street.” | Rooms and Hall | Recognized several times, they turned To Hire | murdered and many others wounded, | and, the plaintiffs in the case. - 9 Meeting ia. Russ dinner at the Turkish Embassy. Am- (Corner Willis Avenue) back and Litvinoff prepared for a Suitable for Meetings, Lectures erican officials gathered around Pres-| with his government supported by Workers needing full outfits of horsehide ident Roosevelt to talk over what had S fi i | Neather sheeplined Coats, Windbreakers, and Dances in the the money of the richest and most| Organizations represented in the! Long Island, at 8 p.m. : 4 West 18th Street, New York City Breeches, Hish Shots, sien will reeive spe Peen done —and a few locks away,| powerful German monopoly capl-| delegation were: N. ¥. Comtn.iice to Bee ia bere fey PY uannek bee! ee gs SQUARE DEAL Workers House, Inc.| ram to Roosevelt asking for “un- thai national Labor Defense, Marine DR. S. L. SHIELDS $18 Broadway, New York City ARMY and NAVY STORE | IZ THIRD AVE. (2 doors South of 14th Street) | “NOTICE! RUSSIAN AR PEASANT HANDICRAFTS MOVED TO 9 West 42nd Street Large Selection of Gifts, Toys and 347 E.72nd St. New York Telephone: RHinelander 5097 "NOTICE! T SHOP Ine. BRANCH AT 107 E. 14th Street Novelties from the Soviet Union. 10% Discount to Readers of the Daily Worker | Exceptionally High Quality Su at Exceptionally Low Prices _ MAX TRAIGER One Price Clothing Store CORRECT STYLES—FINE FABRICS 168 STANTON STREET ©: “unten 8 | Mention the Daily Worker and Get 10% Special Reduction! its and Overcoats WORKINGMEN OF 4129 EAST 34th STREET You Need Natural, Undoped and Unproces;ed Health Foods to Give You Health and Strength in Your Struggle for Power. Come to Our Store or Send for Our Health Guide Free— _- HEALTH FOODS DISTRIBUTORS. New York City, — Phone: LExington 2-6926 ALL COUNTRIES! (Near Lexington Avenue) conditional recognition.” These lib- eral government employees and car- Penters, shoe makers and clerical workers, put on little red badges with gold lettering, “We Welcome Litvin- off.” Then they adopted a decision to the Austrian Embassy here pro- testing against the suppression of the Friends of the Soviet Union in near- fascist Austria. One of them had just returned from the Soviet Union and spoke of the theatre in Moscow. Michael Gold Speaks on Role of Press in New Haven Tonight NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Michael Gold, revolutionary author and Daily Worker columnist, will lecture at the Little Cinema Theatre, 38 Howe St., this evening at 8 p.m. on “The Role of the Press.” M.W.S.L, SCHEDULE FOR SUNDAY Al Division Ital. American vs. Fichte, 1 p.m., Betsy Head Park. Olympic vs. Tico, Park. Red Spark vs. Falcons, 3 p.m., Thomas Jefferson. Italia vs. Spartacus, 3 p.m. A? Divi: 3 pm., Betsy Head » Hodson Park. BI Division Dauntless vs Juventus, Park, 64th Bt. Herzl vs Maples, 1 p.m., Gravesend Park. Bronx Hung. ys N. ¥. Hung., 3 p.m. Mo- Coombs Dam. Hero vs So. American, 11 a.m., Jasper Oval. B2 Division Fichte va Red Spark, 11 a.m., Thomas Jefferson. Maple vs Nonpareil, 1 p.m., Jasper Oval. Prospect vs Hinsdale, 11 a.m. Crotona, L.W.O. ys Spartacus, 11 a.m., Astoria, Italian American vs Rome, 3 p.m, Crotona 6C Division Fichte vs French, 1 p.m, Thomas Jefferson. 3 pm., Central Spartacus vs Youth Culture, 1 p.m., Mc- Coombs Dam, * é “My program combines nationalism with Socialism because such a com- bination alone could save Germany.” So false have these promises of “Soc’alism” been proved by the ac- tual deeds of Hitler, that even his censors could not silence the reports -of many revol{s among the Fascist Storm Troops who joined because they believed Hitler's promises. Agent of the big monopoly capi- talists, and ruthless antagonists of working class trade union organiza~ tions, Hitler cynically continued: “If any one has a right to adderss you, my workers, it is I, for I game from your ranks, and always consid- ered myself one of you. Through in- dustry and study, I ‘worked myself up.” Listening to the adders, many a German worker must have thought of: the bloody, murderovs ‘terrorism against the workérs and the Com- munist Party," by which Hitler “worked himself up.”> © Typical of the way the Hitler Fascist government protects the in- terests of the German capitalist emoloyers, all the German workers who were forced to tok time off to listen to the Hitter sneech, will have to work ovev-t'me to make un crisis, on his failure “to stem the srowth of unemployment, on his driv- ing down of the relief payments, on the growing preparations for hurling the German wo-kérs into’ a war against the Soviet Union. He was silent on the steadily in- creasing number of reports showing that the German petty-bourgeots and peasant masses are slowly awaken- ing to the realization that Hitler has failed to carry out one of his dem- agovie nromises to: bring about better conditions, | grams, Workers Industrial Union, Workers Ex-Servicemen’s League lationai Student League, Alteration Painters Union, Pocketbook Workers Union, Food Workers Industrial Union, Shoe and Leather Workers Industrial Union, Independent Sheet Metal Workers Union, Needle Trades Work- ers Industrial Union and Pen and Hammer. A flood of telegrams and cables protesting against the threatened execution of Dimitroff, Torgler, Pop- off and Taneff went out of New York yesterday. Protests were wired to Willhelm Buenger, presiding judge of the trial and to the German Ambassador in Washington by many organizations and individuals. These included the Trade Union Unity League, representing 125,000 members; the International Workers Order, with 38,000 members; the Fur- niture Workers Industrial Union with 15,000 members; the Workers Ex- Servicemen’s League; Post 35 of the WES.L.; the League of Professional Groups; the Ella May Branch of the International Labor Defense; the New York Committee of Allied Pro- fessional Groups to Aid Hitler Fas- cist: Victims; the Hospital Workers evening, 8 p. m. at Irving Plaza, Irving Place and 15th Street. All mass ozganizations affiliated with the committee have been asked to send representatives - to’ Monday night’s meeting, Representatives of the labor press and the various lang- uage organizations aré also invited to attend. + be The Philadelphia district of the ; ILD ‘has arranged a mass meeting of protest for Friday evening, Noy. Russian Revolution at the Finnish | Hall, 109-26 Union Hall St., Jamaica, Day Demonstraticn An anti-war dance will feature the Armistice Day demonstration of the National Students League tonight at 583 Sixth Ave, The entertainment will consist of anti-war skits, songs and dances. . Boston Scottsboro Meet BOSTON, Nov. 10.—A Scottsboro protest mass meeting will be held this Sunday afternoon, at 3:30 o'clock at the North Community Church, to elect delegates to the régional anti- Lynching Conference in Baltimore, Nov. 18 and 19. The meeting will hear the report of the delegation which visited Gov. Ritchie of Mary- land and President Roosevelt to pro- test the lynching of George Armwood on October 18 on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. * Dressmakers Celebrate NEW YORK.— Comrade Clarence Hathaway, editor of the Daily Worker is to speak at the celebration of the 16th Anniversary of the Russian Rev- olution arranged by the left wing group of the LL.G.W.U. local 22 at Irving Plaza, tonight. A concert and dance until early morning will be Part of the festivities. All dress- fire trial will be staged, dramatizing the heroic defense of Dimitroff, Torgler and their comrades. A dele- gation will be chosen at this meeting to visit the German conculate in Philadelphia to protest against the Nazi terror. An urgent appeal for defense funds with which to carry on the struggle for the liberation of the four Com- munists on trial was issued today by the National Committee to Aid the 17, 8 p. m. at the Boslover Hall, 701 Pine Street. A reproduction of the Victims of German Fascism, 870 Broedway, New York City. Surgeon Dentist 2074 WALLAVE AVE. corner Allerton Avenue Bronx, N. ¥. DR. R. H. ISAACS Formerly ot Baltimore, Md. has moved his office *o New York at 304 E. 178th Street, Bronx, N. ¥. (Cor, Anthony Ave.) Phone: FOrdham 7-3443 Office Hours: 12 to 2; 6 to 8 P. M. Sunday 10 to 12 Noon To Russia? HUDSON Army and Navy Store ‘97 THIRD AVENUE (Between 12th and 13th Streets) Gives Honest Values in Genuine Horsehide Sheeplined Coats; Windbreakers, Breeches; High Shoes; Boots, Ete. (Brooklyn) 1639 PITKIN AVENUE WORKERS—EAT AT THE Parkway Cafeteria 1638 PITKIN AVENUE Naor Hop! Ave. Brooklyn, N. ¥. Algonquin 4-4267 FOOD WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION Gramercy, 5-8956 METAL WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION $5 East 19th Strect, New York City _ Gramercy 17-7842 NEEDLE TRADES WORKERS INDUSTRIAL UNION 131 West 28th Street, New York City, awanna 4-4010 CLASSIFIED. ROOM TO LET, Goldens Bridge, N.~¥. Comradely atmosphere. Suitable for couple and small child. Partial. commutation to and from city free. For details aprly to 8. B. ¢/o Daily Worker. . . COMRADE can take care of children. ‘feference. Phone Stella, Haddingway bee RUSSIAN lessons. Ressonable. Bolotowsky, 1027 44th St., Brooklyn, N. ¥. - s FURNISHED Room. Up-to-date apartment. Telephone, 337 West 14th St., Apt. 74. ° ‘ pbc richard indice A BEAUTIFUL Room for 1 or 3, Kil privileges; 1600 7th Ave. cor. 110th 4 Apt. T-B. : DOWNTOWN a JADE MOUNTAIN | American & Chinese Restaurant 197 SECOND AVENUE. sea Sas —— | | Monabl vs. French, 11 a.m., Central Park,/ for the time ‘ost, or else have their | League and a number of others. makers are invited to attend this in- Bet, 12 & 13 eroepect . vs) Hinsdélé,-.4-, pam.; Grotona | WATTS dboked. : A special meeting of the Committee | teresting affair, FOR BROWNSVILLE rRoLeTantans || Welcome to Our Comrades Park. “ aa Hitler’s sneech was stlent on the| to Aid the Victims of German Fas- ey Polish vs Red Spark, 1 p.m. Maspeth Park. | increasing intensity of the’economic| cism has been called for Monday SOKAL CAFETERIA — 2 TOmpkins Square 8-556: © John’s Restaurant +} SPECIALTY—ITALIAN DISHES. «4 A place with atmosphere where nll radicals meet 302 E. 12th St. ‘All Comrades Meet mt the -—— NEW HEALTH CENTER’ CAFETERIA; ——— ‘Fresh Food—Proletarian [riees G) .. 19TH ST., WORKERS’ CENTER———~! ER LI EW 8 Tc eB

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